Have you signed up yet for the
one way trip to Mars? 78,000 people from all over the world have applied to the
Netherlands based Mars One to make the one way trip. Young and old alike have
decided that life on earth is not a big deal. Knowing they can never come back
isn’t a deterrent to these adventurous people. They want out and can hardly
wait until 2023 when the first 4 lucky winners will depart for the Red Planet. There is no maximum age for applicants, no
required technical background, nationality or language. Well, astronaut
candidates will have a few years to learn English if they don't speak it
already. This requirement should excite members of the English only movement
here in the USA.
Of course some people question
the sanity of anyone who would agree to make a one way trip to Mars. It seems a
lot more people would be willing to make the trip if it was more like going to
Disney World. You know, fly to Orlando, go on the rides, stay in the hotel and
then head back home to Little Rock.
Had these round trippers been alive
in say, the seventeenth century, it’s probably safe to say they would not have been
aboard any wooden ships bound for America. They’re probably here now only
because an ancestor got kicked out of London and was sent to the colonies. These
naysayers obviously don’t share a bit of DNA with the Puritans who came to
America. Did those brave voyagers realize they would never see their homeland
again? That this was a one way trip? Certainly! And I guarantee you not one of
them was thinking, “In America I can get me a wide screen TV and watch NASCAR
and All Star Celebrity Apprentice on Sundays.”
And you can be just as sure that
today’s scaredy cats live within a square mile of where those naughty ancestors
landed. You just know when the pioneers set out to settle the west their
great-great grandfathers thought the people getting on the wagon trains were fools.
“Why would you go to parts unknown Clem? I hear tell there’s wild Indians and
grizzly bears nine feet tall. Why, you can’t never come back here.”
A spirit of adventure and a
desire for a better life for their children was what drove the Mayflower passengers
and later, the pioneers, to say goodbye forever to what they knew and head for
the great unknown.
Now some might say, “That is the
difference. How could anyone have a better life on Mars than they could here on
earth? For starters, earth has oxygen,
not to mention Starbucks.” Maybe it’s what Mars won’t have that makes it so
appealing. No unemployment for example. Listen, it’s been rumored that the entire city of Detroit
has applied for jobs on Mars. And since a day on Mars is 40 minutes longer than
here on earth, there won’t be any excuse for not sweating to the oldies every
day. And you just know there’s at least one applicant that applied in
hopes of being selected so their partner will get the message. It’s over. For
good this time.
For the astronauts who do decide to go, I wonder how quickly they will lose
interest in everything happening on earth. For their sake, I hope it’s quick. I
mean imagine you’re from Chicago. You get to Mars in early October, just in
time to find out that the Cubs are going to the World Series. Your
brother-in-law Carl could easily have scored a couple of top notch tickets for
you. Forget it. You decided to take a one way cruise to Mars.
Our ancestors didn’t have that problem. There were no cell phones or iPads
back then. Benjamin Franklin hadn’t even discovered electricity yet. No worries
and no regrets about who won the British Open for residents of the Plymouth
Colony, that’s for sure.
If you’re interested in making the trip though, be advised that there will
be a minor fee associated with submitting your application. The amount varies
by the gross national income of the applicant's home country. For US citizens
the fee is $38. It’s a better deal than the Pilgrims had. They agreed to be
indentured servants for seven years.
2 comments:
If there's pasta, bread and wine, I'm in.
If there's pasta, bread and wine, I'm in.
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