After Becoming the Oldest Man To Visit Space, William Shatner Makes an Emotional Case for Private Space Tourism
Blue Origin's New Shepard capsule carried the 90-year-old former Star Trek actor and three crewmembers 66 miles above the Earth's surface.

Today, at age 90, actor William Shatner became the oldest person to travel into space aboard private space company Blue Origin's New Shepard capsule. His post-launch remarks about the transformative experience of private space tourism might make him one of the most compelling advocates for private space tourism.
"To see the blue cover whip by and now you're staring to into blackness," said a tearful Shatner—famous for playing Capt. James T. Kirk in Star Trek—to Blue Origin founder Jeff Bezos moments after planting his feet on Terra Firma in the West Texas desert. "There's the blue down there and the black up there. There is mother and Earth and comfort and there is, is there death? I don't know. Is that what death is? It was so moving."
The short 10-minute flight took Shatner and three fellow crew members 66 miles above the planet's surface, or just about the "Kármán line" that marks the boundary between Earth's atmosphere and space.
Shatner's past portrayal of the space-faring Kirk obviously made his travel into space today a surreal conversion of fantasy into reality. The launch also neatly illustrates the progress that's been made in space technology since he was only pretending to explore the stars.
When Star Trek first aired in the late 1960s, space travel was the exclusive domain of highly trained professional astronauts traveling aboard rockets built and funded by the massive government space programs of two superpowers primarily interested in supplementing their nuclear arms race with a propaganda victory or two.
Fast-forward to today, where Shatner's Blue Origin flight is only the latest milestone-setting launch of a burgeoning private space tourism industry.
Last month, Elon Musk's SpaceX sent the first all-civilian crew into orbit for a three-day, privately funded mission. That follows the company's successful Crew Dragon mission from last year, which carried two NASA astronauts to the International Space Station from American soil for the first time in over a decade.
Earlier this summer, Blue Origin and Richard Branson's Virgin Galactic both performed their first human flights into space (or close enough) with their billionaire founders on board.
Those latter flights attracted heated criticism from progressives who bemoaned the sad reality where billionaires spent their money pushing the envelope of space technology instead of improving the lives of ordinary people here on Earth. Better those funds be confiscated via a wealth tax and funneled into terrestrial government bureaucracies dedicated to real-world problems of health and education, they said.
It's true that space travel has yet to become a reality for the common man. At the moment, it's an option only for the ultra-wealthy, the mildly famous, and a few lucky lottery winners. The same can be said for the early iterations of many inventions that are now boringly commonplace, from automobiles to smartphones.
Innovations born from a capitalist process of innovation and competition have made all those things ubiquitous features of modern life, for both rich and poor. With enough time and low enough taxes, space flight will hopefully be an equally accessible activity.
Critics still might scoff that all that time and investment will only transform billionaires' vanity projects into glorified amusement rides for the less wealthy. But Shatner's own post-launch comments suggest that even his brief trip to space was far more than just a fun adventure.
"Everybody in the world needs to do this," he said, telling Bezos, "what you have given me is the most profound experience I can imagine. I am so filled with emotion about what just happened. I hope I never recover from this. I hope I can maintain what I feel now."
Rent Free is a weekly newsletter from Christian Britschgi on urbanism and the fight for less regulation, more housing, more property rights, and more freedom in America's cities.
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Where no old fart has gone before.
May the farts be with you.
He mixed Star Trek with Star Wars! Impure! Impure!
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They should have landed in the Norway maelstrom.
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missed opportunity for "Khaaaaaaan!"
He did say the one thing he didn't want to see when he looked out the window was a gremlin looking back at him....
"In Space, No One Can Hear You Scream: 'MISTER TAMBURINE MAN!'"
https://youtu.be/YHWMUTkXiE8
Is this what we used to call "a slow news day?" I didn't think we had those anymore.
You think they should have run with a more interesting story about Meghan Markle's new line of dresses or whatever?
She already has a new byline as Climate Editor of Vogue
https://vvattsupwiththat.blogspot.com/2019/07/new-conde-nast-climatogy-journal-for.html
"TO GO WHERE ... really quite a few people have actually gone before ..."
574 as of July 20th this year. Half a dozen or so since then.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_space_travelers_by_name#S
574 people total - out of 7.9 *billion* people on the Earth today and over 107 *billion* people in all of human history.
I personally think it's great. Not myself, but perhaps my grandchildren will be able to go into space for a reasonable price. We already have 3 company's competing for the space industry. Prices will drop. New jobs will be created. Everything from hospitality to food service to trash removal. Adventure company's will sprout up. Limitless and unimaginable.
350,000 feet and a few minutes of free fall?
If they revive a Concorde as a First Class Vomit Comet with free champagne, Bezos' business model is toast.
But it won't be penis shaped.
Apparently the shape has been successful for a very long time.
It is a proven design.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5WCoRGbT3CM
Right there with you. Growing up, I was a space geek. I did multiple research papers on the Shuttle and Apollo Missions. It was also a key point in my conversion to libertarianism. Back in the early 2000's, I read a very compelling takedown of the Shuttle program, showing all the ways that it distorted the heavy launch industry.
Learning how the Shuttle Program set back the private space industry really trained me in being able to love some amazing works of mankind, while also realizing the terrible cost they place on society. Shatner's moment probably came 20 years later than it should have due to the impact of the shuttle program.
