nathanbforrest45 (06-22-2019)
Yes, necessarily.
It's easier to mine to asteroids.
If you want to be pragmatic about such things.
And the flight to Mars is a six-month tour in a possible high-radiation zone.
If gravity is the thing, the place is the moon...which has PRECISELY the same minerals (those that weren't part of a biologic process) as the surface of the Earth itself....and half the gravity of Mars.
Anti-gravity...you're not a serious participant.
The launch site does matter, and neither the Earth nor Mars is the place. The moon is....with four times the solar energy density than Mars.
Freedom Requires Obstinance.
We the People DID NOT vote in a majority Rodent Congress, they stole it via election fraud.
Trumpster (06-20-2019)
Last edited by Sergeant Gleed; 06-19-2019 at 11:50 PM.
Freedom Requires Obstinance.
We the People DID NOT vote in a majority Rodent Congress, they stole it via election fraud.
Trumpster (06-20-2019)
Has any professional ever done a psychological profile of the types of people who are willing to take a one way trip to Mars? What must their lives be like on earth that they are so willing to die? And what does it say about those who are so eager to see them go? What's in it for them? I wonder what it is about their psychological profile that makes them crave this kind of excitement.
Last edited by Trumpster; 06-20-2019 at 04:16 PM.
That won’t change gravity. The first wave will never return. Their skeletal structures would break. The answer is likely robotics cyborg merging. The human body can not withstand those gravitational fields for sustained periods of time. Muscular would atrophy. Morphology would alter. Eventually, an entirely different species.
or not...
Trumpster (06-21-2019)
I agree with your statement that "The first wave will never return." But as far as them evolving into an entirely different species, I agree with your last comment...."or not..."
And here's my reasoning for that: In order for them to evolve into an entirely different species, they would have to live long enough to produce viable offspring, and there's no way that's ever going to happen on Mars. Humans have evolved very slowly over tens of thousands of years to be suited for living conditions on earth, not Mars.
Last edited by Trumpster; 06-21-2019 at 10:34 AM.