States' Rights -- Whoop It Up!

States' Rights -- Whoop It Up!

The UFO community divides into two main groups: those focused on physical evidence like radar and hardware, and those who emphasize the occupants of UFOs, despite little material proof. Mainstream science grudgingly tolerates the former, partly due to its current dysfunction, including mass federal agency departures and funding shifts favoring agencies like ICE. Hardware researchers hesitate to engage with the biologics angle, fearing damage to their credibility, leaving the topic largely unexplored scientifically. An event at the National Press Club on January 20 highlighted the “Brazil’s Roswell” incident, involving a 1996 crash near Varginha, Brazil, where locals reportedly encountered small alien beings and where military forces allegedly secured wreckage and alien bodies. A hospital-treated alien capture led to a bacterial infection killing a police officer, Marco Chereze, who subdued one entity. A neurosurgeon reported telepathic communication with a dying alien. Claims surfaced that a U.S. special operations team confiscated alien cadavers, aligning with congressional testimony alleging Pentagon retrieval of biologics. Evidence for these events remains elusive, but efforts are ongoing to exhume Chereze’s body to investigate the unusual infection, possibly of alien origin. However, skepticism looms over federal cooperation, especially given the current political and institutional chaos in the U.S., where transparency on UFO matters is lacking, and the federal government actively resists open scientific inquiry. In response, some propose state-level initiatives. Vermont Rep. Troy Headrick introduced a bill, supported by a public education lobbyist and military veterans, to create a state UAP task force aimed at gathering and reviewing local sightings and data. This initiative would partner with established research groups like the Scientific Coalition for UAP Studies, which investigates UFO phenomena through diverse scientific methods and was once considered for a federal consulting role before being sidelined. While state resources cannot match federal capabilities, a decentralized, coordinated effort to secure physical evidence quickly could yield significant discoveries, as demonstrated by environmental impact studies from UFO cases in France. Vermont, with its rural landscape and high per-capita UFO sightings, could serve as a testing ground for this model. Success there might inspire other states to form similar task forces, increasing pressure on the federal government for transparency and data sharing. These developments underscore the widening federal leadership vacuum on UFO matters, raising the possibility that state-level efforts could challenge federal authority in investigating and managing extraterrestrial phenomena, especially concerning potential biological hazards revealed by cases like that of Marco Chereze.

Source: substack.com
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