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#21
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Better to build a low cost to orbit manned launcher and then get us out of LEO,
no doubt less expensive than the alternatives too. |
#22
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"Herb Schaltegger" wrote in message
... Forgive me if I sound cynical but how ****ing stupid is that quote? ". . . forcing NASA to get serious . . ." PLEASE! NASA is an administrative agency under the Executive Branch of government. How about some good, old-fashioned top-down management from, say, the President? The President is almost irrelevant to the process. Simply setting some stupid policy goal ("Hey, let's go to the moon!") and then walking away while NASA twists in the wind for the duration of another ten year, never-get-done project (SSF-Alpha-ISS, anyone?) is NOT good leadership. Again, *ideas* and even management is not the problem. Congress is the problem. NASA and the President oversells a program, Congress slightly underfunds it to begin with, then, after unrecoverable money has already been spent on design, cuts the budget, thus ****ing away much of the money that has already been spent (but which still counts as part of the new budget), and forcing still more money to be spent on a redesign. If Congress ponied up the full, total project cost and placed it in an independent, blind trust fund, where the money will be doled out to NASA according to the mutually agreed upon plan and which could be recovered by Congress only by completely cancelling the project, and where Congress makes it clear that there will be *no* more money allocated period (which means that insurance needs to be taken out to cover accidents), then we'd see some stability. NASA would have an incentive to provide realistic proposals, and wouldn't fear having the money yanked out from under them, while Congress wouldn't have to worry about continually budgeting for ongoing projects since it would be done and over with. I don't see Congress giving up that layer of micromanagement. This is the "**** or get off the pot" budget method. The pot of money is there, NASA knows exactly what it has to work with, and Congress can't touch the money unless NASA fails to deliver. The construction industry expecially works on the "draw" method- when certain milestones are hit, the contractor gets a certain percentage of the money to continue- and there's no reason why NASA or a lot of other government projects can't work under the same method. If it's time for a draw, the money needs to be there, and there is no money unless the milestone has been reached. If the customer changes the contract, there is a charge. In this case, if Congress changes the project, then it needs to pony up more money, not only for the changes to the project, but an additional fee just for making a change. If a milestone isn't reached when scheduled, Congress has the option of continuing the project or cancelling it. Grand pronouncements are not the solution. Can anyone say "Space Exploration Initiative"? No bucks, no Buck Rogers. -- If you have had problems with Illinois Student Assistance Commission (ISAC), please contact shredder at bellsouth dot net. There may be a class-action lawsuit in the works. |
#23
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"George William Herbert" wrote in message
... First, the veterans who died and/or have retired had to figure it out the hard way the first time, and got it right, and left us scads of documentation on both right and wrong things. Reminds me of Larry Niven's Moties- population pressure periodically forces them to bomb themselves back to the stone age- but they carefully preserve museums with the necessary technical knowledge so that they don't have to start from scratch. -- If you have had problems with Illinois Student Assistance Commission (ISAC), please contact shredder at bellsouth dot net. There may be a class-action lawsuit in the works. |
#25
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On Thu, 30 Oct 2003 06:23:59 GMT, "G.Beat"
wrote: "Rand Simberg" wrote in message .. . On Thu, 30 Oct 2003 03:38:47 GMT, in a place far, far away, "G.Beat" made the phosphor on my monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that: If he was serious about space, he would have started 3 years ago. (Florida, Texas and California economies -- how many electoral votes is that?) Space is important to local economies, but not *state* economies. Particularly in some of the largest states in the nation... Very true .... as I watch some of the factories (subcontractors) that produced Apollo and Gemini components - close or be shipped to China. They should have a good space program ... we sold enough of the parts FWIW I've read that the Chinese rockets are based on American hardware, and the head of their program was educated in America, during the McCarthyism period he was given the elbow by the then administration,and went back to China with his American paid-fore knowledge and experience, and started from scratch on their space program. [Hah ... reminds me of the M*A*S*H episode of shipping a Jeep from Korea to US one part at a time .... very educational episode ... ] gb Christopher +++++++++++++++++++++++++ "Kites rise highest against the wind - not with it." Winston Churchill |
#26
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Pat Flannery writes:
And if Halliburton and the Carlyle Group can get involved in space exploration, the president and vice president will be 100% behind the "free market" aspects of the plan as to assigning contracts. Pat Hey, who was it who was saying that we'd know the politicians are actually getting serious about space when they stop giving space station contracts to Boeing and start giving them to Brown and Root (parent company of Halliburton) instead? -- Phil Fraering "Oh, so now Mike's the nut, Roger's the good one, and I'm the bad guy?" |
#27
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(Rusty B) wrote in message . com...
