DayToday: Pentagon to Declassify UAP Report to Congress; Massive Triangular Craft spotted over China
World News & Politics
Friday; June 25th, 2021 - Hello everybody! Below are some of the most interesting events that happened throughout the course of the last few days. In total, we’re looking at four events that took place in DayToday. It seems to be an interesting day, to say the least.
The Pentagon will supposedly deliver its complete UAP Report to Congress today; What should we expect?
In December, Congress passed a $2.3 Trillion omnibus spending & Coronavirus-Relief Package which contained a stipulation ordering the Department of Defense & the Director of National Intelligence to deliver an unclassified report on Unidentified Aerial Phenomena (UAPs) within six months. Those six months are about up, and while we were initially expecting a report by the end of June, Politico reported that it may be made public as soon as June 25th. Regardless of what may lie within it, the release will be the most direct and substantive U.S. Government account of what’s been flying through restricted airspace for decades.
On June 3rd, the New York Times reported that senior administration officials who were briefed on the report had found no evidence that the objects seen by Navy pilots over the past decade are not of this Earth. The report also found that the “vast majority” of more than 120 incidents analyzed did not involve U.S. Military or Government technology, which appears to “eliminate the possibility that Navy pilots, who reported seeing unexplained aircraft, might have encountered programs the government meant to keep secret.” Senior officials ruling out U.S. technology “is about the only conclusive finding in the Classified Intelligence Report”, in which, they claimed that “without hesitation”, they were positive it was not U.S. technology.
Congress has made clear that the report must include “detailed analysis of Unidentified Aerial Phenomena data and intelligence” collected by the Office of Naval Intelligence, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and the Unidentified Aerial Phenomena Task Force, which is a program created by the Department of Defense to “detect, analyze, and catalog UAPs that potentially pose a threat to U.S. National Security.” It must address whether they may be “attributed to one or more foreign adversaries”; more specifically, whether there’s any indication that “a potential adversary may have achieved breakthrough aerospace capabilities that could put United States strategic or conventional forces at risk.”
Most recently, multiple reports came from China a few days ago on a massive triangular-shaped craft that was hovering over mainland China. Multiple videos have captured the incident from a variety of different angles, leaving people questioning their safety in the event that this is the secret technology of an adversary.
In summary, we’ll most likely hear of more classified encounters of UAPs from military officials when the Pentagon releases its report. The Government will deny all claims of extraterrestrial life, and they will also deny all claims of it being U.S. technology. When the report is released, we’ll be doing a deep dive into what’s exactly been released. Make sure you check back next week!
The House Judiciary Committee has voted “YES” on a Bill that has the power to break up Big-Tech in a 21-20 Vote
On Thursday, the House Judiciary Committee passed a bill in a 21 to 20 vote that requires Big-Tech companies to sell their other lines of Businesses they run on their platforms if they also compete against them, which aims at completely minimizing the power of some of the country’s most successful companies. Rep. David Cicilline (D-RI), Chair of the Antitrust Subcommittee, claimed that the tech giants have not been playing fairly and must choose between either running a platform or competing against it.
“Google, Amazon and Apple each favor their own products in search results, giving themselves an unfair advantage over competitors.”
- Rep. David Cicilline
On Wednesday and Thursday, the Committee also approved of multiple bills that prohibit Big-Tech companies from disadvantaging rivals who use their platform. They also passed a bill that will require Big-Tech companies who are contemplating mergers to show that the deal they are making is completely legal, rather than requiring antitrust enforcement to prove they are not. Finally, they also approved of a measure that requires platforms to allow users to transfer their data elsewhere.
“This legislation attempts to address that in the interest of fairness, in the interest of competition, and the interest of meeting the needs of people whose privacy, whose data and all the rest is at the mercy of these tech companies.”
- Nancy Pelosi; Democratic House Speaker
President Biden’s Department of Justice sues Georgia over new “Voter Suppression Laws”
The Justice Department has announced on Friday that it’s suing the state of Georgia over its new voting restrictions, claiming that several provisions of the new legislation were made with “discriminatory purpose”, according to Kristen Clarke, head of the Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division.
“Our complaint alleges that recent changes to Georgia’s election laws were enacted with the purpose of denying or abridging the right of Black Georgians to vote on account of their race or color, in violation of Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act”
- Merrick Garland; Attorney General
The lawsuit, which is being overseen by Kristen Clarke & Vanita Gupa who’s the Associate Attorney General, is the “first of many efforts” to ensure every voter has access to a ballot box. Clarke claimed that the legislation demonstrated what she called “intent to deny or abridge” Black citizens’ access to voting, which came as Georgia had made massive strides in voter turnout during the 2020 elections. Georgia’s legislation supposedly hands greater control over election administration to the GOP-controlled state legislature.
President Biden has called the legislation “Jim Crow in the 21st Century”, while Gov. Brian Kemp has insisted that there is “nothing Jim Crow” about the Georgia law. The legislation contains a bundle of provisions that create obstacles for absentee voting; such as strict ID requirements, fewer drop boxes, and tighter request windows for absentee ballots. It also makes it a crime for any outside groups to provide food and water for voters waiting in line at polling stations, aiming at stopping voter persuasion by third-party groups.
“We have not been blind to the dramatic increase in menacing and violent threats against all manner of state and local election workers, ranging from the highest administrators to volunteer poll workers… Such threats undermine our electoral process, and violate a myriad of Federal laws.”
- Joe Biden; President of the United States
This will be the first major voting rights lawsuit filed under the Biden Administration. Florida & Iowa have also passed laws cracking down on voting standards, while other states such as Texas, New Hampshire, Arizona, and Michigan have legislations that are in the works.
That is all for today! I hope you enjoyed this segment of DayToday, please be sure to stick around for more this coming Monday! Also, be on the lookout for an upcoming letter on Unusual Option-Flow Analysis if you’re into investing!
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