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#226 2017-04-07 10:18:50

JohnX
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From: Thunder Bay
Registered: 2017-03-10
Posts: 87
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Re: Mapping a way forward

If a 'company town' or 'university town' can have a governing board of elected representatives, or even that everyone employed there gets a vote or a say on decisions, then that could be a great model to start with and still allow some return on investment if required. Some checks & balances so that people preserve dignity & some freedoms.

Then again, from what I can tell, Elon Musk isn't in this for profit - he's a visionary who needs to make profit in order to accomplish his real goals.


-- Because it's there! --

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#227 2017-04-07 13:45:54

Scott Beach
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Registered: 2017-02-21
Posts: 180

Re: Mapping a way forward

JohnX wrote:

If a 'company town' or 'university town' can have a governing board of elected representatives, or even that everyone employed there gets a vote or a say on decisions, then that could be a great model to start with and still allow some return on investment if required. Some checks & balances so that people preserve dignity & some freedoms.

Then again, from what I can tell, Elon Musk isn't in this for profit - he's a visionary who needs to make profit in order to accomplish his real goals.

John: The University of Central Florida Board of Trustees is a public corporation.  The UCF Board of Trustees is composed of people appointed by the Florida Board of Governors (an agency of the State of Florida).

     https://bot.ucf.edu

I do not know whether UCF-BOT is a for-profit or a not-for-profit corporation.  However, UCF-BOT probably is permitted to earn profits on its assets, and the profits might include royalties on patents that are based on research and discoveries at UCF research colleges.

UCF-BOT might contract with a space transportation company to take people and supplies to a spaceport on Mars.  The transportation company would have to make a profit on such services in order to remain in business.

UCF is a space-grant university.

     https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_ … ip_Program

Florida Space Grant Consortium is a NASA sponsored program administered by the University of Central Florida.

     https://floridaspacegrant.org

UCF might establish a College of Sociocultural Systems Engineering.  Students of the college could participate in the design, construction, testing and operation of such systems.  UCF could sell completed systems (Martian settlements) to groups of setters.  After arriving on Mars, a group of settlers could move into their new settlement and then sign an agreement like the Mayflower Compact.  They could thereby establish a government for their settlement.

     https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mayflower_Compact


"It is possible to build a rational and humane culture completely free from the threat of supernatural restraints."  Arthur C. Clarke, The Songs of Distant Earth

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#228 2017-04-07 14:47:06

RobertDyck
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Re: Mapping a way forward

I'm sure a lot of scientists would like a university model. However, university doesn't have the billions necessary for Mars. And university has focus on science, not building. So I argue for the company town model.

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#229 2017-04-07 15:30:24

Scott Beach
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Registered: 2017-02-21
Posts: 180

Re: Mapping a way forward

RobertDyck wrote:

I'm sure a lot of scientists would like a university model. However, university doesn't have the billions necessary for Mars.

UCF is a public university.  The United States Congress could give 10 billion dollars to UCF so that UCF can pay for the design and construction of a prototype Martian settlement on Earth and the construction of a prototype Martian settlement on Mars.  And once that first successful prototype settlement has been built on Mars the planetwide settlement of Mars will be possible.

And the UCF Foundation Inc. can help to fund UCF research projects.  The Foundation is a tax-exempt public charity that can accept tax-deductible contributions.

Is Canada going to claim Mars and then give Mars to the corporation that you have been advocating?  If Canada is not going to do that then I think that your proposal cannot be a model for "Mapping a way forward".


"It is possible to build a rational and humane culture completely free from the threat of supernatural restraints."  Arthur C. Clarke, The Songs of Distant Earth

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#230 2017-04-07 17:09:15

RobertDyck
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Re: Mapping a way forward

Canada is a signatory of the UN Outer Space Treaty. So Canada can't do that any more than the United States can. Not unless it formally withdraws from the Outer Space Treaty. I would like to say my corporation will establish the first human settlement on Mars, and I will declare myself king of Mars! Or president for life! With the proviso that my successor must be democratically elected by the citizens of Mars. But I'm not a billionaire like Elon Musk, I'm just some schmuck who can't afford to go to the annual Mars Society Convention.

A head hunter (agent of a personnel agency) has submitted me for a job locally in Winnipeg, and at the same pay rate I got in Miami in 1999/2000! In Miami I was paid in US dollars, this one is in Canadian dollars, so it's that much less. But I can live in my own house, and only one country to pay taxes to, so would be absolutely wonderful! Pray for me.