................According to Space Lift Washington, President Bush may announce at Kitty Hawk a return to manned lunar exploration Full text of article at this URL: http://www.spacedaily.com/news/beyondleo-03a.html To me, this looks and smells like a purposeful leak for vetting purposes. Reading from the article: "According to sources familiar with the White House review, the current plan-**subject to change at any time the sources say**-is for a final recommendation to the president by November 30th ... " "As of late October, sources indicate that a central recommendation is **likely, but not certainly** to be resumption of manned lunar flights ..." Perhaps the White House, thinking ahead a few years, decided it didn't want China to be exploring the moon (unmanned probably) all by itself. Maybe an unmanned exploration program will suffice, maybe not. There would be one nagging concern: the new KT-series rocket China is developing will be the world's most powerful rocket... - Ed Kyle |
#28
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![]() And if Halliburton and the Carlyle Group can get involved in space exploration, the president and vice president will be 100% behind the "free market" aspects of the plan as to assigning contracts. Pat And then the bulk of the new money will be promised for the out years, and the first years funding will be delayed until FY 05, and then it will turn out that some of the "new funding" will actually be earmarked for reimbursing FEMA, and then ... The Bush Administration seems to apply bistromathics to everything. |
#29
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![]() Pat Flannery wrote: George William Herbert wrote: One hypothetical approach here would be to start a major set of initiatives now, and set specific long term goals, and then assuming Bush (43) gets re-elected, for there to be a major bloodbath among the non-perfomers about oh say 6 months into his second term. Something like that... The thing that's missing from all this is a rational reason to return to the Moon- it's lifeless, and we already know a fair amount about its geology; we can't afford a permanent manned lunar base because of the supply problem that such an endeavor would pose, and spending billions of dollars to get some more rocks is a vast waste of money. At least with Mars, we would get an inherently more interesting place to visit. Pat We certainly can't afford to build a lunar base with expendable HLLV's, but then we can't afford to do Mars that way either. Develop a system that will make going to Mars affordable and we will be able to afford a lunar base too. Spending at least a year or two building a lunar base would give us experience with our Mars systems in as realistic an environment as possible and allow us to get the bugs out of the hardware. I can't immagine that we would commit to a 2 1/2 years long Mars round trip without that experience. |
#30
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Pat Flannery wrote:
The thing that's missing from all this is a rational reason to return to the Moon- it's lifeless, We don't yet have any data to suggest that Mars is any better in this regard. and we already know a fair amount about its geology; I would have thought that the discovery of lunar ice decades after the end of Apollo would have brought home the point to everybody that we still know precious little about the moon. Who know what other surprises may still lie in store? At least with Mars, we would get an inherently more interesting place to visit. That's a statement of personal opinion. My view is that the moon and the NEAs are more interesting because it's barely possible they represent locations for economic exploitation which might have returns to the terrestrial economy. -- Regards, Mike Combs ---------------------------------------------------------------------- We should ask, critically and with appeal to the numbers, whether the best site for a growing advancing industrial society is Earth, the Moon, Mars, some other planet, or somewhere else entirely. Surprisingly, the answer will be inescapable - the best site is "somewhere else entirely." Gerard O'Neill - "The High Frontier" |
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