The race back to the moon
appears to be over, at least for now, and at least in the foreseeable future
and in my lifetime.
Instead of going back to
the moon, the Obama Administration wants to invest $6 billion over five years
in a commercial taxi to orbit. The idea is to give the private sector the
impetus to take over routine flights into space.
About the only good thing
that the previous administration of George Bush did while it was in power was
to create the Constellation program, which had a goal of putting Americans on
the moon once again. Somewhere in the range of $9 billion was spent on the
program's development of a new crew capsule, the Orion, and a new rocket, the
Ares I.
Well, that is all out the
window now.
Sen. Richard C. Shelby, a
Republican from Alabama, said it all. "The President's proposed NASA
budget begins the death march for the future of U.S. human space flight. The
cancellation of the Constellation program and the end of human space flight
does represent change, but it is certainly not the change I believe in."
I would have to agree.
Scuttling the space program is putting shackles on further improvement in our
ways of life on earth. Remember, without the space program, you would not be
reading this rant, because compact, workable computers would not have come
about without the space program.
Nor would cellular phones,
iPods, and many, many other devices that are considered to be standards in our
civilization today.
By basically killing the
space program, the current administration is also setting back technology at
least several decades. My kids won't see the advances I have seen over my
lifetime because there won't be a platform for these advances.
I don't buy this latest
move, and I hope that Americans see it as a poor decision.
Because that is what it is.
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