New York Daily News

LET E.T. GO FREE!

Ex-rocker: I can prove feds hide links with aliens

- BY SPENCER DUKOFF Ex-Blink-182 star Tom DeLonge says work of his To the Stars Academy of Arts & Science will “affect ... a lot of people’s belief systems.”

TOM DeLONGE knows the truth is out there.

And after leaving pop-punk band Blink-182 to focus on exploring unexplaine­d phenomena fulltime, the band’s former front man is ready to share that “truth” with the rest of the world.

Namely, that aliens exist, UFOs aren’t actually “unidentifi­ed” and that extraterre­strial technology could save humanity.

As the founder of To the Stars Academy of Arts & Science, DeLonge is working with former high-ranking officials from the Department of Defense, CIA, NSA and Lockheed Martin’s “Skunk Works” aerospace program.

One of DeLonge’s partners is Luis Elizondo, who ran the Pentagon’s top-secret, $22 million-ayear UFO investigat­ion program that The New York Times revealed in a bombshell report Saturday.

According to DeLonge, disclosure­s like the Times report are “only the tip of the spear,” and further “confirmati­on” of extraterre­strial life will continue to trickle out.

DeLonge claims the government has not only known about the existence of alien life for decades, but that the feds also have been experiment­ing with alien technologi­es.

And while this informatio­n has largely been hidden from the general public, DeLonge wants to lead what he believes will be an internatio­nal — and perhaps, one day, intergalac­tic — conversati­on about how these soon-to-be-declassifi­ed technologi­es can benefit mankind.

“I know that it’s fun to make snarky comments, but this isn’t the kind of thing to joke about,” DeLonge told the Daily News earlier this month.

“This is going to really affect a U.S. lot of people and a lot of peoples’ belief systems.” The organizati­on has three divisions — aerospace, science and entertainm­ent — and will attempt to “bring transforma­tive science and engineerin­g out of the shadows” free from “the restrictio­ns of government priorities.” DeLonge wants To the Stars to be owned by the public, which is why the company is relying on crowdfundi­ng to launch. So far, it has raised over $2.1 million from more than 2,200 individual investors. “What we’re trying to do is make sure the story of the millennia and the technology of the millennia are owned by the people from day one,” DeLonge said. “Part of our strategy has always been to throw it all out in the open so people can’t come and try to shut it down from some weird office at NATO or the United Nations or the United States or whatever.”

DeLonge hopes that To the Stars will use previously classified informatio­n about alien technologi­es to achieve breakthrou­ghs that government agencies like NASA have been uninterest­ed in exploring.

One such innovation is what DeLonge refers to as “engineerin­g the space-time metric,” which is being developed by Hal Puthoff, a longtime government physicist and current To the Stars partner.

“It’s like a time machine,” DeLonge said. “You get into this craft and you turn it on — boom! — you’re in China in one minute as a ball of light.”

Other To the Stars projects will seek to revolution­ize human space travel, combat climate change, improve national security, enhance genetics, harness telepathy and more.

“All the things (people have) heard about and seen are the first step of 20,” DeLonge said. “There’s a lot more s--t coming.”

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