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#76 2006-03-31 11:11:25

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

Re: The First to Mars - Who will it be?

It's also surprising that the cosmonauts seem to be less hierarchic than the astronauts. Maybe communism does really work in spaceflight.

Communism for Mars ?

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#77 2006-04-02 03:02:54

callmeishmael
InActive
From: Bangkok, Thailand
Registered: 2005-12-16
Posts: 4

Re: The First to Mars - Who will it be?

I voted for China, but I think they would only be first if the manned Martian mission is about 50 years off.  If it happens sooner, it will probably be an international - US/Euro/Russian and maybe Japanese consortium.

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#78 2006-06-30 16:22:50

cjchandler
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From: canada
Registered: 2006-06-24
Posts: 138

Re: The First to Mars - Who will it be?

I don't think anyone is going to mars soon. Only a nation based in space around earth and the moon with huge space mining infrastructure will be able to do it. Mars direct isn't going to happen because of the expense, democracys are too shortsighted for the long haul. the second part is why bother, other than to say you've done it? astroids, the moon, and outer planet moons are just as good with less of a gravity well. Mars has the unfortunate situation of having too deep a gravity well to be easilly acessable, but too little gravity to keep people in desent shape. I will be visited only to show some space group's dominance or to mine water.


Ad astra per aspera!

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#79 2006-07-08 07:45:48

MikkelR
Banned
From: Europe
Registered: 2005-12-08
Posts: 20

Re: The First to Mars - Who will it be?

I believe it will be a NASA funded mission with big contributions from the private sector. I do however have no problems visualising a European led mission (By European i mean ESA/Rokosmos) since the only thing missing for such an event to occur is political unity, which I believe will happen in the next 10-15 years. Many Europeans (Especially the 15-40year generation, who have lived and worked in different european countries) can see the advantage of having a federal Europe that limits national sovereignty in the quest of uniting in a common front to promote european values.

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#80 2006-07-08 11:15:16

Rxke
Member
From: Belgium
Registered: 2003-11-03
Posts: 3,669

Re: The First to Mars - Who will it be?

A crew of six, with at least one 'token' European, probably a German or Italian scientist-astronaut... As one of the mission specialists... And (maybe, maybe) one Russian...

All part of the bartering policy that's in vogue today in spaceflight, Europe builds some stuff, and either gets free seats to ISS or free launches of some hardware... The glovebox is European, some 'fridges, pressurized cargo-containers, the upcoming ATV's...

Like the Italian cargo-container that's currently in orbit inside the Shuttle, it probably partly paid for the long duration stay of Thomas Reiter, the German astronaut now also orbiting...

I expect this kind of thing continuing through the years, mutually benefitting both agencies.

Same story probably with the Russians. Though that future seems more uncertain.

Oh, it will be an American mission for sure, with an American commander, and American pilots etc. But not 100.00%, heh.

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#81 2006-08-16 12:49:56

Tom Kalbfus
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Registered: 2006-08-16
Posts: 4,401

Re: The First to Mars - Who will it be?

I said NASA. I think that the current administration has very little stomach for globalism, plus for valid reasons or not many of people view the pre-Columbia ISS delays on the Russians.

I agree with this stance, I think that our exploration of the next new world should be an American (the British can come too) affair. Ideally I would like to see private industry step up to the plate, but I don't think that is in the cards at this juncture. I also think a good motivator for a continuing program is if we dumped the space treaty so that the driving ethos of the Mars program would not be 'we came in peace for all mankind' but 'We claim this next new world for the United States'. I know I'm sure I will be flame for being a jingoist or what-have-you, but every new frontier has been conquer by national expansion because that's what offers incentive, resources, territory, prestige. Plus, the Chinese haven’t signed the space treaty, and in the long run I really, really don't want to see Mars under the banner of the PRC. (Or the UN for that matter)

I have a simple proposal. Why not have a Martian Constitutional Convention? Those who can get to Mars get to participate, have a minimum number to make quarum such as 7 or 9 people and require that they stay for 1 Martian Year and then have the Convention, if they can maintain their presence on Mars, the Constitution remains in effect. If those people are 7 or 9 Americans, then naturally by selecting who gets to go, the US would influence what sort of constitution is adoped for a Martian government. Legally the Planet would count as a seperate nation, but practically it would depend heavily on whoever finances the expeditions to Mars and pays for the projects there. No native Martians can do that by themselves, they'll need sponsors from Earth such as NASA, the ESA or whom ever. You can skip the whole "Who owns Mars" issue by establishing Mars as an independent country from the get go, and then have that government allow countries on Earth to pay for various missions on Mars. Who gets sent to Mars determines what kind of society exists there, no jingoism involved. If some nation can't afford to send people to Mars, it has no business saying how that planet should be governed. We don't need a grand compromise among all the nations of Earth, that would create nothing but a UNish nightmare of nongovernment and lawlessness.

