Daily Archives: December 23, 2013

– transhumanism – Article Archives – Vigilant Citizen

Posted: December 23, 2013 at 5:45 am

The National Intelligence Council Predicts a Very Transhuman Future by 2030 Jan 7th, 2013 | By VC

The National Intelligence Council is a high-level agency best known for producing National Intelligence Estimates forecasts predicting future trends [...]

Posted in Latest News | 12733152 commentshttp%3A%2F%2Fvigilantcitizen.com%2Flatestnews%2Fthe-national-intelligence-council-predicts-a-very-transhuman-future-by-2030%2FThe+National+Intelligence+Council+Predicts+a+Very+Transhuman+Future+by+20302013-01-07+17%3A48%3A54VChttp%3A%2F%2Fvigilantcitizen.com%2F%3Fp%3D12733 Tags: transhumanism

This TV ad promoting Verizons Droid DNA phone is weird, cringe-worthy and also promotes something else: Transhumanism. Indeed, the ad [...]

Posted in Latest News | 12713112 commentshttp%3A%2F%2Fvigilantcitizen.com%2Flatestnews%2Fdroid-dna-hyper-intelligence-commercial-and-its-transhumanist-message%2FDroid+DNA+%22Hyper+Intelligence%22+Commercial+and+its+Transhumanist+Message2013-01-04+17%3A27%3A36VChttp%3A%2F%2Fvigilantcitizen.com%2F%3Fp%3D12713 Tags: illuminati commercials, transhumanism

Weve seen in previous articles that the concept of transhumanism (which can be defined as the merging of humans and [...]

Posted in Latest News | 11668106 commentshttp%3A%2F%2Fvigilantcitizen.com%2Flatestnews%2Fwonder-girls-like-money-promoting-transhumanisn-through-k-pop%2FWonder+Girl%27s+%22Like+Money%22%3A+Promoting+Transhumanisn+Through+K-Pop2012-08-11+17%3A59%3A01VChttp%3A%2F%2Fvigilantcitizen.com%2F%3Fp%3D11668 Tags: k-pop, transhumanism, wonder girls

Weve seen in several previous articles (notably The Transhumanist and Police State Agenda in Pop Music) that the normalization of [...]

Posted in Latest News | 10841133 commentshttp%3A%2F%2Fvigilantcitizen.com%2Flatestnews%2Fmore-of-the-transhumanist-agenda-in-j-pop-videos-perfumes-spring-of-life%2FMore+of+the+Transhumanist+Agenda+in+J-Pop+Videos%3A+Perfume%27s+%22Spring+of+Life%222012-04-23+15%3A19%3A38VChttp%3A%2F%2Fvigilantcitizen.com%2F%3Fp%3D10841 Tags: j-pop, perfume, transhumanism

Weve seen in previous articles (notably in The Transhumanist and Police State Agenda in Pop Music) that the concept of [...]

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Space Station Malfunction: Fixes Discussed By NASA | Video – Video

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Space Station Malfunction: Fixes Discussed By NASA | Video
Space Station Malfunction: Fixes Discussed By NASA | Video ISS Mission Operations Integration Manager Kenny Todd gives an update on the Space Station cooling...

By: VideoFromSpace

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Space Station Malfunction: Fixes Discussed By NASA | Video - Video

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International Space Station News – Video

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International Space Station News
Mission Control has launched several "Tiger Teams" to work around the clock troubleshooting the cooling failure on the International Space Station, NASA offi...

By: Everton Land

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International Space Station News - Video

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International Space Station celebrates 15 years in the orbit – Video

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International Space Station celebrates 15 years in the orbit
The International Space Station (ISS) is the biggest man-made built in the space. December 12, 2013, KNC Show (UNTV37) Kawan ng Cordero is the only Bible-bas...

By: untvweb

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International Space Station celebrates 15 years in the orbit - Video

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The ISS Emergency Spacewalk – Video

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The ISS Emergency Spacewalk
Three space walks are set for next week when two astronauts will repair the damaged cooling line on board the International Space Station. The Daily Conversa...

By: The Daily Conversation

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The ISS Emergency Spacewalk - Video

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Expedition 38 Space Station Live December 18 – Video

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Expedition 38 Space Station Live December 18

By: Matthew Travis

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Expedition 38 Space Station Live December 18 - Video

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Why Colonize Mars? – Red Colony

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Here are seven reasons why we should colonize Mars:

1. Its Similarity to Earth

Mars has water, frozen underground and at the polar caps. There is evidence that this water has, in the past and present, flooded the surface in liquid form. Signs of erosion can be found on the slopes of craters and volcanoes. Geological features resembling those on Earth suggest that Mars was once a wet and hospitable planet.

