Imagine uncovering technologies that could deliver affordable, planet-saving energy — cutting bills, slashing emissions, and accelerating climate repair. Disclosure could also unite people across borders: if we are not alone, we’re all on the same team.
Breakthrough propulsion might shrink global travel from hours to minutes. Open scientific collaboration could trigger advances in materials, medicine and computing. Just as importantly, a real investigation would rebuild public trust by replacing rumours with records, and stigma with facts.
Let’s start with a quick update: the old name “UFO” (Unidentified Flying Object) has been replaced by “UAP” — Unidentified Anomalous Phenomenon.
If you’re not yet up to speed: UAPs are no longer a fringe “conspiracy theory”. That dust has settled. Yet the jaw-dropping revelations that have become public have somehow skirted mainstream news coverage. Why? That’s a separate discussion — but it’s a big one.
So, for just a moment, set aside automatic scepticism. If even one of the following is true, the implications for energy, science and public trust are enormous:
This site assembles primary sources and serious leads. If the BBC applies Watergate-level rigour here, the public will be better informed — whichever way the facts fall.
Don’t you think — as a UK licence payer or a concerned citizen anywhere — that the BBC should investigate this on our behalf? It’s a publicly funded organisation, accountable to the people of the UK.
And if even a fraction of what’s alleged is true, the upside is historic: clean, abundant energy that could accelerate decarbonisation, restore trust in institutions through sunlight and accountability, and unlock scientific breakthroughs we can scarcely imagine.
Start with a guided trail, then dive into the library of sources.
Christopher Sharp has been the most active UK journalist investigating the UAP issue from a British perspective. He founded Liberation Times, a specialist outlet dedicated to this unfolding story.
Any BBC reporter beginning an investigation should first liaise with Christopher Sharp. His reporting traces UK government involvement, identifies potential gatekeepers, and connects with international whistleblowers.