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Does Mars need women? Russians say no
http://msnbc.msn.com/id/6955149/ COMMENTARY By James Oberg, NBC News space analyst Special to MSNBC Updated: 8:52 p.m. ET Feb. 11, 2005 Are women up to the job of exploring Mars? This week, the director of Russia's top space medical institute told students that only men should be allowed on the first mission to the Red Planet, because women are too weak to endure the flight's rigors. His comments once again exposed the internal contradictions of a country that put the first woman into space while having the reputation of being the last European bastion of male chauvinism. After addressing students at Moscow International University, Professor Anatoly Grigoryev elaborated in comments reported by Russia's RIA Novosti news agency: "After all, women are fragile and delicate creatures; that is why men should lead the way to distant planets and carry women there n their strong hands." |
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Christopher wrote:
Jim Oberg wrote: Does Mars need women? Russians say no http://msnbc.msn.com/id/6955149/ COMMENTARY By James Oberg, NBC News space analyst Special to MSNBC Updated: 8:52 p.m. ET Feb. 11, 2005 Are women up to the job of exploring Mars? snipped After addressing students at Moscow International University, Professor Anatoly Grigoryev elaborated in comments reported by Russia's RIA Novosti news agency: "After all, women are fragile and delicate creatures; that is why men should lead the way to distant planets and carry women there n their strong hands." Did he say it with a straight face? Not according to the original article. But it doesn't matter that it was put forth in a joking manner, because he meant it, every single word. |
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Jim Oberg wrote:
Does Mars need women? Russians say no http://msnbc.msn.com/id/6955149/ COMMENTARY By James Oberg, NBC News space analyst Special to MSNBC Updated: 8:52 p.m. ET Feb. 11, 2005 Are women up to the job of exploring Mars? This week, the director of Russia's top space medical institute told students that only men should be allowed on the first mission to the Red Planet, because women are too weak to endure the flight's rigors. His comments once again exposed the internal contradictions of a country that put the first woman into space while having the reputation of being the last European bastion of male chauvinism. After addressing students at Moscow International University, Professor Anatoly Grigoryev elaborated in comments reported by Russia's RIA Novosti news agency: "After all, women are fragile and delicate creatures; that is why men should lead the way to distant planets and carry women there n their strong hands." I'm sure all the female factory workers, and military snipers during WW II, will be quite interested in hearing this. As would Shannon Lucid, with the second longest time in space of anyone, doing it on *their* station... -- You know what to remove, to reply.... |
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Working in a factory (like the ones where many Chinese female workers
work), sniping, living in micro-G enviroment and operating things do no require a strong and resistant creature. That's why even a computer is able to do those things. Or maybe you think that women have the same intelligence, fragility, and delicateness as a computer? Frankly, I don't why some women wanted to do all of those hard works when they can instead use men to do those things for them. Maybe it's the sign of lack intelligence? Or the sign of being able to be manipulated to rebel against a stable situtation to make into a chaos situation? Or maybe both? You decide. Just remember the incident that took place at the Garden that is located East of Eden? Things went quite smoothly, until someone provocate a woman to ruin things. Personally, I'm against in putting a woman or two or more in a spaceship to Mars with a crew of the majority of them are male. Unless you are talking about a sending a WHOLE city or maybe a village into Mars, if you want to to do it, do it community style. There's a reason on why submarines never took women aboard when they are doing their three months long mission. One of the reasons of not doing it is not because the women aren't capable, but because due to social tensions that will probably cause major conflicts aboard the submarine. Now... If you want to send as a ship to Mars with women aboard, I suggest doing it with a father and daughters team. One father with his daughters. |
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Michael Smith wrote in
: Incidently I see a connection here with the thread on emergency return from a stranded shuttle at ISS. Do some people fly on shuttle who could never fit into a Soyutz seat? Yes. Good point! -- JRF Reply-to address spam-proofed - to reply by E-mail, check "Organization" (I am not assimilated) and think one step ahead of IBM. |
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"Michael Smith" wrote in message
... But going to mars actually requires somebody physically small and able to live on smaller quantities of oxygen, food, etc. It doesn't require any such thing, although it may make the spacecraft cheaper. |
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On Sun, 13 Feb 2005 17:18:37 +0800, "Neil Gerace" wrote:
"Michael Smith" wrote in message ... But going to mars actually requires somebody physically small and able to live on smaller quantities of oxygen, food, etc. It doesn't require any such thing, although it may make the spacecraft cheaper. Maybe personality filled monkeys? Dale |
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"Dale" wrote in message
... On Sun, 13 Feb 2005 17:18:37 +0800, "Neil Gerace" wrote: "Michael Smith" wrote in message ... But going to mars actually requires somebody physically small and able to live on smaller quantities of oxygen, food, etc. It doesn't require any such thing, although it may make the spacecraft cheaper. Maybe personality filled monkeys? "You used the M-word. The Librarian does not like the M-word. He likes you, though." "H-how do you know?" "Your head is still on." |
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