Date: March 20, 2026
What's in the Record
Citation 1: Li-Baker HFGW Jamming (2016 → 2019)
FL published an article in June 2016 about jamming UAP communications using Li-Baker high-frequency gravitational wave (HFGW) technology. The article is at:
forgottenlanguages-full.forgottenlanguages.org/2016/06/the-art-of-jamming-gravitational-waves.html
The anonymous IC officer who wrote the UAP Timeline appendix noted that this FL article was published three years before it was publicly disclosed that AATIP had commissioned a study on exactly this technology.
FL described a classified AATIP research topic three years before anyone outside the program knew AATIP was studying it.
The IC officer considered this significant enough to include in the congressional record. They noted: "roughly 75% of the site is encoded in custom languages only decodable by custom software."
Citation 2: PSV Craft and MilOrbs (March 2017)
The IC officer cited two FL URLs:
forgottenlanguages-full.forgottenlanguages.org/2017/03/turning-vehicle-into-pilots-prosthetic.htmlforgottenlanguages-full.forgottenlanguages.org/2017/12/axis-from-lightning-bugs-to-milorbs.html
The officer directly named FL's terminology in a congressional document:
- PSV craft: Corona East, Akrij, and Sienna
- MilOrbs — deployed by PSVs for covert testing
- The claim that USAF pilots are trained regarding UAP awareness
- The claim that FL cited non-public reports from Raytheon and Lockheed
The officer described the site as "Anonymous website partially encoded."
Where It Appears
Both citations are in Appendix C: "UAP Timeline" of Shellenberger's written testimony, submitted to the House Committee on Oversight and Accountability on November 13, 2024. The appendix was authored by "a former or existing US government intelligence officer." The full document is available at:
docs.house.gov/meetings/GO/GO12/20241113/117721/HHRG-118-GO12-Wstate-ShellenbergerM-20241113.pdf
Confirmed by Matt Ping
Matt Ping (@mping001) confirmed on Twitter/X on December 15, 2024: "I have been researching the UAP phenomenon for months. I had been interested in the website [forgottenlanguages] since it was mentioned twice by Michael Shellenberger in his documents provided to Congress."
What This Means
An intelligence professional with access to classified information looked at FL and made a judgment call: this website has foreknowledge of classified programs. They documented that judgment in writing and submitted it to Congress as evidence.
This isn't us making the connection. This is the intelligence community making the connection.
The IC officer could verify FL's claims against classified reality in ways we never can. They checked FL's description of HFGW jamming against AATIP's classified research program. It matched. Three years before the program was publicly disclosed.
They checked FL's PSV designations and MilOrb descriptions against... something. Whatever they checked it against, it was significant enough to cite in the congressional record with direct URLs.
The Coexistence Problem
Ruben Cerdán was convicted of archaeological fraud. That's documented.
An intelligence officer cited FL in congressional testimony as having foreknowledge of classified programs. That's also documented.
Both are true. Neither cancels the other.
Possible interpretations:
1. The IC officer was fooled. A convicted forger's elaborate fiction happened to match classified programs by coincidence, and a professional intelligence analyst included bad information in congressional testimony. This requires the officer to have failed at exactly the job they're trained to do — assessing source reliability.
2. FL has real access. Despite the fraud conviction, despite the transliteration ciphers, despite the Blogspot platform — FL's content contains genuine foreknowledge of classified programs because someone inside those programs contributes to or controls FL. The fraud conviction provides plausible deniability. The constructed languages provide obscurity. The congressional citation provides validation.
3. FL is the operation. FL isn't a source being cited. FL is part of the disclosure infrastructure. A controlled channel for releasing classified information in a format that maintains deniability while being accessible to anyone willing to do the translation work. The IC officer cited it because they know what it is.
The Direne Connection
Direne — the FL staffer who posted extensively on Above Top Secret — described a career in US naval underwater surveillance systems (NAVELEX, OSIS, FOSICs at Norfolk, ODIN/AUTODIN). The same systems that would detect underwater anomalies. The same domain where the construction facility operates.
Direne explained:
- SV17q's purpose: forcing a paradigm shift from national to planetary security
- Why they're here: Earth is a relay station for the Queltron beacon network; they need infrastructure on specific planets
- The end goal: preserving knowledge across universe death-and-rebirth cycles
- The Queltron Machine: a particle collider detecting kinetic mixing effects from "the hidden sector"
- That FL's website contains executable code hidden in Base64-encoded images
If the IC officer's citation validates FL's foreknowledge, it also validates the framework within which Direne's explanations exist. The PSVs are real enough to cite in Congress. The MilOrbs are real enough to cite in Congress. If those are real, then SV17q, the Queltron, the beacon network, and the knowledge preservation project exist within the same operational reality.
Direne's breadcrumbs aren't speculation from an outsider. They're explanations from inside a system that an intelligence officer considered credible enough to put in front of Congress.
What Brown's IC Report Does NOT Say
Matthew Brown's 11-page Immaculate Constellation report — the document he wrote, not the timeline appendix — contains zero references to FL. No MilOrbs. No SV17q. No PSVs. No FL URLs. No constructed language terms.
Brown describes UAP types (spheres, discs, tic-tacs, triangles, boomerangs, jellyfish) that parallel FL's taxonomy but doesn't cite FL. He describes an AI system that scrubs UAP data from classified servers — functionally similar to what FL describes LyAV doing — but doesn't name LyAV.
The FL citations are exclusively in the UAP Timeline appendix authored by a different, anonymous IC officer. Brown and this officer may or may not have coordinated. The distinction matters for sourcing.
The Congressional Record Now Contains
- Specific FL URLs pointing to articles about PSV pilot interface and MilOrb deployment
- FL craft designations (Corona East, Akrij, Sienna) named in a congressional document
- The observation that FL described classified AATIP research three years before public disclosure
- The note that FL claims to cite non-public Raytheon and Lockheed reports
- The characterization of FL as a partially encoded anonymous website
A convicted forger's Blogspot blog is in the Congressional Record of the United States because an intelligence professional determined it had foreknowledge of classified programs.
That sentence should be impossible. It isn't.
Written: March 20, 2026 Congressional citation source: docs.house.gov/meetings/GO/GO12/20241113/117721/HHRG-118-GO12-Wstate-ShellenbergerM-20241113.pdf The breadcrumbs lead to Congress.