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Henry Spencer wrote:
As did Bush, please note -- unless I've missed something, he hasn't said a word about it since. It's been suggested that he was hoping for a stronger and more positive public response, and when he didn't get it, the issue went very much on the back burner... which bodes ill for political support of exploration if he *is* re-elected. The other reason he would have made his announcement would have been to preempt criticism of how he's handled the space program. The Columbia loss occured on his watch, so he may have felt he needed to explain how he was going to address the underlying problems. It's convenient for him that large changes aren't until far in the future. Paul |
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Charles Buckley wrote:
4 months after the release of the CAIB is not preemption. It's damage control. Well before the 2004 election is preemption. Paul |
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Paul F. Dietz wrote:
Henry Spencer wrote: As did Bush, please note -- unless I've missed something, he hasn't said a word about it since. It's been suggested that he was hoping for a stronger and more positive public response, and when he didn't get it, the issue went very much on the back burner... which bodes ill for political support of exploration if he *is* re-elected. The other reason he would have made his announcement would have been to preempt criticism of how he's handled the space program. The Columbia loss occured on his watch, so he may have felt he needed to explain how he was going to address the underlying problems. It's convenient for him that large changes aren't until far in the future. Paul 4 months after the release of the CAIB is not preemption. It's damage control. |
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Paul F. Dietz wrote:
Charles Buckley wrote: 4 months after the release of the CAIB is not preemption. It's damage control. Well before the 2004 election is preemption. Nothing to indicate space is an issue in this election in any way shape or form. It's damage control from the CAIB. That's it. He had to have a game plan in place before the budget was submitted and the 2010 recertification date meant that they had to adjust the 2005-6 budget request to either meet the requirements for recert or plan to ground shuttle. The request had to be made within the scpoe of NASA's strategic plan. ISS would be hitting core complete within that budget cycle, so he also had to start the shift in funding to meet the next goal after ISS. |
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![]() "Henry Spencer" wrote in message In article Bear in mind that *any* statement about space from "these guys" -- and I include one G. Bush in that collective noun -- right now means little. I think that Bush's space plane will not change in the near future. NASA has done a hard turn into that program and it would be extremely hard to turn it again without aggravating NASA civil service. |
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In article ,
Rand Simberg wrote: First, the NASA administrator is the president's (and vice-president's) man. Second, the president's party controls Congress. Those two factors mean that a new inertia for the new policy will set in over the next few years (assuming, as I consider likely, a Bush reelection). Meet the new inertia. Same as the old inertia. Who will get fooled again? -- /\ Greg Kuperberg (UC Davis) / \ \ / Visit the Math ArXiv Front at http://front.math.ucdavis.edu/ \/ * All the math that's fit to e-print * |
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