It's Been 50 Years Since Humans Walked on the Moon
The last time there was a manned mission to the moon, Pong had just been released on Atari.

We were supposed to go back to the moon last week. We were also supposed to go back five weeks before that in mid-September, and six months before that. We were maybe supposed to go back to the moon during the George W. Bush administration. And we were definitely supposed to go back to the moon shortly after what ended up being the final Apollo mission.
Yet no one has been to the moon for 50 years.
That so much time has elapsed since mankind's last lunar foray is somehow shocking, even to those of us who are too young to remember the moon landings. Those few round trips to plant flags, gather rocks, take photos, and play golf are so central to our sense of ourselves as a nation—and as a species—that it's jarring to contemplate what it means that so much time has passed without a repeat performance.
The last time a group of astronauts was preparing for a manned moon mission, Bob Barker was making his Price Is Right debut. The first pocket scientific calculator was appearing in stores. Pong was newly released for Atari. Comedian George Carlin had just been arrested for "Seven Words You Can Never Say On Television."
When Apollo 17 returned to Earth on December 19, 1972—after a 12-day mission in which Gene Cernan and Harrison Schmitt became the last two men to walk on the lunar surface—no one involved thought it was the end of an era. Public opinion was turning against government space spending at the time, but popular literature, music, and movies were full of visions of lunar colonies and more. The final frontier remained very much alive in the popular imagination, and humanity's conquest of it felt inevitable.
Yet five decades have slipped by without a single new footprint in the regolith. If we can put a man on the moon, why can't we put a man on the moon? Conventional wisdom holds that the moon race was little more than Cold War peacocking, with both sides demonstrating their ability to burn resources and genius on a project with no immediate practical payoff—other than perhaps vaguely hedging against the other side weaponizing space. This, in turn, led to a first-past-the-post mindset and, ultimately, a dead end. The moon was a prize. Like a high school boy trying to win a stuffed toy at a carnival game, NASA was willing to do almost anything to win it. Once in hand, it lost its fascination. Mankind managed a giant leap, and we neglected the many small steps that should have come next.
Reason has been publishing special features devoted to space travel since shortly after our own founding in 1968, the same year as the first crewed Apollo mission. What is striking about the tone of Reason's space coverage over the years is how hard it strives to be measured, realistic, even critical—and how consistently it fails to maintain that cynical distance in favor of optimism and hope.
The question Reason has long grappled with is not whether to return to the moon (though that is an interesting debate as well), but how to reconceive space travel and exploration as an emerging market and a chance to discover new attributes and aptitudes of our clever, canny species.
Nationalism isn't an ideal source of competitive spirit—too often such contests end in shootouts or embargoes—but it is what got us to the moon in the first place. As this issue goes to press, NASA's long-delayed Artemis is poised for takeoff, the beginning of the most viable push to return to the moon in my lifetime. But the world has changed since the days of Apollo, and in many ways that launch is inconsequential. Even if it fails, there are a handful of serious private competitors working on their own viable, sustainable visions. Perhaps one of them will sell me a ticket.
This article originally appeared in print under the headline "It's Been 50 Years Since Humans Walked on the Moon."
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We haven't gone back to the moon because there is nothing on the moon. It's a death trap and wasteland. To think it could be used for anything with the technology we have available is ridiculous. Going to the moon is like climbing mount Everest, except vastly more expensive. It's a "look ma, look what I can do" moment. We lack the ability to transport machinery or really anything of "weight" to the moon. Thus it is a complete waste of time and money. Meanwhile, reason is talking about real estate (laughing) at the moon, and property rights. Let's get real: No one is going to be able to do anything (except maybe die during a visit) with the moon.
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The first pocket scientific calculator was appearing in stores. Pong was newly released for Atari.
BTW, older generations of microprocessors have been used on spacecraft not only becuase NASA is super slow in developing spacecraft but because older architectures are less vulnerable to cosmic rays than more micro scale, newer architectures.
Pong wasn't released on Atari pong was Atari. You bought the console and the only thing you could play on it was Pong.
I didn't pong until I hit puberty; until then I had to put up with my dad's pong. After that, he always had to worry that my pong would out-pong his pong.
[Translation for Americans: Pong is slang for a foul odor or stink.]
We actually got Pong 16 in '78. The best game on it was Breakout - I played that for many hours.
Come on... I came here for the conspiracy comments. I'll start.
50 years? That might just be enough to make somebody suspicious. Eh?
Yeah, it's a conspiracy alright.
The fact that going to the moon is horrendously expensive, horrifically dangerous and there isn't anything there worth all the risk positively conspires against anyone going back.
Except the Chinese - who, once they've landed on the Moon, will claim that it belongs to China and always has. They will cite some ancient text written thousands of years ago as proof that they have always "owned" the Moon. China "owned" the Moon long before the US even existed; the US landings are only proof that the Americans are capitalist, imperialist dogs trying to steal what always belonged to China.
[Not sarcastic at all, sadly.]
The other Reptile People made it clear that we were not welcome on the Moon again until after The Queen died.
Classic distraction.
Nothing to see here. Oh look, the moon!
"no one has been to the moon for 50 years."
And why is that a bad thing? Once we got there, it was clear to everyone that there was nothing to do there. And there never had been. We didn't spend all that money to send a couple of guys on a sightseeing vacation. During the great age of exploration you could bet off your ship, find food and water, and build a house and settle down if the natives would let you. The moon was an utter dead end - once you got there all you could do was leave. All else was vanity. And now we're doing it again?
There are actually resources that could be mined on the Moon. If we ever figure out fusion Helium 3 could be a valuable Moon resource.
"If we ever figure out fusion..."
Why, that's only ten to fifteen years in the future... and has been since the 1950's!
I'll believe we are getting serious about space travel when the first space dock is built; you know, an orbital platform for building spaceships in space. You can't build spaceships designed for long-term habitation on the ground [F*ck off, JJ Abrams, for ruining Star Trek!]. You can only build the parts and launch them into space for assembly.