For as long as we’ve been told about space, we’ve been sold on it. Sold the idea that there’s an infinite void out there, just waiting for our reach. Sold the vision of astronauts bouncing on the Moon, billionaires colonizing Mars, and satellites making first contact with the unknown. But what if none of it is real—not in the way we’re told?
What if space isn’t an open frontier, but a closed loop? A concept, not a reality? And more importantly, what if the entire business of space is just that—a business? What if all the movies (one of the 1st movies ever made was about going to the moon,) about space were just programming devices to give the masses the impression space was one way. Tough to prove, but tough to convince me otherwise.
While we’re watching rocket launches and CGI renderings of deep-space missions, a very real market is at play. Stocks surge and crash on the promise of cosmic dreams. Governments funnel billions into projects that never seem to deliver what was promised. And somewhere in the mix, the idea of space itself remains untouchable, unquestioned.
The Economics of Outer Space
Let’s look at the financials. Companies like SpaceX, Blue Origin, and Virgin Galactic don’t actually sell space travel. They sell speculation. SpaceX wins massive government contracts, Virgin Galactic promises commercial spaceflight that keeps getting delayed, and Blue Origin plays the long game with its billionaire-backed vision of off-world colonies.
Investors don’t need to believe in space—they just need to believe they can make money from it. The stock market moves on perception, not proof. If a company says it will send tourists to orbit, the stock jumps. If another company claims it will mine asteroids, investors throw in cash. It doesn’t matter that the promises rarely materialize, because the game is about keeping the illusion profitable.
The Problem With "Up"
But let’s go deeper: If we live inside a closed system, where exactly are these rockets going? The footage we see is often heavily edited, the physics don’t always add up, and the deeper into space they claim to go, the more CGI we seem to get. It’s always just out of reach—far enough away that the average person can’t verify it for themselves.
Even the Moon landings, the supposed pinnacle of human achievement, remain locked in a strange haze of lost data, missing tapes, and strangely inconsistent imagery. And yet, questioning space is treated as heresy. Why? Because too many people have too much to lose if the illusion falls apart.
The Myth of the Final Frontier
Space has always been a story. Ancient civilizations looked to the skies for gods, then later for meaning. Today, we look up and see billionaires playing explorers, claiming they will take us to the stars while the world below crumbles. The idea of space is the ultimate escape fantasy—a way to believe there’s something more out there, something bigger than ourselves.
But what if there isn’t? What if this is it?
Would people even want to know?
That’s the real question. Not whether space is real or fake, but whether we can handle the possibility that we’ve been lied to about something this big. And whether we’re ready to accept that the biggest frontier isn’t in the stars—it’s right here, in the space between truth and belief.
0 comments:
Post a Comment