Saturday, January 28, 2012

Challenger STS-51-L


Twenty six years ago today America, indeed, the world, lost seven heroes. The Challenger disaster brought home how truly dangerous spaceflight is...and how courageous our Astronauts are.



Exploring the unknown has always brought with it danger and the possibility that something could go wrong. These seven men and women...these heroes... were well aware of that possibility and yet chose to take that risk to further mankind's understanding of what lies beyond our tiny oasis of rock, water and air. The pure quest for knowledge is perhaps the most noble endeavor humanity can undertake. It requires no malice, no weapon, no harming of fellow creatures, no religious fervor or desire for personal gain. This is the mission these heroes had set themselves upon when misfortune struck. May we always remember them with that in mind. They gave their lives so that others could one day "boldly go where no one has gone before."


Friday, January 27, 2012

"Space- Head" Newt.

 Presidential Hopeless Newt Gingrich; "By the end of my second term, we will have the first permanent base on the moon and it will be American," He proposes an entirely American effort to establish a colony of perhaps 10,000 people on the Moon by 2021.




Newt Gingrich's idea of a large-population Moon colony is what i would expect from a person who has no idea what he is proposing or talking about. The cost of a large Moon colony, along with all the hardware that goes with it would be many times his estimate. There is the problem of  the physical degeneration of the inhabitants to account for (try getting 10,000 people to exercise for hours a day). Most, indeed all, of the resources for the large colony would have to be delivered from Earth until mining, manufacturing and farming could be established on the moon. Advances that would take years, perhaps decades, to achieve.

The only way i could envision this happening would be through a fully international effort backed by major corporate interests. It is simply too vast a project to be embarked upon by any one nation, particularly in light of today's financial situation. It is improbable, as well, that Americans as a majority would support such a venture. I already see dissatisfaction and criticism over the paltry .6% (est) that NASA presently ekes from the national budget.

Finally, Newt isn't a "space-head" (except perhaps in the sense that there is a vast emptiness in his skull). He's a Science Fiction aficionado....this isn't nearly the same thing. The former concerns themselves with what can be, is being and has been accomplished in space, the latter with fictitious stories of what might be.

I am a booster (pun intended) of a more advanced and aggressive space program. I'd like nothing more than to see mankind burst forth into the Cosmos in my lifetime. However Newt's methods would lead to failure. He is not a visionary....he is an illusionist.