Vance goes ‘rogue’ on UAPs: UFOs are not aliens, but ‘demons’

Vance goes ‘rogue’ on UAPs: UFOs are not aliens, but ‘demons’
The rhetoric from Vance is not accidental, as it appears to align with a shadowy group within the US intelligence services known as the "Collins Elite."

A single statement by the Vice President of the United States, J.D. Vance, was enough to make the internet community wonder whether he is serious or simply "trolling." In a stance that is causing tremors in the global scientific community and redefining White House rhetoric, the US Vice President has attributed a purely theological and spiritual dimension to the UAP phenomenon (Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena) or UFOs, shifting the scientific center of gravity toward metaphysics. This comes at a time when the Pentagon and NASA are focusing on the search for biological life from other planets or advanced technology from rival powers like Russia and China. "I don't think they're beings from another galaxy in metallic craft. I believe they are demons," he characteristically stated, adopting a position previously confined to specific religious circles.

The connection to the "Collins Elite"

The rhetoric used by Vance is not accidental, as it appears to align with a shadowy group within the US intelligence services known as the "Collins Elite." This is a group of intelligence and Department of Defense officials who, since the 1950s, have argued that UFOs are not extraterrestrial but interdimensional. They believe that these entities feed on human energy and negative emotions, and that government engagement with them constitutes a "spiritual trap." The adoption of this line by the Vice President suggests a deeper shift in how the Trump-Vance administration approaches national security: instead of light years, they speak of "folds" in reality where these entities move in and out of our world. Addressing UAPs no longer requires just missiles and radar but—according to this perspective—a form of "spiritual shielding" for the state.

Why now? The political dimension

Many analysts point out that this shift serves the conservative base of the US by linking unexplained phenomena to a Christian worldview. At the same time, it "muddies the waters" regarding actual technological breakthroughs, transforming a discussion about aerospace engineering into a debate about good and evil.

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