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You Cannot Afford Mars

By Annalee Newitz, AlterNet. Posted February 19, 2008.


Even if we spent as much money on space exploration as we do on war, funding a mission to Mars would not solve any of our problems.

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Mars used to teem with life, but now it's a dead world. I'm not referring to actual Martian history, which we still know very little about. I'm talking about the way humans used to think of Mars and how they think about it now. As recently as the 1950s, Mars was packed with scary, incomprehensible creatures and hulking buildings set in a web of gushing canals. But now it's a cold, dry land full of rocks that are fascinating mainly due to their extraterrestrial nature. We even have two robots who live on Mars, sending us back pictures of mile after mile of beautiful emptiness that looks like the Grand Canyon or some other national park whose ecosystem is so fragile that tourism has already half-destroyed it.

Mars has, in short, been demystified. It's not an exotic source of threat or imagination; it's a place to which President George W. Bush has vowed to send humans one day. And Feb. 12 to 13, a conference was convened at Stanford University to discuss the feasibility of a United States-led mission that would send humans to the Red Planet. The attendees, mostly scientists and public policy types, were all pragmatism.

Reuters reports that consensus at the conference was that the National Aeronautics and Space Administration would need an additional $3 billion per year to plan for a Mars mission that would leave in the 2030s. (NASA's current budget is $17.3 billion per year.) So the question geeks like to ask one another -- "What would you take with you to colonize another planet?" -- now has a depressing and very non-science-fictional answer when it comes to Mars. It's $75 billion, paid out over the next 25 years.

But just to put things in perspective, a congressional analysis done in 2006 pegged the cost of the U.S. war in Iraq at $2 billion per week. Last year the total amount of money spent on the war surpassed $1.2 trillion.

So it's a hell of a lot cheaper to colonize Mars than it is to colonize our own planet. Still, it's too expensive. U.S. aerospace geeks are hoping that we can turn to Europe, Russia, and perhaps Asia to collaborate on a Mars mission because nobody expects that NASA will ever get even a sliver of the budget that the U.S. war machine does.

There is a tidy way to wrap this up into a lesson about how we're willing to spend more on destroying life as we know it than extending life to the stars. About how we'd rather burn cash on war than healthy exploration of other planets. But that's not the whole story.

Let's say the US government decides to leave Iraq alone and spends $2 billion per week on a mission to Mars instead. A mission that would culminate in a human colony. We could follow a plan somewhat like the one outlined in Kim Stanley Robinson's book Red Mars (Bantam, 1993), in which we first send autonomous machines to create a base and begin some crude terraforming. And then we send a small group of colonists, to be followed by bigger and bigger waves of colonists, who eventually live in domes. And who wage wars and rape the Martian environment.

I think the problem with colonizing Mars is that it would look all too much like colonizing Earth. We might even be killing a fragile ecosystem that we're not yet aware of. But most of us haven't demystified Mars enough to realize that. Sure, we know it's not packed with cool aliens, but we haven't realized that hunkering down on another planet isn't going to solve our basic problems as humans. On a planet, given the chance, we'll exploit all natural resources, including one another.

It's not that I'm against a mission to Mars. I just think getting the money for that mission is really the least of our problems. What I'm worried about is what humans tend to do with money when they aim it at something, whether that's a nation, a people, or a planet. Maybe it's better for Mars that we can't afford to go there.

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Annalee Newitz (annalee@techsploitation.com) is a surly media nerd who would rather live on an artificial halo world than a colonized planet.

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View:
It requires intelligence to explore
Posted by: aethr on Feb 19, 2008 8:25 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
On a planet, given the chance, we'll exploit all natural resources, including one another.

That's what animals do, exploit their environment to the best of their ability. It requires real intelligence to explore space, not the animal pseudo-intelligence that humans possess. There's a reason robots got to Mars first.

