I doubt thats even possible without a whole new technology discovery. I cant ship a single piece of paper across town over night for that. When you get it under a 500 dollars a pound you will see real gains. Right now its near the ten thousand mark I believe but that depends on your source and definition. Some new technologies are paving the way for such gains but only time will tell.
Strip
SpaceX's Musk said the SaturnV class rocket they're planning would do about that, 500$/kilo. Assuming that's a typo for /kg rather than /lbs in your post. Edit- their estimate is 500$/lbs.
Iron, one desert here or there, I'll take the one as far away from everything we know. I don't see the point in turning down a chance to discover things in a completely new setting. Once the few pioneers get things mapped and worked out so that the popular colonization industry shows up, all the earthly comforts will probably be cost effective to some acceptable degree for the average joes.. They'll be free to recreate everything they "miss" about Earth. FWIW though, if they do that I'll move to the next planet. That's all speculation, but that's how I see it.
And there's at least a few other very interesting things to do on the Moon, like radioastronomy on some quiet parts of it.. Manufacturing there will probably have some advantages not found in microgravity in Earth orbits and restricted free space (as opposed to on the ground of the Moon), permanent shade in some craters etc.
Crap.. I mean, it would be like the Shackleton and Columbus expeditions all over again, and you're saying you'd pass that up, or that I would. No way.