Part of my bias against universities comes from my alma-mater. I went to the University of Manitoba. In the early 1980s, it was the only university in my province to offer computer science. The Maclean's list didn't exist at that time, but does now. It ranks universities. Every accredited university in Canada and the US is on that list. Except universities that have asked to be removed. It ranks universities according to the quality of education a student will receive at that university. It doesn't include community colleges or career colleges or junior colleges, it doesn't include non-accredited universities; only fully accredited full universities. And a university may have excellent research, but that's ignored. The list only counts quality of education a student will receive. And a university may specialize in one subject, but that's ignored too. The list evaluates universities overall for everything offered at that university. As you can imagine, Ivy League universities rank near the top. My alma-mater ranks absolute dead last, bottom of the list, worst university in Canada or the US. The University of Manitoba is a provincial university; Americans would equate it to a state university. But it's the worst of them. When I was in high school, the representative from the University of Manitoba tried to claim they're one of the best universities in all of Canada, and tried to compete with the University of Waterloo for computer science. That university is recognized as the best computer science university in the world. But the University of Manitoba? Um, no! We now have the Maclean's list, which clearly shows how bad the University of Manitoba really is.

The University of Manitoba now has a "Smart Park". This is a section of land the university owns, part of the land of their main campus, but previously undeveloped. The "Smart Park" is a series of buildings with space they rent to commercial business. If a business wants a prestigious address that they can associate with the university, they can pay a premium price for office space in one of these buildings. The university administration has become obsessed with this, and the revenue they gain from it, rather than students. They have focused on this commercial real estate at the expense of students. And I've seen the inside of these buildings, they aren't even the best office space. They're equivalent to old warehouse buildings downtown that have been converted to office space. Ironic considering the "Smart Park" was built in an open field. For a couple decades the university is obsessed with profit from the "Smart Park" at the expense of education for students.

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#231 2017-04-07 23:10:50

Tom Kalbfus
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Re: Mapping a way forward

RobertDyck wrote:
Tom Kalbfus wrote:

Corporations by their very nature are supposed to compete with one another, the very idea of having only one corporation defeats the purpose of incorporation. The market requires many players, not one. A corporation is not supposed to be a monopoly, that goes against the rules. As soon as you have one corporation governing the planet, someone is going to file an antitrust suit against it an try to break it up due to anticompetitive behavior!

No, Tom. You are again applying your bias. You make many assumptions. First your idea of a competition is part of the American system, and all modern western capitalist economies. But that is competition between business; you are confusing business with corporation. The corporation was invented as a means to raise capital. A corporation was invented as an artificial person, the word "corpus" is Latin for body. The idea was to limit liability. That this artificial person owed investors, and the artificial person was liable for whatever it did, not individual investors. This was a major change, previously all that existed was sole proprietorship or partnership; in both cases the owners are personally liable for whatever they do. Today in practice the board of directors can be held liable for actions an debts of the corporation, although large corporations somehow appear to shield their board of directors from liability for debts. Lawyers.

Scott Beach wrote:

However, where a corporation owns the whole planet and dictates who the government officers are and what the laws shall be the corporation can declare that it is immune to judicial processes.  This is known as the doctrine of sovereign immunity.

Scott answered that one.

Are you not familiar with a "company town"? That's a town established by one company, where the one company provides most or all services. It's a monopoly. I didn't invent it. For corporate government, I'm suggesting the corporation establish one and only one settlement. That one settlement will be a company town. That means company owned dormitory for its employees, company owned cafeteria, company owned clothing stores, company owned grocery stores. I would allow others to set up business in the company town, but expect the company to dominate that one town. This town would service the interplanetary transport, so the only Earth money needed to transport settlers to Mars will be to deliver them to Low Earth Orbit. Everything from LEO to the surface of Mars will be provided by the space economy: propellant either from Mars, one of its moons, or asteroids. Food and replacement parts from the company town on Mars, etc. That way we don't need to deliver any profitable product to Earth, instead settlers pay in Earth currency, but the transport operates on the space economy. So once established, almost all of the ticket price repays investors. That's the big trick to make this work. And that means a company town. To support that company town, the company will ensure all settlers arrive at the company town, not delivered directly to any other location. So everyone arriving on Mars must go through that company town. That gives the company town a chance to recruit employees, and to sell goods.

Look, Tom. The United States had the chance to lead in space. The people of the US expected they were leaders in space, but throughout the 1950s, the American government refused to do any work or invest any money at all in space. The Soviet Union did a lot of hard work and invested a lot of money from 1951 onward, and made a lot of announcements of their successes, but the US government suppressed all news of what they did. Then in 1957 the Soviet Union launched Sputnik. They deliberately installed a radio transmitter that would transmit on a ham radio frequency, so private individuals could track it, confirm Sputnik. It worked, the US government couldn't suppress it any more. The American people responded with shock, asked how the US government could be passed. What they didn't know is he US government knew what the Soviet Union was doing, deliberately decided to do nothing themselves, and suppressed all news. The US government spread propaganda that everything Soviet was old, obsolete, decades behind the US. Obviously it wasn't. The US was ahead in some things, behind in others. The US only led in space long enough to spoil what the Soviet Union did. NASA had big plans, but Nixon drastically slashed NASA. He would have completely dismantled NASA if Congress would have let him get away with it. Skylab was only built after the Soviet Union launched Salyut 1. The US has been a spoiler, not a leader.