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Some One's Going To Say It
Posted by: pdxstudent on Feb 19, 2008 9:08 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When ever anyone brings up space travel or exploration, someone is going to make the fallacious argument that we need to "fix things on Earth before we look to the stars." What is always lost for those making arguments like this is that, after we point out it's a false dilemma, being realistic means taking risks. It's not exactly faith, since they are fairly calculated and well understood risks, but risks nonetheless. The most significant risk, the one worth taking, is precisely that we can achieve something we never thought we could before---doing the impossible you could say.

Not only is it feasible that humans return their interest in inter-planetary exploration, but there is an ethical imperative to it too. If we can't come together to accomplish the seemingly elective task of establishing a human presence somewhere other than Earth, then we are going to have at least as hard of a time coming together to accomplish something like stabilizing our major relationships with each other and the earth. On its face, it would seem the other way around, but I think of it this way: if we cannot risk everything for something that seems important purely in the human context we create for it (i.e. because we say it is important), then we're already not in a position to be devoting the energies of the human community to anything else, because there is nothing whose importance for humans comes from outside of that context.

In other words, we implicitly pre-suppose the importance of doing some things, like take care of the Earth, while explicitly pre-suppose the importance of doing other things, like devoting a life-time to the study of literature or going to other worlds. The former must become more like the latter before we can hope to take seriously anything like shepherding the Earth or resolving human conflict.

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» RE: Some One's Going To Say It Posted by: acidrain69
» Unconventional propulsion Posted by: suprmark
Spendng money "on Mars"
Posted by: ahmlco on Feb 19, 2008 9:49 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I love it that when every time the subject of NASA comes up, people talk about spending money "on space", or "on Mars", as if we're just going to pile all of that cash inside of a missile and shoot it into the sun.

But in truth, we spend that money here, on earth, and mostly in the form of all of the people and jobs it will take to accomplish the task. One could also talk about all of the spinoffs and science and technology we'll gain in the process, and that fact that we'll have created most of what we need to get and stay in space, but those are just added benefits.

Want a real US economic stimulus package? Spend the money "on Mars", instead of just handing cash back to consumers who'll use it to buy iPods made in China.

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» RE: Spendng money "on Mars" Posted by: jmooney
» RE: Spendng money "on Mars" Posted by: acidrain69
» RE: Spendng money "on Mars" Posted by: acidrain69
Anne Clayborne only ends up destroying herself
Posted by: Sigil on Feb 20, 2008 7:47 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If we continue Kim Stanley Robinson's story of Humanity on Mars to its conclusion on Green Mars and Blue Mars, we see that the colonist who most advocates the position Annalee is taking-- that Mankind will simply ruin another world-- becomes a bitter, defeated, suicidal old crone.

Her "Red" movement is beaten in armed conflict, twice, and ultimately the planet is terraformed and becomes a progressive civilization that acts as the jumping-off point for both the cololnization of the rest of the solar system and the salvation of the ecologically-wrecked earth.

Not that there is profit in acting altruistically, but it's worth noting that at the moment, on this world, we are becoming more and more of a monocluture which makes the likelihood that we will face extinction ever more probable. Whether this is through our technology turning on us or some act of nature is irrelevent. We need a firewall, so to speak, to protect against our own frailties.

Further, beyond the immediate technology benefits a push for offworld colonization would bring (e.g. Tang and Velcro) we would also give ourselves a mandate beyond "CONSUME!" which seems to be about the only thing younger generations are being told they are good for anymore. Something concrete that is greater than themselves, not related to some fairytale of religion or ideology.

If you want a counter-parable for what might be if we do not do something like colonize Mars, look at Snow Crash and/or The Diamond Age, where fascism grows until it destroys itself, and the USA disintegrates into an infinite stretch of soverign strip-mall Franchised Quasi-National Entities and armed burbclaves. I, personally would rather look outward than inward-- but I'm apparently more of a hippie than Annalee is.

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» More Than Consumption Posted by: pdxstudent
You're right, let's not colonize other planets...
Posted by: hurricane hugo on Feb 20, 2008 9:25 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
let's just sit here waiting for the next planet-killer to come hurtling in from the void.

jdfu!

