Last night on Jesse Watters Primetime, filmmaker Dan Farah — the man behind The Age of Disclosure — sat for a blunt, no-nonsense conversation about what our government may already know about non-human intelligence. Farah didn’t dance around the stakes: he warned Americans that we could be at a disclosure tipping point and that serious people in uniform and intelligence circles have been raising alarms for years.
Earlier this week a respected, Stanford-trained researcher, Dr. Hal Puthoff, told Steve Bartlett’s podcast that those involved in crash recoveries have described at least four distinct types of non-human biological life recovered from downed craft. Puthoff was careful to say he lacked direct access, but he made clear he believes colleagues with firsthand knowledge are describing multiple, separate life-forms — a claim that demands transparency, not sneers.
Other participants in this conversation — people like Dr. Eric Davis — have reportedly given names to those categories that sound ripped from decades of eyewitness reports: Grays, Nordics, Reptilians, and Insectoids. Whether you’re a skeptic or a patriot, the operative fact is simple: these are not wild internet rumors anymore but assertions being spoken aloud by credentialed scientists and former government insiders, and they remain unverified by independent examination.
Farah’s documentary lays out a darker prospect: an eight-decade pattern of secrecy where powerful institutions prioritized technological advantage over public knowledge. The Age of Disclosure assembled testimony from dozens of current and former officials who warn that rivals may already be racing to reverse-engineer whatever this technology is, making this a national-security issue as much as a philosophical one.
Patriots should want answers, not cover-ups; conservatives should be the loudest advocates for the kind of controlled, accountable disclosure that protects secrets that must remain secret while letting the American people and their elected representatives see real evidence. President Trump’s recent push to identify and release files on extraterrestrial life underscores why Congress and the public must insist on a full accounting from the agencies that have been gatekeepers for so long.
We should demand hard evidence: physical specimens for independent scientific testing, unredacted reports for congressional review, and clear rules so the military and intelligence communities cannot bury the truth for decades. To every doubter who laughs this off as pulp fiction, remember that national security begins with facts and ends with accountability — and hardworking Americans deserve neither secrecy nor deception when stakes this high are on the line.