The US government receives more tax dollars from the space industry that it spends on NASA. For the government, space is profitable. The US slashed funding of NASA so much that the European Space Agency achieved dominance in launching commercial satellites. This resulted in the US space industry falling behind; not behind the Soviet Union or Russia, but behind western Europe. Taking commercial business meant US federal tax dollars. So the US responded by investing money to develop new launch vehicles; not just one, but two. Again this obsession with competition. They didn't seem to realize they were already competing for commercial business with Europe, Russia, and China, that internal US competition was redundant. The US federal government went to the same military contractors who had gouged and screwed American taxpayers since cancellation of Apollo. Corporate executives were certainly willing to take government money, but had no intention to develop a launch vehicle that was actually affordable. This program was called "Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicle" or EELV; the two vehicles developed were Delta IV and Atlas V. Many major technological improvements, but still not competitive against Ariane for commercial satellite launch.

So you ask why the US government hasn't established settlements in space. Uh huh. They've shown two things: (1) they really aren't interested, (2) they want to see profit for the US federal government. Many space fans keep talking about Mars declaring independence right away. But if that happens, how does the US government get return on investment? If they're going to invest multiple billions of dollars, then they will insist upon positive return on investment. So those Americans who ask the US government to have NASA do it, but at the same time talk about Mars independence, are actually sabotaging their own effort.

Bottom line: The US isn't going to. We need some other way to establish settlement on Mars. I have pointed out development of the Airbus A380 cost $25 billion in US dollars. This wasn't any government program, this was all private investment. So sufficient private money is available, the but condition is private investment demands return on that investment. I proposed treating Mars as a giant company town. I have given an historical example: St. John's, Newfoundland. The first ever European settlement in North America after the Vikings. St. John's was successful, and started more than a century before any government colony. It still exists, it's now the capital of the Canadian province of Newfoundland.

Bottom line is if the US was ever going to settle space, it would have been done decades ago. Time to move on, find someone else who will.

How many astronauts has the ESA launched into space? Launching private satellites is a business, not a space program. For all the astronauts Russia has launched into space and all the space stations it has built, Russia has never left Low Earth orbit, and it hasnever successfully landed a space probe on Mars, not even after 60 years since launching Sputnik. Seems to me Russia' space program has stalled ever since it failed to land the first humans on the Moon, it made enormous efforts, but when NASA got their first, the Russians just gave up, as if nothing else was important other than getting there first. Why do you suppose that was? I think if it wanted to, Russia could have landed some people on the Moon after Apollo, but it just didn't seem interested, all it wanted to do was build space stations.

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#232 2017-04-08 00:02:00

RobertDyck
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From: Winnipeg, Canada
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Re: Mapping a way forward

Tom Kalbfus wrote:

How many astronauts has the ESA launched into space? Launching private satellites is a business, not a space program. For all the astronauts Russia has launched into space and all the space stations it has built, Russia has never left Low Earth orbit, and it hasnever successfully landed a space probe on Mars, not even after 60 years since launching Sputnik. Seems to me Russia' space program has stalled ever since it failed to land the first humans on the Moon, it made enormous efforts, but when NASA got their first, the Russians just gave up, as if nothing else was important other than getting there first. Why do you suppose that was? I think if it wanted to, Russia could have landed some people on the Moon after Apollo, but it just didn't seem interested, all it wanted to do was build space stations.

There's the spectacular stuff that gets attention, then there's practical stuff that earns money. Launching communication satellites earns money. Whether you want to accept it or not, the US federal government has noticed they make more tax dollars from the space industry than they spend on NASA. And that money they spend on NASA is necessary to keep the space industry healthy, and profitable.

Russia had dominance in space from 1951 until Apollo 8. America didn't realize it until Sputnik, and the public didn't like being second. Sputnik was launched by an R7 rocket, the Soviet Union's first ICBM. The message was they could drop a nuclear bomb anywhere on the planet. The public, including myself, had dreams of human space exploration, but world powers saw it as military dominance. The space race continued to demonstrate technological superiority, and to gain allies. Reality wasn't nearly as pretty as we thought at the time.

Russia didn't give up when you thought they did. Russia was severely affected by losing the race to land a man on the Moon. They seriously considered trumping what NASA did by sending a crew directly to Mars. Western intelligence learned of this, so that's when NASA got serious about Mars. Russia started by sending unmanned probes to Mars. All failed. And no one had life support capable of sending crew to Mars and back. So Russia chose to put serious effort into developing that life support capability by launching space stations.

But Russia didn't actually quit immediately after Apollo 11. They continued anyway. They conducted 3 tests with their LK lunar lander in Low Earth Orbit. By 1972 they were ready to go to the Moon. But the Russia government felt this was too little, too late; so they cancelled it. But you think their space program was stalled? Do you realize they launched over 240 Soyuz spacecraft have flown in space? How many Apollo spacecraft flew? How many Shuttle flights? Russia built a series of space stations, each improving on the last. The core module of Mir was an improved version of Salyut 7. And the "Russian service module" is actually the core module of ISS, which was originally built to be the core module of Mir 2. They never quit.

