What is missing in Musks plan is in my opinion the economic case for moving to Mars. People were moving to the Americas en masse in hope for a better life. But why would life on Mars be any better than life on Earth?
I do think the economics are an important part that needs more consideration. However, the hardest part of setting up a Mars colony right now is getting people there and that is where Musk is focusing his attention. As he said at the IAC, he plans on becoming the Union Pacific railway of space.
And I think that at least a large portion of the economic question will sort itself out. Just having people on Mars will be a huge economic driver there as people will have to develop the entire infrastructure of a planet that has none. This will create a massive labor shortage for decades, if not centuries.
We're at the Jamestown point with Mars. Most of the people going to Jamestown were either fleeing immediate persecution, sentenced there as punishment for a crime, or had a debt they could only repay with some years of indentured servitude.
Yes and no. I hear your point but I actually don't think most people that will go to Mars will be driven by the same motivations as they were in centuries past. As long as private companies are providing the rockets, I don't think there is much chance that people will be forced onto them as punishment - I can't see a private entity getting involved in that. And no government currently has any plans to develop transportation to Mars (particularly the governments that would be most likely to send convicts). Further, once people arrive on Mars they'll set up their own government and I doubt they'd be willing to accept convicts. So not only would a country that wants to send convicts there have to provide transportation, they'd have to set up a second colony at the cost of billions or trillions of dollars to keep them alive once there.
As for the other reasons to go to Mars you listed, I find it far more likely that people would escape persecution by going to other countries, not other planets.
I think that the colonization efforts will be driven by people who want adventure and/or genuinely want to be part of making humanity a multi planet species.
Any other engineers out there looking for work:
http://www.courant.com/news/connect...uc-pratt-and-whitney-0917-20160916-story.html
The main driver of the growth is demand for the new geared turbofan engine. Which is taking the airliner market by storm. It's well in advance of any of its competitors.
Thanks for the tip! I will pass it along to the few friends from school who haven't burnt that bridge already.
There was a mars voyage "project" some years ago about sending volunters to mars, without any plan for returning but a horrible and miserable death after a couple of months for lack of oxygen. There were thousands of applicants for the way.
Mars One? Yup, basically it was a scam.
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One issue that colonization efforts will have to sort out is what to do with respect to potential Mars life. The Outer Space Treaty ensures that any country that has jurisdiction over space launches must protect potential life on other celestial bodies from contamination. NASA and the ESA take this very seriously and NASA also just put out a list of places Mars that no one should ever go to because of their potential habitability. I think this is misguided to be honest as it's based on far too many assumptions of what life is like outside of Earth. Granted, we only have one data set to go on but this unilateral policies like this are foolish. Once colonists arrive, these restrictions will be a moot point. NASA is not going to be able to dictate where people from Earth.