Vice President Vance Exposes UFO Deception: They’re Not Aliens, They’re Demons
Vice President J.D. Vance just dropped a theological bombshell that has conservative America cheering and the liberal media in complete meltdown mode. During a candid podcast appearance, Vance declared he doesn’t believe UFOs are aliens at all. Instead, he thinks they’re demons.
“I don’t think they’re aliens. I think they’re demons,”
Vance stated with characteristic bluntness, bringing a biblical worldview to what has been dominated by Hollywood fantasy and government cover-ups.
NEW – U.S. Vice President Vance on UFOs: "I don't think they're aliens, I think they're demons."pic.twitter.com/5vHdxyUUbJ
— Disclose.tv (@disclosetv) March 27, 2026
This isn’t some off-the-cuff remark from a politician trying to score points. Vance has been obsessed with getting to the bottom of the UFO files since taking office. He promised listeners he’s going to use his remaining three years as Vice President to finally expose the truth.
“Trust me, anybody who’s curious about this, I’m more curious than anybody. And I’ve got three years of the very tippy top of the classification. I’m going to get to the bottom of that,”
Vance declared.
The Vice President even revealed his concrete plans to visit Area 51 and New Mexico to investigate personally. Multiple trips have been planned but haven’t worked out timing-wise yet. But Vance remains determined.
His reasoning draws from deep Christian theology. “Every great world religion, including Christianity, the one that I believe in, has understood that there are weird things out there,” he explained. “I naturally go when I hear about sort of extra natural phenomenon… that’s where I go to is the Christian understanding that there’s a lot of good out there, but there’s also some evil out there.”
Vance specifically called out what he sees as demonic deception. “I think that one of the devil’s great tricks is to convince people we never existed,” he said, suggesting that supernatural beings are masquerading as something more palatable to a secular age.
This perspective aligns perfectly with conservative Christian theology that recognizes spiritual warfare as real and ongoing. While the liberal establishment prefers to frame UFO phenomena in materialist terms, Vance brings a biblical lens that resonates with millions of faith-driven Americans.
The Vice President’s comments came as he discussed the Trump administration’s unprecedented transparency on Unidentified Aerial Phenomena. Since President Trump reclaimed the White House, the administration has accelerated declassifications and released Pentagon videos confirming objects that defy known physics.
Vance contrasted this openness with previous administrations’ opacity, particularly calling out former President Obama’s podcast comments that acknowledged UFOs are real but denied they’re at Area 51. “There’s a great question. Where are they?” Vance responded to Obama’s dodge.
The response from conservatives has been overwhelmingly positive. Prominent voices like Franklin Graham praised Vance’s “biblical bravery,” while Senator Tommy Tuberville echoed the sentiment: “JD’s right—these aren’t little green men; they’re lying spirits testing our resolve.”
Predictably, the liberal media has responded with mockery and derision. Progressive outlets branded Vance’s remarks as “medieval superstition,” while late-night hosts trotted out tired atheist talking points to dismiss faith as folly.
But such reactions only highlight the left’s discomfort with metaphysical realities that challenge their materialist worldview. They’d rather worship government bureaucrats than acknowledge the spiritual dimension of existence.
Vance’s stance represents a broader cultural renaissance under Trump-Vance leadership. With the economy thriving, borders secured, and energy independence restored, the administration can now tackle existential threats—spiritual as much as strategic.
The Vice President’s demonic hypothesis draws from millennia of religious tradition. From Ezekiel’s “wheels within wheels” to Revelation’s fallen angels, scripture contains numerous accounts of supernatural craft and entities that defy natural explanation.
Conservative theologians have long argued that ancient encounters with “gods” were actually demonic principalities, not spacemen. Vance’s words channel this tradition while rejecting the materialist atheism peddled by coastal elites who prefer ET over biblical truth.
Recent Pentagon reports document over 1,200 UAP incidents since 2021, with many exhibiting “transmedium” capabilities that move seamlessly between air and water. These craft appear near nuclear facilities and military installations, raising national security concerns.
But if Vance is right, the implications go far beyond defense preparedness. They suggest America faces spiritual warfare that requires prayer alongside Patriot missiles. The administration’s 2026 defense budget allocates $500 million for UAP defense, potentially blending faith and firepower.
Vance’s promise to visit Area 51 and declassify UFO files could reveal whether crashed materials are exotic technology or something more sinister. If demonic in origin, traditional military responses might prove inadequate.
This episode underscores why conservative Americans elected Trump-Vance: leaders willing to confront uncomfortable truths that challenge establishment narratives. While Democrats mock and deflect, Vance applies biblical wisdom to modern mysteries.
The Vice President sees through the veil, naming the enemy while others chase shadows. In a polarized era, his demonic diagnosis restores moral clarity to phenomena that have long confused and divided Americans.
As Vance continues his investigation over the next three years, expect unprecedented revelations that could reshape how America understands both national security and spiritual reality. The truth, whatever it reveals, will finally be exposed by leaders who fear God more than government secrecy.

