We Are Going to the Moon
Thanks to the rise of private spaceflight companies, mankind will have a future off-Earth.

Following 11 years in which the space agency has had no launch capability of its own, NASA will soon attempt to fly its huge Space Launch System (SLS) booster for the first time. A few minutes after liftoff, the Orion spacecraft will separate from the rocket and zip into orbit around the moon for more than a month. No astronauts will be on board this much delayed initial flight. But on later flights, some will.
NASA has heavily promoted this first Artemis mission as a return to human moon missions. Because Artemis superficially resembles the Apollo Program, it would be easy to dismiss it as a mere rehash. The SLS looks a lot like the Saturn V that launched six Apollo missions to the surface of the moon. And while the Orion spacecraft is roomier and hosts modern avionics in its guts, in essence it is a larger version of the Apollo capsule. Our Chinese rivals mocked NASA for just striving to relive past glories, and even President Barack Obama in 2010 denigrated the idea of returning human beings to the moon as "been there, done that." Buzz Aldrin, the second man to set foot on the moon, sat in the front row as Obama said that, fuming quietly.
But Artemis is different. NASA's new space exploration plan is beginning as the agency starts to embrace the commercial space industry. Although the big SLS rocket and Orion were funded more than a decade ago through cost-plus contracts designed to reward such familiar corporate partners as Boeing and Lockheed Martin, more recent deals have gone through a genuinely competitive award process.
Significantly, in April 2021 Elon Musk's SpaceX beat a handful of serious competitors for a $2.89 billion contract to use its futuristic, silvery Starship vehicle to land astronauts on the moon. While Orion and SLS can take prospective moonwalkers to lunar orbit, NASA still needed a lander to carry humans to and from the surface. In a striking contrast with its earlier contracts, SpaceX did not create Starship at NASA's request. The company built the large rocket to one day fly human beings to Mars, an audacious but no longer insurmountable goal. SpaceX had invested billions in the project by the time NASA expressed interest in using the vehicle to ferry astronauts down to the moon from lunar orbit. Because SpaceX had invested so much already in Starship, NASA was able to buy a service—lunar landings—for a fraction of what other companies were offering.
NASA has a legitimate chance to return to the moon sustainably because private companies began competing with it and/or selling it services. That is probably the only way the U.S. will ever go back. NASA isn't about to return to its halcyon days when it had a work force of 200,000 and was spending 5 percent of the federal budget. After six lunar landings, in 1972 President Richard Nixon decided that America had more than honored its commitment to President John F. Kennedy's legacy of landing a man on the moon before the end of the 1960s. As Nixon directed the space agency to scale back its ambition, NASA's budget fell to less than 1 percent of federal spending. Today it is less than one-half of 1 percent.
Apollo's extravagant cost is just one of the reasons no human being has flown more than a few hundred miles off Earth's surface in half a century. One must know all the reasons NASA stopped trying to get to the moon if one is to understand how the Artemis Program is different from Apollo—and more importantly, why, thanks to private enterprise, it has a chance to succeed.
How NASA Lost its Boost
In 1972, Eugene Cernan and Harrison Schmitt stared across a desolate lunar surface with a sense of regret. The two Apollo 17 astronauts knew that theirs would be NASA's final mission to the moon for a while.
Still, they didn't think it would be decades before a new generation of space travelers followed in their gray and dusty footsteps. Before he climbed into the Lunar Module for the final time, Cernan radioed back to Earth that people would return to the moon "not too long into the future." But he was wrong. When he died in 2017 at age 82, Cernan was still the last man to have been on the moon.
Why was Cernan's wish unfulfilled? Mainly because there was no strong reason to go back. Apollo's great goal was not a detailed exploration of the moon, nor to let us establish a permanent presence beyond the close confines of low Earth orbit. Apollo was driven by strictly geopolitical aims, reversing a series of Soviet firsts in space starting in 1957 with Sputnik.
Moscow's propaganda machine trumpeted each Soviet space flight as further evidence of the benefits of its culture and form of government. In 1960, Gallup's polls showed large majorities in countries one might think sympathetic to the United States—including Great Britain, France, and West Germany—thinking the USSR would lead the world in science during the 1960s.
Kennedy decided to combat that by besting the Soviets in space. In pledging to go to the moon, he picked a goal that was just barely doable, was certain to create a global splash, and, critically, was far enough into the future that it would give NASA time to catch up to Russia's space program.
That is precisely what happened, and Apollo 11 was a geopolitical triumph. Yet almost immediately after Neil Armstrong and Aldrin splashed down in the Pacific, Apollo's strategic importance began to fade.
Only a few years later, Washington and Moscow started to regard space less as a place for grandstanding and competition and more as a venue for wary cooperation. In the summer of 1975, NASA's Apollo spacecraft docked with a Soviet Soyuz capsule in low Earth orbit. Two decades later, the Americans and the Russians trusted each other enough to embark on a major extraterrestrial construction project, the International Space Station (ISS).
