Put that in your pipe and smoke it, skeptics. After being widely derided for going public with his belief in aliens, former Blink-182 rocker Tom DeLonge confirms he is in the possession of several pieces of material from a crashed UFO.
Back in 2015, the rocker founded The To the Stars Academy of Arts & Sciences, or TTSA for short. Earlier this year, a 6-part documentary put together by TTSA, “Unidentified,” aired on the History Channel, prompting a confirmation from the US Navy just last month that military footage included in it was, in fact, legit.
The confirmation, though taken by many to mean “the army has just confirmed aliens exist,” came to legitimize DeLonge and his team of investigators in terms of UFO expertise. Now, in a New York Times profile in which the former rocker talks about his project and their work, he reissues an older claim: they have physical evidence to prove we have been visited by UFOs.
It comes in the form of “exotic material samples from UFOs,” he says, refusing to comment further. If you’re itching with curiosity about what that may be, fret not, because this isn’t the first time DeLonge is talking about it.
TTSA actually tweeted about the samples in June this year, saying the structure and composition are unlike anything we’ve seen in either commercial or military equipment. They also said they were working on independent research to determine the material’s attributes and possible applications.
DeLonge himself posted about it one week ago, saying they’ve already made some breaks in the investigation, with amazing potential.
“Please then, also consider what we at TO THE STARS ACADEMY have been saying (consistently) for 24 months, in parallel to the videos being released, about our acquisition of PHYSICAL EVIDENCE of a crashed UNIDENTIFIED AERIAL VEHICLE,” he writes on Instagram. “These pieces already show attributes of EXTREMELY ANOMALOUS ENGINEERING and our continued scientific study over the past year with the @tothestarsacademy “A.D.A.M. Project” is pointing to what we believe will yield NUMEROUS potential Aerospace breakthroughs. Yes, we also look forward to the next revelation that may very well be within our Aerospace Division at @tothestarsacademy.”
Though DeLonge says the pieces come from a crashed UFO, he doesn’t offer theories about what may have caused it fall out of the sky or, for that matter, where the rest of it could have gone.
The confirmation, though taken by many to mean “the army has just confirmed aliens exist,” came to legitimize DeLonge and his team of investigators in terms of UFO expertise. Now, in a New York Times profile in which the former rocker talks about his project and their work, he reissues an older claim: they have physical evidence to prove we have been visited by UFOs.
It comes in the form of “exotic material samples from UFOs,” he says, refusing to comment further. If you’re itching with curiosity about what that may be, fret not, because this isn’t the first time DeLonge is talking about it.
TTSA actually tweeted about the samples in June this year, saying the structure and composition are unlike anything we’ve seen in either commercial or military equipment. They also said they were working on independent research to determine the material’s attributes and possible applications.
DeLonge himself posted about it one week ago, saying they’ve already made some breaks in the investigation, with amazing potential.
“Please then, also consider what we at TO THE STARS ACADEMY have been saying (consistently) for 24 months, in parallel to the videos being released, about our acquisition of PHYSICAL EVIDENCE of a crashed UNIDENTIFIED AERIAL VEHICLE,” he writes on Instagram. “These pieces already show attributes of EXTREMELY ANOMALOUS ENGINEERING and our continued scientific study over the past year with the @tothestarsacademy “A.D.A.M. Project” is pointing to what we believe will yield NUMEROUS potential Aerospace breakthroughs. Yes, we also look forward to the next revelation that may very well be within our Aerospace Division at @tothestarsacademy.”
Though DeLonge says the pieces come from a crashed UFO, he doesn’t offer theories about what may have caused it fall out of the sky or, for that matter, where the rest of it could have gone.
“The structure & composition of these materials are not from any known existing military or commercial application,” says COO Steve Justice "we are focusing on verifiable facts and working to develop independent scientific proof of the materials' properties & attributes." pic.twitter.com/GUbPBSPl7M
— To The Stars Academy (@TTSAcademy) July 25, 2019