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#82 2006-08-17 03:41:50

Martin_Tristar
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From: Earth, Region : Australia
Registered: 2004-12-07
Posts: 305

Re: The First to Mars - Who will it be?

Tom Kalbfus,

Does this mean, that If private enterprise gets their first they could design the constitution for Mars ? everytime people think that government will do it the economies are business driven not government driven they wait for there handout through charges and taxes.

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#83 2006-08-17 11:06:57

publiusr
Banned
From: Alabama
Registered: 2005-02-24
Posts: 682

Re: The First to Mars - Who will it be?

Private industry alone will not win space.

Most of these space conventions are made up of a lot of groups selling and nobody buying.

Alt.space incest, I call it.

You get a few venture capitalists who forget the lesson of spacelift is TVA, not MSN. Spacelift is blue-collar thrust, not white collar computing. Venture types will put money in low infrastructure internet start ups that need only a good programmer. But the paltry funds that would cause such a venture to lift off is worthless when trying to build real spacecraft.

So space start ups get small sums in fits and starts--use them for fine glossy ads--which they just pass around to each other or the rare investor, who glances at them before placing them in the circular file..13.

Remember, the mark of a 'good businessman' is his ability to (while eating that steak dinner you just bought him) look you dead in the eye and say--

"No."

And off he goes to invest his money in EXXON.

And--to be perfectly fair...wouldn't you?

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#84 2006-08-17 13:08:50

Tom Kalbfus
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Registered: 2006-08-16
Posts: 4,401

Re: The First to Mars - Who will it be?

Tom Kalbfus,

Does this mean, that If private enterprise gets their first they could design the constitution for Mars ? everytime people think that government will do it the economies are business driven not government driven they wait for there handout through charges and taxes.

Why not? if the prize is the whole planet, then this may start a whole new space race and free up alot of private capital as well. You must remember that the US Government gets the money it has to spend on human space missions from private enterprise through taxation. Ordinarily a human space mission may seem like a throwaway for most private investors as their is no return. however some rich person might fancy himself as the founder of a new nation, so he might underwrite a colonization mission with his own funds, and leave a lasting legacy for is progeny. Generally the success of a Martian government depends on how open and inclusive it is. I'm willing to bet that if you increase the importance of a human Mars mission alot more people are going to attempt it. If its just flags and footprints and then good bye, then only governments may attempt this for bragging rights and propaganda. I believe the people whol colonize Mars first deserve a chief say in what sort of government it has, it would be a good idea if it was amendable so that it may continue to meet the needs of the current Martian population, but the initial Constitution should be decided by those who first colonize the planet whoever they may be. I think if properly motivated, their is a good chance the US may get their first, but who knows, other countries may think they have a good chance too as well as private corporations, why not? There is nothing that says private corporations can't start their own country. I do prefer one government for all of Mars rather than another planet with borders, competing ideologies and wars. Let the contest be decided by who gets there and establishes the first permanent human colony. The people who live on Mars, however they get there should always have the final say. Just because their sponsors give them a Constitution doesn't mean necessarily that the individuals they send their will automatically adopt it. I don't think the UN with all the Nations in the World should decide on this matter, I don't think they deserve too. Those that actually put up the money and colonize the planet should have a greater say, because without them nothing happens. The ability to get to Mars is a mark of sucess, and an indication that their system of government and the way they run their society is working. I think the capitalist democracies have a big leg up in the Mars race if sufficiently motivated.

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#85 2006-08-17 13:21:53

Tom Kalbfus
Banned
Registered: 2006-08-16
Posts: 4,401

Re: The First to Mars - Who will it be?

Private industry alone will not win space.

Most of these space conventions are made up of a lot of groups selling and nobody buying.

Alt.space incest, I call it.

