China Planning Mission to Set Up Machines on Dark Side of the Moon

Adrian Sol
Daily Stormer
January 1, 2018

Why are the chinks sending out women to space? Do they intend to seduce any aliens they come across?

Conquering the galaxy is our destiny and our birthright.

Yet while we’re twiddling our thumbs worrying about stupid crap like tranny bathrooms and human rights for Blacks, the Chinese are cucking us out of our achievements by actually having a bold vision for their space program.

This is unacceptable.

If the Chinese ever get far ahead of us in the space race and get a foothold off-world, they may be getting an insurmountable advantage over us. Once you’re out building zero-g manufacturing plants and harvesting asteroids and comets for materials, you hit a economic and population growth curve that is exponentially higher than anything possible on earth.

We can’t let the Jews get in the way of beating the yellow menace to this civilization-changing research.

The Guardian:

This time next year, there may be a new world leader in lunar exploration. If all goes according to plan, China will have done something no other space-faring superpower has been able to do: land on the far side of the moon. China is rocketing ahead with its plans for lunar exploration. In 2018, they will launch a pair of missions known collectively as Chang’e 4. It is the fourth mission in a series named after the Chinese moon goddess.

If the Chinese succeed in this, they’ll officially be ahead of us in the space race. Let that sink in.

Our technology is definitely more advanced – we just lack the will to get this done.

There’s no doubt in my heart that we’d already have gundams if it weren’t for the Jews. Yes, the greatest obstacle to making anime real is definitely the kike subversion of our institutions.

The first component of Chang’e 4 is scheduled to lift off in June. It will be a relay satellite stationed some 60,000km behind the moon and will provide a communications link between Earth and the lunar far side. Once this link is established, it will allow China to send the second part of the mission: a lander to the far side’s surface.

Landing on the far side of the moon is something no one has tried before. “The Chinese are pushing back the frontier with such a technically challenging mission,” says Brian Harvey, space analyst and author of China in Space: The Great Leap Forward.

China’s lunar exploration programme started in 2007 with Chang’e 1, a simple lunar orbiter. In 2010, Chang’e 2 also went into lunar orbit before setting off for a trek across the solar system that culminated in a flyby of asteroid Toutatis in 2012.

In 2013 Chang’e 3, deploying the Jade Rabbit rover, made headlines for the first soft landing on the moon since 1976. So far, so impressive, but all China had done was catch up with the achievements of the US and USSR. Chang’e 4, however, will be a space first.

Nobody has landed on the far side of the moon, mainly because of the communications difficulty. Yet the scientific payoff is huge. Being in the shadow of the moon allows stray radio signals from Earth to be blocked so the view of the radio universe is unparalleled.

Do we really want the Chinks to be the ones to find the hidden Nazi moon bases?

Heino Falcke, Radboud University, Nijmegen, is hoping to take full advantage of this by supplying a radio telescope to the Chinese mission. His aim is to test how easy it will be to pick up signals from the early universe before there were any stars.

Radio telescopes in orbit around the Earth have to deal with all sorts of interference from human civilization, introducing all sorts of noise into their readings and thus significantly reducing their potential accuracy. Sensors placed on the dark side of the moon would have the entire mass of the moon to absorb stray transmissions from earth, and thus have a much better chance at finding interesting stuff out there in space.

This means if there’s aliens out there that we missed, the chinks are going to be the first ones to know about it. They’ll also have exclusive access to all sorts of potentially important scientific data.

More importantly, they’re getting valuable experience setting up infrastructure off-world, as well as running a space program.

If we had devoted even a fraction of what we spent on Jew wars to developing alternative launch systems, we could be building massive space colonies by now.

This stuff is mostly achievable using current technology. It just requires political commitment.

Indeed, I could be writing anti-Semitic blog posts from outer space as we speak, instead of being tethered to the earth like a worm…

The Jews can never be forgiven for trying to take this future away from us.