The previous three years have produced unprecedented exopolitical developments. During the presidential campaign of 2015 and 2016 PRG was able to draw the political media into the politics of Disclosure on a national level generating over 400 mainstream English language articles connecting the extraterrestrial issue to a presidential candidate. The Democratic campaign had no choice but to directly speak to the extraterrestrial/Disclosure issue on eleven occasions leading up to the election. All of that is archived.
The year 2017 saw the launching of the To the Stars Academy of Arts and Science (TTS/AAS) including the most powerful group of persons ever brought together in the public sector to address the extraterrestrial question. This was quickly followed by major articles in the New York Times and the first authorized release ever by any nation of gun camera footage of UAP intercepts.
The TTS/AAS includes many career professionals who worked within the military/intelligence/industrial complex. They are backed up by dozens of others still working within the MIIC. At this time the TTS/AAS is leading the Disclosure advocacy movement with more announcements imminent.
The TTS/AAS has also raised several million dollars to advance its initiatives. PRG fully supports its work and hopes it raises millions more. Funding is critical to the success of advocacy efforts challenging national policy.
While PRG is happy to follow, there is still much it can contribute to the movement. The TTS/AAS of necessity must operate under certain constraints. Clearly they must not release classified material, or break any non-disclosure agreements. Most certainly there are factions within the MIIC that oppose their initiatives. The TTS/AAS must be careful to not provide a basis for such factions to impede or close down their organization. The degree of difficulty faced by the TTS/AAS in going forward should be appreciated by all.
PRG operates from a very different platform. It has never signed government related non-disclosure agreements or held security clearances. It is intentionally not set up as a non-profit so it can function as freely as possible under the First Amendment. It does not need to service any objections from any group within the government.
The Disclosure advocacy movement transcends terrestrial politics, but it is not immune from political developments. The current degree of political chaos and instability has slowed progress and made fund raising more difficult.
Fortunately, PRG does not need millions of dollars to move forward, A few tens of thousands will make it possible to continue to impact the Disclosure process. Such funding would make it possible to set up a permanent office in Washington, DC, develop new media materials, seek more interviews on national television in European countries and more.
Your support is needed now so PRG will be ready to move quickly when the political circumstance begins to normalize.
Thanks,
Steve Bassett
Los Angeles, CA
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