Space no longer ranked high on the list of national priorities, and NASA's human spaceflight ambitions contracted along with the buying power of its budget. Over the years, some U.S. senators have debated whether NASA should continue a human spaceflight program at all, given all the problems on Earth. Even the venerable space shuttle was almost canceled. President Jimmy Carter only managed to get the funding needed for cost overruns by pushing NASA to accommodate U.S. spy satellites and other military payloads on the vehicle.
In the years following Apollo, there were two major American efforts to reignite a manned space exploration program. The first came in 1989, when President George H.W. Bush grandly announced the Space Exploration Initiative on the 20th anniversary of the Apollo 11 moon landing. This would have sent astronauts to the moon and then to Mars. But NASA's senior administrators were not convinced of the plan's viability, fearing that their existing programs might be cut for what they viewed as a quixotic venture. They preferred to continue flying the space shuttle, which had only made its debut eight years earlier, and pressing ahead with a large space station in low Earth orbit. Congress, too, was uncertain about the program—and it outright revolted when NASA's own estimate pegged the cost of Bush's plan at half a trillion dollars.
So NASA concentrated on using the space shuttle to build the ISS. The project was approaching the halfway mark when tragedy struck in 2003, as space shuttle Columbia fell apart during re-entry into Earth's atmosphere. President George W. Bush directed NASA to complete the station by 2010 and then to retire the space shuttle, which clearly was not as safe as advertised. Bush also used this moment to push NASA to develop the technology needed to land astronauts on the moon again. He wanted this Orion spacecraft ready to carry people into space by 2014, and he wanted a powerful rocket to launch astronauts to the moon by 2020.
The ISS was finished, and the shuttle was scuttled. But Bush's larger space ambitions, which came to be known as the Constellation program, foundered. Manned missions to the moon and beyond require a significant commitment in funding, and a willingness to stand by the program over years of development. The Obama administration correctly diagnosed the program's failings and moved to cancel it in early 2010.
MISSION to Nowhere
By then, NASA was four decades removed from Apollo's heyday. In the early years, the agency had been filled with purpose and staffed largely by 20-somethings; now it was a big, aging bureaucracy. NASA has 10 field centers across the country, each competing for its share of the budget and each with its own congresspeople working to corral those funds. Congress may pay lip service to the agency's exploration aims, but the legislative focus is on directing dollars to key field centers and contractors. These priorities often conflict with the broader national strategy set by the White House.
The challenge for a president interested in a grand vision for spaceflight is making a case for it. The Apollo astronauts found an airless, dusty world on the surface of the moon. There is even less economic justification for going to Mars—it's far more difficult to reach, and in terms of habitability it makes the summit of Mount Everest look like Hawaii. NASA's primary argument for lunar and Martian missions is science. Human beings certainly can do more science than rovers can, but robotic missions cost about 1 percent of what human missions cost. And the recent discoveries by NASA's Perseverance and Curiosity rovers are not screaming out for human hands to follow along immediately. Indeed, some scientists are concerned about the microbes that people would inevitably bring to Mars, and their potential to contaminate investigations for past or present life.
So advocates for manned missions often fall back on softer justifications, such as the human drive to explore and expand our horizons. Such appeals have not moved most Americans, who in survey after survey rank studying Earth and protecting the planet from asteroid strikes far higher than sending astronauts to the moon and Mars.
Although the White House appoints the NASA administrator, key decision makers at the agency are civil servants who have spent decades at the agency and may work to protect existing programs. They have allies in the field center directors, who also want to maximize their branch's budget and work force. Finally, there is the inevitable battle within NASA between human exploration and science, with scientists concerned (with good reason) that the extra money needed for manned spaceflight will lead to delays or cancellations of robotic probes.
The traditional space contractors, such as Boeing, Lockheed Martin, and Northrop Grumman, also have strong incentives to protect a status quo that benefits their bottom lines through long-term cost-plus contracts. These companies will not hesitate to employ their considerable lobbying power when the White House proposes changes that might shake up the existing order.
Nor do the advocates of manned missions agree on what the goal of such a program should be. One group argues that NASA has unfinished business on the moon and that the agency should return us there on a sustained basis—not just for flags and footprints, but for eventual settlement. The other group, sometimes called the "Mars mafia," contends that it is best to skip the moon and focus entirely on sending astronauts to Mars.
Persuading all of these disparate constituencies, with very different agendas, to align behind a common goal is a huge challenge. Still, after the Constellation program's 2010 cancellation, Congress and its allies in the traditional space industry pulled together to gin up another new federal effort in space. They reinstated the Orion and devised a new rocket, the SLS, that would almost job-for-job keep the old space shuttle work force gainfully employed. Since 2011, with bipartisan support, Congress has lavished about $4 billion annually on the rocket, the spacecraft, and their related ground systems. Obama's space team eventually went along with this plan after receiving a pittance—about a tenth of the annual funding for SLS and Orion—to develop the commercial crew program to replace the space shuttle with private vehicles.
