Home Business NewsWhite House issues sinister claims that ‘aliens are walking among us’

White House issues sinister claims that ‘aliens are walking among us’

by LLB staff reporter
29th May 26 9:23 am

The White House has launched a provocative new “alien invasion” website accusing previous administrations of covering up what it claims was a decades-long infiltration of America — not by extraterrestrials, but by illegal migrants.

In a deliberately theatrical move blending UFO imagery with immigration politics, the administration of Donald Trump unveiled a new online platform presenting illegal immigration as an “alien invasion” that has allegedly plagued the United States for more than 60 years.

The website, styled like a declassified UFO disclosure portal, initially appears to promise revelations about extraterrestrial encounters and government secrecy.

“Aliens have been walking among us, living in our neighbourhoods, and interacting with us in our daily lives,” the site declares.

But after invoking decades of conspiracy theories surrounding hidden truths and state cover-ups, the page pivots sharply toward immigration enforcement.

“With one exception — they do not belong here,” the statement continues, before accusing previous presidents and senior officials of knowingly allowing “millions of illegals” to enter the country while concealing the scale of the crisis from the public.

The site claims earlier administrations chose to “cover it up and even accelerate the invasion”, before praising Mr Trump as the first leader willing to confront what it calls the “real danger” posed by illegal immigration.

The highly politicised campaign represents one of the most striking examples yet of the Trump White House merging internet culture, conspiracy aesthetics and hardline immigration messaging ahead of the approaching midterm elections.

Officials have openly admitted the UFO-style branding was intentionally designed to attract attention online.

One White House official told Fox News the website was created to “draw eyeballs” toward what the administration sees as the failures of previous governments on border security.

The platform includes an interactive heat map showing where undocumented migrants have allegedly been arrested across the United States, alongside a live counter tracking encounters with law enforcement agencies.

Users can search by city, offence type or suspected gang affiliation to view details of arrests, including dates, criminal charges and countries of origin, using data compiled from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

The site also contains a public tip line encouraging users to report what it describes as “suspicious aliens” directly to immigration authorities.

Critics have already accused the administration of dehumanising migrants through inflammatory language and exploiting conspiracy-style imagery to inflame tensions surrounding immigration.

The launch comes amid renewed public fascination in Washington surrounding unidentified aerial phenomena after the administration recently authorised the release of several batches of files relating to UFO investigations and alleged extraterrestrial sightings.

Earlier document dumps included military footage, intelligence reports and photographs linked to unidentified anomalous phenomena, including images allegedly captured during the Apollo missions and reports of strange objects near military installations.

Days after those disclosures, Mr Trump further fuelled controversy by posting an AI-generated image appearing to show himself escorting a handcuffed alien through a military facility.

The latest campaign reflects the increasingly unconventional media tactics employed by the Trump White House, which has frequently blended online meme culture, provocative political messaging and viral internet aesthetics to dominate public attention.

While supporters argue the strategy effectively highlights concerns over border security, opponents warn it risks trivialising serious immigration issues while deepening political polarisation through fear-driven rhetoric.

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