Renowned scientist Jane Goodall Revealed Desire to Launch Musk and Trump on Non-Return Trip to Space

After dedicating years researching chimpanzee behavior, Jane Goodall became an authority on the aggressive tendencies of leading males. In a freshly unveiled interview documented shortly before her passing, the celebrated primatologist disclosed her unique solution for dealing with particular figures she viewed as showing similar traits: sending them on a non-return journey into outer space.

Final Documentary Unveils Frank Opinions

This extraordinary perspective into Goodall's thinking emerges from the Netflix production "Famous Last Words", which was recorded in March and maintained confidential until after her recent demise at 91 years old.

"I know persons I don't like, and I wish to send them on one of Musk's spaceships and dispatch them to the celestial body he's convinced he's going to discover," stated Goodall during her conversation with Brad Falchuk.

Specific Individuals Identified

When inquired whether the SpaceX founder, known for his questionable behavior and political alliances, would be part of this group, Goodall replied positively.

"Oh, absolutely. He would be the host. You can imagine whom I would include on that spacecraft. Together with Musk would be Donald Trump and various Trump's real supporters," she declared.

"Additionally I would put the Russian president on board, and I would put Xi Jinping. I'd certainly put the Israeli leader in there and his administration. Send them all on that vessel and send them off."

Past Observations

This wasn't the initial instance that Goodall, an advocate of conservation efforts, had voiced concerns about Donald Trump especially.

In a earlier conversation, she had observed that he displayed "comparable kind of behavior as a male chimpanzee exhibits when battling for supremacy with a rival. They stand tall, they strut, they portray themselves as much larger and hostile than they really are in order to daunt their opponents."

Leadership Styles

During her last recorded conversation, Goodall further explained her comprehension of alpha personalities.

"We observe, notably, two types of dominant individual. The first achieves dominance solely through combat, and because they're strong and they battle, they don't remain for extended periods. Others do it by employing intelligence, like an aspiring leader will just confront a more dominant one if his friend, typically a relative, is with him. And you know, they remain far more extended periods," she detailed.

Group Dynamics

The famous researcher also analyzed the "social dimension" of conduct, and what her extensive studies had taught her about combative conduct exhibited by human communities and primates when encountering something they considered threatening, despite the fact that no risk actually existed.

"Chimps observe an outsider from a nearby tribe, and they become highly agitated, and their fur bristles, and they reach out and make physical contact, and they display these faces of rage and terror, and it transmits, and the others catch that feeling that a single individual has had, and everyone turns combative," she detailed.

"It's contagious," she continued. "Various exhibitions that become hostile, it sweeps through them. Each member wishes to become and join in and turn violent. They're protecting their domain or fighting for control."

Human Parallels

When asked if she believed the same dynamics occurred in humans, Goodall answered: "Likely, on occasion. But I truly believe that most people are decent."

"My biggest hope is nurturing the upcoming generation of caring individuals, foundations and growth. But do we have time? It's unclear. We face challenging circumstances."

Historical Comparison

Goodall, born in London five years before the beginning of the World War II, compared the struggle against the difficulties of current political landscape to England opposing the Third Reich, and the "unyielding attitude" exhibited by the prime minister.

"However, this isn't to say you won't experience periods of sadness, but then you come out and declare, 'Well, I'm not going to let them win'," she commented.

"It resembles the Prime Minister during the conflict, his renowned address, we will oppose them along the shores, we will resist them along the roads and urban areas, then he turned aside to a companion and allegedly commented, 'and we will oppose them at the ends of shattered glass as that's the only thing we actually possess'."

Closing Thoughts

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

"In current times, when the planet is challenging, there remains optimism. Maintain optimism. Should optimism fade, you grow indifferent and do nothing," she counseled.

"And if you wish to preserve what is still beautiful across the globe – should you desire to save the planet for the future generations, your grandchildren, their offspring – then contemplate the decisions you make each day. Because, replicated a million, a billion times, modest choices will generate great change."

Hector Alvarez
Hector Alvarez

Environmental scientist and sustainability advocate passionate about sharing practical green living solutions.