I agree that there is something to be said about most of the following, snipped, post but...
Also, a permanantly settled moonbase would not be likely, even if nominally self-sufficient
As compared to a space-station?
it's not easy to live there
As compared to a space-station?
It would be incredibly dangerous all the time there
As compared to a space-station?
and the safety requirements and low gravity would make things miserable for the people there.
As compared to a space station?
people would need to be rotated out at great expense
(Ok, so this would be greater than a space station, but you're breaking up my flow of objections)
or otherwise everyone would develop space madness, or moonmadness in this case
And compare this to a space station?
Not to mention the acculmative effect of radiation exposure.
The biggest error here, given that with the moon you can dig down into the regolith/rock and pile any spare that you happen to have over the top of you for good measure. At least over the areas designated as shelters for the more extreme events that aren't within the tolerances already mitigated by the standard protections/time-exposure levels.
Anyway,
We are just running out of money. We can't even get normal factories and towns on earth to prosper right now, how would a moonbase do any better?
To be honest, money is an ephemeral concept. Our problems with money right now isn't because we're running out of chickens, or leather hides or bars of steel or even the little round discs of non-precious metal and other pulp/fabric/polymer-based tokens representing monetary values. It's because the fairly arbitrary and almost entirely disconnected association between the concept of currency values and the physical needs and provision of services has been sent out of whack by people who "use money to make money", with that particular kind of money having been not even composed of said physical substances, but almost entirely conceptual.
Actually, we
are running out of resources, insofar as consumptions are concerned (the "if everyone on the planet was American/whatever we'd need 4.5 Earths to keep them living as they already do" thing, or somesuch value that's got huge error bars on it anyway). But I'm not expecting MoonFarms(TM) to be a solution to
that. (f/when we get into space on a self-sufficient basis, though, we should at least know
how to be a lot better at keeping ourselves supported, though I suspect that most 1st-world 'Groundsiders' will continue to pig themselves out on the easier to import (from 2nd-, 3rd-, Off-world sources) foods and other stuff, rather than adopt the much more spartan spacer way-of-life (itself being positively decadent compared with the current starvation areas of the 3rd-world, and breadline families in the 1st still also comparatively suffering).
Physically, it is basically doable. And, actually, financially so either by rejecting the current system (getting more 'realistic') or by actively embracing it in the expectation that the boom you artificially inflate will provide the required dividends well before the marker is called back in again. (Or having the "reject the system" solution at hand t bring into the end of it, but that's even more a bit of a dodgy one than the embracing solution!)
Not that I'm calling here, for an anti-capitalist (or
hyper-capitalist) revolution, prior to space, but that would be one way.
The other way is to drip, drip, drip the space tech into our lives. Millionaires on SpaceShipTwo tomorrow, the pretty well off sometime thereafter in a trickle-down effect; at the same time exploration discovers something we particularly want (or need to deal with pretty sharpish) and we send up a set of miners/rig-jockeys to have a go at it, which eventually expands into a trickle-
up effect; all the while, the scientists that are currently doing their own 'thang' expand their activities in vanguard, support and follow-up research activities of various kinds (i.e. prepping expeditions, giving specific expertise to any that go out there and clear up the messes and develop improvements for the followup/continuation of the not-fatally-flawed attempts. Except that I'm worried that this approach is going too slow. But a few key techs (high-altitude launches from buoyant platforms, if not space elevators, and various improvements in space medicine)
could be the answer. Or it could be something unexpected. And that's not even considering some kind of First Contact assistance; Ferengi/Centauri opportunist traders; some guys wandering over and telling us that we're the 13th colony or origin planet; portal/Stargate/'Door' technologies; worldwide 'ascendence' to non-corporeal forms, whatever...
But that sort of thought tends to go off-the-wall quite easily. Perhaps best not to let the latter part of that diatribe be a point of discussion.