Mexico's First Public UAP Hearing Examines Non-Human Remains and Calls for Clarity
To the point
Jaime Maussan presented two desiccated bodies at Mexico’s first public hearing on unidentified aerial phenomena and claimed they were non‑human to push for recognizing UAPs as a matter of airspace security and research, saying DNA would prove they weren’t human and showing X‑ray images in which one body allegedly contained eggs, with the bodies said to date from 2017 in Peru’s Nazca Desert, while lawmakers like Sergio Gutiérrez Luna heard three hours of testimony without taking a position, the event sparking social media debate about whether UAPs are a national security issue or a scientific mystery, and in the United States former intelligence official David Grusch’s congressional testimony raised questions about alleged programs to recover crashed alien spacecraft though the Pentagon said there was no verifiable information, underscoring a call for clearer, more transparent discussion of unidentified aerial phenomena.