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  • Britain’s X Files: The Government’s Secret Paranormal Investigations Revealed

    Britain’s X Files: The Government’s Secret Paranormal Investigations Revealed

    A new documentary series on Sky History is pulling back the curtain on the UK own X Files classified government documents proving that British authorities formally investigated ghosts, UFOs, and paranormal phenomena for decades. Investigative journalist Tim Tate has gained access to recently declassified files from police, military brass, and even intelligence agencies.

    For years, the United States has dominated the conversation around government investigations into the paranormal. But a new documentary series is revealing that Britain had its own hidden history and it is equally fascinating.

    Britain X Files airs Tuesdays on Sky History, and investigative journalist Tim Tate has gained access to recently declassified files from police, military brass, and even intelligence agencies.

    What in the Files

    The series reveals that British authorities came remarkably close to confirming the existence of the paranormal on multiple occasions:

    • Police investigations: Officers formally documenting ghost sightings and haunted location reports
    • Military briefings: Classified reports on UFO sightings submitted to high command
    • Intelligence agency interest: MI5 and other agencies apparently tracked paranormal phenomena
    • Official inquiries: Several formal government investigations that were later quietly buried

    The documents span decades, showing a consistent pattern: serious officials taking bizarre reports seriously, compiling evidence, and then nothing. Many files simply end without conclusion.

    As TVMaze reports, deep beneath the streets of London sit thousands of highly classified and previously top-secret government files which disclose the details of extensive military, spy agency and police investigations into the paranormal.

    The Revelation

    The paper trail is surprisingly extensive and full of odd details. But here key point: these are not crackpot investigations they are sober, detailed reports from professionals whose job was to take potential threats seriously.

    Episode 5 airs Tuesday, March 24, 2026, and continues to reveal what authorities found when they actually looked into the paranormal rather than dismissing it.

    Why It Matters

    1. Precedent for Disclosure: If the UK government was investigating these matters officially, what did they find? As Space.com reports, the U.K. official government investigation of UFOs can be traced to a group formed in 1950: the Flying Saucer Working Party.

    2. Institutional Memory: These files represent a hidden history of how establishments grappled with the unexplained

    3. Comparison to U.S.: Britain investigations ran parallel to American programs

    4. Modern Relevance: With the current U.S. disclosure push, other nations may follow suit

    The series raises uncomfortable questions: If authorities took this seriously enough to investigate, what did they discover? And why was it kept secret?

    Read more about Britain X Files on Sky History and learn about the UK UFO history from Space.com.

  • Joe Rogan Just Pushed the Netanyahu Death Conspiracy Mainstream

    Joe Rogan Just Pushed the Netanyahu Death Conspiracy Mainstream

    In a viral clip from The Joe Rogan Experience, Joe Rogan reacted to conspiracy theories about Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu being dead — and said, essentially, “they’re both dead.” This is significant because Rogan has one of the biggest audiences in the world.

    In a viral clip from The Joe Rogan Experience #2471 (released March 20-21, 2026), Joe Rogan reacted to conspiracy theories about Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu being dead — and said, essentially, “they’re both dead.”

    This is significant because:

    • Joe Rogan has one of the biggest audiences in the world
    • He’s not typically known for conspiracy content
    • The clip has gone mega-viral

    What Rogan Said

    During the episode with comedian Mark Normand, Rogan reacted to suspicious videos circulating online amid heightened Israel-Iran tensions. His response: claiming Netanyahu and his brother are dead.

    As JFeed reports, Rogan appeared to buy into wild online conspiracy theories claiming Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is dead, even suggesting his brother was killed in a recent missile strike.

    His comments quickly gained traction across social media, where pro-Israel users accused him of echoing Iranian disinformation and veering into conspiracy theories.

    The Context

    The conspiracy has been building for weeks:

    • March 13, 2026: Netanyahu’s “six finger” video goes viral; AI conspiracy explodes
    • March 17, 2026: Netanyahu posts a new video amid rumors; Yair Netanyahu (usually posting 30-35 times/day) goes silent
    • March 20-21, 2026: Rogan episode drops; clip goes viral

    The context: AI-generated “proof of life” videos, the infamous “six finger” incident, and Elon Musk’s AI Grok fueling the fire by falsely labeling footage as AI-generated.

