For alien believers, November 13th is like Christmas, Fourth of July and the Super Bowl all combined into one because Congress has scheduled a hearing on UFOs, which are officially known as unidentified aerial phenomena (UAPs).


The hearing, led by Rep. Nancy Mace, R-S.C., is expected to feature several government officials and UAP experts and will likely address the several unexplained aerial sightings that have occurred around military bases over the last year. Some in the alien-believer community think that this hearing could finally confirm that the government knows about the existence of extraterrestrials who have visited Earth.


One thing that will be discussed at the hearing is the Immaculate Constellation, which is already being celebrated as a massive win for extraterrestrial fanatics on the r/UFOs subreddit (the original post has also mysteriously disappeared which is only fueling speculation that certain shadowy government figures are working hard to make sure none of this sees the light of day).



Right about now, you’re probably wondering, “What exactly is the Immaculate Constellation?” and “Why are people excited it’s being discussed at this hearing?” Both are very valid questions that I will answer for you right this very minute.


To put it simply, the Immaculate Constellation is allegedly the secret Pentagon program that contains all the information that the U.S. government has regarding UFOs. It’s basically like if Area 51 was condensed into a convenient file, and there’s speculation that the program has all the high-res images and info that the government likes to pretend they don’t have.



So why is the Immaculate Constellation’s inclusion in next week’s hearing of major significance? Well, mainly because, up to this point, its existence has only been alleged. Independent journalist Michael Shellenberger has insisted it’s real, but officially? It’s only as real as Bigfoot and the Loch Ness Monster at this point. And Department of Defense spokesperson Sue Gough has outright denied its existence. “The Department of Defense has no record, present or historical, of any type of SAP called ‘IMMACULATE CONSTELLATION,’” she wrote to NewsNation.


Obviously, this kind of denial can’t be trusted because, for decades, the government’s default strategy when it comes to aliens (and, honestly, most stuff in general) has been deny, deny, deny until they can’t deny something anymore.


That could all change if Immaculate Constellation is indeed being discussed at the hearing. Will the feds allow every single piece of information they have on aliens to be released to the general public? Probably not, but they could be forced to acknowledge that Immaculate Constellation exists, which would ultimately be a small step for us meeting aliens but a giant leap for the government finally being slightly more truthful with all of us about our outer space visitors.