Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Space Industry and Business News .




SPACE TRAVEL
Flights of Fancy
by Launchspace Staff Writers
Bethesda MD (SPX) Oct 31, 2013


NASA is really taking a beating. There is no national mandate for a civil space program. After 55 years of bureaucratic evolution this agency has apparently become a purely political tool with no significant importance other than to spread pork to congressional districts.

"Flights of Fancy" hits home in an unique way. So, we thought it should be aired again in case you missed the first airing in August of this year. Robert Zimmerman got it exactly right. In an August 2013 Wall Street Journal his Op-Ed piece appeared, entitled: "No Liftoff for These Space Flights of Fancy."

All too rarely do we see something as frank and honest as this description of a space program that has become a pure political football. It would be funny if not so sad. It is a joke portrayed by politicians, but the joke is on us, the space professionals.

To quote Mr. Zimmerman, "Both (political) parties excel at feigning interest in space exploration for the purpose of justifying pork to their districts." This one sentence really says it all.

He goes even further, "The result is that America's incoherent space program is unable to accomplish anything except spend money the federal government doesn't have." What Mr. Zimmerman did not say is the government is wasting our money, our resources and our futures.

Take for example the recent pork fight over the funding of an asteroid mission. House Democrats and NASA have been trying to fund an unmanned spacecraft that would capture an asteroid, bring it closer to Earth and position it to allow astronaut visits. As expected, all 17 Democrats on the House Science committee voted for this plan.

However, Republicans don't want NASA to capture an asteroid. Instead, they want to resurrect George W. Bush's plan to send humans back to the moon. Thus, all 22 Republicans on the committee voted against the asteroid mission.

The reality is clear. Neither of these plans will ever get off the launch pad. Just look at the large mission funding patterns since Apollo, some four decades ago. Each president since Kennedy had declared some great space adventure. Congressional members use these declarations to justify sending pork to their districts.

Initial funds are spent to study the initiative, but the big bucks for building various space systems almost never materialize, because the systems are unbelievably expensive. So, the program is cancelled. A new president takes office and makes a new declaration. The cycle begins again. And in Zimmerman's words, "The pork rolls out, a new project begins, some money gets spent, and nothing gets built."

NASA is really taking a beating. There is no national mandate for a civil space program. After 55 years of bureaucratic evolution this agency has apparently become a purely political tool with no significant importance other than to spread pork to congressional districts.

Other nations are racing ahead with national space programs that are exciting, meaningful and adventuresome. In fact, the U.S. private sector space program offers the only excitement to young space engineers and entrepreneurs in this country.

Maybe, we should dissolve NASA and send all of the space pork to those who are really interested in a meaningful space program.

.


Related Links
Launchspace
Space Tourism, Space Transport and Space Exploration News






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








SPACE TRAVEL
Chinese no longer banned from NASA astronomy meet
Washington (AFP) Oct 21, 2013
Six Chinese scientists who were banned from a NASA astronomy conference are now welcome to register, resolving an international row over academic discrimination, a co-organizer told AFP on Monday. The US space agency ban on allowing the scientists to enter a NASA building for the meeting next month prompted a boycott by some prominent American astronomers and was described as discriminatory ... read more


SPACE TRAVEL
Historic Demonstration Proves Laser Communication Possible

UNC neuroscientists discover new 'mini-neural computer' in the brain

Birthing a new breed of materials

Unique chemistry in hydrogen catalysts

SPACE TRAVEL
Latest AEHF Comms Payload Gets Boost From Customized Integrated Circuits

Northrop Grumman Cobham Intercoms Receives First Order For AN VIC-5 Enhanced Vehicular Comms

Raytheon produces new US Army satellite communications terminals ahead of schedule

Lockheed Martin To Continue In Theater Support for Real-Time Surveillance

SPACE TRAVEL
ILS Proton Launches Sirius FM-6 Satellite

Boeing Finalizes Agreement for Kennedy Space Center Facility

Russia Plans to Spend $22M on Soyuz-2 Launch Pad

Ariane 5 arrives at the Spaceport's Final Assembly Building for payload installation

SPACE TRAVEL
Russia, US to protect satellite navigation systems at UN level

Russia Retires Faulty Glonass-M Satellite

Raytheon demonstrates first Direct Geo-Positioning Metric Sensor

Britain considering car-tracking 'bullet' technology

SPACE TRAVEL
New Climate-studying Imager Makes First Balloon Flight

Raytheon's Joint Standoff Weapon C-1 demonstrates networked capability with E-2D aircraft

US military's airship programs lose altitude

Boeing, Lockheed team up for new US Air Force bomber

SPACE TRAVEL
JQI team 'gets the edge' on photon transport in silicon

Atomically Thin Device Promises New Class of Electronics

Tiny Sensors Put the Squeeze on Light

Quantum conductors benefit from growth on smooth foundations

SPACE TRAVEL
Astrium delivers microwave radiometer for the Sentinel-3A satellite

Time is ripe for fire detection satellite

Canadian Satellite SCISAT Celebrating 10 Years Of Scientific Measurements

Developing Next Generation K-12 Science Standards

SPACE TRAVEL
UCSB researcher documents the enduring contaminant legacy of the California gold rush

New low-cost, nondestructive technology cuts risk from mercury hot spots

Pollution debated in Canada's oil fields

Mustard gas traces found close to Poland's Baltic Sea coast




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement