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3/23/2006 5:41:55 PM
Food is the one I'm least concerned about. We've already got enough of that now. And we're already figuring out better ways to increase yields. It's only been a problem of distribution that's gone ignored due to the total lack of profit incentive involved.What non-renewables that we can't invent our way away from are you talking about?Pollution would certainly be solved by hopping a ship to the moon--as far as the inhabitants are concerned anyway. We haven't been there to pollute it. And there's no atmosphere to pollute in the first place. Furthermore, we get to construct the habitat we'd live in, so unless you're suggesting it'd be polluted right off the bat, moon bases will certainly help some. Personally, I think we'd build habitats under the oceans before we'd move to moon bases. Just seems easier to do, and more practical over the short term. Doing so would give us enough experience to perfect methods so that we'd be able to build on the moon when it was time.
3/23/2006 5:50:11 PM
look, you are still not thinking about the problem. the population of the earth is growing out of control. look, since I was born, the population of the earth has increased by 2 BILLION people. it will only increase faster from here on out. the accelleration of the population is faster than the acceleration of our food production/distribution technology. those lines are going to cross eventually, and we will have mass starvation.
3/23/2006 5:54:48 PM
How do you posit that the acceleration of our food production methods are being outpaced? You said it yourself, the population has increased by 2 BILLION people in your lifetime. And yet, there is still enough food being produced in the world to feed them all. We're not even close to out of aerable land, yet, either.Our food distribution methods have already been outpaced, which presents its own issue and speaks to your point. But I've already agreed with that. I just happen to think it's a problem that will be solved as the economy becomes more globalized and it suddenly dawns on people that when malnourished African, South American, and Asian people are getting three subsidized squares a day, they can make just as productive and educated a labor force as we do--benefiting everyone in the long run.Mass starvation I highly doubt. That'd only take place if there was a sudden and unexpected increase in population. While our expansion has been geometric, it's been fairly predictable. We'd see signs of unavoidable starvation long before it'd reach a massive scale. And I'd assume we'd move to prevent it from reaching such a scale; Draconianly if necessary.[Edited on March 23, 2006 at 6:18 PM. Reason : ...]
3/23/2006 6:03:58 PM
i cant see food production being a problem, but food distribution certainly could (and already is)
3/23/2006 6:05:49 PM
God could always intervene and fix all of these problems though.
3/23/2006 6:10:39 PM
^^we're too busy paying farmers to keep their crops off the market -- stop that first (thus giving incentive for food-poor countries to produce more themselves), then come talk to me about the problems of food distribution---
3/23/2006 7:30:29 PM
http://www.liftport.com/Some of these projects are expecting to reduce the price to a few hundred dollars per pound to lift something into space.With refinement and next-generation elevators, it could be even cheaper.Just wait folks, just wait, the technology is in the works.And kris, honestly:
3/23/2006 8:38:16 PM
3/23/2006 8:56:16 PM
^^ If there is money to be made in space then private investment will make it. Extensive government investment in space will disuade private interests from investing (what idiot wants to compete with Uncle Sam?) Therefore, you had better hope uncle sam does everything exactly right, because there will be no other attempters.
3/23/2006 9:17:28 PM
^ Yeah... and private investment is working in space... Hence the X-Prize, liftport, and the development of space ports* like this. There's just no reason to cut funding to NASA (and that's what the whole mini-paper in my post was about).* The space ports SHOULD, in theory, encourage private business by providing the infrastructure required to go into space given present technology. I realize this one is being funded by the gubmint. [Edited on March 23, 2006 at 9:31 PM. Reason : haha, I should clarify this]
3/23/2006 9:23:44 PM
3/23/2006 9:59:33 PM
space ship one BARELY made it into space, much less into orbit. of course it cost less. not to mention that the government is the one who invested into rocket research heavily in the 50's on, so now private companies can base their own engines off of that research.
3/23/2006 10:29:41 PM
3/23/2006 10:48:05 PM
what you don't understand is that we aren't exploring space right now to make a monetary profit. we are exploring it to better our understanding of the universe, our solar system, as well as the earth its self. knowledge is CRITICAL for modern civilizations... the civilizations that have more knowledge will thrive much more than civilizations without it. things that we learn about space NOW are going to guide our future progress into the solar system. it's not like a future civilization that needs the resources that space can offer wil be able to say "well, now it's time to go to space. lets all get on our rockets and go get the stuff we need"... it takes RESEARCH now to make future technologies possible.and ANYONE who argues that the huge scientific gain we have gotten from the space program isn't worth it is... well... wrong.
