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Orbdev Files US Federal Suit Over Asteroid Claim

chongo writes "Orbital Development has filed legal action against the United States by filing a Complaint for Declaratory Judgment in Federal Court. After NASA's NEAR probe landed on the asteroid 433 Eros, Gregory W. Nemitz, who claims to have owned the asteroid since the 3rd of March 2000, sent NASA an $20 invoice for the first 100 years of parking and storage fees. NASA told him to "pound sand". OrbDev's Eros Project seeks to promote their ludicrous ideas about property rights in space."

13 of 733 comments (clear)

  1. Why? by rsilvergun · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Once we can effectively enter outer space, and get energy and materials from there, what use are property rights? I'm serious. We can generate more than enough wealth to keep everyone happy, and I don't buy that nonsense that if people aren't paid they won't work (explain OSS to me then). It would be a very different society than we have now, but certainly a better one.

    On the other hand, if we don't somehow artifically separate people into 'rich', 'middle class' and 'poor', the wealthy won't be able to use their superior command of society's resources to steer things in whatever direction they see fit. Frankly I think that's a good thing, but naturally wealthy people disagree. Viewed in this light, I can see why a complex system of property rights for outer space would be advantagous.

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
  2. Re:We must establish private property in outerspac by whig · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The right to own property is the foremost right of every person and should be defended above all these other "rights"...

    Thank you Ayn Rand.

    Now let's get real. Property is not inherent. Moreover, the subject of what can and cannot be property is a limited one; slavery is a form of property that was once legally recognized but is no longer in most parts of the world.

    What is inherent is life and liberty. Working from these one can derive certain forms of legitimate property, i.e., a presumed legal right to exclusive possession of things one creates, lest he or she be deprived of the labor (life and liberty interest) invested in its creation.

    Now tell me, sir, when and how did you make the asteroid you now claim to own?

    --
    Peace and love, y'all
  3. Speaking of real loonies... by Durindana · · Score: 3, Insightful
    You sound like one, treating "objectivism" as anything more than a faux-mystical conservative crutch. That pap is a Scientology of the self.
    The right to own property is the foremost right of every person and should be defended above all these other "rights" like the right to welfare and non-descrimination.

    Bzzzzzt.

    You'd better leave America (along with Western civilization, and virtually all religion) behind if you think owning property comes before "welfare" - which, in non-reactionary terminology, means efforts by men, through their governments, to help other men - and before "non-discrimination" - which means recognition of equal humanity and everything that flows from it: equal rights, due process, life and liberty, and all those other things Ayn Rand couldn't imagine living without.

    Sigh. It takes a fairly well-developed industrial society to produce people with such effective blinders that they mistake their surroundings for the state of nature.

    Lemme quote ya yer holy prophetess: I regard charity as a marginal issue. What I am fighting is the idea that charity is a moral duty and a primary virtue.

    Say goodbye to the human race, then. Recognition of human inequality - intellectual, yes, but more importantly economic and social - is a bedrock principle of human morality, as is the value of efforts to rectify inequality. Abandonment of virtue is tantamount to abnegation of one's own humanity; and "self-reliance" (a meaningless idea, given the sociopolitical state in which humans inevitably find themselves) at another's expense is no virtue.
  4. Re:Markers? by chill · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Besides, even if he did "own" it, does the paltry price he is charging just a sign that he's only trying to be a pain in NASA's ass?

    Nope. I bet he's trying to get a gov't agency to "recognize" his claim by paying the invoice.

    --
    Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
  5. International treaty by igny · · Score: 5, Insightful
    AGREEMENT GOVERNING THE ACTIVITIES OF STATES ON THE MOON AND OTHER CELESTIAL BODIES(1979) is more appropriate here.

    From Article 1

    1. The provisions of this Agreement relating to the moon shall also apply to other celestial bodies within the solar system, other than the earth, except in so far as specific legal norms enter into force with respect to any of these celestial bodies.
    From Article 11
    3. Neither the surface nor the subsurface of the moon, nor any part thereof or natural resources in place, shall become property of any State, international intergovernmental or non-governmental organization, national organization or non-governmental entity or of any natural person.
    --
    In theory there is no difference between theory and practice. In practice there is. - Yogi Berra
  6. Re:ever heard of selling the brooklyn bridge? by BorgDrone · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I live in the netherlands, where we do have a captialistic/socialistic system, and it seems to be the best solution available at the moment.

    Doesn't mean it's a good system, it's the least bad.
    I'd prefer a system without the concept of money with people working because of the intellectual challenges, not because of the money, but I don't see a workable implementation of such a system in the near future, the problem is there will always be people too lazy to work if they won't get paid.
    What needs to be done is that technology has to advance to such a stadium that working is optional, everything should be automated except for the fun stuff (like inventing new things).

  7. No right to property, just defence of. by Morgaine · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Pointing doesn't give you property, but nor do physical markers, government laws, planetary authorizations, galactic leases or anything else.