Nevertheless, here we are, 20 years later and I couldn't be more excited to see us back on the path to the stars. Sometimes I truly think that getting away from this rock is the only way to escape the gnarled rat's nest of regulation and special interests that has overrun every part of our lives.
… only way to escape the gnarled rat’s nest of regulation and special interests that has overrun every part of our lives.
Rest assured it will follow us wherever we go.
Everywhere you go, there you are….
"Rest assured it will follow us wherever we go."
Oh certainly, but it will take time. The first space-steaders won't have time for bureaucracy. Like in the United States, we can potentially buy 100 years of freedom before the leviathan creeps in. And the beauty of the solar system is just how vast it is. Literally thousands of places for small populations to thrive as the technology improves.
Yeah, assuming the progs don't kill it off for just that same reason.
"NO ESCAPE!"
Like you, I was a space geek growing up. It caused me to decide that's what I wanted to do. So, I ended up spending 12 years of my career working directly on the space shuttle orbiter and its payloads. And while I enjoyed it, I agree with you completely. It also helped me convert to libertarianism.
That said, my experience and my education helps me understand why it's so hard to do the space thing. For the first time time I am actually believing that private entities are really going to do it. It takes crazy billionaires to do it.
Oops, this was supposed to be a response to Overt. I guess that's pretty obvious but still...
The flights around the moon will be when it really gets interesting. You won't even need to go into lunar orbit, just get the free return ride.
Fast-forward to today
Um...maybe crawl forward...inch forward...creep forward? Fast? Cheap orbital travel should be a consumer item today. Shatner's flight should have been while he was still playing Kirk.
Hit fast-forward on the old VCR, eh?
Be kind. Rewind.
"Earlier this summer, Blue Origin and Richard Branson's Virgin Galactic both performed their first human flights into space (or close enough) with their billionaire founders on board."
If Virgin Galactic broke through the Kármán line, is it still a virgin?
It didn't. But it probably wasn't because he was thinking of that question.
Did he romance a hot alien girl like he used to?
The Orion slave girls? Which one do you like best.
I thought I'd say something about how if Orion had slaves it must have had a civil war, as well. But it turns out they did:
https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/Star_Fleet_Universe
The chick from "The Menagerie" and Uhura are tops for a FMF/FFM threesome.
Those latter flights attracted heated criticism from progressives who bemoaned the sad reality where billionaires spent their money pushing the envelope of space technology instead of improving the lives of ordinary people here on Earth.
You mean the money they earned by improving the lives of ordinary people here on Earth?
But they should give back the money they earned. Profits are theft.
Gods, I wish this was obviously sarcasm. I mean, I get that it probably is from you, here, but there are undoubtedly people who would say it and be completely serious.
Awesome cool Captain Kirk!
Keep inspiring people to reach for the stars.
"You know what to do, Dawg!...BUST A MOVE!"
https://youtu.be/RNrQoMODKfE
Love or hate Jeff Bezos you have to admire his business sense. I don't think anyone would have paid attention to the space flight had he not had Shatner aboard.
I do think the real trick is getting to point where orbital flight is possible. I would not pay what Blue Origins or Virgin wants for a short flight. But I would for a day or two in orbit. Better yet would be a space hotel. China is building its own space station now. If when the station is finished what if Hilton contract them for another space station just for paying guests? Seem like a get idea.
I don’t have the energy to create a sock puppet account so just pretend I did and titled it “Cpt James T Kirkland”:
CARRY ON, KLINGONS!!!!!!
machqu'bogh vay'
Orbiting Uranus looking for Klingons.
"HE'S RED(NECK), JIM!"
*applause*
Comparing launching into the darkness of space to the blackness of death was interesting. Shatner would be one of the invited guests at my fantasy dinner party.
Good for him! Actually going into space at his age is a big step in space travel for all of us. This is another break in the NASA narrative that only a select few NASA only can go into space.
While it's still pricey, there is some competition which will drive the cost down and increase availability.
Shatner is the second member of the Enterprise crew to make it into space, although he’s the first to make it while still alive:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Doohan
I wonder if Bezos will send any other cast members, maybe George Takei. When Shatner was speaking after the flight, Bezos was hanging on his every word like a hardcore fan.
Let's not forget how much taxpayer subsidy these companies have gotten.
Didn't New Mexico taxpayers build a spaceport?
Don't worry. Some of us have, especially a certain Copypasta maker.
And yet, still a better value than the train from Belen to Santa Fe.
> Those latter flights attracted heated criticism from progressives who bemoaned the sad reality where billionaires spent their money pushing the envelope of space technology instead of improving the lives of ordinary people here on Earth.
Confiscate the total wealth of all billionaires in this country, and you couldn't fund the government for even a year. Heck, you would a hard time covering the spending increases from just Trump and Biden.
"But we could just tax them 100% again next year?" Yeah, right.
After spending two weeks on the 600 foot yacht of the latest trillionaire, John Q. Richards, Oprah Winfrey makes an emotional case for private yacht tourism.
Isn’t this just a 21st Century version of the old barnstorming pilots giving joyrides in their biplanes? Probably a lot of fun, sure.
Let’s not forget how much taxpayer subsidy these companies have gotten.
https://www.news000k.com/2021/04/Toyota-Avalon-2021.html
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