Tech Won't Save Us - Keep Capitalism Out of Space w/ Chanda Prescod-Weinstein

Episode Date: August 11, 2022

Paris Marx is joined by Chanda Prescod-Weinstein to discuss the science behind the new space telescope, the problems with the billionaire space race, and why we need to challenge the capitalist and co...lonial forces driving the the effort to commercialize space.Chanda Prescod-Weinstein is the author of The Disordered Cosmos: A Journey into Dark Matter, Spacetime, and Dreams Deferred. She’s also an assistant professor of Physics and core faculty member in Women’s and Gender Studies at the University of New Hampshire, and a  columnist at New Scientist and Physics World. Follow Chanda on Twitter at @IBJIYONGI.Tech Won’t Save Us offers a critical perspective on tech, its worldview, and wider society with the goal of inspiring people to demand better tech and a better world. Follow the podcast (@techwontsaveus) and host Paris Marx (@parismarx) on Twitter, and support the show on Patreon.The podcast is produced by Eric Wickham and part of the Harbinger Media Network.Also mentioned in this episode:Chanda wrote “Becoming Martian” for the Baffler earlier this year, and called last year for the James Webb Space Telescope to be renamed.Paris wrote about the billionaire space race for Tribune Magazine.Of the five initial images released from the JW Space Telescope, Chanda described the First Deep Field and noted the accessibility of its alt-text on Twitter.As part of Joe Biden’s trip to Saudi Arabia in July 2022, the country signed onto the Artemis Accords. The Accords have faced criticism as a US-centric and commercial set of bilateral agreements that seek to set new norms beyond international law.Saturday Night Live made fun of the billionaire space race.In July, the head of Roscosmos indicated it planned to pull out of the International Space Station, though an official notice has not been made. The segment Paris mentioned on AlJazeera can be found here.Starlink is undemocratically altering how we see the night sky, which some Indigenous groups are calling “astro-colonialism.”Gil Scott-Heron released “Whitey on the Moon” in 1970.Chanda called attention to the Just Space Alliance.Support the show

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Starting point is 00:00:00 capitalism requires endless expansion to live. So they need to feed the beast, and they're now planning to feed the moon to the beast. They're now planning to feed Mars to the beast. They're now planning to feed whatever asteroid they can get their hands on to the beast. Hello and welcome to Tech Won't Save Us. I'm your host, Paris Marks, and this week I have a fantastic conversation with Chanda Prescott-Weinstein. Chanda is the author of The Disordered Cosmos, A Journey into Dark Matter, Space Time, and Dreams Deferred. She's also an assistant professor of physics and core faculty member in women's and gender studies at the University of New Hampshire. She's also a columnist
Starting point is 00:00:52 at New Scientist and Physics World. As Elon Musk and these other billionaires, and not to mention governments like in the United States and other parts of the world, keep pushing this vision of a privatized and commercialized future for space,
Starting point is 00:01:04 we need to push back against those visions and think critically about what they mean for us as the people of the world, but also what it means for our future relationship to space. We recently saw the release of new images from the James Webb Space Telescope, or as Chanda calls it, the Just Wonderful Space Telescope, recognizing that James Webb was involved in the firing and discrimination against queer employees of NASA in the 1950s. And someone like that should not be honored by having a space telescope named after them. There seemed to be a renewed excitement in a different kind of space, not so much the colonization of Mars, but what we can learn from, admittedly, these beautiful images that the space telescope provided to us. I thought that was a good opportunity to have a deeper, critical conversation with Chanda about these developments, about how we think about the space program, about our
Starting point is 00:01:56 relationship to space, and where these companies and governments are driving us, and also why we need to push back against that, and to think about a different relationship to space and how we can learn from other ways of understanding that relationship to have a more fruitful and respectful way of looking out to the stars. In this conversation, we start off with more of a scientific discussion, you know, what we can learn from the space telescope and from these images that it's giving us. But then we very quickly move into a wider conversation around what the drives to colonize space and to push capitalism in the space are actually doing to the way that we think about outer space, and how that's not really serving our interests, but the interests of, you know, a very narrow number of corporations and wealthy
Starting point is 00:02:42 people who will ultimately benefit from this drive at our expense. I think this is such an essential conversation, and I hope that you enjoy it and consider picking up Chanda's book. There are also some links in the show notes to things that we mentioned during this conversation that might be of interest to you. If you like this episode, make sure to leave a five-star review on Apple Podcasts and Spotify, and make sure to share it on social media or with any friends or colleagues who you think would learn from it. You can also support the work that goes into making the show and having these critical conversations by joining supporters like Josh from Edinburgh and Will from Seattle by going to patreon.com slash techwontsaveus
Starting point is 00:03:18 and becoming a supporter. Thanks for listening and enjoy this week's conversation. Chanda, welcome to Tech Won't Save Us. Thanks for having me. I'm really looking forward to chatting with you. I really enjoyed your book. I finally got the opportunity to read it recently. And I think that there's such a great opportunity to have a really critical conversation about space and space science and how we understand these sorts of things. I would say that I find space pretty fascinating, but I certainly make no claims to understand space science to any significant degree. And so to start us off, I was hoping you could tell us a bit about the work that you do and what your research focuses on. Yeah, so I am a scholar in
Starting point is 00:03:55 two different areas of research. So my primary area of research is particle cosmology. So broadly speaking, I think about the origin and evolution of space-time and everything inside of it. That's basically what a cosmologist does. And I focus on this from a particle perspective. And I've been particularly interested in the question of what is the dark matter? So we know that most of the normally gravitating matter in the universe, like 80 to 85% of the normally gravitating matter is some kind of invisible matter that we can't really see. And for historical reasons, this is called dark matter. So we know it's out there, but we don't really know what it is. We can't really write down an equation that describes it,
Starting point is 00:04:36 which I'm a theoretical physicist. And so my primary interest is in how do we write down an equation that has the details in it? I also do research in Black feminist science technology and society studies, and I've been particularly interested in how race and gender shape how physics happens, and more broadly, how science is done. But I've been particularly interested in physics, partly because in feminist philosophy of science, physics is often held up as an exception to the critical discussions that happen about the life sciences. And so part of my task has been saying, no, actually, that stuff applies to the physical sciences and particularly to physics too. I love that. And I really appreciated how that comes out in your book as well, right? How it's