A day on Mars is 24.5 hours long. Mars is a third the size of Earth, but it has as much land area as the seven continents combined. Its gravity is 2.7 times less than that of Earth: enough to remain flat-footed on the surface, but a low enough escape velocity to make launching from Mars relatively simple. Remember, it was much easier for Apollo to lift off from the moon than it was to leave Earth. Construction materials would be lighter as well, facilitating labor in the early colony. The health benefits of such an environment are unknown, but it is theorized that Mars might prevent and relieve forms of arthritis and back pain. Also, Martian-born children might be taller than their Terran cousins.

Both planets have seasons and similar rotational patterns. Mars is roughly in the same heat-range as Earth, being next-door in the solar system, and if it had a thicker atmosphere it is likely the two planets would share the same climate. Today, Mars's temperature varies from +1F to -178F, with an average global temperature of -85F. That's cold, but still the solar system's most hospitable for humans.

2. Its Scientific Secrets

With its similarity to Earth, there is a strong possibility that bacterial life (or something more?) exists on the planet. Some people believe that Viking detected it way back in 1976. Others believe that we found it in a Martian meteorite. Rovers are on their way to Mars to settle the debate, but we may only be sure if humans look for themselves. As any engineer will tell you, the ease with which a human being can cover a stretch of ground and examine specimens along the way, gathering and processing data, cannot be emulated with a machine. If we ever find life, we can begin to answer some of the biggest questions we've ever asked: "Are we alone in the universe? What else is out there? What is the basic unit of life? What does life need to survive?"

From a geological standpoint alone, Mars is exciting because it offers scientists a view of how planets develop. Mars is billions of years older than the Earth, and its features are much more exaggerated. The largest canyons, volcanoes, and craters in the solar system are available for our study.

3. Its Diplomatic Potential

It is obvious that the world isn't perfect, but we've been trying for the entirety of our civilized existence. We've reached a point now where the majority of the world's superpowers are on good enough terms to begin an international joint-project to colonize Mars. This was much the theory with the International Space Station, but dirty politics proved how immature the world's superpowers are. Ending the quarrelling and going to space might sound like ignorant idealism, but imagine the diplomatic potential. When we become united in a goal, not just as Americans or as Russians but as mankind, all of humanity puts aside its differences.

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Why Colonize Mars? - Red Colony

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NASA Quest: Possibility of colonizing Mars

