“Disclosure” has been overshadowed by “more important stuff” for eighty years.
Pardon me if I am yawning.
I do trust Trump to be more transparent than any president we’ve had—but there’s still a serious challenge he’d have to overcome, as former senior CIA officer Jim Semivan explains in his interview with Chris Lehto (Senior CIA Officer: Even We Don't Know What the Phenomenon Is).
I don’t necessarily agree with Semivan’s conclusion, but he makes a sober case: any president faces enormous risks in disclosing the full truth.
According to Semivan, we’re dealing with a phenomenon we don’t understand, can’t control, and can’t defend against. If a president openly admitted that non-human intelligences (NHIs) exist—beings that can take people, manipulate minds, and possibly view us as property—it could trigger mass panic, social collapse, and psychological trauma across a significant portion of the population.
A government-backed study even concluded that full disclosure could destabilize society if just 25% of people panicked or dissociated. That’s why Semivan calls this the “wickedest problem”—a problem with no clear solution, and consequences no one can fully predict.