❝ You can’t terraform a corpse. ❞
— If it were possible, we’d be able to raise the dead. LOL.
The Dream That Was Sold
The dust never settles on Mars — it hovers, suspended like a ghost in thin, broken air.
For centuries, we stared up at that crimson dot, imagining canals and civilizations, lost empires and hidden signals. The fantasy evolved with us. From telescopes to satellites, from science fiction to startup pitches, Mars has always been more than a planet. It became a promise.
They told us Mars was the new frontier. The place where humanity could reset. Where our mistakes wouldn’t follow us, where the deserts could be conquered with science, and red could be reborn as green. But dreams, like planets, have layers. And beneath this one — beneath the vision of domed cities and starports — lies something darker. Not a bold plan… but a brilliant distraction.
Because while the world beneath our feet buckles under heat, war, and collapse, the conversation has shifted skyward, to Mars, to escape, to abandon and to forget. What they don’t want to admit — what they hope you never ask — is what Mars actually is. Not in theory and not in myth. But in the cold language of planetary physics: Mars is not a beginning. It’s an ending that’s already happened.
Trying to terraform Mars isn’t visionary. It’s desperation wrapped in delusion. And we see through it — not just with common sense, but with science, history, and the unmistakable scent of a lie sold too often.
Autopsy of a Planet
The first time you look at Mars through a telescope, it almost tricks you. The soft red hue, the faint wisps of polar ice, the shadows that stretch across the craters — it feels familiar. Almost like Earth wearing war paint. But that feeling doesn’t last. Because Mars doesn’t move like Earth. It doesn’t breathe like Earth. And it doesn’t live like Earth. The deeper you look, the more it begins to resemble something else entirely, a body thats cold, still and hollow. Its a corpse orbiting in silence.
No Magnetic Field — No Protection, No Future
At some point in its early youth, Mars had what Earth still holds — a magnetosphere. A protective bubble of electromagnetic force generated by the molten iron swirling in its core. That invisible shield is what lets life on Earth exist. It blocks solar wind, redirects cosmic rays, and keeps the atmosphere from being peeled away atom by atom. Mars lost that gift. Roughly four billion years ago, the core of Mars cooled. Its magnetic dynamo shut off. The protective shell vanished. And once it was gone, the planet’s fate was sealed.
Every second since, the Sun has been slowly erasing what little air Mars had left. No shield. No barrier. Just exposure. The Red Planet isn’t just exposed to radiation — it’s saturated with it. The very thing we need to survive — atmosphere — is what Mars cannot hold. You don’t “fix” that with domes. You don’t “override” that with comets. You either have a magnetosphere… or you don’t. Mars doesn’t.
No Plate Tectonics — No Breath, No Cycle
Earth has lungs — deep beneath the crust, tectonic plates shift and slide, carrying carbon deep into the mantle and releasing it through volcanic breath. It’s messy, violent, beautiful — and essential. It’s how our planet regulates temperature. Recycles minerals. Stabilizes atmosphere. Mars? It doesn’t move. Its crust is locked. Its plates are static. Its volcanoes, once the tallest in the solar system, are extinct. Cold. Sealed. A world without tectonics is a world without breath.
There is no geologic heartbeat on Mars — no force beneath the surface trying to start again. Just ancient scars and silent faults. The blood stopped moving eons ago. Terraforming such a place is like giving CPR to a mannequin. There’s nothing to revive. Nothing waiting to awaken. Just rock — unfeeling, unmoving, unchanging.
No Core Dynamo — No Chance of Reversal
The core of Mars isn’t just dormant. It’s frozen. The iron inside has cooled and stiffened. Without fluid movement, there is no convection. And without convection, there is no magnetic field. No resurrection. No reversal. It would take a planetary-scale miracle to reheat that core — and even then, the entire structural geology of Mars is against you. It’s not just lacking a fire within. It’s been built to stay cold.
There’s a reason Earth remains alive.
It’s not just luck — it’s size, mass, imbalance. Earth is dynamically restless. Tectonic. Pressurized. A world in motion. Mars? Mars is the opposite. Too small. Too light. Too stable in its silence.
