Missing Scientists and UAP Inquiry: Abduction Narratives, Secrecy, and the Push for Cooperative Futures
To the point
From the perspective of someone who reports abduction experiences, it asks whether non-human intelligence may be involved in missing scientists and military personnel, cites Tim Burchett’s warning about abductions or murders to protect secrets, links researcher deaths to efforts to suppress UAP propulsion work, lists Jacinto Reza, Nuno Loureiro, Lt. Jaime S. Gustitus, Jaymee Prichard, Claudio Manuel Neves Valente, Melissa Casias, and General McCasland, explores mind-control or induced dissociation and possible foreign-state involvement, notes that conclusions are speculative, describes the beings as cautious, telepathic, and collectively deciding, and calls for policy reform toward reducing conflict and pursuing a cooperative future, while noting the material is drawn from a work in progress.