You get a few venture capitalists who forget the lesson of spacelift is TVA, not MSN. Spacelift is blue-collar thrust, not white collar computing. Venture types will put money in low infrastructure internet start ups that need only a good programmer. But the paltry funds that would cause such a venture to lift off is worthless when trying to build real spacecraft.

So space start ups get small sums in fits and starts--use them for fine glossy ads--which they just pass around to each other or the rare investor, who glances at them before placing them in the circular file..13.

Remember, the mark of a 'good businessman' is his ability to (while eating that steak dinner you just bought him) look you dead in the eye and say--

"No."

And off he goes to invest his money in EXXON.

And--to be perfectly fair...wouldn't you?

The motivation behind all business interests is power, if they get a chance to start a political government on Mars, they may just reach into their deep pockets to do it. Money is just a form of power, and it is the power they are after, if getting a chance to start a government on Mars and become the planet's leader suits their fancy, they may just dig into their deep pockets to accomplish it. So long as "everbody owns Mars" nobody's going to want to spend the money to send people there, however if you can conquer a planet and make it your own, that is a different story. So long as Mars remains the common property of all humankind rather than just the people who live there, there is going to be little incentive to colonize the place except for enthusiast groups like the Mars Society. I'm willing to risk not getting there first, I happen to think the chances of my country getting their first are very good, but if someone else like China does it, I can accept that. If the constitution is too repressive, Mars is not going to be successful and no one is going to go there. If property rights aren't protected, no one is going to invest there. I think there is no environmental problem of developing Mars like their is with Antartica, Mars is pretty barren and no one has thus far proven otherwise. You can strip mine it, or terraform it, and no one is going to seriously object. I think Mars has a good chance in becoming a second home for humanity, the massive manipulation of the planet's environment would be unthinkable to do deliberately to Earth.

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#86 2006-08-22 08:15:22

Grypd
Member
From: Scotland, Europe
Registered: 2004-06-07
Posts: 1,879

Re: The First to Mars - Who will it be?

The motivation behind all business interests is power, if they get a chance to start a political government on Mars, they may just reach into their deep pockets to do it. Money is just a form of power, and it is the power they are after, if getting a chance to start a government on Mars and become the planet's leader suits their fancy, they may just dig into their deep pockets to accomplish it. So long as "everbody owns Mars" nobody's going to want to spend the money to send people there, however if you can conquer a planet and make it your own, that is a different story. So long as Mars remains the common property of all humankind rather than just the people who live there, there is going to be little incentive to colonize the place except for enthusiast groups like the Mars Society. I'm willing to risk not getting there first, I happen to think the chances of my country getting their first are very good, but if someone else like China does it, I can accept that. If the constitution is too repressive, Mars is not going to be successful and no one is going to go there. If property rights aren't protected, no one is going to invest there. I think there is no environmental problem of developing Mars like their is with Antartica, Mars is pretty barren and no one has thus far proven otherwise. You can strip mine it, or terraform it, and no one is going to seriously object. I think Mars has a good chance in becoming a second home for humanity, the massive manipulation of the planet's environment would be unthinkable to do deliberately to Earth.

Mars is a big place and it has roughly the same landmass as we currently use now (remember no oceans..yet). But getting there at the moment will take a lot of power literally billions of dollars and it wont get many people there. So any group getting there will not have the numbers to have the moral capability to say we own Mars.

It will come down to routine access to space and the development of routine journeys to Mars before Mars colonisation will take off and the political future of Mars can be developed.


Chan eil mi aig a bheil ùidh ann an gleidheadh an status quo; Tha mi airson cur às e.

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#87 2006-08-22 10:12:49

Tom Kalbfus
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Registered: 2006-08-16
Posts: 4,401

Re: The First to Mars - Who will it be?

Mars is a big place and it has roughly the same landmass as we currently use now (remember no oceans..yet). But getting there at the moment will take a lot of power literally billions of dollars and it wont get many people there. So any group getting there will not have the numbers to have the moral capability to say we own Mars.

It will come down to routine access to space and the development of routine journeys to Mars before Mars colonisation will take off and the political future of Mars can be developed.

Mars is empty. If one person lives there and claims to be ruler of Mars, their is no one else to say otherwise. That one person might claim to be the World Government of Mars, but if someone else sets down and does whatever he wants, there is very little the first person can do about it.

