Mukhrani
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- Jul 24, 2021
My personal future dystopia theory is that space travel will be used as a kind of euthanasia program. Maybe asteroid mining will eventually be economically 'worth it', but the main problem that space travel will try to resolve is an overburdening of earth. I don't see why TBTB would fund these colossally expensive ships just to create distant colonies on earth-like planets that run the risk of eventually rebelling against them. I think it's far more likely that they would use the 'space program' as a way to skim insane amounts of money off the top. They would build a big shiny ship, some sort of interstellar ark, and fill it with useless eaters. Fire it off to great fanfare, then once it's floating out in space just have all the hatches open up and kill everyone inside as the dead husk floats off into the great dark beyond. It was never even built to complete the journey, just to get off the ground, with the immense budget pocketed by earth-magnates.
The idea that humans have some benevolent drive to explore doesn't really hold up to scrutiny imo. Europeans didn't make a serious attempt to sail West or round Africa for centuries, because all the trade that we needed flowed down the silk road and straight into our civilizational gullet. It wasn't until the silk road was cut off by Islamic expansion that we started the age of exploration in earnest. And the Portuguese discovered the necessary trade routes and developed them, then Spain stumbled upon the New World. From that point, it was international strife and competition that drove a race for resource extraction to fund contentions on the home continent - because the New World was just like the Old World and you could extract value from it super easily.
That's not true of any planet that we know of - it would be an immense drain on any nation to try to establish and maintain a colony on Mars or Venus which far exceeds the scale and scope of European colonies. It would be a ball and chain around that nation's leg as it contends with adversaries, and if the mother nation stumbled the colony would just wither and die. This applies even more to interstellar settlements, as you wouldn't really have any way to bring the resources back to earth or even communicate efficiently if you were using some sort of 'ark' method for early colonization.
The idea that humans have some benevolent drive to explore doesn't really hold up to scrutiny imo. Europeans didn't make a serious attempt to sail West or round Africa for centuries, because all the trade that we needed flowed down the silk road and straight into our civilizational gullet. It wasn't until the silk road was cut off by Islamic expansion that we started the age of exploration in earnest. And the Portuguese discovered the necessary trade routes and developed them, then Spain stumbled upon the New World. From that point, it was international strife and competition that drove a race for resource extraction to fund contentions on the home continent - because the New World was just like the Old World and you could extract value from it super easily.
That's not true of any planet that we know of - it would be an immense drain on any nation to try to establish and maintain a colony on Mars or Venus which far exceeds the scale and scope of European colonies. It would be a ball and chain around that nation's leg as it contends with adversaries, and if the mother nation stumbled the colony would just wither and die. This applies even more to interstellar settlements, as you wouldn't really have any way to bring the resources back to earth or even communicate efficiently if you were using some sort of 'ark' method for early colonization.
Last edited: