| > We aren't. It's the individuals who own the resources and money to implement space flight and Mars colonisation that are going to Mars. > But the people who are doing the innovation and taking the most risk with their own capital will decide. > will protest about the trillions of "taxpayer dollars that could be put to a better use" There aren't any individuals that own the resources to implement space flight and mars colonization you yourself admitted as much with the "trillions of taxpayer dollars" Those last 2 quotes contradicting themselves are literally back to back > Citizens don't really get a say in how national resources are deployed Every two years we do in the US. > Your basic assumptions are wrong and troubled by motivated reasoning. But I'm sure you can already tell where you are wrong so I won't condescend. You have condescended to me but you haven't explained how I'm wrong and I don't think I am. If so pray tell. Money as a fundamental unit of value outside of economics leads to nonsensical conclusions like taking a money guy who presently employs a stable of geniuses who themselves sit atop the result of man millennia of labor by singular irreplaceable people and assigning credit to the current idiot who owns the works. It leads you to imagine that owning a hundred billion is as valuable a contribution as a million teachers or that someone who risks 90% of his fortune by ceding a bigger piece of the economic pie to another billionaire and thereby downsizing to fewer trips to space is somehow risking a billion times more than someone actually risking their life. It's like listening to a psychologist try to understand the evolution of galaxies via their domain knowledge. Capitalism is a method to allocate resources within a society it offers no meaningful truths about it. It is on the whole a massive failure only slightly less stupid than prior iterations of central planning. Back on the topic of mars. It is fundamentally absolutely useless as a second home for man. It is at best a place where a small number of people can do interesting science. There wont be a meaningful number of people there because the entire idea is fundamentally flawed. Would you like to talk about that or would you like to educate me about capitalism and government? |
This has already been falsified.
I personally have stood and watched fleets of satellites cross the night sky in naked-eye visible formations that were put there by private industry using reusable launch vehicles.
Your argument was valid in the 20th century but it's not any more. Things change.