Donald Trump’s order to “identify and release” government files on aliens, UFOs and UAPs was the kind of transparency move Americans have been demanding for years — and it came straight from Truth Social. Patriots who have watched decades of secrecy know that the only antidote to suspicion is sunlight, and the president’s directive finally forces the bureaucrats to produce answers instead of memos.
The Pentagon has publicly said it will work with other agencies to comply with the directive, which means this is not just political theater but a real, interagency effort to bring documents into the open. If the military and intelligence alphabet soup are serious, career officials will have to stop hiding behind jargon and start delivering facts to Congress and the public.
Harvard astrophysicist Avi Loeb told Greta Van Susteren on Newsmax that even experts don’t yet know what the released files will imply, and that uncertainty is exactly why Americans deserve disclosure. Scientists like Loeb want raw data and declassified records so independent minds can assess whether we’re dealing with advanced foreign tech, natural phenomena, or something more extraordinary — and the government’s shrug is no longer good enough.
Washington has lied by omission for too long, pointing to sanitized reports while labeling inconvenient leads as “sensitive.” Even the government’s own All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office in 2024 said it found no evidence of reverse-engineering extraterrestrial technology, but that kind of official denial only fuels calls for open files and independent review. Americans should demand the underlying records, not a final press release tailored to protect reputations.
We also shouldn’t ignore the political flavor of this moment: Lara Trump suggested there’s even a prepared speech the president is saving for the right time, which tells you this administration understands both the transparency value and the political power of disclosure. If there’s a speech and there’s paperwork to back up claims, bring it all forward — let voters judge on facts, not spin.
Conservative Americans ought to be the loudest voices for truth here. We believe in strong national security, but security rooted in accountability, not secrecy. Let the files be released, let experts and independent investigators comb them for answers, and let the people — not a permanent bureaucracy — decide what to make of whatever is out there.