    Why This Matters

    Rogan is mainstream:

    • 60+ million YouTube subscribers
    • His show has been credited with shifting opinions on everything from COVID to politics
    • When Rogan “goes there,” millions of people follow

    The conspiracy has legs:

    • It’s not just fringe anymore — it’s trending globally
    • Even AI is getting in on the action (Grok mocking “proof of life” videos)
    • The unusual silence from Yair Netanyahu adds fuel

    The “proof of life” problem:

    • In the age of AI, any video can be fake
    • When leaders need to “prove they’re alive,” something has changed
    • This could be the new normal for global leaders

    The Israeli Response

    Netanyahu has posted multiple videos trying to quell rumors. The “six finger” incident was explained as a camera glitch.

    As Euronews reports, officials have blamed poor quality footage for the confusion: “If you look at the higher quality footage, it clearly says 2026.”

    But the conspiracy persists.

    The Bigger Picture

    Joe Rogan’s comments represent something larger: in a world where AI can generate realistic videos of anyone saying anything, the concept of “proof of life” has been fundamentally broken.

    When a leader posts a video to prove they’re alive, skeptics can now claim it’s AI-generated. When Grok — Elon Musk’s AI — starts falsely labeling real footage as fake, the situation becomes even more chaotic.

    Whether Netanyahu is alive or dead, one thing is clear: we’ve entered an era where seeing is no longer believing — and even a comedian on Joe Rogan’s podcast can push a global conspiracy into the mainstream.

    Read more about the story on Matzav.com.

  • Varginha at 30: The Brazilian UFO Incident That Won’t Die

    Varginha at 30: The Brazilian UFO Incident That Won’t Die

    In January 1996, something extraordinary happened in Varginha, Brazil. Three young women claimed to have encountered a strange, non-human creature near a military barracks. Now, 30 years later, Brazil is commemorating the incident with a new museum and documentary — and the mystery remains.

    In January 1996, something extraordinary happened in Varginha, a small city in Brazil. Multiple witnesses — including military personnel — reported seeing a strange, non-human creature. Three young women claimed to have encountered an “extraterrestrial being” near a military barracks.

    Now, 30 years later, The Guardian is covering the anniversary, and Brazil is commemorating the incident with new efforts to document what happened.

    What Happened in 1996

    The encounters:

    • Multiple sightings of a strange, small creature with “oily” skin
    • Three women — Liliane, Valquíria, and Angela — claimed to have seen the being on January 20, 1996
    • Military units were deployed; witnesses say they saw the creature being captured

    The creature:

    • Described as approximately 1.5 meters tall
    • “Oily” or “wet” looking skin
    • Large eyes, no hair
    • Moved in an unusual way
    • Emitted a bad smell

    The aftermath:

    • An army investigation was launched
    • A police intelligence officer who reportedly grappled with the being died from an unexplained infection
    • Rumors of a cover-up have persisted for 30 years

    The Cover-Up Narrative

    For three decades, conspiracy theorists have argued that:

    • The Brazilian military captured the creature
    • The incident was covered up at the highest levels
    • Physical evidence was hidden or destroyed
    • Witnesses were silenced or intimidated

    The Brazilian army has consistently denied these claims.

    The 30th Anniversary

    To mark the anniversary:

    • New museum: A Varginha museum dedicated to the incident has opened
    • Documentary: A new documentary tells the story
    • Army report: The army published their full investigation to “commemorate” and rebuff conspiracy theories

    As The Guardian reports, one witness said: “I’ve seen the devil” — describing the encounter that has haunted her for three decades.

    Why It Matters

    Varginha is significant because:

    1. Multiple witnesses: Not just civilians — military personnel saw something

    2. Documented aftermath: The officer’s death adds mystery

    3. Government involvement: The army investigated, but conclusions are disputed

    4. Cultural impact: Varginha is now called “Brazil’s UFO capital”

    It’s one of the most significant South American UFO incidents — and one that refuses to go away.

