Jane Goodall Revealed Wish to Transport Trump and Musk on Single-Journey Trip to Space

After dedicating years observing chimpanzee actions, Jane Goodall became an expert on the aggressive tendencies of alpha males. In a freshly unveiled interview filmed shortly before her death, the famous primatologist disclosed her unconventional solution for handling particular figures she viewed as showing similar qualities: sending them on a non-return journey into outer space.

Legacy Interview Discloses Frank Opinions

This extraordinary perspective into Goodall's philosophy emerges from the Netflix production "Famous Last Words", which was filmed in March and preserved secret until after her recently announced death at 91 years old.

"I know persons I'm not fond of, and I would like to place them on a spacecraft and send them all off to the planet he's sure he'll find," remarked Goodall during her discussion with the interviewer.

Named Figures Identified

When asked whether the SpaceX founder, famous for his disputed actions and political alliances, would be included, Goodall answered with certainty.

"Oh, absolutely. He would be the leader. You can imagine who I'd put on that spacecraft. Along with Musk would be Donald Trump and various Trump's dedicated followers," she declared.

"And then I would put Russia's leader in there, and I would include China's leader. I'd certainly put the Israeli leader on that journey and his administration. Send them all on that spaceship and launch them."

Earlier Comments

This wasn't the earlier occasion that Goodall, an advocate of ecological preservation, had shared negative views about the former president specifically.

In a previous discussion, she had observed that he showed "the same sort of actions as a dominant primate exhibits when battling for leadership with a rival. They posture, they strut, they project themselves as much larger and hostile than they really are in order to intimidate their rivals."

Leadership Styles

During her last recorded conversation, Goodall further explained her comprehension of alpha personalities.

"We get, notably, two kinds of alpha. One does it all by aggression, and since they're powerful and they battle, they don't remain indefinitely. The second type succeeds 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 you know, they remain much, much longer," she explained.

Group Dynamics

The celebrated primatologist also studied the "social dimension" of actions, and what her detailed observations had taught her about hostile actions exhibited by groups of humans and primates when confronted with something they viewed as hostile, although no threat actually existed.

"Primates see an outsider from a neighboring community, and they become very stimulated, and their fur bristles, and they stretch and touch another, 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 combative," she detailed.

"It spreads rapidly," she continued. "Some of these demonstrations that grow violent, it sweeps through them. They all want to participate and engage and become aggressive. They're defending their domain or battling for control."

Comparable Human Reactions

When questioned if she considered the same behaviors occurred in people, Goodall responded: "Probably, sometimes yes. But I strongly feel that the majority of individuals are decent."

"My primary aspiration is nurturing this new generation of empathetic people, beginnings and development. But is there sufficient time? It's unclear. These are difficult times."

Historical Perspective

Goodall, originally from London prior to the commencement of the World War II, likened the fight against the challenges of present day politics to the UK resisting Nazi Germany, and the "unyielding attitude" displayed by Winston Churchill.

"However, this isn't to say you avoid having moments of depression, but then you come out and state, 'OK, I'm not going to let them win'," she stated.

"It resembles the Prime Minister in the war, his famous speech, we'll fight them along the shores, we'll fight them in the streets and the cities, then he turned aside to a companion and was heard to say, 'and we shall combat them using the fragments of shattered glass because that's all we've bloody well got'."

Closing Thoughts

In her concluding remarks, Goodall provided words of encouragement for those combating political oppression and the climate emergency.

"In current times, when the world is challenging, there continues to be hope. Preserve faith. If you lose hope, you become indifferent and take no action," she advised.

"Should you want to save the remaining beauty across the globe – if you want to save the planet for subsequent eras, your grandchildren, later generations – then consider the actions you make daily. Because, expanded numerous, a billion times, minor decisions will make for significant transformation."

Julie Valdez
Julie Valdez

Tech enthusiast and digital strategist with over a decade of experience in emerging technologies and startup ecosystems.