I am demonstrating a principle. If you base a programme on a lie ("ZOMG, we have to beat the Chinese who are gonna land ASAP!") and then the truth (inevitably) surfaces since we live in the age of investigative journalism and fierce political competition (and China is not so stupid to be dragged into a space race it cannot win), then the whole programme collapses like a house of cards with HUGE fallout for the credibility of the whole space community. Just as now when the US (rightly) says that Iran is building a nuclear weapon, that claim is being taken with a huge amount of suspicion abroad and even in the US itself. That's because some people lied about a similar thing not that long ago.
WMD/Iran is on an entirely different plane than lying about a Chinese moon program. I really don't care for this analogy as it puts space exploration (and the motivations for it) in the same light as Iraq II. The two
really aren't comparable.
Having said that, I don't disagree that making things up to force a space race could definately hurt in the long run.
I want a space programme build on a realistic base, sustainability, and achievable goals. I don't want to go to the Moon to beat China, I want to go there to establish science and fuel processing bases that will help us later. Hell, I'd be happy even if the first base there was a kind of Disney land for the filthy rich. Just please, let it be sustainable and not another flags and footprints kind of nonsense (that was NOT a comment disparaging Apollo, BTW!).
I didn't read that as disparaging Apollo, I know exactly what you mean. I don't really disagree that making this a international race is probably a bad thing in the long run, especially if there is lying about the status of said 'race'.
I just want people to get excited about space first and foremost, and care less about how it's done. I also think it's kind of inevitable that this will happen. They are already talking about an 'asian space race'; and no matter how you cut it, countries are going to compete just to compete. Chances are, they won't have to make up stuff about the progress of the Chinese, Indian, Korean or Japanese space programs. They are all making progress, and people are going to start comparing our programs soon enough - you can't stop people from talking. Plus, this is USA#1, we make a competition out of
everything.
But I do agree with you that unless the fundamentals are shifted to profit making (asteroid mining, Lunar DisneyLand), the will to go do big things in space and stay there will evaporate. So I agree that political motivations could hurt in the long run, I just hope they will spark longer-term aspirations.
I would like to point out that although the Apollo program and that whole race was short lived, it's not like it really dead-ended the whole space exploration effort. It was a major achievement, and neither side stopped exploring after the fact. They just toned down the emphasis (and budget allocations) after it was 'won'.
Then make them. People have to understand that the space programme isn't just overgrown boys playing in the orbit. They should be reminded of the many benefits it brings to them, the taxpayers. New technologies, education, innovation that creates jobs and keeps the US ahead of countries that don't innovate, and prestige that makes them feel better about being Americans (Gods know that's needed these days).
Agreed. We are doing a crappy job of this right now in the US. NASA is a source of prestige, but it could be so much more.
Just don't lie to people or whip them into action by drumming non-existent threats and then expect them to take you seriously in the future.
Dude, you really underestimate our capacity to swallow a lie hook, line and sinker.

I agree, the whole thing needs to be put on a more solid footing. I just think competition is inevitable, and it could kick start our efforts to go out and do things. Given Obama's emphasis on the commercialization of space, I believe things will play out the way he intends them too. Companies will go out and make money in space, and find better and better ways to do so. NASA will push the boundaries and do the bigger things that aren't profitable yet. But right now, the whole thing is on the slow track and needs a good shove.
But, I am a hopeless optimist.
I wouldn't get to disheartend about the extrasolar planets. The scientists are trying to make an implausible scenario work (life on unfit planets) with incomplete theories and data. Hell, we can't even directly see or take measurements of most aspects of these planets.
The news will get better as they perfect their tools.
On the push into outerspace and other solar systems - I'm actually optimistic it won't take centuries. A century, maybe; but our technology and economic prowess on a planetary scale are leaping forward faster and faster. I'm not understating the scale of the problem, I'm just emphasizing our growing ability to meet the challenge.