Its death wasn’t sudden. It didn’t explode. It faded. Quietly. Just like Mother Earth is fading now — not through one catastrophe, but through the slow collapse of cycles that took billions of years to build. And it took a lot less years for humans to speed up the process. You don’t rush the birth of a planet. And you don’t shortcut its death. Mars isn’t waiting for rebirth. It’s already completed its cycle. What we see now is not a dormant world. It’s a planetary body that has reached its final state — a stillness earned through entropy.
This Isn’t a Pause. This Is the End.
When you examine Mars like a scientist, you don’t see possibility. You see pathology. The failure of planetary function. The withering of internal processes. The slow death of a once-young world that simply couldn’t hold on. Every so-called solution — comets, nukes, asteroid collisions — ignores the obvious: You can’t terraform what no longer has the capacity to support change.
This isn’t science fiction. This is postmortem analysis. And what you’re left with is the truth: Mars isn’t a project. It’s a planetary graveyard.
SPACE JUNK FANTASY: THE ASTEROID COLLISION PLAN
Scientists want to The Collision Fantasy The idea reads like something pulled from a script rejected by The Expanse for being too unhinged: “We’ll crash asteroids into Mars. The impact will release heat, water, and atmosphere. It’ll terraform the planet. We’ll light the match and let Mars breathe again.”
It’s pitched with confidence — graphs, simulations, animated projections. But when you slow it down, when you strip away the optimism and chase the physics to the end, you’re left with something very different. A planetary-scale act of violence that does nothing but fracture stone and dreams. This isn’t science. It’s a hail Mary with no endgame. And here’s how it really plays out.
The Plan: Steal Ice From the Edge of the Solar System
To even begin the process, you’d need to identify and redirect icy asteroids from the Kuiper Belt — a region far beyond Neptune, where frozen rocks the size of mountains drift silently in the dark.
The idea? Well — if you believe in quackery science.
They want to drag one of these behemoths — icy asteroids from the Kuiper Belt — across billions of miles of deep space… using propulsion systems we don’t even have yet… and crash them into Mars at just the right angle, speed, and geological target to magically release water vapor and nitrogen like it’s a cosmic vending machine. And it gets better.
Some proposals aim even farther out — to the Oort Cloud, the deep, frozen graveyard of comets that makes the Kuiper Belt look like your backyard sandbox. Estimated time to redirect just one? 15,000 years. Not a typo. LOL. This isn’t science. It’s sci-fi larping as planetary engineering. And they expect you to take it seriously.
The Logistics: A Fantasy Made of Vapor
To make any of this happen, you’d need: Precision propulsion systems capable of operating across centuries Real-time remote steering of chaotic mass in deep space. Fusion reactors powering drives we haven’t invented yet. Guidance systems that survive multi-generational missions. A planetary impact zone that somehow absorbs the hit… and benefits from it. All while avoiding total catastrophe — because if even one of these ice missiles comes in off-angle? You’re not terraforming Mars.
You’re cratering it into fragments.
And yet, the plan continues to circulate in science journals and media hype cycles — not because it’s viable, but because it sells the idea that we’re doing something bold.
The Impact: Heat, Ruin, and Nothing Left to Save
Here’s what they won’t tell you.
When a massive icy asteroid slams into Mars:
– The energy released is equivalent to thousands of nuclear bombs.
– The impact zone would be reduced to melted rock and atmospheric chaos.
– Any heat generated would be temporary, radiating out into space almost immediately.
– Vaporized water would either freeze back into permafrost — or escape into space altogether.
– Volatile gases released would drift briefly… then be stripped by solar wind due to lack of a magnetosphere.
– And if there were any life on Mars — microbial or human — in or near that hemisphere?
They’d be turned to steam and dust in seconds.
All the while probably — but most likely — shift the planet’s path from its original orbit.
The Cost: Catastrophe Masquerading as Innovation
There’s no world where this plan doesn’t carry planetary risk. You’re weaponizing celestial bodies against a fragile surface with no regenerative capability. No tectonics to stabilize shock. No water table to rehydrate. No pressure system to hold the new gases down. And for what? A fleeting atmospheric spike? A brief rise in humidity? A moment of artificial warmth? This isn’t science. This is terraforming by detonation. And you don’t heal a dead world by punching it in the face with a frozen hammer.
