Huge excitement. Two Earth-size planets found orbiting a sunlike star less than a thousand light-years away. This comes two weeks after the stunning announcement of another planet orbiting another star at precisely the right distance — within the so-called “habitable zone” that is not too hot and not too cold — to allow for liquid water and therefore possible life.
Unfortunately, the planets of the right size are too close to their sun, and thus too scorching hot, to permit Earthlike life. And the Goldilocks planet in the habitable zone is too large. At 2.4 times the size of Earth, it is likely gaseous, like Jupiter. No earthlings there. But it’s only a matter of time — perhaps a year or two, estimates one astronomer — before we find the right one of the right size in the right place.
And at just the right time. As the romance of manned space exploration has waned, the drive today is to find our living, thinking counterparts in the universe. For all the excitement, however, the search betrays a profound melancholy — a lonely species in a merciless universe anxiously awaits an answering voice amid utter silence.
That silence is maddening. Not just because it compounds our feeling of cosmic isolation. But because it makes no sense. As we inevitably find more and more exo-planets where intelligent life can exist, why have we found no evidence — no signals, no radio waves — that intelligent life does exist?
It’s called the Fermi Paradox, after the great physicist who once asked “Where is everybody?” Or as was once elaborated: “All our logic, all our anti-isocentrism, assures us that we are not unique — that they must be there. And yet we do not see them.”
How many of them should there be? Modern satellite data suggest the number should be very high. So why the silence? Carl Sagan (among others) thought that the answer is to be found, tragically, in the high probability that advanced civilizations destroy themselves.
In other words, this silent universe is conveying not a flattering lesson about our uniqueness but a tragic story about our destiny. It is telling us that intelligence may be the most cursed faculty in the entire universe — an endowment not just ultimately fatal but, on the scale of cosmic time, near instantly so.
This is not mere theory. Look around. On the very same day that astronomers rejoiced at the discovery of the two Earth-size planets, the National Science Advisory Board for Biosecurity urged two leading scientific journals not to publish details of lab experiments that just created a lethal and highly transmittable form of bird flu virus, lest that fateful knowledge fall into the wrong hands.
Wrong hands, human hands. This is not just the age of holy terror, but also the threshold of an age of hyper-proliferation. Nuclear weapons in the hands of half-mad tyrants (North Korea) and radical apocalypticists (Iran) are just the beginning. Lethal biologic agents may soon find their way into the hands of those for whom genocidal pandemics loosed upon infidels are the royal road to redemption.
And forget the psychopaths: Why, just 17 years after Homo sapiens discovered atomic power, those most stable and sober states, the United States and the Soviet Union, came within inches of mutual annihilation.
Rather than despair, however, let’s put the most hopeful face on the cosmic silence and on humanity’s own short, already baleful history with its new Promethean powers: Intelligence is a capacity so godlike, so protean that it must be contained and disciplined. This is the work of politics — understood as the ordering of society and the regulation of power to permit human flourishing while simultaneously restraining the most Hobbesian human instincts.
There could be no greater irony: For all the sublimity of art, physics, music, mathematics and other manifestations of human genius, everything depends on the mundane, frustrating, often debased vocation known as politics (and its most exacting sub-specialty – statecraft). Because if we don’t get politics right, everything else risks extinction.
We grow justly weary of our politics. But we must remember this: Politics — in all its grubby, grasping, corrupt, contemptible manifestations — is sovereign in human affairs. Everything ultimately rests upon it.
Fairly or not, politics is the driver of history. It will determine whether we will live long enough to be heard one day. Out there. By them, the few — the only — who got it right.
Charles Krauthammer’s email address is letter@ charleskrauthammer.com.



So, Mr. Krauthammer, this explains your support of the criminal war of choice in Iraq.
Curious.
Krauthammer is far more often wrong than right. The only way to read him is to read what he wrote three or five or ten years ago.
Here’s an example, from slightly more that four years ago, thirteen months before Bush left office:
“It took Bush three years to find his general (as it did Lincoln) and turn a losing war into a winnable one. Baghdad and Washington are currently discussing a long-term basing agreement that could give the United States permanent military presence in the region and a close cooperative relationship with the most important country in the Middle East heartland — a major strategic achievement.
Nonetheless, the pressure on this administration and the next to get out prematurely will remain. There are those for whom our only objective in Iraq is reducing troop levels rather than securing a potentially critical Arab ally in a region of supreme strategic significance.”