While Obama was an effective champion for commercializing the space industry, his administration never figured out what to do with SLS and Orion. Those programs consumed so much of NASA's budget that there was no money to spend on the payloads and missions that would actually use the machinery. So NASA developed the concepts of sending astronauts to visit an asteroid and later Mars. But these were Potemkin programs. NASA was on a mission to nowhere.
Commercial Space Business Takes Off
Under President Donald Trump, the country's space portfolio was given to Vice President Mike Pence. Breaking with tradition, he took the responsibility seriously, showing a genuine interest in something previous vice presidents had considered a third-tier priority.
Pence tapped a professor from George Washington University, Scott Pace, to serve as executive secretary of the National Space Council; he picked a former pilot and congressman, Jim Bridenstine, to serve as NASA administrator. All three agreed that NASA should drop its fanciful visions of Mars and instead focus its near-term ambitions on the moon.
They had several reasons for this. For one, they recognized China's serious interest in landing its own astronauts on the moon by around 2030, and they wanted to make sure an American-led coalition got there first. NASA's international partners, too, were more interested in the moon than any other destination, having missed out on the Apollo program.
Another major disruptive influence had emerged within NASA's orbit in the last 10–15 years. Musk's SpaceX and Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin have brought billions of dollars into the space industry. This "new space" sector has become an increasingly powerful force within policy making by offering to sell services to NASA at a far lower cost than before. This has given them a voice in setting space priorities. And they were game for a return to the moon as well, with some companies already starting to work out business plans for the lunar surface.
Finally, scientists were becoming increasingly certain that water ice existed in permanently shadowed regions of the moon's poles. Water on the moon could be worth its weight in gold for rocket fuel and other purposes.
Pence formally announced the government's intentions during a 2019 space policy speech at Marshall Space Flight Center in Alabama. Pence set a goal of landing astronauts on the moon by 2024, and he said NASA must proceed with "urgency" if it is to achieve that aim. Pence also called out the SLS rocket for delays and cost overruns, and he said NASA needed a "major course correction." NASA, he argued, should buy from the commercial space industry when possible.
"I call on NASA to adopt new policies and embrace a new mindset," Pence said. "If our current contractors can't meet this objective, then we'll find ones that will."
By then, America's commercial space industry was the envy of the world. SpaceX had begun to demonstrate rapid, reusable rockets. A year later, it would also become the first private company to fly astronauts into orbit, relieving NASA of the embarrassment of relying on Russia for that service. In the wake of SpaceX's success, more than a dozen U.S. companies were building credible launch systems; still more were working on in-space transportation and small, medium, and large landers for cargo and people on the moon.
This new industry was very different from the contractors that had built the Apollo and space shuttle rockets. Musk, Bezos, and other entrepreneurs had invested their own money or, if they did not have individual wealth, raised seed funding from venture capitalists and other sources. They did not merely build hardware to NASA specifications, and they did not build it solely after being awarded contracts. NASA, in turn, started talking about being "one of many" customers for this new private space hardware.
The road has been rocky, and some space companies have already gone bankrupt. But many more are finding success, and NASA is in the midst of a major transformation: from telling industry what to build and then paying a steep fiscal price for oversight of those programs, to telling industry what it wants (such as low-cost transportation to the ISS) and then getting out of the way and letting businesses innovate.
And private space companies are doing just that. SpaceX remains the biggest success story. NASA never asked for any of its contractors to build reusable rockets. Indeed, it was hesitant to put its cargo and crew missions on board such vehicles initially. The space agency would also not pay more for the development costs, a dealbreaker for most aerospace companies. But Musk knew that the only pathway to a vibrant future in space involved bringing down the cost of access, and that the only way to achieve this was by making spaceflight operations as much like the airline industry as possible.
So he invested time and money into reuse, building prototypes in Texas, and crashing nearly 20 rockets into the Atlantic Ocean before finally landing the company's first booster in December 2015. A little more than a year later SpaceX re-flew one of its Falcon 9 first stages for the first time, lofting a 5-ton communications satellite into geostationary orbit. At the time Musk called used rockets "flight-proven boosters." Pretty much everyone in the industry snickered behind his back, believing such a statement to be a marketing gimmick. After all, what could be safer than a pristine rocket, fresh from the factory? But Musk has been proven right in the end. The company's final version of the Falcon 9 rocket, optimized for reuse, has completed more than 100 launches without a failure. It already owns the world record for the longest successful launch streak by any rocket, in any era.
