NASA Sending Spacecraft to Meet Alien Humanoid on Asteroid

Blue Origin to Build Factories in Space; Will NASA, SpaceX Join? NASA Sending Spacecraft to Meet Alien Humanoid on Asteroid Clapway

Mars, the moon, and now asteroids, where will NASA go next? NASA has its sights set on multiple targets recently, and an alien humanoid may just be waiting for them when they arrive. They announced that the OSIRIS-ReX spacecraft will go on an asteroid-hunting mission this year. The new OSIRIS-ReX mission is aimed for data collection purposes, once it arrives at the asteroid. Sure NASA, collecting rock samples from an asteroid again? The space agency may be coming up with new clever ways to hide their secret alien humanoid meetings. Or maybe they are simply collecting asteroid dirt.

The OSIRIS-ReX Asteroid Mission

The recently announced mission is scheduled to be launched in September. This will add to the already impressive resume NASA has compiled for 2016. The mission is simple in theory. Spaceship launches. Spaceship finds asteroid. Robot arms take rock from asteroid. Rock brought back to Earth. The target asteroid is near Earth, which may be why it is of importance. The space rock in question, 1999 RQ36, could be a threat. Or it could also be housing the secrets behind an alien humanoid.

Alien Humanoid Ready for NASA

It will take OSIRIS-ReX nearly three years to reach the asteroid target. So UFO and alien enthusiasts will need to wait for their alien humanoid heroin dose. The OSIRIS-ReX spacecraft has arrived at the Kennedy Space Center to prepare for its September launch. But it is not the only icy rock mission planned. NASA’s cheapest space project, New Horizon, has plans to do a few flybys of MU69. MU69 is an icy space rock roughly a billion miles from Pluto. It is considered to be one of the oldest rocks in space. Which some say has alien humanoid potential as well. Despite aliens, it may help scientists understand the galaxy’s beginning better.

Space Wars

The rise in launches and space traffic recently may ignite a small space war. SpaceX has 18 launches planned for the remainder of 2016. China is looking at the moon for colonization, as well as Russia. Those missions are scheduled for 2020. NASA is also piggybacking with SpaceX for future launches. And they are looking for alternative ways to deliver astronauts to the ISS, without the help of Russia. Space is going to get crowded, and the race to plant flags in planets, moons and space rocks has become a growing priority. What’s wrong with Earth?