Winner
Diverse in Unity
However, if India can launch satellites into space it is surely capable of feeding malnourished children. So why doesn't it?
A different problem at a different scale.
I have a strong suspicion (bordering on certainty) that even if you totally shut down the whole Indian space programme and redirected all the funds into fighting poverty, the overall effect would be barely noticeable. It's like saying Europe should stop investing in high-speed railways and instead send the money to the UN to feed Africa. The end result of that would be Africa only negligibly better off, but Europe lagging behind in an important aspect of development.
The problem with space exploration is that it is very visible (no matter that we often grumble here that people don't know crap about it) and so is the cost. Media are of course more than willing to stress that a space probe costs a billion dollars, but they rarely put this in perspective by comparing the cost with other things countries do with public money*. In this respect, space programmes are often victims of their own success.
*-You mentioned Thatcher and milk for kids. Well, I remember that one of the previous social democratic governments in my country introduced something they called "pastelkovné", literally "colour pencils benefit" - a special bonus paid to parents with kids in their first years in primary schools, supposedly to help families with small children. In reality, most parents used the money for something different and the kids never really profited from it, but it costed our treasury a few hundred million CZK a year. It would be infinitely better to just take this sum and use it to fund a new science centre or something that would actually produce clear results and perhaps offer opportunities for young scientists. I guess this would help far more than a little money early on which really changes nothing.
Hell, I'm 99% sure the Raptor engine itself is being developed specificially for Mars. It's a closed-cycle engine that runs on Methane. Methane is slightly more efficient than Kerosene (which SpaceX's engines currently use) but has some disadvantages to it that have kept companies from actually developing engines that use it. However, you can synthesize Methane on Mars, so I think the whole point of this engine is to enable some key Martian infrastructure to be sent over in the not-too-distant future.
I am glad at least someone is actually *doing* something in that area, instead of talking endlessly about how good methane would be as fuel, without actually producing anything but PPT presentations.
SpaceX plans on flying the first stage back to the launch pad (which still comes across as black magic to me given how much propellant they would have to use I think) where it will land, be refitted and can reused within hours. They haven't worked out yet how to do the same with the 2nd stage but they are working on it.
I'll believe it when I see it. Reusability, well, maybe. Within hours? On what still amounts to a pretty conventional rocket? Hmmm



