Wild. Matt Gaetz on being told by a senior Army guy about alien hybrid breeding programs using abductees and people taken from migrant caravans:
Wild. Matt Gaetz on being told by a senior Army guy about alien hybrid breeding programs using abductees and people taken from migrant caravans:
If that's factual info, then we've entered another lower level of depravity. Many UFO authors have touched on this subject before (with the aliens themselves doing this with abductees), but for it to be institutionalised by human agencies, well, I've run out of words. Disgusting.I watched the Bob Lazar - S4 documentary this morning. It's available to rent on Amazon for $14. It was as professional and polished as the "Age of Disclosure" film and probably the most informative one in regards to the Bob Lazar story (imo). It brings up more questions than answers though (which is a good thing, I think), such as "why release this now?". Also in reading about the Missing and Dead Scientists, how is Lazar still above ground and how is he being used (if he is being used) as an conduit for disclosure?And finally the S4 documentary with bob lazar will be on Amazon the 3rd of April
Following the revelation that yet another government contractor with links to nuclear secrets and suspected dark project UAP information has vanished, speculation as to what exactly is going on has massively intensified.
The case of Steven Garcia, a 48-year-old property custodian at the Kansas City National Security Campus in Albuquerque, New Mexico, marks the latest entry in a disturbing sequence of deaths and vanishings among individuals connected to NASA, nuclear weapons components, and sensitive aerospace research.
Los Angeles Magazine contributor Lauren Conlin joined “Jesse Weber Live” to discuss the case, noting its eerie parallels to prior incidents.
Garcia’s disappearance is being framed as the 10th missing person case in the UFO mystery.
The disturbing pattern of deaths continues to baffle.
Garcia was last seen leaving his Albuquerque home on foot on August 28, 2025, carrying only a handgun. He left behind his phone, keys, wallet, and car. Officials have described him as potentially a danger to himself, but no trace has been found in the remote area where he lived.
Conlin emphasized the chilling similarities during the NewsNation segment. “This one is chilling to me because, as you said it echoes Neal McCasland’s disappearance. It was like the same thing in the state of New Mexico,” she stated. McCasland, a retired Air Force major general with deep UFO community ties, vanished from the same region earlier in 2026.
Garcia held top security clearance at the Kansas City National Security Campus (KCNSC), which manufactures over 80 percent of the non-nuclear components for U.S. military nuclear weapons.
“So Stephen Garcia, I mean he had a top security clearance at KCNSC,” Conlin explained. “They manufacture 80% of non-nuclear components that go into building military nuclear weapons and I mean he oversaw tens of millions dollars of assets, equipment some classified.”
She added that Garcia’s role involved handling “some classified, some not,” leaving open questions about his knowledge base. “We don’t know what was going on in this guy’s head right, the officials had said that he may have been a danger to himself.”
Neighbors noted he lived in a very remote area and worked in aerospace research. Conlin even raised a provocative possibility on air: “I have to wonder, again I know this sounds crazy but it could be an option here is the government doing this? Are they taking out their own people because of XYZ.”
The timing adds to the intrigue. Garcia’s disappearance occurred amid heightened congressional scrutiny of UAP (unidentified anomalous phenomena) videos and related programs, including a deadline set by Rep. Anna Luna for the release of specific footage.
Multiple individuals on the list of those who have vanished or died worked at or with NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), Los Alamos National Laboratory, or Air Force Research Laboratory projects involving asteroid defense, rocket engines, and classified aerospace systems.
No official connections have been publicly confirmed by law enforcement between the cases, yet the geographic clustering in New Mexico and California, combined with shared professional networks in nuclear and space tech, continues to fuel speculation.
Online discussions on X and Reddit’s r/UFOs and related communities have exploded with theories attempting to explain the pattern. Many users point to foreign intelligence operations, suggesting adversaries like China or Russia may be targeting U.S. experts to steal or neutralize knowledge of advanced technologies, including those potentially linked to UAP reverse-engineering programs. Ex-FBI officials have been cited in reports noting that foreign services have long pursued Americans with critical tech secrets.
