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On 8/11/2013 3:05 AM, Brad Guth wrote:
On Saturday, August 10, 2013 11:55:27 AM UTC-7, Brad Guth wrote: On Saturday, August 10, 2013 6:33:01 AM UTC-7, Martha Adams wrote: big snip Try to imagine what a trillion dollars per year (in 2013 dollars), of public matching funds for off-world exploitations could have accomplished, starting as of four decades ago. By now that incentive would have amounted to 80+ trillion dollars invested and directly benefitting each and everyone of us, as well as capable of salvaging our global environment. ================================================== ============== For reason I don't understand, I'm seeing a lot of doublespacing introduced here, along with very long lines not helpfully filled. I just re-filled the above paragraph, which has in my view, a very important point about space settlement, if maybe the numbers are off by two or three orders of magnitude. America's immense military budget is still shy of a trillion dollars per year -- I think, officially it's around 700 billion. I don't know the amount of money circulating thru the overseas arms sales business, nor how to count the costs of political and ideological corruptions. (A recently published book, Leibovich, This Town, may bear on that matter.) But *yes,* a few ten-billions of dollars as a stable program (held safe from today's devastating political interventions) would change our world very quickly. I see particularly, a growing popular appreciation of the reality our species is vulnerable to large astronomical events, see the current (Aug 10-16) issue of New Scientist: Solar Superflares, p. 46 there. Vs today's social awareness of Out There still believing our world is practically all of the universe and it was made by a supernatural being who bears perfect resemblance to the Father of a simplified and idealized human family. Titeotwawki -- Martha Adams [Wed 2013 Aug 14] |
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On Tuesday, August 13, 2013 10:58:47 PM UTC-7, Martha Adams wrote:
On 8/11/2013 3:05 AM, Brad Guth wrote: On Saturday, August 10, 2013 11:55:27 AM UTC-7, Brad Guth wrote: On Saturday, August 10, 2013 6:33:01 AM UTC-7, Martha Adams wrote: big snip Try to imagine what a trillion dollars per year (in 2013 dollars), of public matching funds for off-world exploitations could have accomplished, starting as of four decades ago. By now that incentive would have amounted to 80+ trillion dollars invested and directly benefitting each and everyone of us, as well as capable of salvaging our global environment. ================================================== ============== For reason I don't understand, I'm seeing a lot of doublespacing introduced here, along with very long lines not helpfully filled. I just re-filled the above paragraph, which has in my view, a very important point about space settlement, if maybe the numbers are off by two or three orders of magnitude. America's immense military budget is still shy of a trillion dollars per year -- I think, officially it's around 700 billion. I don't know the amount of money circulating thru the overseas arms sales business, nor how to count the costs of political and ideological corruptions. (A recently published book, Leibovich, This Town, may bear on that matter.) But *yes,* a few ten-billions of dollars as a stable program (held safe from today's devastating political interventions) would change our world very quickly. I see particularly, a growing popular appreciation of the reality our species is vulnerable to large astronomical events, see the current (Aug 10-16) issue of New Scientist: Solar Superflares, p. 46 there. Vs today's social awareness of Out There still believing our world is practically all of the universe and it was made by a supernatural being who bears perfect resemblance to the Father of a simplified and idealized human family. Titeotwawki -- Martha Adams [Wed 2013 Aug 14] Our world spends roughly a trillion dollars per day on energy and energy related products and services. Much of what is getting spent on energy is based upon an ever increasing public and personal debt. |
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