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Will the Dutch really populate Mars?
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As for Mars.
One way is the way to do it. Radiation shielding is going to be an obstacle on Mars, which has no full magnetic shield. It does have "spot" shields you could tuck your initial colony into. But both that and getting there would be made MUCH safer if we could crack magnetic shielding.

Hi Jennifer you are right, I don't know how it melded into a new name in my mind!

Hey, Mark Watney did it, why can't four rookies do it?
Last night on All In With Chris Hayes on MSNBC, Chris interviewed one of the finalists selected to go to Mars. It was interesting. The guy -- who works at NASA -- was dead serious about going, even though he's married with young kids.
http://on.msnbc.com/1Fq6TRr
http://on.msnbc.com/1Fq6TRr

As for political structuring on mars, I think it will naturally have to evolve towards a social anarchical system if humans are to survive there. Most likely people won't have a choice. Those first poor four people are going to face insurmountable odds to survive. Just getting there is a huge problem. We just don't have reliable space ship technology yet. We have no manufacturing infrastructure in space for one thing, which is a huge hurdle. The space elevator is a great idea and probably more unlikely to be built until more industry is in space to warrant such a large investment. I wish Mars One luck for sure though. They should team up with people like Elon Musk if they already are not.

IE investment scammers. Like FreedomShip they have no hardware, no plan for how to get said hardware, a plan that's idealistically appealing but technically infeasible and a budget that's ludicrously short of what they'll need.
So no, the Dutch won't put people on Mars. At least not these Dutchmen.

I'd like to see a Mission to Mars, but they shouldn't send people who are abandoning dependents back home. People who would abandon family for glory will also abandon the team for their own selfish interests when the going gets rough.
As for the Dutch settling space? Who knows... Maybe this will spark off a new space race [*fingers crossed*] Such a more useful way to spend taxpayer money than funding wars in the middle east, eh?

It's hard to put a figure on how much the commercialization of the mars mission would be worth, including the filming and rebroadcast of Life on Mars footage. Certainly, this would also mean that McDonald's are coming to mars!

Davidreneke


Joshua wrote: "I think that is an impossible goal to raise that much money through crowd funding. Besides which the genetic diversity will not be enough to sustain a healthy population. Also, the obligatory jok..."
I'm not sure that genetic diversity would be a problem for long. If they prove that a permanent colony on Mars is now viable, I think they'd soon have a lot of company--the Russians, more Europeans, the Chinese, maybe even North Koreans.
I'm not sure that genetic diversity would be a problem for long. If they prove that a permanent colony on Mars is now viable, I think they'd soon have a lot of company--the Russians, more Europeans, the Chinese, maybe even North Koreans.

Joshua wrote: "The second is the fact that we know we can do it on the moon... Yet we don't......."
We can't really know that until we do it. There may be stuff we don't know yet until we live there.
We can't really know that until we do it. There may be stuff we don't know yet until we live there.

http://qz.com/346639/sorry-but-those-...

We can't really know that until we do it. There may be stuff we don't know yet until we live th..."
The fact that it is so relatively close and easy to access compared to Mars and yet we haven't set up a colony, even to just mine exotic elements, is not a good sign for Mars colonization.
Conal wrote: "The below article doesn't paint a hopeful picture of this venture.
http://qz.com/346639/sorry-but-those-..."
Yeah, but that's just money.
http://qz.com/346639/sorry-but-those-..."
Yeah, but that's just money.


The implications of that are pretty weird... and that is only a short term fix, it wouldn't be viable until you reach at least a breeding population of at least 3k.

EDIT: If we're talking some sort of intergenerational ship then this may become an issue but even then it seems low on the priority scale and easily solved.

[*okay ... that's a bit of a stretch ... but I still think it's funny*]
I think the bigger problem is what has been said, the fact we can't be bothered with the moon, so why Mars?
[*Dusts off old VHS tape of Red Planet...*]

I was a kid in the 'fifties. The year 2000 was a magic number, and those of us into Science Fiction thought we'd have the entire Solar System settled by now. A lot of optimism back then.

Nowadays, that shared sense of purpose is gone. Unless an enemy the entire world truly hates (such as ISIS) sends up a mission before us, the people are too fractured to cough up and spend some money on the space program.
I think Putin in Russia is talking up a new "space race," but we'll see.

In order for any race to take place you need at least two racers who desire to win. Whether the goal is to just beat the other (See the Space Race and arguably the entire Cold War) or to seize a prize doesn't matter.
Putin might talk up a race, but since ever conceivable player already have space launch capability and with the Cold War proving quite thoroughly that Soviet style communism doesn't work long term, a symbolic goal like landing a man on the Moon largely for the sake of doing it first isn't likely to gain much traction.
Christian wrote: "Putin might talk up a race, but since ever conceivable player already have space launch capability and with the Cold War proving quite thoroughly that Soviet style communism doesn't work long term, a symbolic goal like landing a man on the Moon largely for the sake of doing it first isn't likely to gain much traction...."
Hard to predict in some cases where popular opinion will go.
Hard to predict in some cases where popular opinion will go.




Actually it did, quite hard. And it's more or less still lying were it fell.
These days the Russian Space Program is essentially a launch provider.

NASA isn't here to do routine jobs. NASA exists to push the boundaries of science, to take the risks and spend the effort the private sector can't afford. And putting satellites into orbit and people into low earth orbit is routine and should be pushed out to the private sector. This was how NACA worked before and it made it possible for the US aeronautical industry to dominated the world marked the way they did for 50 years.
Unfortunately NASA forgot that part in the aftermath of the Apollo program and the Shuttle program ended up as the tangled mess because of it.
The CCDev program and the Orion program looks to be a sign that they themselves have realised this. Instead of trying to reinvent the wheel they're doing what they do best, and that's pushing the boundaries while they let the private sector what they do best, develop, optimise and refine.
I agree that they should have started the CCDev program way before they did. However that's a failure at a higher level.
And in case anyone is wondering the manned part of the CCDev program should produce a manrated platform sometime during 2016.

NASA isn't here to do routine jobs. NASA exists to push the boundaries of science, to take the risks and spend the effort the private sector can't ..."
Well go, NASA!

NASA isn't here to do routine jobs. NASA exists to push the boundaries of science, to take the risks and spend the effort the private sector can't ..."
Great to hear all of that!
If you haven't been watching the news lately, the Dutch company Mars One has announced they are funding a reality show to set up a base on Mars, populated by four volunteer astronauts who will set up a colony there and build a biosphere (gross over-simplification by me ... I am not all that technically gifted). They claim they will raise $6 billion dollars through crowdfunding to pay for this venture.
In any event, to up the ante, a second group of scientists now claims the first 'contestant' will die by Day 68.
http://qz.com/278312/yes-the-people-g...
A claim which Mars One disputes...
Okay, Space Opera Fans! We've got some of the most scientifically gifted minds on the planet in this community. So let's all rag-chew on this and pick apart whether this mission will work ... because ... a mission to Mars sounds cool ... especially if we all get to watch people overcome these kinds of challenges.
Be epic!
Anna Erishkigal
Borg Queen