One thing that I have noticed is that there is, what appears to me, to be a certain disinformation campaign going on by certain individuals that have a focus of ”debunking”, downplaying, dismissing, and redirecting. Some of this come from named individuals active on X/Twitter, and they seem very engaged, beyond the point of being what I would consider a normal sceptic. I did see one of them be confronted by another individual who claimed that he had received information that the first fellow had an association with the CIA in the past and asked him to confirm or deny that, but no reply. Just more of the above.
Then we have what could be described as people with (claimed) insider knowledge who either directly or indirectly attempt to dismiss certain observations, footage and so on.
This Sarah Gamm that come up in the below quote is one I’d put in that category. As you note the story she’s spinning is being called out to be a lie towards the end.
Weaponized...
"That [Jellyfish] video is not a UAP. I can't provide what it is because the analysis to that is classified." ~Gamm
"[Sarah Gamm] straight up lied." ~Corbell
~~~
Gamm, Corbell, Knapp and the Devious Jellyfish Lies
Vinnie - @disclosureteam_: "So did you see the Jellyfish video that Jeremy Corbell released during your time at the [UAP] Task Force?"
Sarah Gamm: "So yes, I have seen that...I did see it. I cannot provide what I know the analysis to be. But this is also giving me a good moment to say something that is very important to me.
"So, first off, that video is not a UAP. I can't provide what it is because the analysis to that is classified and I'm not (laughs) risking that. But, I'm going to say (laughs)...like, it's so frustrating for people. I did not do the analysis on that video. So the people that did...You end up getting somebody that does unauthorized disclosure, which, in the Intelligence Community, is leaking information. So like a Snowden. Snowden went in, leaked information on an unauthorized disclosure. That's illegal!"
(Audio was shaky so forgive me if I got any of that partial transcript wrong. It seems that she started to say, 'That's a felony,' and then changed to, 'That's illegal.' Maybe I'm hearing things. And to compare a leak of an alleged UAP (that some claim is a bunch of party balloons) to what Snowden did is laughable.)
Gamm: "And when these people leak stuff like this, you leak 5% of what it is. They don't provide what the analysis actually was."
(So, is she also opposed to the Go Fast, Gimbal and Tic Tac (FLIR1, which originally leaked in 2007) being released through a loophole or back door in 2017/2018, by Elizondo and Mellon? We don't have the full story (or full videos) on those videos, either, but they were extremely important in getting the media talking about this subject again and getting the general public engaged.)
Gamm: "So it's really frustrating from a person on my end that some of the data that was leaked, from when I was on the Task Force, we would spend very good efforts on and someone would leak a still photo or a screen shot, or whatever, and only provide that screen shot. And that's not the story. That wasn't our hard work. That was...and I can't provide examples of the instances of that I'm talking about
"But, I just wanna say, whoever's leaking these videos, screen shots, whatever? Please stop. It's not helping. It's not helping anything and it's illegal."
(My opinion: Whoever's leaking these videos, screen shots, or whatever, of alleged UAP, please keep doing it.)
~~~
Weaponized from December 31st, 2024
@g_knapp: "Toward the end of the year, in an attempt to debunk the Jellyfish video, somebody comes forward and says she worked for UAP TF. She was a key member of UAP TF, the UAP Task Force. She was a key staffer, maybe...and one report, she was the manager of UAP TF. And boy, we looked at that Jellyfish video. We dismissed that whole thing, we debunked the whole thing long ago. Well, that's total bullsh*t, because we know when people associated with the Task Force got it. It was after they left the Task Force. They saw it a year later. We wanted to get their impression of it, and we showed it to them - you can guess who they are - in a hotel room, long after they had left the service. UAP TF did not have that video, they did not analyze it. We can get into a whole discussion about whether the person in question ever actually worked for UAP TF, or was an associate, or had something to do with it. But there was no debunking of the Jellyfish video, that's crap. But there was an interesting attempt to dismiss it, wasn't it?"
@JeremyCorbell: "Yeah, so that, unfortunately, that was Sarah Gamm, and it really took me by surprise because I'd met her, and, you know, we communicated some. But she straight up lied. And it was so bizarre to me, she could have called me, could have texted me. The claim she made was that UAP TF had resolved the Jellyfish UAP case, that she was part of the analysis team."
(From the interviews I have watched, Gamm did NOT claim to be part of the analysis team.)
Corbell: "And we know that's bullsh*t because we did show it to the top dogs, the UAP TF, after UAP TF ended, and they had never seen it before. We showed them in a hotel room in Huntsville, Alabama, and so we know that's a false claim, that this was never analyzed by UAP TF in any way. They didn't have it. AARO didn't have it until way later, after our reporting, and they obtained the original footage. And they only posted part of it. So it was very bizarre to me that somebody would make a verifiably-false claim. And I could have jumped on the news and and said, 'Oh, that's complete bullsh*t.' But I didn't. I was like, watching this to see why would somebody do this.
"So that is, again, a fundamentally bullshit lie that maybe people, you know, will just pick up on online and try to, you know, massage that into some false reality. I don't know what's going on with that, but I do know it to be absolutely fictitious, and that's very disappointing. It's disappointing because our jobs as journalists are to inform the public about matters that are for the public good and to attack something fictitiously like that. There's gotta be a reason, I don't know. We'll have to figure that out later."
Knapp: "Well, it seemed to me one possible guess that you and I kicked around in private was that maybe somebody was trying to goad us into reaching out with people who had maybe helped us obtain information, and then people could figure out if they're watching our phones or email. They could figure out who we're talking to about this and identify them. Because they don't know who helped us get this information. So, if that was the case, that was pretty devious."
That’s just an example. But my point is that I’m seeing signs of a disinformation campaign that seems to aim to ”bury the story.” My guess is that this has been instigated by a group of people within the intelligence community, but it appears to not have a huge amount of people involved in it. Nor any real indication of networks of bots on X to amplify the message, and so on. That leads me to think that this is not organized by an intelligence agency through its normal operating structure, and lack access to the full capacity and means of an agency. I think that what we’re seeing is a group within the community that is operating off the books, utilizing assets that they are able to call on personally without getting it authorized as an official project. It has made me think that various claims from various people that there exist a shadowy group of ”gatekeepers” within the government, the goal of which is to stop disclosure, hold some merit.