robertsconley
Hero
Of course, space travel will not fix all things. It will, however, fix some things. Historically, human civilization has taken an “all of the above” approach. Some efforts succeed, others fail, but collectively they expand what is possible. We are capable of addressing climate change, space travel, and many other issues we are grappling with in the 21st century.Edit: Like, we already know how to fix climate change. There are plenty of perfectly viable plans that involve far less expense than space colonization, for which we don't even have the beginning of a plan. And yet we lack the will to deal with our self-created issue - a substantial number of people refuse to even accept that it is a problem. But space travel will fix things?
For a long time, human spaceflight was largely static. We improved our understanding of hypersonic flight, long-duration habitation, and orbital construction through programs like the Shuttle, Skylab, Salyut, Mir, and the ISS. But the underlying economics did not change, and activity remained limited to governments and a narrow set of applications like communications and remote sensing.
Reusable rockets have reduced the cost to orbit by an order of magnitude. That shift allows smaller organizations, universities, and private groups to run experiments and projects that were previously impossible. Programs like SpaceX’s Transporter missions, which carry dozens of payloads at once, are a direct example of this. Even YouTubers are getting in on the action. Allowing me to send a photo of my cat into orbit.
The result is more people trying more things, increasing the likelihood that something meaningful will happen as a result of space travel positively impacting our lives.
Whatever governments decide about other priorities, like climate policy, this process is already underway. People are choosing to push forward, and that will shape what space becomes.







