| > Its basically impossible to finance a meaningful try at colonizing mars without national resources That's a separate point: Citizens don't really get a say in how national resources are deployed, though the theatre of elections certainly makes them think they do (Recall that dude at Davos who said, "There are 150 people who run the world, all of them are men, and none of them are politicians"?). The point is: you and I, unless we own private aerospace companies, don't get a say and don't matter in the question of "why Mars". We'll certainly be allowed and encouraged to "make your voices heard" and many, including politicians and "representatives", will protest about the trillions of "taxpayer dollars that could be put to a better use". But the people who are doing the innovation and taking the most risk with their own capital will decide. |
The people doing the most innovation will be the scientists who be compensated a tiny fraction of the money earned by the capital.
The people taking the most risk will be the people going.
Again the capitalists will be contributing little and risking almost nothing mostly their position on a scoreboard.
The person driving the school bus risks more and contributes more than the parasites.