Trump’s UFO Files Reveal ‘Super-Hot’ Orbs and Flying Discs, But No Alien Proof

Donald Trump’s latest document dump on UFO sightings offers eerie tales of glowing orbs and mysterious flying discs dating back to the 1940s. Despite the spectacle, experts warn these files contain no concrete evidence of extraterrestrial life — just more unanswered questions and government secrecy.

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Trump’s UFO Files Reveal ‘Super-Hot’ Orbs and Flying Discs, But No Alien Proof

Donald Trump has unleashed a fresh batch of declassified UFO files, promising “maximum transparency” on a subject long shrouded in mystery and conspiracy. The newly released documents, sourced from the FBI, State Department, NASA, and Pentagon, span decades of unexplained aerial phenomena, including reports of “super-hot” hovering orbs, flying discs, and an eerie glowing orange light likened to the Eye of Sauron from Lord of the Rings.

The files, numbering over 160, cover incidents that remain unexplained by official agencies. Among them are sightings from as far back as 1947, when “flying discs” were reported, and moon-based phenomena captured during Apollo missions in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Notably, federal agents recounted witnessing orange orbs that emitted smaller red orbs, and one intelligence official described encountering a “super-hot” orb moving at 32 km/h during a helicopter search.

While Trump trumpeted the release on his Truth Social platform, claiming previous administrations hid the truth, experts caution against jumping to conclusions. The Pentagon’s own 2024 report explicitly states there is no verified evidence that these unidentified aerial phenomena are of alien origin. Many sightings have been debunked as misidentified aircraft or natural occurrences.

This latest UFO file release comes amid a pattern of Trump-era document dumps that promise revelations but often yield little new information, as seen with the JFK assassination and Jeffrey Epstein files. Some Republican allies hailed the move as fulfilling Trump’s promise, while critics, including former GOP congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene, dismissed it as a distraction from pressing issues like war and economic turmoil.

The Pentagon says more files will be declassified in the future, but for now, the American public is left with tantalizing glimpses of unexplained lights in the sky — and the persistent question: What the hell is going on?

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