It’s hard to believe but this is a picture of the United States reflecting pool before the revolution happened. The US was once a very westernized country
Today in 1913, the Gettysburg's Great Reunion occurred, where 44,713 Union and 8,694 Confederate Civil War veterans gathered for the 50th anniversary of the battle.
🚨The UFO Files Are Being Replaced by Theater, Don't be fooled!
This is exactly the problem with the current UFO file release. While everyone is being pushed toward the new PURSUE releases on https://t.co/LiSMsdQ7EE, the legally mandated UAP Records Collection at the National Archives appears to be sitting in silence, incomplete and way past due.
On June 2, thirty Air Force UAP records reportedly appeared in the National Archives Amazon S3 storage. These had already been identified through FOIA as Air Force records intended for public release, and according to the uploaded records, they'd been declassified back in May 2025.
Then, within a day, before they were even published properly to the National Archives catalog, the links went dead, no joke they all disappeared.
The 2024 NDAA created a legal framework for UAP records to be identified, reviewed, transferred to the National Archives, and made available to the public. Agencies were supposed to identify records by October 2024 and transfer public records to NARA by September 30, 2025. The public release process was not meant to be optional, vague, or dependent on whatever website the administration decides to promote that week.
But now of course the public focus has shifted almost entirely to https://t.co/LiSMsdQ7EE and PURSUE, a release system with no clear legal requirement, no clear scope, and no firm schedule. Meanwhile, the National Archives collection, the one actually established by law, barely gets mentioned.
A rolling UFO file dump can create headlines and it has. It can create the appearance of transparency and again, depending on your outlook I guess it has. It can give the media something to point at and say, "Look, disclosure is happening." But if the legally mandated archive is incomplete, delayed, ignored, or sidelined, then what we are watching isn't disclosure at all, its replacement.
The government shouldn't get credit for creating a shiny new release portal while the official UAP Records Collection remains unfinished. Additional releases are welcome, but they should support the legal framework, not distract from it.
If the current law can be ignored this easily, what exactly is the point of asking for new legislation?
Release the records through the National Archives. Follow the law and stop turning disclosure into a branding exercise or a distraction.
https://t.co/LAoyM4EyQf
Go check out the full story here:
https://t.co/aSoIlII4Js
#ufotwitter #uapX #Disclosure
Still waiting on cheaper groceries, $1.99 gas, the Epstein files, $5000 DOGE checks, lower inflation, better healthcare… still waiting.
Still lying on the ground.
Same, Mr. Bean. Same.🙄
#CantAffordTrump
The most under discussed part of the "How did Graham Platner do it?" question is how his voice sounds like that.
The way he says “Susan Collins”, that’s a ~5 point swing for him right there.
This Billboard was seen in Spokane,Washington and it was allegedly put up because people were calling counseling centers asking for help to get out of MAGA!
You know what would be amazing if Vance and his team can negotiate an agreement where Iran doesn't enrich above 3.67% (far below weapons grade); gets rid of 98% of its stockpile of enriched uranium; has weekly inspections by the IAEA; keeps the straits open without charging anyone; and commits to all of this for at least ten years. Oh, yeah, that was the Obama Iran deal.
🚨Missing Former Kirtland Commander: The FBI Join the Investigation
The disappearance of retired U.S. Air Force Major General William Neil McCasland has quickly drawn national attention, not only because of who he is but because of where he spent much of his career. When someone with decades of senior involvement in advanced military research suddenly vanishes, the situation inevitably raises questions.
Authorities in New Mexico confirmed this week that the FBI has now joined the search for McCasland after he was reported missing in Albuquerque. The Bernalillo County Sheriff's Office issued a Silver Alert on Friday after the 68 year old former commander of Kirtland Air Force Base's Phillips Research Site was last seen late that morning near Quail Run Court NE.
For now, investigators say the case is being handled strictly as a missing person investigation. Yet the man at the center of the search is no ordinary retiree. McCasland spent decades inside some of the U.S. military's most sensitive research programs, including leadership roles within the Air Force Research Laboratory. This is exactly why federal authorities are now involved.
According to the Bernalillo County Sheriff's Office, McCasland was last seen around 11 a.m. on Friday morning in northeast Albuquerque. The Silver Alert issued shortly afterward indicates authorities believed there could be concerns regarding his well-being.
Officials have not released details about any medical conditions that may have contributed to the alert. Law enforcement says privacy laws prevent them from discussing that information publicly. What they have confirmed is that the so far the search has been extensive.
