Nick Gillespie | July 27, 2007
The latest triumph of NASA, the preferred federal workfare posting for diaper-wearing, would-be kidnapper pilots everywhere:
Despite safety warnings from NASA doctors, astronauts were allowed to fly after drinking heavily, an independent panel said in a report released Friday.
The report said it happened twice but gave no names and did not say when the drinking occurred, how many astronauts were involved, or whether they were flying on the space shuttle, the Russian Soyuz spaceship, or aboard NASA's training jets.
NASA officials let them fly even after flight surgeons and fellow astronauts raised concerns that safety might be jeopardized, according to the report, done by a panel created by NASA after the arrest of astronaut Lisa Nowak in February on charges she tried to kidnap her rival in a love triangle.
More on boozy astronauts here.
Elton John's "Rocket Man" lyrics--including the great line "And I'm gonna be high as a kite by then"--here.
William Shatner's dramatic reading of "Rocket Man"--including the super-fantastic line "And I'm gonna be...hiiiiigh...as a kite by then":
Double Bonus Friday: Chris Elliott's dramatic reading of William Shatner's dramatic reading of "Rocket Man":
Update: As requested, Family Guy's Stewie burns his fuse out there, alone:
Even More Update: Katherine Mangu-Ward's original blog post from yesterday on NASA's gastronauts here. And on the future of space tourism (wet and dry) here.
Help Reason celebrate its next 40 years. Donate Now!
Try Reason's award-winning print edition today! Your first issue is FREE if you are not completely satisfied.
I think being drunk on the Soyuz capsule is required as one of the preflight checks.
Let's make it a trifecta...can anyone provide a link to Stewie's rendition of Rocketman on an episode of Family Guy?
Nick has uncovered even more proof that government just doesn't work. The guy simply does not rest.
I can't believe these pilots would be drunk before rocketing into space. Isn't it obvious that it would be way cooler to be high for that?
I can't believe these pilots would be drunk before rocketing
into space. Isn't it obvious that it would be way cooler to be high
for that?
Drug testing...same reason airline pilots drink.
Stewie's "Rocket Man":
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w95eCmyLl6U
Let's make it a trifecta...can anyone provide a link to
Stewie's rendition of Rocketman on an episode of Family
Guy?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nh65oO5ym0E
In non-governmental spacecraft related news, an explosion at Burt Rutan's Scaled Composites testing facility kills 3. Scaled Composites is the company who built SpaceShipOne, the winner of the Ansari X Prize.
I think the real question is "what the hell is Shatner
on?"
The
Transformed Man, however, is genius. Evil genius.
Nick is starting to post like a Urkobolder. Gotta love the
Shat--he just keeps on giving, year after year. The funny thing is,
he was always in on the joke. Is that a Canadian thing?
Kwix,
Heard about that earlier today. Terrible. I believe the accident
occurred during some test connected to the SpaceShipTwo
development.
Is the superimposition of Shatners illustrating some kind of relative effect caused by faster-than-light rocket travel?
By the way, "a superimposition of Shatners" would be a great way to refer to him in the plural.
Way OT....
Have I entered some alternative Bizarro universe? Ron Paul was on
All Things Considered Wednesday evening and not one mention yet at
Reason!?
William Shatner claims it was supposed to be a Frank Sinatra impression. Or a pun on "rock it, man." Or something.
Someday in the distant future, people will watch the Shatner clip and plumb it for meaning, like a dusty manuscript. A whole religion built thereupon.
How much shat could a Shatner shat if a Shatner could shat
shit?
Anyway, the guy is amazing.
The brilliance of Shatner is that he can't be parodied. As much
as I love his rendition of "Rocket Man", I think the true Shatner
masterpiece is his interpretation of "Taxi". This is Shatner as an
artist at the absolute top of his game. Far more nuanced and
poignant than the emotionless, overproduced Harry Chapin original,
it moves me every time I listen to it:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dBWOmHUvKBw
Shatnered, Shatnered.
Barbary Coast and Trek and dreams,
Are still surviving on TV.
Look my shirt, it's in tatters!
I'm the Shatner!
Shatnered.
And so on.
Well, to paraphrase Chuck Yeager, you try sitting on
top of a missle, whose every working part was provided by the
lowest possible bidder...
...filled with liquid whatever that could blow you to kingdom come
at any moment...
...sober...
I might be going out on a limb here, but if I were being blasted
into space at mach ten i think i would need to be loaded. Ya know.
Cause ive seen a few blow up. Plus, sexy love triangles in space
just arent as much fun sober.
Posted from my iphone bitches!!
Well, to paraphrase Chuck Yeager, you try sitting on top of
a missle, whose every working part was provided by the lowest
possible bidder...
...with a catastrophic failure rate on the order of 1%. Besides,
the computer does all the flying. The people are just part of the
cargo.
Astronaut Lisa Nowak was arrested last February on charges she
tried to kidnap her rival in a love triangle.
NASA responds by creating a panel.
Six months later the panel issues a report: Flying While
Intoxicated.
And we wonder why we still don't have a space program?
Has anyone else here read Orbital Decay and Lunar
Descent by Allen Steele? I'm glad this happened on a
government program rather than in the private space industry as it
was in the stories, because private industry doesn't deserve that
kind of black eye.
I'd be very concerned about this if the drunk person(s) was at the
flight controls of a vehicle while under the influence. But if it's
a payload specialist who can't even begin his/her work until 4-6
hours after takeoff (and was sober by then), I hope they can cut
him/her some slack.
Certainly the secrecy surrounding this (and other alleged
misconduct by astronauts) is more disturbing than the misconduct
itself.
And I wonder if anyone has researched just how differently alcohol
may work on people in zero gee? Sooner or later we'll know; and it
would be a shame to have to find out the hard way.
I doubt any of them were drunk at liftoff. As far as I can tell, they only violated the no drinking 12 hours before flight rule. If you had 3 beers 6 hours before flight your not drunk, although you're breaking the rules.
Site comments/questions:
Media Inquiries and Reprint Permissions:
(310) 367-6109
Editorial & Production Offices:
3415 S. Sepulveda Blvd.
Suite 400
Los Angeles, CA 90034
(310) 391-2245