Renowned scientist Jane Goodall Revealed Desire to Transport Elon Musk and Donald Trump on Single-Journey Cosmic Voyage

After devoting her life studying chimpanzee conduct, Jane Goodall became an expert on the hostile behavior of leading males. In a newly published interview recorded shortly before her demise, the celebrated primatologist shared her unique solution for handling specific people she viewed as showing similar characteristics: transporting them on a non-return journey into outer space.

Posthumous Film Unveils Candid Thoughts

This notable viewpoint into Goodall's mindset emerges from the Netflix production "Final Words", which was filmed in March and preserved secret until after her recent passing at nine decades of life.

"There are persons I dislike, and I would like to put them on a SpaceX vessel and send them all off to the celestial body he's convinced he'll locate," stated Goodall during her interview with the interviewer.

Specific Individuals Mentioned

When questioned whether Elon Musk, famous for his controversial gestures and connections, would be among them, Goodall answered positively.

"Certainly, without doubt. He'd be the organizer. Envision whom I would include on that vessel. Together with Musk would be Donald Trump and some of Trump's dedicated followers," she stated.

"Additionally I would add Vladimir Putin among them, and I would put Xi Jinping. I would definitely include Benjamin Netanyahu on that journey and his political allies. Send them all on that spacecraft and launch them."

Earlier Comments

This was not the earlier occasion that Goodall, an advocate of conservation efforts, had voiced concerns about Donald Trump especially.

In a 2022 interview, she had observed that he exhibited "similar type of conduct as a dominant primate exhibits when battling for leadership with an opponent. They posture, they parade, they portray themselves as significantly bigger and aggressive than they may actually be in order to daunt their rivals."

Dominance Patterns

During her last recorded conversation, Goodall elaborated on her analysis of dominant individuals.

"We see, remarkably, two types of alpha. One type succeeds through pure aggression, and due to their strength and they battle, they don't last very long. Others do it by employing intelligence, like a younger individual will just confront a higher ranking one if his ally, frequently a sibling, is with him. And as we've seen, they remain much, much longer," she detailed.

Collective Behavior

The celebrated primatologist also examined the "political aspect" of conduct, and what her extensive studies had taught her about aggressive behaviors shown by human communities and apes when confronted with something they perceived as dangerous, despite the fact that no threat really was present.

"Chimpanzees encounter an unfamiliar individual from an adjacent group, and they grow very stimulated, and their hair erect, and they extend and make physical contact, and they've got these faces of anger and fear, and it spreads, and the remaining members catch that feeling that this one male has had, and the entire group grows aggressive," she described.

"It transmits easily," she noted. "Various exhibitions that grow violent, it sweeps through them. Each member wishes to get involved and grow hostile. They're defending their territory or fighting for dominance."

Comparable Human Reactions

When asked if she considered similar behaviors were present in human beings, Goodall responded: "Perhaps, sometimes yes. But I strongly feel that most people are ethical."

"My primary aspiration is nurturing future generations of compassionate citizens, roots and shoots. But is there sufficient time? I don't know. It's a really grim time."

Historical Perspective

Goodall, a London native prior to the beginning of the Second World War, equated the struggle against the difficulties of current political landscape to the UK resisting Nazi Germany, and the "determined resistance" shown by Winston Churchill.

"That doesn't mean you won't experience times of despair, but subsequently you recover and declare, 'OK, I refuse to allow their success'," she stated.

"It resembles the leader in the war, his renowned address, we'll fight them on the beaches, we shall battle them in the streets and the cities, then he turned aside to a friend and reportedly stated, 'and we will oppose them with the remnants of broken bottles as that's the only thing we truly have'."

Parting Words

In her concluding remarks, Goodall shared motivational statements for those combating authoritarian control and the ecological disaster.

"Even today, when Earth is challenging, there remains possibility. Maintain optimism. When faith diminishes, you become apathetic and do nothing," she recommended.

"Should you want to preserve the existing splendor across the globe – when you wish to save the planet for coming generations, future family, their offspring – then think about the decisions you take each day. As, expanded numerous, a billion times, modest choices will create substantial improvement."

Kimberly Johnston
Kimberly Johnston

A retail and lifestyle enthusiast with a passion for sharing urban experiences and consumer trends.