A Bill for a Starfaring Future
Back in 2012 I reported on Peter Garretson’s What Our Civilization Needs is a Billion Year Plan, an essay advocating a robust human expansion to the stars. Lt. Col. Garrison lives and breathes futuristic issues. A transformational strategist at Headquarters US Air Force, he has served as an airpower strategist and strategic policy advisor to the Chief of Staff of the Air Force on his Strategic Studies Group, and spent four years as the Chief of Future Technology for HQ USAF Strategic Planning. He is currently Division Chief of Irregular Strategy, Plans and Policy. A long-time space advocate, he has written widely on issues ranging from planetary defense to solar power. In today’s open letter to Centauri Dreams, he lays down a first draft for a bill aimed at energizing NASA’s role in developing the technologies needed for starflight.
by Peter A. Garretson
Sooner or later we are going to discover an Earth-like exoplanet, and when we do, we are going to want to go there. The 100 Year Starship, Icarus Interstellar, Tennessee Valley Interstellar Workshop, Initiative for Interstellar Studies, Tau Zero and Centauri Dreams are all catalyzing terrific work that forwards general spacefaring and space industrial capabilities. And like NASA’s BPP more low-dollar work could lead to great NIAC-like thinking and advances. Those of us who already know that this should be our direction should have ready legislation to move forward. Here is an initial draft of what might be in such a bill:
Gene Roddenberry Memorial America Starfaring / Starship bill.
It is the will of the Congress that America should become a star-faring civilization, bringing new life to uninhabited worlds, ensuring our continuity, security and prosperity for our posterity. It is the will of the American people for America to develop the capability to “seek out new life and new civilizations, to boldly go where no one has gone before.”
And if it is the dream of Congress, by America’s Quadricentennial (2176) America will have reached another star.
To that end, NASA, the DOE, and DoD are authorized and encouraged, in concert, and in concert with private industry and academia to:
Develop technologies and capabilities to enable interstellar probes
Develop propulsion and life support capabilities that could enable a manned mission in a single human lifetime
Develop off-Earth industrial capability to construct and launch such missions through space resource utilization (space mining and space power)
Enable thriving off-Earth communities and a space economy that could support the expense of such a mission
NASA is directed to:
Sponsor a Conference every two years to review the most exciting and profitable destinations and present visions and ideas to the public
Review and present to the public progress and conceptual designs for interstellar missions
Present to Congress, every two years, the most exciting and profitable destinations beyond our heliopause, and progress in the necessary technology.
//Signed//
PETER A. GARRETSON, Lt Col, USAF
Air University Space Horizons Activity Lead





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