![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#11
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
db wrote in sci.astro:
It is at the request of mr Bush, he wants NASA to focus on going to the moon and mars. ....for a nickel and a dime. At the time the US realizes it's not possible to go to the Moon and Mars for a nickel and a dime, the project is cancelled and the administration has killed a few obnoxious money- consuming projects like the Shuttle and ISS. Money that can be used for more important projects, like ensuring tax cuts for companies like Halliburton, and for deprived US billionaires. -- CeeBee "I am not a crook" |
#12
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Jan Panteltje" wrote in message
... On a sunny day (Sat, 17 Jan 2004 07:07:01 GMT) it happened Sam Wormley wrote in : Mark Folsom wrote: Just read in the NYT that NASA will not fly the scheduled mission to service the Hubble telescope. The one thing they've done with the Shuttle that was worth doing, and now they've chickened out. What a bunch of turkeys!! Mark Folsom Time to replace the current administration! Honest, I agree with Sam on this subject. Well it's been long since time, for a lot of reasons--but the sheep are unlikely to do it. Mark Folsom |
#13
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"agnina" wrote in message
om... Even before the new plans to go to the moon and Mars, NASA was planning on decommissioning the Hubble Space Telescope after the next servicing mission. They have already started the project for the Next Generation Space Telescope (NGST) which will be much larger and further away from the earth. But the next servicing mission would have enabled it to operate for several more years, and included a number of upgrades. Plus the NGST doesn't replace anywhere near all the capability of the Hubble. They're tossing one of the great treasures of modern civilization in the trash long before its time--and for political bull**** at that. It's a stupid unnecessary tragedy. Mark Folsom |
#14
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sat, 17 Jan 2004 13:45:26 -0800, "Mark Folsom"
wrote: But the next servicing mission would have enabled it to operate for several more years, and included a number of upgrades. Plus the NGST doesn't replace anywhere near all the capability of the Hubble. They're tossing one of the great treasures of modern civilization in the trash long before its time--and for political bull**** at that. It's a stupid unnecessary tragedy. What's more, it doesn't even make sense from a political viewpoint; if NASA can't do something as routine as a Hubble maintenance mission, there's not much chance of people believing the guff about them sending people to Mars. A truly bizarre piece of stupidity. -- "Sore wa himitsu desu." To reply by email, remove the small snack from address. http://www.esatclear.ie/~rwallace |
#15
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In sci.physics, Uncle Al
wrote on Sat, 17 Jan 2004 07:54:24 -0800 : Mark Folsom wrote: Just read in the NYT that NASA will not fly the scheduled mission to service the Hubble telescope. The one thing they've done with the Shuttle that was worth doing, and now they've chickened out. What a bunch of turkeys!! How can Management be held responsible when they never lift the heavy end? Management makes decisions, workers make mistakes. American zero-goal education comes to the US space program: Make the average low enough and every mission is above it. Uncle Al sees a bright bright day when the Space Scuttle will be hauled out to its launch pad, fueled, diagnostics run, defueled, diagnostics run, and hauled back to its hangar. Mission accomplished! I think they've done that at least once already -- in fact, I might have taped part of it. :-) I happened to be taping a shuttle launch (I wanted to try to analyze it at the time to see how long it took for them to get into orbit). This particular launch was scrubbed by an engine cutoff just before the boosters would have lit. Oops... The next few minutes were spent "safing" the orbiter (there go those darned nouns acting as verbs again). I don't remember when they rescheduled the launch now. Ah, Hubble. We mourn you. -- #191, It's still legal to go .sigless. |
#16
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Russell Wallace wrote:
