SpaceX goes old-school to fuel new rockets
SpaceX will use old school (1890’s) tech to fuel their cutting edge Raptor engines on Mars as a key piece to The Mars Blueprint.
SpaceX will use old school (1890’s) tech to fuel their cutting edge Raptor engines on Mars as a key piece to The Mars Blueprint.
Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness are three of the unalienable rights which the United State’s Declaration of Independence says have been given to all humans by their Creator, and which governments are created to protect. While times have changed, people have not. History has a habit of repeating itself and it is worth reflecting on the universal maxims the American founding fathers embraced and why those very sentiments may propel humanity to Mars.
A Mars base in our lifetimes seemed like science fiction even 5 years ago, but the creation of SpaceX’s Starship program seems to have made the impossible tantalizingly possible. However, the whole plan will fail if the infrastructure is not in place by the first human landing. To make this happen…. SpaceX needs a robot. Enter Tesla Optimus.
The proverbial road to Mars is long, winding and filled with diversions, dangers and distractions. To succeed, we must plot the course, identify the best path and design the world we are building before we ever set foot on it. At The Mars Blueprint we believe there a “Critical Six” factors that allow us to break down every aspect of the journey we are about to take, allow debate and discussion on the best course, and eventually lay the foundations for The Mars Blueprint needed for success.
The Mars Blueprint is equal parts thought experiment and social movement.
For the first time in human history, we have the technology and the social momentum to allow us to explore and possibly colonize a new world. There has never been this kind of fresh start opportunity for humanity – ever before – and the Mars Blueprint wants to make sure that our new world is born out of the best of humanity.