The U.S. government teases UAP transparency with the 2025 Disclosure Act—breakthrough or just more smoke and mirrors? Dig into the truth at Ashesonair.org.
On March 12, 2025, a bipartisan crew of senators dropped the “UAP Disclosure Act of 2025” into the ring, aiming to declassify Unidentified Aerial Phenomena records. The bill, detailed on Congress.gov, promises to pry open government files, but with caveats—national security can still lock doors tight. This follows the Pentagon’s March 10 report, which tagged 26% of 510 UAP sightings as balloons, 16% as drones, and 2% as aircraft, leaving 42% unexplained (defense.gov). Is this a win for truth or a polished PR stunt?
The Act’s roots trace to last year’s push—Schumer and Rounds’ 2024 effort got watered down, stripping eminent domain and a review board, per InsideGovernmentContracts.com. Now, it mandates a National Archives collection, but postponements can stretch 25 years if the President deems it a “grave threat” (archives.gov). Burchett’s been loud, calling for full disclosure (foxnews.com), yet the establishment spins this as progress. Really? With 42% of sightings still a mystery, the public’s left with crumbs—balloons and drones don’t explain pilots’ tales of physics-defying craft.
The narrative hails this as a “transparency triumph,” but let’s not chase fool’s gold. The Pentagon’s All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) has logged over 800 reports (defensescoop.com), and a March 12 Navy pilot’s testimony before Congress claimed UAP outpace our tech (c-span.org). If the government’s serious, why the loopholes? This could be theater—dangling hope while guarding old secrets. Civilians deserve answers, not redactions.
Let’s push back. Contact your lawmakers at usa.gov/elected-officials to demand unfiltered UAP data. Share your thoughts at Ashesonair.org comments—every voice cracks the cover-up. This is Ashes, shining light on the shadows.
Sources
- Congress.gov for UAP Disclosure Act of 2025 details
- U.S. Department of Defense for UAP report
- Inside Government Contracts for legislative background
- National Archives for postponement criteria
- Fox News for Burchett’s statements
- DefenseScoop for AARO report numbers
- C-SPAN for Navy pilot testimony
- U.S. Government Elected Officials Directory for advocacy contacts













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