A rocket's first stage is the most valuable part of the rocket, carrying about two-thirds of the cost due to the large structure and main engines. After beginning to return its first stages, SpaceX has also learned how to capture and reuse the protective fairing at the top of its boosters, saving an additional $6 million per launch. Entering its third decade at the beginning of the 2020s, SpaceX used this massive advantage over its competitors to start dominating the global launch industry. In 2021, the company launched a record 31 rockets. To accomplish this feat, SpaceX used a grand total of two new Falcon 9 boosters. The rest were re-flights. The company's final launch of the year was also its 100th booster landing.
This year SpaceX is on pace to nearly double its launch total of 2021. Thanks to continued refinements in its procedures to land, refurbish, and re-fly Falcon 9s, Musk's company now has the capability to launch a rocket more than once a week. During some months this year, SpaceX launched more rockets (six) than its nearest U.S. competitor—the United Launch Alliance, formed by old-school NASA contractors—will launch all year. Almost certainly, in 2022, SpaceX's Falcon 9 rocket will launch more than any other rocket has in a single year, ever. This is all thanks to an entrepreneur who saw where he believed the global space marketplace should go, not where the government said it would be.
The Russian invasion of Ukraine further highlighted the significance of reuse. After the atrocities in Ukraine became clear, the European Space Agency broke ties with the Russian launch industry, which at that time performed a majority of annual launches for Europe. Moscow's actions also accelerated the U.S. launch industry's move away from Russian engines.
Only SpaceX, with its reusable rocket, had the capacity to pick up the slack after the Western world turned away from Russia's Soyuz and Proton rockets. As a result, SpaceX will in the next two years launch payloads for its biggest customer in satellite internet, OneWeb; for its main competitor in cargo delivery to ISS, Northrop Grumman; and for its primary international competition for commercial launch, the Europe-based Arianespace.
Because of these changes in the commercial and geopolitical landscape, Artemis will be a very different program from Apollo. Precisely because it is different, Artemis has a chance to succeed where the Space Exploration Initiative and the Constellation program failed. Pace, who helped build the framework for Artemis, bears the scars of those two previous efforts.
"I think the reason why Artemis is going to be successful is because of the lessons we took over the previous decades of starts and stops," Pace said during a "Road to Artemis" panel discussion sponsored by Arizona State University in August. "What makes things sustainable is not just an inspiring vision but a direction that aligns with enduring national interests—so new political leadership, new Congresses, and new presidents can come in and pick up the baton and carry on."
That is what is happening with Artemis. Just two weeks into Joe Biden's presidency, his administration endorsed the Artemis plan. It was the first time since Apollo that a human space exploration program survived the transition from one administration to the next. What's more, Congress intends to fully fund Artemis. Canceling the program now would anger international partners, commercial partners, the traditional space industry, and the space community at large. Nearly everyone, therefore, is aligned.
And at some point, commercial spacecraft such as Starship will almost certainly take on a larger role in launching and flying human beings to the moon, superseding the government-owned and-operated SLS rocket and Orion capsule.
The plans will surely change. There will be schedule slips, and there may be accidents. But because the government opened its previously closed system to private visionaries committed to the human future in space, we are going back to the moon.
This article originally appeared in print under the headline "We Are Going to the Moon."
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Google pay 200$ per hour my last pay check was $8500 working 1o hours a week online. My younger brother friend has been averaging 12000 for months now and he works about 22 hours a week. I cant believe how easy it was once I tried it outit.. ? AND GOOD LUCK.:)
HERE====)> ???.?????????.???
I get paid over ?200$? per hour working from home with 2 kids at home. I never thought I'd be able to do it but my best friend earns over ?10k? a month doing this and she convinced me to try. The potential with this is endless. Heres what I've been doing..
🙂 AND GOOD LUCK.:)
HERE====)> ???.????????.???
Great article, Mike. I appreciate your work, i’m now creating over $35000 dollars each month simply by doing a simple job (mjd-15) online! i do know You currently making a lot of greenbacks online from $28000 dollars, its simple online operating jobs.
Just open the link———————————————>>> http://Www.RichApp1.Com
Thanks to private billionaires, just no future on earth.
How many lifetimes of carbon usage are required to put each billionaire in orbit?
Do you think that resources will be squandered according to profit motives and greed on a mars mission or off world colony?
Beam me up Scotty.
There’s no intelligent life down here.
"Aye, but you aren't intelligent life either, me bucko!"--Scotty.
"Fuck Off, Nazi!"--Me.
Any use of resources by private entrepreneurs for their "Individual Good" beats any use by you and your Aryan Pure Supermen for "The Common Good!". We've also seen what your "Common Good" means!
Fuck Off, Nazi!
I'm sure we could defer to your Aryan Pure Supermen brethren on this subject, since their crematoriums put tons of Carbon, Nitrogen, Oxygen, and Hydrogen in the air!
Fuck Off, Nazi!
Why do you lie by calling me a Nazi? Prove it.
You never have refuted anything I’ve ever said.
