Сообщение аэрокосмического инженера о том, что аэрокосмические компании просят сотрудников не давать интервью и ссылаться на AARO в Twitter.

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Твит аэрокосмического инженера ретвитнул Росс Култхарт. Может ли это означать, что Кондорман является одним из его источников, или Росс просто случайно ретвитит твиты инженеров. Я, честно говоря, не знаю, но интересно, что эти ВКС внутри себя сейчас просят сотрудников не говорить об этом и обращаться в ААРО еще до принятия закона.

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48 комментарий для “Сообщение аэрокосмического инженера о том, что аэрокосмические компании просят сотрудников не давать интервью и ссылаться на AARO в Twitter.”
  1. Does this mean the companies are trying to have the communication and updates come from AARO to stop the chaos of chatter etc or….

    (hopefully not but likely) these companies are really going to hide every drop of info and item they have…

  2. AARO is like a repeat of the Condon Report trick they pulled back in the 60s. Send all info to AARO where the director can eventually reach his preconceived conclusion. Why Kirkpatrick is allowed to continue when it’s clear he’s been compromised is madness

  3. This is where things get muddy and how conspiracies flourish.

    A private company’s best move through this, whether they have alien tech or not is to tell their employees to shut up and direct everything to the government.

    In the case of public companies, this is doubly important because your stock price could be significantly impacted by both a confirmation or a denial of involvement.

    I’ve worked at companies where bad industry marketing issues were at play and everyone gets an email saying «the company line is (x), direct any further questions to (y)»

    I wouldn’t take anything from a private or public company as hints of anything, personally. Unless an employee leaks something juicy, anyway.

  4. Is this not standard practice? Employees are generally not allowed to speak on behalf of the company. Referring to AARO might be something, but an aerospace company that doesn’t have exotic materials would probably do the same thing.

  5. Tweet by aerospace engineer retweeted by Ross Coulthart. Could this mean that Condorman is one of his sources or does Ross just randomly retweet engineer tweets.

    I honestly don’t know, but it’s interesting that these aerospace corps internally are now asking employees not to talk about it and refer to AARO even before the legislation is passed.

  6. Tbf my company has explicitly said I would be reprimanded too if I spoke to the press about any incidents related to my company. Leave that for the PR department.

    I dont work for aerospace, but some of my coworkers have. Talking to the press has ALWAYS been a bad move as an employee not in PR regardless of where you work unless you make cookies.

  7. Man, this Blackvault guy is really trying hard to discredit any whistleblower. There is some serious ego problem he should be working on instead of trying so hard to stop disclosure from happening.

  8. I mean, AARO’s job is clearly to continue the obfuscation, to have a place to report UAPs to, with the confidence that this place you reported to can be counted on to pretend nothing at all happened.

  9. AARO hired a company specialized in stopping whistleblowers:

    [https://www.reddit.com/r/UFOs/comments/142uf1s/breaking_aaro_hired_a_company_specialized_in/](https://www.reddit.com/r/UFOs/comments/142uf1s/breaking_aaro_hired_a_company_specialized_in/)

    Multiple whistleblowers have testified to AARO that the US has recovered multiple UAP. AARO has refused to provide this information to congress:

    [https://public.substack.com/p/us-has-12-or-more-alien-space-craft](https://public.substack.com/p/us-has-12-or-more-alien-space-craft)

    AARO is not trusted by whistleblowers:

    [https://www.liberationtimes.com/home/pentagon-unable-to-confirm-or-deny-discovery-of-materials-originating-from-non-human-intelligences-or-unknown-origin-within-secretive-programs](https://www.liberationtimes.com/home/pentagon-unable-to-confirm-or-deny-discovery-of-materials-originating-from-non-human-intelligences-or-unknown-origin-within-secretive-programs)

  10. I think my company is leaning into it, we had a newsletter go out with a UAP cartoon on it. But then again, I’ve heard the rumor mill around here say we are pushing for disclosure, but also trying to offload UAPs at the same time.

  11. This could simply be companies telling their employees not to get involved in this media hype. They could be worried about dragging the company into the public spotlight, or employees hurting their careers for some temporary popularity.

  12. As an aerospace engineer I can say with near 100% certainty that this is because the press questioning is wasting company dollars and engineering time. A single Top Secret cleared engineer costs a program at LEAST $200 an hour so having their time «wasted» pondering questions about programs that they probably aren’t even involved in is wasted effort. Companies like mine have teams who’s job it is to handle these kinds of things and at this point disclosure is in the DoD’s court, not the MIC’s else they risk losing future contracts from the government.

  13. People have to realize 99% of the aerospace industry has absolutely nothing to do with studying UAPs. These companies are just like any other company, they don’t want some low level guy spilling his personal theories to fox News then the next day : «AEROSPACE INSIDER CONFIRMS EXISTENCE OF UAP PROGRAMS» . To an extent every aerospace company will probably be harassed relentlessly until we find out who actually has UAP in their possession. This is nothing newsworthy it’s just PR damage control done by every company in this industry.

  14. I like how this person talks as if Aerospace companies have this folder with » all things not from earth, don’t call it alien tech».

    Like I get there is information in private sectors, but can we not act like every company out there is in the know?

    Also credentials much?

  15. This doesn’t necessarily mean that Condorman is one of his sources, but this does seem to indicate that certain aerospace companies trust AARO to handle their press inquiries (regarding UAP things) directly. I don’t think that’s a big deal

  16. Makes sense. Aerospace cos need to appear serious. If I was Lockheed PR right now, I’d be working to ensure we didn’t look nefarious or un-serious, and I’d assume profit motive might work on employees wanting «go viral.»

  17. How would the response differ if they were/weren’t holding advanced non-human tech? I don’t think this is evidence or even an indicator. A lack of denial isn’t evidence of guilt. it’s just pleading the fifth which is a right in the US for very very good reasons. To me, this reads as «don’t spend your time answering questions regarding UAP. Just direct the questions to this one department».

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