There is compelling evidence we have threats to global security not from this earth, according to Tennessee congressman Tim Burchett — and it’s time the American people learned the truth.
Burchett appeared on John Michael Godier’s Event Horizon podcast last week to discuss the government’s cover-up of extraterrestrial technology. The congressman, who sits on a House committee investigating UFO sightings, claimed that alien spacecrafts can travel at the speed of light, fly underwater and turn people into “charcoal briquettes.”
According to Burchett, the government has been covering up UFO sightings since 1897 when an alleged spacecraft crashed into a windmill in Aurora, Texas. A local paper reported that the pilot “was not an inhabitant of this world” and the logs of his travels were written in “unknown hieroglyphs.”
“Let’s just turn loose the reports, quit with the redacted reports that look like Swiss cheese with everything whited out or blacked out, and just give us all the information and let the American public decide,” Burchett said.
Burchett’s claims come just a month after whistleblower David Charles Grusch reported that the US government is in possession of at least a dozen non-human spacecrafts which it is working to reverse engineer. Grush, who served in the Unidentified Aerial Phenomena Task Force from 2019-2021, claims that the information was illegally withheld from Congress.
Despite the closed-door briefings Burchett has attended, he compared the relationship between intelligence agencies and congress as a game of “cat and mouse.” In February, Burchett said he and Representatives Matt Gaetz and Anna Luna were promised “to see some things” at a UAP briefing in Florida that they were later denied.
“Sure enough, they were not going to allow us to see any of it. They said we didn’t have the clearance and I said, ‘What clearance?’ We have the highest levels of clearance as congressmen.”
In Junel, author Michael Shellenberger reported that he had spoken with several high-clearance government officials who corroborated Grusch’s claims. Shellenberger added that the government has rejected proposals to allow private contractors to work on the spacecrafts.
“We can’t have it both ways. If you think there is nothing there, then you should have no objection to Congress, representing the American people, finding out. The claims are that these are real objections and that they exist at military bases with military contractors. If they are not there, nobody should object to people looking.”