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Sunday 16 March 2014

Britain joins new hunt for E.T.

Comment: Rather like SETI this seems to be a colossal waste of money and indicative of a thoroughly myopic, if not materialistic view of the Universe. 

In my view, not only do we have a vibrantly alive cosmos teeming with "alien" life we also have our own military which has been conducting deep black projects outside of presidential / congressional oversight. Reverse-engineering from crashed craft and Faustian bargains between less than benevolent ultra-terrestrials appears to have been ongoing since at least the Second World War.

What this means is that essentially, is that the "aliens" are already here and indeed, may never have left. 

As a result, what we have is what Richard M. Dolan has termed a breakaway civilisation which has thrived from an advanced form of occult technology and which has appropriated that knowledge for its benefit at great cost to the whole. There are those who are attempting to leak information to the public and who believe that humanity can handle the revolutionary implications such knowledge dissemination would bring to light. The dominant faction within this civilisation believe the opposite, namely that humanity cannot handle the truth of the ultra-terrestrial existence here on earth and it's associated scientific and cultural influences.

They may have a point as it would certainly mean enormous upheaval, the likes of which we have never seen before. It would make the present geo-political uncertainties look like child's play. However, I think that people should know. Truth is truth. Objective reality should be honoured so that we can grow. And shock can be a great transformative force even if disintegration of the old is the initial result. 


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The Telegraph

Britain has signed up to a space mission to hunt for extra terrestrial life on planets outside the Solar System.The European Space Agency’s Plato project will see a huge observatory launched into space to seek out Earth-like planets in habitable zones which could sustain life. 

The mission was described as 'truly awe-inspiring’ by science minister David Willetts who this week pledged £25 million to the project. 


“Space-based observatories have shown that rocky planets very much like Earth are almost certainly common in the Galaxy,” said Mr Willetts. “Plato is a mission to find and understand these planets and in particular to assess their potential for hosting extra terrestrial life. 


“If, or rather when, mankind travels beyond our solar system to new, habitable worlds, the first planet visited may well have been discovered by this.” 

Plato – an acronym derived from 'Planetary Transits and Oscillations of stars' – will be launched from Europe’s Spaceport in Kourou, French Guiana, in 2024. 

It will consist of an array of 34 individual telescopes mounted on a space probe and will be positioned at a 'Lagrangian Point’- where the gravitational pull of the Sun and the Earth cancel each other out so it can stay at a fixed position in space. 

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