Starting point is 00:05:20 not just this exploration of the science of space, but you really give us that kind of feminist angle, that angle on the social aspects of this research of what's going on in this space. So I really appreciated that. I think that my relationship with the book, I don't know, the thing I've been telling people over and over again is that a book tells you about itself as you're working on it. And so I actually went into the disordered cosmos thinking it was just going to be an adaptation of essays I'd been writing online that were critical of the physics community and how physics happened. And then when I actually sat down to write it, and even as I was working on the proposal, I was like, oh, I need to say something about the kind of science that I do. And then it became a more important chunk of the book. And then I think in the end, maybe this is just like me
Starting point is 00:06:05 summarizing in hindsight, right? I don't know how much of this was planned, but I think that the end of the book where I make critical comments about how we do science and how we should be doing science is maybe more compelling because you've experienced my joy in the ideas at the beginning. And so you're on that journey with me and you're like, yeah, I understand why we should salvage this. Yeah, I can certainly feel that. And you know, you can certainly understand the trajectory of the book in that way and see how, you know, it's really effective. I think what really spurred the desire to have this conversation for me, what brought me back to this topic was seeing the newly released photos from the James Webb Space Telescope recently and how they were really visually stunning. But what I learned through that,
Starting point is 00:06:51 what I was reading was that they also hold really important discoveries or developments to inform the understanding of the universe, I guess. What do these images tell us about the universe and what might this telescope help us to learn in the future? Yeah, so the Just Wonderful Space Telescope, as I'm calling it, because he who shall not be named. And we're trying, we're hoping that his name will be removed from the telescope at some point and that it will be renamed the Harriet Tubman Space Telescope. That's my wish. But in the meantime, just wonderful space telescope fits the acronym, right? JWST. So we have so far seen five images from the telescope. And maybe I'll just say a little bit about my favorite one. So my favorite one is known as
Starting point is 00:07:38 a deep field. So it was, I think, a 12 and a half hour exposure. And it was a very, very tiny fraction of space-time, but it was a very deep look at space-time and relatively speaking, like a broad enough cross-section that there are many galaxies in the image. So for people who are trying to figure out which one's the deep field, that's the one that unfortunately Joe Biden got the opportunity to release to the public. So that was the Monday night one, not the Tuesday morning release. Um, we can talk about why I think that was unfortunate, uh, and, and, and maybe fortunate on an, on another side, it's always good when the administration feels like invested in what NASA is doing, because then like NASA is probably going
Starting point is 00:08:22 to get better support. But I think as far as like explaining things to the public, that was kind of a terrible release. Anyway, I haven't really said anything about the image. My sociology brain is kind of taking over. What I loved about that image was that almost all of the galaxies in the image were distorted. So they were banana fied. They were stretched out. They were at angles that were clearly not what the actual shape of a galaxy is. In several cases, there were multiple copies of the same galaxy in the image. And so all of this was like a great example of a phenomenon that we call gravitational lensing. And so this is basically when there's so much matter in a particular region of space-time that the space-time curves in really extreme ways and
Starting point is 00:09:05 acts as a funhouse mirror. So light can't travel in straight lines anymore. It travels on curved lines. And so it's coming to our telescope along these not straight paths. And that gives us a distorted image of what's out there. For the deep field, those distortions are almost certainly caused by dark matter that we can't see. And it was just, I don't know, it was beautiful. In particular, there's one galaxy. So if you go and look at the image, which everybody has to know, go look. I'll put a link to the image in the show notes if you don't know which one to go look at. Good. In the top right corner, there's one galaxy that's kind of orange and like wiggly. It's been called in a recent paper that was written by a group, including my mentor Priya
Starting point is 00:09:52 Natarajan, who is just an incredible dark matter expert. They call it the Beret Galaxy. I'm in love with that galaxy. Okay, I've been going out for a while stop but i'm in love with the beret galaxy no that's completely okay you know it's great to hear you describe it and one of the things i was wondering was you know if it would help if what is coming from this telescope would help your research in dark matter and help to advance that as well yeah so i think you know gravitational lensing is and this is something I encourage people to just spend time looking at images of gravitational lensing because they're literally just mind blowing. And also, you know, for people who are not visual for whatever reason to go look at the
Starting point is 00:10:36 NASA alt text on that image on their tweet was just like a phenomenal example of translating that into the written word that probably should get taught in writing classes. This is how you do description, right? But gravitational lensing is so powerful because we are literally looking at the imprint of what we can't see on space-time, and that gives us the ability to translate that imprint into information. So, you know, it's a little bit like looking at dinosaur footprints. Like there was that recent story that I read in the newspaper about someone eating in a restaurant in China and looking down and spotting like a dinosaur footprint in the ground. I'm pretty sure this is definitely not my area of expertise. So don't quote
Starting point is 00:11:23 me on that, but that's what I read, or I have chosen to imagine is what happened, right? But looking at that footprint tells you something not just about the foot of the dinosaur, but it tells you something about what the relative scale of the dinosaur must have been because of how the feet scale and the mechanics and all of that. And so we can similarly do the same thing with gravitational lensing. And so I think for that particular image, this gives us insight into how dark matter is distributed, where dark matter is. Setting dark matter aside, there's another part of that image, and now I can't remember where it is. You can tell I wasn't spending as much time in other corners where the Bure galaxy wasn't. There is a bright red dot, I'm pretty sure in
