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#61
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![]() "Mike Rapoport" wrote in message ink.net... Do YOU want to pay for it? How about privatizing all the airports to pay for it? A $5 gallon tax on fuel? There really is no upside to doing this. We are already overspending at a rate that is unsustainable. Actually, we've been spending that way for over 70 years; this is just the logical culmination of statism and the welfare state. |
#62
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![]() "Jay Honeck" wrote in message news:_omNb.68628$I06.309450@attbi_s01... I caught most of it -- and it was fantastic! It was appalling, to me. Is the man completely insensible to the federal deficit? He certainly seems insensible to the impracticalities of manned travel to Mars. I think people on Mars would be a wonderfully cool thing, but our national credit card is already maxed out. Sometimes you have to put "cool" on hold and make sure the rent is paid. You know what, Dan? I, too, am appalled at the federal deficit, and the waste, and all the examples of Gubmint crap. It makes me ill to see it. Still, in my lifetime, I can point to just one real Gubmint success story: Apollo. Every other government program, from the "Great Society", to the "War on Poverty," to "No Child Left Behind," has been a dismal, utter waste of money and time. So why are you willing to trust the program to someone with a .013 batting average? Hell, put Bob Uecker in Gene Krantz's spot and it'll be done for 1/20th the cost with double the results. |
#63
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"Morgans" wrote in message
... "Mike Rapoport" wrote Yes, the real question is: What do we have to give up to get this new space program? How about Medicare? The cost if about the same. Lets have a vote! Do you want Medicare or a Mars program. It is foolish to ask someone whether or not they want something unless you tell them what it will cost. Several years ago it was decided that technology wasn't ready for the Nationaly Aerospace Plane. I guess that since it is an election year, all that must have changed. Too bad Teddy Roosevelt isn't running this time. Mike So how much per person per year is it going to cost? Pass the plate. I'll pay my share. How about you start a company and sell stock to investors...I'm sure you could convince a thousand billionaires to put up a billion (their entire worth) each ($1T = $1B x 1000) |
#64
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In article , "Dan Luke"
writes: It will never happen if we do not create the need for it by reaching the limits of rocket technology. I submit that we are already at the practical limits. One of the things that make a manned trip to Mars so expensive is the long exposure of astronauts to conditions in space. Tremendous amounts of r&d will be required to protect them from the physiological effects of zero gravity and radiation. -- Then we better get started. Don -- Wm. Donald (Don) Tabor Jr., DDS PP-ASEL Chesapeake, VA - CPK, PVG |
#65
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In article et, "Steven P.
McNicoll" writes: "Wdtabor" wrote in message ... Same place Jefferson found authorization for Lewis and Clark. What place was that? Hee Hee. That is the point. There is no direct reference to space exploration any more than there was for exploring the West. But Article 1 section 8, in the second to last paragraph authorizes the erection of forts, magazines, dockyards and other needful buildings in new territories and earlier for the establishment of a Navy. The FAA and ATC are extensions of the authorization to build Postal and other roads and to regulate interstate commerce. We applied the clear intent of the Constitution to new technology and situations that were not anticipated at the time it was written. Jefferson saw expansion of the US into the west and exploration of and securing those new territories as essential to the defense and security of the US. I would agree that holding the "high ground" and strategic advantage in the new territories outside the atmosphere as essential to our security as well. We will either lead the world or be lead by it. I don't trust the rest of the world, and I do not want to surrender the high ground to the Chinese. If we don't take and hold space, the Chinese certainly will. Don -- Wm. Donald (Don) Tabor Jr., DDS PP-ASEL Chesapeake, VA - CPK, PVG |
#66
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#67
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![]() http://tinyurl.com/26gzu "All I've got to say is please, for pity's sake, stop worrying about NASA stealing money from your favorite federal program and adding to the deficit. Out of a $2 trillion-plus budget in 2004, human resources programs (Education, Health and Human Services, HUD, Labor, Social Security, etc.) will get an astounding 34%! In contrast, NASA has the smallest budget of all the major agencies in the Federal government. In fact, its budget has represented less than 1% of the total budget each year since 1977 and it will probably never get more than a fraction above that, even with this new plan." "Before they complain about it, I wish the moaners would take the time to find out a few things about NASA's measly 1%. It has added billions of dollars back to our economy. It's about the only program in the Federal budget that has a track record of doing that. When NASA does cutting-edge work, new products are devised and people, Americans, are put to work producing them. To keep our economy steaming and pay our bills, we have to stay ahead in product innovation. That means inventing and manufacturing new products. One proven way to do that is to get the space program going with some real work." |
#68
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![]() http://tinyurl.com/22zpp "What the plan lacks in momentum and flash, however, it makes up in political shrewdness, and analysts said that, unlike previous attempts to get the space program off the dime, it might even survive the congressional gantlet." |
#69
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![]() "Wdtabor" wrote in message ... Hee Hee. That is the point. There is no direct reference to space exploration any more than there was for exploring the West. But Article 1 section 8, in the second to last paragraph authorizes the erection of forts, magazines, dockyards and other needful buildings in new territories and earlier for the establishment of a Navy. The FAA and ATC are extensions of the authorization to build Postal and other roads and to regulate interstate commerce. We applied the clear intent of the Constitution to new technology and situations that were not anticipated at the time it was written. Jefferson saw expansion of the US into the west and exploration of and securing those new territories as essential to the defense and security of the US. I would agree that holding the "high ground" and strategic advantage in the new territories outside the atmosphere as essential to our security as well. We will either lead the world or be lead by it. I don't trust the rest of the world, and I do not want to surrender the high ground to the Chinese. If we don't take and hold space, the Chinese certainly will. So space is a new US territory, and we're exploring it for the purpose of erection of forts, magazines, dockyards and other needful buildings? |
#70
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http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/space/2354537
WASHINGTON -- Eugene Cernan, the last man on the moon, said Wednesday he's more than ready to give up the title. "I want somebody dearly to take that dubious honor ... off my shoulder," he said after President Bush announced plans to send astronauts back to the moon and eventually to Mars. "There's some young kid, some young boy or girl out there," Cernan said in the hallway at NASA headquarters after Bush's speech. "God bless their soul. Give them the courage, give them the opportunity. Go for it." |
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