    Your property is what you can hold on to, and anything else is just hot air and handwaving.

    Hot air and handwaving aren't necessarily worthless, because after all they reduce the pain and suffering in what we loosely call civilization, but to believe that rights have any fundamental substance is simply a delusion. The fact that those delusions are often imposed by force just proves the point.

    It all boils down to what you can defend, and nothing more.

    --
    "The question of whether machines can think is no more interesting than [] whether submarines can swim" - Dijkstra
  8. Re:We must establish private property in outerspac by Rich0 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Ultimately ownership comes down to who has the bigger army.

    If the head of the Mafia declared that he owned all of Chicago, and requested that everyone leave or be terrorized, the police would be dispatched. If the Mafia were sufficiently armed to hold off the police, then the military would be dispatched. In the USA it is a foregone conclusion that the military would win. Thus it is not disputed that US laws govern the territory called the USA. In the USA, citizens are allowed to own private property - in a democracy the citizens band together to fund said army for the common good (in theory).

    The Poles probably had perfectly good property laws in the late 1930s - but it didn't due much to deter German trespassing. They didn't send in lawyers, they sent in tanks. Lawyers are only used by people who can't afford enough tanks to do the job (thankfully society has evolved to a point where this is usually the case).

    Right now, if somebody could live independantly in space and laid claim to the Eros asteroid, nobody could do anything about it. Sure, somebody could file a claim in the UN, but nothing would stop you from just picking up the NASA probe and using it as scrap metal. No nation on Earth has a significant capability for prosecuting wars in space - yet.

    I'm not saying this is how it should be - but this is how it always has been. The guy with the army makes the rules. Courts only have power because of the police. The UN only has power as long as its component nations are willing to supply troops. If you have a weak army, you had better make friends with somebody who has a strong army, and be prepared to pay for that friendship. If not, you won't be sovereign for long...

  9. Re:We must establish private property in outerspac by ratamacue · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Property rights and freedom go hand in hand. If you are "against" pritate ownership of property, you are against freedom. Do you not realize that in order to "eliminate" private property, you must do so by force? Or would you actually try to argue that force -- the basic premise of all theft, fraud, rape, and murder -- is a "lesser evil" than private ownership of property?

    Moreover, when government owns all property, it is really those who control government who own the property. These are individuals just like you and me, acting in self-interest like you and me. The only difference is that they hold the "right" to invoke force as a means to an end, and we don't.

  10. Re:We must establish private property in outerspac by b-baggins · · Score: 3, Insightful

    And those lot of people are total idiots. You either have personal property rights, or you have the government exercising control of all the property.

    The moment a government has the power to control the land you need for shelter, food and industry, that's the day that government can control every fundamental aspect of your life. They can tell you where to live, where to farm, where to work.

    99.9% of the fools who argue against property rights are basically envious of some rich guy on the hill and either want him living in a trailer park out of spite, or they have some idiotic idea that with the government owning all the land, they'd be living in that house on the hill for free.

    Sometimes I wish I could just send them all to a public housing project for six months.

    --
    You can tell a great deal about the character of a man by observing those who hate him.
  11. Re:Show us the homestead! by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This is easy: The USA (and the rest of the world) are unable to enforce any sort of laws off-planet, so eros 433 is out of their jurisdiction. If eros wants to get their money, they can damn well go to eros 433 and impound the probe for nonpayment.

    --
    "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
  12. Re:Markers? by baileytal · · Score: 3, Insightful
    As to his claim: he has declared that the UN treaty banning governments from laying claim to land in space only applies to governments, and that it has no bearing on individuals. The government's right to do anything comes from citizens, so this is the 'correct' order of things.
    That's interesting. He is attempting to enforce a property right in a vaccuum -- literally and technically. As an earlier poster pointed out, without "civilization" (i.e. a legal system) "property rights" are meaningless -- it all comes down to what you can hold on to personally. He expects a legal system to enforce his personal authority to lay claim to an asteroid which that same legal system has prohibited.

    Mr. Nemitz confuses domestic property law with international law, I think. If he had done a bit of reading up on the philosophy of law, he'd realize that governments are the only source of law in the international milieu where treaties are drafted.

    You are precluded from laying claim to land in space because property rights come to citizens from their governments, Mr. Nemitz. You have no personal authority at law to lay claim to any "Terra Nullius" you may come across (unless you are the designated representative of a country who does have that authority). You can sit on that asteroid with a shotgun and keep people off by force, but in that case you have only possession, not title. When a state lays a claim to that asteroid (or states agree that no-one shall do so), they can enforce that law against your possession.

    It will be interesting to see what the court has to say about this claim.

    --
    Never at a loss for words... because of the voices.
  13. Re:Show us the homestead! by ceejayoz · · Score: 3, Insightful

    He, as a citizen, must follow the laws of this country.

    As this country's constitution says treaties have full force of law, he's thus bound by it whether he signs or not.