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» you mean mccain, right? Posted by: KaptainSpiffy
The Eternal Problem
Posted by: gonzoskismet on Feb 20, 2008 4:03 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The so-called space program in the United States has always been your basic old 'pissing
contest' between the U.S. and the Soviet Union which resulted in several manned U.S. missions to the moon but little else. The vast mineral wealth of the moon was left in the dust of 'beating the Commies' and no colonization efforts were realized.
It was the same with the SPS, or Solar Power Satellites, proposed in the late 1970's as a means to liberate America from the dependence on foreign oil as an energy source. We had the technology and the launch capacity at the time to achieve this goal but the Big Oil lobbyists
convinced the Congress of the United States of America that this would be a 'bad idea.' Thus, now we are faced with 100 dollar a barrel oil and a failing economy.
It is not that America has lacked vision that has brought us to such a sad state of affairs. It is that the greed of our politicians
their willingness to sell out to lobbyists, and
our own incredible egotism that has brought us to the point we are now. The Chinese will most likely inherit the moon with its vast mineral resources, as well as it's strategic military
advantage. We had the brass ring in our hands at the end of the Sixties and we blew it. In the 21st century we will pay the price for our mistakes.

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What an unbelievable bunch of wankers you Americans are!
Posted by: Robert_Hoogenboom@leftfoot.com.au on Feb 21, 2008 4:08 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You haven't even been to the moon yet, and you're talking about whether to colonise Mars! It's part of the fabric of lies and deceit those in control have woven: exalting America and hiding the true nature of all the things America has been up to in the world, during the 20th and now into the 21st century. For years now we have been saying: "If you're so sure you've been to the moon, prove it! Make the calulations available, make that 74K computer available and those genius programs that ran on it that could do all the process control. Make the space suits available, with the zipped up sleeves, and let's test them in a nuclear reactor, to see if they can withstand the radiation in space. Fly that lunar module again here on earth, and see if you can land, and make it take off, it safely, the way you say you have on the moon, not once but 6 times! And show us how exactly have you tried to make your presence on the moon visible from earth, as any apce agency would." Who says you've been to the moon? NASA, at the behest of your governments. We don't believe NASA. We don't believe the fake videos and the fake pictures; we don't believe you could have done it with the technology available in 1969, when rocket docking hadn't even been invented yet - it can't be even done now! Not by you, not by the Russians, not by the French and not by the Chinese. Correction, you have been to the moon. When the Chinese finally get there, having solved the problem of getting through the van Allen radiation belt alive, they will no doubt find a few crashed rockets there, and the dead bodies of American and Russian astronauts. Yes, you've been to the moon, but you never got back. No, you didn't go to the moon in 1969, when you hoodwinked the whole world into believing you had - you stayed well under the deadly radiation. Ask Neil Armstrong if you've been to the moon, if you can find him. (Buzz Aldrin will lie about it till his dying day.) And what's that one-liner in Bill Clinton's autobiography where he tells you in a roundabout way that you've never been to the moon? Isn't it time you stopped believing the lies you've been fed all your lives? Honestly the world won't fall if you accept a more sober appraisal of yourselves. You're not even more evil in the world than other nations. The Brits were there before you, and before them the Spaniards, and the Dutch, and that's only amongst the Europeans.

Robert Hoogenboom
Sydney, Australia

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» Neil Armstrong lives Posted by: Artkansas
» wanna buy some Mandies, Bob? Posted by: hurricane hugo
We can't afford to not explore Mars
Posted by: Artkansas on Feb 21, 2008 7:56 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Earth is wonderful, but all our eggs are in one basket. Humanity is a niche filler. We need to get populations of people off planet.

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You're gonna run out of gas anyway...
Posted by: postconsumer-consumer on Feb 21, 2008 10:30 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Had a look at a shuttle launch lately? Noticed the homogeneous fuel tanks that are required to propel the shuttle into space. There's not enough fuel or energy on earth to sustain a space program to anywhere that will benefit humanity in any way. Go back to watching Star Trek and forget about it!