    The Legacy

    Thirty years later, Varginha remains a touchstone for UFO researchers worldwide. The testimonies of the three women, the deployment of military units, and the mysterious death of the police officer have all contributed to a story that has only grown with time.

    Whether you believe the official story or the conspiracy theories, one thing is clear: in Varginha, something happened on that January day in 1996. And after 30 years, the world is still talking about it.

    Learn more about the Varginha incident and its legacy on The Guardian.

  • The Illusion of Disclosure: Why We’re Not Getting the Truth

    The Illusion of Disclosure: Why We’re Not Getting the Truth

    A new piece from The Paracast newsletter is making waves in the UFO community. The argument: We are living in “what should be the long-awaited age of disclosure” — but it’s all an illusion.

    In the world of UFOs, few concepts are as tantalizing — or as frustrating — as “disclosure.” For decades, researchers and enthusiasts have waited for the moment when governments would finally reveal what they know about extraterrestrial life.

    But a new piece from The Paracast newsletter by Tim R. Swartz suggests something darker: we may never get the truth, not because it’s being hidden, but because there’s nothing to hide.

    The Argument

    Swartz makes several key points:

    1. More information, less truth:

    • We have more UFO data than ever
    • But the fundamental questions remain unanswered
    • Disclosure “happens” in increments that lead nowhere

    2. The government’s game:

    • Official channels release information slowly
    • It’s never enough to confirm anything
    • But it’s enough to keep the conversation alive

    3. The “disclosure industry”:

    • Books, podcasts, conferences all profit from the mystery
    • Everyone has a stake in keeping it unresolved
    • True disclosure would put people out of work

    4. The timing is always “soon”:

    • Disclosure has been “coming” for 70+ years
    • Each generation gets the same promise
    • Nothing ever actually arrives

    The Evidence

    Looking at recent events, the pattern is clear:

    • Trump announced disclosure — but no files released yet
    • aliens.gov was registered — but nothing on the site
    • Pentagon reports thousands of cases — but “no evidence of aliens”
    • AARO has 2,000+ cases — but most are “misidentified”

    The pattern is consistent: activity without results.

    Why This Matters Now

    This piece is resonating because:

    • The hype is at a peak: Trump’s announcement, Spielberg’s movie, everything
    • But the substance is missing: Still no smoking gun
    • People are starting to notice: The gap between talk and action

    The Alternative Interpretation

    Of course, there’s another way to read it:

    • The truth is being protected: Someone, somewhere knows something
    • Disclosure would be chaos: Maybe they’re right to hold back
    • The cover-up is real: The lack of disclosure proves the conspiracy

    Swartz acknowledges this but argues the simpler explanation is that there’s “nothing there” — and the disclosure game is just theater.

    The Bigger Picture

    Whether you believe the cover-up theory or Swartz’s “nothing there” interpretation, one thing is clear: we’ve been here before.

    Every generation gets its “imminent disclosure.” Every few years, there’s a new announcement, a new documentary, a new wave of hope. And every time, the results are the same: silence, denials, and promises of “coming soon.”

    The disclosure debate may be the only mystery that never gets solved — and that’s exactly what makes it so compelling.

    Read more about “The Illusion of Disclosure” from The Paracast.

  • Meet Palm Beach Pete: The Jeffrey Epstein Lookalike Who Went Viral

    Meet Palm Beach Pete: The Jeffrey Epstein Lookalike Who Went Viral

    A video of a man in Florida who looks remarkably like Jeffrey Epstein went viral — sparking immediate conspiracy theories that Epstein is still alive. But there’s a twist: the man has come forward to say “I’m not Jeffrey Epstein.”

    A video of a man driving a convertible in Palm Beach, Florida went viral across social media — and the internet immediately erupted with conspiracy theories. The man looked nearly identical to Jeffrey Epstein. But as multiple fact-checks have concluded, it’s just a remarkable case of resemblance.

