Collection: UAP

Since records began, every culture has recorded anomalies in the sky — and every power structure since has tried to control the narrative.

They've been in our skies and in our oceans since before we had words for them. They're in tablets and carvings. They're in religious iconography. They're in medieval art — from paintings to the Battle of Nuremberg woodcuts of 1561. They're in every culture's sacred texts. Whatever they are, they are not new.

What's new is that the US Navy released the footage. The Gimbal. The Go Fast. The Tic Tac filmed by the USS Nimitz performing maneuvers that violate known physics — no wings, no exhaust, no explanation. Commander David Fravor saw one up close in 2004 and has been saying so on the record ever since. The jellyfish UAP. The drone hordes over Langley. The three orbs escorting MH370 into something that has no name. The skies over New Jersey. The language shifted from UFO to UAP as if the rebranding would make it easier to manage. It hasn't.

Some of what's up there is ours — reverse engineered, built by defense contractors operating in black budget programs that don't appear in any public ledger. Some of it isn't. Whether it comes from space, from another dimension, or from further down the timeline than we're supposed to be looking — those with security clearances can't seem to agree, and the ones who are talking are saying all of the above. Whether Lou Elizondo was a genuine whistleblower or a carefully managed limited hangout is a fair question. But psyops, like lies, are most effective when they're grounded in the truth.

This is the collection for everyone who stopped looking up in wonder and started looking up for answers.