So, in the past few weeks or so, Wikipedia's current events page has been filled with the usual Covid/Ukraine BS, but with several strange astronomical news reports.
On March 21, NASA said they discovered their 5000th exoplanet. On April 4, they found a planet they say closely resembles Jupiter. Odd for them to assume what the planet looks like already!
On March 30, NASA announced the discovery of a star "28 billion" light-years away. They named it Earendel, Old English for "morning star." I.e. one of Lucifer's names.
And then, today, NASA said they found the farthest-known galaxy, "13.5 billion" light-years away.
Comms? Exoplanet > Star > Galaxy = + > ++ > +++? Going up the chain? From a drip to a flood? Idk, I just see patterns and I get blown away.
At the very least, what are the chances NASA discovers a milestone exoplanet, star, and galaxy, within a few weeks of each other?
NASA et al is essentially a grift.
Huge amounts of taxpayer money goes in, and nothing of value (or justifiable expense) comes out - like these press releases. They are just to ostensibly justify the fantastic amounts of money they embezzle.
There is no deeper meaning :(
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I don't see how anyone can think that pouring trillions of dollars into an agency just to get told "hey, we found a galaxy far far away" is a good idea. And yet the normies (and even many patriots) still believe that NASA is good.
Sci-fi addiction. It is a major part of their secular religion of scientism.
Many (if not most) don't even recognize that they are religious.