And how many American spacecraft successfully landed on Venus?

But I never suggested asking the Russians or Europe to lead settlement of Mars. I suggested private enterprise do it. America appears to be the hare to Russia's tortoise. America has been asleep since Apollo, did something with Shuttle, but fell asleep again. Almost woke up with VentureStar, but fell a sleep before taking a step. Almost woke up again with Constellation, but again fell asleep. Is sleep-walking now, but not really getting anywhere. Commercial space are the only ones making any progress now.

Last edited by RobertDyck (2017-04-08 00:03:02)

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#233 2017-04-08 04:15:53

louis
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From: UK
Registered: 2008-03-24
Posts: 7,208

Re: Mapping a way forward

re universities - across the globe there are probably around over 15,000 universities. Many command hundreds of millions of dollars of revenue each year. In the USA, some 22 million people are engaged in university employment, support and study.

I have long argued that a University on Mars should be a priority for economic development of the planet. The first Mars base could well be a "university town" rather than a "company town". 

The research opportunities on Mars are huge.  Either a consortium of universities or a single university might set up shop there, paying Space X or a Mars Consortium for transit, habitat and life support.

Big donors would love to be associated with such projects.  One can envisage a "Bill Gates Centre" at the Harvard University of Mars.

This is a quick route to guaranteeing a cash injection of tens of millions, perhaps hundreds of millions of dollars every year.


Let's Go to Mars...Google on: Fast Track to Mars blogspot.com

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#234 2017-04-08 07:03:54

Scott Beach
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Registered: 2017-02-21
Posts: 180

Re: Mapping a way forward

louis wrote:

re universities - across the globe there are probably around over 15,000 universities. Many command hundreds of millions of dollars of revenue each year. In the USA, some 22 million people are engaged in university employment, support and study.

I have long argued that a University on Mars should be a priority for economic development of the planet. The first Mars base could well be a "university town" rather than a "company town". 

The research opportunities on Mars are huge.  Either a consortium of universities or a single university might set up shop there, paying Space X or a Mars Consortium for transit, habitat and life support.

Big donors would love to be associated with such projects.  One can envisage a "Bill Gates Centre" at the Harvard University of Mars.

This is a quick route to guaranteeing a cash injection of tens of millions, perhaps hundreds of millions of dollars every year.

Louis: I have written about the University of Central Florida above (post #227).  Another reason to think that UCF would be a good choice is that, as a public corporation, it has its own police department. 

     https://police.ucf.edu

The university could exert sovereign control over a branch campus on Mars.  Exercising sovereign control over a spacecraft or spaceport or other sovereign facility (e.g., a prototype Martian settlement) is permitted by the Outer Space Treaty.

If the university admitted students from dozens of terrestrial nations then, when the prototype settlement was eventually sold to a group of the university’s graduates, the Old World would probably accept the settlers’ declaration of sovereignty over their settlement.

I think that this Mars development model is the closest that we have yet come to “mapping a way forward”.


"It is possible to build a rational and humane culture completely free from the threat of supernatural restraints."  Arthur C. Clarke, The Songs of Distant Earth

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#235 2017-04-08 07:46:28

Tom Kalbfus
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Posts: 4,401

Re: Mapping a way forward

Scott Beach wrote:
louis wrote:

re universities - across the globe there are probably around over 15,000 universities. Many command hundreds of millions of dollars of revenue each year. In the USA, some 22 million people are engaged in university employment, support and study.

I have long argued that a University on Mars should be a priority for economic development of the planet. The first Mars base could well be a "university town" rather than a "company town". 

The research opportunities on Mars are huge.  Either a consortium of universities or a single university might set up shop there, paying Space X or a Mars Consortium for transit, habitat and life support.

Big donors would love to be associated with such projects.  One can envisage a "Bill Gates Centre" at the Harvard University of Mars.

This is a quick route to guaranteeing a cash injection of tens of millions, perhaps hundreds of millions of dollars every year.

Louis: I have written about the University of Central Florida above (post #227).  Another reason to think that UCF would be a good choice is that, as a public corporation, it has its own police department. 

     https://police.ucf.edu

The university could exert sovereign control over a branch campus on Mars.  Exercising sovereign control over a spacecraft or spaceport or other sovereign facility (e.g., a prototype Martian settlement) is permitted by the Outer Space Treaty.

If the university admitted students from dozens of terrestrial nations then, when the prototype settlement was eventually sold to a group of the university’s graduates, the Old World would probably accept the settlers’ declaration of sovereignty over their settlement.

I think that this Mars development model is the closest that we have yet come to “mapping a way forward”.

