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This is the kind of thing we used to do here before the trolls took
over. http://www.spacepolitics.com/2007/05...g-for-griffin/ Sorry, Henry, but Usenet really is dying. The interesting conversation is happening on the web now. |
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On May 18, 7:52 am, (Rand Simberg)
wrote: This is the kind of thing we used to do here before the trolls took over. http://www.spacepolitics.com/2007/05...g-for-griffin/ Sorry, Henry, but Usenet really is dying. The interesting conversation is happening on the web now. Just read it, and it's excellent. I wonder who "anonymous" is. Usenet isn't totally dead, but it sure has gone downhill since a decade ago -- and the S/N was remarkably low even then. Oh, well, as long as there's a searchable archive it's still useful as a filing cabinet. |
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On 18 May 2007 06:46:46 -0700, in a place far, far away, Allen Thomson
made the phosphor on my monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that: On May 18, 7:52 am, (Rand Simberg) wrote: This is the kind of thing we used to do here before the trolls took over. http://www.spacepolitics.com/2007/05...g-for-griffin/ Sorry, Henry, but Usenet really is dying. The interesting conversation is happening on the web now. Just read it, and it's excellent. I wonder who "anonymous" is. Yes, many do. He (or she) is writing some of the most trenchant stuff on space policy on the web right now, and (s)he only does it in comments sections, mostly at Jeff's site. |
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Rand Simberg wrote:
This is the kind of thing we used to do here before the trolls took over. http://www.spacepolitics.com/2007/05...g-for-griffin/ The moon program is over. Get used to it. Sorry, Henry, but Usenet really is dying. The interesting conversation is happening on the web now. We have high technology, the trolls don't bother us at all anymore, and there is no way in hell, unless they implement extreme moderation, that they can stop anyone from posting anymore. Implement extreme moderation, and what you end up with is NASASpaceFlight, or Unmannedspaceflight, dry tasteless and uncreative ********s stalked by wannabee knowitalls/mods. Just read it, and it's excellent. I wonder who "anonymous" is. He's a ****ing crybaby. He a 'doing a heckava job, Alberto' kind of guy. Yes, many do. He (or she) is writing some of the most trenchant stuff on space policy on the web right now, and (s)he only does it in comments sections, mostly at Jeff's site. No, Plan B is the most cogent thing written yet. Rand can't read the writing on the walls. The republicans and the neocons are finished. Michael Griffin is finished. VSE and ESAS are finished. What these ****ing Paul and Anne Spudis types need to start doing is to look for another space transportation system, and to start figuring out how to do science remotely, like the rest of us have to do on a daily basis. It's not as if meteors don't hit the moon on a daily basis now, do they. -- Get A Free Orbiter Space Flight Simulator : http://orbit.medphys.ucl.ac.uk/orbit.html |
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On May 18, 10:13 am, kT wrote:
No, Plan B is the most cogent thing written yet. Rand can't read the writing on the walls. The republicans and the neocons are finished. Michael Griffin is finished. VSE and ESAS are finished. What these ****ing Paul and Anne Spudis types need to start doing is to look for another space transportation system, and to start figuring out how to do science remotely, like the rest of us have to do on a daily basis. It's not as if meteors don't hit the moon on a daily basis now, do they. -- Get A Free Orbiter Space Flight Simulator :http://orbit.medphys.ucl.ac.uk/orbit.html The problem is that most people in discussing the "return to the Moon" need first to return to political reality. They act as if the last 6 years have not happened. Of that a guy who was/is suppose to be the "conservative hope" hasnt been elected twice and governed...and run the entire conservative "thing" into the ground. I dont care what vehicles or baseline or timeline one uses, there is no more money for human spaceflight, and there is no support outside the "space is great" crowd to go back to the Moon. Its dead Jim. Robert |
#6
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![]() "Allen Thomson" wrote in message oups.com... On May 18, 7:52 am, (Rand Simberg) wrote: This is the kind of thing we used to do here before the trolls took over. http://www.spacepolitics.com/2007/05...g-for-griffin/ Sorry, Henry, but Usenet really is dying. The interesting conversation is happening on the web now. Just read it, and it's excellent. I wonder who "anonymous" is. Usenet isn't totally dead, but it sure has gone downhill since a decade ago -- and the S/N was remarkably low even then. Oh, well, as long as there's a searchable archive it's still useful as a filing cabinet. Much of what anonymous discusses has been discussed here before. That said, anonymous seems to be well informed about what's going on with VSE/ESAS/Ares/Orion and has put together some insightful observations about the program. He's obviously a very good writer as well. It also helps that he shares many of my views about VSE/ESAS/Ares/Orion. ;-) Your typical sci.space troll is none of the above. Jeff -- "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety" - B. Franklin, Bartlett's Familiar Quotations (1919) |
