August 20, 2004
Tabloid finds Inuit on Mars
Article describes life
of Inuit who teleported themselves to cold planet
JANE GEORGE
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The August 2 issue
of the Weekly World News, "America's extreme newspaper," credits the
"indomitable Eskimo spirit" with helping the Inuit of Earth become
the first colonists of the cold, dark planet.
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The NASA rover that landed on Mars this year has found Inuit colonists living
on Mars!
At least, that's according to the Aug. 2 cover story of the tabloid, the Weekly
World News, that shows a family of Inuit dressed in fur and eating country
food on Mars all with large alien eyes.
The article says NASA's Spirit Rover has sent back photos of "an Eskimo-like
tribe living at the north pole of Mars" with 187 people living in Martian
homes that look like igloos.
The frozen ice-cap at the northern tip of Mars makes life habitable, explains
the article, although the average temperature is -81 F.
The Inuit colonists, a NASA source is quoted as saying, are able to survive
because of the "indomitable Eskimo spirit."
These Martian Inuit have larger-than-average eyes "to help them find food
on the mostly dark planet." Their fur? Well, they must have had the foresight
to bring animals with them.
No furry animals were photographed by the Rover, but the Weekly World News
says the Inuit "were seen ice-fishing and later slaughtering a huge, unidentified
aquatic mammal caught under the ice." They later "divided its blubber
and had a hearty feast."
The rover also apparently recorded the Inuit celebrating a man's 140th birthday,
although he only looked about 30 perhaps because their diet of Martian
maktaaq is like a fountain of youth.
"Linguists have identified the dialect as a variant of the Eskimaluet
language family spoken by the Eskimos of Labrador 5,000 years ago," this
"reliable" NASA source says.
The article suggests that the presence of Inuit on Mars explains the origin
of the mysterious Mars face first spotted and photographed in 1972. It may have
been constructed by those Martian colonists and actually show a parka hood.
But how did Inuit get to Mars, anyway?
According to the article, ancient Inuit had "enormous drive, determination
and spirit of exploration" and used "mind-over-matter" techniques
to teleport themselves to Mars.
It may also be that these Inuit were the first people to be abducted by aliens
for "reasons of their own," suggests a UFO expert in the tabloid
who altered their lungs to breathe Martian air.
The Weekly World News says you haven't heard about this tribe already
because the U.S. wants to keep it "hush-hush" and not let it be known
how Inuit got to Mars first.
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