    What Happened

    The viral video: A man was filmed driving in Palm Beach, Florida wearing sunglasses and a backward white baseball cap. The resemblance to Jeffrey Epstein was undeniable — gray hair, distinctive facial features, and the same general aura. The video exploded across social media with users claiming: “Epstein isn’t dead!”

    The reveal: Multiple fact-checks concluded it’s a lookalike. The man himself has spoken out: “I’m not Jeffrey Epstein.” He identified himself as “Palm Beach Pete” — and says he’s just a regular guy who happens to look like one of the most infamous figures in modern history.

    As CBS 12 reports, the resemblance isn’t lost on Pete, but he wants to distance himself from “such a vile human being.” He told a podcast host: “I could be the guy, but I’m not the guy.”

    He continued to denounce any conspiracy theories on Instagram, saying in a video: “I’m so not Jeffrey Epstein, I’m just me being me.”

    The Parallel to Other Conspiracies

    This follows a pattern that has become disturbingly familiar:

    • “Epstein is alive” videos have circulated before
    • Some have been proven AI-generated
    • Some are lookalikes like Pete
    • The conspiracy refuses to die

    This is part of a larger trend: in a world of deepfakes and AI, “seeing is no longer believing.”

    Why It Keeps Happening

    The Epstein mystery: No one knows exactly how he died (officially ruled a suicide). The conspiracy theories have only grown. People want to believe there’s more to the story.

    The lookalike factor: Epstein had a distinctive appearance. It’s not surprising someone resembles him. But in the age of AI, any resemblance becomes “evidence.”

    The timing: The video emerged amid ongoing Epstein file releases. The conspiracy ecosystem is very active right now.

    The Bigger Picture

    “Palm Beach Pete” is a case study in:

    1. Confirmation bias: People see what they want to see.

    2. Viral mechanics: Conspiracy content outperforms debunking.

    3. AI chaos: We can no longer trust video evidence.

    4. The death of “proof”: In a deepfake world, everything is questionable.

    As TMZ reports, Pete found out he was going viral when friends started blowing up his phone. Now he’s become an unlikely social media sensation — for all the wrong reasons.

    Whether he’s a lookalike, an AI生成, or something else entirely, “Palm Beach Pete” represents something larger: we live in an era where the truth is no longer self-evident, and the line between evidence and illusion has never been blurrier.

    Read more about the story on Yahoo Entertainment.

  • The Pentagon Says No Aliens — But 2,000+ Cases Say Otherwise

    The Pentagon Says No Aliens — But 2,000+ Cases Say Otherwise

    The Pentagon just dropped a new UFO/UAP report — and it’s giving the UFO community exactly what they didn’t want to hear. Hundreds of new incidents — still no evidence of extraterrestrial life.

    The Pentagon’s office dedicated to investigating unidentified aerial phenomena has released a new report — and it’s generating more heat than light. AARO (All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office) has received “several hundred” new reports, bringing their total caseload to over 2,000 documented incidents dating back to 1945. Yet the official conclusion remains unchanged: there’s still no evidence of aliens.

    What the Report Says

    Key points from the new report:

    • Hundreds of new cases: AARO has received “several hundred” new reports since the last assessment
    • Most are misidentifications: The review includes cases of misidentified balloons, birds, and satellites
    • Some defy explanation: A small percentage remain unexplained
    • The official stance: “To date, AARO has discovered no evidence of extraterrestrial beings, activity, or technology”

    As Tucson.com reports, the Pentagon has received “several hundred” new UFO reports, but maintains there is still no evidence of extraterrestrial life.

    The Numbers

    • 2,000+: Total reports AARO is now carrying (dating back to 1945)
    • Hundreds: New reports received recently
    • 21: Cases identified as “unexplained” in earlier reports
    • 0: Confirmed extraterrestrial evidence

    The Timeline

    • 2022: Biden administration creates AARO under the Pentagon
    • Early 2026: Caseload exceeds 2,000 documented incidents
    • February 2026: Trump announces UFO disclosure directive
    • March 2026: aliens.gov and Alien.gov domains registered
    • Now: New report confirms “no evidence of aliens”

    The Frustration

    The UFO community is reacting with a mix of:

    1. Skepticism: “Of course they say that — they’d cover it up”

    2. Distrust: The same government that registered aliens.gov is saying there’s nothing there

    3. Demands for more: If there are 2,000+ cases, why only a fraction made public?

    There’s a fundamental credibility gap: the government says “nothing to see here” while simultaneously registering alien domains, holding workshops, and investigating thousands of cases.

