When diplomats report it, it’s treated like a national security issue.
When civilians report similar experiences, they’re often treated like a punchline.
That contradiction should raise alarms.
Same type of distress.
Same type of disruption to sleep, cognition, and nervous the credibility standard changes depending on your job title, your access, and whether an institution wants to acknowledge the implications.
Here’s the lesson...
Dismissal is not a diagnosis.
Ridicule is not evidence.
And “we don’t understand it yet” is not the same as “it isn’t real.”
If the bar for being taken seriously depends on your status instead of your documented data, we don’t have a truth problem, we have a system problem.
So ask yourself...
Why would one group be validated while another is automatically discredited?
Who benefits from limiting the conversation to “official” cases only?
And what would real accountability look like if civilians were investigated with the same seriousness?
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