TUESDAY, DECMBER 15, 2015: NOTE TO FILE

Space: the Final Wealthy Frontier

The billionaire vision

Eric Lee, A-SOCIATED PRESS

TOPICS: FOLLOW THE SMART MONEY, FROM THE WIRES, AND THEN WHAT?, VISONARY ISSUES

Abstract: Billionaires seem to have an affinity for space toys. Elon Musk plans to retire on Mars. If you have billions, you better have a vision, and what's not to like about up, up, and away?.

TUCSON (A-P) — Who will be a spacefarer?

Richard Branson and his Virgin Galactic
Paul Allen and his Stratolaunch Systems
Elon Musk and his SpaceX
Jeff Bezos and his Blue Origin

What next? Trump the Spaceship? Are space toys just irresistible to billionaires? Are they just in it, as usual, for the profit? Or is there a bigger vision involved?

The stated vision is to colonize Mars, 1,000,000 Munchkins minimum, so humans won't have all their eggs in one basket (Earth). Should Earth have a bad day, at least some will be living the prosperous life on Mars and business as usual will continue. Musk, perhaps smarter than the average billionaire, plans to retire on Mars. To make a planet fit to live in luxury on, he'll need a little help from his fellow billionaires.

The taxpayer minions of Earth will have to subsidize their venture into space, but subsidizing corporate special interests is what they do, as do they whom the public is told to elect to serve special interests. Serving elite interests is what they're for—taxpayers... voters... the elected (formerly known as public servants), so their doing so is pretty much a given. Nothing has to be in the public interest; the public merely has to believe, with a little help, that it is in their best interest.

Is it all about tapping the market for space tourism? Space tourism might be profitable, but the elites would likely soon lose interest and move on to the next must-do thing. Colonizing space is a possibility, but your colony is limited to such resources as can be taken from Earth into orbit or gleaned from a few asteroids. Without vast resources a colony can't really grow. There are just too many limits to growth to start by colonizing space.

What is needed is a Planet B with its own resources for the taking. Fortunately there is one nearby. It is a "fixer-upper" of a planet, but with a few hundred trillion dollars invested, it wouldn't be so bad. Might take 25 years for the pioneers to fix it up enough that the first ship of billionaires and their families would blast off for Gilligan's Planet, but by 2050 Earth may have gone to the dogs (commoners fighting to survive), so $1 billion per ticket may seem like a bargain and Musk, as a transhuman, can retire to live the privileged life he so richly deserves. Selling one way tickets to elsewhere will be a growth industry.

If Musk is smarter than the average billionaire, does he really believe that Mars can be colonized before Earth becomes uninhabitable for decent right thinking (and wealthy) people? He doesn't need to colonize Mars, just sell his vision while laughing maniacally (in private). He can die deliriously happy on an expansive estate on the Kona Coast surrounded by his Praetorian Guard, a more achievable vision, by orders of magnitude, that even lesser billionaires could aspire to, but a vision of Mars Awaiting is far more sellable. No decent billionaire wants an island enclave. They want a planet for the taking and Earth has already been taken.

A politician can make a 'No billionaires in space' campaign pledge. If elites, everyone living in modern techno-industrial society, realized that they and/or their progeny, will have to live on Earth, then they might reconsider laying waste to planet to maximize short-term profit/self interest.

Humanity is at a fork in the road. Will we evolve into a Federation of explorers wanting to know—whose prime directive is non-interference? Or will Borg Elites lord over their collective of Borg drones directed to consume all insofar as it profits them and their growther overlords? Which fork are we going down? Look around. Is resistance futile?


 

SUBNOTE TO FILE 5/19/22

Elon Musk has a different Plan B. What if Earth finds itself irreversibly damaged through climate change, overpopulation, a third world war or a mass extinction event? We need a planet B, Mars, and the greatest threat to colonizing Mars is a threat that we can do something about. We have to increase birth rates to prevent a population collapse.

Elon Musk's dreams of Mars colonization could be hindered by depopulation

Yes, we can make abortion less common by criminalizing it; shame those who use birth control..., but in modern techno-industrial society, the monetary culture, the solution to population collapse is obvious: pay women to have babies (until womb technology is fully developed). If they won't raise them at their expense (why should they?), babies can be raised in factories, far more efficiently, to serve the growth hegemon needed to allow Musk to retire on Mars as a transhuman.

 


 

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