On Tue, May 31, 2011 at 8:39 PM, rigsy03 <[email protected]> wrote:

> If they could actually travel trillions of miles, they'd find slim
> pickin's, imho. We are ravaging ourselves!
>
> I think the Explorers had definite goals besides their curiousity-
> spices, gold, slaves, territory, sea lanes, etc.
>
> You can have my ticket! :-)
>

Are you saying that given the opportunity to travel the galaxy without
restriction you'd pass?

Wow. I wouldn't even hesitate. My speedo and blowup doll would be packed
before I finished accepting.


> On May 31, 5:57 pm, Chuck Bowling <[email protected]>
> wrote:
> > On Tue, May 31, 2011 at 7:38 AM, Pat <[email protected]>
> wrote:
> >
> > > On May 19, 6:41 am, Chuck Bowling <[email protected]>
> > > wrote:
> > > > I think that with nanotechnology we will be able to synthesize pretty
> > > much
> > > > anything we want from raw materials in the future. Assuming that any
> > > alien
> > > > race capable of traveling the trillions of miles to get here would
> have
> > > at
> > > > least the same level of technology my guess is that they wouldn't
> need
> > > > anything we'd have to offer.
> >
> > > Perhaps they would want the two things we can spare the least:
> > > ourselves as their 'food' and the REST of our planet's natural
> > > resources.  After all, food and resources is exactly why WE'D be
> > > touring the galaxy.
> >
> > When I refer to resources I'm thinking about the 92 raw elements that
> > naturally occur in nature. Given those and advanced nano-assembly
> techniques
> > I think that literally anything can be replicated.
> >
> > Assuming that's the case, I'd think that an advanced alien civilization
> > would find better ways of feeding itself than to travel trillions upon
> > trillions of miles to ravage the Earth.
> >
> > As to why we'd be touring the galaxy, I think human curiosity would be a
> > major factor.- Hide quoted text -
> >
> > - Show quoted text -

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