Even the Models Break Down
A few brave scientists ran the math. One Reddit astrophysicist calculated that to warm Mars by 27 degrees Celsius, you’d need the equivalent of 10,500 Halley-sized comets. That’s more than 10,000 impacts. Each one a mass extinction-level event. And even that wouldn’t generate Earthlike conditions — it would barely move the needle. And in the end, Mars still can’t hold that atmosphere. It would be gone within decades.
It’s Not Engineering. It’s Ego.
This plan doesn’t survive scrutiny. But it does survive headlines. Because it sounds epic. It sounds cinematic. It sounds like a species playing god. But what it really is… is an act of desperation.
A last gasp at relevance for a world that never asked to be saved. You can throw comets at a graveyard.
You can light fires in tombs. But you can’t terraform a world that doesn’t respond. You’re not creating life.
You’re just rearranging rubble.redirect icy asteroids into Mars to “release water and nitrogen.”
Let’s break this down:
- Source: Kuiper Belt or Oort Cloud (29–15,000 years away)
- Propulsion: Theoretical ion drives powered by fusion (which we don’t have)
- Impact: Devastating, uncontrollable — and would likely kill any life trying to settle there
- Atmosphere Gain: Temporarily thick, quickly lost again due to lack of magnetosphere
- Water Stability: Vaporized. Then frozen. Then gone.
It’s like trying to warm your frozen pizza by throwing Jupiter at the oven.
THE NUMBERS DON’T LIE
There’s something unshakeable about numbers. They don’t care what you believe. They don’t bend for hope, for hype, or for hero narratives. They just are — absolute, brutal, and impossible to ignore. And when you apply real math to the idea of terraforming Mars, the illusion doesn’t just crumble… It implodes. Let’s walk through the raw arithmetic of planetary delusion.
Temperature: A World Locked in Cold
The average surface temperature on Mars is −81°F (−63°C).
And that’s just the average. Nighttime lows can drop to −195°F near the poles — temperatures where steel becomes brittle and carbon-based compounds seize into frostbite silence.
To reach even the minimal livable threshold for long-term human exposure, you’d need to raise Mars’ temperature by at least 60°F (33°C) across the entire planet. That means blanketing the globe in greenhouse gases, vapor, pressure, and regulated heat.
How much energy would that require?
→ More than Earth produces globally in decades.
→ More than any fusion plant we’ve even dreamed of.
→ More than you could generate without also obliterating the fragile Martian terrain.
And here’s the cruelest twist: Even if you managed to heat Mars up… It would lose that warmth again — almost instantly. Because heat without pressure, without atmosphere, without magnetic retention… Isn’t progress. It’s a leak. A waste of time.
Atmosphere: Thin as Dust and Just as Temporary
Mars’ atmosphere isn’t just thin — it’s virtually non-existent.
- Surface pressure: ~0.6% of Earth’s
- Composition: 95% carbon dioxide, 2.7% nitrogen, 1.6% argon
- Oxygen: 0.13% (compared to Earth’s 21%)
To reach breathable conditions, you’d need to increase atmospheric pressure by a factor of 170. That’s not adding a few gases — that’s manufacturing a planet’s entire sky.
To replicate Earth-like conditions, scientists estimate you’d need to release over 3.5 teratons of carbon dioxide and at least 1.5 teratons of nitrogen — and that’s before you even begin seeding with oxygen-producing biospheres. The total atmospheric requirement for long-term habitability? Roughly the mass of everything we’ve ever extracted from Earth’s crust — times ten. And even then, Mars would start bleeding it into space the moment you let go of the valve.
Gravity: The Unfixable Flaw
Gravity isn’t optional. It’s the skeleton of atmosphere.
