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d-17900House OversightOther

Speculative commentary on future private space tourism and robotic manufacturing

The document contains only speculative opinions about private spaceflight, future technologies, and does not provide concrete leads, names, transactions, or actionable investigative details. It mentio Mentions Elon Musk and SpaceX in context of private spaceflight Discusses future robotic fabricators and space manufacturing Advocates framing space travel as extreme sport rather than tourism

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #026738
Pages
1
Persons
1
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The document contains only speculative opinions about private spaceflight, future technologies, and does not provide concrete leads, names, transactions, or actionable investigative details. It mentio Mentions Elon Musk and SpaceX in context of private spaceflight Discusses future robotic fabricators and space manufacturing Advocates framing space travel as extreme sport rather than tourism

Tags

speculationprivate-aerospacespace-tourismhouse-oversighttechnology

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Later this century giant robotic fabricators may assemble vast lightweight structures in space (gossamer-thin radio reflectors or solar energy collectors , for instance) — using raw materials mined from the Moon or asteroids. Robotic and AI advances are eroding the practical case for human spaceflight. Nonetheless, I hope people will follow the robots, though it will be as risk-seeking adventurers rather than for practical goals. The most promising developments are spearheaded by private companies. Elon Musk’s Space X, has launched unmanned payloads and docked with the Space Station — and has successfully recovered and reuseed the launch-rocket’s first stage — presaging real cost-saving. He hopes soon to offer orbital flights to paying customers. Wealthy adventurers are already signing up for a week-long trip round the far side of the Moon - voyaging further from Earth than anyone has been before I’m told they’ve sold a ticket for the second flight but not for the first flight. We should surely acclaim these private enterprise efforts in space — they can tolerate higher risks than a western government could impose on publicly-funded civilian astronauts, and thereby cut costs compared to NASA or ESA. But they should be promoted as adventures or extreme sports -- the phrase ‘space tourism’ should be avoided. It lulls people into unrealistic confidence. By 2100 courageous pioneers in the mould of (say) Felix Baumgartner, who broke the sound barrier in free fall from a high-altitude balloon -- may have established ‘bases’ independent from the Earth — on Mars, or maybe on asteroids. Musk himself (aged 45) says he wants to die on Mars — but not on impact. But don’t ever expect mass emigration from Earth. Nowhere in our Solar system offers an environment even as clement as the Antarctic or the top of Everest. It’s a dangerous delusion to think that space offers an escape from Earth's problems. There’s no ‘Planet B’. Indeed, space is an inherently hostile environment for humans. For that reason, even though we may wish to regulate genetic and cyborg technology on Earth, we should surely wish the space pioneers good luck in using all such techniques to adapt to alien conditions. They'll free from terrestrial regulation and have maximal incentive to do so. Indeed, these spacefarers may spearhead the post-human era — evolving within a few centuries into a new species

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