We Can Make It To Mars Without NASA
"We can—and should—develop space without government help," says Reason Foundation's Robert W. Poole.
"We can—and should—develop space without government help," says Reason Foundation's Robert W. Poole.
Until next year's, because capitalism is always making things better.
Plus: What Orion is carrying to the moon, when you might be able to munch on some lab-grown meat, and more...
Thanks to the rise of private spaceflight companies, mankind will have a future off-Earth.
An aeronautical engineer considers writing a novel about a new start on the moon.
Weir's books take seriously the limits of human knowledge and planning when it comes to space travel.
The regulations that increase building costs on Earth will have the same effect in space.
One insurance company started offering a space travel policy last year.
Robots don't get cabin fever, develop cancer from cosmic radiation, miss their families, or go insane.
A dying star and a young star orbit each other within a plume of burning dust and gas.
Starlink is the biggest player in the satellite business, for now.
Privatization can free orbital innovation from ground-bound politics.
What does "longtermism" offer those of us who favor limited government and free markets?
The millennial generation has had enough anti-prequel propaganda.
The video game merges free market trading with exciting space combat, and your ethics and goals are up to you.
The ice cream's innovative freezers helped Pfizer keep COVID-19 vaccines stable during transit.
The 23-foot-tall polymer structure has room for two and fits inside a SpaceX Starship.
What if our interplanetary future involved train heists, legal sex work, and a lot of running from the feds?
One critic calls it "arrogant vandalism," but advocates say it might be a necessary form of self-preservation.
If we move to space, it probably won't be because we filled up Earth with trash.
It's best to avoid sparking up a doobie on a spaceship, but there are other ways to consume substances in the cosmos.
How the FCC went from regulating telegraphs to regulating satellites
NASA has spent more than $420 million on the development of spacesuits with very little to show for it.
Reality has failed to match author Arthur C. Clarke's hopes.
A dimming sky and overprotective parents make it harder for today's kids to observe the great expanse.
Here's what could happen when John Locke and Henry George go to the moon.
News of politicians and space bureaucrats behaving badly from around the galaxy.
The treats you bought in gift shops are too crumbly to eat in microgravity.
The last time there was a manned mission to the moon, Pong had just been released on Atari.
Taking humanity from Earth to the stars isn't easy.
"Deep Space Homer" aired only eight years after the real-life Challenger disaster.
Why does the newest branch of the U.S. military need horses?
He spent his government career thinking about space. Then he got to fly.
A new generation of companies has made space travel affordable.
According to the ruling, the Pima County Board of Supervisors violated the state constitution's Gift Clause with its sweetheart deal to a space tourism company.
Science writer Mick West examines alleged UFO sightings. He finds that they almost always have far more obvious explanations.
And one or the other is likely our fate too.
The artist's Rocket Factory project, which lets users build and own their own virtual spacecraft, is changing how we think about reality.
The Rocket Factory NFT project stands at the intersection of crypto, the metaverse, and persistent human longing for the new frontier.
There are technical and logistical hurdles, but satellite internet could one day offer an uncensored alternative for people living in war zones and authoritarian countries around the world.
"Synthetic wombs make having kids much faster, easier, cheaper, and more accessible."
Star Trek used to dare to say that things were getting better.