That reminds me of a movie:
ed209.jpg
Remember this guy? It was part of the police force of New Detroit, a company town run  by a defense conglomerate OCP in the Movie Robocop.

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#236 2017-04-08 09:00:25

louis
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From: UK
Registered: 2008-03-24
Posts: 7,208

Re: Mapping a way forward

If a fossil is discovered on Mars, it will be like a gold rush on Mars! But even without evidence of life once on Mars, I think academic interest in the planet will be huge once scientists and researchers realise that a trip there is within the realm of the possible.


Let's Go to Mars...Google on: Fast Track to Mars blogspot.com

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#237 2017-04-08 11:44:09

RobertDyck
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From: Winnipeg, Canada
Registered: 2002-08-20
Posts: 7,934
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Re: Mapping a way forward

Tom Kalbfus wrote:

That reminds me of a movie:
http://www.giantjapaneserobot.com/wp-co … /ed209.jpg
Remember this guy? It was part of the police force of New Detroit, a company town run  by a defense conglomerate OCP in the Movie Robocop.

Video clip of that scene. Graphic content:
hqdefault.jpg?custom=true&w=336&h=188&stc=true&jpg444=true&jpgq=90&sp=68&sigh=c71YXwwSnTVW4Pl-TeNhVxDmO4Q

Competent police officers so not draw their weapon in anger ever their entire career. The US has far too much violence right now, why would you even think of an abomination like this?

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#238 2017-04-10 16:18:54

Scott Beach
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Registered: 2017-02-21
Posts: 180

Re: Mapping a way forward

The article cited below includes images of what a Martian settlement might look like.  A College of Sociocultural Systems Engineering at the University of Central Florida might design a prototype settlement that looks similar to the settlement in the images presented below.

AN ECONOMIC MODEL FOR A MARTIAN COLONY OF A THOUSAND PEOPLE
     
     Richard Heidmann, vice-president Association Planète Mars [the French Chapter of the Mars Society]
     Pierre Brisson, financial advisor and English translation 
     September 26, 2016
   
     http://planete-mars.com/an-economic-mod … nd-people/

     http://planete-mars.com/wp-content/uplo … nColo2.jpg

     http://planete-mars.com/wp-content/uplo … Orange.jpg

Last edited by Scott Beach (2017-04-11 07:40:59)


"It is possible to build a rational and humane culture completely free from the threat of supernatural restraints."  Arthur C. Clarke, The Songs of Distant Earth

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#239 2017-04-10 17:14:31

louis
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From: UK
Registered: 2008-03-24
Posts: 7,208

Re: Mapping a way forward

Can't say I find that French design practical or pretty.

I think most habitat space will be piled over with Mars regolith.

Where are the vehicles? Surely a community that size would have lots of vehicles. A community of 1000 would surely have at least 20 Rover vehicles for exploration of the surrounding area, lots of robot diggers and so on, and other technical vehicles. 

For a community of 1000, there might well be a central area with natural lighting, that part might be right. But people would still need to be protected from radiation.  A central area would probably have stone cloisters around a central atrium, so people were protected from radiation.

Personally I would also like to see us experimenting with creating pressurised spaces in gullies/canyons, where we would put in a glass or plastic roof. This space would have paths and be wooded.  Additional light would be piped in from the surface, so it was as light as anywhere on Earth. We could start small and gradually work our way up to much larger canyon spaces, maybe several hundred metres long, 100 metres wide and perhaps 200 metres deep.


Let's Go to Mars...Google on: Fast Track to Mars blogspot.com

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#240 2017-04-10 19:03:54

SpaceNut
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From: New Hampshire
Registered: 2004-07-22
Posts: 29,431

Re: Mapping a way forward

Scott your post in 238 shows a far off future state when we have leverage mass and power into a delivery system that can teraform mars at least inside a jar.....There appears to be lots of redundancy in the hub and outward arms of the colony with the green house appearing to have a blanket for night time draping over the glass.

I can see lots of work has gone into this image....

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#241 2017-04-10 20:00:43

RobertDyck
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From: Winnipeg, Canada
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Re: Mapping a way forward

Plant trays are stacked so tightly that the only way plants could grow is with artificial light. Why do that with a glass greenhouse? If you need artificial light, then put it underground.

I've argued strenuously for ambient light. That's the only way to recycle oxygen and water without electrical power. And plants are more robust vs radiation that we are. The surface of Mars at any altitude where you would build a settlement has half the radiation of ISS, and almost no heavy ion galactic cosmic rays. I still like "Mars Homestead Project, Phase 1 - The Hillside Settlement". Yea, I'm biased because I was part of that project. But part of the idea is at least some of the greenhouses would be illuminated by ambient light, yet living spaces are under deep regolith. Our design had a 2-story atrium deep within the hill, with light pipes feeding light from the surface. Apartments would have a window at one end. The roof would be under at least 2.4m of regolith. The window would have a flat "shade" outside and above the window, providing shade from the sky. You could call it an "awning", but it would be flat and horizontal to the ground, with 2.4m of regolith piled on top as well. The purpose of the "window shade" or "awning" would be radiation shielding. The window itself would be strong glass, with mineral oil filling the space between panes. That's how a window is built to a radiation "hot cell". Mineral oil is as clear as water, but it's a hydrocarbon liquid polymer. The oil blocks light ion radiation, proton radiation, and neutron radiation better than water. Water is better for heavy ion radiation, but Mars atmosphere blocks that. With the window shade, what you have to worry about is solar radiation. That's mostly proton, and a tiny bit of neutron radiation produced as secondary radiation when solar radiation strikes the ground. So this window design protects against that.