I like to feed trolls like you evidence of correctly applied logic and science that can never be refuted and laugh time and again when you choke on it.
You bleat fuuuck off naaazi over and over. How’s that working for you?
Hahaha.
Eric - a new place to read your articles. Sadly, as a contractor working for NASA I left before the current change of atmosphere took place. Would love to be inside the gate now and hear what people are really thinking. I think we are on a good path forward.
Why the dump of "space" related articles this morning?
Yeah. This is actually really shitty. I don't know which Reason was worse on Libertarianism or Science, but I at least knew it was a 'Free Minds. Free Markets.' Magazine. This feels really gimmicky.
This is all the site is good for. Narratives, movie reviews, gimmics.
I declare the moon is mine!
Duck Dodgers in the 24th and a 1/2 Centuryyyyyy!
https://vimeo.com/76668594
"We" aren't going to the moon.
It's actually going to be the richest 0.1% of shitheads escaping the planet they polluted and immiserated trying their luck out there while the rest of us get to enjoy rising plastic-filled oceans and the various violent world wars over increasingly dwindling natural resources.
Please correct the article title.
Tony finally found a buddy to orate for communism for the elucidation and conversion of Reason miscreants. Wheeee...
"The Glibertine Party"
When did the Glibs become platitude-spouting blue checks?
Libertarians don’t give a fuck about Liberty, they just want to pollute and ignore externalities while they do whatever they want. So they’re self-indulgent libertines, “Libertarian” sound way too respectable for what insufferable, disengenuous, intellectually-dishonest pieces of shit you all are.
Now the “Glibertine” part comes from libertines being glib. “Glibertarian” is a hilarious slur against you freaks, and it refers to the effects of your preferred policy outcomes would have on the poor and disabled. You guys look at something like the Grenfell Tower fire and think its fine, regulations are still bad, if you’re poor you SHOULD live in precarious conditions, fuck you got mine etc. So, glib! you’re glib! you don’t give a fuck about others suffering and you parade this around like it’s a good, respectable thing.
So, you're not the Libertarian Party, you're the Glib Libertine Party, or for brevity's sake, the Glibertine Party.
We have no liberty, except what gets by the regulators/politicians. If we had more efficient rulers, more control, then the wealth to deploy on space/moon/mars wouldn’t exist. But we would have a lot more people suffering, more poverty, more for you to blame on capitalism. When the little remaining capitalism is eliminated, you can blame poverty on freedom in other nations, like Cuba does. Nobody does “whatever they want” thanks to socialist collectivism. Glib, honest enough for you?
Do they have secret technology because the Moon is a harsh mistress?
NOW you've done it! Mentioning Robert Heinlein will REALLY piss off the Austrian Anschluss. Heinlein's Rocket Ship Galileo made some VERY unkind references to Christian National Socialist efforts to Aryanize the Moon. The Von Mises Caucus and the German political parties funding it ain't gonna take kindly to sabotage!
Von Mises wouldn't have taken kindly to the Caucus that bears his name. Not merely was Ludwig Von Mises and his wife Margit Jewish and barely escaped with their lives from Nazism, but there's not one word in any of his works supporting Edgelord Shitposters, who, in his days, would be scrawling on bathroom walls, which are private property.
Drink your Boost, Hank.
I get paid over 190$ per hour working from home with 2 kids at home. I never thought I'd be able to do it but my best friend earns over 10k a month doing this and she convinced me to try. The potential with this is endless. Heres what I've been doing..
AND GOOD LUCK.CLICK HERE.........>>> onlinecareer1
I can see a hotel on the moon accommodating wealthy tourists from earth. And it could well make money. Mars, no. It takes about half a year to travel there, another half a year to travel back. No tourist has the patience or fortitude to be cooped up in a smelly space ship for a year getting exposed to radiation.
You won't get to either the Moon or Mars on a rickshaw, Watermelon Boy! 🙂
Rickshaws look like a lot of fun. I've seen them outside the ferry terminal on Hong Kong island, but they were expensive and I preferred the double decker street cars for surface transportation, or the ferrys to get to Kowloon or Lantau. I used to be driven about by strong legged women on bicycle rickshaws in Jing Hong, Xishuangbanna. I'm not a big fan of flying and don't like to be cooped up, though I'd be curious to try a dirigible.
A little blimp poetry for everyone:
The Blimp (Mousetrapreplica) Lyrics
[Intro: Frank Zappa]
You ready?
(1, 2, 3, 4)
Ok, go
[Verse: Antennae Jimmy Semens (Jeff Cotton)]
Master, master
This is recorded through a fly's ear
And you have to have a fly's eye to see it
It's the thing that's gonna make Captain Beefheart
And His Magic Band fat
Frank, it's the big hit
It's the blimp, It's the blimp, Frank!
It's the blimp!
