UFO Transparency Movement Gains Ground In Congress
The UFO transparency movement gains substantial ground in Congress as lawmakers push harder than ever for the disclosure of classified information. In a remarkable shift from decades of institutional silence, prominent political figures including Senator Chuck Schumer (D) and Congressman Tim Burchett (R) are leading an unprecedented charge to uncover what the Pentagon knows about unidentified aerial phenomena.
“Now do UFOs”
Senate Chuck Schumer has publicly challenged President Trump to follow through on his pre-presidency pledge to declassify UFO files, pointing to Trump’s successful release of both the JFK assassination and Martin Luther King Jr. documents as precedent. Taking to Twitter with the direct message “Now do UFOs,” Schumer’s call for action highlights a glaring omission in Trump’s declassification efforts. While Trump made good on his promise to unveil sensitive historical documents related to JFK and MLK, his commitment to transparency seemingly hit a wall when it came to UFO-related files.

In 2023 the Schumer-Rounds Amendment, a legislative effort aimed at compelling the Pentagon to either release UFO files or provide explicit justification for their continued classification. The Pentagon’s rejection of this amendment in the 2023 NDAA has raised eyebrows and deepened suspicions about what might be hidden from public view.
Congressman Mentions Underwater Alien Bases
Congressman Tim Burchett has emerged as a leading voice in the congressional push for UFO transparency. His recent shocking claim on The Matt Gaetz Show about the existence of underwater extraterrestrial bases marks a significant escalation in official discourse about the phenomenon. Burchett’s involvement in UFO Congressional hearings and his consistent advocacy for disclosure has lent credibility to the conversation, especially given his focus on following the money trail behind various UFO research programs.

The Earth’s oceans present the perfect hiding place for advanced technology or bases, with their vast unexplored depths offering unparalleled secrecy. With only 10–15% of our oceans thoroughly mapped and explored, the remaining 85–90% remains a mysterious frontier beyond our technological reach. Current human submarines and sonar equipment can only penetrate so deep, making the intense pressures of the ocean’s darkest regions an ideal shield against detection. Any civilization with technology advanced enough to withstand these crushing depths would find our oceans an ideal sanctuary, hidden from the limitations of our surface-based monitoring systems and sophisticated enough to evade our most advanced detection methods.
The current state of UFO disclosure represents a complex interplay between public demand for information, institutional resistance, and the challenges of managing potentially paradigm-shifting revelations. As more government officials speak out and evidence continues to accumulate, the traditional approach of denial and deflection faces mounting pressure from an increasingly informed and skeptical public.
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