Immaculate Constellation Common UAP/UFO Shapes.
Part one in a series of two...
Happy new year!
As you may recall from my last post. A leaked whistleblower report says the Pentagon is operating a secret UFO retrieval program called Immaculate Constellation, according to independent journalist Michael Shellenberger.
The report revealed for the first time the name of an alleged UAP program, stating that the executive branch has been managing UAP issues without congressional knowledge or oversight, possibly for decades.
Department of Defense spokesperson Sue Gough denied records of the alleged program.
Contained in the document were the highlights of notable trends of Common UAP/UFO Shapes in the reporting with specific examples.
Common UAP/UFO Shapes Observed in Defense HUMINT Dataset
From 1991 to 2022, the most common UAP shapes reported in this USG dataset were spheres/orbs, discs/saucers, ovals/tic-tacs, triangles, boomerang/arrowhead, and irregular/organic. The Triangles/Boomerangs/Arrowhead shapes were by far the rarest and spheres the most common. Variations of morphology within these categories are present i.e. smooth spheres and spheres with protuberances; saucers without domes and saucers with domes; smooth ovals and ovals with surface structures; jellyfish or floating "brains" with appendages; and elongated triangles as well as equilateral triangles.
Sphere or Orb: Spheres were the most reported shape, with variations ranging from smooth featureless orbs to spheres with visible openings or appendages. These objects' prevalence suggests a possible standard in UAP design or function, capable of high maneuverability and speed. The diversity within the sphere category, spanning from simple, polished appearances to more complex structures with appendages, suggests a broad range of purposes or technologies unique to the platform’s mission and/or the origin.
Disc or Saucer: Saucer-shaped UAPs, reported with and without domes, were the second-most common shape reported. Flat saucers were reported as well, these being disc like objects without pronounced domes. Traditional bi-convex UAPs are also reported in the data.
Oval or Tic-Tac: Oval-shaped UAPs were infrequently reported within the dataset, and only after approximately 2003; these UAPs either maintained a uniform "egg-like" symmetry, occasionally tapered into a teardrop shape. Cylinders with convex ends also fall into this category, and occasionally featured visible protuberances on the ‘top’ or ‘bottom’ of the otherwise uniform planform.
Part two next month.
Bonus Comic:





