Herzog is right -- we'll never leave, will we? →[More:]I was listening to a science segment on NPR about the discovery of an earth-like planet orbiting a nearby star. Apparently this is the right amount of distance from its sun to allow for the possible presence of liquid water.
The scientist (I wasn't paying close enough attention catch his name) said the star is "only" 20 light years away. Meaning that, with our current technology, it would take about 300,000 years to get there.
This made me flash back to an interview I read with Werner Herzog, in which he expressed deep pessimism about the prospect of humanity ever leaving the planet to explore "strange new worlds." And it hit me that he's probably right. Given the vast, vast distances involved and our proclivities for destroying ourselves and our environments, it seems to me very unlikely that we'll ever develop technology sufficiently advanced to make interstellar travel possible.
Dammit, I guess a little kid inside of me still nursed the idea. I feel like I just realized that a fat guy in a red suit couldn't possibly squeeze himself down our chimney on Christmas eve.
Even if it's unlikely that we're alone in the universe, it seems we might as well be, and that our little life form will probably perish before ever finding out.