It would bring nothing of the sort. It would bring life and death in the void. Nobody wants that when there's a perfect planet right here.
Really, Deckerd?
If you had said that economics would prevent long term space travel by preventing the building of interstellar spaceships, your argument would have had some value.
But you said nobody is interested/would volunteer for such an expedition. You have already been proven wrong.
Both in this thread and by humanity's history.
Here we go again. Nowhere in humanity's history have they travelled further than the Earth, with the exception of a spectacular but brief flirtation with the Moon. I don't think our inner planets and maybe some of the outer moons will not be explored eventually but nobody's going to want to stay there for very long when the Earth is in sight. The amount of time it would take an interstellar craft to get from one star to the next would be hundreds of years. You might get some diehard nuts wanting to try it but, as I've said before, they won't survive the trip, which means they have to breed several generations to make it work and the chances of them breeding people who will never be on any planet in their lifetime and NOT be a bit cheesed off is fantasy.