Depiction of the movie, 'Back to the Future'
Designated “Back to the Future”. Actual content may reflect unrelated Earth nonsense.

Back to the Future 1985

This transmission concerns a teenage human named Marty who is accidentally launched into the past using a modified Earth vehicle called a DeLorean. The car has been outfitted with time-displacement technology by an older human who exhibits signs of madness or genius — possibly both. The required energy source is plutonium, which they store in a suitcase.

Once in the past, Marty meets younger versions of his own parents. This creates a timeline hazard. His mother develops romantic interest in him, not knowing he is her future offspring. Marty spends much of the film trying to prevent this biological loop from closing.

To return to his correct time, he must help his future father gain confidence and his future mother lose interest. This involves a staged physical assault, several musical performances, and lightning. All of these are treated as reasonable solutions.

The humans appear to have no safeguards around time travel. Changes to the past are allowed to ripple forward unchecked. By the end of the film, the timeline has been altered. Marty returns to a new version of his home life, which he prefers. He expresses no concern about the moral or existential implications.

Meanwhile, the inventor announces he will now visit the future. His only preparation is wearing aluminum clothing and refueling the vehicle with trash.

Conclusion: Humans should not have access to time travel. Their sense of consequence is limited, and their emotional attachments make them poor timeline custodians. They will alter reality if it improves family dynamics or social standing.

Recommend blocking all temporal research on Earth. Or redirecting it into endless committee review.