Mars’ gravity is only 38% that of Earth. That means:
- Gases escape more easily
- Human bodies suffer bone and muscle degeneration
- Liquid water can’t stay stable at the surface without pressure domes
- Atmospheric molecules drift into the vacuum of space unless held by sheer planetary mass
There is no technology that increases a planet’s gravity. There is no machine that scales Mars up by 60%. You can’t fake mass. You can’t cheat escape velocity. And so, even if you build an atmosphere — Mars will simply let it go. Slowly. Relentlessly. Permanently.
Soil: Poison at the Roots
Let’s say — against reason — you succeed in heating the planet, pressurizing the atmosphere, and stabilizing the temperature. Now you want to plant crops. Except… you can’t.
Because Martian soil isn’t soil at all — it’s regolith laced with perchlorates, a class of reactive oxidizers toxic to human organs. Even trace amounts absorbed through food or dust inhalation can cause:
- Kidney failure
- Endocrine disruption
- Fatal autoimmune reactions
No amount of hydroponics or sealed greenhouses makes the surface safe. You’d have to scrub the entire top layer of the planet — chemically, manually, or with imported Earth microbes that might not even survive the radiation exposure. This isn’t “just add water.” This is “bury it in biohazard tape.” LOL.
Radiation: The Planet That Burns Without Flame
Mars receives 250 times more radiation than Earth does — and that’s before solar flares. No ozone layer. No magnetic deflection. Just direct, unfiltered exposure to cosmic rays and ultraviolet death.
Within weeks, unshielded humans on Mars would suffer:
- Severe radiation sickness
- Organ damage
- Genetic mutation
- Cancerous growths
- Death
Even under several feet of Martian soil or ice, background radiation levels still exceed Earth’s deep-space standards. Mars isn’t a new frontier. It’s a slow-motion execution chamber.
Escape Velocity: The Leak That Never Closes
Mars’ escape velocity is only 5.03 km/s, compared to Earth’s 11.2 km/s. That means atmospheric molecules — especially lighter ones like oxygen and nitrogen — easily escape into space under heat and solar influence. You could spend centuries pumping gases into the sky… And within decades, they’d be gone. This is a planet that doesn’t just resist terraforming — It actively undoes it.
In the End, the Math Isn’t a Maybe — It’s a Murder Scene
The numbers aren’t a debate. They’re a verdict. Every factor — gravity, atmosphere, heat retention, soil toxicity, radiation exposure — screams the same truth: Mars is not habitable, it is not terraformable and it never will be. This isn’t an engineering problem. It’s a planetary incompatibility. The fantasy ends when the numbers begin.
Tomb, Not Terra
Stand on the surface of Mars — not through a screen, not in a simulation, but really stand there.
Beneath your boots, the ground is dry, powdered with iron oxide and broken stone. Above you, the sky isn’t blue. It’s butterscotch, filtered through a haze so thin you could almost mistake it for glass. But it’s not glass. It’s void. There is no wind you can feel, no sounds that travel, no birds, no bees and no rustle of trees or crash of waves. Just silence, absolute, ancient and psychologically scary.
And if you stood there long enough — without a suit, without a shell — your blood would boil, your lungs would collapse, and your last breath would be taken not by panic… but by pressurelessness.
Because there’s nothing there to hold life in. And that’s the secret. The thing they don’t want you to internalize. Mars isn’t a beginning. It’s a tomb.
It’s a shorter life span for any human that is crazy enough to want to live there.
No Trees, No Rain, No Breath
Mars doesn’t know the sound of rainfall. It never has for a very, very long time. There are no water cycles. No weather patterns beyond angry dust devils and planet-wide storms that can rage for months.
There is no humidity, no condensation, no gentle rolling of fog across the hills. Just static desolation — locked in red rock. There are no trees to breathe for you. No root systems to stitch the surface together.
There is no fungal networks to carry nutrients beneath the soil. No birdsong, no pollination and no ecological rhythm. There is absolutely no ecosystem at all.
What we call “soil” is nothing but sterile powder, stripped of nitrogen, infested with perchlorates, and incapable of supporting life as we know it. You could dump every seed on Earth onto the Martian surface — and nothing would grow. It’s not asleep. It’s dead.
No Biosphere, No Cycle, No Regeneration
Earth is more than a planet. It’s a system — a balance of feedback loops and chaotic harmonies that breathe together: air, water, land, and life, exchanging energy, sharing memory.
