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Aliens.gov: What Is the Government Hiding from Us?

The sudden registration of aliens.gov by the federal .gov registry has conservatives and patriots rightly asking questions about what the federal government is preparing to release to the American people. Public database entries show the domain was added to the .gov registry on March 17, 2026, and the registration metadata points to government control, not a private prank.

Remember that President Trump publicly said he would direct agencies to release files related to unidentified aerial phenomena, so the timing of this domain registration is not happening in a vacuum — it lines up with promises of a formal disclosure process. Americans deserve facts, not theater, when an administration teases revelations about matters that touch national security and cultural truth.

Conservative viewers will note that Dr. Steven Greer, who has pushed for disclosure for decades, appeared on Newsmax’s Finnerty to warn about the risk of deception and psychological operations around UFO narratives. Greer told Rob Finnerty that actors in the national security apparatus could stage or exaggerate events to preserve secrecy for classified programs, and those warnings should make any honest reporter or citizen wary of government spin.

Technically, the .gov namespace is administered through the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, which handles approvals and management of federal domain registrations, so the presence of aliens.gov in the registry is an official act, however opaque the public-facing details remain. That means this is not some random farmed URL — it was placed under the government’s control and can be used in whatever manner the executive wants.

Public reaction has predictably split between hopeful disclosure advocates and skeptical citizens who suspect the site could be about immigration policy or even a calculated distraction from other scandals. Whatever the final use, conservatives should reject the reflex to accept official narratives at face value and instead demand durable proof: raw records, unredacted documents, sworn testimony, and clear chain-of-custody for any physical evidence.

This is a moment for healthy skepticism, not partisan giddiness. If the administration intends to reveal historic intelligence about nonhuman phenomena, it must do so transparently and under oversight — not through theatrical website drops or curated briefings that leave more questions than answers.

Hardworking Americans should insist on accountability: congressional oversight, independent experts, and a public record that respects both national security and the public’s right to know. We are patriots before we are believers or skeptics, and we will not let Washington turn a potential truth into another exercise in manipulation.

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