Calm. Methodical. Evidence-Based.

U.S. Congresswoman from Florida says there is evidence of ‘interdimensional beings’

A sitting member of Congress is amplifying extraordinary claims while pressing executive agencies for UAP briefings, pulling oversight toward speculation instead of verifiable governance.

Congress

Aug 14, 2025

Sources

Summary

U.S. Rep. Anna Paulina Luna said there was evidence of “interdimensional beings” during a podcast appearance and faced questions and criticism afterward. A sitting member of Congress is using her office and public platform to elevate extraordinary claims alongside formal requests for classified-style briefings on Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena. The practical consequence is increased pressure on executive agencies to respond to speculative assertions, shifting oversight attention and public trust toward unverified narratives.

Reality Check

When elected officials use the authority of office to elevate unverifiable claims, we normalize a public sphere where evidence standards can be optional for those wielding state power. That weakens democratic accountability by diluting oversight into spectacle and eroding shared baselines for truth in public decision-making.
The long-term risk is institutional drift: executive agencies get pulled into responding to narratives that cannot be audited, while the public learns to treat official attention as proof. Our guardrails depend on disciplined oversight grounded in verifiable facts, not the amplification of claims that cannot be tested.

Detail

<p>U.S. Rep. Anna Paulina Luna, a Republican representing Florida’s 13th congressional district since 2023, made statements on <em>The Joe Rogan Experience</em> that she said there was evidence of “interdimensional beings.” The episode was released Wednesday, and Luna faced questions and criticism Thursday.</p><p>In the interview, Luna told host Joe Rogan that such entities “can actually operate through the time spaces.” She added that, without discussing classified conversations, there were “very credible” witnesses who reported “movement outside of time and space.”</p><p>Earlier this year, Luna, a University of West Florida biologist, and Rep. James Comer, R-Ky., sent letters to Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, and CIA Director John Ratcliffe requesting a briefing on all Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena. In 2023, Luna participated in a congressional hearing on the subject.</p>