How many people do we need exactly to have claim to a World Government on Mars, and if not the whole planet, then how much of it can a person legitimately claim to own? I think having no government works, when you have few people on Mars, but when population gets high enough where you start having to worry about crime, then you need a government of some sort to enforce the law so you don't have chaos and anarchy. I think we need some nice orderly process where a World government can be established and all concerned will recognize it and make it stick.

If Mars has its own World government that is automatically recognized by the most important nations, then we can get past the national rivalry issues about who owns Mars, who can claim it as a terrotory and how much of it.

I think Mars should have an open World Government with equal access to all so that nations and corporations that invest in it can all realize a return in their investment and so have incentive for doing so. I think property rights are important, their must be some agency that fairly awards claims to various governments, agencies, corporations and people so that Mars might be properly used and exploited. Earth governments should be allowed property rights,but not sovereignty over territory on Mars. A Martian Government should have sovereignty and decide upon the laws with the democratic participation of all the people living on Mars, and all corporate and national enitities should be legally required to adhere to the law established by the Martian government, but the law should also be fair, open to all and unbiased. I wouldn't want nation-states forming on Mars or colonies with borders. I think all the World's governments, all corporations, and all people who can afford to get their should be allowed equal access to all parts of Mars without having to contend with borders, and customs except for that of the planet as a whole. That way we have a bit of security that doesn't exist on Earth. With a recognized World government, we don't have to worry about wars and other such things, and if the government is fair and just, people won't have reason to rebel, and it should be inclusive to allow for the participation of the people in the political process.

Probably at this time, no one really cares about a World Government on a planet with no people, so I think nows the time to decide upon a process for determining one, hence my idea of having a constitutional convention on Mars. Once people start arriving on Mars in large numbers their are bound to be comflicts between them and disputes about who owns what, and who rules. I just think we should head all that off and establish a process that the participating nations will agree to adhere to and then just follow that process to establish a new Martian government when the time is right.

When the European powers colonized the New World, their were many wars between the colonial powers over resources and competing claims. The sooner we can settle this, before economic interests get involved, the better I think.

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#88 2006-08-22 10:15:23

Yang Liwei Rocket
Member
Registered: 2004-03-03
Posts: 993

Re: The First to Mars - Who will it be?

though this link should probably be posted here too.



RUSSIA, WESTERN EUROPE MAY UNITE INTO LARGEST SPACE ASSOCIATION


Would make for a very interesting combination

I'm not sure if Russia and Europe will ever form one space group,  they politics of Euro ( French, British, German ) Vs Moscow mentality will prevent this
what they could do however without building one big space group is come to an understanding on joint missions like the ESA/NASA Cassini-Huygens or ESA/RSA joint missions putting European astronauts to space


'first steps are not for cheap, think about it...
did China build a great Wall in a day ?' ( Y L R newmars forum member )

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#89 2006-08-22 10:33:14

Tom Kalbfus
Banned
Registered: 2006-08-16
Posts: 4,401

Re: The First to Mars - Who will it be?

EXXON and other private oil companies together have only 10% of all the oil resources in the World, the other 90% belong to governments and are exploited by government owned and run oil companies. EXXON is just the tip of the iceburg and it cannot extract oil from places it does not control and isn't allowed to operate. Governments jealously guard these resources whenever the price of oil is high. So called big oil companies like EXXON are just bit players and their participation and investements in oil doesn't affect the overall oil supply situation. the oil market is controlled by Governments, not by "big" oil companies. Exxon literally lives off the crumbs left over by the national oil cartels that control most of the oil in the World. If an investor is a modest person and can't think of anything better to do with his money, he might invest in Exxon and live off the crumbs left over by OPEC. If you want really big time however, you will want to invest in space colonization and get there first! The first people to get their and establish their authority, will set the rules that everyone else will have to live by. I think that in the end is a much more profitable investment than a bottom feeder like EXXON, who just invests in oil drilling and can't really affect the overall oil picture, and are at the mercy of OPEC. OPEC sets the oil price and EXXON can profit by it or not with the small percentage of the World's oil that they actually own.

Mars is out there, there is a whole planet's worth of stuff. You could do asteroid mining right on the surface of Mars, the Moon too, because each crater that you see and the remains of an asteroid buried under its surface, some of those asteroids have valuable mineral wealth. the Geology of the Moon and Mars is mostly dead, so those asteroids haven't gone anywhere since, they are still there. I think it may be easier to mine the asteroids buried under Mars's craters, than to mine the asteroids in the belt. On Mars they are close together, in space they are far apart and in different orbits.