It may sound strange that I go on so much about radiation, when I've argued for no radiation shielding what so ever for the greenhouse. But for the greenhouse we want sunlight. Humans must be protected, plants not so much. Especially annuals, which are plants that only live one year. Plant a seed, grow the plant, then harvest. Next year plant again. Annuals cannot accumulate radiation damage over multiple years like humans, they just grow then are gone.

Ps. I keep fantasizing about an estate on Mars. It would include a large bedroom on the top story. This special bedroom would be round, with a dome that extends from floor level. Get into this room with a stairway through the floor, nothing to pierce the dome. Not even 1 millimetre of "lip" from the floor to the dome, like windows of a Frank Lloyd Wright house, but round. The dome would actually be 2 domes of almuno-oxynitride (aka aluminum oxynitride or ALON), with mineral oil between the panes. Again, radiation protection. But with material strong enough that a descent size meteorite would just bounce off. And positioned so you get a panoramic view of the entire area, 360°. With a raised platform in the centre, with a big round bed. Would that attract some young honey?

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#242 2017-08-12 09:22:47

unlinkmon
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Posts: 2

Re: Mapping a way forward

Via GCR: Switching The World To Electric Vehicles Will Take Way Longer Than You Think

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#243 2017-08-13 07:21:49

SpaceNut
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From: New Hampshire
Registered: 2004-07-22
Posts: 29,431

Re: Mapping a way forward

First post is about "law and governance" a pretense that once a colony reaches rebel state that we will need paper to control actions of those that are there. Sounds like ethics to me and selection of thoses that believe in its sound practice.

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#244 2019-09-25 13:13:37

tahanson43206
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Registered: 2018-04-27
Posts: 19,408

Re: Mapping a way forward

For JohnX ....

Thank you for providing the link to this topic, started in

2017-03-11 12:05:11

That was before I joined the forum, so I am glad to be informed it is there.

Congratulations again on your first book!

Have you considered writing for Analog?

Their editorial policy encourages fiction based (as much as possible) on known physics, although (obviously) exceptions do occur.

(th)

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#245 2021-09-08 06:50:17

Mars_B4_Moon
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Registered: 2006-03-23
Posts: 9,776

Re: Mapping a way forward

If American tourists and business people went to Mars in the future...and a bunch of bandits, independence factions and rebels and criminals on Mars took these American's hostage, hijacking US domes and craft and ships...how would the USA react. Could a 'Space Force' really do anything to win on another planet?
What kind of diplomatic relations would a USA and an independent Mars have? If Mars is colonized, villages and bio-domes and towns and cities grow then would the netions we see today on Earth continue to exist into our future??

With so many wars fought on Earth and so many new players in space, has the world and the Solar system changed?
Are we now starting to be ruled by a Globalist Multi-Corpoate Technocracy but we just don't know it... yet...


Will an American flag be on that city on Mars, will it be US style values and a United States style constitution for the first villages and towns on the planets?


In a lot of older 1960s, 70s, 1980s era scifi people thought the USSR was going to last forever, I guess the end of the ColdWar and the Collapse of the USSR and America becoming the lone superpower did bring new times. Soem even seen a vision of the new USA in space, a US Navy Empire of the Solar System - The USA real vision is a military one, with naval space vessels and oil rigs and fast food burgers on Mars? It is interesting how the USA has changed since Bush-Jnr, the Neocon policy of interventionism and the War on Terror, we had a foolish invasion of Iraq which cost lives, it cost the USA time and teasure and hurt the United States on the political stage. I believe 'conservative rightwing' Bush and liberal leftwing' Tony Blair going on tv after 911 and constantly calling it a 'religion of peace' was a massive mistake, another mistake the "axis of evil" was first used by U.S. President little Bush jnr, Iran, Myanmar or Burma,  Iraq, Cuba,  North Korea, Syria  Libya,  Belarus were now part of some giant almost random 'Terrorist Axis'....even more were added, some Afro centric Ethno State that was in economic collapse, Communists, some Tribal Black African guy, actual mohammedan jihadi islamists, the Axis however did not seem like much of an 'Axis'.  The Communist Dictatorship of North Korea perhaps fearing it would be invaded next then started Testing Nukes while US military is mud trapped in Iraq, its possible the Bear was poked in places like Ukraine and the nation of Georgia is next to the countries of Russia, Turkey, Armenia and Azerbaijan, maybe the USA promising to 'back them up' with money and stealth bombers but in the end these smaller states on Russia's doorstep getting smashed and stomped on. Is Vladimir Putin also another of those collection of a dictator in history?  Putin is former KGB, he got in all the way back in year 1999, Vladimir Putin is the second-longest serving European president, after Alexander Lukashenko of Belarus, is Putin an actual dictator i guess for some with the uncertain years after the fall of the USSR it depends on how one defines a “dictator”.