When I see you floatin' down the gutter
I'll give you a bottle of wine
Put me on the white hook
Back in the fat rack, Shadrach e-shack
The sumptin' hoop, the sumptin' hoop
The blimp, the blimp!
The drazy hoops, the drazy hoops!
They're camp, they're camp
Tits, tits, the blimp, the blimp
The mothership, the mothership
The brothers hid under the hood
From the blimp, the blimp
Children, stop your nursing unless you're rendering fun
The mothership, the mothership
The mothership's the one
The blimp, the blimp
The tape's a trip, it's a trailin' tail
It's traipse'n along behind
The blimp, the blimp
The nose has a crimp
The nose is the blimp, the blimp
It blows the air, the snoot isn't fair
Look up in the sky -- there's a dirigible there
The drazy hoops whir
You can see them just as they were
All the people stare
And the girls' knees tremble
And run and wave their hands
And run their hands over
The blimp, the blimp
"Daughter, don't you dare!"
"Oh momma, who cares?
It's the blimp, it's the blimp!"
[Outro: Frank Zappa and Captain Beefheart]
(Hello)
Hello
(Did you get it?)
Sure did
It's beautiful
I think that we have enough on the tape to uh
Just use that as is for the album
Ok, I'm gonna listen to it back now I gotta go back to work
The mars rovers, robotic exploration spacecrafts, and space telescopes produce the most value for investment dollar. This is where the governments focus and support should be concentrated. Leave the human spirt and aspirations to the private sector.
I look forward to the day when there exists zero debate about where other peoples wealth should be "focused" because there is no stolen wealth, no coercive govt., just self-governed sovereign citizens peacefully cooperating.
Why was England more successful at colonial building than autocratic states such as Spain, Portugal and France (who all started earlier)? Because, unlike those states, English colonialism and exploration was primarily conducted by private entities and for private gain. Even when the government did fund exploration, they were generally private-state ventures, with predominantly commercial aims. Why was the Roman Empire able to survive longer than similar contemporary empire builders? Because Roman imperial ambitions were more economical than others, and the Roman government tended to take a more light handed approach to governing, especially in economic matters. Rome tended to integrate conquered lands rather than trying to force romanization on them. Additionally, Roman traders actually proceeded their armies by decades, thus they had already begun the process of romanization, creating a basis for successful integration of conquered lands. So, arguably the two most successful world empires, were successful not because they were driven by government spending but due to market forces. Even the westward expansion of the US was driven more by markets than by government. The government often had to adopt policies specifically because markets dictated rather than government dictating. The first great expansion westward set the template. Movement west of the Allegheny Mountains wasn't dictated by government, but by private individuals and companies. The government had to react, so they created Ohio, Kentucky and Tennessee (and then Indiana, Michigan etc). The Louisiana purchase technically transferred the land to America, but Americans were already venturing into Missouri and trading with New Orleans before Napoleon offered to sell these territories (which was in part why he chose to sell them, France couldn't afford to defend them). America was Santa Fe's biggest trading partner long before the Mexican American War and most people living in New Mexico preferred America to the government of Mexico. More Americans were living in Northern California than Hispanics in Southern California before Fremont launched the California campaign. This despite first Spain and then Mexico banning American settlement and trade with Americans. The point is that government driven exploration and settlement tends to fail, but private tends to be more successful long term.
"Because, unlike those states, English colonialism and exploration was primarily conducted by private entities and for private gain."
Private interests in India made such a cock up of their business that hundreds of thousands died in the ensuing uprising, Victoria disbanded the East India Company and turned the whole place over to her civil service and the Anglican church.
As for exploration, Drake was a privateer working for the Crown, and Cook, Franklin, Shackleton, Scott and all the others were officers in the Royal Navy.
Arab, Italian and Portuguese explorers were far more likely to be traders non government types.
The East India Company built the British colony long before it was disbanded. Privateers were private entities that licensed out to the government when needed but also partook in commercial ventures. Drake was only successful as a privateer because he had wealth from his private ventures. As for the Royal navy explorers you mentioned, if you look at the records, their voyages of exploration were largely privately funded, not funded by the crown. Italy was never a major colonial power, mainly because Italy didn't exist at the time (not until the 19th century did Italy exist). Portuguese exploration was largely funded by the crown and establishment of colonies was directed and funded by the crown. Yes, private traders did most of the trading, unlike the Spanish and French, but colonization was a crown venture. The English colonies were almost exclusively funded and established by private ventures, including the Indian colonies and the American colonies. The first English colonies in India were founded in the 17th century. Pointing out what happened two centuries later is not disproving my thesis. In fact, it just reinforces it, as Victoria was able to absorb a conquered land that was largely subdued by a private company (even during the wars of the 18th century, the majority of English forces were supplied by the East India Company not by the British Army). Once again your attempt to disprove my thesis failed because you failed to address the underlying theme and focus instead on ancillary points. For instance focusing on the fact that Cook was held a Royal Navy commission and commanded a Government vessel, instead of who funded the voyage. Focusing on the collapse of the East India Company and ignoring it's two centuries of history before that collapse. Focusing on private traders instead of who funded the colonies the traders visited, who controlled them and who funded the the voyages of exploration that led to the colonies being founded in the first place. Additionally, you fail by omitting the two larger states I mentioned, Spain and France and instead focusing on two non-state entities at the time, Italy (Genoa was part of the Holy Roman Empire and Venice was an autonomous vassal of the same state).