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#90 2006-08-22 15:20:03

Grypd
Member
From: Scotland, Europe
Registered: 2004-06-07
Posts: 1,879

Re: The First to Mars - Who will it be?

"Tom Kalbfus wrote:

Mars is empty. If one person lives there and claims to be ruler of Mars, their is no one else to say otherwise. That one person might claim to be the World Government of Mars, but if someone else sets down and does whatever he wants, there is very little the first person can do about it.

How many people do we need exactly to have claim to a World Government on Mars, and if not the whole planet, then how much of it can a person legitimately claim to own? I think having no government works, when you have few people on Mars, but when population gets high enough where you start having to worry about crime, then you need a government of some sort to enforce the law so you don't have chaos and anarchy. I think we need some nice orderly process where a World government can be established and all concerned will recognize it and make it stick.

If Mars has its own World government that is automatically recognized by the most important nations, then we can get past the national rivalry issues about who owns Mars, who can claim it as a terrotory and how much of it.

I think Mars should have an open World Government with equal access to all so that nations and corporations that invest in it can all realize a return in their investment and so have incentive for doing so. I think property rights are important, their must be some agency that fairly awards claims to various governments, agencies, corporations and people so that Mars might be properly used and exploited. Earth governments should be allowed property rights,but not sovereignty over territory on Mars. A Martian Government should have sovereignty and decide upon the laws with the democratic participation of all the people living on Mars, and all corporate and national enitities should be legally required to adhere to the law established by the Martian government, but the law should also be fair, open to all and unbiased. I wouldn't want nation-states forming on Mars or colonies with borders. I think all the World's governments, all corporations, and all people who can afford to get their should be allowed equal access to all parts of Mars without having to contend with borders, and customs except for that of the planet as a whole. That way we have a bit of security that doesn't exist on Earth. With a recognized World government, we don't have to worry about wars and other such things, and if the government is fair and just, people won't have reason to rebel, and it should be inclusive to allow for the participation of the people in the political process.

Probably at this time, no one really cares about a World Government on a planet with no people, so I think nows the time to decide upon a process for determining one, hence my idea of having a constitutional convention on Mars. Once people start arriving on Mars in large numbers their are bound to be comflicts between them and disputes about who owns what, and who rules. I just think we should head all that off and establish a process that the participating nations will agree to adhere to and then just follow that process to establish a new Martian government when the time is right.

When the European powers colonized the New World, their were many wars between the colonial powers over resources and competing claims. The sooner we can settle this, before economic interests get involved, the better I think.

A goverments control of land only comes down to what it can defend, either by force or by use of historical and legal authority. Currently no one has that right and no one will have it for a long time. No decision made on this planet will have universal popularity or even universal political support. If it does you may well not like the result. Imagine not being allowed to go at all, and being called imperialist for even thinking  tongue

No it will come down to who actually controls the land and the more important ability to get to Mars. There are strategic choke points when it comes to Mars and control of these gives will give the occupier a lot more power.


Chan eil mi aig a bheil ùidh ann an gleidheadh an status quo; Tha mi airson cur às e.

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#91 2006-08-22 15:48:07

RobS
Banned
From: South Bend, IN
Registered: 2002-01-15
Posts: 1,701
Website

Re: The First to Mars - Who will it be?

The first human community on Mars will be small--dozens to a hundreds--and probably should start by claiming civil authority (equivalent to a city, county, state, province) rather than national authority. They will want to issue birth and marriage certificates, oversee divorces, deal with petty crime, and settle property issues (once people live there a while, they will want to own land). But the population will still be economically dependent on Earth in a way that even third world countries are not, so national status would not make sense. As for claiming the place without outside permission, a boycott on the import of key goods (rocket engines, communications devices) would bring the local population around pretty fast. No one on Mars will want to live in an artificial environment without computers.

But overy time the population will grow and people will put down roots. A local culture will emerge, possibly with a local dialect, local songs, Martian holidays, etc. Children born on Mars will not feel French, Chinese, or American as much as Martian, especially if their parents come from two different countries. My Mars Frontier novel is full of examples of this. As the population grows, too, its dependence on Earth will lessen (though it will never go away; there will always be children wanting to import Barbie dolls and parents wanting the latest nifty gadgets). So at some point nationalism will arise and there will be a certain logic to independence.

