Emergent Disclosure and Secrecy in the UFO/UAP Ecosystem: A Post-Materialist, Multi-Actor Perspective
To the point
Disclosures about UFOs/UAP are described as an evolving, interdependent system where secrecy and disclosure arise from interactions among governments, agencies, researchers, private actors, and even non‑human intelligences, with consciousness and collective readiness shaping what is shared and how experiences are interpreted, a view echoed by Diana Pasulka’s emergent UAP research tradition and Julia Mossbridge’s idea of AI as a learning partner, while culture shifts, citizen‑science data, leaks, competition, and cross‑border cooperation push partial disclosures into broader awareness even as fragmentation and biases complicate control, and a wide cast of actors including DoD, AARO, NASA, ESA, the UN, NATO, Harvard’s Galileo Project, NGOs like the Disclosure Project and TTSA, private firms such as Lockheed Martin, Google, Palantir, media, and MUFON shapes the strategic dynamics of normalization, data sharing, and diplomacy, with non‑material participants like planetary consciousness possibly communicating through telepathy or synchronicities and individuals encouraged to engage through CE‑5 to influence their own experiences, all underscoring that emergent disclosure is hard to constrain and requires adaptive, collaborative, and transparent approaches rather than centralized control.