To mark the last two days of the Democratic
Convention, my collection of forty short stories with political themes – Political Pies – will be free to
download on Kindle today and tomorrow.
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
Wednesday, July 20, 2016
Free Pies!
To mark the last two days of the
Republican Convention, my collection of forty short stories with political
themes – Political Pies – will be
free to download on Kindle today and tomorrow.
Tuesday, July 19, 2016
The Moon Before Mars
Over the last few years a lot of people
have caught Mars fever. It seems a week
doesn’t go by without a report of some new group wanting to send people to
Mars, or some big name in the industry talking about why we have to go to Mars,
or articles talking about the glorious future humanity will have on Mars. All of this worries me. In my opinion, a Mars base is currently not
sustainable because there’s no way for it to make money. A few missions may fly doing extraordinary
science, but if it’s then cancelled for cost the whole Mars Project may just be
seen as an expensive stunt.
Fortunately, there are other places in the
solar system besides Mars. While bases
on the moon and amongst the asteroids won’t be as inspirational as one on Mars,
they will have opportunities for businesses to make goods and services as well
as profits, meaning less chance of them being outright cancelled. This will make life better on Earth and
secure a firm foothold in space for humanity.
The essays in “The Moon Before Mars: Why returning to the moon makes more sense than rushing off to Mars” allow me to describe my ideas on what can
be accomplished on the moon and with the asteroids, and why Mars isn’t the
destiny of humanity its cheerleaders make it out to be. I even made a short video talking more about this.
Here is a brief excerpt:
Many of the people gung-ho on Mars see it
as a backup for humanity, in case something terrible happens on Earth. But there are enough metals in the Asteroid
Belt to build hundreds of space stations.
The population of a community station may only be ten thousand or so,
but they would be scattered all over the solar system, each acting as a backup.
And one thing we can do with a hollowed
out asteroid or a constructed vessel that can’t be done with Mars, is to put
rockets on one and send it off to another star system. So basically, the math comes down to, if we
go to Mars we get a planet; but if we go to the asteroids, we get the
galaxy. Yes, we’ll do both, but what I
realized is that those so focused on Mars, are just thinking too small.
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