Colonization Exploration Generic - ENDI 2011

Negative

*** The DA *** 2

1NC – Space Exploration DA 2

Uniqueness – No Exploration Now 5

Uniqueness – No Contact Now 6

Generic Links – Exploration 8

Exploration – SPS Links 10

Exploration – Asteroid Mining Links 11

Colonization – SPS Links 12

Colonization – Asteroid Mining Links 15

*** Exploration Bad *** 15

Exploration Bad – Generic 16

Exploration Bad – Debris 17

Exploration Bad – Debris Uniqueness 18

Exploration Bad – Debris Links 19

Exploration Bad – Debris Impacts 20

Exploration Bad – Debris Turns Case 22

Exploration Bad – Space Disease 23

Exploration Bad – Earth Diseases Spread 25

Exploration Bad – Disease Impacts 27

Exploration Bad – Disease Impact Magnifier 29

Exploration Bad – Disease – Empirically Proven 30

Exploration Bad – Disease – AT: Virii Incompatible 31

Exploration Bad – Disease – AT: Antibiotics Solve 32

Exploration Bad – Tissue Degeneration 33

Exploration Bad – Cancer 34

Exploration Bad – Ozone 35

Exploration Bad – Ozone Extensions 37

*** Aliens Exist and Are Bad *** 38

Aliens Exist 39

Contact Bad – They’ll Kill Us 42

Contact Bad – Genocide 43

Contact Bad – Earth Wars 44

Contact Bad – Threaten the Aliens 45

Contact Bad – Tech 46

Contact Bad – Computer Viruses 47

Contact Bad – Disease 48

Contact Bad – Resource Theft 49

Contact Bad – Err Neg on Contact 50

AT: They’ll Be Nice 52

AT: Timeframe Too Long 53

AT: Invasion Inevitable 54

*** Colonization Impossible *** 54

Col Impossible – Frontline 55

Col Impossible – No Sex in Space 58

Col Impossible – Launch Costs 63

Col Impossible – Water 64

Col Impossible – Helium 3 65

Col Impossible – Diseases 66

Col Impossible – Timeframe 67

Col Impossible – Cosmic Rays 68

Col Impossible – Radiation 69

Col Impossible – Moon Specific 70

Col Impossible – Mars Specific 71

Col Impossible – Mars – No Sex 73

Col Impossible – AT: Asteroids 74

Col Impossible – AT: Try or Die 75

*** AT: Get Off the Rock *** 75

Stay On – Only Earth 76

Stay On – AT: Asteroids 77

Stay On – SPS Solves Asteroids 79

Stay On – AT: Supervolcanoes 80

Stay On – AT: Impact Outweighs 81

Stay On – Innovation Solves 82

Stay On – AT: Resources 84

Stay On – AT: Population 85

Stay On – AT: Climate Change 86

Stay On – Timeframe Too Long 88

*** Colonization Bad *** 88

Col Bad – AT: Consciousness Transformation 89

Col Bad – Spending Link 90

Col Bad – AT: Solves Environment 91

Col Bad – Terraforming Unethical 92

Private Sector Solves Col 93

Affirmative

*** General DA Answers *** 93

Non-Unique – Aliens – Already Attempting Contact 94

Non-Unique – NASA Exploration 95

*** Get Off the Rock *** 95

Off Rock – Uniqueness 96

Off Rock – Generic Extinction 98

Off Rock – Asteroids 99

Off Rock – Asteroids Impact Extensions 105

Off Rock – AT: Divert the Asteroid 106

Off Rock – AT: Asteroids Rare 107

Off Rock – Sun 108

Off Rock – Overpopulation 109

Off Rock – Climate Change 110

Off Rock – Environment 112

Off Rock – Resources 113

Off Rock – Supervolcano 114

Off Rock – Supervolcano Probability 116

Off Rock – Supervolcano Timeframe 117

Off Rock – Nuclear War 118

*** Colonization Possible *** 118

Col Possible – Generic Tech 119

Col Possible – Mars 120

Col Possible – Mars – Tech Ready 124

Col Possible – Mars – AT: Too Expensive 126

Col Possible – Mars – Timeframe 127

Col Possible – Mars – AT: Dust Storms 128

Col Possible – Mars – AT: Disease 129

Col Possible – Mars – AT: No Sex 130

Col Possible – Moon 131

Col Possible – Generic Planets 132

Col Possible – Orbital Colonies 133

Col Possible – Asteroids 134

Col Possible – Molecular Nanotech 135

Col Possible – AT: Meteor Collision 136

Col Possible – AT: Too Expensive 137

Col Possible – AT: No Life Support 138

Col Possible – AT: Radiation 139

Col Possible – AT: People Won’t Go 140

Col Possible – AT: No Sex in Space 141

Col Possible – AT: Distance 143

Col Possible – AT: Resources 144

Col Possible – AT: Timeframe 145

*** Colonization Good *** 146

Col Good – Generic Extinction 147

Col Good – Earth Resources 151

Col Good – Consciousness Transformation 152

Col Good – Resource Wars 153

Col Good – Environment 154

Col Good – Energy 157

Col Good – HIV/AIDS 158

Col Good – Economy 160

Col Good – War 161

Col Good – Bioweapons 162

Col Good – Asteroids 163

Col Good – Environmental Ethics 164

Col Good – Competitiveness 166

Col Good – Asteroid Settlements 167

Col Good – Mars 168

Col Good – Try or Die 169

Col Good – AT: Send a Smaller Group 170

Col Good – AT: Private Sector 171

Col Good – Now Key 173

*** AT: Aliens *** 173

No Aliens 174

Aliens – Won’t Find Them 180

