What is in Elon Musk’s New Mega Rocket? Get to Know NASA’s New Artemis Freemason Space Program

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    by Brian Shilhavy, Health Impact News:

    This coming Friday, November, 17, 2023, SpaceX’s largest rocket, the “Starship,” which is also the world’s largest ever built rocket and launch system, is scheduled to make its second test launch and flight.

    SpaceX’s next Starship test launch could lift off as early as Nov. 17, pending regulatory approval from the Federal Aviation Administration and other agencies.

    The potential launch from SpaceX’s Starbase test site at Boca Chica Beach near Brownsville, Texas will mark the company’s second test flight of an orbital class Starship and Super Heavy booster — the largest and most powerful rocket ever built. SpaceX launched its first Starship test flight in April, but it exploded shortly after liftoff.

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    “Starship preparing to launch as early as November 17, pending final regulatory approval,” SpaceX wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter, late Friday (Nov. 10).

    The Starship and Super Heavy launch system is the world’s tallest and most powerful rocket. It stands nearly 400 feet tall (121 meters), has a touted lift capacity of 165 tons (150 metric tons) and is designed to be fully reusable. SpaceX aims to use Starship as a workhorse heavy-lift launcher, as well as for deep space missions and has already sold flights around the moon to space tourists. NASA also plans to use the Starship rocket to land Artemis 3 astronauts on the moon. (Full article.)

    What is this mega-rocket going to be used for? Launch more satellites, joining the more than 8,800 operating satellites currently in orbit radiating the earth and looking at who knows what?

    On Sunday, SpaceX launched 23 satellites from Cape Canaveral in the morning, and 22 more from Vandenberg Air Force Base in the evening. This brought the total number of operating satellites  irradiating the Earth to about 8,800.

    SpaceX has been sending up satellite-laden rockets every few days this year, in its haste to satisfy an insatiable demand for bandwidth by the billions of human beings who use cell phones. But  SpaceX is not the only one. Hundreds of companies are competing for a share of the global market to supply Internet from the sky to the world’s population.

    On January 5, 2022, I sent out a newsletter listing 147 companies and government agencies from 34 countries that were operating, launching, or planning fleets of satellites that, if they were all  launched, would total about half a million in our skies, far outnumbering the visible stars. (Full article.)

    Probably, but this rocket is built for bigger things.

    Could we be entering into a new phase of war, where the threat from alleged “nuclear bombs” becomes nothing compared to energy weapons that could potentially affect the weather, create earthquakes, and cause massive fires that instantly incinerate everything in their path?

    Such massive destruction could render human soldiers unnecessary, as the modern warrior would then be sitting behind a computer somewhere ready to “pull the trigger.”

    Well one thing we know for sure, is that NASA’s new space program, Artemis, has already contracted with Musk and his SpaceX “Starship” to become part of the Artemis space program.

    Since its inception, the U.S. space agency NASA has used the names of “Greek Gods and Goddesses”, which the Bible refers to as “Demons”, to name their spaceships and space “exploration” programs. “Apollo” was one of the first names used.

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