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A Truly
Loony Idea: $10 Billion a Year for a Moon Base
by J. H. Huebert
Baltimore Sun
December 13, 2006
Americans have long ignored the space program, only to have their
interest momentarily reawakened by occasional news of yet another
colossal failure, or announcements of grandiose plans to send people
beyond Earth's orbit.
The latter, playing upon Star Trek-fueled fantasies, inevitably come
when NASA wants more money. Thus, NASA announced this month that it
needs at least $10 billion per year of your tax dollars, this time to
put a base on the moon by 2024.
Without question, a base on the moon sounds infinitely more
interesting than more space-shuttle launches. After all, the shuttle
doesn't really go anywhere and only makes headlines for narrowly
avoiding (and occasionally meeting with) tragic disaster.
But are there good reasons for you and me to pay for more moon
missions, let alone spend $10 billion per year to build a base there,
other than that "it sounds neat"?
One reason to think not is that NASA itself doesn't seem to know why
it wants to go.
That's probably why NASA recently performed a study to come up with a
list of 200 "lunar exploration objectives" - that is, things people
could do on the moon if we went there. And the list is not persuasive.
At the top of NASA's list is "expanding human civilization" - that
is, preparing for the eventual human settlement of space. As a human and
a fan of civilization, this sounds kind of good to me.
But who wants to live on the moon? Most people don't want to live in
the desert, or on a tiny island in the middle of the ocean, or in
Kansas, because there isn't anything or anyone around. As Elton John and
William Shatner have memorably noted in song, living in space would be
far worse: no heat, no air, no water, no people, no trees - nothing.
Sure, maybe someday Earth will be so crowded or unpleasant that
people would find it worth moving to the moon. But probably not. For
example, even the most extreme global-warming scenarios wouldn't make
Earth nearly as uninhabitable as the moon. Anyway, until then, why take
money from everyone for something that few people outside of sci-fi
novels want to do?
Another reason NASA offers is scientific research. But a lot of
scientific research could be done right here on Earth with $10 billion
per year, and with a lot more practical value. It could be used to find
cures for diseases, for example, or to develop other products of all
kinds that could improve our lives.
Entrepreneurs would better know what to do with this money if it were
left in the private sector, because to succeed they have to figure out
what people really want so they can provide products that people will
voluntarily buy. Whenever government removes resources from the market,
it prevents entrepreneurs from serving consumers with those resources,
and instead serves special interests and bureaucrats - like the people
seeking job security at NASA who have their hands out for more money.
That's why another one of NASA's stated reasons for going to the
moon, "economic expansion," is just silly. If it made economic sense to
go to the moon for minerals and other resources, entrepreneurs would be
doing that already. The profits from the minerals would be greater than
the costs of developing and launching a spaceship, extracting the
minerals and bringing them back. But spending $100 billion on spaceships
to get, say, $50 billion in resources would be irrational - unless, of
course, you're in government and are not held accountable for your
wasteful activities. Apparently that's what NASA wants.
Still, I can't deny that there's something inherently exciting about
the idea of space travel. I too enjoy Star Trek, Robert Heinlein novels
and the like. But government's efforts in space have entailed endless
waste and repeated failure.
Sure, people someday will go to the moon and beyond. But we should go
when we are wealthy enough here on Earth that no one needs to be forced
to pay for it.
J.H. Huebert, an adjunct faculty member of the Ludwig von Mises
Institute, writes often on space law and policy. His e-mail is jhhuebert@jhhuebert.com.
©
2006 The Baltimore Sun; used under license. This article
also appeared in the Hartford Courant as "NASA's Moondoggle" on
December 15, 2006. |