Aliens – Timeframe Too Long 181

Contact Good – Friendly 182

*** Exploration Good *** 184

Exploration Good – AT: Disease 185

Exploration Good – AT: Debris 188

Exploration Good – AT: Robots Can Explore 189

*** The DA ***

1NC – Space Exploration DA

A. Absent the plan, NASA spaceflight will end

The Space Review 6/6 “New strategies for exploration and settlement” June 6th, 2011 http://www.thespacereview.com/article/1860/1

Greason, though, is more pessimistic about the future of at least NASA’s human spaceflight program without a firm strategy in place for space settlement. Without that strategy, he said, “we’re going to build a big rocket, and then we’re going to hope a space program shows up to fly it. Any in my opinion, that strategy—the strategy of default—is going to result in the end of the NASA human spaceflight program” when members of Congress question the wisdom of spending several billion dollars a year on that effort and its lack of progress in an era of constricting budgets. “If we haven’t done better in the next ten years than we have in the last ten years, we’re going to lose that fight, and NASA’s human spaceflight activity will end.”

B. Space exploration will lead to alien encounter

Daily Galaxy 5/29/2011 [‘Weekend Feature: 'Endeavour' Astronauts on Extraterrestrial Life -- "We'll find something out there."’, May 29th, 2011, http://www.dailygalaxy.com/my_weblog/2011/05/-weekend-feature-endeavour-astronauts-on-extraterrestrial-life-well-find-something-out-there.html]

The human race will find life elsewhere in the Universe as it pushes ahead with space exploration, reported astronauts of the space shuttle Endeavour. The US space shuttle Endeavour prepares today to undock from the International Space Station and jet back to Earth, wrapping up its final journey before entering retirement, NASA said. "If we push back boundaries far enough, I'm sure eventually we'll find something out there," said Mike Foreman, a mission specialist on the Endeavour, "Maybe not as evolved as we are, but it's hard to believe that there is not life somewhere else in this great Universe," he added. “I personally believe that we are going to find something that we can't explain," said another astronaut, Gregory Johnson. "There is probably something out there but I've never seen it," he said. Dominic Gorie, the crew commander and veteran of four space flights, points out that explorers in past eras did not know what they would find before setting off across the ocean. "As we travel in the space, we don't know what we'll find. That's the beauty of what we do. I hope that someday we'll find what we don't understand." Takao Doi, a Japanese astronaut on past Endeavour missions, agreed "life like us must exist" elsewhere in the Universe. The comments come after a surprisingly high-level debate in Japan about UFOs. Japan's Foreign Minister, Nobutaka Machimura said in 2007 that he personally believed aliens existed, in an unusual rebuttal to a government statement that Japan had no knowledge of UFOs. Defence Minister Shigeru Ishiba went as far as to say that he was studying the legal ramifications of responding to an alien attack in light of Japan's post-World War II pacifist constitution. At the celebration marking the 50th anniversary of NASA, Stephen Hawking, Newton's heir as the Lucasian Professor of Mathematics at the University of Cambridge, answered the question, “Are we alone?” His answer is short and simple; probably not!

C. Aliens will pillage earth for resources and kill the humans that remain

Jonathan Leake, journalist, 4/25/2010 [ “Don’t talk to aliens, warns Stephen Hawking”, April 25th, 2010, http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/science/space/article7107207.ece]

THE aliens are out there and Earth had better watch out, at least according to Stephen Hawking. He has suggested that extraterrestrials are almost certain to exist — but that instead of seeking them out, humanity should be doing all it that can to avoid any contact.

The suggestions come in a new documentary series in which Hawking, one of the world’s leading scientists, will set out his latest thinking on some of the universe’s greatest mysteries.

Alien life, he will suggest, is almost certain to exist in many other parts of the universe: not just in planets, but perhaps in the centre of stars or even floating in interplanetary space.

Hawking’s logic on aliens is, for him, unusually simple. The universe, he points out, has 100 billion galaxies, each containing hundreds of millions of stars. In such a big place, Earth is unlikely to be the only planet where life has evolved.