3/23/2006 11:09:51 PM
3/24/2006 12:35:23 AM
did that bitch just say we needed "diamonds and gold"dieplzthx
3/24/2006 12:37:41 AM
3/24/2006 1:14:20 AM
we got a lot more out of that early investment than just rocks on the moon or photos of pluto. This includes direct spinoff technologies as well as the way it changed our work force and culture. The US attitude toward science and technology was changed in the country because of the space program.The economic value of a culture geared more toward fundamental scientific advance is a hell of a lot more than $60 billion spent decades ago.[Edited on March 24, 2006 at 1:22 AM. Reason : sdf]
3/24/2006 1:20:18 AM
^^jesus you are incredibly short sighted. science is done for the sake of understanding the universe, not to make us "feel good".[Edited on March 24, 2006 at 1:23 AM. Reason : ]
3/24/2006 1:22:45 AM
Ok. Most people in this thread agree that it is not profitable right now to develop space travel. Was it profitable for Europeans to go to America the first couple times? Eventually it balanced out with enough tobacco, gold, other New World Products. Eventually space travel will become profitible, however we just have to suck it up and deal with the cost until we get to that point.
3/24/2006 1:26:53 AM
^^he has an easy position. He can just pull his sophistry all day and say that it would have turned out better if the government had not done it, but he has no actual evidence to the contrary -- only highly abstract and simplified economic models that are notorious for not being able to make predictions.Also, economic models ignore very real political contexts. Were we supposed to back down while the soviets appeared to be making huge leaps in technological advance???[Edited on March 24, 2006 at 1:52 AM. Reason : asdasd]
3/24/2006 1:29:30 AM
3/24/2006 2:43:47 AM
We knew the moon was made of rock, we know Mars is made of rock and some ice. However there are moons out there that have water on them, not ice but water. Will it be worth it if we find other life out there? We did not go to the moon thinking it was made of cheese or some other fancy material. We are also in the infancey of space exploration. People had been sailing for a long time before Columbus made it across the pond. Give space travel another 1000 years and the results will be amazing. We had to beat the Russians to the moon and that reason alone is worth it..
3/24/2006 8:38:48 AM
you guys are unimaginably ignorant and naive if you think spending money on space exploration doesnt benefit our species.Saying The moon and mars are just boring rocks just shows how dense you are to the subject.So we spend the billions on making your life more comfortableso the fuck what? once youre dead what the fuck do we have? some fella that had a comfy life. meanwhile our species is sitting stagnant on this little rock, no more intelligent to what is beyond our atmoshphere.its rediculously depressing that there are people who think exploration of the unknown is a waste of money. that kind of thinking is what is going to 'doom' the species. crossing that bridge when we come to it doesnt work for this shit[Edited on March 24, 2006 at 9:08 AM. Reason : *]
3/24/2006 9:07:47 AM
3/24/2006 9:38:05 AM
3/24/2006 1:06:59 PM
Kris trolls the soap box at a level I can't ever hope to reach.Daps to you good sir.
3/24/2006 1:22:38 PM
some call it a gift, some call it a curse
3/24/2006 1:28:40 PM
Yeah I guess I just wasn't thinking that you were so immature that you'd be trolling in the soapbox. Chit chat is where that kind of thing belongs. [Edited on March 24, 2006 at 2:20 PM. Reason : -SaabTurbo]
3/24/2006 2:18:20 PM
I'm not really trolling, I really believe that we are prematurely spending money on space research. The outcome does not justify the cost right now.
3/24/2006 8:57:04 PM
3/24/2006 11:00:55 PM
Oddly, in this thread, I think Kris is the only one NOT trolling... go figure.
3/25/2006 1:03:02 AM
well, you are clearly wrong.
3/25/2006 1:47:19 AM
3/25/2006 3:42:53 AM
"Where's That Damn Spaceport???""I Blame KRIS, Captain"[Edited on March 25, 2006 at 10:22 AM. Reason : -)]
3/25/2006 10:17:53 AM
hahaha
3/25/2006 12:18:41 PM
3/25/2006 5:26:33 PM
I had considered drug company lobbyists, the way I figure, the drug company lobbyists would be going up agianst a good number of other lobbyists and industries. Marlboro would absolutely love it if the government could cure lung cancer. McDonalds would be estatic if the government could cure heart disease. That kind of research would benefit pretty much every industry other than the medical industry. They are the only ones who need to keep their customers in sickness.
3/25/2006 6:44:10 PM
Sooner or later this planet will become uninhabitable..not in this life time, not in the next 100 life times, but eventually it will be. And tell me Kris how was the first expedition (Colombus) profitble? He lost 2 of 3 ships, the majority of his crew, etc.
3/28/2006 3:13:05 AM
One could argue that true western civilization would have been better off had Columbus stfu'd and stayed home.
3/28/2006 10:47:38 AM
You could, but I don't think you would get very far. The discovery of the Americas was inevitable. If it hadn't been 1492, it would have been 1519, or similar.
3/28/2006 10:59:59 AM
3/28/2006 12:29:44 PM
and also dark skinned bitches
3/28/2006 12:30:46 PM