Investigators have conducted neighborhood canvassing, interviews, and coordinated search operations across the surrounding area. Authorities are also asking residents to review security camera footage from between 9 a.m. and 2 p.m. on the day he disappeared. Law enforcement states that even small pieces of information could help establish a timeline of events.
Friends say his disappearance came as a complete shock. Sherman McCorkle, co founder of the Kirtland Partnership Committee and a longtime associate, said he had spoken with McCasland only days before the disappearance and noticed nothing unusual. In his words, McCasland wasn't the type of person who would vanish without explanation.
Why did the FBI become Involved? Federal involvement in missing person cases can occur for several reasons. In this situation, the FBI Albuquerque Field Office was brought in to assist because of the tools and investigative resources available to federal agents. Local authorities still remain in charge of the investigation.
The involvement of the FBI shows that investigators are treating the case seriously and want access to additional tools like digital forensics, communication tracing, and federal databases. Officials say this is standard procedure when a case involves someone with McCasland's background and network of professional relationships.
Still, the decision inevitably raises public interest because of where McCasland worked during his military career. For years, McCasland served as commander of the Air Force Research Laboratory's Directed Energy Directorate at Kirtland Air Force Base in Albuquerque.
That division oversees some of the U.S. military's most advanced research in areas such as high energy lasers, electromagnetic weapons, and advanced aerospace technologies. Kirtland itself is a major hub for national defense research. The base hosts multiple classified programs and works closely with national laboratories, including Sandia and Los Alamos.
McCasland's leadership role meant he sat at the center of that research ecosystem. Before retiring, he also led the Phillips Research Site and held multiple senior positions connected to Air Force science and technology development. He had spent most of his career managing projects that sit on the cutting edge of defense innovation.
McCasland's career placed him in charge of programs dealing with some of the most sophisticated technologies developed by the U.S. military. The Directed Energy Directorate at Kirtland has worked on systems involving lasers, microwave weapons, advanced sensors, and space technology.
These programs are designed to create operational capabilities for the Air Force and the broader defense establishment. Research in this area includes everything from missile defense technologies to satellite protection systems and experimental aerospace concepts.
Over the years, many of these projects have transitioned from classified research into operational systems used by the military. Because of that role, McCasland would have worked closely with defense contractors, national laboratories, and high level government agencies.
After retiring from active service, he remained involved with the Kirtland Partnership Committee, an organization that works to support and expand the base's mission. Friends describe him as deeply connected to the community around the base.
News of McCasland's disappearance has shaken people who worked with him for years. Members of the Kirtland Partnership Committee say they are stunned by the situation and remain hopeful that he will be found safely. Many of them say that the idea that he could vanish without explanation feels completely out of character.
People who knew him describe a disciplined and structured individual, someone whose career revolved around precision and responsibility. Those traits make the mystery of his disappearance even harder for them to process.
Local law enforcement has emphasized that the search remains active and ongoing. Investigators continue to pursue every credible lead while asking the public to help review surveillance footage that might provide clues.
Missing person cases happen every day across the United States. Most receive little national coverage, but when the missing individual spent decades working inside high level defense research programs, attention naturally expands.
People begin asking questions about the context. Where was he going? Who did he meet with last? Was there anything unusual happening in his life in the days before he disappeared?
At this stage, investigators have not released any evidence suggesting foul play. Authorities have also not indicated that the disappearance is connected to McCasland's past work. Right now, the case remains exactly what officials describe it as, a missing person investigation.
For now, law enforcement is focused on the fundamentals. They are reconstructing McCasland's last known movements before he disappeared and attempting to establish a detailed timeline of that day.
Surveillance footage, phone records, and witness interviews are all standard tools in this type of investigation. The FBI's involvement could help speed up the technical side of that process, especially if digital data or communications need to be analyzed.
Authorities say they will provide updates when new information becomes available, but they are also being careful not to release details that could compromise the investigation.
The Cincinnati Hospital Chaplin that was released after 73 days in ICE detention is speaking out and saying that he was legal from Day one and has no criminal record especially one with 34 felonies! He said most of the ones detained have no criminal record especially!
This has become a xenophobic Holy Grail for white people who hate fraud, but admire Donald Trump.
Media, please get this right: It wasn’t “welfare abuse.”
It was contractor fraud.
Which is the exact kind of fraud Republicans accept — as long as it’s done by corporations.
https://t.co/7RGfhOAEf1
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