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#211
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In article 9IRQb.116056$5V2.583387@attbi_s53,
"Robert J. Kolker" wrote: Accidents happen, and the potential victims should be adequately informed of the risks. NASA claimed a risk of disaster to be one in tenthousand per orbiter. The statistics are more like one in twentyfive to one in fifty. Life is full of risk. Life -is- risk. The moral imperative is to be honest with the persons puting their lives on the line. NASA lied. I'm fairly certain the pilots and crew are WELL aware of the risks, yet folks still line up to go and do, anyway. Would you turn down a chance to go into space? I wouldn't. Just as I enjoy and realize the risks of spelunking, I do it anyway. Dangerous? Yup, you bet, I am replacing a fellow who died caving, in my organization. Fun? Yup. Discoveries? Yessiree. But if we didn't do it, humans might actually still think there are gnomes and demons living in those holes, they wouldn't understand aquafers or find archeological or biological wonders. You would still think bats were evil. I know it's fanciful, but what if... Is there calcium carbonate on Mars? Caves. Caves? Biology. What then? A robot can't go spelunking, no radio underground. Fantasy? Probably. But let's rule out the "beliefs" and replace them with actual knowledge. None of the above. Never worked for NASA. I have not worked for a gummint contractor since 1968. I got a my fill of that nearly forty years ago. I am not disgruntled. I am appalled at the dishonesty and the incompetence. If a private company wants to do that with -its- money, then fine by me, but -my- pocket it being picked and I object to that. A private company will act no different in protecting it's interests and bottom line. I have a generic dislike for lying son's of bitches running a scam on the tax paying public. Do you think it is o.k. to filch money on false pretenses? Bob Kolker I don't think it's o.k., but it happens every day, doesn't make it right, but it happens across the board in every sector, private, govt., religion, non-profit. You asked how the knowledge of bacteria's existance on another world would help our general welfare. That's just it, WE DON"T KNOW, it could be profound (especially to religion). It could have many other effects as well. But I'd say it would be better to try than wonder "what if". No other specie have done what we collectivly have done. -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
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Chris L Peterson wrote in message . ..
On Sun, 25 Jan 2004 15:51:36 GMT, "Robert J. Kolker" wrote: It would be more accurate to say NASA is Morton Thiokol... You missed my point, which was only that NASA and JPL are different entities with very different internal cultures and politics. This is often overlooked. Sean O'Keefe can walk around the Mars Rover control rooms beaming and talking about NASA's great success, but (funding aside) this mission, and most others, are not NASA projects at all, but collaborations between JPL and various universities. _________________________________________________ Chris L Peterson Cloudbait Observatory http://www.cloudbait.com So, correct me if I'm wrong, but my take in all this is that NASA's only real involvement in these unmanned missions is in providing the launch vehicles? |
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Chris L Peterson wrote in message . ..
On Sun, 25 Jan 2004 15:51:36 GMT, "Robert J. Kolker" wrote: It would be more accurate to say NASA is Morton Thiokol... You missed my point, which was only that NASA and JPL are different entities with very different internal cultures and politics. This is often overlooked. Sean O'Keefe can walk around the Mars Rover control rooms beaming and talking about NASA's great success, but (funding aside) this mission, and most others, are not NASA projects at all, but collaborations between JPL and various universities. _________________________________________________ Chris L Peterson Cloudbait Observatory http://www.cloudbait.com So, correct me if I'm wrong, but my take in all this is that NASA's only real involvement in these unmanned missions is in providing the launch vehicles? |
#214
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Chris L Peterson wrote in message . ..
On Sun, 25 Jan 2004 15:51:36 GMT, "Robert J. Kolker" wrote: It would be more accurate to say NASA is Morton Thiokol... You missed my point, which was only that NASA and JPL are different entities with very different internal cultures and politics. This is often overlooked. Sean O'Keefe can walk around the Mars Rover control rooms beaming and talking about NASA's great success, but (funding aside) this mission, and most others, are not NASA projects at all, but collaborations between JPL and various universities. _________________________________________________ Chris L Peterson Cloudbait Observatory http://www.cloudbait.com So, correct me if I'm wrong, but my take in all this is that NASA's only real involvement in these unmanned missions is in providing the launch vehicles? |
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Robert J. Kolker wrote:
The Ghost In The Machine wrote: I would hope that we don't lose 17 more, but it's clear that from a death standpoint 17 is a lot less than 1.7 million, which IINM is within an order of magnitude of the number of Americans who perished during World War II. Our survival as a nation depended on America entering into the festivities of WW2. Can you convince the skeptical that our survival as a nation is conditioned on sending manned expeditions to Mars or the Moon? Pray do tell us why we must. And no fair invoking Cheng He either. You place unreasonable limitations on the discussion; you are not sufficiently cynical. The only condition that I can see is if there is a credible military threat from another nation's occupying the Moon, say. If that be the case, then we would have to respond in some fashion. The Soviet Union bought it during Apollo. Just as the Space Shuttle was not overtly advertised as a missile-proof nuclear bomber, the USSR clearly was intended to see an American Lunar base as an unassailable nuclear missile platform; an early, if ambitious, ancestor of SDI. Note that the strategy eventually worked (in terms of reducing an enemy's ability to make war). I don't think anyone seriously takes Mars as a potential nuke platform. Please don your Cynic hat; assuming for the moment that the covert purpose of America's space program is as I describe above, what covert purpose could a manned mission to/long term base on Mars serve for any participant? Example; China has nukes and overt (and presumably covert) Lunar ambitions, so our capacity to settle Mars could be interpreted as easy Lunar fly-by (and drop-off) capability... Question is, can China con a con? ;) Mark L. Fergerson |