Starting point is 00:12:10 the bottom left-hand corner of the image. There's a bright red dot that we all looked at that on the first day and everybody was like, is that a galaxy? If that's a galaxy, that's incredibly exciting. So there is a new paper out that claims that it's likely a galaxy. And why is this significant? So it looks like a red dot. So to someone who doesn't know these images, you might just think, oh, it's a very red star. The fact that it's so red in a telescope that's in the infrared, so we're already like well in the red regime, means that it's very old. It's very far back in time, really far back in time. It's red shifted. So the further back we go, the redder they get. And this one galaxy, if there are more
Starting point is 00:12:54 like it, it suggests that maybe we don't understand galaxy formation because the galaxy is maybe older than galaxies of that scale should be. So it suggests that big galaxies formed earlier than we thought, which is just like a totally wild proposition. So that's really exciting and raises all kinds of questions about like, what did we miss in not just the dark matter physics, but also the standard model physics? And I will say actually that my friends and I have already been talking about what this could imply, what we need to understand, and which experts we need to ask questions of to fill in our blanks. I promise we're going to get to the more sociological questions in a second. But I have one more question on this topic, I guess, because it was fascinating and just
Starting point is 00:13:41 hard for me to really comprehend how this is light from billions of light years away, which means that it's like that far back in history that we're kind of peering in having these images in the particular image that you talk about, which is, you know, if you think about the how long our species has been around, how long our planet has been around, It's just hard to like even conceive of those kind of timescales. Is the goal with this telescope about finding planets to inhabit or things like that as we hear more and more about colonization? Or is it more about learning about the development of the universe and then what that teaches us about how everything came to be? Okay, so there's a scientific question here, but there's also a sociological question in there, right? Fair, yeah. You know, this is an enormous project that has had involvement from around the world. So it's pitched as a NASA mission. NASA led the mission. It had major contributions from the European Space Agency. It was actually launched from, I'm going to put this in air quotes, a European site because it was launched from French Guiana in Latin America.
Starting point is 00:14:50 And French Guiana is a French overseas department. It's not technically a colony. It's some kind of in between colonial structure though, post-colonial structure. And there were also Canadians, we'll never let you forget the contributions that Canadians have made. The entire time I was in graduate school in Canada, I just heard about the Canada arm so many times. Like on this space shuttle, everybody was like, that was us. I was like, okay. Yeah, I'm Canadian. We hear about it all the time as well. Like, that's our contribution. It's up there. Take a look. So that is to say that not only are there many nations involved, but there are obviously a lot of scientists involved. And so
Starting point is 00:15:30 all of those scientists are motivated in different ways and by different imperatives. The Just Wonderful Space Telescope is going to be fantastic for looking at exoplanets. And that's certainly one of the goals. And the question of why we spend all this money on exoplanets. So there's like the pure, like, we're just interested. We want to know what's out there. We're curious. And certainly that's what's driving some of the scientists who are doing the work. As for what's driving the people who give us the money to do the work, I think that part of it is exoplanets enlivens the public's imagination. It keeps the public focused on space in a particular way, partly because it gets the public thinking about, well, what if we could travel to another planet? Even though scientifically, that's probably a deeply unreasonable proposition because we just can't travel that far. Even the closest planet would take a bajillion years to get to. Not a scientific statement, but it would take a really long time and we don't have the technological
Starting point is 00:16:31 capacity. But I do think as far as public relations goes, exoplanets are very successful. It's also the case that exoplanets as a subfield of astronomy and planetary science has, maybe because it's a younger area of research, is actually more diverse. There are more students of color in the field. There are more people of color. There are more white women, non-binary people across racial identities who are rising through the ranks in that area. So I do think that there is also that element of it, which is people from traditionally excluded and marginalized groups are seeing people like them doing that work. And that makes exoplanets interesting, right? So there's that socio-technical component as well. I think an instrument like this is incredible because there
Starting point is 00:17:23 are so many things it can do. It's meaningful for me as a cosmologist. It's meaningful for the exoplanets people. It's clearly meaningful for the galaxies people. I always feel like I have a little bit of tension with the galaxies people because they're like, yeah, galaxies are all just like standard model particles. And I'm like, you can't get a galaxy without dark matter. Like, what are you talking about? This is another point of sociological tension and political tension that we could get into. But I think what drives the instrument is it takes all of these different passions and political concerns and so-called
Starting point is 00:18:01 political imperatives, again, air quotes around imperatives. One thing that I learned recently that I didn't know was that JWST is designed to be serviceable. So as far as I know, there's no plan to service it, but it does need fuel in order to maintain its orientation. And it is supposed to run out of fuel. So I can also see that, you know, for the people who are thinking about being more spacefaring, mining, those kinds of questions of how do we make serviceable instruments, it was also a technological experiment to see if we could make an instrument like this. And I think that that does have implications for the more capitalist visions of our future. I appreciate you outlining that, and we'll certainly come back to those capitalist visions later in this conversation. I think this question really kind of helped us bridge the scientific and sociological parts of our
Starting point is 00:18:56 conversation. One of the things that stood out to me as I was watching NASA's live stream of the release of these images was that a few moments they talked about the telescope as being our telescope, you know, something that is owned by the people of Earth and that is serving us. And, you know, I couldn't help but think of how that contrasted with recent splashy displays from companies like Blue Origin and SpaceX and how they are very much not for the public, but for billionaire directors. I wonder what you make of that notion that the telescope is quote-unquote ours. I like the thought behind it. I love the idea of the Harriet Tubman Space Telescope by the people and for the people. And one of the things that I write about in The Disordered Cosmos, and I think is part of my vision as a public intellectual, is that I actually do think that there is something there. Our relationship to the night sky, our relationship to wanting to understand how things work, both here on earth and beyond the atmosphere, I think is spiritual.
