Coastal Unidentified Submerged Objects: Security, Transparency, and Disclosure

Coastal Unidentified Submerged Objects: Security, Transparency, and Disclosure

- The piece highlights thousands of unidentified objects spotted near U.S. coastlines, including underwater or water-adjacent phenomena, fueling national-security concerns. - Enigma, a non-partisan UFO-sighting database, has logged about 30,000 sightings since 2022; since August, more than 9,000 sightings have occurred within 10 miles of shorelines or major bodies of water. - Unidentified Submerged Objects (USOs) are defined as underwater objects not readily identifiable, with witnesses reporting high speeds, sharp direction changes, and transmedium movement between water and air. - California and Florida have the highest counts, with clusters of activity around specific coastal points. - Experts and observers discuss transparency and security implications: Kent Heckenlively advocates for greater government transparency and crowdsourced data to push for disclosure, while remaining skeptical of alien life; Tim Gallaudet (retired Navy Rear Admiral) warns that Pentagon video evidence suggests advanced tech that could threaten maritime security and calls for fuller information sharing on all-domain anomalous phenomena. - The piece also raises questions about potential coverups and the possibility that some sightings could be misinterpretations or intentional concealment, noting the ocean as a perceived hiding place for unknown technologies. - Elon Musk is referenced in a speculative framing about alien coverups, with his stance that there is no evidence of aliens cited alongside questions about whether he or others might be part of a disclosure dynamic.

Source: ktvu.com
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