Mars has none of this — there is no nitrogen cycle, no carbon sinks, no photosynthetic organisms.
No ozone, no regulatory heat sink, no buffers and no renewables.
There’s no part of Mars that participates in change — no self-correcting process, no regenerative core.
You could pour Earth’s entire atmosphere into Mars tomorrow and it would leave — stripped by solar wind, bled off by low gravity, or frozen into the soil. I hate to be the bearer of bad news — even life doesn’t want to stay.
The only way to sustain human presence would be sealed domes, deep bunkers, artificial heat, radiation shielding, pressurized environments, and constant resupply. Forever. And well… forever.
Psychology of the Lie: Why We Pretend It’s Possible
So why do we keep saying Mars is “the future”? Because the truth is unbearable to those who have bet everything on escape. Mars is blank. And in that blankness, powerful men see something seductive: No rules. No resistance, no past and no history to answer for. A place to write new laws — or none at all. A planet with no regulators, no climate activists, no political consequences. It isn’t about building a better world.
It’s about building a clean slate for control. But they can’t admit that — so they dress it up in hope, science, and inspiration. They call it progress. They call it humanity’s destiny.
But behind every word is this: A hunger to flee accountability.
This Is Not a World. It’s a Wound
Mars is beautiful in the way ruins are beautiful — quiet, distant, scarred. But ruins aren’t homes.
And this isn’t a new beginning. This is a fossil in orbit. A planetary reminder that not everything can be rebuilt. That some things stay broken. No matter how much money, ambition, or technology you throw at them. You can’t terraform this. You can’t restore this. You can’t bring it back — because it never had what we have. Mars is not Earth’s twin. It’s Earth’s ghost. And Mother Earth… well, she will become her own ghost in a much shorter time because of the humans’ time here within her. Those parents with children who have stabbed them in the back at one time or another —
they know exactly what Mother Earth feels like.
The Real Reason They Push It
They want you to believe it’s about hope. They talk about backup plans. Survival of the species. Interplanetary destiny. The noble quest to become a multi-world civilization. But beneath every word, every press release, every carefully orchestrated launch… is a quiet truth they’ll never say aloud: Mars isn’t their salvation. It’s their escape route. Not from Earth’s collapse — but from Earth’s consequences.
Follow the Funding, Not the Fantasy
It always starts the same way: a stage, a starry background, a billionaire in a black T-shirt pacing in front of PowerPoint slides. “We’ll terraform Mars.” “We’ll build cities in the dust.” “We’ll preserve the human race.” But follow the trail. Don’t listen to the speech — follow the capital.
You’ll find defense contracts wrapped in climate optimism. Mining patents masked as research.
Surveillance tech cloaked in space-habitat language. And private investor portfolios hedging against Earth-based volatility by investing in “off-world real estate.” It’s not science fiction. It’s portfolio diversification. This isn’t a plan to save us. It’s a plan to replace us — with those who can afford to leave.
Earth Is Burning — and They Don’t Want to Fix It
Let’s be clear: Mother Earth has problems. Real serious ones. The weakening shield. Climate collapse. Soil degradation. Ocean acidification. Ecological breakdown. Economic instability. And every one of them could be addressed — right here, right now — with the full force of our global tech empires. We may not be able to change the outer or internal damage that has already been done, but we can try to do what’s right and at least try.
Show some love to the planet that thrives to keep us alive — and maybe God might intervene to change the course Mother Earth is on.
Sorry, but like a human death… only God has the power to prevent that. But unfortunately… these people won’t. They never will. Because saving Earth requires accountability. It means cutting profits. It means redistribution. And a serious commitment to justice. They don’t want that They want Mars. Mars asks nothing of them, it’s blank, silent and lawless. A place where they can start over — but only for themselves. The poor don’t get boarding passes. The working class doesn’t get oxygen rations. You’re not invited to the Martian arc. You’re meant to stay behind. And watch the red dot disappear.
The Psychology of Abandonment
They dress it up in language that flatters humanity: pioneers, visionaries, dreamers. But the truth is uglier. This is not humanity reaching for the stars. This is power looking for a vault.
