The Lucifer Project : Update
July 4, 2008 was going to be a turning point in the evolution of man kind. It was a date that would mark the beginning of a new age for the elite. This date would have marked the day that the Lucifer Project came to fruition and a second Sun was born.
NASA launched the Cassini space probe on October 15, 1997, and reached Saturn on July 1, 2006. Over the next two years Cassini would run a few experiments, take a few pictures to justify the $3.3 billion cost of the mission. Then on independence day, Cassini would begin preparing for its real mission of entering Saturns atmosphere and detonating its 72 lbs of plutonium payload—the most launched into space until that point. Causing a chain reaction that would ignite the Saturn’s hydrogen atmosphere, in-turn beginning the processes of transforming Saturn into a star.
Within minutes, shock-waves from the blast will travel to Earth with a constant barrage of deadly radiation that will kill every living creature on the surface in a matter of days. The elite will survive by hiding in secret underground bunkers that have been constructing over the least 50 years. When the radiation has dissipated and return to the safe levels, the elite would emerge from the safety of their Noah’s Arch and reclaim their planet in the name of their God Lucifer.
Back in April, NASA extended Cassini’s mission for another 2 years now ending in 2010. Now the events of the Lucifer Project will closer relate to life imitating art. If you remember in the late Arthur C. Clarks novel, 2010: The Year We Made Contact that Jupiter was transformed into the Sun, in this case they are going to try it with Saturn.

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