Others speculate a domestic cover-up angle: that insiders with knowledge of classified UAP programs or non-human technology are being silenced to delay or control disclosure efforts, especially as Congress pushes for more transparency on UAP videos and related footage. Some tie the cases to specific projects like advanced alloys (e.g., Mondaloy) or propulsion systems funded through overlapping NASA, DoE, and Air Force channels.
A smaller but vocal group questions whether personal factors—extreme stress from high-clearance work or mental health crises—could explain the cluster, though critics argue the sheer number and similarities make coincidence unlikely.
Calls for an independent task force or deeper FBI probe appear frequently in threads, with users linking the pattern to historical UFO lore around sites like Roswell and Wright-Patterson Air Force Base.
Whatever the explanation, the cases underscore ongoing questions about transparency in America’s most sensitive scientific and defense programs. As more details emerge on Garcia and the others, the public demand for answers only intensifies. The full picture may yet reveal connections that challenge assumptions about how these secrets are guarded—and at what cost.
(L) Okay. She is saying, basically, there's going to be disclosure in 2026 of some kind. Is she close to the mark with that?
A: Close.
Q: (L) So, there's going to be some ramping up of some kind of disclosure-type information in another year or so?
A: Yes
Q: (Possibility of Being) Will it be a real disclosure or distraction?
A: Distraction. Real disclosure would lead to mass rejection.
Q: (L) In other words, if they really told who they were and what they were here for, people would freak!
(Possibility of Being) I'm not sure. Half of humanity now would probably run with open arms and greet them.
(L) Well, that's true.
Maybe after going public he had a "talk" with someone that he (or his family) would be allowed to live if he does not truthfully disclose certain things. Which seems quite likely actually.Maybe he's protecting himself in that way, in some fashion? On the other hand, when he did go public, which was a huge risk, why wouldn't he tell an accurate version?
A scientist experimenting with anti-gravity tech was found dead at 34 after warning that her life could be in danger, marking another mysterious case of deaths and disappearances in recent years.
Amy Eskridge was just 34 years old when she allegedly died from a self-inflicted gunshot to the head in Huntsville, Alabama on June 11, 2022. However, neither the police nor the medical examiners have publicly released any details of an investigation ever taking place.
Before her death, she was openly researching and trying to develop anti-gravity technology, a way to control or cancel out gravity, which could revolutionize space travel and energy production.
[...]
Eskridge spoke in a 2020 podcast interview where she had detailed a plan for the public disclosure of UFOs and extraterrestrials, but feared the threats against her were growing more and more dire.
Eskridge said: 'I need to disclose soon, man. I need to publish soon because it's like escalating. It's getting more and more aggressive. This has been going on for like four or five years, and over the past 12 months, it's been escalating, like more aggressive, more invasive digging through my underwear drawer and sexual threats.'
Before her death, Eskridge contacted retired British intelligence officer Franc Milburn for help investigating the incidents of harassment and intimidation she was allegedly the victim of, with Milburn ultimately concluding that her death was not from suicide.
Both Eskridge and Milburn documented multiple occasions where she had been subjected to physical and psychological attacks, including an unknown suspect firing a 'directed energy weapon' at her, causing burns across her body using powerful microwaves.
Milburn's findings were submitted to Congress by independent investigators in 2023.
Journalist Michael Shellenberger testified before a public hearing on Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena that Eskridge was 'murdered by a “private aerospace company” in the US because she was involved in the UAP conversation.'
Milburn said on the fringe science radio show Coast to Coast AM: 'Somebody was after her work. It was either one of two main objectives. One, trying to get her to desist from doing the work, and two, with these attacks, with the harassment, and the directed energy weapon attacks, to actually stop her, to debilitate her so she was unable to do the work.'