ANSWERS: 7
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Cool. I wish I could afford a piece.
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There was something about this on the news. The Beijing authorities suspended the license of a company that was offering this. No one person or group owns the moon, so no one has the right to sell parts of it. Those that have sunk money into it have done nothing but lost. source: http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/english/doc/2005-11/07/content_492152.htm
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I saw a comedian once making fun of people who colonized various countries using a flag and claiming it for their country. If a native came up, the comedian said, the response would be (in a bad French accent), "do you have a flag?" So my question is to the companies that sell moon property is "Do you have a flag?"
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I printed out my own deed to some property on the moon. I own about 500,000 acres, and it didn't cost me any more than the price of the paper and printer ink. Plus it's worth just as much as the deed those other people paid big bucks for.
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I printed out my own deed to some property on the moon. I own about 500,000 acres, and it didn't cost me any more than the price of the paper and printer ink. Plus it's worth just as much as the deed those other people paid big bucks for.
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There's an article in Wikipedia called EXTRATERRESTRIAL REAL ESTATE (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extraterrestrial_real_estate) which confirms that the moon and other objects in outer space are covered by an international treaty. Commercial sale of moon acreage is an obvious scam. You pay real money for a worthless certificate.
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I think that's silly. :-)
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