Saturday, October 11, 2008

How the Kepler Mission will save the Earth

The first chapter in the story of human migration beyond the Solar System will undoubtedly tell of the discovery of Earth-like planets around many nearby stars. The first of these discoveries might very well be made next year by Kepler Mission astronomers. At a time when the Earth itself is becoming less and less Earth-like as the ever-increasing human population degrades its biosphere, discovery of other Earth-like planets will inspire great visions of the future, and trigger a burst of creativity that propels humanity to the stars. Earth will revert to its preindustrial beauty and come to be regarded as a premiere vacation spot, the "Garden of Eden" where human life began.

My interest in the Kepler Mission was inspired by Wiley Brooks of the Breatharian Institute of America, who writes at his web site,

"The Earth, without a doubt, is the most beautiful planet in the Milky Way galaxy and that is why it was "the" vacation spot of the galaxy for millions of years. There was always a constant stream of visitors coming here from Worlds and Galaxies far and wide."

Whether or not extraterrestrials vacation here, we know for a fact that the Earth is the most beautiful planet in the Solar System at least, because it alone sustains life as we know it. Humanity now stands on the threshold of unravelling the sustainability of life on Earth, thanks to its greed, selfishness, and multiplicative proclivities. Our only prospects of finding refuge on other life-sustaining planets in the Milky Way galaxy are if extraterrestrials really do vacation here, and if they are willing to let us hitch a ride. Those are big ifs to be staking our future on, especially for UFO skeptics, but who knows? Wiley Brooks predicts that a Federation of Light 2000-mile long space craft will appear overhead on October 14, 2008. Check it out on www.breatharian.com, and watch the skies. Then on October 15, get to work to stop global warming. Otherwise civilization and the global ecosystem that supports it will collapse before humanity can develop the starships it needs to reach any other Earth-like worlds.

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