So after the big hubbub about Obama changing a bunch of priorities for NASA, apparently today brought a partial about-face:Obama revives capsule from canceled programModified Orion vehicle and heavy-lift rocket on the way, officials sayhttp://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/36484353/ns/technology_and_science-space/
4/13/2010 11:08:11 PM
4/13/2010 11:15:59 PM
yeah, first one, then the other.still, Obama fucked this one up.
4/13/2010 11:21:58 PM
Good thing we have all this surplus money to spend.
4/14/2010 12:51:56 AM
4/14/2010 1:12:51 AM
4/14/2010 9:40:31 AM
Well I'm glad that Obama finally listened to someone about the direction of the space program, it seems like except for the NASA administrator, everyone else involved including most of congress and various other agencies were totally opposed. I'm still pretty skeptical about all of it, but that's just my personal opinion. Everything still seems a little vague to me though, although I've read a few reports and there should be more details released to the public on the 15th.(FYI this is all personal opinion. None of the above comments represent the official policies and opinions of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration)[Edited on April 14, 2010 at 10:16 AM. Reason : disclaimer]
4/14/2010 9:56:08 AM
BREAKING NEWS: NASA Insider describes new Obama space policy as "vague".More at 11:00
4/14/2010 10:21:32 AM
I really don't understand all of this opposition to the space program. Do you think that China, Russia, the EU, or other countries with developing space programs are going to stop their development because we do? The space program has been one of the things that let America have a sense of pride during the Cold War. I'm not sure why we're so willing to give it up, even if it's no longer about us vs. the Russians.
4/14/2010 12:30:00 PM
The Space Age is over. The next one won't start in our lifetime.
4/14/2010 12:40:01 PM
Im glad they arnt wasting all that money but still would like to go to the moon.
4/14/2010 12:43:21 PM
It's all about health these days. The public cares more about health than space, and research dollars have been going this way.I'd love to see more focus put on a moon base though. And i'm glad the ISS has its life extended.The Constellation project was never fully funded though, and it would have been a fight to get the full funding it needed in today's climate anyway.[Edited on April 14, 2010 at 12:45 PM. Reason : ]
4/14/2010 12:45:23 PM
Just to put things in perspective as far as how money is spent, FY10:NASA is one of the thin slivers up there at the top getting 0.53%. For some reason, most people think NASA gets a lot more money than it actually does.[Edited on April 14, 2010 at 1:40 PM. Reason : $$$]
4/14/2010 1:40:30 PM
4/14/2010 2:24:21 PM
^^ you have to look at discretionary spendingWhat do you suggest we cut to triple NASA's budget?
4/14/2010 2:55:12 PM
social security.
4/14/2010 2:59:39 PM
make social security and medicare means-tested, and all the government's financial troubles go away. We could invade and conquer China with all the money we would save...on second thought, maybe it is a good thing the government is broke...
4/14/2010 4:26:46 PM
I'm not suggesting we cut anything. I'm just pointing out that a lot of people have a misconstrued idea of how much of the budget NASA gets.
4/14/2010 5:00:42 PM
Waste is waste, no matter how few tens of billions it is.
4/14/2010 5:03:10 PM
^ There are other things wasting far more money than NASA. If you want cost savings, you should start by looking at the Pentagon.
4/14/2010 5:13:54 PM
it's virtually impossible to cut defense spending.just remember back to how difficult it was to cut the presidential helo program (which isn't really even gone) and F-22.
4/14/2010 5:28:53 PM
It got accomplished in the 90s with the BRAC process. Although I'll agree that it was painful to the communities that were impacted. Still, the military is by far one of the worst offenders when it comes to lack of cost controls and accountability. They have more waste in their budget than NASA has for funding key projects.For those that are going to parse my language, please note I said "one of."
4/14/2010 5:44:26 PM
4/14/2010 6:07:29 PM
I, too, enjoy staying in the trees. . . .
4/14/2010 6:42:21 PM
Right...because any and all scientific advancement must involve the moon!
4/14/2010 7:29:40 PM
4/14/2010 7:39:49 PM
4/14/2010 8:03:36 PM
The moon is a dead rock in the sky. Sending people there was only for show. When people stopped being impressed or threatened by it, they canceled Apollo.[Edited on April 14, 2010 at 8:15 PM. Reason : .]