                    -- RobS

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#92 2006-08-23 07:26:51

Grypd
Member
From: Scotland, Europe
Registered: 2004-06-07
Posts: 1,879

Re: The First to Mars - Who will it be?

Robs I agree that after the initial flavouring of the missions to Mars and the beginning of a long term population there is likely to be a case where the population of Mars will be closer to other settlers on Mars than from there technically home countries.

Then again it depends on future considerations and rampant nationalism can lead to other changes the least could be a suspicion and distrust of the other bases.


Chan eil mi aig a bheil ùidh ann an gleidheadh an status quo; Tha mi airson cur às e.

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#93 2006-08-23 14:06:17

SpaceBull
Member
Registered: 2005-09-26
Posts: 45

Re: The First to Mars - Who will it be?

I think private sector will succeed in making the necessary hardware to go to Mars before anyone else. However, the private sector will not be the first ones on Mars themselves, because they simply cannot afford their own hardware. This is very similar to the colonization of North and South America - the companies that made ocean going sail ships did not travel across the ocean themselves. Many actually didn't even know, or care, that the ships they built were going to travel that far away from home. Being the first ones on Mars is then simply a question about who will be willing to spend lots of money on going there. I voted for China, but it could be another big country (like India) as well.


[url=http://www.newmars.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t=3941]Martian Settlement 2035?[/url]

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#94 2006-08-25 10:41:34

Tom Kalbfus
Banned
Registered: 2006-08-16
Posts: 4,401

Re: The First to Mars - Who will it be?

A goverments control of land only comes down to what it can defend, either by force or by use of historical and legal authority. Currently no one has that right and no one will have it for a long time. No decision made on this planet will have universal popularity or even universal political support. If it does you may well not like the result. Imagine not being allowed to go at all, and being called imperialist for even thinking  tongue

No it will come down to who actually controls the land and the more important ability to get to Mars. There are strategic choke points when it comes to Mars and control of these gives will give the occupier a lot more power.

The most import of these is who has the largest presence on Mars, who can afford to send the most colonists ahead of everyone else. It takes resources to dispute that authority as well and to maintain it. I think we don't want to export our Nation-state system to Mars and also export future conflicts there as well. If we start things on the right foot with a global government on Mars. The whole planet is easier to defend than a nation on that planet. if we start things out right we'll have a global society on Mars with a lot of space to defend itself from the Nations of Earth should any of them become aggressive, and we don't need Martians fighting against each other from different nation-states on the same planet. If Mars is to be a refuge from the problems of Earth, we should try not to bring Earth's problems to Mars along with the colonists, they don't need to live within 30 minutes of nuclear destruction like we are.

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#95 2006-08-26 23:01:09

Martin_Tristar
Member
From: Earth, Region : Australia
Registered: 2004-12-07
Posts: 305

Re: The First to Mars - Who will it be?

Tom,

Your are right about the defence of a whole planet better than an area ( Nation) on the surface of Mars.

SpaceBull

Most of the great trading Nations on the earth are not the owners of the ships that make them the leaders , its private shippers and the future in space will be private shippers / haulers across the system that will build the colonies and settlements on Mars and anywhere else , not governments. Some of the contracts will be with governments and at the start 95% will but as the locations expand and new drive technologies come online the cost per tonne or per kg or per lb will come down bringing large corporations and then private wealthly individuals and then general public into the system colonization. The volume and value of cargo will be more than what the whole earth could do , in 50 years when the full trading lanes open in space. From Mining outposts , Space factories, Space stations, Mars Settlements, Lunar Settlements , Earth Platforms and more.

Everyone

Look past the individual missions to mars and the moon, work out a method for resource allocation for mars settlements and lunar settelments at the most cost effective manner either from earth or within the solar system on a long term basis, and a short term basis.  Private Sector are well placed to harness the possibilities in space and take advantage but the right taxation, property rights and other legal frameworks must be clearly defined or additional costs will occur and increase the costs overall. ( requires strategic planning to develop the necessary framework outside the normal earth based governmental framework )

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#96 2006-08-28 22:36:17

Robert M. Blevins
Banned
From: Seattle, Washington State, USA
Registered: 2005-05-04
Posts: 29
Website

Re: The First to Mars - Who will it be?

Don't laugh too much, but I believe the two major players on a first manned mission to Mars will more likely be NASA and the Canadian Space Agency. If the U.S. offered to make one of the crew members from Eurospace, they would be the other major player.