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Jeff Findley wrote:
"Allen Thomson" wrote in message oups.com... On May 18, 7:52 am, (Rand Simberg) wrote: This is the kind of thing we used to do here before the trolls took over. http://www.spacepolitics.com/2007/05...g-for-griffin/ Sorry, Henry, but Usenet really is dying. The interesting conversation is happening on the web now. Just read it, and it's excellent. I wonder who "anonymous" is. Usenet isn't totally dead, but it sure has gone downhill since a decade ago -- and the S/N was remarkably low even then. Oh, well, as long as there's a searchable archive it's still useful as a filing cabinet. Much of what anonymous discusses has been discussed here before. That said, anonymous seems to be well informed about what's going on with VSE/ESAS/Ares/Orion and has put together some insightful observations about the program. He's obviously a very good writer as well. It also helps that he shares many of my views about VSE/ESAS/Ares/Orion. ;-) Your typical sci.space troll is none of the above. Even your average sci.space.policy advocate is smart enough to know that VSE/ESAS/Ares/Orion is complete and utter bilge, and will be history soon after January 20, 2009. We've got far more serious geological, financial and political problems right here on the planet Earth, that only a space program centered right here on the planet Earth can solve. What anonymous is discussing is a dead horses head in the bedroom. -- Get A Free Orbiter Space Flight Simulator : http://orbit.medphys.ucl.ac.uk/orbit.html |
#8
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![]() Allen Thomson wrote: Just read it, and it's excellent. I wonder who "anonymous" is. Usenet isn't totally dead, but it sure has gone downhill since a decade ago -- and the S/N was remarkably low even then. Oh, well, as long as there's a searchable archive it's still useful as a filing cabinet. That really was a good discussion. I think one of the problems NASA has is that if you try to cut anything at all, you've stepped on someone's toes, and they will take it to their congressperson and get it reinstated. So NASA embodies the Peter Principle; it's risen to the level of its own bureaucratic iincompetence, and if you give it more money it just starts frittering it away on more pork-barrel programs, so that it is in a perpetual state of being underfunded no matter how much money is tossed at it. It might be best to just let the thing die, and then start over with something a lot more modest that only does a few things, but does them well, sort of like going over to the old NACA model. A lot of the "research" NASA funds is public works programs for industry and academia plain and simple. They had one guy I saw on television years ago who was studying Martian life by skiing around in the California mountains while gathering up snow samples. California isn't Mars by a long shot. You want him to get some good data, send him to the summit of Mt. Erebus in antarctic winter... that's a tad more like Mars...what he'd gotten was a taxpayer financed ski vacation. And what this dorky underwater habitat stuff is about is beyond me: http://www.spaceref.com/news/viewnews.html?id=1215 Pat |
#9
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On Fri, 18 May 2007 17:33:31 -0500, in a place far, far away, Pat
Flannery made the phosphor on my monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that: Allen Thomson wrote: Just read it, and it's excellent. I wonder who "anonymous" is. Usenet isn't totally dead, but it sure has gone downhill since a decade ago -- and the S/N was remarkably low even then. Oh, well, as long as there's a searchable archive it's still useful as a filing cabinet. That really was a good discussion. I think one of the problems NASA has is that if you try to cut anything at all, you've stepped on someone's toes, and they will take it to their congressperson and get it reinstated. So NASA embodies the Peter Principle; it's risen to the level of its own bureaucratic iincompetence, and if you give it more money it just starts frittering it away on more pork-barrel programs, so that it is in a perpetual state of being underfunded no matter how much money is tossed at it. It might be best to just let the thing die, and then start over with something a lot more modest that only does a few things, but does them well, sort of like going over to the old NACA model. Gee, once in a while, Pat is capable of putting up a sane post. |
#10
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Ares I is a dead stick for sure, (LOL). We need to use the EELV
systems for LEO. We also need to build a good heavy lift booster using the existing work force, (That will keep the folks on the job, (and give Us the Moon, NEA, and Mars programs needed to get the fire back in the crowd)). As for the Money not being there, (Once the shuttle is off the books, (We have the funding needed for future Human Space Flight). If You want to bitch about the program, (Go ahead). Just make sure You give options for Your view, of what We should do instead of what the path is now. It is childish, (and shows major ignorance of the real world), to say things are just so bad, (and funding so short), that We need to just give up. Be proud of Your past, (and support the future)! Carl |
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