Anonymous ID: 3d1b72 Feb. 18, 2019, 11:54 a.m. No.5246740   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6909

>>5242957 pb Q

>————————————–——– Stop and understand the GRAVITY of acknowledgement.

 

I posted this clip a month or more ago from my regular computer, then earlier today the same thing appeared on my cell phone. Maybe I went there on my phone, don't remember, but for it to just appear for no apparent reason is too strange.

Anonymous ID: 3d1b72 Feb. 18, 2019, 12:02 p.m. No.5246909   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>5246740

sauce

https://www.commerce.gov/

https://www.commerce.gov/news/op-eds/2018/05/op-ed-moon-colony-will-be-reality-

sooner-you-think

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Op-Ed: That Moon Colony Will Be a Reality Sooner Than You Think

Space commerce

Friday, May 25, 2018

Office of Public Affairs

(202) 482-4883

publicaffairs@doc.gov

Publication

The New York Times

The first man on the moon held an American flag. In the not-too-distant future, astronauts on the moon may be holding fuel pumps.

 

The future for American commercial space activity is bright. Space entrepreneurs are already planning travel to Mars, and they are looking to the moon as the perfect location for a way station to refuel and restock Mars-bound rockets. As much as this sounds like the plot of “2001: A Space Odyssey,” it is coming closer to reality sooner than you may have ever thought possible.

 

A privately funded American space industry is the reason. This industry is making progress in leaps and bounds. The global space economy is approaching $350 billion and is expected to become a multitrillion-dollar industry. There are more than 800 operational American satellites in orbit, and by 2024 that number could exceed 15,000. Thanks to public-private partnerships, for the first time in seven years American rockets will soon carry NASA astronauts into space. Long dormant, Cape Canaveral is now bustling with activity. America is leading in space once again.

 

Space tourism may only be a year away. Tickets for human flights into lower earth orbit have already sold for $250,000 each. Earth-based mining companies may soon face stiff competition from the mining of gold, silver, platinum and rare earths on asteroids and even other planets. A race is already developing to create the technology that will bring those crucial resources back to earth.

 

Competition is already fierce, with Russia and China challenging the United States for leadership, and about 70 other countries working their way into space. But today’s space race is different. It is driven by innovative companies that are finding new solutions to get to space faster, cheaper and more effectively.

 

As these companies advance new ideas for space commerce and nontraditional approaches to space travel, they seek the legitimacy and stability that comes with government support and approval. They yearn for a government that acts as a facilitator, not just a regulator. Government must create frameworks that enable, rather than stifle, industry.

 

Unfortunately, our system for regulating private space exploration and commerce has not kept up with this rapidly changing industry. For example, when it comes to licensing cameras in space, we review small, high school science-project satellites the same as billion-dollar national defense assets, leaving too little time and too few resources for crucial national security needs.

 

On Thursday, President Trump signed Space Policy Directive 2, which will make important strides toward modernizing our outdated space policies. These changes include creating a new office, the Space Policy Advancing Commercial Enterprise Administration, within my office to oversee coordination of the department’s commercial space activities, establishing a “one-stop shop” to work on behalf of the budding private space sector.

….more at link…