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» And use the money in a more constructive way... Posted by: postconsumer-consumer
» And what about the space junk? Posted by: postconsumer-consumer
» Uh, you do realize... Posted by: JoshuaLudd
» RE: Uh, you do realize... Posted by: xconservative
Wherefore Barsoom
Posted by: willymack on Feb 21, 2008 11:51 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I used to LOVE to read books by Edgar Rice Borroughs, including the John Carter series, and, of course, Tarzan, the Ape-Man. They excited my imagination and made me THINK, a major accomplishment for any author. It's obvious that the realization that Mars (Barsoom) isn't a viable world by any stretch of the imagination in no way diminishes humankind's enthusiasm for voyaging through hundreds of millions of miles of hard vacuum and intense radiation to make a landing there. It's also just as obvious that no one nation can (or should) go it alone. This MUST be an international effort, and could be a positive, unifying force for the good of all of us.

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» You MUST be joking... Posted by: postconsumer-consumer
» RE: You MUST be joking... Posted by: willymack
» Money on Space is not wasted. Posted by: Artkansas
» RE: You MUST be joking... Posted by: acidrain69
colonies
Posted by: allyourbasearebelongtous on Feb 21, 2008 1:47 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
we didn't go to the moon? yeah and the world is really flat too -- careful you don't fall off the edge.

the real shame about the american space program is that we stopped going to the moon. we could have had a lunar colony by now. really that probably has to come first. then we can talk about a mars colony. also we really need functioning space ships (larger ones -- motherships if you will) that can travel fairly quickly between the planets and are big enough to be able to hold several smaller ships capable of landing on and departing again from a planetary surface. it can't be just one, two or three but needs to be at least a dozen of these larger ships at an absolute minimum and some of them need to be "refueling" ships unless we go with nuclear powered ships. and these ships, especially the larger ships, will probably need to be built in space to avoid the problems associated with trying to lift them off the earth's surface. there's your functional space program -- right there. then we can talk about colonizing mars.

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Mars is moot, so is the moon
Posted by: GarrisonPayneLeonard38H on Feb 21, 2008 1:48 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Unless we find another source of energy that is as cheap and plentiful as petroleum was in the 1960s, we are not going anywhere. We are not going to Mars. We are not going to the moon. In a few decades, transcontinental flight may be ruinously expensive: Why then worry about building colonies on hostile planets? Think it through.

Re-tasking NASA to such an enterprise, lacking the stimulus provided by the USSR forty years ago, would require more political will and educational muscle than this country has shown in decades.

The Space Dream is just another Shiny Bright Object, dangled as needed to distract the rubes, so that the Greed Culture can continue in its quest to own everything.

Fratboy-Emperor Jughead the 1st floated the Mars expedition to leech a little bit of JFK's fame, and because the Mars mission was already planned before he became the Prez-Dint. Like so many of the Fratboy's ideas, this is simply another ruinous scam.

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» Well said... Posted by: postconsumer-consumer
» RE: Can you be anymore pessimistic? Posted by: rfrancis@godisdead.com
space development
Posted by: Monitor523 on Feb 22, 2008 4:55 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You often hear counterarguments to the exploration and development of space - not so many here as I expected, which is nice. One common one is that money should be spent on earth - which of course it would be, in developing space, and with more and more competition in the industry, it would be less and less a matter of more subsidies for Boeing and Lockheed.

Another one, which surprisingly showed up here, is that space travel takes huge amounts of energy. One of the best arguments for space development is the enormous amount of energy in space. The energy output of the sun is huge - about 100,000,000,000,000 times the current total energy consumption of all of human civilization - and renewable, expected to remain at that level or higher for 5,000,000,000 more years or so.

