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Pathfinders
Socialism in the Space Age
Anyone over the age of forty-five will remember very clearly two things
from their school days. One was the moon landings. The other was the
clear and certain knowledge that whatever it was that killed off the
dinosaurs would remain eternally one of life’s unanswerable mysteries.
When in 1980 the geologists Luis and Walter Alvarez discovered a thin
layer of iridium stretching from Italy to Colorado, dated to a period
corresponding to the great extinction at the end of the Cretaceous
period, some 65 million years ago, they knew something pretty severe
must have happened. Iridium lies deep in the core of the Earth, and is
only found on the surface as a result of asteroid strikes. This one,
they reasoned, must have been a humdinger, but where was the crater?
Something that big couldn’t just erode away. Eventually, it was found,
under the sea, off the coast of Mexico, a hole so big it must have
taken a meteorite roughly the size of Brighton to create it, about 23
square miles.
Recently on a socialist discussion list, someone referred to the
‘failed experiment’ that was the dinosaurs. Failed perhaps in the sense
that they are dead and we are not, but let homo sapiens survive and
prosper as a race eight hundred times longer than we have so far
managed before we can claim to equal their success. And the chances
are, on current performance, we won’t get anywhere near.
The power-elites in capitalism are as keenly aware as benighted
commoners just how vulnerable the Earth is to a giant meteor strike,
and while the next close pass by a large lump of rock is still thirty
years away, are even now debating what to do about it. For, even if the
impossible happened and the capitalists worked out some ingenious way
to stop destroying the planet themselves, there’s no accounting for the
vagaries of chance in outer space.
October 4 2007 marks the 50th anniversary of the launch of the Russian
satellite Sputnik 1, the first venture of humanity into space. A few
more efforts, a dead dog, some nasty accidents and a few dead
astronauts later, the world was dazzled by the budget-busting glory of
the Kennedy administration in putting a man on the moon, putting one
over on the Russians, and fixing the global gaze skyward instead of at
Vietnam. Previous generations had lived through the stone age, the
bronze age, the iron age, the steam age and the Tupperware age, but
anybody alive in 1968 and watching the silver men on screen pogoing in
slo-mo on the surface of the moon would have sworn they were living in
the space age. The future was bright. Humanity was on the threshold of
the stars.
But what a disappointment it all turned out to be. For once, the
geometric acceleration of science seemed to falter. After the Apollo
missions, there was no more. The moon was forgotten. Mars remained
beyond reach. The engineers all retired, and took their knowledge with
them. The stars seemed further away then ever, twinkling in cold
amusement at humanity’s punctured hubris.
Sure, the world sent out a lot of probes, some of which didn’t crash,
malfunction or get lost, and many fascinating pictures and much
interesting knowledge was gained. But the two Big Questions remained
unanswered. First: Is there anybody out there? And second: Even if
there isn’t, can we get off this rock before it blows?
Capitalism invests in space research the same way it gambles on the
rest of science, by backing every horse in the race, sure at least that
one of them will come in eventually, bringing with it untold new
knowledge and wisdom (aka big bucks and even bigger bucks). It isn’t
really interested in existential anxieties about being alone in the
universe, but when it comes to advanced communications and especially
the military capability of peering into everybody else’s back yard,
then filling the orbital paths with beeping space junk seems a superb
notion. More ambitiously, the possibility of colonising other planets
offers an unparalleled alibi for recklessly destroying your own. Space
Capitalism: a sort of galactic venereal disease.
Meanwhile, George Bush’s Kennedy-like attempt to swivel the eyes of
America away from Iraq and up to Mars is unlikely to outlive his
incumbency. The cost of a manned mission is just too ludicrous, the
risk (in lives but, more to the point, in credibility) not worth the
gamble, and the scientific returns probably insignificant, given no
conclusive sign so far of any organic material on that almost certainly
dead planet.
Some scientists, playing a dubious numbers game, have famously
calculated that the probability of there not being intelligent life out
there, given the billions of galaxies, is virtually zero. Others have
responded by calculating the probability of us ever having contact with
any of these lifeforms, given the
brain-shreddingly large space-time
distances involved, as being also virtually zero. Capitalist Earth,
being uncontrollably in the grip of a mindless and suicidal orgy of
self-destruction, would love to find some comfort and company out
there, feeling as it does that the prospects of life down here are
diminishing like sand through an hourglass.
But what of a socialist Earth? Suppose that humanity has
a moment of
sanity and takes its affairs in order by abolishing capitalism before
it’s too late, what then? Obviously expeditions to Enceladus would be
somewhat down the priority list at first, as
issues like food, water
and shelter took the lead. But would a socialist world eventually
develop a space programme? Perhaps so, if
by then the depradations of
capitalism had reduced the planet to an unsalvageable toxic tar-pit
from which we had no choice but to escape. Hopefully though, we will
have taken control of our common abode and our common responsibility
much earlier than that. Then, living as free custodians of a newly
green and pleasant planet, we may not feel such anxieties about our
cosmic isolation, but in fact bask pleasurably in our unique biological
identities and our uniquely fulfilling way of life. Children, though,
will always gaze at the stars and wonder what is out there. Socialists
may debate whether they could or should ever
‘export’ socialism to the
cosmos. They might also, perhaps more pertinently, wonder when some of
the cosmos is likely to pay a visit here. Among its other priorities,
socialist Earth would be wise to remember what happened to the
dinosaurs, and make contingency plans for the next Brighton rock.
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