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QUESTION: Is it possible to colonize mars to the extent that human beings could live there? If so, then how would you go about it? Would we ever need to colonize Mars? ANSWER from R. Bourke on January 9, 1997: It may be possible for people to live on Mars in the future, but they must be protected from the environment. Conditions on Mars are much more harsh than any on Earth. It is very cold--far below freezing--there is no water, and the air is very thin and mostly carbon dioxide. Thus people will not be able to breath the air without space suits. In fact, machinery must be used to decompose the carbon dioxide to separate the oxygen to produce breathable air. ANSWER from Jack Farmer on January 30, 1997: The colonization of Mars by humans is being thought of in terms of "terraforming", which simply means modifying the Martian atmosphere and climate to make the "red planet" habitable for life. The Surface Environment of Mars: Cold, Dry and Full of Radiation The present surface of Mars is an inhospitable place for any terrestrial life form, whether microbe or person. The atmospheric pressure averages about 7.5 millibars (the avg. for Earth is 1000 mb). This means that water is unstable and can exist only as ice or vapor at the surface. In addition, the thin atmosphere of Mars is composed almost entirely of carbon dioxide (95%) and it lacks the oxygen needed to support human colonists without creating airtight shelters or spacesuits filled with our kind of atmosphere. The lack of oxygen also poses another risk. There is no protective ozone shield and the surface gets a very heavy dose of ultraviolet radiation (3-4X that at the Earth's surface). We know that UV is harmful to most life forms (that's why we have to use sunscreen!). As far as we know, Mars lacks a magnetic field, and that means that lots of other harmful radiation reaches the surface of Mars from the sun that, on Earth, is deflected away from the surface by the magnetic field. The temperature of the Martian surface is below freezing most of the time over most of the surface. Lastly, Mars is very cold (mostly below freezing most everywhere), but humans are able to live in cold climates on Earth, so that is not an insurmountable problem. However, combined with everything else, it makes colonization a real challenge. Building a Martian Atmosphere: An Oxygen-rich Greenhouse Terraforming would involve increasing the atmospheric density of Mars by liberating the water and carbon dioxide that lies frozen in the soils and on the polar caps of Mars to create a "greenhouse" effect (carbon dioxide and water both absorb heat energy from the sun and retain it causing the atmosphere to warm up) that would raise the surface temperature to the point where liquid water would be stable. There are a number of ideas for how to do that, but most involve installing large atmosphere-producing plants on Mars that would pump out carbon dioxide and perhaps other greenhouse gases like methane continuously until the atmiosphere was built up to the right level. Obviously, at some point we would also want to add oxygen to make the atmosphere breathable. On Earth, oxygen in our atmosphere is almost entirely formed by photosynthesis of green plants. So during terraforming, sometime after water ahd been rendered stable by the increased atmosphere, we would introduce photosynthesizing plants to contribute oxygen. What other benefit do you think oxygen would add, based on the preceeding discussion? There are a number of people and approaches that have been suggested for terraforming. Additional Reading: Some of these ideas were reviewed in a recent book by Robert Zubrin titled "The Case for Mars: The Plan to Settle the Red Planet and Why We Must" (1996, Free Press Publishing). Jack D. Farmer, PhD. NASA Ames Research Center ANSWER from Mark Adler on June 20, 1997: Yes. But it won't be easy. Mars is deathly cold (around minus 100 F), has a very thin carbon dioxide atmosphere with almost no oxygen, and has no ready supply of water. You'd have to *really* want to live there. A few people could be sustained on Mars with a steady line of supplies coming from Earth. In the long term, decades, we could find ways to provide some of those supplies on Mars, allowing the small colony to become more and more self-sufficient over time, and to possibly even grow. It would be a very long time, perhaps a century or more, before a colony on Mars could be completely independent. On even longer time scales, a few centuries, some people believe that we could change Mars globally to make it more hospitable for people by somehow making the atmosphere thicker and warmer. ANSWER from Mark Adler on July 29, 1997: There is certainly the possibility of humans exploring Mars. It's simply a matter of the rather high cost. Mars' atmosphere is extremely thin (less than 1/100th as thick as our atmosphere), is composed mostly of carbon dioxide, and is very cold. In short, Mars' atmosphere cannot support humans or other Earth life. However, that does not mean that we cannot inhabit the planet someday. We would need special enclosures to contain a warm, Earth-like atmosphere to live in. Mars' atmosphere of carbon dioxide and some nitrogen can be used, with some machinery and electrical power, to create and replenish an oxygen/nitrogen atmosphere in the enclosures. Water is a bit more of a problem, but there may be solutions there as well. Some people talk about actually changing Mars' atmosphere on a global scale to make it thicker and warmer in order to make habitation easier This is inspired in part by human's inadvertent but noticeable effect on Earth's atmosphere. However, it will likely be a long time before we have the technology and sheer presence to make global changes on Mars. Mark Adler ANSWER from Jim Murphy on June 22, 1998: I do not think that humans will NEED to colonize Mars, but I believe that we will have a very strong desire to do so since it is a challenge to be met (like going to the moon was..). I don't believe that current and future environmental problems we must deal with here on Earth are a good argument for developing a Mars colony. Rather, I'd prefer that we deal with our problems here. If we can develop the technology to build and sustain a Mars colony, then we can certainly develop strategies to deal with our problems here on earth without running (or rocketing) away to another planet. I certainly think that a Mars colony is possible. I would not expect one to be developed/built prior to 50-100 years from now, unless some form of life is discovered there, which would greatly accelerate the desire to get a base established. The cost will be enormous, and currently neither the money nor political will exists to fund the effort, but there are people thinking about how to do it. The advantages to having a Mars colony are to be able to conduct long-term science studies there, and to be able to travel over large distances on the surface repeatedly. Since the day length on Mars is 24 hours and 36 minutes, I would think it would be no problem to adjust to that day length. A colony would need to be "self contained", that is a structure not directly opened to the Martian atmosphere, since the Martian atmosphere is not capable of sustaining people (the lack of oxygen, and low atmospheric pressures would be deadly to anyone directly exposed to the atmosphere). Weather would play a role in determining how people travel about on the surface. Being out during a dust storm might make determining which direction to go difficult, and the large winds which might sometime blow could be a problem for some of the structure. ANSWER from Donna Shirley on July 9, 1998: I don't think humans "need" to colonize Mars in the sense that colonizing Mars will save us from the affects of overpopulating or despoiling the earth. If we get into such a situation I don't think that we will be able to afford to colonize a planet so far away. I think we "need" to explore Mars from the standpoint that we are a curious, exploring species. Donna Shirley

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Moonbase Lunar Colony Simulator – Colonization

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Title Moonbase, Lunar Colony SimulatorGame Type Management SimCompany Wesson InternationalPlayers 1

MAJOR MS-DOS PROBLEM - The PC Version of the program (below) won't run under later versions of MS-DOS (Microsoft Disk Operation System, with the 'C:>' Command Prompt) i.e. Windows XP, Vista Basic, Windows 7... Probably works on Windows 95/98. Will it work on Windows 8 (in production)??? It is run using the MS-DOS Shell, not Windows. Other Software that won't run includes Star Trek: The Birth of the Federation. This comes with a good manual off Ebay. But Microprose's Master of Orion II is superior in every way! And WORKS!!! Take a look right down the whole page as there are some good great [science fiction] pictures, and it gives a good jist of how the game works.

