The "Disclosure Secrecy" doesn't add up when viewed globally, and makes me doubt the whole thing
I think Disclosure is generally seen in the wrong way on this sub, but that "wrong way" is American's purely seeing through an American only lens when surely it would be a global phenomena?
Government secrecy, control, power, CIA cover-ups - these are all very American concepts. In countries like France the military industrial complex has nowhere near the power they do in the U.S, and political system isn't anywhere near as corrupt. The power is really with the people in that country and governments and people in authority are HEAVILY scrutinised and will be ousted if needed.
What I'm saying is that a secret government, a "them", military blacks ops with billions of dollars missing, mass cover-ups cannot exist in France. So are we saying that this has been happening for decades and a country like France has no knowledge of it?
Then take the Soviets/Russia - if this is real they they would know about it, and would likely have craft on their own. Russia is desperate to stop U.S military support for Ukraine, do you honestly think Putin wouldn't use that against the U.S if he could? it would cause chaos.
When you view it globally, holes start appearing in the "story"