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What is this technological progress bringing to humanity? SpaceX is a private company making private research using public funding and peoples delusions with space exploration.

Maybe we won't need to colonize some other planet if we don't trash our current planet to save shareholders some dollars in the name of "technological progress" .


This is a pretty nihilist take. We don't "need" anything but food, water and the most rudimentary shelter in colder weather. Surely we don't "need" anything like computers, electricity and programmers gabbing on HN.

But humanity in its current size definitely needs some industry, and industry is actually becoming less polluting with technological progress. I am 45 and I grew up in an industrial city; both the air and the water there have become a lot cleaner during my lifetime, because a richer and more developed society can afford better protections. When I was a kid, neither a butterfly nor a fish could survive in Ostrava, today there is plenty of both.

Also, judging someone's else's interests as "delusions" is pretty rude. Who are you to distribute such labels to others?


> I am 45 and I grew up in an industrial city; both the air and the water there have become a lot cleaner during my lifetime

The place you grew up at was degraded by industrialization. It would have been cleaner today if it wasn't for that. Irreparable changes have been made. I'm about half your age and I'm disgusted by the state the planet is in right now. I understand, old people do not care about a future they won't live in. But I'm going to suffer from micro-plastics more than you. You had access to more natural landscapes than I ever will. I have every right to be angry at old people for screwing up our homes and bodies.

> because a richer

Ah, the 1% is richer, that makes it more okay! But me, little 99% guy, I got screwed by inflation. The U.S. economy is stronger than ever my little Ethiopian fisherman, what are you crying about? Go raise funds making an unprofitable startup or work for a defence contractor to build machines to kill little brown kids remotely, you'll make good money to buy a McMansion, a Tesla, and play golf on artificial grass with friends you secretly hate.

> and more developed society can afford better protections.

What protections? Against the various cancers that are more and more common? Against the mental decay I see in my young peers, caused by social media? Against the huge floating pile of trash in the sea? Against the coral reef that's mostly lost by now? Against the constant threat of the atom bomb, great technological innovation brought to you by the same friendly agencies financing SpaceX nowadays? The protection I want is protection of the environment. I don't care about your money and your materialism, it'll never buy love and community.

> Also, judging someone's else's interests as "delusions" is pretty rude. Who are you to distribute such labels to others?

I believe the idea that we can colonize Mars is delusional. How are we supposed to terraform a planet when we can't even fix our own? Who do I have to be to be allowed to have this opinion? What is rude about that? Would you find it rude to call flat earthers delusional? At least flat earthers are not causing irreparable damages to our round planet.


Your posts sound like they are coming from a seriously depressed person. Maybe that is the real problem. Depression is running rampant in the 20-something cohort, much worse than it did in mine when I was the same age as you. I believe that the main culprit is the relentless torrent of negativity that comes from the Internet and especially the social networks. Most media and even many individuals push bad news on you in order to win your attention and raise their status or clout. Or even money. And they cause large scale misery.

I doubt that the world is objectively worse off in 2023 than it was in 2000, I would even say that it has grown a bit better. (For example, a lot more people in the developing world are food-secure.) But the perception of the world has gone from "bearable" to "irredeemable shithole" among way too many people. IMHO this is even worse than objective trouble such as climate change; widespread depression results in unwillingness to even try to improve things.

"How are we supposed to terraform a planet when we can't even fix our own? Who do I have to be to be allowed to have this opinion?"

We cannot terraform Mars in 2023. But we couldn't even fly to space in 1923, and we might be able to terraform Mars in 2123. Every passing year brings some new development, and these developments compound our abilities.

Also, here you are mixing two different sorts of questions. Fixing Earth's climate is mostly a political question, not a question of technology. It might be harder than future terraforming of Mars because you need to bring many important nations on board, and humans are notoriously bad at large scale cooperation. On Mars, there are no nuclear superpowers opposing your plans.


> Your posts sound like they are coming from a seriously depressed person. Maybe that is the real problem.

That's a personal attack and that's against the spirit of this website. Please do not do that.

https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html

> We cannot terraform Mars in 2023. But we couldn't even fly to space in 1923, and we might be able to terraform Mars in 2123. Every passing year brings some new development, and these developments compound our abilities.

This does sound reasonable to me. What does not sound reasonable is cutting corners today in the name of "technological innovation" for something that we might be able to do in the future we are currently destroying.

The young naive person that I am thinks that in reality, this is mostly for defence purposes, to put military bases and equipment in space.

If colonization there will be, it will be only for rich people, which will pay a lot of money to get irreparable DNA damage while reading Icarus in space. Kind of funny when you think about it.

> Also, here you are mixing two different sorts of questions. Fixing Earth's climate is mostly a political question, not a question of technology.

I guess what made me angry here. This attitude is exactly why the planet is in the state it is right now. I'm not even talking about fixing, I'm talking about not destroying. You kids - if any - will have to fix the damages caused by SpaceX, but you can prevent it now.

> It might be harder than future terraforming of Mars because you need to bring many important nations on board, and humans are notoriously bad at large scale cooperation. On Mars, there are no nuclear superpowers opposing your plans.

I believe the complete opposite of your statement: it's easier to take care of our planet than terraforming another one, and on Mars there will definitely be nuclear superpowers opposing your plans. But I guess we will never agree on that.


Expressing the idea that someone sounds depressed is not an attack. Being depressed is neither evil nor shameful. In case of doubt, let someone like dang mediate.


Building the damn rockets is the easy part. They could start by "colonising" Antarctica. That's an environment vastly more habitable than Mars, but still very inhospitable.


I'm pretty sure they're referencing John Hanke, who used to work for the U.S. govt, founded Keyhole through funding from In-Q-Tel (CIA's VC), which ended up spawning Niantic.

It seems they're actively working with the NGA, NSA, DIA, and CIA. It could be just for 3D geo-spatial tech, or it could be for sharing data. It's secret and it doesn't look like conclusive evidence of data sharing has been published. My personal belief is a little bit of both is going on.


I worked for a YC company called Anima App [1] that begged us through multiple @here pings to "boost" their posts on HN, Reddit, LinkedIn, etc... It never really worked on HN, the posts would just get buried, but it did kinda work on Reddit.

[1] https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/anima-app


> 'Design to Code' Startup Anima Raises $2.5 Million in Seed Funding Dec 22, 2022

> Anima, a no-code tool that turns designs into code, raises $10 million Series A • TechCrunch Sep 01, 2021

> Seed

Strangest spelling of bridge I’ve ever seen


I wish I could dismiss this with a snarky comment but it’s probably a worthwhile spend of ~2 minutes of everyone’s time in terms of return.


Iirc HN has some kind if detection for suspect upvotes - I could guess at algorithms for that, but for obvious reasons I doubt they would share specifically how they do it. It would be a fun data science project to look at the distributions of votes as they come in on stories.


Maybe, but I'm glad I can get top-notch LSD delivered in 2 days using crypto.


So paying criminals.

Before anyone says paying criminals for illegal drugs is a victimless crime, remember that a significant portion of the illegal drug trade is run by the cartels and other organized crime organizations which do victimize people.


I'm already paying criminals every time I pay my taxes. Hell, even when I fill up my car with gas, or when I buy meds. If you really want to live ethically and not pay criminals, you have to be autonomous.

The real crime here is preventing me from opening my third eye!


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