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3:10 to Yuma

This is less about the movie than about the thoughts it crystallized in me. The movie, in short: loved it, recommend it, not for kids. Now, on to more important topics.

Ever since I started reading about the emerging (and, surprisingly, pre-existing) legal regime in outer space, first in Glenn Reynolds' and Robert Merges' Outer Space, then in David Livingston's "The Business of Commercializing Space", and The Cato Institute's Space: The Free-Market Frontier, it seems to me that the whole business is founded on some pretty foolish ideas. (Also, see this link, hat tip Instapundit.com; while this article was in draft) (This, from the same site, is also interesting)

The big one, the almost humorous one, is the idea that, when various nations signed the "Outer Space Treaty" of 1967, it included phrases that say, in essence, that space is for use by The People but not for nations to claim as territories. Some folk have got it into their heads that this means that we can have property rights without the territory being claimed by a nation, including the movement of any military into space, for use against earth or other extraterrestrial presence.

I'm a very simple man, and here's my simple understanding of property law: Say I'm a solar-farmer on the moon, just selling my electrical output to them city-folk across the ridge at the space port. Pirates, who've mutinied against the captain of their space ship, land on my farm, kill my sons, rape my daughters, and take over my collector to recharge their batteries, becoming their new illicit base to spread their range of plundering and villainy. Who shoots them? If it's the government, then I have property rights; if it's me, then I might as well fly my own flag and call my 40 acres "Cardopolis", a petty king of a petty city-state; if it's nobody, this scenario will surely come to pass. Every advance in transportation has led to equivalent advances in piracy and I don't expect space travel to be much different. I pitched this idea past a friend recently, and her response was, "But there's nothing in space to build a ship out of; in the Carribean, there were trees." I did my best to remain polite when I pointed out that Black Beard probably never built a ship himself; he bought them, or took them, from mutineers.

Defenders of this idea frequently cite Antarctica as a good precedent for how we should extend property rights in space. The problem is that nobody wants to go to Antarctica; it's really cold. In all honesty, it's probably easier to live in space than in Antarctica, and there's no money to be made in Antarctica that isn't easier to make elsewhere. That's just a bad precedent.

Some also cite the International Telecommunications Union (ITU). This is a UN agency that "prohibits the ownership of frequencies or orbital locations," according to James E. Dunstan in Space: The Free-Market Frontier. However, they do allocate orbital slots and frequencies to individuals or companies, who can then use them, not use them, or sell them to other people, who then use them or not use them or sell them. I don't know about you, but that sounds like a deed registry to me. The only difference, it seems, is that a deed registry admits that the property that it's deeding is in its own territory; the UN seems not to want to admit that they want to be the territorial governors of Outer Space. This, again, is a bad precedent, this time not because its irrelevant, but because it's completely wrong.

The opponents of extending national territories into space focus on the risk that competition over territory may lead to war between the nations. This is not invalid, but the concern over international war is the first concern of civilization; it is the last concern of the frontier. This is where 3:10 to Yuma becomes a great illustration. From local cattle barons, to the railroad, to weak and ineffectual lawmen, to the poverty of the people themselves, every villain of the western genre made an appearance. In fact, natives made barely any appearance. There were two good people in the whole film (thankfully, Alan Tudyk played one of them) and they don't both survive. And I figure the odds on that are probably pretty reflective of humanity, on Earth and off. The first concern, regarding violence, of the frontier is not international conflict, but extra-legal conflict. That is, murder from bandits and pillaging from pirates. It's not even clear to me that police forces will be seen as non-military, so even flagging an orbiting colony as a United States vessel, which is currently expected to indicate that it is subject to United States law in the same way that a flagged vessel in international waters is under United States law, will be relevant or even desirable. If the law can't be enforced, what's the point of subjecting yourself to it? In fact, the nation may well discourage it, since it is responsible for damage and havoc done by any vessel under its flag.

Anousha Ansari is quoted in Rocketeers: How a Visionary Band of Business Leaders, Engineers, and Pilots Is Boldly Privatizing Space, saying, "I wish the leaders of different nations could do the same and have a world vision first, before a specific visions for their country.". With all due respect, that's a load of crap. Capitalism works because I know my business better than I know yours, so I should mind my own and communicate with you, conducting your business, through prices and voluntary transactions. I can't run India as well as an Indian, so I'd appreciate it if the Indians don't try to run the U.S. It's not a crime that the residents of the U.S. look after U.S. interests first.

Part of the problem is the insistence of space law theorists to treat property on a celestial body the same as territory in orbit or deep space. A better analog, to me, is to treat orbit, up to some multiple of geosynchronous orbit, around a body as "belonging" to that body (or some joint organization representing that body, like the ITU) analogous to territorial waters in maritime law, deep space as international waters, and territories on celestial bodies as terra nullius, land that's as yet unclaimed (I believe Mr. Hickman also suggests this). I'm not proposing that we should ignore the real threat of war between nations over territories in space. But there are other solutions. There are a lot of solutions on how to allocate terra nullius; these solutions are discussed in Outer Space, starting on page 165. I don't see why some such alternatives couldn't be extended to the claims of national territory. My thought is a limited degree of claiming land by an individual, similar to the current regime, with jurisdiction over the property subject to the country represented by the flag on the vessel. After some period of time, that property becomes the territory of the country of origin, provided continuous (or overall) profitability of the enterprise, conditional on no, or limited, direct subsidization by the government. An additional caveat could be presented where unclaimed territory, surrounded on four sides by territory governed by one government, becomes territory of that government. The purpose of this is to promote the growth of law and order in extraterrestrial territory, but also to slow down a land rush into space that could result in blocking still-developing countries from an opportunity to grow in that direction.

Laws, institutions, and societies advance like any other technology. What's important to remember is that human beings don't. I seem to remember Bill Clinton once saying how humanity is getting better. No, we're not; our civilizations are getting better. I walk to McDonalds after dark safely in Greenwood Village, Colorado, not because the people of Colorado are better than the people of Mogadishu, but because our governments, laws, and institutions are better. To force humanity to go to into a new frontier without the benefit of these advances is like requiring we go without any of our technology, like Man vs. Wild in the cold indifference of vacuum. I can't imagine that working; why would we ask for the other?
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