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Instead of spendy planetary probes, I totally and absolutely argue
that we should be applying interplanetary communications, as in to/from Venus. Then onto establishing the LSE-CM/ISS. Unfortunately, this following rant isn't "Onion" class fiction, nor is it MSNBC certified for prime time, though it's perhaps our best ever science future, or at the very least it's offering a whole lot more truth and honesty of worthy substance than you'll discover elsewhere. At least I don't have to impose any "so what's the difference" nor skew my morals as based upon the sorts of toilet "high standards and accountability" as those of our resident warlord. "Moon Dirt isn't just Moon Dirt, it's absolutely Everything Dirt" Even though water might become a nice sort of lunar attribute to discover, but it's the moon dirt that's invaluable for the survival of humanity, as well as for the future of survivable space explorations. The one absolute thing we can do efficiently from Earth, on behalf of the moon, is exporting of water to the moon. With few individuals needed on the surface or within the LSE-CM/ISS, water is not a problem, especially with Earth's global warming ongoing and entirely unchecked and only getting itself worse off, thus we've got way too much water. Exporting it as slush hydrogen and/or h2o2 is simply an alternative, whereas accommodating plain old h2o can be cheaply delivered via robotic landers with absolutely no fear of losing another astronaut nor chancing any contamination of the moon should something go terribly wrong. I have absolutely no doubts that once upon a time Mars had a sufficient atmosphere, and surface water, thereby a warmer and radiation protected environment, possibly even long enough to have sustained either natural evolution and/or of some well intended terraforming on behalf of establishing some life similar to human. Unfortunately, there are certain limits to which life and of it's DNA/RNA as we know it can coexist within the confines of what Mars has had to offer for the past few thousand years, and certainly things are not getting any better. Whereas Venus still offers a survivable atmospheric buffer zone that's also loaded with all sorts of natural energy opportunities. The more the Mars core cools itself off, the worse becomes any opportunity for that planet to revive itself, short of receiving a massive infusion of artificial energy, such as what 1000 terawatts per year as derived from our lunar He3 might have to offer. The moon may have never sustained life, but it may have provided itself as a truly long-range capable transporter and/or transponder of life, even of life as we know it. Some good readings: SADDAM HUSSEIN and The SAND PIRATES http://mittymax.com/Archive/0085-Sad...andPirates.htm The latest insults to this Mars/Moon injury: http://guthvenus.tripod.com/gv-moon-02.htm Some other recent updates: http://guthvenus.tripod.com/gv-gwb-moon.htm http://guthvenus.tripod.com/gv-interplanetary.htm http://guthvenus.tripod.com/moon-04.htm http://guthvenus.tripod.com/moon-04.htm |
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