Ok there's a huge been a huge renaissance in aerospace the last few years. On the private front, Jeff Bezos of Amazon, John Carmack of Id, Elon Musk of Paypal, Paul Allan of Microsoft, Richard Branson of Virgin, Walter Anderson, formerly of MCI-Worldcom, Robert Bigelow, of Budget Suits of America and a host of other wealthy individuals have spent hundreds of millions of dollars (if not billions) on new ventures to commercialize technologies which range in sophistication from suborbital gliders to actual orbital launchers and space hotels. Basically, a lot of these tech geeks who struck it rich in the 90s and who grew up reading science fiction are trying to make their childhood dreams come true, and some of them are doing a good job of moving us in that direction.On the public front, China has thrown their hat into the ring, Russia, while they haven't done anything yet, has started talking big once again, and Bush has committed NASA to recreating the technological capabilities that were lost when the Apollo program was scrapped 35 years ago. At this point, it seems likely that by mid century there will be a permanent human presence in space.We know the UN wants to manage space as a socialist park. http://www.unoosa.org/oosa/SpaceLaw/lpos.htmlhttp://www.unoosa.org/oosa/en/SpaceLaw/gares/html/gares_34_0068.htmlMy question is, what political framework do you think should be established in space.My preference would be for none. Since I know that Isn't going to happen, I'd settle for one that allowed individual colonies the widest possible latitude to manage their own affairs without interference from Earth. I think the vast, empty stretches of Mars, the barren voids of the Asteroid Belt, will provide room for hundreds - if not thousands - of new human colonies to innovate, to experiment, and to improve on or replace the outdated forms of human political organization that have ossified on Earth. Space is a great proving ground, not only for technology, but for new social and political innovations. Most, as is the nature of such things, will probably fail. Those that succeed will enrich even the homeworld by their example.
6/16/2008 10:59:04 AM
You're gonna need a 'socialist commune' in space until man is well defined there. A capitalist system, "Oh shit, your oxygen tanks just burst and you'll die in a few days if you don't replace them? 50 million or you die" just wouldn't work in my opinion.In such a rough and unnatural place we will need to cooperate as much as possible.
6/16/2008 11:03:34 AM
Unless you want to get all your stuff sent to you by Earth governments, you're also going to need production. If you have more than a few dozen people that means you're going to need a price system to do cost accounting and convey information and incentives. Otherwise, division of labor and complex productive enterprises just don't work so well.
6/16/2008 11:13:19 AM
pretty much the same one we have for antarticathe "nobody gives a shit about that desolate hellhole" form of government
6/16/2008 11:15:25 AM
SkankinMonky, there has been extensive analysis performed on the economic systems common to the sea where, it just so happens, one ship often came across another ship in need. While there is a credible negotiation deadlock where both sides have an incentive to keep negotiating past the point of no return, all-in-all it turns out to be the best set of incentives possible to let such bargains, when they are struck, to stand. This is because if someone gets to sell a $10 tank of oxygen for $50 million every now and then in the void of space, then greedy merchants will set up (probably unmanned) outposts in those voids in hopes of earning unconcionable profits, with the unforseen consequence that anyone that finds themselves in distress gets rescued. Yes, they have lost most of their money, but they get to keep living. Compare that to the alternative where selling oxygen for $50 million is illegal and therefore everyone desperate for oxygen dies, all their money going to their next of kin.
6/16/2008 11:17:47 AM
More like "hey, we are almost out of oxygen and this unmanned space station is selling it for 50 million bucks, what are we going to do?""Rob it of course"
6/16/2008 11:28:51 AM
^^^ Does Antarctica have huge deposits of potentially very valuable fusion fuels like He3 or vast stores of precious metals like platinum and iridium?Sooner or later, these are going to be pricey enough, and the costs low enough, that human settlement off world becomes economically enticing, Still it's probable that the first people willing to bear the risk and hardship incumbent upon such a pioneering role will be zealots of one type or another. The establishment should probably encourage people like me to ship out to the 'belt or some other frigid, barren waste by offering to leave us be, if only to be rid of our earthly rabble rousing.[Edited on June 16, 2008 at 11:29 AM. Reason : ^]
6/16/2008 11:29:25 AM
short of the moon, i say if you can claim land, it's yours, no different than colonizing or homesteading.But the physical nature of space, say the space directly over a country, be considered that country's "airspace" to a certain extent. No I have no idea what that extent should be.
6/16/2008 11:37:34 AM
Just out of curiosity, why make an exception for the moon?
6/16/2008 11:48:30 AM
6/16/2008 11:57:38 AM
^^ i figured since we already planted our flag there
6/16/2008 12:02:37 PM
6/16/2008 1:01:29 PM
It would be a dictatorship with the governance of said dictatorship being done by committee. Which really doesn't matter, because most of the people that would be dictated to would be the employees of said dictator.The dictator would either be NASA, the European Space Agency, the Russians, or the Chinese.The clearest historical comparison would be the race for early colonialism of the New World. Sure, anyone could take a boat over here and strike a flag in the ground (the city of New Bern in eastern North Carolina was originally a Swiss colony for example, there was a New Sweden in Delaware, New York was originally New Amsterdam and Dutch), but they would be defeated quickly either due to lack of monetary resources or lack of a good military. So all the minor players got crowded out, leaving the powers that retained major control as the English (American colonies, Belize, Guyana, most of the Caribbean), France (Quebec, Louisiana, Haiti, a couple Caribbean islands, French Guiana), Spain (South America minus Brazil, Mexico, Central America, Puerto Rico, Cuba, Dominican Republic), and on the minor player stage, Netherlands (some Caribbean islands and Surinam) and Portugal (who got Brazil through a geographical mistake).[Edited on June 16, 2008 at 1:19 PM. Reason : /]
6/16/2008 1:11:05 PM
6/16/2008 1:14:50 PM
Megaloman84 has convinced me
6/16/2008 7:44:55 PM
space will most definitely be a Corporatist-Oligarchy
6/16/2008 8:27:00 PM
no different than earth hahai do find it funny though all the fighting that goes on just trying to suck resources out of africa and the middle east. imagine what i'll be like in space. then again with infinite resources in space, maybe the conflicts will die down
6/16/2008 8:29:15 PM
Perhaps something along this order, that or Organians....
6/16/2008 10:12:02 PM