On Monday, August 25, the
Pentagon announced that Dr. Jon T. Kosloski would be taking over the job
abandoned by Dr. Sean Kirkpatrick several months ago. Kosloski comes to the
All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office, commonly called AARO from the National
Security Agency.
Official government portrait of Dr. Jon Kosloski |
We are told that he
held several technical and leadership positions in the NSA’s Research
Directorate and that he has extensive experience working in multiple scientific
fields, including quantum optics and crypto-mathematics. He was described as
NSA’s subject matter expert in free space optics and that he invented an
advanced language-agnostic search engine.
While we are told,
according to the press release, that he possesses the unique set of scientific
and technical skills, policy knowledge and proven leadership, I note there is
nothing in his background that suggests he knows anything about the history of
UFO research or in the thousands of credible sightings that have been reported.
His background is
impressive but I see this as similar to selecting a person skilled in esoteric
anthropological research to run a program designed to create the next
generation of fighter aircraft. That person might be a highly skilled, high
trained anthropologist but that doesn’t mean this is a person who has the
background to create a military aircraft. It seems the listing of Kosloski’s
impressive background as an appeal to authority. This man has studied quantum
optics and crypto-mathematics so you can believe that he knows what he is
talking about.
In the past, we have
been treated with military officers and scientists who tell us there is nothing
to flying saucers, UFOs and now UAPs. The March report written by Kirkpatrick
told us there was no evidence of off-world technology flashing through our skies,
but did we really expect anything else. There is nothing new in that report. It was what
I expected and I’m sure that most of us who have been around the world of the
UFO from more than a week or two expected exactly what was reported. I have
discussed this sort of thing in the past and you can read it here:
http://kevinrandle.blogspot.com/2024/01/kirkpatrick-aaro-project-mogul-and-moore.html
http://kevinrandle.blogspot.com/2023/08/dr-sean-kirkpatrick-responds-to-david.html
I can point to half a
dozen of other reports, authoritative studies that told us the same thing but
the trouble is they were riddled with errors, mistakes and no real
understanding of the history of the UFO phenomenon. There include the Air Force
Project Grudge report, the 1953 CIA-sponsored Robertson Panel that advocated a strategy
to convince people that there was no mystery and the alleged scientific study
of UFOs that had the conclusions written before any investigation began. You
can read more about that here:
http://kevinrandle.blogspot.com/2019/01/moon-dust-robert-hippler-and-project.html
http://kevinrandle.blogspot.com/2007/03/hippler-letter.html
And if you are interested
in a long read that provides the evidence for this, you can find it here:
http://kevinrandle.blogspot.com/2024/03/the-latest-from-arro-more-of-same.html
Seems like we are now going
down the same road again. We are told that this is a serious subject, investigations
are proposed and eventually it devolves into what we have seen for decades. If
there was nothing to this as Sean Kirkpatrick seemed to suggest (other than a
threat to aerial navigation by terrestrial based problems such as drones), why
hasn’t this been discovered by now.
If we could find an official study that wasn’t driven by an agenda of cover up and lies, that would be one thing, but every time the government gets involved in UFO research, the outcome is the same. And when the documentation is located and becomes available, we can verify that the fix was in. And now, we see it all happening again.
4 comments:
I could not agree more. We are still on the UFO road to nowhere, thanks to what we are being handed out by the powers that be. Hope all is well Kevin.
I don't know if it is just me, but the AARO website gives "not found" when I try to load the site. Anyone else having this problem? Not a good sign if this is the way of things. https://www.aaro.mil/
Try https://www.aaro.mil WITHOUT the / at the end. It came right to my screen.
Thanks John. Yes, the website is back up, but it was down for a day or so. I am guessing their maintenance guys have to take down the whole site to fix it or something. Not significant in the end, not something to read anything into. If the site were still down it would be a different story.
Post a Comment