It is how we refer to our company for ease of communication: Moriba Jah Universal.
What is the space junk problem?
There are currently about 50,000 pieces of junk being tracked in LEO and GEO ranging in size from a cellphone to the space station, with at least 12 satellites being launched each week from the US alone. There are currently no modalities of junk removal or remediation being employed by humanity. LEO and GEO are what we refer to as orbital highways, and like all highways, there is a finite amount of carrying capacity. So, if there is no junk removal occurring and at least a dozen satellites being launched each week, not to mention the super-spreader events that occur when two pieces of space junk collide going 16x faster than a bullet which creates massively more junk from the exploded pieces, that creates a very real and fast-growing problem of space junk.
How does this relate to the average human on Earth, you might wonder? Well, if you are a human who has grown reliant on satellite-provided services and capabilities such as internet access, GPS, air-traffic control, maritime traffic control, banking transactions, and more (if you’re reading this, you are one of those humans), you must understand that one single collision in space that affects any of the satellites that controls those capabilities means that you no longer have access to those things for an unknowable amount of time. And the question isn’t what if this happens, at this point it is simply… when?
What is Ancient tek? How does it help solve the orbital debris problem?
Ancient TEK, or Traditional Ecological Knowledge, is the combination of expansive wisdom and conscious, intentional practice carried down by generation after generation of Indigenous Stewards of planet Earth. These Indigenous Stewards have a much different view of their role here on Earth. They view their role as “stewards,” while the vast majority of humanity view themselves as “owners.”
Stewardship asks us to claim RESPONSIBILITY for the compassionate maintenance of the finite resources that our Earth so generously offers to us, while ownership asks us to claim RIGHTS to these same finite resources, which no human truly has.
This helps solve the problem of space junk by employing the conscious, intentional practices of stewardship as we continue to navigate this fast-growing threat to humanity (created by humans) versus plowing forward with the current status quo of exploration across land, air, and ocean which are deeply rooted in colonialism. Colonial practices have caused and continue to cause immeasurable and unnecessary suffering across humanity, mostly to those who are underrepresented in rooms where decisions are made. Excluding these BIPOC voices in the past has been detrimental to all aspects of human society, and we want to ensure this doesn’t continue on into space exploration as it has already begun in that fashion.
What is a celestial steward?
It is a title that can be claimed by anyone willing to embrace stewardship, empathy, and interconnectedness in their ways of living and acting in the world. Celestial stewardship is a mantle worn by those who embrace the mostly forgotten intergenerational contract we humans have to be custodians of the sky and beyond.
What is decision intelligence?
It is the tradecraft of manipulating data and information in such a way that maximizes desired outcomes and enables better decisions to be made.
The Observe-Orient-Decide-Act (OODA) loop is a construct created by John Boyd (circa 1968) describing the process of gaining advantage over adversaries. The critical part of the OODA loop is Orient, because it requires taking the time and energy to make sense of the Observations, that can then provide the crucial insights that lead to the best decision making possible. Decision Intelligence is the ability to ingest multiple sources of heterogeneous data and information, “orient” these data in a way that their aggregation not only makes sense, but uncovers critical hidden insights. MJU then providing these insights at the speed of relevance to decision-makers across the globe.