They’ve extracted everything from Earth — resources, labor, data, culture — and now they’re laying the groundwork for the final betrayal: leaving us behind while calling it progress. The same hands that polluted this planet now position themselves as the architects of the next one. As if the problems we face didn’t come from them. As if we’re supposed to cheer their departure.
They want Mars because Earth reminds them what they broke. They want distance from consequence. They want elevation without sacrifice. And they want you to believe that your suffering is part of a greater plan — a noble migration. But the only thing being launched is a lie. And they will get what they paid for.
The PR Machine Is Part of the Rocket
Hollywood backs them. Streaming services back them. TED Talks. Futurist magazines. Educational videos for kids. They create a narrative where Earth’s failure is inevitable.
Where fighting to save our forests is less sexy than building hydroponic farms on a lifeless rock.
The planet you live on becomes the past.
The red one — the one with no oxygen, no birds, no rain — becomes the future. That’s not optimism.
That’s mass programming. Because if they can convince you Mars is hope, then you’ll forgive them for letting Earth collapse. You’ll follow them into the fire, convinced it’s a gateway, Good luck.
This Isn’t a Mission for Humanity — It’s a Lifeboat for the Elite
Not everyone is meant to go. And they know that. The ticket to Mars won’t be won by merit. It will be bought — with wealth, with compliance, with silence.
- The engineers go.
- The brandable scientists go.
- The CEOs go.
- The obedient go.
But the rest? We’ll watch it all on livestream. From a planet they already decided to abandon. And I like that idea — watching live from here on Mother Earth. Because we will see firsthand how fools become the fooled.
TRJ Reality Check
The story they sold you wasn’t just science fiction. It was strategic distraction. It didn’t ask you to think critically — it asked you to hope blindly. It wasn’t a plan for the future — it was a permission slip to abandon the present. Because the moment you start looking to Mars as the backup plan, you stop fighting for Earth as the only plan.
But here’s the hard truth: There is no Planet B that is reachable yet. And I hate to say it, but I’m pretty sure God made sure of that. There is no second Earth that is reachable yet. No do-over. No red oasis waiting to be kissed awake by human ambition. Mars is not a beginning. It is a dead echo — and the only people pretending otherwise are those who benefit from your distraction. I love the thought of descending off onto another planet. I love space, and all the adventures that come from it.
I’ve said it before — I would love to see what’s in outer space personally. I mean, who wouldn’t? To visit Mars and then return home? Great. But to live there? Hell no.
IF THE TECH WORKED — THE MISSION STILL WOULDN’T
Let’s say the suits are perfect. Radiation-hardened. Oxygen-recycling. Pressure-sealed.
Let’s say the ship operates like a sealed miracle — no malfunctions, no supply issues. Even then… every single minute on Mars is a countdown.
The Environment Fights Back
Mars has 1% of Earth’s air pressure. That means no real oxygen, no pressure cushion, and no heat retention. You step outside, and the cold doesn’t bite — it devours. Forget frostbite. We’re talking tissue death in minutes. No breathable air. No buffer zone. Just raw exposure.
Radiation Is Constant
Even with the best shielding, you’re absorbing 20x the radiation you’d get on Earth. With no magnetosphere, cosmic rays and solar bursts are unfiltered. Damage isn’t avoided — it’s just delayed.
No Escape, No Margin
Earth and Mars only align every 26 months. If something fails — if water turns, oxygen drops, systems glitch — you don’t get to leave. There is no backup launch. No rescue team. You’re sealed in until the orbit says otherwise.
No Resupply. No Recovery. No Redo.
Everything has to work the first time. One misstep in payload, thermal load, oxygen supply, reactor shielding — and it’s over. No patch, no parachute, no emergency hatch.
Psychological Collapse is a Certainty
Mars doesn’t just isolate. It erases. No wind. No animals. No trees. No color. Even hardened astronauts struggle in sterile silence. Humans were not built to thrive in a vacuum. They were built to hear birds, touch bark, feel wind, see life.
So even if the tech works — the humans still don’t.
