Our earth is but a small star in a great universe. Yet of it we can make, if we choose, a planet unvexed by war, untroubled by hunger or fear, undivided by senseless distinctions of race, color or theory.
- Stephen Vincent Benét
Space is Full of Junk. Here’s How to Clean It Up…
Trash on Earth Wasn’t Bad Enough—Now We’re Polluting the Cosmos!
Let’s get one thing straight: humanity is an absolute disaster when it comes to keeping its own backyard clean.
The oceans are drowning in plastic, landfills stretch across the horizon, and microplastics are swimming in our bloodstreams.
And yet, instead of fixing the apocalyptic garbage heap we call home, we’re now enthusiastically turning space into the next great cosmic junkyard.
The latest example? The embarrassing tale of Elon Musk’s Tesla Roadster being mistaken for an asteroid.
Yes, you read that right. Astronomers at Harvard—some of the smartest minds in the world—spent time and resources tracking what they thought was a potential Earth-threatening asteroid, only to realize 17 hours later that it was actually a billionaire’s vanity project, aimlessly drifting through the void.
A literal car, complete with a dummy in a spacesuit, because apparently, we needed to make interstellar trash quirky and marketable.
The New Frontier of Garbage: Space
The fact that astronomers even made this mistake highlights the sheer amount of untracked, unregistered crap floating around above our heads.
Satellites, rocket parts, defunct probes, and now, luxury sports cars. And yet, we have the audacity to call ourselves an “advanced civilization.”
The problem isn’t just Musk’s space toy—though it perfectly encapsulates the arrogance of our species.
The real crisis is the growing swarm of unidentified objects cluttering space, which, by the way, makes it harder to track actual threats like killer asteroids.
Astrophysicists are sounding the alarm: our recklessness in space could result in catastrophic collisions, putting both astronauts and satellites in danger. But sure, let’s launch another car for the memes.
Clean Up Earth Before We Trash the Stars
Let’s be brutally honest: the way we treat space is a direct reflection of the way we treat Earth.
We strip-mine resources, poison ecosystems, and dump our waste wherever it's most convenient. Now, we’re exporting that same reckless stupidity to the final frontier.
The European Space Agency (ESA) is scrambling to create missions like Clearspace-1, spending millions just to clean up the mess we shouldn’t have made in the first place. And yet, the problem keeps getting worse.
Meanwhile, back on Earth, climate change is accelerating, entire species are being wiped out, and fresh water is becoming a luxury item.
But instead of fixing the destruction we’ve caused here, we’re investing billions to ensure that our garbage floats endlessly through the solar system. How’s that for human progress?
Time for a Reality Check
If humanity is going to survive its own stupidity, we need to take responsibility for our trash—on Earth and in space.
No more billionaire space stunts, no more unregulated junk in orbit, and no more reckless disregard for the only home we’ve ever known.
Want a utopian future among the stars? Start by cleaning up the filth beneath your feet.
Otherwise, we’ll just be another species that collapsed under the weight of its own waste—on Earth and beyond.
Sincerely,
Adaptation-Guide
ADAPT OR DIE!