It also happens to be the only (even theoretically) logistically feasible way to finance truly high quality science on other planets in our solar system.
Sure, we can send probes, but there are a lot of sacrifices with sending those. The number of experiments they can run is limited. The instruments they carry is limited. The terrain they can navigate is limited. .. ... On and on and on.
Lowering mission costs through establishing permanent space presence, and maintaining that permanent space presence through leveraging billionaire vacationing and asteroid mining operations, is how you get there.
Getting a reliable resource pool (even an expensive one) for useful materials like iridium (which as a number of interesting materials science and semiconductor manufacture applications) would enable new categories of fancy products to be made, that ordinary people like you and I could get to enjoy.
There would be a wealth of ancillary benefits to the thing, should it be successful.
Again, we dont know if it will be or not, because we really dont have any actuarial tables to make estimates from. Initial estimates will be very liberal on costs, because of those unknowns. Establishing true feasibility based on those padded estimates is not consistent with a true reality-- But again, we dont KNOW what the true reality even IS. We can only know that after attempting it.
The best way to look at this is the planning stage for a very expensive and dangerous experiment, being undertaken because there is potential for a dramatic change in human history riding on its success or failure.
@palazzo
Your position is one of perfect safety-- You cannot be wrong in it. Since the information you demand does not exist, you can comfortably assert that it is easier on earth, because you do have numbers for that. With the same stroke, you remove any attempt to collect the data that would contra-indicate your assessment.
One of the reasons to attempt a permanent space presence, is to know what those recurring and actuarial costs of operating one actually are, and to know if further development along that line is reasonable or not. Right now there is insufficient data to know.