    What’s Next

    AARO is accepting reports from government employees, military, and contractors. Plans are underway to expand to the general public “sometime in the future.”

    The Pentagon held an invite-only workshop in March 2026 to “shape the future of UAP research.”

    But the fundamental question remains: If there’s nothing there, why is the government so engaged?

    The Bigger Picture

    This is a classic credibility gap:

    • The government says “nothing to see here”
    • But they’re spending resources investigating
    • They registered alien domains
    • They’re holding workshops
    • There are 2,000+ cases

    Something is happening. Whether it’s aliens, classified technology, or something else — the official story doesn’t match the activity level.

    As DefenseScoop reports, the government is very serious about UFOs — even if they’re not yet ready to confirm what they’re investigating.

    The disclosure debate continues: either the Pentagon knows more than they’re letting on, or they’re genuinely investigating phenomena they don’t understand. Either way, 2,000+ cases is a lot of nothing — or a lot of something.

    Read more about the Pentagon’s UAP investigation on AP News.

  • Piltdown Man: The Greatest Scientific Hoax in History

    Piltdown Man: The Greatest Scientific Hoax in History

    In 1912, a remarkable discovery was made near the village of Piltdown in Sussex, England. An amateur antiquarian claimed to have found a human skull and a fossilized ape jawbone. It was called “Piltdown Man” and was going to revolutionize our understanding of human evolution. There was just one problem: It was a fake.

    In 1912, the scientific world was hungry for evidence of human evolution. Darwin’s theory was controversial, and the quest for the “missing link” was on. Then, near the village of Piltdown in Sussex, England, an amateur antiquarian named Charles Dawson made a discovery that seemed to answer every prayer.

    The Discovery

    What Dawson found in a gravel pit was remarkable: a skull cap that looked human and a jawbone that looked like an ape’s. Together, it appeared to be the “missing link” between apes and humans — the evolutionary bridge that scientists had been searching for.

    The timing was perfect. The scientific community was hungry for evidence, and Piltdown Man was going to provide it. The find was celebrated as one of the most important archaeological finds ever. It became famous overnight.

    As the Natural History Museum notes, the specimen was a combination of a medieval human skull cap and the mandible of an orangutan, with the teeth filed down to make them appear more human-like. Both bones had been chemically stained to make them appear old and fossilized.

    The Hoax Revealed

    For 40 years, Piltdown Man was accepted as genuine. It wasn’t until 1953 that scientists finally exposed it as a forgery.

    How the hoax worked:

    • The skull was actually human — but from the medieval period, not ancient
    • The jaw was from an orangutan — also modern, not fossilized
    • Both were chemically treated to make them look old
    • The teeth were filed down to make them look more “transitional”

    It took four decades for modern dating techniques to reveal the truth. When the hoax was finally exposed, it embarrassed the entire scientific establishment.

    Who Did It?

    The identity of the forger was never definitively proven, but suspects include:

    Charles Dawson: The man who “found” the bones. He had a history of fabrications and is considered the primary suspect.

    Sir Arthur Conan Doyle: The creator of Sherlock Holmes lived nearby and was suspected — though he denied any involvement.

    Martin Hinton: A zoologist at the Natural History Museum who had access to the bones and the chemicals needed to fake them.

    Most evidence points to Dawson as the perpetrator. He was known to have faked other fossil discoveries.