Krauthammer didn’t just “support” the invasion and occupation of Iraq. He lobbied for it, he pandered for it, he demagogued for it, chronically misrepresented the facts.
That’s the way he always does things. We shouldn’t expect anything else.
We are NOT alone.
All the Aliens are on the History Channel!
I have no doubt that any intelligent life in the universe would give the earth a wide berth due to a particular life form that inhabits this planet. An intelligent life form would realize that the planet earth is infested by a virus-like order that systemically consumes a planet’s finite resources with little regard to the consequences. The virus replicates itself at an exponential rate demanding more and more of the planet’s resources. The virus though intelligent, has little understanding of its rate of consumption and worse the waste produced by its blind consumption pollutes any resources that may remain. After scouring the surface of the planet the virus begins to dig into the planet’s crust and empties it of anything it can find for profit and consumption. Only after the entire environment has been rendered unusable and is totally exploited does this virus consider finding another planet to digest.
The theory that Mars may have once supported life could be the smoking gun that proves the virus not only consumes planets but is a space traveling life form that moves from planet to planet as it justifies its actions by the demand for additional resources. It’s good news for the two planets just discovered that they are thousands of light years away; that distance may save them from a life form that destroys the places it inhabits. If life does exist elsewhere in the universe and they have visited earth hopefully they will warn other intelligent forms of life to beware and be silent. Because if one day a life form shows up on your planet and they call themselves human, flee for your lives because your planet is doomed.
Has anyone ever pointed out to you that all those movies on the SciFi channel aren’t documentaries?
Do you mean like Jules Verne, “twenty thousand leagues under the sea” and “Voyage to Moon,” Flash Gordon and ray guns – lasers, genetic engineering – cloning, …. oh sure that’s all SciFi.
If that’s your take on humanity, I genuinely pity you. What a noxious way to live your life.
This poster reminds me of the time when I was driving my kindergarten son down a rural road and I pointed out some construction along the road side. The town was doing some access work to their water supply. My son burst into unexplainable tears. When I asked what was up he told me, “They were cutting down trees and where were the squirrels going to live?”
It appears his kindergarten teacher had told him that the people everywhere were cutting down trees. I expect Barst had the same teacher but no one bothered to tell him/her that access to clean water for people was important.
Clean water huh? glad you rose to the surface, it shows you care.
and see that may be your problem. You think no one else does.
and your problem is you feel the need to attack others for no apperent reason which is typical of rightwing thinking.
perhaps I misunderstood your previous comment. Exactly what did I rise to the surface of?
Its just a form of sucker fishing ….. and the drag is screaming right now.
What a ring piece…
Humanity is a killer virus. Homo Sapiens are, on the hole, violent and destructive just like the rest of nature. The only difference is human violence is often done with malice and forethought. The lioness does not violently attack the impala because she harbors anger toward it, she kills it merely to survive. Individually people can deeply care for someone or something, but in the end humanity is a cruel beast. We have to be, think of the hundreds of thousands of people world wide that die in violent ways due to war, crime, etc… now imagine if humanity were peaceful and none of them died, we would all be starving. Our cruelty and violence is a part of Mother Natures system of checks and balances. Our higher brain functions have gotten us around a few of them and we are destroying the planet as a result. The natural resources of Earth can support 500 million people, we now have over 7 billion. Thus we cut down rainforest to grow more crops, over fish the seas, and pollute the air with belching smoke stacks in order to make the things we cannot grow. Mother Nature does her best to keep us in check via natural disasters, plagues, and droughts, but she can only do so much. Ever notice how every year or two there is a new sickness or disease to be afraid of? Nature is upping the ante. We cure one thing , she comes up with something worse, when she gets really upset we see island nations that have way too many people per square mile getting a knock on the head, like Haiti and Japan for example. If you look throughout history you will find natural disasters and the lives lost during them are way down during times of massive wars. When we kill ourselves Mother Nature doesn’t have to. When you think globally you will see that humanity are pests and vermin. Ever have a fruit fly problem? Humanity are the fruit flies of the galaxy, vermin who do much more harm than good, and there is no denying it.
The pests and vermin afflicting the planet are unfortunate apologists for humanity’s existence like you. If you are genuinely concerned that homo sapiens are, on the hole (whole) violent and destructive, do the rest of us a humanitarian favor and stop breathing.
Ask mitt Romney about the aliens…
Mormons, aliens, you know.
And he wants to be president?
The ” wars” in the middle east are over a stargate saddam Hussein found.
Not oil. Not nation building. A stargate