
About This Episode
George Howard joins the conversation to explore life on Mars, cosmic mysteries, and what NASA might not be telling us. 👉 Watch the full episode here: https://youtu.be/ZOvRFc2T8iM 👉 Check out his channel here: @cosmicsummit #Aliens #LifeOnMars #GeorgeHoward #SpaceMysteries #NASASecrets #AandMPodcast #Astrobiology #ExtraterrestrialLife #podcastclip #CosmicQuestions #space #spaceexploration #alien #podcast #spacefacts
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Full Transcript
St. Mars is crawling with light. Plankton found on space station. All of that stuff has been proven by NASA itself to survive the conditions in space. St. Mars is crawling with light. Maybe not crawling but microbial life. Okay. I believe it exists in ambient space as well, right? That there are thousands of life particles. Thousands. God, trillions of life particles. Yeah. Viruses in space. microbes of all sorts in space and you say, "Well, come on now. Space, you know, radiation is so strong and it's vacuum and all of that. Nothing lives in space." We grow up and you think space, nothing there. Yeah. They're particles all over the space. And what are those particles? Those particles are comet dust or cosmic dust. Okay. Okay. No doubt in anybody's mind that tons and tons and you get a lot of dust for a ton of dust. Tons. Yeah. Yeah. Worldwide. They're talking about it's a it's a light rain, but it's everywhere. Yeah. Yet tons and tons 100 tons a day or whatever that stuff comes in. Yeah. Okay. Those pieces of cosmic dust in some cases, maybe most cases, I don't know, are actually kind of large enough to see potentially, right? The naked eye. Yeah. Yeah. Maybe just a regular micros. Sure. You know, but they're they're in that range. A virus. Oh. Or a data. Yeah. Or a E.coli coli bacteria in a desiccated form inside of a visible to just subvisible particle of comet cosmic dust. It's like being at a space station a billion times larger well shielded. Yeah. Right. And it's not alive. It's not sitting out there. All of that stuff has been proven by NASA itself to survive the conditions of space. When you go take um tardy grades for instance, fabulous thing. You know, tardigrades are everywhere on earth. They're called water bears. It's tiny things. What are they? They're tough as hell. They're called tardy grades water organisms. Cool things. And they all look little different. They look like a child's plush toy. Yeah. Right. And they live in all malts worldwide, but they also in Antarctica, you know, tardig grades. And they started testing tardigrade said, "Well, how do they live in Antarctica and you know here and there and they're extreophiles. They're in the class of things." Yeah. That that they they can't find anything. They kill them. So they actually went so far with tardy grades than they have with other they went and painted them on a plate, put it outside the space station. Yeah. Brought it in and just add water and heat. Damn thing comes back to life. Now, why in the world would evolution endow that creature with the ability to withstand that unless that creature was intrinsic to the universe and it sometimes lived there? Because they can hibernate. They can go into there's another word I'm seeking hibernate. Yeah. Dormant stasis. Yeah. And shut down, right? And then it's just add water. So just add water light plus a space station of a and they say okay well that might be good supposition what's the proof of that you go on the cosmic tusma blog and type ISS international space station plankton and you can see that the Russians 10 times over six years went to the window the tourist window on the outside of the space station where they look out themselves and Right. Big thing. And took tampons. I talked about this on Danny James me saying. Took tampons and swiped the window. Right. And very careful. Did it 10 times. Made sure nothing. Put it in the little thing. It back to Russia. Took it to the line. 10 out of 10. Every one of them. Plankton. Datums. E. E. Yes. Yes. Bacteria. Yeah. Oh. DNA particles of it. Sure. So, not does and I don't know anything about some of the whole. So, I remember waiting in my kid's pickup line in like fifth grade or something and looking at my phone and it says plankton found on space station. I'm a big fan of Shanderwick Ramosing who's kept the this whole truth alive and he's 85. Big fan of his personal friend talk regularly and I said is vindicated. Hell yes. That's something he would say the plankton on the space station. This is gonna wreck it just nothing. They did space.com came out and said task the Russian space agency had or the space they had it was an errant report. Nobody can get anybody to follow up. There's no backup. It was blah blah blah. And I'm like and then then nothing. And those were slashed articles, right? And then I had actually missed it and found out a year or two later in 2018 the Russians actually put those results in a paper cuz I just seen it in this little spattering of articles and you read the paper very well done all very established um seems to be institutes and you got to think if you're writing a paper about your tests an evaluation of something that came from the space station You're a credible scientist. Yeah, that means at least you're the person in Russia that gets to the space station. Yeah. So these people came out and they said, "Yeah, which we got life all over the outside of the space station." So you said, "Well, that should be a big deal." But they hedged. They said, "And this oversimplifying, but um it's clear in the paper. Either it came from above, yeah, or it came from below." So they even say in the paper that they kind of go through the two things and then they say we weigh down on the side that it came from below as hoisted into the at the atmosphere into space immediate space orbital space wafted it on there through an unknown mechanism. Yeah. If you got a punt to an unknown mechanism you got a problem there. Yeah. And and second that means we're seeding it into the world that life world and that proves panspermia on itself. Why the next planet doing it? Why in the