You’re not sending explorers. You’re sentencing them. Not to glory — but to entropy. Mars isn’t waiting for colonization. It’s waiting for your failure. It’s waiting for another body to add to its graveyard.
Earth Is the Only Living World We Know
This planet breathes. It heals — for the most part. It adapts. It carries forests, rivers, fungi, animals, clouds, and currents. It has a magnetic field still, tectonic breath, an atmosphere that holds, a biosphere that speaks, and a heartbeat underfoot. I never want to see this planet die. I want it to forever survive. And that… is no longer true.
Mother Earth is most likely in its early stages of dying — we’ve discussed this before in many of my previous articles. But Mother Earth is our home. And I would rather be here and die with it. Because honestly… everything we need is here. Everything we’ve ever loved, built, or dreamed of — was born in Earth’s soil. And yet… the ones who profited from its ruin are now pointing upward. Telling you to look away. Telling you that “forward” means leaving it all behind. But forward doesn’t mean fleeing.
Forward means accountability. It means staying. It means trying to fix what we broke. You don’t prove your species is worthy by running from your home. You prove it by trying to save it.
No Escape Without Conscience
Let this be said plainly:
- Terraforming Mars is not possible.
- Colonizing Mars in any meaningful way is not sustainable.
- Pretending otherwise is irresponsible, manipulative, and dangerous.
You can’t terraform a corpse. You can’t build a biosphere out of branding.
And you can’t solve Earth’s problems by launching billionaires into the void and calling it progress. LOL.
We Don’t Need Martian Myths. We Need Earthly Resolve.
The Realist Juggernaut rejects the dead-planet delusion. We expose it for what it is: A propaganda campaign to sell escape as evolution.
Let the Mars cult keep dreaming of tombstones in orbit. We choose to remain grounded — not in fear, but in truth. Because realism is the most radical resistance of all, There’s a powerful force in realism.
TRJ BLACK FILE: DEAD PLANET DOSSIER
Status: Finalized
Classification: 🔒 Public Deconstruction
Threat: Psychological Detachment, Environmental Abandonment
Dissemination Priority: High
Recommended Action: Reject all “Mars as Future” narratives. Refocus on planetary preservation. Track funding pipelines tied to off-world colonization propaganda.
TRJ BLACK FILE — THE TERRAFORMING DELUSION
This isn’t progress. It’s narrative warfare dressed as science.
Debunked Tactic #001 — Asteroid Impact Heating
Redirecting ice comets to crash into Mars to “release greenhouse gases”? Laughable. The vapor would either freeze or escape to space. The collision would be catastrophic, not constructive.
Debunked Tactic #002 — Atmospheric Fabrication
No magnetic field. No atmospheric retention. No long-term heating. You’re not terraforming — you’re staging a temporary illusion that evaporates into the void.
Debunked Tactic #003 — Geoengineering Revival
You can’t force tectonic activity on a geologically dead planet. There’s no core dynamism. No mantle convection. No planetary metabolism.
Debunked Tactic #004 — Billionaire Exodus Plans
Domes, bunkers, and PR campaigns aren’t colonization. They’re escape plans for the ultra-rich while Earth decays — under the watch of their own industries.
This isn’t futurism. It’s deflection.
You can’t terraform a corpse. You can’t build a biosphere out of branding.
And you can’t solve Earth’s problems by launching billionaires into the void and calling it progress. LOL. We love space. The mystery. The challenge. The wonder. We love exploration — and the dream of reaching the stars. But we don’t like being sold on lies.
Don’t wrap desperation in inspiration and call it progress.
Don’t sell us science fiction and pretend it’s engineering.
Mars is not the next chapter. It’s the last page of someone else’s distraction.
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The Cold War Moon Base They Swore Never Existed
What if the moon landing was just the cover story?
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After rereading most of this article, John, I now remember it well. Thank you for sharing the link with me. I see that I liked and commented on this. I can remember my specific comment now as well.
Thank you again and I hope you have a great Sunday!
You’re very welcome, Chris. I appreciate you taking the time to revisit it, and I’m glad the link helped reconnect the dots. Thanks as well for engaging with the piece earlier — that kind of thoughtful follow-through always means a lot. I hope you have a great Sunday too. 😎
Thank you, John, and thanks for the comment. This is an interesting topic.
