Monthly Archives: April 2013

Robert Zubrin to Debate ‘Zero Growth’ Ideologue Phil Cafaro on April 15th

Debate: Are People the Problem?
Monday, April 15 from 7:00 PM to 8:30 PM

Philip Cafaro, a professor of philosophy at Colorado State University, recently warned in print that immigrants to America will endanger the planet by partaking of our country’s carbon-based prosperity. Robert Zubrin, an entrepreneur and space scientist, rebutted by insisting that population growth and carbon energy are both good things. To contend otherwise, he charged, is “anti-humanity.” Dr. Zubrin published a rebuttal of this argument in National Review.Centennial Institute presents a debate on this clash of visions. “Resolved: To help slow global climate change, the U.S. should reduce immigration and stabilize our population, as part of efforts to cut back sharply on greenhouse gas emissions.” That’s the proposition Cafaro will affirm and Zubrin (pictured) will negate.

“The subject of the debate has everything to do with Mars exploration. ‘Zero Growth’ ideology is antithetical to human expansion into space, and opening the space frontier is completely subversive to Malthusian and related limited resources ideology.” 

The planned debate, entitled “Are People the Problem?”, was occasioned by an article that Dr. Cafaro wrote in the Denver Post, arguing that immigration contributes to global warming, because by coming to America, immigrants increase their incomes, and thus their carbon footprints. This, says Dr. Cafaro, must be stopped.

In his anthology “Life on the Brink” (introduction by Paul and Anne Ehrlich, edited by Dr. Cafaro and Eileen Crist) he states that it is not only necessary to cut off immigration to America, but that the U.S. population needs to be reduced to 100 million people. According to Dr. Cafaro, “The last thing the world needs is hundreds of millions of more Americans.”

In addition, Dr. Cafaro requires that the world population be cut down from its current 7 billion to 2 billion, and recommends using the denial of U.S. foreign aid as a method to coerce Third World countries to accept population reduction. In addition, argues Dr. Cafaro in his included essay entitled “Is humanity a cancer upon the Earth?”, economic growth must be ended.

In the same book, contributing author David Foreman, the founder of Earth First and fellow leader of the “Apply the Brakes” anti-growth organization, objects to feminist interference in the family planning movement on the grounds that some feminists have the temerity to insist that a woman’s right to choose also includes the right to choose to have children. He says they have no such right.

This is going to be a significant debate. Dr. Cafaro’s views bring sharply into focus the anti-human and totalitarian implications of the ‘Zero Growth’ movement. In opposing him, Dr. Zubrin will make the case for human creativity and freedom.

The Issue Monday debate will take place on Monday, April 15, from 7-8:30 p.m. at the CCU Beckman Center. Admission is free and all are welcome, but reservations are required. Complete the RSVP form below or call 303-963-3424 to reserve your space. The CCU Beckman Center is located at 180 S. Garrison Street, Lakewood CO 80226.

Admission to the debate is free, but advance registration is required. Those wishing to attend may register online.

"Mars Curiosity Fan Art" (Glen Nagle, Michael Kountouris, Jeff Parker, Dan Brennan)

“Curiosity Poster” by Glen Nagle
Michael Kountouris
“Here’s Curiosity” by Dan Brennan
“Curiosity Mona Lisa” by Glen Nagle
“Picasso Curiosity”  by Glen Nagle
“Ansel Adams Curiosity” by Glen Nagle
“Starry Rover” by Dan Brennan
“Rover Gothic” by Dan Brennan

“Curiosity Stuck the Landing” by Jeff Parker

Tweetup At NASA’s JPL

“A Space Curiosity” by Glen Nagle

Thoughtful Interview of Planetary Resource’s Eric Anderson in The Atlantic

“Eric Anderson [Planetary Resources]: In the next generation or two—say the next 30 to 60 years—there will be an irreversible human migration to a permanent space colony. Some people will tell you that this new colony will be on the moon, or an asteroid—in my opinion asteroids are a great place to go, but mostly for mining. I think the location is likely to be Mars. This Mars colony will start off with a few thousand people, and then it may grow over 100 years to a few million people, but it will be there permanently. That should be really exciting, to be alive during that stage of humanity’s history.”
“In 10 years or so, what we’d really like to do is get robotic exploration of space in line with Moore’s Law [the tech-world maxim that the price for computing power falls by half every 18 months]. Remember, asteroid mining doesn’t involve people. We want to transition space exploration from a linear technology into an exponential one, and create an industry that can flourish off of exponential technologies such as artificial intelligence and machine learning.”
“It will be possible to know more about an ore body that’s 10 million miles away from us in space than it would be to know about an ore body 10 miles below the Earth’s surface.”

James Cameron "Aliens of the Deep"

. “That party’s been join’ on down there for a billion years – and its going to be going on for the next billion years. They’re just doing their thing – it’s got nothing to do with us, the sun could go out tomorrow – and they wouldn’t know and they wouldn’t care.”
.
“These microbes go far beyond anything our imagination might conceive of, back, when we were studying where we might find life.”

“So you know when you’re little and used to play that you were in a submarine? That was this. Way better than a cardboard box.”

“You’re in the world’s best spacecraft to explore this planet. [Eartth’s ocean]”

“Let’s say that my kind of Modified Drake’s Equation, says that life was possible on any planet any distance from the sun or not even anywhere near a sun or any planetary-like body, like a moon of Jupiter or whatever, that had ice around it. Okay. And had some kind of tidal pumping from some kind tidal pumping from some kind of gravity source near it, so that it had a liquid core, so that it would generate heat – and it was making heat like these thermal vents that we’re seeing. And if we said that there were ten or twenty or maybe fifty times as many worlds – like that. Isn’t it likely to assume, that when we get a call from one of your buddies – out there – when Setti Institute finally picks up a signal, it’s going to be coming from somebody who had to bore up through ice. And set their transmitter out on the ice. Statistically – isn’t that indicated by what we’re, what we’re talking about here.”