Suppose, for a moment, that Michael A. Hoffman's most unsettling idea isn't entirely wrong.
Not necessarily the specifics.
The pattern.
Hoffman coined and popularized the phrase "Revelation of the Method" to describe what he saw as a recurring phenomenon: institutions of power gradually revealing aspects of their own methods—not out of guilt or transparency, but because the revelation itself becomes part of the psychological process. Whether one accepts that framework or not, it raises an uncomfortable question:
What if the modern world doesn't hide nearly as much as it used to?
Look around.
Government agencies openly discuss surveillance capabilities that would have sounded dystopian twenty years ago. Artificial intelligence summarizes our conversations. Algorithms quietly decide what billions of people see every day. Corporations collect oceans of behavioral data. Cameras are everywhere. Facial recognition improves. Digital identities expand. Much of this isn't hidden; it's described in policy papers, congressional hearings, product launches, and quarterly earnings calls.
The surprise isn't that these systems exist.
The surprise is how quickly extraordinary becomes ordinary.
This is where Hoffman's idea becomes interesting—not as proven doctrine, but as a lens. Perhaps the most effective form of influence isn't concealment. Perhaps it's normalization. If enough information is released gradually, debated endlessly, and folded into everyday life, resistance often fades into familiarity.
That dynamic isn't unique to governments. Technology companies, advertisers, political campaigns, and media organizations all compete to shape perception. Every notification, recommendation engine, viral clip, and trending topic participates in an economy where attention has become one of the world's most valuable resources.
At FMPU, we spend a great deal of time examining UFO disclosure, media narratives, and institutional transparency. The same question appears again and again:
Are we witnessing revelation—or simply information arriving at the speed of the modern news cycle?
The distinction matters.
History is full of genuine disclosures that improved public understanding. It is also full of rumors, myths, and narratives that evolved far beyond the evidence available. Sorting one from the other requires skepticism in more than one direction.
Perhaps the greatest trick isn't convincing people to believe everything.
It's convincing them they no longer need to ask questions.
Whether Hoffman's framework ultimately proves insightful or not, one lesson remains valuable: pay attention to how information is presented, not only what is presented.
Because every age tells stories about itself.
The digital age tells them faster than any civilization before it.
And if there is a revelation of the method happening today, it may not arrive with a secret handshake or a coded ritual.
It may arrive as a software update that everyone clicks "Accept" without reading.