[JUN06] "Coiled tubing units are so compact and have such great potential, the Mars Drilling Project is evaluating a coiled tubing unit to drill for water on Mars." It can rotate up to 90 degrees, and drill 400 feet/hour driven by Nitrogen. Reinaldo Latham, Coil Tubing Technology, Inc. (CTBG)

I thought I would include a review of this game, as it is a similar concept to colonization, and so might be of interest to some readers.

This is a very unusual game, quite apart from the run of the mill. It is one of my favourites. The game is not by a software company as such, but by a Construction Company, predicting a near future Moonbase, and showing how it can be technically, and more importantly economically feasible, the Programmers consulted NASA experts. The concept gels well, and seems plausible, but one decimal point in the wrong place for commodity prices, and it could all fall to bits. The game rightly predicted that there was a high change of finding water deposits on the Moon, in the form and crashed meteorites. Since the real life discovery plans for a Moonbase have been revealed, showing just how critical it is. In the game you don't allows find water, it is winnable without it - just! But a walk over with it, as it is needed for drinking, growing food (it is highly costly to ship in), and for making oxygen and rocket fuel (H2O -> Liquid Oxygen and Hydrogen).

Also mine Helium-3 for [as yet un-discovered] radiation free Fusion Reactors. The Russians plan a Moon mission in 2015 for this very purpose! Make high quality Semiconductors (better quality due to low gravity), Solar Panels, and Equipment for missions through out the Solar System. Low Gravity means material can be fired into orbit using a cheap Mag-Lev system, as opposed to the extoriantly high cost of lifting out of Earth Orbit. Also build Hotels for Ultra-Rich tourist, and get NASA grants, that dry up over the years or if war occurs on Earth. Stock Market Prices for all commodities.

You also get a big manual, which is a story, with technical and game information scattered through it, most novel (pardon the pun). The story involves, not surprisingly, the foundation of a lunar colony. With another Chinese colony on the other side of the moon (again very plausible in today's world). Among other thing they have to prevent a melt down of a fission reactor, see to a crashed lander, break a strike, and trade solar power with the Chinese, as one side of the moon is in darkness, when the other is light, with a lunar might lasting 14 earth days, this makes a lot of sense.

For once the blurb on the back cover, actually reflects the game, so I will include it:

You are Commander of Project Moonbase, NASA's long-range plan to Earth's Moon. From your multi-million dollar annual budgets, you must establish a base, then manage its growth into a full-fledged, independent colony. With savvy (and luck), you may create a self-sufficient city on the Moon, but not without adeptly handling the myriad leadership problems in the highly-charged political and harsh physical environment.

Explore and exploit the Moon's surface Explore the lunar surface for new mining sites. Process the raw materials you find into oxygen, water and helium-3, then use then internally or sell them to Mars missions. Build hotels for fat cats from Earth. Profits from ventures like these can free you from Earth's purse strings - you might even want to declare independence!

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Moonbase Lunar Colony Simulator - Colonization

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Moon in fiction – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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This article is about the Moon as the subject of and inspiration for creative works. For the Moon in mythology and religion, see Moon (mythology).

The Moon has been the subject of many works of art and literature and the inspiration for countless others. It is a motif in the visual arts, the performing arts, poetry, prose and music.

Lucian's Icaromenippus and True History, written in the 2nd century AD, deal with imaginary voyages to the moon such as on a fountain after going past the Pillars of Hercules. The theme did not become popular until the 17th century, however, when the invention of the telescope hastened the popular acceptance of the concept of "a world in the Moon", that is, that the Moon was an inhabitable planet, which might be reached via some sort of arial carriage. The concept of another world, close to our own and capable of looking down at it from a distance, provided ample scope for satirical comments on the manners of the Earthly world. Among the early stories dealing with this concept are:

The first flight to the Moon was a popular topic of science fiction before the actual landing in 1969.

Robert A. Heinlein wrote extensively, prolifically, and inter-connectedly about first voyages and colonization of the Moon, which he most often called Luna.[3] He also was involved with the films Destination Moon and Project Moonbase.

The Moon is sometimes imagined as having, now or in the distant past, indigenous life and civilization.

Human settlements on the Moon are found in many science fiction novels, short stories and films. Not all have the Moon colony itself as central to the plot.

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Moon in fiction - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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