It would make a profound difference even just harnessing that energy on Earth through solar power (as long as some good method for distributing the energy is found - petroleum at least has the advantage of being compact and portable, even if it is intrinsically limited). The solar energy intercepted by the Earth is a few thousand times our current consumption. But more importantly, the choice is whether to enter the solar-system resource economy, or stay on the terrestrial one. As is well documented by the IPCC, the UN's Millennium Ecosystem Assessment, and so forth, the terrestrial system is severely overloaded by even our current population. As the human population is projected to grow another 50% even as the Earth's resources are depleted, people who argue for limiting our development to the Earth's resources and not sticking our noses offworld ought to be aware that there are not enough resources on earth to support the projected population. Not by a long shot.

What we are experiencing is typical of "ecological release" of a new species into a closed system - there's a period of innovation or migration where the species has a new niche to fill. (Either by migrating to a new place, or developing, in this case, new technologies.) This leads to a phase of exponential growth, then a slowing down, followed by a population crash back to a plateau at a more sustainable level. Even if we don't deplete Earth's resources (like arable land) any further, the sustainable level is projected to be about 2 billion, which is 7 billion less than the peak population. (If anyone is interested, I recommend David Christian's "Maps of Time", which puts human history into the big picture. There's a nice description of some of the above in Ch. 5).

The alternative to this program of partial extinction is to open a new niche, which would be the solar economy. Other species than humans would benefit also, if we stopped building our industrial infrastructure in the middle of the ecosystem, which is (all things considered) a stupid place for it. Exploring Mars may or may not be the best near-term step toward such a future, but to say that "we can't afford it" is to put the situation 100% backwards.

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» RE: space development Posted by: postconsumer-consumer
» Challenge Posted by: Monitor523
» RE: Challenge Posted by: PopRox80
» Solar Power Posted by: Monitor523
» A very long exension cord... Posted by: postconsumer-consumer
» Space elevator Posted by: suprmark
Terrorist
Posted by: HeKnew on Feb 22, 2008 5:08 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
On the day we give the elite somewhere to go in the event of an all out nuclear exchange we will have signed our own death warrant.


Direct Primaries!

Direct Elections!

Direct Democracy!

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Just more imperialism from the Neocons
Posted by: acidrain69 on Feb 24, 2008 9:47 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think of this as "science-washing" for the neo-con set; kind of like green-washing for corporations. They want to look like they support science, but in reality, they look at space as a war-front for spy satellites and more feel-good politics. It's just another imperial adventure to these clowns.

I'm reminded of the scene in Wayne's World, "Look at me.... I'm in... Delaware" What the hell are we going to do on Mars?

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Bread & Circuses
Posted by: NoPCZone on Feb 27, 2008 9:34 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
First, let's get this fact straight- Dubya doesn't give a flit about exploring Mars. This is about a couple of other things:

1- A chance for the big Aerospace congloms to make truckloads of money.
The same pigs at the trough for the GWOT will be lining up for another chance to fleece the taxpayers. This is where all the Congressional support will be coming from.

2- It gave Dubya something to talk about other than his massive string of failures and corrupt appointees.
A little distraction never hurts.

Next. there is no compelling reason to push a manned flight to Mars. None. More exploration of Mars- yes. Manned- no way. Computers and robotics have progressed to the point that a human onboard only adds complexity and cost to the program and adds to the profit margins of the companies that score contracts.

We need space exploration and we usually get our money's worth. It is also well-known that we get our best return from UNMANNED space exploration. Another Hubble-type space telescope would be nice as would probes to explore our neighbors in the Solar System. But we cannot afford and do not need this kind of dog and pony show.

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Progressives Often Have No Sense of Adventure
Posted by: rfrancis@godisdead.com on Feb 27, 2008 10:24 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Why go to Mars?

How about exploration and colonization?

Expanding human civilization to 2 planets?


It's always:
We need to feed the poor...
We need to cloth the poor...
We need to house the poor...
We need to provide medical care for poor...


How about we all agree to stop taking tax money from the public to do either?

Then progressives who want to save the world can take care of the poor with their extra money and the progressives that want to explore the final frontier can use their extra money to do so.

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