Hearing was about more than "little green men or flying saucers"
At the beginning of today's meeting, Representative Tim Burchett said lawmakers were "not bringing little green men or flying saucers into the hearing", and instead were going to just "get to the facts".
Testimony ranged from witness encounters with unexplained objects that defied physics, to pilots being too afraid of "stigma" to speak about their encounters, and alleged retaliation against whistleblowers, as well as allegations of a huge government cover-up involving "reverse engineering" of recovered craft and recovery of "non-human" biological evidence.
But beyond today's testimonies, the meeting held an importance simply by taking place. Discussions of UAPs and UFOs has gone from shadowy backroom meetings held by enthusiasts, or held under cover, to a full-blown televised panel where the topic was treated with the same level of severity as any other matter of national security.
The issue has seen lawmakers from both parties coming together, calling for investigations and transparency. Almost all lawmakers focused their questioning on the topic up for discussion today, rarely straying into politics, in a rarity for televised congressional hearings.
Florida Representative Jared Moskowitz summed the issue up, saying: "Many Americans are deeply interested in this issue. And it shouldn't take the potential of non-human origin to bring us together."