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The Mars Pivot
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The Mars Pivot
by Frank Genin
Los Angeles CA (SPX) Jan 20, 2025

Just two weeks ago, in these very pages, I outlined what seemed then a bold prediction about America's space strategy.

President Trump's inaugural declaration to 'pursue our manifest destiny into the stars' and 'plant the Stars and Stripes on the planet Mars'- is not anymore campaign rhetoric it's the ultimate cosmic mic drop!

The Moon, our faithful celestial companion for millennia, has officially been relegated to the status of mere stepping stone in American space policy.

The great space drama unfolds exactly as anticipated. Remember when we thought the Moon was humanity's next big destination? Turns out it was just the galactic equivalent of a layover we're going to skip. With Jared Isaacman soon firmly at NASA's helm, what we projected as probable has become our new space reality. The Moon, our faithful celestial companion for millennia, has officially been relegated to the status of mere steppingstone in American space policy.

SpaceX's Elon Musk must be grinning wider than a Falcon Heavy booster at launch.

His Mars-or-bust mentality has graduated from 'eccentric billionaire's pipe dream' to official government policy faster than you can say 'lunar regolith.'

With Jared Isaacman's appointment to NASA's helm, the agency's transformation from Moon-eyed romantic to determined Mars suitor is now complete.

The new D.O.G.E. department (and doesn't that acronym just perfectly capture the meme-worthy state of our space policy?) is expected to pull the plug on Artemis faster than you can say 'budget overrun.' Let's be honest - the program was starting to look less like Apollo's sister and more like Icarus's cousin, complete with melting ambitions and falling budgets.

Meanwhile, NASA's traditional contractors are about to learn that in the new space economy, legacy status carries about as much weight as a feather in Mars's thin atmosphere.

The agency itself is being gracefully ushered into a new role: focusing on the science missions where they truly shine, while leaving the heavy lifting (quite literally) to SpaceX's fleet of Starships.

The cosmic irony? This might be the most elegant diplomatic pirouette since the end of the Cold War. China gets its moment in the lunar spotlight, hosting their own 'small step for mankind' party by 2029, while America skips the Moon mosh pit entirely for the more exclusive Mars club.

It's like watching a cosmic chess game where America just declared 'Check' by completely changing the board. While China builds their lunar gateway (complete with orbital tea rooms and diplomatic lounges), America's setting its sights on colonizing an entire planet.

SpaceX, now effectively America's officially ordained Mars transportation authority, is being handed the keys to the kingdom - or should we say, the keys to the interplanetary highway. From launch to landing, they're getting the whole Mars Quest package, like some cosmic Amazon Prime delivery service for human ambition.

Will this strategy pay off? Will humanity prefer China's lunar bed & breakfast or America's Martian frontier homesteads?

The answer might depend less on rocket science and more on which story captures humanity's imagination.

Because in this new space race, the real thrust isn't measured in pounds of force - it's measured in pounds of narrative force.

One thing's certain: 2025 is shaping up to be the year when American space policy executes its grandest pivot yet - from lunar ambitions to Martian dreams.

Call it crazy if you want, but in the grand game of cosmic chess, sometimes the boldest moves win.

About the Op-ed author. Frank Genin, Author of ASTROPOLITICS 3.0 - REALITY CHECK | E-Book & Paperback and soon in Audio format on Audible

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