stranger than heaven: Why A Sudden Spike In Unreported UFO Sightings Has Intelligence Experts Questioning The Official Narrative
In the past 72 hours, a surge of anonymous reports from within the aviation and defense sectors has surfaced, detailing encounters described as "stranger than heaven" — a phrase now trending among a network of former intelligence analysts. The precise details are being kept under an unofficial gag order, but internal emails leaked to a small group of independent journalists reveal a startling pattern: multiple credible sources claim to have witnessed aerial phenomena exhibiting "anti-gravity propulsion" and "signal jamming capabilities" that surpass any known human technology. The question being asked is not whether these objects exist, but who benefits from the sudden, coordinated effort to dismiss them as misidentified weather balloons. With government contracts for next-gen surveillance systems set to be renewed, the timing of this disclosure—or lack thereof—feels less like a scientific curiosity and more like a strategic power play. As one retired CIA officer quipped, "If they told us the truth, it would be stranger than heaven. So they're telling us nothing, and expecting us to thank them for it."