Starting point is 00:19:58 And I don't mean that necessarily like in a supernatural way. I just mean that like that's part of how our species is. And if you think about it from an anthropological perspective, right? Like we evolved under the night sky. For most of our species existence, it's us in the night sky, right? We didn't have electricity and lots of nighttime lighting and all of this. So I think that part is real. And as with many real things, propagandists are very good at taking advantage of that. And I think part of capitalism's effectiveness is how it takes the things that we care about and then tries to sell them back to us and also takes things that we care about and mangles them and tries to sell the product back to us as if it is superior, right? And so I think just to think of the example with what's going on with the SpaceX constellations, right? They so I think just to think of the example with what's going on with the
Starting point is 00:20:45 SpaceX constellations, right? They're literally planning to have tens of thousands of satellites in the sky. They're visible to people with just small backyard telescopes. They're totally messing with our ground-based facilities. Those of us who are working on the VeriC Reuben Observatory, which is under construction in the Atacama Desert in Chile, we've now completely had to reconfigure our pipeline for data analysis because all of those things, the satellites are in the images now. That's a completely undemocratic decision that has been made on behalf of the entire planet, humans and non-humans, right? And we're still learning about how animals who
Starting point is 00:21:27 are not human use the night sky for navigation and use that level of lighting for navigation. So we don't know what that impact is going to be on other species. We don't really know what that impact on us is going to be, frankly. It's not a question that got asked. And there was really like no regulatory barrier that was like, you can't do this. So coming back to the repackaging question, it was repackaged to us as this will give people internet in rural places. And so it has to be done. And anybody who asks questions about this is an asshole. Sorry, I don't know if I'm allowed to cuss. You are, yeah. And anybody who asks about this is an urban elite asshole who doesn't care about people in rural communities.
Starting point is 00:22:12 But you can't convince me that SpaceX went to people in rural communities and like, yeah, so, you know, screw the fact that we have difficult time getting like doctors and adequate medical care and all of the services that we need for dealing with all of the basic needs our community has. Really, our primary thing was that we wanted satellite dishes and we wanted satellite internet. It's true that having access to the internet is very important. I don't want to diminish that. But I don't think that that question was really asked of rural communities. And so the way that they are held up to us as like, you hate the real America, right? Like that's the whole story. And so I think that the telescope becomes part of that conversation because we depend on
Starting point is 00:23:06 SpaceX to launch things for us now. I was just on urban radio on Sirius XM yesterday talking about the discovery of a multi-planet system. And the satellite that made that discovery was launched on a SpaceX Falcon, Falcon 9. I think it's concerning, right? Especially when you see the narratives that they're using, like around connecting rural communities and how that then serves as a justification for what they're actually doing. You know, it's not actually there, what's primarily motivating them. And if you really cared about connecting rural communities, we could have funded that
Starting point is 00:23:41 publicly ages ago and actually connected up those communities so that they had access to the internet. I want to pick back up on the NASA question for a second, and I think we'll come back to the night sky in just a minute. Because I agree with you that I think that there is something nice in the idea that this is like an infrastructure or a piece of equipment that is serving us, right? That is serving the public, this telescope. That's something that we would hope and that we would imagine. But then at the same time, you can't disconnect that from the history of nationalism that has kind of pushed the American space program and, you know, the European and Canadian space programs that are associated with it. And so I guess, you know, I wonder how that shapes the way that these agencies
Starting point is 00:24:25 see space and what the goals that they hope to achieve from it are. Yeah, I mean, I think that the goals haven't changed very much in like 60 years, unfortunately. I think that a lot of what goes on in space now, in terms of how it's how we motivate, or I shouldn't say we, but how legislators are motivated, the people who control the money, even the people who appoint, like who is the head of NASA, continue to be motivated by both nationalism and capitalism. I think what we're seeing now, actually, is an emergence of a different capitalist push than what we saw in the 60s. And maybe that's where things are changing. And I say different, right? Because often,
Starting point is 00:25:09 you know, what happened under the Apollo program, the push to get to the moon, the push to beat the Soviets to the moon. And, you know, I can only guess at what it looked like from the Soviet side, but I know the American side better. But that push is articulated as a nationalist push. But as I was about to say, the underpinning of that was a competition between capitalism and communism. I put communism in air quotes, right? Because at that point, we're in Stalinism, and I don't think that's fair to the Marxists, right? But that's how it was publicly articulated. And so even as it was this nationalist, like America first, America's best, the value there was America's first and America's best because America is
Starting point is 00:25:51 capitalist. So I think we need to draw that connection that that nationalism and the capitalism aren't separable. I think what's changing now, and this is a transformation that I think we really started to strongly see under George W. Bush's administration. But also something that continued apace under Barack Obama was the push for NASA to become a facilitator for commercial activity in space and for commercial enterprise in space. And so we end up in this kind of like endless frontier scenario where we're now doing manifest destiny. We've quote run out of United States and I use we here real loosely because that's not why my family was brought here. But I think that it is a form of manifest destiny that now manifest destiny is going into space. And I think that one of the things that I would like people to really pay attention to is under,
Starting point is 00:26:48 I mentioned Barack Obama, this continues under Donald Trump. And the Trump administration actually put forward a new regulatory vision for space that for the first time ignored international traditions of how we do space, how we do space diplomacy. And instead of rejecting that approach, the Biden administration has picked it up. And my understanding is, is that actually part of what Joe Biden was doing in Saudi Arabia was getting Saudi Arabia's signature on that document. No way. Yeah. And this was and this is something that makes statements about mining on the moon and beyond. And so we are entering this new era where the U.S. government is, again, acting as facilitator for capital commercial interests. We've gone from the former Cold War arguments, but I think we're also entering a new one. Whatever your opinions, and I think mine are fairly nuanced and critical, might be about what the Chinese government establishment is doing, or the US, any government establishment, let's just say, I do think that there is now this push now to see us
Starting point is 00:27:54 as in competition with China. And we see that with the CHIPS Act, and even now the discussion this week about sanctions on superconducting components and all of that. I think that this is something that is happening on the ground, but it's happening in space simultaneously. And I'm not sure that the press is articulating that connection for the public in the ways that they should. Yeah, I think it's a really important point, right? Because as you're saying, like this initial space program was driven by this competition between Soviet Union and the United States by capitalism and communism. And it seems like, you know, for a while, kind of that interest in sending humans to space in particular, but I think the interest in NASA in general kind of waned for a while. And then you see it pick back
