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Disclosure Day on the Screen and on the Capitol Lawn

Disclosure Day on the Screen and on the Capitol Lawn

As this article closes, the timing rewards attention.

Steven Spielberg’s Disclosure Day arrives as more than a motion picture. It arrives at a national moment. At the SXSW festival on March 13, 2026, Spielberg told interviewer Sean Fennessey, “I have a very strong suspicion that we are not alone here on Earth right now,” and he added that he made a movie about exactly that. When Obama called aliens real on a podcast, Spielberg welcomed the gift of timing for the film. Reporting traces his renewed interest to the wave of UAP developments that began in 2017.

At that same moment, a real disclosure push filled the lawn of the U.S. Capitol. A bipartisan group of lawmakers, journalists, and UAP whistleblowers gathered to demand the release of additional government records on unidentified anomalous phenomena. The roster included David Grusch, Representatives Anna Paulina Luna, Tim Burchett, Eric Burlison, and Jared Moskowitz, along with Leslie Kean and James Fox. Their call rang clear: release the records, protect the whistleblowers, and end the secrecy.

That parallel is the point. One Disclosure Day runs cinematic. The other runs political. One opens in theaters. The other opens on the steps of Congress. Together they signal that the wall of secrecy may at last crack in public view.

The film and the gathering share one nerve. Presidents, lawmakers, whistleblowers, journalists, podcasters, late-night hosts, experiencers, and citizens now circle a single question.

What have they hidden from humanity?

This stands as more than one isolated event. It moves as a feedback wave.

The news shows talk about UAPs. The podcasts amplify the stories. Whistleblower groups draw courage from public attention. Congress answers the pressure. Congressional hearings feed the media cycle. The White House and federal agencies release files. Mainstream platforms ask former presidents about aliens. Late-night hosts turn the subject into open conversation. Spielberg carries the question to the big screen. The film then feeds the public imagination, and that imagination sends more witnesses, insiders, experiencers, and investigators toward the surface.

That is how cultural waves build.

One story becomes ten. Ten become a hundred. A whistleblower becomes a hearing. A hearing becomes a headline. A headline becomes a podcast. A podcast becomes a family conversation. A family conversation becomes a witness who says at last, “This happened to me too.”

The disclosure domino timeline

The fire raced. It jumped channels.

First, the Disclosure Day trailer entered the Super Bowl bloodstream and placed Spielberg’s alien-disclosure story in front of one of the largest mass audiences in American culture. Then Obama’s alien comments on Brian Tyler Cohen’s podcast carried the subject through the digital political-media world. Cohen works as a sharp podcaster and political commentator rather than a traditional prime-time host, so the moment showed how disclosure now travels: through clips, podcasts, YouTube, reactions, headlines, and social loops.

Then came the clarification, the walk-back, the arguments, and the reposts. The clarification kept people talking rather than closing the story.

Then Trump reacted. His disdain for Obama and for the late-night world around figures like Stephen Colbert amplified the subject rather than burying it. His reaction turned a podcast exchange into a political flashpoint. The more people argued over Obama’s meaning, Trump’s meaning, and the possible classified truth, the wider the question spread.

That is the loop.

Spielberg lit the screen. Obama’s comment gave the story oxygen. Trump’s reaction threw gasoline on the flames. Podcasts kept it moving. Late-night comedy made it public theater. News panels chewed on it. UAP channels dissected it. Whistleblower groups rode the momentum. Congress felt the pressure. The public asked more questions.

What began as sparks became a California wildfire. The wildfire then became a wave.

The congressional loop inside the disclosure loop

Congress runs its own feedback loop inside the larger cultural wave.

The old pattern held that citizens asked questions and officials refused to answer. Something different happens now. Whistleblowers testify. Hearings generate headlines. Headlines generate public pressure. Public pressure gives lawmakers political cover to ask sharper questions. Those questions produce letters, subpoenas, amendments, disclosure bills, and calls for immunity. Each move draws more witnesses toward the surface. Then the cycle begins again.

The Capitol gathering made that visible. Lawmakers, journalists, investigators, and UAP whistleblowers stood on the Capitol steps to demand transparency, the release of additional records, and protection for those who know more than the gatekeepers allow them to say.

That matters because Congress now generates disclosure pressure rather than only receiving it from outside.

A hearing becomes a headline. A headline becomes a Capitol press conference. A press conference becomes a demand for records. A demand for records becomes pressure on the White House, the Pentagon, the intelligence agencies, and career officials. Every fresh request creates another public marker, another place where secrecy has to defend itself.

This is the loop within the loop. The culture asks. Congress echoes. Whistleblowers step forward. The media amplifies. The public demands more. Congress asks again, louder.

At a certain point, secrecy stops looking stable. It starts looking surrounded.

The YouTube loop: where the wave turns personal

For me, this wave of disclosure stays concrete. I watch it move in real time.

On YouTube, the loop runs everywhere. Podcasters discuss the movie. News shows speculate about Spielberg’s knowledge, the film’s timing, and the arrival of disclosure language in the mainstream. Interview programs spotlight Spielberg and the actors. UAP channels break down every trailer, every congressional statement, every whistleblower appearance, every White House release, and every hint of something larger.

The feedback circles rather than running in one direction. A movie trailer becomes a podcast topic. A podcast clip becomes a news segment. A news segment becomes a YouTube reaction. A reaction becomes a livestream panel. A congressional hearing becomes a highlight reel. A whistleblower statement becomes a dozen interviews. A late-night joke becomes a serious question. A film promotion becomes a disclosure portal.

