Renowned scientist Jane Goodall Revealed Aspiration to Launch Elon Musk and Donald Trump on Single-Journey Space Mission

After devoting her life observing chimpanzee actions, Jane Goodall became an authority on the aggressive tendencies of alpha males. In a newly published interview documented shortly before her demise, the celebrated primatologist revealed her unique solution for dealing with particular figures she viewed as exhibiting similar qualities: sending them on a one-way journey into space.

Final Documentary Discloses Frank Opinions

This extraordinary insight into Goodall's philosophy emerges from the Netflix film "Famous Last Words", which was captured in March and maintained secret until after her latest death at 91 years old.

"There are persons I dislike, and I wish to send them on a SpaceX vessel and dispatch them to the planet he's certain he'll find," remarked Goodall during her interview with Brad Falchuk.

Particular Personalities Mentioned

When asked whether Elon Musk, recognized for his controversial gestures and connections, would be included, Goodall answered with certainty.

"Certainly, without doubt. He could serve as the organizer. Envision the people I would place on that vessel. In addition to Musk would be Donald Trump and some of Trump's loyal adherents," she stated.

"Furthermore I would include Vladimir Putin in there, and I would include China's leader. I'd certainly put Benjamin Netanyahu in there and his administration. Put them all on that spaceship and send them off."

Past Observations

This wasn't the earlier occasion that Goodall, a supporter of environmental causes, had expressed criticism about the political figure in particular.

In a 2022 interview, she had noted that he displayed "the same sort of conduct as a male chimpanzee will show when battling for leadership with another. They stand tall, they strut, they project themselves as significantly bigger and hostile than they truly are in order to intimidate their opponents."

Dominance Patterns

During her final interview, Goodall expanded upon her understanding of leadership types.

"We see, interestingly, two kinds of dominant individual. The first achieves dominance through pure aggression, and since they're powerful and they fight, they don't last very long. Another group achieves dominance by employing intelligence, like a younger individual will only challenge a higher ranking one if his companion, typically a relative, is supporting him. And as we've seen, they endure much, much longer," she detailed.

Collective Behavior

The renowned scientist also examined the "politicization" of behavior, and what her extensive studies had taught her about aggressive behaviors displayed by groups of humans and apes when confronted with something they viewed as threatening, even if no threat actually existed.

"Chimpanzees observe an unfamiliar individual from an adjacent group, and they get highly agitated, and their fur bristles, and they stretch and make physical contact, and they've got visages of rage and terror, and it spreads, and the others catch that feeling that one member has had, and everyone turns combative," she explained.

"It transmits easily," she added. "Various exhibitions that turn aggressive, it sweeps through them. Everyone desires to participate and engage and become aggressive. They're guarding their area or fighting for control."

Comparable Human Reactions

When asked if she considered comparable behaviors occurred in people, Goodall answered: "Likely, sometimes yes. But I truly believe that the bulk of humanity are decent."

"My primary aspiration is raising the upcoming generation of caring individuals, beginnings and development. But do we have time? I don't know. We face challenging circumstances."

Historical Perspective

Goodall, originally from London five years before the start of the the global conflict, compared the battle with the darkness of present day politics to England opposing Nazi Germany, and the "determined resistance" shown by the British leader.

"That doesn't mean you avoid having periods of sadness, but then you come out and state, 'OK, I'm not going to permit their victory'," she commented.

"It resembles the Prime Minister in the war, his renowned address, we'll fight them at the coastlines, we will resist them through the avenues and the cities, afterward he commented to a companion and allegedly commented, 'and we'll fight them at the ends of damaged containers as that's the only thing we truly have'."

Parting Words

In her concluding remarks, Goodall offered motivational statements for those fighting against political oppression and the ecological disaster.

"In current times, when Earth is difficult, there remains optimism. Don't lose hope. When faith diminishes, you become unresponsive and do nothing," she counseled.

"Should you want to save the remaining beauty in this world – if you want to save the planet for subsequent eras, your descendants, their offspring – then contemplate the actions you take every day. Because, replicated numerous, innumerable instances, minor decisions will create significant transformation."

Brittany Lang
Brittany Lang

A seasoned marketing strategist with over a decade of experience in building successful brands across various industries.

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