Which means they've had 300 years to do the paperwork at their local galactic planning office, and didn't.
You sure about that...?Also, I wish I'd gotten a POLL indicator in my thread title, but I didn't for some reason.
It was on display in the bottom of a locked filing cabinet stuck in a disused lavatory with a sign on the door saying ‘Beware of the Leopard.'Which means they've had 300 years to do the paperwork at their local galactic planning office, and didn't.
Also what's missing is if the harvesting would even work to cure the Sonaa; methinks it was just a ploy too.
The treaty explicitly forbids any government to claim a celestial resource such as the Moon or a planet.[7] Article II of the treaty states that "outer space, including the Moon and other celestial bodies, is not subject to national appropriation by claim of sovereignty, by means of use or occupation, or by any other means.
But if you say that primitives should hold those rights, how about a star system with a species that isn't quite sapient yet, but very close (Let's say earth of 3 million years ago)? Or a planet with a flourishing ecosystem that could in time produce such a species ? (let's say Earth, 100 million years ago?) Or a star system with a planet that has primitive life ? (like Earth, 1 billion years ago). Or even a planet that could evolve life?
Where do you draw the line?
As for this Outer Space Treaty (quoting from Wikipedia)
This was agreed upon in 1967. I'm curious as to how much of it effectively will go out of the window the moment it actually becomes commercially feasible and profitable to exploit such "celestial resources".
But if you say that primitives should hold those rights, how about a star system with a species that isn't quite sapient yet, but very close (Let's say earth of 3 million years ago)? Or a planet with a flourishing ecosystem that could in time produce such a species ? (let's say Earth, 100 million years ago?) Or a star system with a planet that has primitive life ? (like Earth, 1 billion years ago). Or even a planet that could evolve life?
Where do you draw the line?
As for this Outer Space Treaty (quoting from Wikipedia)
This was agreed upon in 1967. I'm curious as to how much of it effectively will go out of the window the moment it actually becomes commercially feasible and profitable to exploit such "celestial resources".
I note that you assume that there were no intelligent beings on Earth 3 million years ago. That seems like a bold assumption to make.
No vogons. Please!to me an existent sentient species is it - earth 100 million years ago could be settled by vogons, ferengi, whoever
A corporation could either incorporate in a country that didn't ratify the treaty, or estabish in a country where the government would take money to pull out of the treaty.This was agreed upon in 1967. I'm curious as to how much of it effectively will go out of the window the moment it actually becomes commercially feasible and profitable to exploit such "celestial resources".
No. The bar for "decent movie" doesn't move just because Nemesis and Into Darkness went way below where Insurrection did. The mere existence of Battlefield Earth doesn't magically make Wag The Dog any better.I haven't seen it in decades, because I thought it was terrible. But that was before I'd seen Nemesis and Into Darkness. By that standard, Insurrection is one of the decent ones.
At that point, I'd say it would be up to the Federation (or whatever interstellar civilization is visiting) to decide: Either they would begin developing the star system for their own use, or, they would make the system a preserve, in which case, if sapient life developed, they would no longer be able to decide to convert it back for their own development. Probably, at least in the case of the Federation, they would preserve it if sapient life appeared to be on the cusp of existing - if the monkeys are already banging the rocks together, so to speak.But if you say that primitives should hold those rights, how about a star system with a species that isn't quite sapient yet, but very close (Let's say earth of 3 million years ago)? Or a planet with a flourishing ecosystem that could in time produce such a species ? (let's say Earth, 100 million years ago?) Or a star system with a planet that has primitive life ? (like Earth, 1 billion years ago). Or even a planet that could evolve life?
Where do you draw the line?
Depends on what you mean by "advanced". You probably mean it the way we generally do - physically advanced. But if they were super *psychologically* and *sociologically* advanced, then perhaps they wouldn't approach dealing with a less advanced species in the way we might expect from our own less advanced perspective.If a super advanced Alien Race arrived on our doorsteps tomorrow, it wouldn't be long before we figured out who owned not only "our" planet, but the Solar System as well.
I'll give you a clue. . . .it wouldn't be "us"
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