Starting point is 00:28:39 up right as China is rising to become this competitor to the United States, is funding its own space program. And then there's an opportunity then for the space capitalists like Elon Musk, but, you know, a much bigger industry beyond that, to take advantage of it for their own benefit and for the commercialization, the privatization of space. Virgin Galactic hasn't come up, but I think that Richard Branson is worth mentioning, partly because he was like, he beat Jeff Bezos, which like the fact that we were talking about this like three-way billionaire space race. I actually, my favorite take on this was the Saturday Night Live skit that they did afterwards. I thought that that was maybe the most brilliant
Starting point is 00:29:21 capture of like what a disaster the whole thing is. I find Richard Branson to be really interesting because he really positions himself as the good guy. And I should say once that my mom had a really bad experience on a Virgin Atlantic flight and was like going up to the Virgin offices and happened to be in the elevator with him. And she was telling someone about the bad experience she had. And he was like deeply concerned and like took care of it and was like really nice. And she was telling someone about the bad experience she had. And he was deeply concerned and took care of it and was really nice. And so I think there's also this element of it being these cult of personalities. Like, oh, you can't say anything critical about Richard Branson because he's actually a nice guy. He seems on a one-on-one level, he was real nice
Starting point is 00:30:00 to my mom, right? He's still a billionaire and billionaires shouldn't exist economically. And I don't mean that he shouldn't be alive. I just mean that it shouldn't be possible financially for anyone to be a billionaire. So he's an interesting character because he's positioned himself as the good guy. And when he went up to the edge of the atmosphere, I'm not sure that I agree that he went to space. But let's be generous and say when he went to space, when he came back down, he talked about this as the beginning of opening space for all of us. And he tried to pitch this to us in democratic terms. But like real talk,
Starting point is 00:30:34 we're not all going to space. There will never be the capacity for that. We are, I hate saying stuck with Earth because Earth is fucking awesome. If we could just like be cool to it, literally cool to it. But like, so I don't think we need to escape, but I do think that's again, like an example of this, like repackaging that's happening to encourage us to be like, well, that guy is awesome. Let's just follow our benevolent billionaire dictator. Or you choose your other like apartheid Clyde. He's not at all benevolent, but people Or you choose your other apartheid Clyde who's not at all benevolent, but people just think he's smart and they like to follow him. Probably going to get hate mail for saying that, but there it is. Not on this show. I think you'll be fine on this show.
Starting point is 00:31:18 Very anti-Elon Musk podcast. I think it's so fascinating to hear you describe it that way. And one of the things that comes to mind as you describe this kind of escalation of the privatization of space, is how that even infects like the national space programs, right? Like you can see how NASA is driving it right now and really helping to push that. But even recently, there was the story of Russia wanting to pull out of the space station. And, you know, I watched a program, a discussion about that on Al Jazeera. And one of the things that I guess the expert from Russia was saying was that this collaboration has become less lucrative for Roscosmos because they're no longer sending the astronauts into space to the same degree that they used to. They're no longer sending up the satellites and all these other rockets that they used to send up to bring all these payloads into space. And now, instead, that's being taken over by a lot of private US companies. And so the kind of collaboration that used to exist isn't as lucrative financially. So there's less of a, I guess, political
Starting point is 00:32:20 encouragement to continue that sort of thing. And so when I heard that, I just thought, okay, so we're seeing this general privatization, but we can also see how that then influences what the space programs themselves, the national space programs are doing and how they're reacting. I have to say I'm really sad about Russia's plan to pull out of the International Space Station. And I think, you know, I say that from a variety of like emotional levels, one of which is my inner idealist, that I do think that there continues to be something powerful about that international collaboration happening in public, in outer space, and that that being something that at least that ties us together. And actually, I've been watching the drama on Apple TV for all
Starting point is 00:33:07 mankind, and I think it does a really good job of highlighting why those moments and activities that seem really symbolic are politically and materially meaningful. I really do think that there is that element of it. As someone who works with a telescope that is actually physically on the International Space Station, it's really worrisome. So I work with the Neutron Star Interior Composition Explorer. I'm known as NICER. It's a little x-ray telescope that's on the International Space Station. And so, you know, this is clearly not the most important thing, but it does actually have implications for this so-called pure science that we are doing. That if the International Space Station, if at some point it's abandoned, or if it's transformed into, say, a more defense-oriented mission, or whatever the things that the U.S. establishment may choose to decide to do with it if they're the only ones there, right? The idea of international
Starting point is 00:34:12 collaboration and cooperation means that it bounds the U.S. establishment a little bit in what it can aspire to do with the ISS. And that changes if it's no longer an international space station and it's now the U.S. space station, particularly with this growing emphasis on into space, I guess. I want to come back to these questions on capitalism and colonization in space in just a second. But, you know, as we've been talking about this, the national space programs and the role of the state in funding these things, one thing that comes to mind and that stood out to me in your book was this discussion of funding for science and the importance of that, how those things get chosen. And this is also, you know, an important conversation for people who are thinking
Starting point is 00:35:10 from a tech angle as well, because, you know, many of the technologies we rely on are the result of public funding as much as, you know, Silicon Valley would like us to forget that important detail. In your book, you talked about how funding for particle physics has declined in favor of what you called quantum information, or what is called quantum information. How should we think about the importance of funding for basic science, and what guides the decisions over how it gets distributed? So I think it's worth starting by saying that basic science is a political category that's constructed. It's socially constructed. You can tell from my facial expression, I don't like admitting that because things would just be
Starting point is 00:35:49 a lot simpler. If there were things that I could just declare, that's basic science. It's objectively basic science. But I think we're allowed to have a broad variety of views of what counts, right? And the conclusion, if you look at historians of science, like I'm thinking of Joseph Martin's beautiful book about the history of solid state physics, Solid State Insurrection. And in it, he says that physics is what physicists say it is, right? And the context for that is that for a long time, solid state physics, which is now better known as like condensed matter physics, and it crosses over with like material science, but you know, think about superconductors and all the things you're hearing about in the news that are very representative of what actually dominates research and physics at this point.