Thank you so much for your valuable input, John.
You’re very welcome, Michael! 😎
Great post, John, thank you. You’ve just solidified an opinion that I’ve had for a long time…there is no reason to think that there is anything practical about going to Mars. We’ve had rovers there. You think that would be enough to knock some sense into those who think Mars is any kind of a possibility. Any money that is spent on Mars travel would be better spent trying to make our planet a better place to live.
Appreciate you, Chris — and you’re absolutely right.
Rovers have already shown us the truth: Mars is a corpse. No tectonics. No shield. No biosphere. No atmosphere worth speaking of. Just dust, radiation, and dead terrain. And yet… the illusion persists — not because it’s plausible, but because it’s profitable.
Thank you very much, Chris! You nailed it: “There is no reason to think that there is anything practical about going to Mars.”
Every dollar spent chasing that fantasy is a dollar not spent fixing what’s still salvageable here. Earth isn’t perfect, but it breathes. And no amount of hype should make us abandon that gift.
This one is so easy, John, that I really don’t see how people don’t get it. I know that I certainly don’t have the wisdom to see certain things that others can but this is just simple common sense.
Right there with you, Chris — and I appreciate that perspective.
Some truths really are that simple. You don’t need a degree in aerospace engineering or theoretical physics to see what’s right in front of us: Mars is dead. Earth is alive. And common sense says you don’t abandon the living for the lifeless.
But you also nailed something deeper — the fact that many people do miss it.
Not because it’s hard to understand, but because the distraction is dressed up as destiny. That’s how propaganda works: it buries truth under branding. It turns fantasy into future and sells it as progress.
Thank you very much, Chris! I hope you have a great night. 😎
That’s an amazing piece which brings home reality. On the other hand, it does shoot down a theory I had about the Red Planet. Here’s a link to an old post: https://peacefulrampage.wordpress.com/2019/06/15/things-that-prove-my-insanity-religion-and-life-on-mars/
Thanks for reading, Michael — and for sharing your honest reaction.
We respect visionary thinking — and your theory about the Red Planet reflects something humanity has always wrestled with: the hope that life can start again somewhere else. That longing, that “next-world” curiosity, is part of what makes us human.
But the reality, as the article lays bare, is harder to face: Mars isn’t waiting for us. It’s not a cradle — it’s a crypt.
That doesn’t mean your idea was without value. On the contrary — it highlights something powerful: our desire to believe in cycles, in rebirth, in a cosmos that gives us second chances. But truth matters more than myth. And if we don’t face the truth about Mars, we’ll keep using fantasy as a distraction from accountability here on Earth.
So while the science may have shot the theory down — your willingness to imagine, and then to engage with new evidence, speaks volumes. We need more of that in this world. 😎
Thank you John, the idea came from another idea I had about Venus. Here’s the link if you want to read it. https://peacefulrampage.wordpress.com/2019/06/03/things-that-prove-my-insanity-life-on-venus/
You’re welcome, Michael — I did read it, and it’s clear your imagination moves with both curiosity and caution.
What struck me most about your Venus theory wasn’t just the idea that the planet may have once harbored life — it was the deeper parallel you drew between planetary death and human behavior. The idea that civilizations may rise, fall, and disappear long before another world even wakes up? That’s haunting. And relevant.
Your story idea — ships trading places across time, misunderstood by civilizations that can’t comprehend their arrival — is a perfect metaphor for how we treat new information. We dismiss what doesn’t fit. We call it madness. But sometimes, it’s just a message from the past or future trying to break through.
In Dead Planet Propaganda, we took the hard science route — to show that Mars can’t be terraformed, can’t be saved, can’t be made into another Earth. But what you’re doing is equally valuable: you’re exploring the emotional and philosophical voids that science leaves behind. And that’s the kind of fiction that matters.
Appreciate you sharing this — and keep writing. You’re not insane at all.
The real insanity isn’t imagining too much — it’s not imagining at all. Thanks again, Michael! I hope you have a great day. 😎