RE: Ganymede and Callisto: Could There Be Life On These Moons of Jupiter?
We have two centuries worth of archaeological work waiting for us on Mars and Ganymede. Mars was home to an advanced civilization in prehistoric times and remains minimally inhabited today:
www.bearfabrique.org/Misc/electrogravitics.pdf
www.bearfabrique.org/Misc/marsImages.pdf
www.bearfabrique.org/Misc/Mars_Indigenous.pdf
There is solid reason to believe that Ganymede, several tens of thousands of years ago and under hugely different circumstances, was the original home of modern humans within our system:
Human origins, the real version:
On Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/groups/514483018695199/
On Youtube:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCBZ1RMqjKk8pp_TB_jfeBHQ
15-minute intro to the basic idea of the Ganymede hypothesis:
The creatures and indigenous people which remain on Mars appear to be living mainly underground, coming out to the surface for a half hour or so of sunlight and vitamin D around noon time. Simplest google search is for "squirrel on Mars" which has now gone viral:
Basic History of the American Manned Space Program
It started under Ike in the 1950s and by the late 50s, was pretty much all you ever heard about, at least if you were a school kid in those days…
“GOTTA GET TO THE MOON! GOTTA GET TO THE MOON! GOTTA GET TO THE MOON! GOTTA GET TO THE MOON! GOTTA GET TO THE MOON…”
And that went on throughout the 1960s until finally (you can only talk about something for so long and, sooner or later, you gotta Do it), in July 1969, with Apollo 11, they actually landed humans on the moon and thereafter managed to bring them back to earth safely. From what we read, there were six more Apollo missions, ending in 1972 when, seemingly, the program was just getting started. Certainly that would be true for any sort of a GOVERNMENT program…
At that point, one of two things happened, and it is up to the reader to determine which version of the thing he cares to believe:
One of those two stories is a fairytale. And the first version of the story (item 1), requires the viewer to jettison everything he knows about human behavior and about the behavior of government agencies and government projects, in order to believe.