Jane Goodall Revealed Wish to Send Musk and Trump on One-Way Cosmic Voyage

After dedicating years observing chimpanzee conduct, Jane Goodall became a specialist on the hostile behavior of dominant males. In a freshly unveiled interview documented shortly before her death, the celebrated primatologist disclosed her unique solution for handling specific people she viewed as showing similar traits: sending them on a permanent journey into space.

Legacy Interview Discloses Frank Opinions

This notable viewpoint into Goodall's philosophy emerges from the Netflix production "Final Words", which was filmed in March and maintained secret until after her recent death at the age of 91.

"I know persons I'm not fond of, and I wish to place them on a spacecraft and launch them to the planet he's sure he'll find," stated Goodall during her conversation with her interlocutor.

Specific Individuals Targeted

When asked whether Elon Musk, known for his questionable behavior and connections, would be included, Goodall answered with certainty.

"Yes, definitely. He would be the host. Picture who I'd put on that spacecraft. Together with Musk would be Trump and various Trump's real supporters," she declared.

"And then I would include Russia's leader in there, and I would place China's leader. Without question I would add Israel's prime minister in there and his administration. Put them all on that spacecraft and send them off."

Past Observations

This wasn't the initial instance that Goodall, a champion of ecological preservation, had shared negative views about the former president especially.

In a 2022 interview, she had observed that he showed "comparable kind of behavior as a male chimpanzee exhibits when battling for supremacy with a rival. They stand tall, they strut, they present themselves as much larger and aggressive than they may actually be in order to daunt their opponents."

Alpha Behavior

During her final interview, Goodall further explained her analysis of alpha personalities.

"We observe, interestingly, two kinds of leader. The first achieves dominance all by aggression, and due to their strength and they fight, they don't remain for extended periods. Another group achieves dominance by using their brains, like a young male will merely oppose a higher ranking one if his companion, often his brother, is with him. And as we've seen, they last far more extended periods," she detailed.

Collective Behavior

The famous researcher also analyzed the "politicization" of conduct, and what her comprehensive research had revealed to her about combative conduct exhibited by people and primates when faced with something they perceived as hostile, despite the fact that no threat really was present.

"Primates encounter an outsider from a neighboring community, and they grow highly agitated, and their hair erect, and they extend and contact each other, and they display these faces of hostility and apprehension, and it transmits, and the rest adopt that emotion that a single individual has had, and they all become aggressive," she detailed.

"It transmits easily," she continued. "Certain displays that grow violent, it spreads among them. They all want to get involved and grow hostile. They're defending their domain or battling for supremacy."

Human Parallels

When asked if she considered similar behaviors were present in people, Goodall responded: "Likely, in certain situations. But I truly believe that most people are decent."

"My primary aspiration is raising this new generation of compassionate citizens, beginnings and development. But is there sufficient time? I don't know. We face challenging circumstances."

Historical Comparison

Goodall, originally from London prior to the start of the World War II, compared the battle with the challenges of current political landscape to England opposing the Third Reich, and the "unyielding attitude" shown by the prime minister.

"This doesn't imply you won't experience periods of sadness, but subsequently you recover and state, 'Well, I'm not going to allow their success'," she commented.

"It's similar to the leader in the war, his famous speech, we'll fight them on the beaches, we shall battle them in the streets and metropolitan centers, subsequently he remarked to a friend and reportedly stated, 'and we will oppose them using the fragments of shattered glass since that's everything we truly have'."

Closing Thoughts

In her last message, Goodall offered motivational statements for those combating political oppression and the environmental crisis.

"In current times, when the world is challenging, there continues to be optimism. Don't lose hope. If you lose hope, you grow unresponsive and remain inactive," she recommended.

"Whenever you wish to save the existing splendor in this world – when you wish to preserve Earth for the future generations, future family, their grandchildren – then think about the choices you implement every day. Since, multiplied a million, innumerable instances, minor decisions will create significant transformation."

Susan Taylor
Susan Taylor

Tech enthusiast and lifestyle writer passionate about sharing knowledge and inspiring others through engaging content.