Decade in Review: The '00s in Moon Colonization December 31, 2009
Posted by Nick Azer in : American History, Base Race, Frontiers , add a commentWith a blue moon marking the end of the ’00s and the beginning of the lunar-revolutionary ’10s, it’s time to take a quick look at some of the major events this past decade that took space in new directions, and how moon colonization went from still being a science fiction dream to being as real as the railroad revolution:
- April 28, 2001: Dennis Tito becomes the first space tourist.
- August 15th, 2003: India announces its first lunar mission, the unmanned Chandrayaan-1, which arrives for its mission in 2008.
- October 15th, 2003: China sends its first taikonaut,Yang Liwei, into space, becoming only the third nation to independently launch a man into space. China has noted plans for an eventual moon base.
- Jan 14th, 2004: President Bush announces the new Vision for Space Exploration, initiating NASA’s Constellation program with an eye on a moon base before 2025.
- Oct. 4th, 2004: The Ansari X PRIZE is won by Scaled Composites‘s SpaceShipOne, helping to open the door for Google Lunar X PRIZE and for private space efforts in general.
- 2007: Japan’s Kaguya lunar orbiter is announced; it arrives for its mission in 2008.
- September 13th, 2007: The $30 million Google Lunar X PRIZE is announced.
- September 28th, 2008: SpaceX‘s Falcon 1 rocket is the first privately developed liquid-fuel rocket to orbit Earth, proving the capability and opening door to important later contracts.
- December 23rd, 2008: SpaceX and Orbital Sciences are awarded contracts to resupply the International Space Station, a duty previously performed by the Space Shuttle.
- October 23rd, 2009: The Augustine Commission delivers its final report on NASA and potential new directions for the American space program.
While this is just the tip of the iceberg as far as the details, these are the lynchpin events that have propelled the nature of the base race and ‘NewSpace’ movements. With the Google Lunar X PRIZE set to be won by 2012, and numerous companies and international efforts on the cusp of truly integrating the Moon into our daily socio-economic sphere here on Earth, the 00′s will be remembered as the decade that ramped up to what will be one of the most historic decades in mankind’s history: the 2010s.
Check back in a few days, as I look forward to the dramatic changes to space that could be happening in the next 10 years :)
Moon Colonization: An American Historical Perspective July 20, 2009
Posted by Nick Azer in : American History, Apollo, Frontiers, Obama , 3commentsOn this, the 40th anniversary of the Apollo 11 moon landing, the map above demonstrates not only where America stood in 1803; in a sense, it is where America stands now.
The Apollo 11 mission is often compared to Lewis and Clark’s Corps of Discovery. They are indeed, similar: bold scientific missions of exploration, with eventual political and economic goals in mind, mandated by a President with a dreamer’s eye and performed by a squad of mostly military hands (with important civilian assists). Incredibly dangerous, incredibly unlikely, and completed incredibly well.
Lewis and Clark’s expedition was followed, eventually, by a wave of frontier colonization that has resulted in the Union’s most populous state and also the metropolis I currently reside in (Portland, Oregon). It was the spark for generations of expansion that took America places it could hardly have even imagined.
“You’re familiar with the phrase ‘man’s reach exceeds his grasp’? It’s a lie: man’s grasp exceeds his nerve.” -David Bowie as Nikola Tesla in “The Prestige“
“Man’s reach exceeds his imagination!”- Hugh Jackman as Robert Angier, later on in “The Prestige“
Those same quotes could be applied to America, today. 40 years after Apollo 11′s own journey of discovery, America is on the verge of repeating its history: we stand at the cusp, along with other nations, of a new colonial era, the true wave of integration to follow that initial step the explorers took.
America’s government, and perhaps more importantly its companies, now have Moon settlement (and mining) within their grasp. The potential that Kennedy’s mandate—and Jefferson’s before him—spoke of now has the technology in place to be readily met, the same way that the railroads led to the true opening of the West.
The time is now; the lunar colonial era is our era, and our generation. In my mind, there’s no time to waste—the Louisiana Purchase had significant foresight, and perhaps there are decisions that could be made now, that could have similar impact on America’s role in developing this new frontier (a resource-rich swath of land being added to humanity that is nearly the size of Asia).
America was a leader in reaching the Moon, and now we can lead in developing the Moon. Mankind’s past colonial eras have done many wrongs, particularly America’s; so perhaps this is a time for us to correct our past, to take steps to lead by example in ensuring a smooth and peaceful rollout of humanity onto the Moon (mutually beneficial to everyone).
The moon is there for us; our grasp exceeds our imagination, today. Let’s see what we can do.

