According to the UK's Daily Mail a top secret CIA office (Office Of Global Access or OGA) has been collecting crashed UFO debris since 2003 and even took possession of two intact craft.
Unnamed sources told the Mail:
There's at least nine vehicles. There were different circumstances for different ones, it has to do with the physical condition they're in. If it crashes, there's a lot of damage done. Others, two of them, are completely intact.
Wow, but we have to ask, if extraterrestrials are so technologically advanced that they were able to cross the icy void of interstellar space to visit earth, why would they crash, much less allow the CIA to get hold of their tech. It seems unlikely, which hints at a coverup, an inside job if you will.
Here at the Compound, we believe USGOV along with its secret police and espionage agencies have been infiltrated and possibly controlled by Off World interests for many years. Much like, if you pause to reflect, the Church of England (COE), the Anglican Church of Canada (ACoC) and the tellingly named TEC (The Episcopal Church).
So of course the OGA took possession of downed space alien craft, they're on the same team. Terrifying, isn't it. And perhaps you think this is some kind of weird conspiracy theory, think again.
Ad Astra,
LSP
8 comments:
Operation Blue Beam.
You'd think that after having traveled thousands of light years, space aliens would build craft that would be less likely to crash on Earth.
Aliens likely have their own Joe Bidens and 2nd LTs.
Exactly, Zendo.
That's what I'm saying, LL. So, inside job? You be the judge.
Right on, WSF. And we have to ask, is their Biden in the White House? They've clearly got the Archbishop of Canterbury slot.
The lie is out there.
I've never seen one, but my otherwise sober, no B.S., Father, who turned wrenches on Navy aircraft in WWII and Air Farce aircraft afterwards, and held a commercial pilot's license, saw two of 'em. Mother was there to see the second one.
I've seen one or two, Wild. Were they aliens or homegrown? Dunno but there's plenty of sightings going back to, say, the '40s which argue against the "our secret tech" line.
Tucker's onto it too, which is interesting.
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