So the modern equivalent to a Tower of Babel intead of looking out for the widows, orphans, and strangers living amoung you?I would rather have seen some social programs cut instead of this.
So the modern equivalent to a Tower of Babel intead of looking out for the widows, orphans, and strangers living amoung you?I would rather have seen some social programs cut instead of this.
No you wouldn't. The companies would still be liable back on Earth for any damage or injury caused by negligence on their part. Of course there are inherent risks that the customers accept, just like, say, going skydiving. It's not a bad idea to acknowledge those risks, and if private companies can cut the odds of death from spaceflight to 1%, they've done better than the government has done so far.I don't think your approach could ever work, and even if it did, you'd be recreating the Wild West in space.
That's already been done, more or less. All the basics of low Earth orbit spaceflight and its effects on humans have been discovered, and the technology exists for private companies to pick up the torch regarding manned space exploration. Government projects are no longer needed.Publicly funded spaceflight is not meant to be an adventure for few crewmembers, it's meant to pave the way for other people, including private companies. You show them how it's done, you develop the 'infrastructure' and then you provide incentives to kick start the process, until it can support itself.
The government could still subsidize private space exploration for some time until it becomes relatively commonplace, if some push is needed. There's no reason to suspect that it would have to provide anywhere near the amount of money it needs to fund manned space exploration on its own, since private capital still bears a large part of the burden and private companies tend to be better at keeping costs down.No. A dollar (or euro, or ruble, or yuan) spend in the space programme gets to the private sector too - all major space agencies are closely tied to private companies which are developing the technologies they request. ESA awards money to Arianespace, Alenia or EADS/Astrium to mention just a few, NASA cooperates with Boeing and Lockheed-Martin and RKA with Energia. It is and always has been a public-private partnership. In this system, the government can provide stable funding for private companies which gives them the long-term financial security they need to be able to focus on highly specialized and very expensive space-related technologies.
In your proposed system of incentives, the companies do not get any funding in advance and during planning/development stages, which means most of them will never get the capital necessary to even start out. And if they do, many of them will go bankrupt before they accomplish anything.
And if you want to provide such money, then you'd be doing the same thing we're doing today, just without any control over how the money is spent.
And what would we gain from that? Building bases on solar system bodies is extremely expensive, so much so that it's practically impossible that the amount discovered per dollar spent is anywhere close to robotic space exploration.Oh please. Everything of this sort is difficult and costly at first. Building an underwater colony would costs billions too. The difference is that with an underwater colony, you'd still be stuck on Earth, whereas with a working colony on the Moon, you'd gradually open the whole universe for exploration and colonization. Universe > earth oceans![]()
So the shuttle dies and nothing public replaces it. So what? We're not far from seeing private orbital spaceflight, and in the meanwhile there isn't really any reason to send astronauts up there on the government's dime. Even repairing satellites and whatnot tends to be far more expensive than sending up a new one.No, you're not making sense. Space Shuttle programme has been winding down for years. The contracts which are being made long in advance are running out, new external fuel tanks are not being produced (why would they?), some shuttle-related activities have simply been ended because they are no longer needed, etc. Not to mention that NASA's planning doesn't count with Shuttle being operated beyond 2011 and the funds have been re-allocated.
If you now decided you want several more years of Shuttle operations, you'd need to spend billions to restart the programme.
BTW, how's throwing the 9 billion dollars that has already been spent in Constellation out the window a good idea, that's also beyond me.
Suppose Obama gets it through and the Shuttle is retired - explain what space launch capacities will NASA retain post-2011. I am waiting for an answer for several posts already.
A wise and good move. Human space travel is very costly and dangerous. America can spend to money in much better ways in these times.
So you can outsource to them?We are just waiting for China and India to catch up.![]()
Most banks repaid their bailout money plus interest. The administration is stoking populist sentiment in order to pass a "bank tax" so as to support those banks/institutions which haven't yet repaid their bailout money (namely Chrylser/GM/Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac).Yes, more banks need to be bailed out, more wars need to be fought and more farmers need to be subsidized so that they can overproduce for even higher prices.
And what would we gain from that? Building bases on solar system bodies is extremely expensive, so much so that it's practically impossible that the amount discovered per dollar spent is anywhere close to robotic space exploration.
So the shuttle dies and nothing public replaces it. So what? We're not far from seeing private orbital spaceflight,
and in the meanwhile there isn't really any reason to send astronauts up there on the government's dime. Even repairing satellites and whatnot tends to be far more expensive than sending up a new one.
Now don't get me wrong - I have expensive projects I'd like to see NASA do as well. Like space telescopes that can directly see planets around other stars and scan their atmospheres for oxygen. That sort of discovery would have vastly more interesting implications than anything NASA can send astronauts to do, and we could do it a lot faster and better if NASA wasn't spending so much money funding manned missions.
Suppose Obama gets it through and the Shuttle is retired - explain what space launch capacities will NASA retain post-2011. I am waiting for an answer for several posts already.
Surely agricultural subsidies are needed to retain food production in your own country so that in the event of a war or a natural disarster you can feed yourselves without relying on exported grain from other nations. This is bad for Africa but USA + EU is just looking after its own strategic interests.
Great News. Now that the bloated government is out of the way I'm sure the free market will have moon resort hotels in my lifetime.
I'm pretty sure the US grows enough food to feed itself twice over.
We're by far the largest exporter of food in the world.
So true. A public option wouldn't stand in the way of private insurers making a buck.How was the 'bloated government' standing in the way of this to begin with?![]()
Sigh. Since I need to economize, I'll respond only to the parts I haven't already refuted.
First, you're mixing exploration with long term settlement. Two different, though interrelated, things.
Second, technologies evolve and mature only if you actively develop and try them. Once you get the first experience, you can improve them, which will (surprise surprise) make your further activities cheaper, safer, and more effective in general. First exploration voyages in the 15th century were actually pretty useless too in terms of short-term benefits. First aircraft were pitiful flying coffins.
If you're gonna sit on Earth waiting for technologies to magically overcome the gap and allow you to go to Mars for no cost in no time, you're gonna grow old and die long before it happens. If it ever happens.
I don't really care about the ISS. It seems to be sinking money without contributing a whole lot to human knowledge. Does it have any real utility?I guess the ISS is going to maintain itself too. Oh my gods...
You people are making it look like as if the humans were just useless baggage which is unnecessarily dragged along. In reality they are only going when it's necessary.
For example, the hubble space telescope needed servicing many times - only humans could do that. You don't have a spacecraft to get there and manipulate it, you're screwed.
Next-gen telescopes will be even larger and more importantly, placed farther (Lagrange points, perhaps). No commercial spaceship/rocket currently in development will be capable of getting humans to them. That's just one example.
Heck, no commercial rocket currently in development will allow to send anything meaningful beyond geostationary orbit. 60 years after the beginning of the space age and 40 years after Apollo, we're still stuck in LEO.
I am starting to root for the Chinese. I hope ESA stops being afraid to commence full cooperation with them, it could be an interesting partnership if the US insists on self-destructing it's manned space exploration programme. If we get the Russians onboard as well, perhaps we'll continue doing what needs to be done.