Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos frame settling space as an existential imperative, but three recent books push back on that consensus by assembling practical, ethical, and ideological objections. Kelly and Zach Weinersmith in A City on Mars (paperback release 2025) catalog the medical, technical, legal, and existential costs of off-Earth communities, warning of outcomes that range from Martian eugenics to interplanetary war and even “space cannibalism.” The Weinersmiths emphasize the harsh realities of reproduction, radiation, bone loss, and the ethical problem that infants cannot consent to being experimental subjects in a hostile environment. They also coin the blunt term “suckitude” to describe underestimated hardships of living off Earth.
Savannah Mandel in Ground Control (2024) reframes the argument through justice and distribution: the money spent on human spaceflight competes with unmet needs on Earth, a critique voiced since Apollo-era protests and Gil Scott-Heron’s poem. Mandel argues the current commercial model will concentrate benefits among the very rich and that robotic missions offer far better value for scientific return and risk reduction. Mary-Jane Rubenstein in Astrotopia (paperback release 2024) traces the ideology behind the corporate space race to dominionist and mythological impulses that recast Earth as expendable and space as divinely allotted. She disputes the optimism of slogans such as Jeff Bezos’s trillion-people vision and cautions that human vices will travel with us, producing a “numbers game” that could amplify rather than solve political violence.
All three authors converge on a common recommendation: slow down and mature. They call for decolonizing approaches that prioritize stewardship of Earth, multigenerational governance, and alternative myths that discourage exploitation. The books also register recent signs that their concerns are not purely theoretical: in 2025, the commercial sector faced high-profile technical failures and political controversies that underscored safety, inequality, and regulatory risks, including Starship test failures, a Starliner malfunction and extended crew stay, and backlash against high-profile suborbital tourism. The collective message is cautious: human settlement of space may be desirable someday, but not until ethical, political, and technological conditions improve and the impulse to rush is checked.