BelenUmeria said:
Bush may have his faults, but he has forwarded space policy more than any administration in 40 years.
Yes, but his mission to the Moon and Mars initiative looks to be poorly considered, funded and executed. That may (will likely, imho) overwhelm what good he has done.
Our lifetimes could be fairly long. You should read Ben Bova's nonfiction book "The Immortals." There are advanced coming that could double or triple the lifespan of those people born in the 70s and later.
Perhaps, but looking at it that way would be couting chickens before they've hatched. We may also be in for an ecological disaster that will wash Mr. Bova's projections into the ever-deepening ocean. Or not. Or lightning may strike a young man in South Dakota, revealing him to be the space-faring son of interstellar pirates. Lots of things
might happen.
If we relied on the government for advancements in space, then we would have to wait generations. The government needs to get out of the way and make sure that Lockeed and Boeing do not try to smash the little guys for jumping into their sandbox.
Hardly. While NASA and the ESA and the Japanese have now worked with low-earth orbit stuff enough to shift that off to the private sector, anything beyond that is still too expensive and risky for any currently existing private enterprise to tackle. Private enterprise exists to make money for people
now. They are (and should be) more focused on the profits of their current investors, and that precludes tossing out money that may not see a return for a century or more.
Simply put, nothing short of a first-world nation has the excess wealth to invest in so high-risk and long-term investments as the cutting edge of space flight. Putting stellites in orbit is no longer cutting edge, so others can manage that. But going even deeper will still require massive federal funding.
Science is great, but the only reason we need to go out there is because "it's there."
For some, that may be enough. But in every age, only a small number of people were really into exploration. Most people are "stay-at-homes", and it being there often does not seem to them to be sufficient cause for spendign tax dollars. Advancement (scientific or otherwise) that benefits future generations of their families, however, most folks can understand.
We do not need ONE single launch platform or vehicle. This is why we have a dozen different types of sedans, SUVs, etc. We need lot of competing platforms for the industry to survive.
No, we don't need competing platforms. We need
complimentary platforms. Sedans and SUVs are not really in competition - they serve different needs, and fill separate niches.