Starting point is 00:36:32 There was a point at which people were like, no, that's applied physics. And you guys can't sit with us, like literally, but they wouldn't let them join the American Physical Society, which is our primary professional organization. And there was a whole fight about that, right? So our understanding of what counts as basic science and what counts as central to what it means to be a physicist changes with time as the economic value of certain areas transforms, as different people end up in positions of power to influence with their discursive perspective on things. So I do think that there is that element of it. The question that I put forward in The Disordered Cosmos, and maybe try and propose some frameworks for thinking about what our answer to it might be,
Starting point is 00:37:18 I don't know if I have an answer, but I want to think about what are the ethical guidelines that we should measure against when we say, is this a good idea? Is to ask the question of what motivates us. I think it's fantastic to be excited about exoplanets, but I think it matters why you're excited about exoplanets. And I think it matters why you're funding exoplanets. So exoplanets is an easy one to pick on because we've been talking about it a lot, but let me talk about my own field, particle physics. Particle physics, its history begins really in the Manhattan Project. There's, of course, scientific story that goes behind that, just the basic nuclear physics, but particle physics basically broke off from nuclear physics after the Manhattan Project.
Starting point is 00:38:03 And the reason that that was even possible really had a lot to do with the fact that after the Manhattan Project, the US government was like, yeah, we'll just give you guys money because you seem to be really useful to us when we give you money. And they continued to fund scientists who had worked on the Manhattan Project. The Department of Energy just gave legacy money to people. And actually an interesting long-term outcome of this is that a lot of the research groups that had been getting that legacy money had been kind of continuously getting it. It had been inherited through the institution by new crops of faculty until the Obama administration came along and they democratized the funding a little bit. And so groups that had been used to just like not even asking for the money
Starting point is 00:38:46 suddenly had to start applying. And this was like a big blow to the legacy groups. And it's also why research groups like mine at the University of New Hampshire, we just got Department of Energy money for the first time like a few years ago. It opened the door. So I just want to say like that lineage is very, very clear. And so the question we have to ask ourselves is like, is being useful for building weapons of mass destruction, which like when we talk about
Starting point is 00:39:10 WMDs, the United States is like the captain of industry there, right? But is that really how we want to make the case for ourselves? Like, hey, we might help you build another weapon of mass destruction. So just keep funding us. And I know that that's not really what we say anymore. Usually what we say is particle physicists gave you guys the World Wide Web, but there's a backstory there of like why we were getting the money in the first place. So I think the question has to be, how do we make the case for why science matters and why science should matter to like people in the communities that usually we scientists have traditionally ignored. Why should rural America care about particle physics when they have all sorts of concerns
Starting point is 00:39:52 about factories closing and lack of job opportunities and corporate farming and families losing their farms and all of those questions, the pressures to use certain seeds that are proprietary that you can't, you have to buy new every year. Why should they care about what we're doing in particle physics? It is on us to make that case for the spiritual significance and the cultural significance. And there we are on the same page with the arts. We matter the way that novels matter. People don't like that because the arts are severely underfunded, which like, yes, correct. We should be in that struggle with the arts. I love that. And, you know, I think it also helps me kind of go back to something that we were
Starting point is 00:40:37 talking about earlier. And this is the night sky and our relationship to that and the relationships that we hold to, I don't know, these things that we almost take for granted in a way, right? And how over time, experiences like the night sky have already been kind of slowly rolled back, you know, with the light pollution that we experience and how that makes it so much more difficult to have this kind of experience with it. There's this experience with the night sky. This is something that the human species has this relationship to. This is something that particular cultures still have a very strong relationship to that maybe some of people should be able to decide what is going to happen to the night sky, what you can actually do, what you can send up into space. And we have very
Starting point is 00:41:32 little recourse against that. And then not only is it just that one decision that causes these things to happen, but now, you know, a company like Amazon is trying to follow suit and put their own satellites up to add even more. And there were these French and British companies that just merged who were trying to do something similar. So it's not just having SpaceX kind of pollute the night sky in that way with all of these satellites that you've mentioned are causing these problems. But then you have other companies that follow suit because this is a negative externality. It's something that they don't think about. There's no regulations or costs to not considering it. And so I guess that's a larger way of me of asking, what are the risks of extending these notions of capitalism and even colonialism into space,
Starting point is 00:42:16 especially as this supposed billionaire space race and the privatization of space are gaining momentum? I mean, really fuck colonialism, right? I have to open with that. The fact that everybody is talking about equity, diversity, and inclusion, these are like our hot buzzwords right now, but in very clear-cut ways, people are so the opposite of done with colonialism, but actually they're trying to extend it and color it in. And so actually to give a concrete example of this, I have found myself multiple times recently looking at the Artemis website on NASA's website. So Artemis is going to be the next mission to go back to the moon and our new commercialization slash Cold War drama that is going to be a lot less fun than for all mankind
Starting point is 00:43:03 because it's real. I do feel I should say I do feel like very nervous sometimes watching that show and like they're out in space when they do some of these sequences where like they're jumping between the spaceships and stuff like my heart is in my chest, even though I know it's just like a TV show. 1G is your friend. People are all like people ask me if I want to go to space and I'm like, no, I'm good. I I'm not at a point in my life where I have to wear a diaper yet, so I'm good. That alone, they haven't figured out poop and pee in space, so I'm good being in a place where gravity helps take care of that.
