The Secret Mars Colony
Are you worried that the government has interests and desires that you don’t want you to know about, and that we are surrounded by rich and powerful people who have access and influence that you will never have? Then The Secret Mars Colony by UFOTV is most likely for you. The film takes a hyper-conspiracy view of humanity’s interests, exploration, and quest to colonize our nearest planetary neighbor, theorizing that some widely accepted truths about Mars are actually just propaganda. Some ideas raised:
Mars is being prepared as a survival colony in the event of what is considered an imminent catastrophe that would render Earth largely uninhabitable. The inevitability of this planetary destruction has reportedly been known since the 1950s, when top-secret government summits involving the world’s most enlightened scientific minds produced data indistinguishable from the concept of global warming. In the decade before us (2000s), predictions of when these events might occur have been made.
This Mars was settled by humans in the mid-20th century and has been colonized by strategically selected experts ever since. During this period, travel between Earth and Mars was an ongoing and fairly routine practice, with teleportation (using technology based on a physical concept like wormholes) being the primary mode of transportation. “…Long distance travel is best accomplished through portals. Anything else is… just too inefficient.”
The American elite, the great-granddaughter of President Eisenhower, is a leading member of this group and has had the opportunity to participate in these “escape plans” for many years.
“NASA as we’ve known it for 50 years is a lie.” The idea that NASA is an open, civilian science organization is a front that was actually created to enable all of the aforementioned government-only technological advancements.
The narrator insists in the film’s final few minutes that the data presented is not evidence that the government has colonized Mars, before turning in his next point to discuss whether Disney’s (horrible) 2012 film John Carter might be such a glimpse Access to government portal-based technology for interstellar travel. It’s certainly a showcase for many bold ideas, but only a skeptic can relate to most of the ideas here.