Oh great — another government hearing about UFOs. Just what we needed: Congress holding a very serious, taxpayer-funded séance to find out whether aliens crash-landed in a cornfield with a government-issued 401(k).
Except this time, it might actually get interesting.
Let’s back up. You might remember last summer when David Grusch, the whistleblower with a military background and a straight face that could rival a marble bust, dropped the kind of testimony that should’ve rattled every Pentagon office from here to Roswell. He said — and we’re not paraphrasing here — that the U.S. government and private aerospace contractors are sitting on non-human craft and actual biologics. Translation: alien stuff. Space junk. ET’s luggage.
And you’d think that would have been the moment America screeched to a halt. But no. The media hit snooze, most of Congress looked like they just smelled something weird, and your average American was too busy trying to afford eggs and gas to care about little green men.
Now, Congressman Eric Burlison is trying again — this time with a new hearing, fresh witnesses, and the kind of beltway paranoia that smells like someone’s getting way too close to something they’re not supposed to find.
In his sworn testimony before the House Oversight subcommittee, David Grusch, a decorated Air Force veteran and former U.S. intelligence officer, stated under oath that he had knowledge of highly classified UAP crash-retrieval and reverse-engineering programs.
Grusch told… pic.twitter.com/rpupL0nKEi
— Non-Human intelligence (@NonHumanintel) September 8, 2025
This isn’t your run-of-the-mill, tinfoil-hat convention. Burlison is naming names. He’s talking about firsthand witnesses. Real people. Air Force veterans. Investigators. Even journalist George Knapp — the guy who’s been crawling around the dark corners of the UAP world since before your iPhone had a flashlight.
Rep. Anna Paulina Luna’s rolling out a witness list that’s starting to sound more like the season finale of a Tom Clancy series. And while none of them are officially part of “The Program” — that’s what they’re calling the alleged top-secret effort to reverse-engineer UFOs like some cosmic pit crew — there’s a growing sense that someone’s getting close enough to make the deep state sweat.
But let’s not pretend this is all smooth sailing.
Burlison casually mentions that witnesses are afraid to come forward because doing so might require admitting to criminal activity. Just let that sit for a second. Because apparently, if you know too much about how the government is spending your money on maybe-not-from-Earth technologies, you might also be neck-deep in black-budget no-no’s.
So what do they do? They’re working on amnesty for whistleblowers. That’s right — the same government that won’t give you the time of day if your IRS refund is late is now preparing to offer legal forgiveness to anyone who says, “Yes, I once accidentally touched the hull of a non-human aircraft in a hangar in Nevada.”
Oh, and Grusch? He’s no longer just a whistleblower. He’s now working for Burlison — helping draft “interrogatory letters” that will go out to… well, we don’t know who yet. But according to Burlison, these letters “carry significant weight.” Which is political speak for “you can ignore this at your own risk.”
And if you’re wondering whether this hearing might finally lift the lid on the truth, well — maybe. But don’t get your hopes too high. The hearing itself might be more about the show than the substance.
On Tuesday, 9 September, Congress will hold another UAP hearing.
Back in July 2023, former Air Force officer & intelligence official David Grusch came forward under oath.
He testified that he had knowledge of secret crash-retrieval & reverse-engineering programs but said he… pic.twitter.com/q8w3ZijyHM
— Non-Human intelligence (@NonHumanintel) September 8, 2025
What really matters, says Burlison, is what comes after: the paper trail. The subpoenas. The letters. The quiet panic behind closed doors when certain names show up on the return address.
Now, you might think this is all a giant distraction. That it’s easier to talk about UFOs than inflation, crime, or border security.
But ask yourself this: if someone has been sitting on alien tech for decades — while Americans are still struggling to get decent cell reception in rural Arkansas — don’t you think it’s time we got some answers?
And if it turns out that yes, your government really has been hoarding otherworldly objects while lying to your face about it?
Well… that would explain a lot, wouldn’t it?
Strap in. Tuesday’s hearing might just be the prelude to the real story — the one they’ve been desperate to keep buried in a vault labeled “Totally Not Aliens.”













