1. I'm sorry, I'll continue to attack your arguments.
2. Nope. I said the moon isn't happening, not that it couldn't happen.
3. mmk
4. This would be the crux of my point. Everything you have said so far has been baseless speculation. There's absolutely no reason for any of it except your desire for it to happen. The only argument you've offered as to why or how is that you're an astronomer. Then I pointed out that all attempts at private space travel have, so far, been expensive disasters. You ignored that in order to say "50 years!" It's circular reasoning.
5. But I- but then you- b... okay.
And by space proper I mean outside of Earth's orbit. The technology for putting satellites in orbit is orders of magnitude less complicated than that required to go outside of it. So you're comparing apples and oranges when you say that our ability to put satellites in orbit is demonstrative of our command of space flight technology.
Look, if you premise is that this can't happen in the next 20 years, I agree with you. I think there will be commercial flights into low Earth orbit, but not to the moon. If you don't like my argument that it could happen in 50 years, fine. Let's move on from that. We disagree. I grant you, I can't predict the future. I just know what people are working on right now. I know that if dark matter is to be found it will probably be relatively soon since that is perhaps the most focused upon subject in astronomy for the last few years. That and the search for extrasolar planets, which anyone can read about in the news lately. Likewise, I believe that the work happening now in physics departments, aerospace industry companies, etc. is applicable to the future of private space travel.
At its core, our argument is all speculation. I grant you that. I can't prove anything will happen because I can't travel into the future. I think our argument has run its course, so please let's stop making the same points over and over again.
I don't know about the computer analogy - computing allows for rapid, incremental advances that have allowed exponential growth, and commercial applications have made computing advances profitable for essentially the entire history of computers. I'm a lot more skeptical about energy generation and propulsion - it seems that every purported advance in energy generation for the last 50 years hasn't panned out. Of course science is an unpredictable beast, so I'm holding out hope that I'm wrong, but as of yet it seems to be very difficult to generate energy economically. Do you know offhand of any plausible ideas that would drive energy costs for spaceships down? New forms of propulsion, for instance?
The analogy was only about how much cheaper stuff gets with time, though the current state of computers wasn't envisioned during their early development (according to the little bit of knowledge I have in that particular field). Predicting commercial demand for space travel is something people will have to predict themselves. Is tourism enough? Is resource harvesting? Colonization? I can't say... well, in the distant future, I would think these things will become extremely important, but that would probably be after my time.
As for propulsion, who knows? There are many theories out there including using improved magnets to get to space, more efficient solar energy collectors once in space, sailing on solar winds, extremely complicated methods involving resonances, things that can only be understood using the language of quantum physics, etc. I won't claim to be an expert in propulsion. However, I know there are people out there, at just about every American university physics department (and I'm sure outside of the US), working on such issues. The great thing about such environments is that scientific research for research's sake (and not necessarily for profit) is acceptable there.
Ultimately, all of my arguments are along the lines of this: I am a firsthand witness to research in these fields and I believe that the people and institutions involved have a desire, and ability to accomplish this task. This is fundamentally my opinion. I can't prove it. Take from this what you will.