Chinese? Not a chance. They have a lot of catching up to do. Just because they orbited a guy doesn't mean they are anywhere near going to Mars.

"This isn't a four-day trip to the Moon, gentlemen. We're talking about keeping human beings alive in hostile environments for more than a year and moving them through space for a few hundred million kilometers. It presents problems..."


Don't give up reaching for the stars...
just build yourself a bigger ladder.

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#97 2006-08-29 08:37:11

Tom Kalbfus
Banned
Registered: 2006-08-16
Posts: 4,401

Re: The First to Mars - Who will it be?

Ever hear the story of the Tortose and the Hare? If we wait long enough the Chinese will catch up! I wouldn't be too relaxed about them, especially if we are to cautious and careful and the Chinese are more risk takers.

What if NASA follows its Semi-Direct plan and China does a Mars Direct Mission?

What if NASA goes to the Moon first and China goes straight to Mars?

What if China is willing to lose astronauts in a mission, find out what the problem was and then send another mission right away? If a mission fails, China doesn't have to justify itself to taxpayers. China has sent men to their death before, if a Chinese astronaut dies in space, their space program won't pause for very long to find out what went wrong, they'll just fix the immediate problem and send another mission, no hand wringing, no soul searching, no self-evaluation. Maybe some heads would roll, but China would not let that slow them down for too long.

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#98 2006-08-30 03:50:28

Martin_Tristar
Member
From: Earth, Region : Australia
Registered: 2004-12-07
Posts: 305

Re: The First to Mars - Who will it be?

Tom,

I agree, If NASA or any government or semi-government authority doesn't push the boundaries of space then why should they go. Space is dangerous place everyone , but , its better expanding the human race in death then sitting at home and reading the newspaper and having boring lives, because they won't be worth anything if you didn't achieve anything in your term on the planet within the human race.

To get to Mars we need to be "Bold" and "Couragous" those values are sometimes lacking in the general public of today because they have a comfortable environment and they don't have to poineer anymore. With all the resources out there in our solar system we could support billions of humans across this solar system.  We need to stop adding the resources cost and start adding the resources created for the space program and our human society.

If we don't other people in comapnies, countries, cartels and governments will eventually build the technology and expand into space with or without the existing space players and they will own their assets , vessels, stations, surface bases and they will be the ones driving the expansion into space for themselves.

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#99 2006-08-30 05:32:11

Grypd
Member
From: Scotland, Europe
Registered: 2004-06-07
Posts: 1,879

Re: The First to Mars - Who will it be?

The first Martian base and hopefully colony will likely be the result of a goverment or series of goverments space program. This means even if from a democratic background it will have an imposed leader and probabily a second in command. But this base will be a collection of some of the greastest go getters ever to be collected in one place. There will be the official command structure but also the interpersonal structure network that Humans always create. It will be a village though a very professional one.

Further than that we have to see what happens in technology that will determine the future of Mars. Currently it is too expensive to send lots of people to Mars the first to create reasonably cheap access to Mars will have the chance to dominate the planet. Whichever organisation or collection of Goverments can start sending a population to Mars will likely find the collective culture and the prefered political setup comes from this.

I of course coming from a western background certainly believe that western democracy would be perfect but then again im sure the Chinese, Russians and the rest of the world have there own ideas.


Chan eil mi aig a bheil ùidh ann an gleidheadh an status quo; Tha mi airson cur às e.

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#100 2006-08-31 17:03:02

Tom Kalbfus
Banned
Registered: 2006-08-16
Posts: 4,401

Re: The First to Mars - Who will it be?

Direct Democracy is the most stable form of government on the small scale, it is hard to be a dictator of three people unless you got a gun pointed at them at all times and you still got to sleep sometimes. if you piss off enough people in a small colony, they may shove you through the airlock just to get rid of you. The first colonies will likely be direct democracies. NASA will probably see in as in their interest not to impose tyrants on people on Mars. Mars is a lonely place, the people their are all alone, and it will be in their interest to get along as best as possible. The type of government on Mars will likely depend on who NASA selects for the mission.

If China sends a bunch of Communist Party Cadres, then the local government will likely follow the communist form of government, but on such an underpopulated planet where survival is at stake, anything that would make the colony more succesful would likely be preferred. If someone imposes himself as "maximo leader" of a group of 10 people, he's likely to soon be breathing Martian air.

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