Hey, one step at a time. Once upon a time aluminum tableware was reserved for the crown heads of nations.
At least now we don't have to destroy Jupiter to fill up the gas tank.
Yeah I talked about that in the 'Does this exist?' thread.
One of the major advantages of asteroid mining is that it has the potential to crash the market for rare earths and precious metals. While counterintuitive, think of how good this would be for us all?
Think of all the products that either cost a ton or use inferior substitutes to keep costs down since things like platinum/molydenum are so expensive?
Random Off-Topic aside, feel free to ignore:
I find the depiction of AI in popular culture extremely childish. The scenario basically goes: people invent AI, people enslave robots, then:
This scenario is roughly equivalent to the crusaders having nuclear weapons in an alternate timeline. Absurd, you say? Crusaders didn't have all the other techs required to build nukes, you say?
Exactly. The path to AI isn't linear or one track. The world isn't a civ game where you can beeline to a specific tech and ignore the rest. By the time we (probably) develop AI, we will also more than likely be extensively bio-engineering ourselves or directly interfacing with computers, blurring the line between what is human and what is AI.
Similarly, our culture will be growing and adapting. Just as the Crusaders would've nuked most of the ME because that's how they rolled, of course
we would enslave robots if given that tech right now. But today, thankfully, we don't nuke every country that crosses us. Hopefully, our cultural, societal, economic and political systems and institutions will have grown up to the point that we could rationally handle AI when it comes.
That being said, the current nightmare depictions of our coming AI overlords actually does help our culture adapt. We're thinking about the problem before we even have it. It's effing amazing to be human.
/OT