Doug
Casey on NASA & Space Exploration
Interviewed by Louis James, Editor, International
Speculator
Recently:
Doug Casey:
We Are Exiting the Eye of the Storm
L:
Hola, Doug! We’ve had a long break while our video crew has been
busy, but I know your mind never stops. Care to share?
Doug:
Well, the markets have been very interesting lately. Gold shooting
up to $1,800 an ounce was a predictable consequence of the U.S.
credit-rating downgrade, which was in turn a predictable consequence
of out-of-control money printing and spending on the part of the
government. And I’m back from my jaunt to the Middle East. We’ll
have a lot to say about that and more in The Casey Report,
but for now I want to bring readers’ attention to the recent, barely
noticed sunset
on the space shuttle program. Atlantis – the last of
the four space shuttles – has just become a museum piece, and that’s
rather historic. The U.S. space effort has basically ground to a
halt.
L:
Are you mourning that or celebrating it?
Doug:
A little of both. It’s something to mourn because space is the final
frontier, and we need that frontier. It’d be wonderful if we could
get off this planet. For many reasons – sociological, political,
technological, and more – I’m highly enthusiastic about the conquest
of space. But it’s a mixed bag, because a government program is
the stupidest way possible to go about it. So in a way, I’m glad
the government is out of the game, and I’m glad the economic crisis
makes it unlikely that the government will get back in it soon,
at least not on anything like the scale we’ve seen in recent years.
This is one bright side of the governments of the world going bankrupt.
L:
Wow, Doug, I’ve got to say that I’m shocked to hear you call it
a mixed bag. I’d have thought you – the International Man who never
shrinks from strong statements – would have called NASA or any government
space program an unalloyed evil. Since we agree that getting the
state involved in this or any creative venture is the worst possible
approach, what is there to see as “mixed?”
Doug:
Perhaps I wasn’t clear – I should have fully separated the concepts
of space exploration, which I wholeheartedly endorse, and government
space programs, which I oppose on principle and in practice. Government
in space is bad economics. It’s unethical to force those not interested
in space to pay for its exploration through taxes. And though few
people like to think about it, most of what the state now does in
space has military intent, and that is very grave, very destructive,
on multiple fronts.
L:
This is an important distinction, because a lot of people who agree
in general with our skepticism of state involvement in any economic
activity make an exception as regards space. Their dream of going
to the stars is important and exciting to them, and they see only
governments active in space exploration, so they forget their principles
and endorse government spending on space programs.
Doug:
I agree completely. I’m sad to see less space exploration, but I’m
very happy to see the government out of it. Even better, now that
the government’s broke, space exploration will necessarily be privatized.
That’ll throw it open to entrepreneurs, and they will give access
to everyone, not just a few anointed astronauts. Moving space exploration
from the government sector to the private sector will change its
entire nature. All sorts of entrepreneurs and inventors will get
involved, not just a few creative individuals like Burt
Rutan, who’s already shown that access to space can be cheap
and effective. It’s going to spread all over the planet – I think
we’ll see rockets heading for orbit from all corners of the world
soon. Space exploration will never get anywhere as long as the state
is involved.
L:
That’s right. “Space
Ship One, Government Zero” – remember that sign? De-funding
and entirely scrapping the government space program is the best
thing that could happen for space exploration. It would release
talent to the private sector. I’d pop a bottle of champagne if they
padlocked the doors on NASA’s headquarters full of bureaucrats in
downtown Washington.
Doug:
[Chuckles] Yes, I do remember the pilot holding that sign up after
Space Ship One landed. And not only would shutting NASA
down release talent, it would also reduce bureaucratic resistance
to private space exploration; if the government’s not doing it,
the bureaucrats involved won’t have turf to defend. So of course
NASA should be abolished, and its assets should be auctioned off.
Many of those are uneconomic under current ownership but probably
would be economic under new management. Or maybe they shouldn’t
be auctioned – because I wouldn’t want to see the money go to the
state.
One solution
would be to put NASA into a corporation and distribute its shares
to taxpayers. Then it would be just another aerospace company, competing
with scores of others around the world. We’d then see if it can
create capital, instead of just consuming it. The problem is that
current management probably has such a bureaucratic, government-employee
mindset that they’d run it into the ground before they could be
replaced.
L:
Perhaps an ethically superior idea might be to auction the assets
and distribute the proceeds to taxpayers who were plundered to pay
for NASA in the first place. A sort of delayed restitution. But
that would never happen. Getting the government out of space is
so important, I’d be willing to encourage them to disband NASA and
sell the parts to pay down the national debt. That idea might actually
gain some traction in D.C., and the proceeds wouldn’t be enough
to really help the government much.
