A congressman aligned with the MAGA movement has made a striking claim about the psychological impact of full disclosure regarding extraterrestrial contact. According to reports, the legislator suggested that Americans would experience severe emotional distress if presented with comprehensive briefings on the subject of alien life and potential visitation.
The congressman’s remarks center on a specific concern: that citizens, once exposed to such information, would struggle with anxiety and sleep deprivation. His characterization suggests that the general public would become, in his words, “unglued”—indicating a belief that knowledge of extraterrestrial reality would fundamentally destabilize the American psyche. He framed this as a reason why such briefings might remain restricted to cleared officials rather than released to the broader population.
This statement reflects an ongoing tension within government circles regarding transparency on UAP and related matters. The assertion that citizens cannot psychologically handle the truth stands in contrast to arguments from transparency advocates who contend that the American public deserves factual information about phenomena affecting national security and scientific understanding.
If a sitting congressman genuinely believes the public cannot handle the truth about extraterrestrial contact, what does that reveal about the actual nature of what officials have learned—and who decides what information citizens are capable of processing?
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Source: UFO
