Space Ark |
The only solution seemed to be a boat. A new society of timeships, sailing the high seas. The Noah myth. Premonitory preparation for the emigration from planet earth.Update: Immediately after publishing this post I found the following article: astronomers apparently just announced yesterday that they have found a "Super-Earth" (their term, not mine) "that may be capable of supporting life as we know it — and it's just a stone's throw from Earth in the cosmic scheme of things." The planet is nicknamed "Lenny." So start packing, folks! And expect more articles like this one filling up your news feed every week, as we're methodically "prepared" to accept the inevitable fact of off-Earth colonization.
-- Timothy Leary, "Starseed: A Psi Phy Comet Tale"
Three rather interesting space-related items from the last week or so, all shaping one larger narrative:
Possible NASA Manned Moon Mission Announcement
Don't worry, there will be plenty of new jobs waiting for you on the moon |
"Krypton" Located By Famed Astrophysicist
Most of the mass media picked up this story about how Neil deGrasse Tyson "locates" the universe in which Krypton existed. Whether he has done so only in the comic book DC is set to promote, "Action Comics" #14, or in "real life" is made rather unclear...witness the story in the esteemed New Scientist website:
"Now famed astronomer Neil deGrasse Tyson has used his power of scientific reasoning to help pin down a real-life red star that could have hosted the home of the Man of Steel. Red stars can scale from dim dwarfs to mighty supergiants. But as astronomer Phil Plait explains, the lifetime of a red supergiant would probably be too short for the advanced Kryptonian civilisation to emerge, while known red giants are too far away from Earth to fit with Superman's back story. That means Krypton had to orbit a red dwarf, which can be older and closer."Note how the language here deftly mixes fact (there was a star and universe found) with fiction (THERE IS NO SUPERMAN OR PLANET KRYPTON!). Both fantasy and reality have been woven together in a meta-narrative that a respected member of the scientific community has endorsed.
Now, who am I to say that there isn't/wasn't a Krypton? Isn't this mythology-woven-into-fact happening as I write this? Don't we really want a Superman to really exist? And look: now we might have a human-friendly planet to go to...the next logical step after all those initiatives in the theoretical imminent NASA/Obama announcement is made.
Further, as I've pointed out on this blog several times -- President Obama has been "cast" as -- sometimes by his own self/handlers -- as a Superman-type icon. Heck, only a few issues back in "Action Comics" #9, there was a whole issue that (metaphorically, of course) explored this. And Obama himself quipped that he was born on Krypton:
New Star Wars Movies Announced
Lastly, to the item that kicked this whole news cycle off: hold on to your hats, fans, there is going to be a new Star Wars movie! And another one after that. And another one after that. And, as NASA sends some hapless souls to cling on an asteroid, another Star Wars movie after that.
We'll have plenty of fun space operas to keep our eyes to the stars over the next decades, thanks to Disney buying out Lucasfilm and forcing them to pump put more creations on a regular basis than the Duggar Family. "Star Wars" has also shaped our political landscape in the past, most particularly with the Star Wars Defense Initiative in the 1980s.
It will be very interesting to see what narratives these new movies spin out, and how they will both reflect and shape the larger world narrative. But the overall "message" of these films will be space travel, exploration, and planets beyond our own. Imagination-fuel for generations who will most likely witness -- and perhaps eventually train for -- these issues in real life.
"Young Jedi" at an actual "Jedi Training Academy" |
Why all these narratives now? It's because we're being prepared -- albeit very slowly and methodically -- for off-planet colonization. THIS -- this is the dominating narrative as the years and decades go by. This is it. Tim Leary was right with "Starseed" -- we have to get off the Rock. 'Cause another part of the narrative might be -- we're Krypton.
BUT
Leary also told us the real key is to travel into the universes within. Where is the official narrative for this, our map studded with friendly pop-culture landmarks for easy consumption?
Folks, that part of the journey -- there is no official plan, no NASA "innerspace" exploration announcement coming. We gotta do that ourselves. However, as always, pop-culture has many keys available to us to light up that way, as well.
(Also, is it time for news of some sort of ill-conceived "2001" reboot movie with state-of-the-art CGI effects? I'm thinking it is.)
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