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Dr. Ernst Stuhlinger has died
eyeball schrieb:
On May 25, 4:02 pm, Pat Flannery wrote: On of the last original members of WvB's Peenemunde team has died:http://www.spaceref.com/news/viewnews.html?id=1291 If the name doesn't ring a bell, one of his ion-powered spaceship designs almost certainly will:http://davidszondy.com/future/space/ionships.htm Yes, the ones that were in the Disney television production "Mars and Beyond". There's a 1962 ion-powered Mars ship he also designed hehttp://www.astronautix.com/craft/stus1962.htm If Phoenix lands on Mars successfully today, you can bet that something in the vicinity of the landing site will get named after Stuhlinger...it would be nifty to name the landing site "Stuhlinger Station" wouldn't it? Considering how much that Disney program did to heighten interest in Mars exploration, he certainly deserves it. Pat I would imagine his Nazi association, no matter how slight, will eliminate any chance of naming anything after him, on PC grounds. There is a moon crater named after Wernher von Braun. |
#12
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Dr. Ernst Stuhlinger has died
On May 26, 11:10 am, eyeball wrote::
http://www... Butt, butt, butt, everything has to have a name, right? Graboids, that's it. I'll give you five dollars for it! |
#13
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Dr. Ernst Stuhlinger has died
wrote in message ... On May 25, 10:18 pm, eyeball wrote: I would imagine his Nazi association, no matter how slight, will eliminate any chance of naming anything after him, on PC grounds. Given that the communists -- Russian and Chinese -- have killed several times the number of humans the Nazis killed, why are Nazis hated so profoundly and viscerally? Because the communists try to hide it. The Nazis published lists, thus giving them more publicity. Also, even though the effect is the same, the Nazis tended to concentrate on specific groups, while the communists are less biased about who they want to murder. Mostly, it's a PR thing. ** Posted from http://www.teranews.com ** |
#14
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Dr. Ernst Stuhlinger has died
On May 26, 3:39 pm, "Alfred S. Dert" wrote:
eyeball schrieb: On May 25, 4:02 pm, Pat Flannery wrote: On of the last original members of WvB's Peenemunde team has died:http://www.spaceref.com/news/viewnews.html?id=1291 If the name doesn't ring a bell, one of his ion-powered spaceship designs almost certainly will:http://davidszondy.com/future/space/ionships.htm Yes, the ones that were in the Disney television production "Mars and Beyond". There's a 1962 ion-powered Mars ship he also designed hehttp://www.astronautix.com/craft/stus1962.htm If Phoenix lands on Mars successfully today, you can bet that something in the vicinity of the landing site will get named after Stuhlinger...it would be nifty to name the landing site "Stuhlinger Station" wouldn't it? Considering how much that Disney program did to heighten interest in Mars exploration, he certainly deserves it. Pat I would imagine his Nazi association, no matter how slight, will eliminate any chance of naming anything after him, on PC grounds. There is a moon crater named after Wernher von Braun. Actually, I couldn't find out when it was named...but I would still think the PCers would bitch today. |
#15
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Dr. Ernst Stuhlinger has died
On May 26, 7:57 pm, eyeball wrote:
On May 26, 3:39 pm, "Alfred S. Dert" wrote: eyeball schrieb: On May 25, 4:02 pm, Pat Flannery wrote: On of the last original members of WvB's Peenemunde team has died:http://www.spaceref.com/news/viewnews.html?id=1291 If the name doesn't ring a bell, one of his ion-powered spaceship designs almost certainly will:http://davidszondy.com/future/space/ionships.htm Yes, the ones that were in the Disney television production "Mars and Beyond". There's a 1962 ion-powered Mars ship he also designed hehttp://www.astronautix.com/craft/stus1962.htm If Phoenix lands on Mars successfully today, you can bet that something in the vicinity of the landing site will get named after Stuhlinger...it would be nifty to name the landing site "Stuhlinger Station" wouldn't it? Considering how much that Disney program did to heighten interest in Mars exploration, he certainly deserves it. Pat I would imagine his Nazi association, no matter how slight, will eliminate any chance of naming anything after him, on PC grounds. There is a moon crater named after Wernher von Braun. Actually, I couldn't find out when it was named. As long as it has a name you're happy. Everything has to have a name. but I would still think the PCers would bitch today. Clearly they would bitch even louder if it didn't have a name. Everything has to have a name, even what's his name knows that. |
#16
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Dr. Ernst Stuhlinger has died
On Mon, 26 May 2008 22:39:25 +0200, "Alfred S. Dert"
wrote: There is a moon crater named after Wernher von Braun. ....Was it officially named that by the Frog-controlled body that officiates the names? OM -- ]=====================================[ ] OMBlog - http://www.io.com/~o_m/omworld [ ] Let's face it: Sometimes you *need* [ ] an obnoxious opinion in your day! [ ]=====================================[ |
#17
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Dr. Ernst Stuhlinger has died
In article , OM
wrote: On Mon, 26 May 2008 22:39:25 +0200, "Alfred S. Dert" wrote: There is a moon crater named after Wernher von Braun. ...Was it officially named that by the Frog-controlled body that officiates the names? Remember that even though he was a German, he did bomb London. -- David M. Palmer (formerly @clark.net, @ematic.com) |
#18
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Dr. Ernst Stuhlinger has died
On Sun, 25 May 2008 19:18:39 -0700 (PDT), eyeball