Starting point is 00:43:38 We have an infrastructure that works with the natural effect of gravity, so I'm good. But to come back to what I was saying good. But, you know, to come back to like what I was saying about Artemis, you go to the website, the exact wording, I'm going to paraphrase a little bit, but the first sentence on the website says something like, we will land the first woman and first person of color on the moon. And that's like their opening salvo. And I'm like, who wrote this copy? I used to be a NASA postdoctoral program fellow, and I lived my time in code 600 at Goddard Space Flight Center. It was really one of the most idyllic workplaces that I've ever seen in my life. So no shade on them. But really, I know that NASA is capable of writing better copy than that. And really, reading between the lines as a Black
Starting point is 00:44:21 woman, I'm like, oh, okay, so you mean a white woman and a man of color? That's how that reads is you're like, we will make commitments, but there are limits. We will not promise a woman of color. That's going too far. But I think also this sales pitch of we're going to do colonialism, but it'll be representatively diverse. Sure, the cops are still going to be like shooting people in the back. And ICE is still going to be kidnapping people in the neighborhood where I grew up. But the first woman and the first person of color will be going to the moon. And it's interesting because like people ask me sometimes about like Whitey on the Moon and that narrative from the 60s. And they were like, but you seem like interested in us doing this space and spending money
Starting point is 00:45:10 on it. And here's the thing. NASA does what it does on relative to like the defense budget, relative to like even what like Amazon Studios is probably spending on movies this year. Definitely what Disney and Marvel are spending on movies this year, is like a shoestring budget. NASA is not taking too much. Like if you want to talk about where's all our money going, it's not NASA.
Starting point is 00:45:36 NASA is not your money sink problem. It could be like if you tax billionaires properly, like all that offshore stuff, that's your money problem. But it is also the case that they want us to believe the story that that is solving our problems here on earth by having the first woman and first person of color who is probably a man on the moon, right? And that's where I think that that's like the heart of Whitey's on the moon is don't believe that hype. In fact, the reason for all mankind is called for all mankind is because like that was the plaque that they put on the moon is that they went for all mankind.
Starting point is 00:46:17 First of all, they said mankind, that was probably accurate. They definitely did not mean all people. They were, you know were harassing trans people in government at that point. So they definitely didn't mean non-binary people, right? But women were also not in the equation. But I really think that they're going to tell us that they're doing it for us. And maybe it's for me because I'm part of that community, maybe. But it's not for the community that I came from in East LA. It's not the community where I went to school in South Central LA or South LA as it's now called. And we can't believe that hype. We just can't. I think that's such an important point to make. And I wonder, when I think about what NASA is
Starting point is 00:46:57 doing and what is actually important for it to be focused on, It seems like the desire to send a human to space, to the moon, comes up at these times when it needs to obviously show itself to be superior to someone like China or Russia or whatever this other state power is. Whereas it seems like the real learning, you know, certainly the space station is providing science and stuff for us to learn from. But the notion that we need to land people on the moon and that is helping us to make these real discoveries or, you know, we need to start colonizing Mars or something like that. It seems like that is driven more by a desire to kind of beat the chest rather than to do science. Would that be a right way of understanding it? Or do you think it's more complicated than that? Well, I wish it stopped at beating our chest, right?