4/14/2010 8:15:30 PM
And yet we keep going back and learning more and more all the time. People used to think a lot of things about it that have since been proven wrong. Look, it's pithy to call it a dead rock, but that frankly ignores reality. If we want to do manned scientific discovery on Mars or any other planet, we have to test out our methods and tools first. It's far easier to reach the moon if something goes wrong than Mars.[Edited on April 14, 2010 at 8:21 PM. Reason : .]
4/14/2010 8:19:52 PM
No! We haven't been back! We've sent robots, because that makes more sense!
4/14/2010 8:37:52 PM
Why the fuck would we go to mars? It's fucking red rocks.We had some scientific advancement after spending billions, but we would have if our goal was to make biggest rice crispy treat. Think if we had spent that money on trying to live forever.
4/15/2010 12:12:27 AM
No, you're right. As stupid and immature as humanity continues to show itself to be it's probably better that we do all we can not to contaminate the rest of the universe with our taint. . . Extraplanetary colonization would be a triumph for human civilization given the social, financial and technological advancement and cooperation required for such an endeavor. But hey, feel free to continue living in your closet.
4/15/2010 12:40:23 AM
http://www.cnn.com/2010/TECH/space/04/14/us.space.program/index.html?hpt=T1
4/15/2010 1:00:19 AM
4/15/2010 6:27:05 PM
It seems that based on our capability for actual space travel we should focus on trying to make contact from the comfort of earth, then worry about getting out there.All the while spending the money on stuff like that ^, which would also be triumphs for human civilization. And maintaining our Low Earth Orbit functions.
4/16/2010 12:52:14 AM
Let's go ahead and beat death. A bunch of people over 65 who never die will do wonders for the national debt.
4/16/2010 1:28:51 AM
he's killing our futureI hope someone somewhere figures out a way to fix this...
4/16/2010 1:47:26 AM
I heard this yesterday and while it certainly doesn't absolve the president's actions it does give a bit more insight into why things are happening the way they are and who all bears a piece of the responsibility. http://thedianerehmshow.org/shows/2010-04-15/future-nasa-and-us-space-exploration
4/16/2010 6:48:06 AM
Brilliant. cure death, and pass a law that anyone proven to take advantage of the cure be denied all future government benefits.
4/16/2010 11:08:35 AM
It's ok. We'll elect somebody competent next time.
4/16/2010 11:11:19 AM
i've seen enough movies to know that when aliens want us to travel through space they will give us the technology to do so.
4/16/2010 12:01:11 PM
http://mediasite.online.ncsu.edu/online/Viewer/?peid=38d970d3f0724ee188c274afaf299a1d[Edited on April 16, 2010 at 12:06 PM. Reason : ]
4/16/2010 12:05:47 PM
4/16/2010 4:54:03 PM
4/16/2010 4:59:37 PM
4/16/2010 5:40:01 PM
Telescopes and satellites, again, can only do but so much. Ground-based telescopes are inferior to space-based ones, and yet there was a major brouhaha about continuing the lifespan of the Hubble.To extend your logic about cost, it costs millions of dollars to build and operate any military aircraft currently in service. It costs billions to build and operate any modern battleship. By your logic, shouldn't we be spending that money on "other things" that help people?
4/16/2010 8:18:16 PM
we don't operate modern battleshipreplace with carrierit's what you meant anyways
4/17/2010 4:55:17 PM
^^^man, seriously, fuck what what you think your ideology puts forth and where these dollars should or should not be spent.fundamental space activities (manned and unmanned) are SO important that its hard to even begin to put a simple argument about it... literally it boils down to what the opposing astronauts have said... slow march to mediocrityit's important to push the limits ALL THE TIMEnow as far as money goes... why don't you put foward the idea of stealing money from the defense sector and putting it towards NASAwe don't have to steal it from the suffering massesdoesn't that sound smooth?I would go along with that 100%
4/17/2010 5:12:09 PM
4/17/2010 6:29:45 PM
^ you're aware that NASA has made massive contributions in those fields, right? I love how you're drawing distinctions when they don't exist so rigidly.Also, cavemen? Seriously? Thst point lacked even basic logic. Cavemen didn't spend their time on space because they didn't know they could go there. Also they lived with the dinosaurs, so they didn't have fossil fuels for their primitive cave-rockets.
4/17/2010 6:49:44 PM