Sad when you realize that we basically just went to the Moon to say "ha ha, we beat the Soviets!" when there is a gold mine of land and resources (China is more privy than ever for the Helium3 and more). Yes, we need to make the place habitable, and it would take a ton of effort, but there's only so much elbow room on Earth. The globalists want us here on Earth in order to keep us under thumb. It's no different than what Britain did to America in the 1700's. Instead they would rather cull us to keep the population "managable". According to our overlords, we are better dead and in poverty, stagnated as a society, then to explore and create strong, stable, high tech nations elsewhere away from their iron fists.
It was a tragedy, but I think the Challenger disaster turned people off not surprisingly. That is another problem, that so many face... are the risks worth it?
Yes, the risks are worth it. Everyone who died on the shuttle tragedies knew the risks, accepted them, and went. There are no guarantees, going into space is going to be really hard, really dangerous, and there are those willing to take the risks.
The answer will always be yes. The risks are worth it. Were they worth it when explorers set out from Europe, on wooden boats?
According to our overlords, we are better dead and in poverty, stagnated as a society, then to explore and create strong, stable, high tech nations elsewhere away from their iron fists.
The global elite firmly believe that "mortality" will be cured in the next ten years. They are all heavily invested in it, in various forms. The only thing they fear more than death, is 9 billion immortals breeding.
It's not just a matter of control or maintaining stagnation, it's about securing that control before that moment so that they will be in charge of who gets to live forever. A big part of that is societal control, and getting people to willingly go along with the population reduction. For that, they have to remove all hope and keep the population living in fear of the future.
Sad when you realize that we basically just went to the Moon to say "ha ha, we beat the Soviets!" when there is a gold mine of land and resources (China is more privy than ever for the Helium3 and more). Yes, we need to make the place habitable, and it would take a ton of effort, but there's only so much elbow room on Earth. The globalists want us here on Earth in order to keep us under thumb. It's no different than what Britain did to America in the 1700's. Instead they would rather cull us to keep the population "managable". According to our overlords, we are better dead and in poverty, stagnated as a society, then to explore and create strong, stable, high tech nations elsewhere away from their iron fists.
Beautifully said. So say we all.
It was a tragedy, but I think the Challenger disaster turned people off not surprisingly. That is another problem, that so many face... are the risks worth it?
Yes, the risks are worth it. Everyone who died on the shuttle tragedies knew the risks, accepted them, and went. There are no guarantees, going into space is going to be really hard, really dangerous, and there are those willing to take the risks.
The answer will always be yes. The risks are worth it. Were they worth it when explorers set out from Europe, on wooden boats?
The global elite firmly believe that "mortality" will be cured in the next ten years. They are all heavily invested in it, in various forms. The only thing they fear more than death, is 9 billion immortals breeding.
It's not just a matter of control or maintaining stagnation, it's about securing that control before that moment so that they will be in charge of who gets to live forever. A big part of that is societal control, and getting people to willingly go along with the population reduction. For that, they have to remove all hope and keep the population living in fear of the future.
The Moon is a Harsh Mistress - R. Heinlein