Economic Lunacy
by
Paul Hein
by Paul Hein
It
is rumored that the administration is considering another flight
to the moon. Rep. Dana Rohrabacher, chairman of the House subcommittee
on space and aeronautics, announced "The moon can be made into
a major asset, rather than just providing light at night."
Well, sure it could. Even someone with no real training in economics
knows that assets, in our modern enlightened civilization, are debts.
With that insight, the moon is a gold mine. Green cheese, indeed!
The
Chinese seem to understand this too, since, according to Sen. Sam
Brownback, there might even a space race between the U.S. and China,
which may put its first astronaut into space soon. The Chinese,
who can barely feed themselves, are going to the moon? Sure, why
not? Governments create money always as debt, of course; they can’t
create wealth so they can afford whatever interests them. The people
can starve. Since when do a well fed, prosperous people bring any
prestige to a government? Hungry people, on the other hand, can
be made dependent on government handouts, and employed in flashy
government boondoggles.
But
seriously, folks, let’s consider some of the arguments for another
moon jaunt that are actually proposed by people presumably having
reached the age of reason, and not obviously intoxicated.
ONE:
the moon can be a steppingstone to Mars. And Mars, of course, is
someplace we sure would like to go! The temperature there can vary,
at the same location, from 14 degrees at one time of day, to –105
at another. Better bring your long johns. And some sort of pressure
suit: the atmospheric pressure there is about 1% of the earth’s.
And don’t forget the oxygen: the thin atmosphere of Mars is 95%
carbon dioxide, with virtually no oxygen. Can you see why it’s such
a desirable destination? Forget Cancun!
TWO:
OK, so Mars isn’t exactly Club Med, but it’s still important to
get to the moon for mining! The Chinese believe there may be a "cheap"
form of helium on the moon. And Harrison Schmitt, once a U.S. Senator
and astronaut, thinks private companies might want to get their
hands on that "cheap" helium as an energy source. Well,
I’m not sure what a "cheap form of helium" might be, but
I can guarantee you that the delivery costs will be horrendous.
Guess who’ll pay them? And, just offhand, what would we do with
the helium? (Establish a federal agency to look into it, I guess!)
THREE:
we could set up a telescope on the moon! Honest! And then we could
look at stuff. We’ve already got Hubble, of glorious reputation a
triumph of science, finally but a lunar telescope would be even
better, for such obvious reasons I won’t waste your time enumerating
them.
FOUR:
water! Now we’re talking! Satellite photos suggest that there may
be lots of water in lunar craters, although some scientists question
this. Let’s find out! We could leave our planet, whose surface is
75% water, and fly to the moon and possibly bring back a few gallons,
along with some of that cheap helium, and nifty photos from that
telescope.
FIVE:
geology. Yep, we could take core samples from the moon and learn
more about it. Scientists think that this might give them an insight
into the history of the solar system. We could teach this to the
kids in school, although cynics might suggest that we teach them
American history, since almost none of them know much about it.
OK,
so much for the reasons given by the experts. Now let’s get really
serious. You’ve seen a graph of the growth of the money supply.
It looks like an architect’s sketch of a skyscraper. You’ve probably
also seen a graph of the national debt. It is virtually identical,
which is to be expected, since the money supply IS the national
debt, or vice-versa. The numbers are so large that private industry
seems about ready to call it quits: no more borrowing. Believe it
or not and many do not you cannot borrow yourself
out of debt; and at some point, you stop trying. But default means
no more interest payments for the money-creators, and my rough calculations
put that at about a billion bucks per working day. What a shame
to lose that! Besides, if, through some miracle, the debt were paid,
our economic assets (debts) would disappear. The money-creators
cannot allow default or repayment.
The
government is always ready to step in as the borrower of last resort.
Expensive as it is, the war on terrorism may not be putting enough
money into circulation to keep the economy going. But the moon!
Getting there is only the first gloriously expensive step. Then
we’ve got to build bases, and supply them. And build that wonderful
telescope, and get it there. And mine that helium. Seek out and
bring back the water. Pop over to Mars, and do it all over again
there!
Space
exploration? No government worth its IOUs would pass it up. Buy
your tickets now!
January
19, 2004
Dr.
Hein [send
him mail] is a retired ophthalmologist in St. Louis,
and the author of All
Work & No Pay.
Copyright
© 2004 LewRockwell.com
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