Thanks for this well delivered talk!! Realistic, since it seems we are designed to live and die on planet Earth, what we should do is focus on repairing the damage done to our home
Gripping and very informative. Two things he leaves out are that Elon Musk is not your "typical billionaire" and that his Humanoid Robot will be used to build the colony.
nah. we gonna get there . . . perhaps not in our lifetimes but, it's clear we're making progress . . . if Matt Damon can get there, so can we . . . just not yet.
Thanks for this well delivered talk!! Realistic, since it seems we are designed to live and die on planet Earth, what we should do is focus on repairing the damage done to our home
So so interesting Brad. You had us hooked the whole way through 🌑
Gripping and very informative. Two things he leaves out are that Elon Musk is not your "typical billionaire" and that his Humanoid Robot will be used to build the colony.
A fabulous talk Brad! 👏👏👏
You are so right ‘the door to colonising mars should remain closed’, very informative
The reason to escape to Mars is because we have done so much damage to Earth.
In some ways it's already been damaged right at the start
@@robertdavies6630 True. If we cannot live sustainably on Earth, then we cannot live sustainably on Mars.
@@computer-training-for-seniors do you think living on the moon or mars would be better either one of them
@@robertdavies6630 Definitely not.
@@computer-training-for-seniors in some ways no but still
Fascinating talk
We will never get close to Mars .... fact!!!! Nor should we.
nah. we gonna get there . . . perhaps not in our lifetimes but, it's clear we're making progress . . . if Matt Damon can get there, so can we . . . just not yet.
We aren't going to Mars.
not in our lifetimes, *maybe* . . . but, our descendants will get there almost certainly . . . 👀
Why should the door remain closed? No thought about AI building great colony’s prior to humans actually living there? Closed minded
closed only for the time being . . . until the DNA risks are figured out . . .