As for the Arabs, which were a people living in multiple different states but the area currently known as Arabia was mostly inhabited by nomadic tribes with no seafaring tradition at the time. Arab people who were part of larger states such as the Ottoman and Persian Empires were accomplished explorers and traders, but not all explorers or traders from those states were Arabs either. It would be like saying that the greatest European explorers were all Germans. England, the Netherlands, Scandinavia and to a lesser extent, France, are predominantly peopled by Germanic people. The problem is that despite having a common ancestry, these countries were very different and often adversarial. We wouldn't think to group them together based on a common ancestry, so why would you group Arabs as a common group?
One more point, is that England, unlike France, maintained the old feudal custom that the Royal family was expected to earn a living through their own industry. This could be through a variety of means, including rents from land, investment and other means (King George the third was rather famous for his ventures in agronomy and animal husbandry, even writing a number of books on the subject). As a result, the royal family of England is fairly wealthy independent of the funds they receive from the state. Drake's biggest investor was Queen Elizabeth I but she didn't fund his voyages with royal funds (at the time the government provided very few funds to the royal family and their wealth was either inherited or earned via their own industry). So, when the Queen invested Drake's voyages it wasn't from public funds but from her own private funds, and she grew quite wealthy as a result.
Yes, Isabella famously pawned her jewelry to fund Columbus's voyage, but the loan was repaid with public funds from taxation rather than privately owned wealth. Spanish royalty was rather infamous for poor money management and fiscal policies. In fact, it was viewed as beneath royalty to invest in commercial ventures. Spain never had a stable economy and often defaulted on loans, despite the large amount of goods that the colonies produced that belonged directly to the crown and the government. In fact, there were several times that decades worth of galleons were in hoc before they sailed. Not a single years worth of the famed Spanish treasure fleets but an entire future decade worth of galleons. France was a little better, but Louis the XIV was in hoc most of his reign to foreign bankers, such that the crowns portion of proceeds from their colonies went directly to service interest on loans. Portugal lost a portion of it's colonies when they failed to pay loans that the colonies had been used as collateral to secure the loans. British merchants cornered the Port market largely because Portugal was unable to pay it's loans.
One final point about the dissolution of the East India Company, one of the main that Victoria had the power to do that was because the Royal family were the largest shareholders. The Crown didn't have the authority to do that by itself, it would have taken an act of Parliament. But Victoria could as a shareholder. And then declare India a Royal Colony as sovereign.
"One more point, is that England, unlike France, maintained the old feudal custom that the Royal family was expected to earn a living through their own industry."
They were rentiers, living off the labor of those who lived on their extensive states. The idea of a king earning a living by the sweat of his brow is laughable. What possible point can you be trying to make?
"The East India Company built the British colony long before it was disbanded."
Because they had made such a horrific mess of the situation, the Crown had to take over and start the British Raj, as I mentioned. The East India Company were not colony or empire builders. They were traders who let a host of minor Indian Brahmans rule the roost while they bought and sold goods such as opium.
I'm not sure where you are getting your information on James Cook, whose voyages were scientific in nature, sponsored by the Royal Society, an organization of scientists and intellectuals founded and funded by the Crown. He was charged with observing the transit of Venus, making maps, investigating scurvy and so on. Not a commercial enterprise. Scott, Franklin and Shackleton were similarly not trading or interested in making money.
The French explorers of North America like Cartier and de Champlain were not traders either. They were employed by the French Crown. It seems you want to rewrite and force history into your neo liberal Procrustean bed.
"Drake was only successful as a privateer because he had wealth from his private ventures."
Pirating gold from the Spanish Crown, not private concerns as you seem to imply.
"Italy was never a major colonial power, mainly because Italy didn’t exist at the time (not until the 19th century did Italy exist)."
Marco Polo was from Venice, an important explorer of the time, not a government functionary, who visited Kublai Khan in Beijing, and returned with spaghetti. Amerigo Vespucci, hailing from Florence, another merchant/explorer whose influence you seek to minimize for some reason. John Cabot, from Genoa, discoverer of Newfoundland, still another Italian merchant/explorer you wish to erase from history.
"so why would you group Arabs as a common group?"