Starting point is 00:47:47 Because then just landing there would be enough to just be like, yo, we did it. We showed that we could win that race. And that was kind of what it was in the 60s, because that was the limits of what they thought they could do, right? Politically, not just in terms of what we had the engineering capacity to do, but politically what they thought they could get away with. And so everything is looking at what do they think they can get away with politically now? And the fact that they are going around and getting different countries to sign this treaty that talks about mining on the moon is like really
Starting point is 00:48:17 clear. They think that they have the technological capacity to engage in mining and they think that they can get away with it politically, which, you know, those nuclear weapons that held people back 60 years ago, those are still a threat. I don't know why people aren't, like, we're doing global warming right now. We're clearly, I shouldn't say we, I really shouldn't say we, but there are a small group of people that's willing to roll with global warming. Joe Manchin, hello. Kirsten Sinema, hello. So I think that capitalism requires endless expansion to live. And so they need to feed the beast, and they're now planning to feed the moon to the beast. They're now planning to feed Mars to the beast. They're now planning to feed whatever asteroid they can get their hands on to the beast. This is capitalist destruction moving off of Earth's surface into the solar system,
Starting point is 00:49:11 deeper into the galaxy. It is, in some ways, and we could do a whole other episode about this, debatable, but in some ways, the anti-Star Trek. In other ways, maybe it is exactly what Star Trek is. I think that's such an important point, though, right? To recognize it's about pushing it and seeing what they can get away with, right? And now they think that they can get away with more than what they got away with in the past, and they have the capacity to try to do so. I have two final questions for you, if that's okay. Obviously, Elon Musk talks a lot now about
Starting point is 00:49:43 the need to extend the light of consciousness to another planet. Just to describe for people, I just rolled my eyes very hard. Okay. Keep going. Happy that you mentioned it. It seems like an obvious question to ask, but should we be desiring to settle other planets at all, especially at this moment when we face so many problems, the climate crisis being a major one here on Earth that we really need to solve and need to be focused on in this moment. You know, we give little kids toy versions of things because we know that they might break those, right? So if you're like a normal person, you don't give your kid a $1,000
Starting point is 00:50:27 gift that can just like break the first time you drop it, right? Like if you're dropping that kind of coin, it's pretty robust against destruction by a child, right? That's something that we understand. And I think that we have to be more humble and understand that we are still in that stage of learning how to maintain balance with a global ecosystem and not drop it and have it break. And all of the problems that we have here on earth will go with us to space. There is no escaping ourselves. As I write, I had an essay in the Baffler called Becoming Martian in January of this year. We're stuck with ourselves. And Apartheid Clyde and I are stuck with each other here on Earth for the moment. There's no escaping those problems. And so the idea that, like,
Starting point is 00:51:17 let's say we had the technological capacity to control the climate on Mars, that doesn't mean that we wouldn't take the kinds of problems that we introduce into climates with us to Mars. We're already having to worry about contamination with microbes on Earth. There was a recent story about some space trash, basically, that was, or some trash that was found recently on Mars, right? That it turned out to be a part of something that we sent because how else did it get there, right? There aren't a lot of options, right? So here in New Hampshire, there are all kinds of discussions about a new garbage dump. We're having these fights in our communities about our garbage dumps. You look at low Earth orbit, and increasingly it's like,
Starting point is 00:52:04 oh yeah, look at that species. They don't know how to deal with garbage dumps. You look at low earth orbit and increasingly it's like, oh yeah, look at that species. They don't know how to deal with garbage at all. They just like have no concept of it. Right. And so I'm sure that there will be companies that are going to come along and say, that's our area of expertise. We will deal with the garbage for you. Right. The problem with that, of course, is that then those companies have incentive to ensure that there's always a supply for them. So there's no incentive to just eliminate the garbage entirely, right? But just to always to manage the problem. And that's kind of how the capitalist thing just keeps growing. So we have to learn to be in equilibrium with the ecosystem that we have. I don't think we have a choice about that. And if we can't do it here on Earth,
Starting point is 00:52:45 we can't do it anywhere else. An essential point. To close our conversation, you know, we've been taking a critical look at space, how we think about space in this conversation. Really key to your work is really taking these decolonial, these feminist approaches to space and to space science and to science more generally. What can we learn from other ways of seeing space science and
Starting point is 00:53:12 science more generally? And, you know, other ways of knowing, I guess, more generally? Yeah, I mean, here, you know, just to turn things a little more optimistically, because I've known a lot of maybe cynical sounding things. I have a lot of hope when I think about the work that the Just Space Alliance is doing and the work of Lucienne Walkowitz and their colleague, Erica Nesvold. And I know Lucienne better than I know Erica, but I've been very impressed by their work and the work of the entire organization. And one of the things that I really appreciate about Just Space Alliance and some of the other folks that I can think of, like Dr. Divya Prasad, who I think is also involved in Just Space Alliance, is asking these questions of what can we learn from ways of thinking that are not colonially oriented? And that means getting outside of Western frameworks from the last 500 years. If we're really going to talk about being a global
Starting point is 00:54:05 community, then that means looking to global thought beyond one small peninsula on the edge of Asia. And, you know, the people, the descendants, the intellectual and biological descendants of those people who have since colonized a lot of the rest of the world. And so I do think we can learn from indigenous thought, for example, just to choose like a broad example. But I want to really caution people against seeing indigenous thought as a material to be collected for our use, right? And so I think that there is something that we have to learn from indigenous thought, but that means paying attention to indigenous people and being attentive to and engaged with indigenous struggle. So in the context of
Starting point is 00:54:58 those of us in North America, understanding that land back is a real demand, understanding how our institutions of higher education benefited from settler colonialism and are built on settler colonialism. So when I talk about learning from indigenous thought, I mean learning from that indigenous thought of there is colonialism that we have to deal with right here on earth right now. That said, I think when we think about, for example, the struggle around the 30-meter telescope on Mauna Kea in Hawaii and the Kanaka Maoli indigenous knowledge keepers struggle to protect the Mauna from further desecration and further development,
Starting point is 00:55:38 that is a place that really informs us about what that dynamic between colonial science and pono science, as some Kanaka people there have called it, is going to look like. And that tells us a lot about what that struggle for the moon and for Mars is going to look like too. I really appreciate you ending with that example. You know, I think at this moment, as we're seeing this push for the commercialization of space, for the privatization of space, for a new even, you know, Cold War or something like it, and space gets wrapped up in that, you know, these are really the perspectives that we need to have on what is going on in space, but also our world more generally and how we push back on those things. So Chanda,
Starting point is 00:56:20 thank you so much for taking the time to speak with us today. Thank you so much for taking the time to speak with us today. Thank you so much for having me. Chanda Prescott-Weinstein is the author of The Disordered Cosmos, an assistant professor at the University of New Hampshire, and you can follow her on Twitter at at IBJIYONGI. You can find that in the show notes. You can also follow me at at Paris Marks, and you can follow the show at at Tech Won't Save Us. Tech Won't Save Us is produced by Eric Wickham and is part of the harbinger media network if you want to support the
Starting point is 00:56:48 work that goes into making the show every week you can go to patreon.com slash tech won't save us and become a supporter thanks for listening Thank you.

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