wrote: On May 25, 4:02 pm, Pat Flannery wrote: On of the last original members of WvB's Peenemunde team has died:http://www.spaceref.com/news/viewnews.html?id=1291 If the name doesn't ring a bell, one of his ion-powered spaceship designs almost certainly will:http://davidszondy.com/future/space/ionships.htm Yes, the ones that were in the Disney television production "Mars and Beyond". There's a 1962 ion-powered Mars ship he also designed hehttp://www.astronautix.com/craft/stus1962.htm If Phoenix lands on Mars successfully today, you can bet that something in the vicinity of the landing site will get named after Stuhlinger...it would be nifty to name the landing site "Stuhlinger Station" wouldn't it? Considering how much that Disney program did to heighten interest in Mars exploration, he certainly deserves it. Pat I would imagine his Nazi association, no matter how slight, will eliminate any chance of naming anything after him, on PC grounds. But was he a "good" Nazi? "Good night, and good Nazi" - Colbert |
#19
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Dr. Ernst Stuhlinger has died
On Mon, 26 May 2008 06:29:05 -0700 (PDT), "
wrote, in part: On May 25, 10:18 pm, eyeball wrote: I would imagine his Nazi association, no matter how slight, will eliminate any chance of naming anything after him, on PC grounds. Given that the communists -- Russian and Chinese -- have killed several times the number of humans the Nazis killed, why are Nazis hated so profoundly and viscerally? Seems to me that the numbers say that we should never name anything after Gagarin and that crew, first. Why the Nazis are hated so profoundly and viscerally is no mystery. They plunged the world into a devastating war which killed millions of people in France and Britain and the United States. And they deliberately singled out for extermination the Jews, a peaceful, inoffensive minority group that had made immense contributions to culture and science. The mystery might be why the Communists are not also hated powerfully and viscerally. But the wars they started were in far-away Korea and Vietnam - so Americans might as easily blame their own government for bothering to send their sons to defend such unimportant places. They subverted the governments of Poland, Czechoslovakia, and other countries after victory was achieved over the Nazis, but this happened when the world was weary of war. They held the threat of nuclear annihilation over our heads for decades, and for this they were resented. The Nazis clearly were interested in running the whole world for the benefit of the Germans. The Communists talked about being in favor of the ordinary working man. During the Depression, people looked towards *both* Stalin's Russia on the one hand, *and* Mussolini's Italy and Hitler's Germany on the other as countries that were doing something about the Depression. Pearl Harbor settled the question about Hitler and Mussolini. By then, Russia was on the Allied side. After the war, though, when it was found that Russia wasn't a democracy, that it took over Eastern Europe - and it was spying on America, stealing the secret of the Atom Bomb - Americans *were* angry. But their anger was USED. Used by people with other agendas, like curbing the strength of labor unions, or stopping evolution from being taught in the schools. Used by people who wanted to get political power by hounding innocent people who were deceived by Communism back in the 1930s, when a lot of people were. It's hard for some people to recognize that the conflict between two ideas is apparent, not real; that Communism can be a horrifying evil even if McCarthyism is also evil. When it comes to Nazism, on the other hand, everything points the same way. The Nazis were bad, and so were the people who wanted to keep segregation or stop black people from voting. So one can denounce Nazism in absolute uncompromising terms - but when denouncing Communism, one has to clarify that one is not expressing support for McCarthyism, or trying to vilify the people working for equality for women or people of color. Of course, it also helps that Yuri Gagarin never killed anyone (except possibly in service during World War II, which doesn't count - this was legitimate response to Nazi aggression), while von Braun and the others with him did help to make rockets that killed civilians in London. The urgency of the Cold War meant that we needed their help - instead of sending them to Britain to face trial. Of course, other Cold War considerations also mitigated against mass prosecutions of German soldiers, sailors, and airmen after Germany's _unconditional_ surrender. John Savard http://www.quadibloc.com/index.html |
#20
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Dr. Ernst Stuhlinger has died
John Savard wrote:
On Mon, 26 May 2008 06:29:05 -0700 (PDT), " wrote, in part: On May 25, 10:18 pm, eyeball wrote: I would imagine his Nazi association, no matter how slight, will eliminate any chance of naming anything after him, on PC grounds. Given that the communists -- Russian and Chinese -- have killed several times the number of humans the Nazis killed, why are Nazis hated so profoundly and viscerally? Seems to me that the numbers say that we should never name anything after Gagarin and that crew, first. Why the Nazis are hated so profoundly and viscerally is no mystery. They plunged the world into a devastating war which killed millions of people in France and Britain and the United States. Why the Americans are hated so profoundly and viscerally is no mystery. They plunged the world into devastating wars which killed millions of people in Iraq and Vietnam. And they deliberately singled out for extermination the Jews, a peaceful, inoffensive minority group that had made immense contributions to culture and science. And they deliberately singled out for extermination one Saddam Hussein, a nutty and offensive petty dictator who made immense contributions to the stability of Iraq. [snip nutty and offensive right wing dogma] |
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