    Why It Mattered

    The scientific impact:

    • Piltdown Man dominated discussions of human evolution for 40 years
    • It misled generations of scientists
    • It delayed acceptance of actual transitional fossils like Peking Man

    The cultural impact:

    • It exposed how hunger for “proof” can override skepticism
    • It showed how prestige and confirmation bias can blind science
    • It’s still the template for “too good to be true” discoveries

    The Lessons

    1. Confirmation bias is powerful: Scientists wanted Piltdown Man to be real, so they ignored red flags.

    2. Authority matters: Dawson was a gentleman and an amateur — people didn’t question his integrity.

    3. Verification takes time: Without modern dating techniques, the hoax might have lasted even longer.

    4. The “missing link” obsession: The hunger for evolutionary “proof” made people sloppy.

    The Parallel to Today

    Piltdown Man is a useful lens for understanding modern mysteries:

    • When something “fits” what we want to believe, we overlook problems
    • The scientific establishment can be wrong for decades
    • New technology can expose long-held beliefs as false
    • Hoaxers exploit the gap between what we hope is true and what is true

    Whether it’s ancient aliens, paranormal phenomena, or other controversial claims, the lesson of Piltdown Man remains relevant: sometimes, what we discover says more about us than about the past.

    The Piltdown Man bones are now kept at the Natural History Museum in London — a reminder of how even the smartest people can be fooled when they want to believe.

    Learn more about the Piltdown Man hoax from the Natural History Museum.

  • Gettysburg: Where America’s Bloodiest Battle Meets Its Most Famous Hauntings

    Gettysburg: Where America’s Bloodiest Battle Meets Its Most Famous Hauntings

    Gettysburg, Pennsylvania — the site of the bloodiest battle in American history — is also one of the most haunted places in America. Civil War-era houses and buildings are going viral for capturing paranormal activity on camera.

    Gettysburg, Pennsylvania is renowned for one of the most pivotal moments in American history — the three-day battle in July 1863 that turned the tide of the Civil War. But for nearly two centuries, visitors have reported something else wandering the hallowed grounds: the ghosts of soldiers who never left.

    The History That Lingers

    The Battle of Gettysburg produced 51,000 casualties in just three days — July 1-3, 1863. The battle was so violently intense that the dead weren’t all recovered for months. As History.com reports, people claim to hear phantom footsteps, ghostly drumbeats, and echoes of musket fire and cannon blasts. Many believe these encounters are the restless souls of soldiers reliving their final moments of violence and fear.

    What makes Gettysburg unique is the combination of history, architecture, and accessibility. Many 19th-century buildings survived — houses, barns, and hotels where soldiers fought and died. Visitors can explore these locations, take ghost tours, and even stay overnight in haunted inns.

    What’s Being Captured

    Recent viral content shows a range of phenomena:

    Visual phenomena:

    • Mist-like figures walking through rooms
    • Orbs and light anomalies in photos
    • Shadows moving in empty hallways
    • Full apparitions seen by multiple witnesses

    Audio phenomena (EVP):

    • Voices captured on recorders that weren’t heard live
    • Whispered conversations in period-appropriate language
    • Sounds of marching, gunfire, and cannons when there’s no one there

    Physical phenomena:

    • Doors opening and closing on their own
    • Objects moving
    • Temperature drops in specific rooms
    • Feeling of being touched or watched

    The Explanations

    The paranormal explanation: Violent deaths create “imprints” in the environment. The energy can’t move on. Gettysburg is essentially a “recording” that plays back.

    The skeptical explanation: Electromagnetic fields from old wiring can cause hallucinations. Infrasound creates feelings of presence. Psychological expectation combined with dark environments leads to “seeing things.” Carbon monoxide poisoning in old buildings is also a documented phenomenon.

    The middle ground: Something is happening — multiple people experience it. The cause might not be “ghosts” in the traditional sense. It could be environmental, psychological, or genuinely unexplained.

    Why It’s Going Viral Now

    The “Civil War houses caught on camera” angle is trending because:

    • “Caught on camera” adds credibility — it’s not just “I felt something”
    • TikTok/YouTube algorithms favor spooky content
    • The history angle appeals to both history buffs and paranormal fans
    • Halloween-adjacent content performs well in certain months

    Ghost hunters have been documenting activity for decades with EMF meters, EVP recorders, and cameras. Now, social media is amplifying their findings.

