Friday 10 January 2014

The Mars One Project (Murder on a new World)


News report today; a local news report on a very slow local news day. Amid endless film of flooding, and anticipation of a football match I care not a jot about, was a feature about a local fellow who has made it to the last 1000 potential candidates for the Mars One mission.


Mars One is no ordinary space mission. Unlike the Apollo moonshots, where JFK stressed the importance of the “Bringing them safely back to earth” bit, Mars One isn't selling return tickets.

It is a one way mission.

Now, they aren't planning to crash the astronauts onto the surface of Mars, although I have to say that my first thoughts were of a modern day Golgafrinchan B Ark designed to remove Earth's cretins from the gene pool in an imaginative fashion. They are going to give them everything they need, carrying out initial construction of a habitation using unmanned robot vehicles, before launching a human crew to their new world, with no probability of return.

Two years later, after the initial crew has successfully got the colony up and running, and expanded it sufficiently, a supply rocket arrives with more colonists aboard – think “Shipwrecked – the Rivals” from Channel 4 – and so on.

Eventually a fully fledged colony is up and running, that might perhaps get on with serious work like rare mineral mining, or perhaps terraforming.

The “Shipwrecked” analogy is an apposite one, because Mars One doesn't have any large scale financial backing. The enormous costs for the mission will be met through TV Advertising, because as much as a space mission, Mars One is a reality TV show. The 8 month voyage, the colonisation, the forever of it, is a celestial Trueman Show. And who should be surprised, for Mars One is a Dutch project, the nation that brought you “Big Brother”.

It may sound crazy on the surface of it, but there is an impression out there that sooner or later, the only way we are going to make these great leap forwards into interplanetary or interplanetary space is through one way missions. But surely by highly trained, highly psychologically assessed professional astronauts initially, not tabloid friendly prone to breakdown backstoried cuties – and financial pressures will mean it will end up that way. No-one is going to watch 24 or so REAAALLLLLY BOOORING people sit on their backsides in a space capsule for 8 months, before eternity in a series of what will essentially be Martian space sheds, each one sod all bigger than the Diary Room. Nope, there's got to be hotties, and there's got to be stories.

To be honest, they may not have to try very hard. The pressures on the crew will be immense – the boredom, the lack of privacy, the fact that there will never be a way home or no way to see families again. There will be suicides. There will be a guy who's habit of drumming his fingers on his chair, or farting, or constantly clearing his throat, will cause knuckles to whiten. There will be arguments...fights...

There will be sexual tension too. Imagine being the guy on the mission that no girl – or guy – fancies. The guy – or girl – you hate is the one who is getting the action. Imagine them in bed, having sex in the most filthy, sweaty way, low gravity orgasms, blood swelling engorged organs...and nowhere to go to escape it.

It would be too much to bear.

The certainty is that the first manned reality mission to Mars, would result in the first murder on another planet. Someone would get it, a space shower head cracked over a skull, strangulation with coolant cable. A geological axe through the spinal column, suffocation in a space helmet.

Someone will get it. And if no-one gets it, no-one will watch any more. And when that happens, no more revenue. And all the astronauts die anyway, as they run out of money for supply rockets and communication systems, and Mars' first colony becomes a futuristically materialled tomb.

Copyright Bloody Mulberry 10.01.14

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