Renowned scientist Jane Goodall Revealed Aspiration to Send Musk and Trump on Non-Return Space Mission

After devoting her life researching chimpanzee actions, Jane Goodall became a specialist on the aggressive tendencies of alpha males. In a freshly unveiled interview recorded shortly before her death, the celebrated primatologist revealed her unique solution for addressing certain individuals she viewed as displaying similar characteristics: launching them on a non-return journey into space.

Final Documentary Unveils Honest Views

This remarkable perspective into Goodall's mindset emerges from the Netflix film "Final Words", which was recorded in March and maintained confidential until after her recently announced death at the age of 91.

"I've encountered persons I dislike, and I wish to place them on a SpaceX vessel and dispatch them to the planet he's sure he'll locate," remarked Goodall during her interview with the interviewer.

Specific Individuals Identified

When inquired whether the tech billionaire, famous for his disputed actions and political alliances, would be part of this group, Goodall responded affirmatively.

"Oh, absolutely. He could serve as the host. Envision whom I would include on that spaceship. Together with Musk would be Trump and several of Trump's loyal adherents," she declared.

"Additionally I would put the Russian president among them, and I would put China's President Xi. Without question I would add the Israeli leader in there and his political allies. Place them all on that vessel and launch them."

Past Observations

This wasn't the earlier occasion that Goodall, a supporter of ecological preservation, had expressed criticism about the political figure especially.

In a previous discussion, she had observed that he exhibited "the same sort of conduct as a male chimpanzee will show when vying for dominance with an opponent. They stand tall, they swagger, they portray themselves as much larger and aggressive than they really are in order to daunt their competitors."

Dominance Patterns

During her posthumous documentary, Goodall elaborated on her analysis of dominant individuals.

"We observe, remarkably, two categories of dominant individual. The first achieves dominance through pure aggression, and since they're powerful and they fight, they don't remain indefinitely. Others do it by employing intelligence, like an aspiring leader will only challenge a more dominant one if his friend, often his brother, is with him. And research shows, they last far more extended periods," she clarified.

Collective Behavior

The celebrated primatologist also studied the "social dimension" of actions, and what her extensive studies had revealed to her about hostile actions exhibited by people and primates when confronted with something they perceived as hostile, although no threat actually existed.

"Chimps encounter an unfamiliar individual from an adjacent group, and they become very stimulated, and their fur bristles, and they extend and make physical contact, and they display expressions of anger and fear, and it catches, and the rest adopt that emotion that this one male has had, and the entire group grows hostile," she detailed.

"It spreads rapidly," she added. "Some of these demonstrations that grow violent, it permeates the group. Everyone desires to participate and engage and grow hostile. They're protecting their domain or competing for supremacy."

Human Parallels

When asked if she considered comparable dynamics occurred in human beings, Goodall responded: "Perhaps, in certain situations. But I truly believe that most people are decent."

"My main objective is nurturing this new generation of empathetic people, beginnings and development. But are we allowing enough time? It's unclear. These are difficult times."

Historical Perspective

Goodall, a London native five years before the start of the the global conflict, equated the fight against the difficulties of contemporary politics to Britain standing up the Third Reich, and the "determined resistance" exhibited by the British leader.

"This doesn't imply you won't experience moments of depression, but eventually you emerge and state, 'OK, I won't allow to allow their success'," she remarked.

"It resembles the leader in the war, his famous speech, we'll fight them along the shores, we shall battle them through the avenues and urban areas, afterward he commented to an associate and allegedly commented, 'and we'll fight them using the fragments of broken bottles as that's the only thing we actually possess'."

Parting Words

In her final address, Goodall provided motivational statements for those resisting governmental suppression and the ecological disaster.

"At present, when Earth is difficult, there remains possibility. Preserve faith. If you lose hope, you become unresponsive and do nothing," she counseled.

"And if you want to save the remaining beauty on our planet – if you want to save the planet for subsequent eras, future family, their offspring – then contemplate the choices you implement each day. Because, multiplied numerous, a billion times, even small actions will make for significant transformation."

Isaac Burns
Isaac Burns

Former defense officer and mentor with over a decade of experience guiding candidates through SSB interviews.