May 22, 2026

Close Encounters of the Comment Kind

Department of War Publishes Second Release of UAP Files

Alien files drop, but the comments want answers — and other files too

TLDR: The government has released another batch of documents about unexplained objects seen in the sky, promising more soon. But online, the bigger story is distrust: some praised the surprisingly functional website, while many mocked the timing and demanded other hidden files instead.

The U.S. government just released a second batch of mystery sky files about what it now calls Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena — basically, strange things seen in the air that officials still can’t explain. The Department of War says this is part of a huge transparency push ordered by President Trump, with more releases coming every few weeks as old records are dug up, reviewed, and cleared for the public. On paper, it’s historic. In the comments, though? Absolute chaos, suspicion, and some top-tier posting.

A few people were genuinely impressed by the rollout, and honestly, the bar is low enough that a government site simply working became a minor miracle. One commenter cheered that the videos actually streamed without breaking, calling it a refreshing sign of competent digital service. But the louder mood was distrust. Several commenters instantly treated the whole thing like a shiny distraction campaign, with multiple people cracking the same biting joke: “cool, now show us the Epstein files.” That became the unofficial chorus of the thread.

Then came the real split-screen energy: one side saying, look, there are clearly unknown objects up there and we shouldn’t pretend otherwise; the other side side-eyeing the administration so hard they barely cared what was in the documents. And yes, one commenter went full action-movie mode, arguing that phone videos aren’t enough and humanity basically needs to build special gear and take one down. So the public mood right now is less “we come in peace” and more “we clicked, we watched, we still don’t trust you.”

Key Points

  • The Department of War, with support from ODNI, says it is leading a government-wide effort to declassify and release unresolved UAP records.
  • The initiative is described as a response to President Donald J. Trump’s directive for transparency on U.S. government information about UAP.
  • The review spans tens of millions of records across many decades and requires coordination among dozens of agencies.
  • The department says the released archive covers unresolved cases where the government cannot definitively determine the nature of the observed phenomena.
  • The Department of War says additional materials will be published on a rolling basis every few weeks, while resolved UAP cases will continue to be reported separately under statutory requirements.

Hottest takes

"quatsch trying to distract us from the epstein files" — nullstyle
"impressive... very nice now lets see the epstein files" — recursivedoubts
"We need to create special equipment to find them and take one down" — illist-ell1s
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