Doug:
Yes. But I fear NASA will never be abolished simply because it’s
effectively an arm of the military. Anyway, you can never really
reduce bureaucracy by trimming it back. It just grows again in subsequent
appropriations rounds. The only way is to totally abolish the bureaucracy,
cut it out by the roots, and ban the state from getting involved
in its former functions.
That would
create the space for a phoenix to rise from the ashes. That’s important,
because a lot of people who should know better are still sympathetic
to NASA. When it was a brand-new bureaucracy with a clearly defined
and powerful mission, full of young, idealistic hotshots, it actually
was an organization that got things done. That was before it became
corrupt, stodgy, concrete-bound, and constipated. People remember
the glory days and don’t see that NASA is just another bureaucracy
today. It’s not quite like the post office playing with rockets,
but it is unfocused and inefficient. I wonder if NASA even could
put a man on the moon today, if it were given the green light to
do so. It’s not a certainty, even though the technology has taken
quantum leaps forward since 1969. Do you realize it’s been 39 years
since a man last walked on the moon?
L:
Yes – and if the government hadn’t been left in charge of space
exploration, I think we’d be able to vacation there as easily as
Argentina these days. The technology exists.
Doug:
We should have colonies on the moon by now, and more: We should
be mining the asteroids and developing real estate on Mars. There
should be active homesteading going on out there right now. As you
say, the technology for doing it is fairly mature – and would be
far more so if the field had been left to the private sector, which
always does things faster and more efficiently than the state.
L:
Let’s talk about that for a moment. You and I see eye to eye on
this, but some of our readers may not. At a time when people are
worried about basic things like having a job tomorrow and food the
week after, why should anyone care about exploring space? Why on
earth – or off it – would anyone want to move out there? And how
would one make money off it, justifying the R&D expenses?
Doug:
Well, on the most fundamental level, getting out there makes the
pie bigger for everyone. If it’s done economically, and for economic
gain, we’re talking about whole new worlds to develop – that’s valuable
real estate. There are vast new resources to make use of, ranging
from metals in the asteroid belt to all that solar energy that’s
just being radiated off into space right now. There’s the ability
to manufacture in zero gravity, which has enormous efficiency implications,
as well as other technical advantages. Space access is extremely
valuable, and those who get there first are going to make
fortunes. Mobilizing that wealth could and would create far more
work than there are people to do it – not just in America, but even
for the hungry masses in Africa and Asia. Simply put, adding to
the net wealth in the world is good for everyone.
Just look at
what China has done in the last 30 years; it’s gone from a backward,
peasant economy to a modern, high-tech powerhouse, creating huge
amounts of wealth for many people. I see the conquest of space as
having similar effects, only orders of magnitude greater.
L:
You are an optimist.
Doug:
I am. The future can be not only better than we imagine, but better
than we can imagine. But it’s critical to get the state
out of the way.
L:
I hadn’t really thought of it before, but opening up the final frontier
is just the sort of thing that could revitalize a dispirited people.
We’d still need sound money, which I think we’ll see after the sham
of paper currencies is finally and fully exposed for the fraud it
is, but to really get things going again in the global economy,
we need the lure of huge profits that will pull frightened capital
out of hibernation. The vast riches of new worlds could be just
the ticket – maybe even the only thing that could get enough people
to forget about their squabbling and fears and start thinking about
reaching – literally – for the stars.
Doug:
Indeed. I’d find it quite entertaining to see all that potential
out there unleashed… What a show it would be to see how millions
of entrepreneurs come up with new ways to make use of it! Space
opens the possibility of thousands of different societies to live
in. And with infinite power from the sun, materials from the asteroid
belt, and room, it could provide a standard of living many orders
of magnitude above anything on earth. Forget about space as surviving
in a cramped tin can. And forget about the military overtones of
Star
Trek and Star
Wars – although I’m a fan of Han Solo. Maybe think in terms
of the excellent TV series Firefly,
or its movie spinoff Serenity.
L:
And we don’t even have to wipe out any beautiful
blue aliens to achieve these things.
Doug:
Hopefully not. Although it’s an excellent bet that we eventually
will find aliens, I just hope it’s merchant adventurers who discover
them, not space Marines; the military isn’t into trade, it’s into
weaponry.
On a different,
but equally fundamental level, another reason to get out there is
the fact that right now humanity has all its eggs in one fragile
basket. One big meteor hits the earth, and that’s it for our species.
We need to spread out beyond this one little world.
L:
That’s hard for most people to feel as a pressing need, not when
they are two mortgage payments behind and just got laid off, but
I agree.
Doug:
Well, one thing even those behind on their mortgages should feel,
deeply and personally, is the loss of freedom we’re all seeing from
the cancerous growth of the police state in America and all around
the world. When people can be arrested for quietly dancing
in the Jefferson Memorial, or making a joke at an airport, or
for tossing an aluminum can in the trash, or for not handing over
half their income to the state, or for any of the myriad other things
that can land peaceful, productive people in jail these days, you
know this planet has too much government. And you know government
is never going to get any smaller by choice. You could try to start
a revolution, but that’s extremely dangerous, and won’t make things
any better in a society full of people who don’t understand the
nature of the problem.
