Tag Archives: because
Because, what else could they Do?
I started working on a home office scene which I have organized in smaller parts to keep me motivated for a longer time. U.S. Department of Commerce: Office of Human Resources Management. More important, human settlement of space is our real goal! The value of the land claim can be similarly increased if we capitalize on the media coverage of a space ship taking off to try to win the race to establish the first human settlement on the Moon. Then, and only then, will a lunar land claim reach the multi-billion dollar value that would make a real difference, enough to justify even the billions it took to win it. If you are in the real estate business, especially if you are selling totally raw Lunar land, you can use all the acreage you can get title to. Cattle ranchers use much more land than farmers. Modern mechanized farms use vastly more land than that.
First, the dollar value of an acre of lunar land goes up exponentially the day buyers can actually buy a ticket and go there, or send a representative or a customer. Many people buy these “deeds” even though there is no way to get there, and nothing can be done with them. It isn’t how much land you get that matters. Real estate experts guessed at the minimum the land would bring when you could buy a ticket and get to it. Space experts guessed at what was the least that financially efficient private companies could hope to establish settlements for. These semi-frequent off-site gatherings might sound expensive to those steeped in the office-as-factory mind-set, but, Herd suggested, they’re cheaper than maintaining a permanent space for everyone, and such meetings would support much of what’s lost in a purely virtual strategy. The day people land on the Moon, set up permanent habitation, and stay there while the ship goes back for more people, they will be the whole world’s heroes — on every TV screen and front page on Earth!
The matter spirals as it goes in a black hole. That means the value of the land goes up exponentially if we hold it back until there is an airline-like space line going back and forth. Further, much can be done to increase the value of that land over time. 150,046,133,679. That is over $150 billion dollars – absolute minimum worst -case value. Do you think a chance to win a “prize” worth almost a Trillion Dollars would be enough to interest Boeing or Lockheed? People around the globe will have a chance to buy those deeds as a way to support the project, or just feel part of the excitement. Setting that aside, she’s also an incredibly gifted lyricist who’s penned unforgettable lines that have become part of the collective consciousness. If you bring more than one person to the meeting, have one team member be the assigned note-taker so the others can engage more fully with the client. One study discovered that ginger was actually better than over-the-counter motion sickness drugs. Explore a few options, read through some reviews, and try out a few mattresses before you decide on the right one. So the “right” size for a claim is that size which is just large enough to justify the cost of developing reliable space transport and establishing a settlement.
The first settlement on the Moon should be able to claim up to 600,000 square miles. The Moon’s mean radius is 1080 miles so its surface area is 14,657,415 square miles. The surface of a sphere is four times pi times the square of its radius. 001562 square miles, so the lunar surface has approximately 9,383,748,198 acres. Nineteenth century land grant farmers used 40 acres and a mule. It might also be required that only a certain percentage of land sale revenue can be used to repay the cost of establishing the settlement and taken as profit, the balance being retained to support the settlement itself until it can find ways to earn enough to become self sufficient. It should require the settlement to behave by international norms. 2 miles (3.2 km) south of the Washington Dulles International Airport. Better known by his stage name “Five for Fighting,” singer John Ondrasik played out the evening, performing solo numbers on guitar and piano including “Superman (It’s Not Easy),” “100 Years,” and “World,” which astronauts used as a soundtrack for a video filmed aboard the International Space Station.