That is the media ecosystem I have watched for years. And I stand inside it, not outside it.

I have hosted shows on this subject. I have written articles about it. I have followed the interviews, podcasts, news clips, congressional movements, whistleblower groups, and public speculation. Now I come full circle with another podcast, another article, another attempt to connect the dots.

That is how disclosure moves now. It moves through official documents, through Congress, and through Hollywood. Most of all it moves through us: through witnesses, hosts, researchers, podcasters, experiencers, viewers, and storytellers who keep noticing the pattern and refuse to look away.

The world watches the wave. Some of us also stand inside it and help it rise.

Why the world has a stake

The world holds a stake now because the consequences turned concrete.

If even a portion of the suppressed testimony holds true, disclosure could release technologies and knowledge that save lives, heal disease, extend healthy human longevity, transform energy, clean the planet, end artificial scarcity, and shift the balance of power on Earth.

That is why the subject stays out of the box.

People sense that disclosure reaches past visitors from elsewhere. It reaches what the gatekeepers withheld from humanity here.

And if Enki moves through this current, as I believe he does, then this also becomes a matter of justice. In the Anunnaki framework, Enki stands as more than a figure from ancient texts. He is the geneticist, the protector, the benefactor, the one who guards humanity’s survival and evolution. If that current moves through disclosure now, the old order has reason to fear it.

The oligarchs, gatekeepers, profiteers, and secrecy managers have profited from a world built on sickness, scarcity, energy control, spiritual amnesia, war, and short human lives. Real disclosure could return them to their proper place. Below humanity rather than above it. Beside humanity rather than in control of it. Stewards rather than owners of our bodies, our medicine, our energy, our history, and our future.

Disclosure, at its deepest level, marks the return of what they took: truth, healing, memory, technology, sovereignty, and the right to grow into our full humanity.

We were robbed

We were robbed.

Robbed of truth. Robbed of healing. Robbed of clean energy. Robbed of longevity. Robbed of our history. Robbed of our cosmic family. Robbed of the future we were promised.

Disclosure reaches past files, craft, witnesses, and hearings. It reaches the machinery that kept humanity sick, divided, frightened, short-lived, and at war.

For experiencers, contactees, abductees, insiders, veterans, contractors, pilots, scientists, and families like mine, this carries past entertainment. This becomes survival. The secrecy around UAPs, contact, advanced technologies, hidden programs, healing science, and the deeper history of humanity has cost us more than knowledge. It has cost health, time, trust, safety, and lives.

If the testimony from Secret Space Program witnesses, experiencers, contactees, and insiders holds even partly true, then secrecy may have denied humanity access to technologies and understandings that could transform medicine, healing, aging, energy, propulsion, and consciousness itself. The Anunnaki records point to beings who lived for spans of time beyond what we can imagine now. Many contact traditions and whistleblower accounts suggest that humanity carries far greater potential for longevity, regeneration, and health than the gatekeepers allowed us to believe.

If the gatekeepers have hidden cures, life-extension technologies, age-reversal science, or advanced healing methods behind classification walls, then secrecy turns harmful rather than neutral. It moves past national security. It becomes a crime against the human future.

These secrets kill us, in fact and not in metaphor.

They kill when officials delay medicine. They kill when handlers silence witnesses. They kill when insiders fear retaliation. They kill when people vanish, face threats, suffer ruin, or die before they speak. They kill when the system keeps a civilization sick, aging, divided, and afraid while its true inheritance waits behind locked doors.

That is why whistleblower protection matters. Representative Luna framed the request as temporary or permanent immunity for whistleblowers who can reveal the locations of craft or advanced technologies. Representative Burlison urged President Trump to waive the nondisclosure agreements that bind those witnesses. Representative Burchett called out the institutional obstruction and the decades-long cover-up, and Representative Moskowitz said the American people deserve the truth.

That is the high note. If this legislation and this public pressure protect the witnesses at last, then people can tell the full story free of fear, retaliation, disappearance, or prosecution. If that happens, Disclosure Day becomes more than a Spielberg film. It becomes the name of an era.

No more war

Spielberg matters because people love stories and images. Humanity awakens through more than data. People awaken through image, emotion, recognition, memory, and shared imagination. Spielberg has always grasped that. He gave generations a language for wonder before governments stood ready to give us a language for disclosure.

Hynek gave us a language for contact. Heinlein, Asimov, and Roddenberry gave us visions of a Star Trekian civilization where humanity grows up, reaches the stars, heals its divisions, and meets other intelligences with courage in place of fear.

Perhaps that future was never a fantasy. Perhaps it was memory. Perhaps it was preparation. Perhaps it was a promise.

The wave builds now: news shows, podcasts, congressional pressure, whistleblower courage, presidential releases, late-night conversations, Hollywood storytelling, and experiencer testimony all feed one another. At first it looks like hype. Then it looks like momentum. Then it looks like a wall of water rising offshore. Soon it may become a tsunami.

And perhaps, once the law protects the witnesses and officials release the records, humanity will remember what they took from us: our history, our healing, our cosmic family, and our right to live longer, freer, healthier, more conscious lives than we ever imagined.

No more war.

No more war.

No more war.

Enough.

Let the truth come. Let the witnesses speak. Let the technologies heal. Let the children inherit a world beyond secrecy, scarcity, violence, and fear.

Amen.

Janet Kira Lessin  |  Research: Claudia Lenore  |  © 2026 Aquarian Media

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