It’s far better
to settle the new frontier, just as Europeans did when abandoning
Old World despotisms for New World risks and rewards, or as Americans
did, settling the West. We need a new frontier, both for those of
us who want to go out there and seek our own freedom and fortune,
and as a safety valve for society’s discontents, who have had no
place to go for the better part of a century.
L:
Freedom in space – I like it. We ought to buy the Statue of Liberty
when the U.S. government is really desperate for hard money, then
strive to be among the first real-estate developers on Mars. We
can set it up there and welcome the tired, the poor, the huddled
masses yearning to breathe free – they sure
aren’t welcome in what was America anymore.
Doug:
That’s right – the Statue of Liberty belongs in a place that respects
freedom and has open borders. A place on the frontier. The loss
of freedom in the U.S. is going to accelerate hyperbolically, with
the next real or imagined terrorist attack – or just on the back
of deteriorating economic conditions. This is a clear and present
danger that people should be thinking about.
What about
you, Lobo: Can you think of other reasons why people should care
about colonizing space?
L:
I have long said that if you’re green, you have to be pro-space.
Even if you’re of the anti-human persuasion – who’d just as soon
see our species eliminated so the rest of earth’s species can live
in a “natural” state – you have to understand that earth’s hungry
billions are not going to lay down and die for your idea of paradise.
On the contrary, they’ll fight you if your policies make their lives
harder. Instead of fueling that conflict, it’s far better to move
towards exploitation of space ASAP. After all, space is mostly…
nothing. It’s empty – space. You build a factory in a far-off
orbit, and nothing is disturbed. You move all heavy manufacturing
off planet, where it would be cheaper and better, and you have no
pollution to speak of on earth.
We should mine
the asteroids. If they do indeed come from a smashed planet, they
should have many, many, many times more metals, more easily available,
than have ever been mined on earth – or ever need be.
It’s possible
to increase prosperity for all of earth’s billions, and
make the planet greener than it’s ever been in history, simply by
pushing for economic access to space as fast as possible.
Doug:
Good point. You’re an optimist too. Most anarcho-capitalists
are optimists.
L:
Yes, I’ve been accused of that many times. Okay, investment implications?
Are there space exploration companies to buy? Other actions to take?
Doug:
I said in Crisis Investing for the Rest of the ‘90s that
I’d buy Scaled Composites, Burt Rutan’s company, or AeroVironment,
which was run by my friend Paul
MacReady before he died. Unfortunately, now that Paul’s dead
most of what AeroVironment is doing seems increasingly geared towards
the military. But there are other private space companies out there.
L:
But these are private companies – would you really invest
in them? It’s one thing to be a space enthusiast, it’s another to
put cash into an illiquid investment in a highly challenged industry.
I know you don’t invest with your heart …
Doug:
I try not to. [Chuckles] I can’t help myself sometimes.
L:
[Laughs] I’m glad to hear it’s not just me!
Doug:
But you’re right – I don’t like investing in private companies,
for many reasons, and that’s all that’s available in this field
right now. I might invest in some of these companies with the sort
of money other people give to charity – not because I think I’ll
profit directly, but because I think their work is worth doing,
regardless. That’s not an investment strategy I’d recommend to readers,
but I am monitoring progress in this field because there will come
a day when there’s big money to be made in it – just as with nanotechnology,
3D fax, biotech, quantum computers, and other fields that are developing
rapidly now.
Space technology
is like any of these fields. We’re right on the edge of it, and
it could advance full-speed in this generation. There will
be fortunes made, just as early investors in IBM, Apple or Microsoft
made fortunes. Alex Daley, our technology guru, keeps an eye on
these things for us in our Casey’s
Extraordinary Technology monthly newsletter. This is one
reason why I enjoy reading CET – I’m personally interested
in the development of such technologies and delighted to find ways
to make money doing so.
L:
If I may be so bold, I should say that Alex has a great track record
of picking stocks in CET – he certainly has helped a lot
of readers make a lot of money.
Doug:
Good place for a shameless plug. Seriously, though; I find reading
CET uplifting. I like winning investments, but watching
these unfolding technologies gives me more hope for the future.
I actually feel better, knowing this work is going on. As I like
to say, there are more scientists and engineers working right now
than have ever lived before in human history – I think that’s fantastic.
L:
Groovy – and a good, positive note to wrap up on.
Doug:
Indeed. We’ll talk soon.
L:
‘Til next time.
August
20, 2011
Doug
Casey (send him mail)
is
a best-selling author and chairman of Casey
Research, LLC., publishers of Casey’s
International Speculator.
Copyright
© 2011 Casey
and Associates
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