    The Cultural Significance

    Gettysburg’s ghosts represent something deeper:

    • Unresolved trauma: A nation still processing the Civil War
    • The price of freedom: Visitors often report feeling the weight of all that death
    • Historical connection: It’s a way to “touch” the past

    Whether you believe in ghosts or not, Gettysburg remains a place where rational explanations don’t always suffice. As one paranormal investigator put it: “I once did an overnight ghost hunting trip in Gettysburg and got to witness a ghost smoke a cigarette. One of the coolest, most unexplainable paranormal things I’ve ever experienced.”

    The battlefield that defined a nation continues to captivate visitors — both living and, it seems, not quite living.

    Learn more about Gettysburg ghost tours.

  • aliens.gov: The Government’s Official Signal on Disclosure?

    aliens.gov: The Government’s Official Signal on Disclosure?

    In a move that’s sending shockwaves through the UFO community, the U.S. government has registered the domain aliens.gov. Is this the first tangible sign of disclosure — or just bureaucratic housekeeping?

    In a move that’s sending shockwaves through the UFO community, the U.S. government has registered the domain aliens.gov.

    The domain was flagged by an automated federal website tracker on March 18, 2026 — just one month after President Trump announced he would direct federal agencies to release government records related to alien life and UFOs.

    This isn’t a joke website or a fan project. This is an official .gov domain, registered by a verified U.S. government entity under CISA (Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency).

    What We Know

    • Domain: aliens.gov
    • Registration date: March 17, 2026 (appears in WHOIS records)
    • Status: Active, but currently shows minimal public information
    • Registrar: Verified U.S. government entity
    • Privacy: The public record shows “REDACTED FOR PRIVACY”

    As Forbes reports, the domain registration came a month after Donald Trump said he would declassify files related to otherworldly life.

    The Timeline

    • February 2026: Trump announces he’ll direct the Pentagon to release UFO records
    • March 2026: Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth says the Pentagon is “keen to comply”
    • March 17, 2026: aliens.gov is registered
    • March 18, 2026: The registration is flagged publicly
    • Now: Media outlets scramble to cover the story

    What It Means

    The bullish case:

    • The government is preparing to release real information
    • They’ve secured the domain name before the news breaks
    • Disclosure is imminent

    The skeptical case:

    • The domain could be for a simple informational page
    • It could be a redirect to existing resources
    • The timing could be coincidental

    The conspiracy case:

    • They’re already preparing for something big
    • The domain was registered to “claim” the space before others did
    • This is the official stamp of legitimacy for the disclosure narrative

    The Official Position

    AARO (All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office): Created in 2022 under Biden, investigates UAP reports. Has investigated 366+ new reports and published reports claiming “no evidence of alien visits.”

    Trump administration: Says they’re working on disclosure, but no timeline given.

    This domain: No official statement on what it will be used for.

    As DefenseScoop reports, shortly after Trump’s disclosure order in February, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said the Pentagon was keen to comply and had started actively working on the initiative.

    Why It Matters

    This is the first tangible, official action that suggests something is happening. It’s not just rhetoric — it’s infrastructure.

    Previous UFO disclosure efforts stalled. This time:

    • A president made an explicit announcement
    • The Pentagon says they’re “working on it”
    • Now there’s an official government domain

    Is this the beginning of something? Or just bureaucratic housekeeping?

    The domain registration is confirmed. Public interest in UAP and UFO disclosures continues to be noted in media reports. But at present, the registration of the domain does not indicate when files or information will be released.

    As Metro reports, all other information on the record is ‘REDACTED FOR PRIVACY’.

    The Big Picture

    One thing is clear: the U.S. government has officially staked its claim on aliens.gov. What happens next — and what information, if any, will be released through that domain — remains to be seen.

    For decades, UFO researchers have demanded government transparency. Now, there’s an official website waiting for content.

    The question isn’t whether aliens.gov exists — it does. The question is: what’s actually going to be on it?

    Read more about the domain on Forbes.