On Sat, 17 Jan 2004 13:45:26 -0800, "Mark Folsom" wrote: But the next servicing mission would have enabled it to operate for several more years, and included a number of upgrades. Plus the NGST doesn't replace anywhere near all the capability of the Hubble. They're tossing one of the great treasures of modern civilization in the trash long before its time--and for political bull**** at that. It's a stupid unnecessary tragedy. What's more, it doesn't even make sense from a political viewpoint; if NASA can't do something as routine as a Hubble maintenance mission, there's not much chance of people believing the guff about them sending people to Mars. A truly bizarre piece of stupidity. Political reality only exists for the moment. Official Truth is evanescent. History does not exist. Yesterday does not exist, except in treasonous utterances. "We have always been at war with Eurasia." "We have always been at war with Eastasia" "We have always been at war with Oceania." War is Peace Freedom is Slavery Ignorance is Strength Bush is President The irksome totality is twofold: 1) Jesus H. Christ, look at what the loyal opposition offers in counterpoint. 2) Historical dictators - Alexander of Macedonia, Gengis Khan, Julius Caesar, Napolean, Hitler, Stalin, Mao - for all their revisionist atrocities accomplished persistently great things. They built nations out of near nothing, left public works valued to this day, created the future though it was borne on the backs of corpses. Khruschev made his bones building the Moscow subway. It couldn't goddamned be done no how no way, and by god he goddamned did it to spec, reasonably on time and within budget, buried nuclear shelter deeply into the bedrock. So what if thousands died doing it? Bush the Lesser has easily blown to Hell at least $250 billion on his watch. What have we gotten to show for it? Halliburton? Washington exists to destroy the future. It has finally discovered a task at which it is expert and facile. And enthusiastic. Science is on its hit list. Miracles belong only to managers. -- Uncle Al http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/qz.pdf http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/eotvos.htm (Do something naughty to physics) |
#17
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "The Ghost In The Machine" wrote in message ... The next few minutes were spent "safing" the orbiter (there go those darned nouns acting as verbs again). That looks more like an adjective-verb transformation to me. |
#18
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Nasa is concerned with only one thing, getting the most money
to fly Monkey crap missions on the Space Shuttle II. They would gladly ditch the Hubble if they thought it would get them an extra two cents. Also the arguement that Hubble is obsolete, is a half truth, sorta like saying that a car that has run out of gas is useless. There were plans for Hubble improvements. The thinking of Nasa, after Columbia burned up, was, 1)the Hubble is a problem, if why go back for servicing missions, that fact will be used by our critics to argue that a new shuttle is not needed 2)argue safety 3)therefore, new shuttle flights must be in the same orbital plane as ISS 4)therefore, we must abandon the Hubble Keep in mind that every dollar spent on 'science' is one less dollar spent on the astronaut-soap-opera. Menwith Mark Folsom wrote: Just read in the NYT that NASA will not fly the scheduled mission to service the Hubble telescope. The one thing they've done with the Shuttle that was worth doing, and now they've chickened out. What a bunch of turkeys!! Mark Folsom |
#20
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article ,
Jan Panteltje wrote: On a sunny day (Sat, 17 Jan 2004 07:07:01 GMT) it happened Sam Wormley wrote in : Mark Folsom wrote: Just read in the NYT that NASA will not fly the scheduled mission to service the Hubble telescope. The one thing they've done with the Shuttle that was worth doing, and now they've chickened out. What a bunch of turkeys!! Mark Folsom Time to replace the current administration! Honest, I agree with Sam on this subject. Sigh! NASA has been under all kinds of administrations and still is screwing up. There's another thread going somewhere else where the comment is that one of the problems is that it's a civilian government org rather than military. [gasping emoticon replacing bell-bottomed jeans]. I've just read Tip O'Neill's auto-bio. It appears that the old-style political machines upgraded themselves from dealing with individual pork to production line pork without quality control. /BAH Subtract a hundred and four for e-mail. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
NASA Urged to Reconsider Hubble Decision | Scott M. Kozel | Space Shuttle | 116 | April 2nd 04 07:14 PM |
NASA Urged to Reconsider Hubble Decision | Scott M. Kozel | Policy | 74 | March 31st 04 01:25 PM |
Selected Restricted NASA Videotapes | Michael Ravnitzky | Policy | 5 | January 16th 04 04:28 PM |
NASA Selects Explorer Mission Proposals For Feasibility Studies | Ron Baalke | Science | 0 | November 4th 03 10:14 PM |
News: Hubble plans and policy | Kent Betts | History | 101 | August 18th 03 09:25 PM |