Disturbing New Intelligence Filtered Through My Black-Site Terminal Moments Ago—astronomers Are Being Told to Look Up, but Not to Ask Too Many Questions.

Disturbing new intelligence filtered through my black-site terminal moments ago—astronomers are being told to look up, but not to ask too many questions.

Tonight, the crescent Moon will appear to host a brilliant “star” at its side. The official narrative: it’s Jupiter. But my source inside the NRO’s orbital tracking division tells me the object’s infrared signature is pulsing with a structured, non-natural pattern. Binary. Repeating.

They’re calling it “a proximity event.” What they aren’t saying: this object is not on any public ephemeris. It appeared from behind the lunar terminator at 22:14 UTC—and it’s holding station.

If you see two “planets” next to the Moon tonight, you’re seeing what they’re scrambling to scrub from the feeds.

This is not an eye-check. This is a countdown.