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Government Moves to Alien.gov, But Are We Getting the Real Story?

Americans deserve straight answers, and this week the federal government finally took a step in that direction by registering the domains aliens.gov and alien.gov and by moving a trove of UFO and UAP files into a public portal run out of the Department of War. The registration of Aliens.gov was first reported on March 18, 2026, and government spokespeople have been teasing the public to “stay tuned” while the Pentagon publicly posted new, never-before-seen videos, photos, and source documents on a new site in early May.

Let’s be clear: conservatives should applaud any move toward transparency that strengthens national trust and oversight, not celebrate sensationalism. But registering a domain and tweeting an alien emoji is not the same thing as real disclosure — Aliens.gov was registered and left dormant for weeks while the Defense Department chose war.gov/ufo as the outlet for released material, leaving people to wonder who’s driving the narrative.

The Pentagon’s new repository claims to publish vetted files on unidentified anomalous phenomena, yet officials admit much of the material is “not yet analyzed” and will be released on a rolling basis. That’s better than secrecy, but it’s not a substitute for rigorous, timely analysis and answers about any potential threats or breaches of airspace; in other words, transparency must be matched with accountability.

This shouldn’t be politicized into theatre for late-night hosts or cable pundits. Conservatives should demand that the release process be driven by sensible oversight — Congress must use its committees to quiz agency experts, and the Department of War and AARO must be required to separate genuine unknowns from misidentifications, foreign probes, or classified national security programs. The public has a right to know whether our skies are being challenged and whether our military has the resources to respond.

We also need to call out the media and the left’s instinct to turn every hint of mystery into hysteria or theatrical “disclosure” moments. Real patriotism looks like sober investigation, not showmanship; registering a sensational domain name without a clear mission invites mockery and undermines the credibility of any serious release. The American people deserve methodical releases, not marketing stunts.

Finally, this moment is an opportunity for patriotic Americans to push for sensible transparency that protects classified sources and methods while giving voters the facts they need about potential threats. Demand hearings, demand timelines, and demand that any future revelations be accompanied by expert analysis and a plan to secure our airspace — anything less is politics over security, and hardworking Americans will not accept that trade.

Written by Staff Reports

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