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“To my mathematical brain, the numbers alone make thinking about aliens perfectly rational,” he said. “The real challenge is to work out what aliens might actually be like.”

The answer, he suggests, is that most of it will be the equivalent of microbes or simple animals — the sort of life that has dominated Earth for most of its history.

One scene in his documentary for the Discovery Channel shows herds of two-legged herbivores browsing on an alien cliff-face where they are picked off by flying, yellow lizard-like predators. Another shows glowing fluorescent aquatic animals forming vast shoals in the oceans thought to underlie the thick ice coating Europa, one of the moons of Jupiter.

Such scenes are speculative, but Hawking uses them to lead on to a serious point: that a few life forms could be intelligent and pose a threat. Hawking believes that contact with such a species could be devastating for humanity. He suggests that aliens might simply raid Earth for its resources and then move on: “We only have to look at ourselves to see how intelligent life might develop into something we wouldn’t want to meet. I imagine they might exist in massive ships, having used up all the resources from their home planet. Such advanced aliens would perhaps become nomads, looking to conquer and colonise whatever planets they can reach.”

He concludes that trying to make contact with alien races is “a little too risky”. He said: “If aliens ever visit us, I think the outcome would be much as when Christopher Columbus first landed in America, which didn’t turn out very well for the Native Americans.”

The completion of the documentary marks a triumph for Hawking, now 68, who is paralysed by motor neurone disease and has very limited powers of communication. The project took him and his producers three years, during which he insisted on rewriting large chunks of the script and checking the filming.

D. Independently, Microbes became extremely dangerous in space

Barry E. DiGregorio,Author and Journalist, 2/1/08 [ “Deadly Microbes From Outer Space”, February 1st, 2008, http://discovermagazine.com/2008/feb/deadly-microbes-from-outer-space]

For astronauts toiling in the close quarters of the International Space Station or on a shuttle to Mars, an ordinary germ would be risky enough. But a recent experiment published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences has shown that a microbe can turn even more dangerous in space than on Earth. In that study, a bacterium particularly nasty for humans—salmonella—was shown to become more virulent after just 83 hours of growing in space.

The experiment on the space shuttle Atlantis was designed to explore how a lack of gravity affects disease-causing microbes in space. Astronauts aboard the space shuttle grew the salmonella, and back on Earth researchers used it to infect a group of mice. For comparison, bacteria grown in a laboratory on Earth in normal gravity infected another group of mice. The mice infected with the space-grown germs had a mortality rate almost three times higher than that of mice given germs grown in normal gravity.

Researchers noticed that while on board the space shuttle, the salmonella encased themselves in a biofilm, a protective coating that is notoriously resistant to antibiotics. Several follow-up experiments on space shuttle flights over the next few years will look to see whether other bacteria undergo similar changes in virulence in microgravity.

E. New diseases result in extinction.

Souden 2k, David: former Research Fellow in History at Emmanuel College, Cambridge, consultant to the Cambridge Group for the History of Population and Social Structure [“Killer Diseases,” Factsheet, http://darrendixon.supanet.com/killerdiseases.htm]

Nature's ability to adapt is amazing - but the consequences of that adaptation are that mutations of old diseases, we thought were long gone, may come back to haunt us. But of all these new and old diseases, AIDS poses the greatest threat. It has the capacity to mutate and evolve into new forms, and the treatments that are being developed have to take account of that. Yet the recent history of life-threatening and lethal diseases suggests that even if we conquer this disease, and all the others described here, there may be yet another dangerous micro-organism waiting in the wings. The golden age of conquering disease may be drawing to an end. Modern life, particularly increased mobility, is facilitating the spread of viruses. In fact, some experts believe it will be a virus that leads to the eventual extinction of the human race.

Uniqueness – No Exploration Now

NASA’s space budget will be trending away from human space exploration

SpaceRef 6/8/11 Citing studies from Euroconsult, the leading international consulting and analyst firm specializing in the space sector

SpaceRef “NASA Spending Shift to Benefit Centers Focused on Science & Technology” 6/8/2011; http://www.spaceref.com/news/viewpr.html?pid=33782 [Schaaf]

According to the report "NASA Spending Outlook: Trends to 2016," NASA's budget, which will remain flat at around $18.7 billion for the next five years, will also be characterized by significant shifts from space operations to technology development and science. With the shift in budget authority, NASA Centers focused on Earth observation, space technology, and aeronautics will see increases in funding, while those involved in human spaceflight will see major funding reductions. Indeed, the termination of the Space Shuttle program will lead to a budget cut over $1 billion for Space Operations, resulting in a 21% budget cut for the Johnson Space Center. Overall, the agency's budget for R&D will account for about 50% of all NASA spending