William Tompkins, a renowned aerospace designer involved with NASA’s prime corporate contractor during the Apollo era, has recently released his autobiography. In his book, he delves into the genuine motivations behind the Apollo missions and recounts his experience of being compelled to withhold information due to an encounter with extraterrestrial beings.
He mentioned how he worked at NASA for 12 years, from 1967 to 1971, working with Dr. Hurt H. Debus, the first director of NASA’s Launch Operations Center (later renamed Kennedy Space Center).
He explained what he called the NOVA program, designed to help them establish colonies on other planets and populate them with military forces.
First stage completed: reaching the moon through the Apollo program.
The second step was to put 10,000 people on the moon, a plan that William Tompkins claims to have helped devise.
The third step is to go to Mars and other planets and develop military power on all the planets we know.
Step four, place manned naval bases in 12 contiguous systems, thus having collective power in the event of imminent war.
The problem is that everything stops in step two, because after reaching the moon, they find it with much more advanced technology than we thought.
Upon learning of this, the NOVA program was completely canceled and any attempts to colonize other planets immediately ceased to exist.