NASA’s agenda
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The National Aeronautics and Space Administration was formed in July 1958 to provide a public face for the American Government’s ongoing civilian and military aerospace research projects. Subsequently, there have been numerous successes, failures, tragedies and intrigues, but none so stupendous as the more recent developments.
Because of NASA, we know that mankind has walked on the moon. Because of NASA, we know what they want us to think the surface mars looks like. Because of NASA, we are stimulated into intelligently commenting on and wondering about the vast expanse of space. NASA even have an astro-biology FAQ section where you can ask difficult questions like what the bleep is this fricken black anti-aliased square doing on one of their Mars rover images? Why is it devoid of color? Why is it concealing something in the sky? (No it is not the sun. Look at the angle of the shadows)
This image has been ‘Photoshopped’! Its a JPEG for goodness sakes! It has passed through a human filter. The Mars rover raw data is not in a web compatible image compression format!!
I am sure you know that NASA routinely covers up inconvenient truths by now. This is just the latest one to emerge.
Remember the Disclosure Project? Donna Hare’s testimony is right here. Her story is by no means unique. Start your journey down the rabbit hole if you haven’t already!
What I am wondering right now is whether this terrible job of obvious censorship above is the result of a disgruntled employee in NASA who has orders to cover up but doesn’t agree with it…
Maybe the UFO disclosure community has a mole!
Tags: coverup, Disclosure project, Donna Hare, NASA, NASA coverup, ufo disclosure






My Stargate Blog


April 3rd, 2010 at 2:57 am
I read somewhere that NASA had planned a manned mission to Mars by August, 1982, but that the Viet Nam war was so costly. This type of mission could have been a drop in the fiscal bucket, compared to the military spending in those days. Comparing the worthiness of a manned mission to Mars to that of slugging it out in Southeast Asia, I vote Mars, completely. We lost Viet Nam; what a waste. We lost our earlier mission to Mars; what a waste. Now, we now have financial woes and budget cuts. Once more, Mars takes the back seat just to fall out of the vehicle. What can we do to stop strike three?