This little Bush was unique in his own crazy way, almost banned Stem cell research, funded religion style Creationism stories in school but also liked to Drone people, opening a path for A.I and computers and flawed software algorithm not humans to decide to will live and die. The little Bush Jnr passed a 'patriot act' and even told the free American people 'You are With Us OR You Are With The Terrorists'!!! A new election and the Obama admin followed and there were more drones, more radical islamism, as bad as this Admin was at times I have to give the Obama admin credit for launching the SEAL team finally end than part of the islamic jihad story and killing Osama bin Laden, however it seems the Saudi and Pakistan has always been involved, 28 pages censored. There were Arab Springs which almost became 'Nuclear Winters' with the fall of Libya these bombs and missiles and guns then running into Syria and North parts of Iraq and almost putting the Entire Middle East on Fire . For a while the name of the radical islamists known as al-qaeda and taliban were replaced by a new name called ISIS. Another electrion and as insulting and tempermental and hotheaded and non-politically correct as Trump was at least he brought an end to ISIS during his term. Part of what got Trump elected was he was different he wasn't a Clinton or a Bush, people probably thought America was being manipualted or going through a tail wag the dog scenario when it came to Trade and Costly Wars, fighting battles and getting manipulated by Britain or the Saudi or Israel or some other Asian or European power. Trump's outbursts were so different that he attracted people with economic and political frustrations. I also find it strange in these times that Trump remains banned from most of the internet while the Taliban and other islamist terrorist groups that scream 'Death to America' are allowed operate their social media accounts on Twitter and Youtube and other social media places. . If the leaders of the USA had studied or watched even scifi and knew of 'Star Trek’s Prime Directive' it stops high tech weapons falling into Primite Xeno Warlike cultures and Lower Agressive Alien hands, the Captain he will give his life, even his entire crew, rather than violate the Prime Directive...if US Leaders know of this idea would they have gifted the Taliban with missiles and guns and Blackhawks? If thye United States Leaders had studied the Quran or Koran like Thomas Jefferson did during the Barbary Wars would they have helped those who wrote a Sharia Law style Constitution for Afghanistan in 2004?

Across Schools in Asia, the 'Art of War' was part of the syllabus for potential candidates of military service examinations. If leaders in the USA had read the The Art of Warfare by Sun Tzu would they have wasted 20 years in that Afghan landscape in such a way? the East isn't really free, culturally many in Asia have different values although places like South Korea and Japan are Western and Allies to America. The Chinese however are Communists, they might claim to be politically free but the country is under control of the Chinese Communist Party.
In the older scifi stories the US was dominant in space and so Russia was always going to be around the USSR military power in space, few predicted a rise of Asia, some of the Cyberpunk stuff seen it coming and China’s Rise to Global Economic Superpower . The Turkish and the Taliban have government links, Iran has oepned trade with the Taliban and now the Taliban will invite the Turk Ottoman culture, the Russias, the islamists of Iran,and Qatar for govt events.

As for right now Americans are trapped behind enemy lines, there are claims by US political leaders and claims within the US media that terrorist are  'Holding them hostage' saying Taliban terrorists have kidnapped Americans stuck and are refusing to let Americans depart

Musk can be a bit of a troll online, he might have some form of Autism or Asperger's but he is no idea, the guy is a genius. In statements he has posted weird stuff, he has called himself the Mars Imperator is an ancient Roman term used for their Overlord Emperor Commander, he has also said he wants the colony to be run on democratic principles.

Last edited by Mars_B4_Moon (2021-09-08 06:54:33)

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#246 2022-03-18 19:13:53

Mars_B4_Moon
Member
Registered: 2006-03-23
Posts: 9,776

Re: Mapping a way forward

The ESA suspends its ExoMars joint mission with Russia
https://www.engadget.com/the-esa-has-su … 14214.html

Inside China’s race to dominate the Moon and Mars – including secretive ‘deep space mission’
https://www.thesun.co.uk/tech/17949204/ … moon-mars/

New carrier rocket, Moon and Mars missions… lawmakers reveal China's forthcoming space programs
https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202203/1254234.shtml

According to Elon Musk, man will reach Mars in the year 2029
https://www.timesunion.com/business/art … ship-river

The owner of Tesla and SpaceX made his prediction by replying to a tweet from an account dedicated to space exploration.


