
Welcome to the Science Mondays segment! Each week here on Geek Alabama, Science Mondays will feature stuff from the world of science and science related content. Our goal here at Geek Alabama is to hopefully have you learn something useful and fulfilling. Science is a geek’s best friend, and we love featuring science content here at Geek Alabama.
SpaceX carries 90% of everything headed to orbit this year, but the spectacular rocket landing back on the pad is a distraction from what actually matters. For a thousand years, from Portuguese caravels to transcontinental railroads, the real wealth has never gone to the ones who left, it went to the ones who figured out how to come back.
The useful space around Earth is far smaller than it looks: a few narrow orbital bands, fewer than 1,900 slots in Geostationary Orbit, and one patch of ice at the Moon’s south pole roughly the size of Switzerland. That ice is water, water is H2O, and the oxygen in it can be liquified into rocket fuel — whoever builds the first gas station on the Moon controls the only refueling point between here and Mars.
This video traces a pattern that keeps repeating: a new physical frontier opens, gatekeepers lose their grip, Maslow’s hierarchy resets to the bottom layers, and selling picks and shovels becomes the most durable business on Earth. The same forces are now playing out in orbit, with Starlink, Amazon, Blue Origin, China, and others racing to fill the chokepoints before someone else does.
Whether that ends in generational wealth creation or a bubble rivaling the dot-com era depends on how fast rockets can close the physical gap between imagination and reality. A second video diving deeper into SpaceX’s economics is coming in a few weeks.
Categories: Science Talk Stuff


