Amidst a general lack of expressed interest in other media sources, Billy Cox ruminates upon what may lie behind the tardiness of the government’s UAP report to Congress. The Terry Lovelace example Billy offers is itself controversial, but the possibility Billy offers for the lateness of the October 31st-mandated documents—secret and public—is both logical and rather frightening. Countries outside the US are facing the UAP/UFO problem, too, per Vincent Costes’ UFOs Are No Laughing Matter for Us: Behind the Scenes of France’s Real Life ‘Ovni’ Hunters. Costes’ explanation of the GEIPAN UAP analysis model is excellent, and a hopeful and refreshing note is struck in that organization’s projected work with the NASA effort. However, Keith Basterfield covers some UAP Questions Asked in 2022 Australian Senate Estimates Hearings. With credit to Aussie researcher Grant Lavac, Keith’s article demonstrates the lack of official Australian government interest in the UFO/UAP subject and coincidentally casts questions about US government claims of including “many allies and international partners into their discussions on UAP.” And see Keith’s follow-on The CSIRO and Those 22,500 Items. The results of his and Grant Lavac’s FOIAs to the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation not only comport with his preceding article, but are nearly a laughing matter themselves. (WM)
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