A bill has been introduced in the Senate, by Ted Cruz and Gary Peters, to preserve them. For All Moonkind has been working on this for a while. It would only protect the sites from Americans, but we need to make this into a multilateral agreement.
Yes, the bureaucrats are pretending that it’s a required part of returning to the moon when, as Bob Zubrin has pointed out it’s a toll booth at best, and a likely roadblock, and there has been no public debate about its necessity.
It only looks ambitious in comparison to previous plans, not to serious plans. At best, it’s Apollo on steroids. And as he notes, there is no budget, either stated or actual.
They failed the acronym check on that one…
— Jonathan A. Goff (@rocketrepreneur) May 20, 2019
Steve Wolfe has been working on putting this together, in conjunction with the ISDC in a couple weeks. I’ll be doing a presentation there on space property rights for settlers.
A few months ago, I asked him to be on my advisory board for my new company. He thanked me for the offer, but told me he had to decline because there was a potential conflict of interest. But today he announced that he is going to be heading up a much more important advisory council. I think it’s a great choice.
Outside of transportation costs (which will be coming down), this is probably the biggest barrier to lunar development. It's really nasty stuff. https://t.co/aWWNanCABG
Lunar Dust Storms…? 🌪 I was interviewed here about Brian O’Brien, his Apollo Dust Detector Experiment, and how he solved (IMO) the long-standing mystery of lunar dust coating the Surveyor 3 spacecraft. This is a very fun read. https://t.co/cM4XgfUHsX