Let’s ponder what our world might be in 100 years.
Okay, maybe not OUR world, but the normie world of Boomers and Gen Xrs who were promised flying cars by the year 2000. They obviously would have assumed, having landed on the moon, that next would be Mars, then we’d leave the solar system, and then maybe find life on another planet. The pace we were advancing in technology left very little to the imagination.
One thing we didn’t consider, however, is the idea that humans would actually never personally step foot outside our little sphere of influence. Everyone just assumed that humans would be piloting the ships, breaking the light barrier just as we had broken the sound barrier, and making first contact with alien life in the flesh.
Not to burst anyone’s bubble here, but that’s pathetically optimistic. Not because it’s not possible to send humans to the edge of the universe, I can’t say either way, but because it’s just stupid. What are the reasons someone might want to leave Earth? With as few people we’ve sent to the moon, if you subscribe to that narrative, you’d figure it’d be a hot tourist attraction by now, right?
Well, no… Just as most people actually don’t even take vacations. It may come as a shock, but the majority of people are happily content to deal with all the crap they already have going on that they couldn’t care less about jumping up and down on the moon. I mean, just the idea of having to wear a diaper for a week would turn off most people from that little adventure in space. What does space offer that a cruise in the Caribbean can’t provide? You wanna look at the stars? You can see them all pretty darn well from a tiny island with no light pollution, so what’s the real appeal in going into space and getting pelted with radiation compared to literally any other novel getaway vacation spot? You’d pretty much only go for the bragging rights…
So, what am I trying to say here?
It’s that Aliens have the same idea, really…
Think logically. Why send a human into space? Why send a living, breathing, individual who requires life support systems, toiletries, rations, and entertainment on a space mission? Forget about the expense, the logistics that go into a tin can to support human life is just silly.
Just to make first contact with an alien species “in the flesh”?
Nonsense. Just send drones.
Better yet, just send androids.
Even better than androids, send in Surrogates.
Yup, remotely controlled robots with some really advance VR capabilities. You could do all the things a human could do with none of the drawbacks a living thing requires to stay alive. Interstellar radiation won’t bother you, you don’t have to eat, you don’t have to poop — you only have to charge your batteries every now and then and jump into the body like a video game when it’s time to do space work. You could have a couple surrogates, with one charging while you’re working in the other one.
You don’t even need clothes.
Now, think long and hard about this next part…
What is a Grey?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grey_alien
“Grey aliens, also referred to as Zeta Reticulans, Roswell Greys, or Grays, are purported extraterrestrial beings. They are frequent subjects of close encounters and alien abduction claims.”
Why are grey aliens always depicted as being sexless, grey, short, unclothed beings with vacuous black eyes?
What would androids designed by humans look like in the next 10, 20, or 30 years?
Well, if what we currently have to go by is any indication, they’d be designed to look very unintimidating, with cutesy animalistic features that are indicative of a cat or anime waifu.
Can you see where I’m headed with this?
Put the two together, and it becomes pretty obvious what technology will invariably result in as it pertains to space travel.
Civilization follows the same thread of logic, regardless of planetary origins. People won’t want to act as martyrs just to see pretty stars. They don’t want to leave Earth to start a lineage of humans that have never been to their “home” planet, a la Elon Musk and his Mars Colony mission.
Why send humans when you can send the robots?
Why send aliens when you can send the greys?
Androids, devoid of sexual characteristics or need to breathe, eat, or poop.
Androids which can be hopped into like controlling a drone remotely.
Androids that can still emulate emotions, speak, and perform rudimentary tasks.
Androids which may or may not have crashed on Earth during a scouting mission and then taken by governments who reverse-engineered the technology and have utilized the surrogate framework in order to produce all sorts of technologies including miniaturized computer systems, holograms, AI, and even surrogate android bodies of their own?
Reread that last part, and consider where we are currently at with conspiracies of Majestic-12 Men In Black with robot voices, Biden’s face falling off every other day, deepfakes and AI, and Neuralink and “Vaccine” systems which may or may not include nano-machines and tracking devices.
I’ve got even crazier ideas that that, but for the sake of brevity, let’s just leave it at the typical spread of “known” alien conspiracy theories. We’ll compare/contrast the difference between biblical angels/demons and aliens for another time. (Some who’ve read my other stuff may already know what I’m talking about.)
My point is, there’s no reason to send living creatures into space. That’s why we’ve stopped doing so, aside for immediate experimentation of how life performs in space, which is quite poorly, unfortunately.
Nope, the idea of Star Trek and other space fantasies are just that — fantasies. In the future, whether or not aliens exist, space travel will be a purely surrogate android affair. Humans will plug in to a VR or even Matrix type interface in order to control an android to do work on space stations and in space ships. At that point, the only limitation is bandwidth and connection rate with the far-off space vessels. I anticipate that if light speed travel is possible it will only be for sending signals to far off receivers. Sending matter through a warp-hole or other such phenomena would simply not be worth the effort.
Just send a ship to the place it needs to be with a platoon of surrogate androids which you can jump into and there ya go. They build more androids, more ships, land on other planets for research and resources, and eventually you have an entire armada of androids ready to do all your risky space shenanigans for you while you sip your future space-mountain dew in your undies before clocking in to weld some satellite panels together. It’s not that much effort, either, considering the auto-pilot AI does most of the work for you. You’re just the overseer, there to pop in when something is a little more complex than a neural AI could handle.
Now consider, if they were smart, that aliens have been doing this all along. Why haven’t they made first contact you ask? Well, they, like us, realize just how much damage that can do to our civilizational development. The Prime Directive may just be a Star Trek plot device, but it makes sense. You can sum it up with the same logic used when we’re instructed not to feed the bears — because they’ll become dependent on hand-outs.
That’s why I don’t figure “real” aliens will be contacting us anytime soon. Project Bluebeam is gonna purely be a psyop to convince us to “join together and form a one-world-government to defeat the aliens scum!” You know, like the CIA have been planning since the 60’s or even before?
If you see aliens in the sky, or the news media shipping aliens like a shiny new bauble to gawk at, just assume you’re being scammed. Aliens aren’t stupid, and they wouldn’t contact us if we don’t already have our shit together in advance. If we can’t even stop our own species from taking advantage of us and enslaving us, do you think we would manage any better if a rogue aliens caste decided to do the same?
Then again, who’s to say that isn’t already going on?
Well, that’s enough for now. Hope I gave you something to think about…