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"Kyle Boatright" wrote:
For me, it comes down to this (choose 1): - Continue manned space flight and recognize that people are likely to be killed from time to time, despite the best efforts to prevent accidents. - Discontinue manned space flight. KB Yes, those are the choices ** except replace "likely" by "certain" in the first of these choices. And in making the choice, recognize that if you want to perform important and useful tasks with taxpayer money in space ** obtain spectacular and otherwise unobtainable scientific knowledge, perform extraordinarily useful and economically important engineering functions like weather satellites, GPS, broadcasting ** then the basic fact is that: * There is NO useful role or need for sending people into space to accomplish ANY of these missions. * In fact, the enormous increase in mission costs and complexity and the enormous limitations on performance required to include passengers on any space mission and get them back safely pretty much guarantees that no useful scientific or engineering results will result from those missions ** as the history of our space effort to date fully demonstrates. If some want to argue that sending more people to the moon (or, God save us all, to Mars) will somehow demonstrate the greatness of our nation, well, they're welcome to do so (and I'd agree that the Apollo program was probably justified, in its time, on that basis alone). And I have no opposition to, and wish all good fortune to, private efforts in the Burt Rutan style. But our shuttle and Space Station programs should have been abandoned long ago and their funding redirected to unmanned space capabilities and challenges. Given the present and likely future state of space technology "lunar colonies" are as utterly unnecessary as they are immensely expensive; and the idea of sending people to Mars in the foreseeable future is a fantasy. It's not a matter of policy choices, it's a matter of the laws of physics. |
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