Discovery's Final Flight, With Bonus Robonaut
Exactly 24 hours from now—assuming the old gal gets her voltage irregularities sorted out—the space shuttle Discovery will make its final voyage, with six astronauts and one robonaut aboard. The astronauts will come home, the robonaut will stay aboard the International Space Station. With only one more flight planned before the entire shuttle fleet is decommissioned, now's as good a time as any to review why it's long past time to let NASA's shuttle program wheeze to a finish, and exciting new private options to step into the breach.
First Woodshed on the Moon: NASA wants you to pay $104 billion for its mistakes, by Ted Balaker | October 4, 2005.
With all the post-Katrina buck-passing, it's rather refreshing to hear a high ranking official admit fault. When he spoke with USA TODAY's editorial staff last week, NASA Administrator Michael Griffin didn't blame himself for his agency's woes, but he did something perhaps even more startling. He agreed that most of what NASA has been doing for the past few decades—the shuttle program and the International Space Station—has been a mistake.
Back To Space: NASA fights the future, by Tim Cavanaugh | February 3, 2003.
Among the major science projects handled during this flight (not counting the familiar zero-gravity tests on ants, spiders, and bees dreamed up by schoolkids in the US, China, and Australia and performed on the shuttle for public relations purposes), there appear to be few if any items of burning import….The Columbia astronauts studied the effects of zero gravity on prostate cancer cells, produced flame balls ("the weakest forms of fire ever produced"), and examined how moss responds to light and gravity.
If these experiments were conducted by, say, the Department of the Interior or a federally funded college lab—that is, if they were removed from the context of national service and heroism space travel endows—they would be scoffed at as a waste of taxpayer dollars, recited in get-a-load-of-this tones by members of congress who occasionally enjoy criticizing obscure and apparently valueless public science projects. (To anybody who accuses me of disrespecting the recently deceased, I throw the question back: Is expanding the base of knowledge about flame balls worth risking seven lives?)
The Men Who Sold the Moon: Advertising the early space race, by Brian Doherty | October 2010.
Space's place in the public imagination may be in low orbit, but the real space age is just beginning. The government bureaucracy and military-industrial complex so stylishly sold in this book may have been the thrust that gave launch energy to man's travels off planet. But a new steering system is emerging for the greatest voyage in human history.
NASA: An $18.9 Billion Self-Esteem Program by Michael C. Moynihan | July 6, 2010.
I will leave it to other staffers to denounce NASA as a wasteful boondoggle, a budget-chewing vestige of the Cold War (I trust this is the case, though admit to having little interest in the celestial). What limited knowledge of space exploration I possess, sadly, comes from David Bowie and The Only Ones. But I do know this: the United States space program now exists to assuage the hurt feelings of nations and cultures that have lagged behind the United States in scientific development.
Extra bonus: Check out this creepily prescient and conspiracy-fodder-providing piece by Gregg Easterbrook from 1980: Beam Me Out Of This Death Trap, Scotty: 5 … 4 … 3 … 2 … 1 … Goodbye, Columbia.
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If I'm not mistaken, the ranking Republican on the House Subcommittee onSpace and Technology - where NASA comes to beg for its budget - is Dana Rohrabacher, the libertarianish congressman from California. Cut NASA's budget? Probably not, he has lots of aerospace in his district. And he served as Chair of the Subcommittee before 2006 and NASA's
still here isn't it.
You win the alt-text cup for the day KMW.
What, no mention of the article posted on Fox last week about a NASA plan to send people on a long one-way voyage to colonize another planet?
http://www.foxnews.com/scitech.....-starship/
That's because NASA intends to crew the ship with all of America's libertarians.
that would be an interesting idea. No need of buying an island. Let's just go and claim a planet.
All three of us?
We're that dangerous.
Next American manned spacecraft is likely the Dragon module.
it is pretty depressing
for what we blew on the international space station, and the shuttle to service it, we could have gone to mars
it would have been our pyramids
Full of dessicated dead people?
A relic the desert.
A place built by enslaved Jews?
You gotta admit that it's sad that the Americans will be flying Space-A on Russian flights to get to the intl. space station.
I mean, picture it: American astronaut, sitting on a bench seat, staring across the straw-covered floor at a babooshka holding a chicken in her lap.
God how far we've fallen.
Maybe not so far:
http://static2.stuff.co.nz/1270188486/288/3544288.jpg
That's hot. She's doin' the white-man's overbite thing.
Happily, the cost of the 2009 Stimulus To Nowhere cost only 44 times NASA's 2010 budget, give or take a few hundred million dollars. Who needs space exploration? We've got sexy road signs!
As a public service I wish to remind these astronauts that this is their last opportunity to steal the shuttle and pilot the poorly shielded vessel into a high concentration of cosmic rays.
No more procrastinating, guys. It only takes four of you.
I have to admit that the Race to the Moon(tm)was a major driver for me to pursue an engineering degree.
I guess I have to turn in my decoder ring now.
... Hobbit
You know if they got rid of everything else in government that they waste money on, I wouldn't mind a few billion every year for human space flight. Of course if we lived in a truly capitalist world the private sector would have us to the stars in no time.