I'm slowly losing what little confidence I had in Burchett. He always seems more eager to give excuses for why his efforts will fail (corruption, excessive secrecy), than to share a strategy that he feels might be successful.
It's clear Burchett hasn't read Garcia's UAPDA regarding the formation of a …
I'm slowly losing what little confidence I had in Burchett. He always seems more eager to give excuses for why his efforts will fail (corruption, excessive secrecy), than to share a strategy that he feels might be successful.
It's clear Burchett hasn't read Garcia's UAPDA regarding the formation of a UAP Review Board, which would report directly to the House Oversight Committee, of which Burchett is a member (the board would also report to the Senate Homeland Security Committee) This Board could potentially disclose some of the information that the UAP Caucus is seeking.
Additionally, Burchett always touts his UAP disclosure amendment in the House NDAA FY24 (sec. 1090) as pushing for total disclosure, but it's a really poorly written amendment, and I wish the media would call him on it. His amendment allows two huge loopholes for preventing disclosure, assigns no responsibility or methods of enforcement, and leverages no other existing US codes such as those granting whistleblower protection. It's clear Burchett dislikes bureaucracy, but he continually appears out of his depth within the workings of congress on this issue.
Thanks for putting this together Matt!
I'm slowly losing what little confidence I had in Burchett. He always seems more eager to give excuses for why his efforts will fail (corruption, excessive secrecy), than to share a strategy that he feels might be successful.
It's clear Burchett hasn't read Garcia's UAPDA regarding the formation of a UAP Review Board, which would report directly to the House Oversight Committee, of which Burchett is a member (the board would also report to the Senate Homeland Security Committee) This Board could potentially disclose some of the information that the UAP Caucus is seeking.
Additionally, Burchett always touts his UAP disclosure amendment in the House NDAA FY24 (sec. 1090) as pushing for total disclosure, but it's a really poorly written amendment, and I wish the media would call him on it. His amendment allows two huge loopholes for preventing disclosure, assigns no responsibility or methods of enforcement, and leverages no other existing US codes such as those granting whistleblower protection. It's clear Burchett dislikes bureaucracy, but he continually appears out of his depth within the workings of congress on this issue.