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Melissa Ede, Transgender Mars One Candidate, Joins HuffPost Live

Started by melissaede, March 18, 2014, 08:18:46 AM

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melissaede

Just letting you all know I made second round of the Mars One way trip. One of only 1058 worldwide from 222000.

Melissa Ede, Transgender Mars One Candidate, Joins HuffPost Live
http://m.huffpost.com/us/entry/4661317 
James Nichols, Huffington Post

Melissa Ede is a taxi driver from the United Kingdom who very well may be the first transgender individual to set foot on Mars.

Mars One's goal is to have a permanent human colony established on the Red Planet by 2025.


edited by lh to comply with posting guidelines
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Kaylee

Just a thought, but would a lifetime supply of hormones be allowed on board?  If this actually goes ahead I'd imagine that weight concerns may prohibit non essential medical supplies from being sent along...
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melissaede

No they will not be allowed. A sacrifice that would be worth it to make such a maek on history.
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Jill F

Can we send the Westboro Batsh^t Cult?
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JamesG

Why would you want to do that to Mars?
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Jessica Merriman

Good luck getting past the Van Allen radiation belts. Microwave Burrito's aisle 1! ;D
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Jill F

Quote from: JamesG on March 18, 2014, 07:39:21 PM
Why would you want to do that to Mars?

Good point.  Mercury it is.  I'm sure they'd all secretly want to probe Uranus...
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Jessica Merriman

Quote from: Jill F on March 18, 2014, 08:01:37 PM
Good point.  Mercury it is.  I'm sure they'd all secretly want to probe Uranus...
LMAO!!!!!  :laugh: :laugh: :laugh: :laugh: :laugh: :laugh: :laugh: :laugh: :laugh: :laugh:
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Joelene9

  Well, good luck to her wanting to go to Mars.  There would be the human exploration and the all seasons stays to see that a permanent self-sustaining base can be established.  There is water just under the soil as ice which is needed foremost.  There are all kinds of dangers such as accidental or overt decompression of the life support gasses, cancer causing protons aplenty from the Sun, farming of crops during its ~2.2 Earth year orbit with the sunlight flux about a quarter of Earth's.  Maintenance of equipment with most spare parts made locally.  Then ultimately terraforming of the planet with a breathable atmosphere and with high enough temperatures that would sustain liquid water most of the year.  This without losing the new atmosphere to the solar wind due to the lack of a magnetic field.  And maybe the "canali" that Percival Lowell perceived in the 19th century being visible from the Earth. 

  Joelene
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