Back on Earth

Firing-squad executions get the greenlight in South Carolina
https://apnews.com/article/business-exe … 2b179ba223

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#247 2022-03-25 09:37:12

Mars_B4_Moon
Member
Registered: 2006-03-23
Posts: 9,776

Re: Mapping a way forward

Elon Musk's SpaceX colony on Mars?
https://nypost.com/2020/10/30/elon-musk … ased-laws/

Chinese space program
Mars?

Chief Designer of the Shenzhou spacecraft stated in an interview that:

    搞航天工程不是要达成升空之旅, 而是要让人可以正常在太空中工作, 为将来探索火星、土星等作好准备。 Space programs are not aimed at sending humans into space per se, but instead at enabling humans to work normally in space, and prepare for the future exploration of Mars, Saturn, and beyond.
http://scitech.people.com.cn/GB/25892/4028044.html
    — CAS Academician Qi Faren

The technocracy of A.I propaganda is coming?

'A mini-conversation with Joe Rogan's AI persona'
https://beams.fm/anamarija/ugtpB91vDSX691fidTgQ2RjA

Joe Rogan, is an American comedian, martial artist, tv producer actor and a talk show host of an online show that has millions of viewers, far more than mainstream tv.
He has debated the 'Bad Astronomer' Philip Cary Plait about conspiracy shadows in Moon Landing Photos and had guys like Elon Musk on his show, he is a political supporter of of Bernie Sanders and often has discussions about culture or world politics or entertainment media topics on his show. Rogan is sometimes known for his fringe views, alt-medical religion ideas, drug culture, UFO studies and other alt history views which include 'New Age' ideas. Some describe Rogan as an anti-establishment libertarian, although he supports Left Democrat politics he also endorsed Republican candidate Ron Paul.  He almost got de-platformed and removed from the social media websites after statements  on Covid-19 and his promotion of alt medical ideas and old clips of him being replayed of his using 'offensive language'

Now take for example how you can fake a voice to be less robotic and use CGI to deep fake a photograph?

Last edited by Mars_B4_Moon (2022-03-25 09:37:51)

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#248 2022-07-08 17:04:31

Scott Beach
Member
Registered: 2017-02-21
Posts: 180

Re: Mapping a way forward

JohnX, you wrote

Yes, so the Bruhns and Haqq-Misra paper could serve as a structure for reconciling disputes and setting limits on one colony's land-grabbing.

Rather than asking the United Nations for permission to establish a Government of Mars, we might side-step the difficult issue of sovereignty.  We could establish a Government of Mars that abstains from exercising sovereignty over Mars.  The Prime Minister of the Government of Mars might simply receive "settlement plans" and review the plans and then file the plans in the office of the "Secretariat of Mars".  The Prime Minister could quietly refrain from filing settlement plans that contain conflicting land boundaries and/or obscene language.  The plans that are filed would be open to public inspection. 

A "settlement plan" might read as follows:

To the
Prime Minister of the
Government of Mars

We respectfully request that you review the following "Volcanoville Settlement Plan" and that you file the plan in the office of the Mars Secretariat, where the plan will be open to public inspection.

Volcanoville Settlement Plan

We, the undersigned, declare (1) that we are planning to establish a permanent human settlement on Mars. 

(2) that the point of origin of the settlement's land survey system shall be located at zero degrees latitude and 120 degrees west longitude.  https://trek.nasa.gov/mars/#v=0.1&x=-11 … 84&sfz=&w=

(3) that the boundary of the settlement shall be a square, centered on the point of origin, and that the length of each side of the square shall be 10,000 meters (32,808.4 feet; 6.21 miles).

(4) that we will adopt a settlement constitution and that the settlement's constitution shall include the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.  https://www.un.org/en/about-us/universa … man-rights

[signatures of the planners]

Scott

Last edited by Scott Beach (2022-07-09 16:55:44)


"It is possible to build a rational and humane culture completely free from the threat of supernatural restraints."  Arthur C. Clarke, The Songs of Distant Earth

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#249 2022-08-10 08:32:31

Mars_B4_Moon
Member
Registered: 2006-03-23
Posts: 9,776

Re: Mapping a way forward

and the punishment for crimes?

German diplomat in Brazil arrested, accused of killing husband: "The cadaver is screaming out the circumstances of its death"
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/uwe-herber … lien-biot/

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#250 2022-09-07 09:27:40

Mars_B4_Moon
Member
Registered: 2006-03-23
Posts: 9,776

Re: Mapping a way forward

Is Australia an Antarctic Colonial Power?

https://www.internationalaffairs.org.au … ial-power/

USF awarded $20 million federal grant to protect coral reef and mangrove ecosystems

https://www.usf.edu/news/2022/usf-award … stems.aspx

Why NASA’s space lettuce is a game changer

https://www.spaceflightinsider.com/miss … e-changer/

Astronauts are finally eating vegetables grown in outer space

https://bgr.com/general/iss-astronauts- … tuce-meal/

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