Friday, August 9, 2024

INDIAN SPACE PROGRAM DISCUSSING RESEARCH BASE LOCATIONS

 

INDIAN SPACE PROGRAM DISCUSSING RESEARCH BASE LOCATIONS

Regular readers here know that I am often intrigued by one or two lines, sometimes even something smaller - a carefully chosen word or a phrase - in the articles that they send me.  I'm intrigued because these types of things usually set my mind off on one of its high octane speculation chases.  That's the case today with this article shared by T.S., an article that appeared in RT, which is, in itself, interesting enough, because this story caught the attention of RT, which is a Russian government media organ, which means that the Russian government wants the world, and you and I, to know about this, and trust me folks, this is a lot better than watching men beat up women on television in the disgusting Jacobin "Olympics" games:

India to decide on location for Moon and Mars research station – media

Now, it is not the least surprising that India and its space program should be discussing long term plans for manned space research centers on the Moon and Mars. Every space-faring power on Earth has been doing this the moment that they started (or start) space programs. One only has to glance at the literature put out in the late 1950s and early 1960s from the Soviet Union and the United States to see that both countries were devoting serious study to the problem of such manned centers. It is therefore no surprise that recent new-comers to the space race - India and China - are doing the same thing, and in the case of India and China, such plans are more than idle and dreamy DARPA-esque projects, for both countries have managed to accomplish some rather stunning space feats, India by landing a probe near the lunar

south pole, as the RT article relates, and China by actually landing a probe on the far side of the Moon. Add Japan's feat of landing a probe on a small asteroid, which took soil samples from said asteroid, and then returning it to the Earth, and you get the idea: when these countries announce some stupendous space plan or project, one had better pay attention, because India's space program is manifesting a distinct lack of diversity, inclusion, and equity (DIE) as it has few to no black, Hispanic, and female technicians and scientists, and Boeing, the latest victim of DIE, cannot even design a space capsule that works (as two astronauts now stuck on the International Space Station know all too well). When these nations announce plans, being unencumbered by Gramscian cultural Marxist nonsense as they are, they are actually in a position to accomplish them.

But I digress.

Amid the article's announcement of India's plans, there is a "curious" bit of phrasing, in this case, a curious name:

Indian scientists are considering a location in the country’s hilly Ladakh region to set up a Mars and Moon analogue research station, the Times of India reported on Friday.

The facility would advance India’s human space program and its plans to explore Mars in the future.

Shubhanshu Shukla, one of four Indians selected for the country’s first manned space mission ‘Gaganyaan’, was among the scientists involved in the project from the Indian Institute of Science (IISc) and Birbal Sahni Institute of Palaeosciences (BSIP). (emphasis added)

Now, when I saw that word, "paleosciences" as an actual part of the name of an Indian scientific institute, I had to sit up and take notice, because ever since my first book in this series of books on alternative research that I've been writing over the last two and a half decades, The Giza Death Star, I coined a similar set of words, including "paleophysics", or literally, "ancient physics", which in the way I used it in that book and ever since, is meant to designate a very high and sophisticated physical science that is so old that it is lost in the mists of prehistory, a prehistory that is so old that I coined the redundant term "paleoancient" to designate it, a kind of "doubly ancient" age...

..the sort of age and antiquity that one encounters in the Vedic literature of India, a literature full of fantastic technologies (that led to some pretty gargantuan wars and destruction). In this literature, mankind itself is much much older than contemporary western scientific, or older western religious cosmologies, would allow. In the Vedic literature, mankind is orders of magnitude older than modern genetics would allow.

All of this suggests that if there is an Indian astronaut who was a member of an "institute of paleosciences" that the Indian space program is at least in part concerned with the verification or falsification of its own rich Vedic heritage, a heritage that clearly implies that there was once, aeons ago in the "paleoancient" mists of antiquity, a human and space-faring high civilization....

... that blew itself apart.  All of this means that India, of all the space powers, is uniquely culturally placed to verify some of the oldest human myths, and that its space missions might be being deliberately planned with that in mind. And Russia, which has its own version of those ancient "wars of the gods" or, in Russia's case, wars angels and demons, is by running the article telling us that it knows all of this and is watching closely. Indeed, given the decades' friendly relationships between the two countries, it would not be surprising at all if there is some quiet discussion of mission planning, on where to look, and what to look for...Tablets of Destiny come to mind... as "paleophysics", extra-terrestial archaeology, and space mission planning all intersect.

See you on the flip side...

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Joseph P. Farrell

Joseph P. Farrell has a doctorate in patristics from the University of Oxford, and pursues research in physics, alternative history and science, and "strange stuff". His book The Giza DeathStar, for which the Giza Community is named, was published in the spring of 2002, and was his first venture into "alternative history and science".


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