  • Meet Selina Avalon: The ‘New Baba Vanga’ Predicting Apocalypse in 2026

    Meet Selina Avalon: The ‘New Baba Vanga’ Predicting Apocalypse in 2026

    A UK psychic is being dubbed the “new Baba Vanga” — and she’s making some bold predictions about April 2026, World War 3, and a “great awakening.” Is this prophecy season — or just another psychic cashing in on uncertainty?

    In times of uncertainty, people turn to prophecy. It’s a psychological pattern that repeats throughout history — and 2026 is no exception.

    Enter Selina Avalon, a UK psychic being dubbed the “new Baba Vanga” — and she’s making some bold predictions about what’s coming.

    Who Is Baba Vanga?

    For context, Baba Vanga was a blind Bulgarian mystic who died in 1996. She’s famous for:

    • Allegedly predicting 9/11 (“two steel birds will fall from the sky”)
    • Predicting the 2004 tsunami
    • Predicting various world events with vague, interpretable prophecies

    She has a cult following of people who believe she could see the future. Her predictions for 2026 included a potential global war — which brings us to Selina Avalon.

    What Selina Avalon Is Predicting

    According to coverage from Daily Star, The Mirror, and other outlets, Selina has claimed to predict:

    “Great Awakening” in April

    • A major spiritual/psychological shift coming within weeks
    • Could be religious, could be consciousness-related
    • The timing is specific: April 2026

    Iran War Escalation

    • Claims the Iran conflict will “escalate to resemble World War 3”
    • She’s not predicting peace — she’s predicting expansion
    • This comes amid already heightened tensions in the Middle East

    “Conveyor Belt of World Leaders”

    • Multiple world leaders will be replaced/removed
    • Political instability on a global scale
    • A new “younger supreme leader” will emerge

    Selina characterized this future leader as “a bit like Napoleon” and “a real alpha male” who will “retaliate against the States” — but also predicted he will be assassinated.

    Her Previous “Predictions”

    Selina claims to have predicted:

    • Liz Truss’s resignation (October 2022)
    • Pope Francis’s death (last year)

    Whether these were genuinely predicted beforehand or retroactively interpreted is a matter of debate.

    The Pattern: Prophecy Season

    This isn’t random. We’re seeing a surge in prophecy content:

    1. Baba Vanga’s 2026 predictions are being recirculated
    2. Nostradamus baby went viral last week
    3. Now “new Baba Vanga” is trending
    4. Real-world tensions (Iran, Ukraine, Trump) give prophecy content fertile ground

    In times of uncertainty, people turn to prophecy. It’s a psychological pattern that repeats throughout history.

    The Skeptics’ Take

    • Retroactive fitting: Psychics often make vague predictions that get interpreted after events happen
    • Cold reading: Selina could be picking up on current events and “predicting” what already seems likely
    • The Liz Truss prediction: Was this actually predicted clearly beforehand, or interpreted after the fact?
    • The Pope prediction: This was a 90+ year old man in poor health. Not exactly a shock.

    The Authenticity Question

    Here’s the interesting thing: Whether Selina Avalon is “real” or not misses the point.

    What’s real is:

    • Millions of people are watching her predictions
    • The coverage is intensifying
    • The prophecy narrative is part of the cultural moment
    • In a world of AI, deepfakes, and uncertainty, people are seeking any source of clarity — even psychics

    The Timeline

    • October 2022: Selina claims to predict Liz Truss resignation
    • 2025: Claims to predict Pope Francis’s death
    • March 2026: “Great awakening” prediction goes viral
    • April 2026: The prophecy window

    The Big Picture

    Whether you believe in psychics or not, the phenomenon is worth watching. In a world where real events are stranger than fiction — from UFO disclosure to wars in the Middle East — the appetite for prophecy is only growing.

    Is Selina Avalon seeing the future? Or just cleverly capitalizing on the present? Either way, she’s not alone. From the “Nostradamus baby” to Baba Vanga’s recycled prophecies, it seems everyone has a prediction for 2026.

    The question isn’t whether prophecy is real. The question is: in a world drowning in information, why do we keep looking to the unknown for answers?

    Read more about the predictions on Express.co.uk.