The forthcoming release of Spielberg's Disclosure Day, as well as the continued trickle of obscure government videos of things that may, or may not, be balloons or other human stuff, is causing me to re-visit the topic of the strange inversion of US politics around UFO's.
Firstly, I have to say that I have a suspicion that the movie might not be testing all that well with audiences, as the final trailer features Steven Spielberg talking to camera about it, and I think does give away the key plot elements. There was also Stephen Colbert interviewing Spielberg in the final week of the Late Show, and it seems a tad odd that Spielberg has felt the need to promote his own movie in person to this degree.
The combination of both of these do tell us one thing: the movie seems to have aliens who enable telepathic empathy in humans. This ties in nicely with ET, The Extraterrestrial when you think about it. It's a little more puzzling as to how it ties in with the aliens in Close Encounters, which many think has its direct sequel in Disclosure Day, as the aliens in it didn't seem to have much empathy for the families of the people they kidnapped for a few decades! (That said, I think the obscure motivation of the aliens in that movie is one of the reasons to like it, as it not dissimilar to the religious mystery of why a good God would let some of his (or her) followers suffer so much.)
So, what does this have to do with weirdo changes in US politics in particular? Well, as I have explained before, it feels very peculiar that belief in UFOs used to be perceived as a bit of a countercultural, hippy-ish thing, and therefore probably aligned with Left leaning politics, and it has now flipped and become the interest of Right wing conspiracy mongers. Yeah, believing that climate change is not real (which is a "conspiracy of scientists and socialist billionaires" belief) now aligns with "aliens are real and already here and the government is hiding it from us". Look at this recent tweet by the incredibly gullible Ross Coulthart, who thinks a government somewhere found a crashed UFO so big it build a huge building over it to hide it:
(By the way, the whole "they have backed away from the worst predictions and lied to us for decades" is a dumbass beat up, and climate change "skepticism" - by which I mean denial - generally is having an algorithmically driven heyday again at Musk's X. My own conspiracy theory is that it might be because Musk wants to get ahead of the growing concern that his money making Starlink - not to mention his intended huge number of Starship launches - is actually a big environmental problem for the upper atmosphere.)
Now, Spielberg himself, as a Hollywood liberal, is playing with fire here, as while there are some Right aligned people who think he is on their side on the question of alien reality and government secret knowledge of it (see Coulthart, for example), there are also plenty of others who will find a way to continue to condemn him in the nuttiest of Right wing ways. Already in comments to Disclosure Day content on Youtube, I have seen them bring up the old, completely without foundation, rumour that he was responsible for the child abuse related death of the young actress in Poltergeist. And on today's final trailer, there are a few comments bringing up the Right wing religious nutter theory - promoted by Tucker Carlson and others - that UFOs and aliens are demons and Spielberg is doing their bidding by making a movie pretending that they are good and should be welcomed!
So yeah, I expect that MAGA conspiracy types who might be tempted by the topic of the movie are going to do their regular routine of finding the movie objectionable because, basically, Spielberg is a Hollywood liberal and liberals cannot be trusted.
Update: Ooh, I might be wrong in worrying about audience reactions. We finally have a handful of reactions from people who have seen it, and they seem all positive. (One does call it Spielberg's "weirdest" movie - but seemingly in a good way.)
Update 2: As I suspected from the start, the final trailer seems to confirm that there was no need to worry about the CGI looking animals in parts of the film, as they were never meant to be real, anyway.
And yes, it is clear from social media that there is a anti-Spielberg pushback going on, even though most comments about him and his movie legacy are positive. Again, there is a bit of an odd turnaround about this - it used to be Left leaning critics who would criticise Spielberg as too emotionally manipulative for them, so liking him used to feel like you were part of middle class class mainstream which the Republicans used to try to appeal to. Now, after making many specifically liberal themed movies (none of which are extreme in message, but stand in a solid tradition of Hollywood movies and their makers mostly being soft liberal), the MAGA crowd went into nutjob land and invented reasons to dislike him.
%20Ross%20Coulthart%20(@rosscoulthart)%20_%20X.png)