#216
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Robert J. Kolker wrote:
The Ghost In The Machine wrote: I would hope that we don't lose 17 more, but it's clear that from a death standpoint 17 is a lot less than 1.7 million, which IINM is within an order of magnitude of the number of Americans who perished during World War II. Our survival as a nation depended on America entering into the festivities of WW2. Can you convince the skeptical that our survival as a nation is conditioned on sending manned expeditions to Mars or the Moon? Pray do tell us why we must. And no fair invoking Cheng He either. You place unreasonable limitations on the discussion; you are not sufficiently cynical. The only condition that I can see is if there is a credible military threat from another nation's occupying the Moon, say. If that be the case, then we would have to respond in some fashion. The Soviet Union bought it during Apollo. Just as the Space Shuttle was not overtly advertised as a missile-proof nuclear bomber, the USSR clearly was intended to see an American Lunar base as an unassailable nuclear missile platform; an early, if ambitious, ancestor of SDI. Note that the strategy eventually worked (in terms of reducing an enemy's ability to make war). I don't think anyone seriously takes Mars as a potential nuke platform. Please don your Cynic hat; assuming for the moment that the covert purpose of America's space program is as I describe above, what covert purpose could a manned mission to/long term base on Mars serve for any participant? Example; China has nukes and overt (and presumably covert) Lunar ambitions, so our capacity to settle Mars could be interpreted as easy Lunar fly-by (and drop-off) capability... Question is, can China con a con? ;) Mark L. Fergerson |
#217
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Robert J. Kolker wrote:
The Ghost In The Machine wrote: I would hope that we don't lose 17 more, but it's clear that from a death standpoint 17 is a lot less than 1.7 million, which IINM is within an order of magnitude of the number of Americans who perished during World War II. Our survival as a nation depended on America entering into the festivities of WW2. Can you convince the skeptical that our survival as a nation is conditioned on sending manned expeditions to Mars or the Moon? Pray do tell us why we must. And no fair invoking Cheng He either. You place unreasonable limitations on the discussion; you are not sufficiently cynical. The only condition that I can see is if there is a credible military threat from another nation's occupying the Moon, say. If that be the case, then we would have to respond in some fashion. The Soviet Union bought it during Apollo. Just as the Space Shuttle was not overtly advertised as a missile-proof nuclear bomber, the USSR clearly was intended to see an American Lunar base as an unassailable nuclear missile platform; an early, if ambitious, ancestor of SDI. Note that the strategy eventually worked (in terms of reducing an enemy's ability to make war). I don't think anyone seriously takes Mars as a potential nuke platform. Please don your Cynic hat; assuming for the moment that the covert purpose of America's space program is as I describe above, what covert purpose could a manned mission to/long term base on Mars serve for any participant? Example; China has nukes and overt (and presumably covert) Lunar ambitions, so our capacity to settle Mars could be interpreted as easy Lunar fly-by (and drop-off) capability... Question is, can China con a con? ;) Mark L. Fergerson |
#218
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"Robert J. Kolker" wrote:
" Before Challenger, NASA publicly estimated the risk of catastrophe at one in 1,000. Before Columbia, the operating risk was called one in 500. NASA has been working on a second-generation space plane with the stated goal of cutting the risk to one in 10,000. The risk of getting cancer is one in eight." .... and much higher if you smoke ... which only goes to prove that if anyone actually cared about risk, smoking would be banned. A 1:1000 or even 1:50 risk raises hackles, with deafening silence by the same opportunists when it comes to 250000/year (in US) committing suicide, and taking 50000 more with them through Second Hand Murder. Welcome to Crazy World. |
#219
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"Robert J. Kolker" wrote:
" Before Challenger, NASA publicly estimated the risk of catastrophe at one in 1,000. Before Columbia, the operating risk was called one in 500. NASA has been working on a second-generation space plane with the stated goal of cutting the risk to one in 10,000. The risk of getting cancer is one in eight." .... and much higher if you smoke ... which only goes to prove that if anyone actually cared about risk, smoking would be banned. A 1:1000 or even 1:50 risk raises hackles, with deafening silence by the same opportunists when it comes to 250000/year (in US) committing suicide, and taking 50000 more with them through Second Hand Murder. Welcome to Crazy World. |
#220
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"Robert J. Kolker" wrote:
" Before Challenger, NASA publicly estimated the risk of catastrophe at one in 1,000. Before Columbia, the operating risk was called one in 500. NASA has been working on a second-generation space plane with the stated goal of cutting the risk to one in 10,000. The risk of getting cancer is one in eight." .... and much higher if you smoke ... which only goes to prove that if anyone actually cared about risk, smoking would be banned. A 1:1000 or even 1:50 risk raises hackles, with deafening silence by the same opportunists when it comes to 250000/year (in US) committing suicide, and taking 50000 more with them through Second Hand Murder. Welcome to Crazy World. |
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