Common language, Arabic. I don't suppose you've been to Hainan Island off the southern coast of China. I have. There are small, isolated villages there where the inhabitants are almost entirely Muslim from what I could make out. Apparently, Arab merchants got shipwrecked there hundreds of years ago and settled down and remain to this day. I watched an open air class of school children learning the Arabic script. A fascinating place. As a general rule, if you do visit Hainan, or any other place in China, I advise eating at Muslim Halal restaurants, obvious by the Arabic script on their signs. No chance of being served rancid lard, responsible for many a stomach upset.
You and mtrueman have gotten into a large discussion, what I would suggest is that government and private interest each play a role in exploration. Government with its resources often funds the basics of exploration. The Spanish government financed Columbus, government launched the first satellites. With the path opened businesses come in to built on basic knowledge that government provided adding value in the process. It is not one or the other but each playing its own part.
Can't have the beginning of a magazine's space issue without some musical accompaniment!
Harry Nilsson--Spaceman
https://youtu.be/D7xOZVBAWtw
Interesting picture. An Astronaut walking on the moon towards a moonrise.
Thanks to the rise of private spaceflight companies, mankind will have a future off-Earth.
Ugh, how much free advertising is this magazine going to give to that literal Nazi Elon Musk?
"Literal Nazi"? Please elaborate.
It's what the leftist are calling him since he has proposed less moderation on Twitter. Everyone knows that free speech is the first things Nazis do when they get power.
I don't get that pic. So a man is on the moon, looking at the moon?
Why would anybody want to go to the moon? It is a barren piece of rock with hardly any atmosphere.
Better to concentrate on making our planet better, in my opinion.
Throw rocks?
The first words broadcast from the surface of the Moon were "Contact light."
I expect that Musk has read the same speculative (sci/fi) fiction as many of us have. The big reason to permanently settle the moon is that it is much cheaper to launch the raw materials and the like from the moon, because it isn’t sitting in nearly as deep a gravity well as the Earth is. The next step is probably to build a permanent residence for humans in space, in high Earth orbit. Using that, the next step is probably to start harvesting, and mining, the asteroids. Fly out to them, put an engine on them, use that to nudge the selected asteroids into slow, spiraling, descents to Earth orbits, where they are nudged into Earth orbit, where they can be mined. Some will contain ice, which we need to survive. Others contain metals. And critically, a lot contain rare earths, which are, right now, frightfully expensive. Which, btw, are in high demand for EV batteries (and thus very useful to Musk’s Tesla automobile and battery company. High Earth orbit also can provide near zero cost energy, using massive solar panels, though they also provide for safe nuclear power. The goal is to make industry in orbit sustainable, in terms of Earth origin resources. This looks more and more feasible every year.
I've always wondered why we've based our space program on Earth based systems. It takes far more energy to achieve break away speed if launched from the surface than from low Earth orbit. To reach planetary bodies wouldn't it make more sense to construct long range spacecraft in orbit, then launch humans to them, dock with them and then fly to your destination and then descend to it with the the same vehicle that you achieved orbit with? This also has the benefit that the deep space transversing vehicle is larger, thus more storage space, and reusable. Once completed the same vehicle could be used multiple times and is more flexible (the same vehicle could be used to visit Mars and Venus). They also could carry more shielding and more creature comforts. Initial costs would be great but once constructed you would only have maintenance costs. Additionally, you could utilize other sources such as nuclear fission and ion thrusters (which accelerate slowly but require less energy and weigh less than chemical rockets) to power them rather than relying on chemical propellants.
There is a reason that most science fiction foresees a two division space flight, a shuttle for ground to orbit and spacecraft for interplanet travel between gravity wells.
Artemis is the son of Apollo. The big rocket with an even bigger price tag. Serving the aerospace giants' interests.
It has no future because it costs too much to be sustainable. Reusability is the only way forward. There is a very good chance that the lander provided by Space-X will head and shoulders more capable, and cheaper, than the rocket system that brings the astronauts to rendezvous with it in lunar orbit.
Not to mention Artemis will fly so seldom-ly that it will never escape being an experimental craft. Every launch will be a question mark.
Eric, as someone who after 46 years retired from NASA last year - and was a direct behind the scenes witness to some of the battles you allude to - I cannot commend this writeup enough. Accurate, comprehensive, and well-written - as usual! This past week has been very significant in space; because several things happened, not just the Artemis I launch; i.e., SpaceX’s new reusable super-booster fired up 14 new methane engines on the pad, coupled with SpaceX getting the second lunar landing contract from NASA, coupled with actual evidence that Europe is finally starting to follow the (good) commercial partnership examples NASA has fought its way through to implementing…A lot’s going on. Your one article succinctly and accurately tells anyone who reads it that in terms of our lunar future in space, how we got here from there…and what the next logical steps are likely to be. WELL DONE!! - Dave Huntsman
I loved this piece, great work Eric.
I logged in to comment after some time away and I notice that there's a lot of spam in the comments. I hope you guys will fix this.