Republican Member Of The Republican Party Congress Calls UFOs An Angel Of God

A member of Congress from the Republican Party, Eric Burlison of Missouri, has publicly expressed the idea that UFOs may be angels sent by God. Burlison, who has received classified information about the phenomenon, conveyed this sensational theory in an amateur podcast this week.

"They may not be in full accordance with the Bible narrative, but when I use the term'miracle'," he told That UFO Podcast on Tuesday, January 16. "For me, it's a synonym with extra-dimensional creatures."

"In many different scripts, including Bibles and others, it's really how you describe the messenger of God or the angel," he added.

Burlison's comments follow statements by other Republican Congressmen, Tim Burchett, who told reporters last year that he believed the 'firstbab of the Book ofTEN was pretty clear about UFO sightings.'

Burlison made his statement Tuesday in a program dedicated to discussing unresolved air mystery, the 'That UFO Podcast' hosted by Andy McGrilen in England.

@RepEricBurlison joined me to disclose his UAP involvement, David Grusch, SCIF's & more in this special update pod recorded minutes ago #UPO #UAP #NHI #SCIF #Grusch #Alien pic.twitter.com/v3fhCYkxrJ

Burlison emerged for a'special update podcast' after a classified UFO briefing from the Home Supervision Committee last Friday, which included a series of allegations made by former Grusch intelligence officer - who testified under oath that the US military and its defense contractors contained evidence of a UFO that had fallen, a 'catch' found, and even UFO-related deaths.

"When I read Grusch's report, which is public and can be read by anyone he explains that one of the theories is that what we are dealing with are extra-dimensional or inter-dimensional creatures," said Burlison.

Although Grusch has publicly discussed the theory that what is now called an unknown phenomenon or UAP may come from higher dimensions posed by physicists, those concepts do not appear in an unclassified version of his complaint.

The 'dimensional or interdimensional' hypothesis also does not appear in what has been published from Grusch's written statement which was first submitted for approval to the Pentagon's Pre-Publication and Security Defense Office (DOPSR).

Despite this, Grusch answered Burlison's question about this theory under oath, during an open hearing by the House Supervision Committee last July.

A foreigner who is technologically sophisticated enough to travel billions of light years up here and somehow incompetent to survive, is something I consider somewhat impossible, Burlison said in the hearing.

Their remarks highlight the craze for UFO speculation in Washington DC over the past seven months, sparked by whistleblower David Grusch's testimony that the Government has planes from outside the earth.

Marine Congressional and veteran Mike Gallagher, who also serves on the House Supervision Committee along with Burlison and Burchett, suggested in June that UFOs may be man-controlled time travel aircraft from the future.

Gallagher compared this scenario to a 1984 film plot, 'Theten.' The legislator of the Republic of Wisconsin also voiced his hypothesis that UFOs 'can actually [from] ancient civilizations that have been hiding here and suddenly appeared,' in a similar June appearance at the Pat McAfee sporting chat show at ESPN.