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-   -   No threads on the Augustine Report? (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/off-topic-discussions/499344-no-threads-augustine-report.html)

Pazuzu 09-16-2009 07:37 AM

No threads on the Augustine Report?
 
No PARFing please, space exploration should not be a political subject.

I figured it would directly impact a few of you.

In a nutshell, Congress commissioned a group to examine the viability of NASA's future plans, including the Moon missions.

They determined that NASA is financially unsound, and that they need to drop major projects. I quote:

"The U.S. human spaceflight program appears to be on an unsustainable trajectory. It is perpetuating the perilous practice of pursuing goals that do not match allocated resources. Space operations are among the most complex and unforgiving pursuits ever undertaken by humans. It really is rocket science. Space operations become all the more difficult when means do not match aspirations. Such is the case today." http://www.spaceref.com/news/viewsr.html?pid=32327

Ouch.

They also state that we cannot go beyond low Earth orbit in the foreseeable future without having an extra $3 billion per year allocated to NASA (yes, $10 per American per year will prevent us from going back to the Moon).

Does this directly affect any of you (NASA itself, NASA contractors, etc)? Would you be willing to pay an extra $10 per family member per year to put men (American) back on the Moon by 2020? Would you rather not spend the money, but hope that another country gets there first? Or, would you rather support something like Space-X, the private company that is targeting space travel?

Gogar 09-16-2009 07:43 AM

I think it's a shame that NASA is the whipping boy for "government waste", when their budget is a comparative drop in the bucket.

Let's take one of the last areas the USA is at the top of the heap in, and get rid of it.

varmint 09-16-2009 07:52 AM

nasa has serious management problems.


but this is a federal bureaucrat ploy. when the money runs out they always cut the things people care about first. here in california they are closing state parks. the feds are going to cut nasa, while leaving the national endowment for the arts alone.

red-beard 09-16-2009 07:56 AM

I've been a long proponent of returning to the moon. I would pay even more

Pazuzu 09-16-2009 08:23 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by red-beard (Post 4901296)
I've been a long proponent of returning to the moon. I would pay even more

**assuming** that the money went directly into NASA's funds, and wasn't pillaged by other fed groups, how much would you pay a year to cover this project? They need $10 per person per year, but we both know that there's lots of people who will refuse to support NASA or space (for various, though absurd, reasons). Would you pick up the slack for 1 of them? 4 of them? 10 of them?

This isn't just pointed at you red-beard, but at anyone willing to answer. Would any of you be willing to write a $100 check each year for 10 years, directly to NASA's accounting office, to ensure the funding is there to try to get to the Moon again?

Moses 09-16-2009 08:33 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Pazuzu (Post 4901358)
**assuming** that the money went directly into NASA's funds, and wasn't pillaged by other fed groups, how much would you pay a year to cover this project? They need $10 per person per year, but we both know that there's lots of people who will refuse to support NASA or space (for various, though absurd, reasons). Would you pick up the slack for 1 of them? 4 of them? 10 of them?

This isn't just pointed at you red-beard, but at anyone willing to answer. Would any of you be willing to write a $100 check each year for 10 years, directly to NASA's accounting office, to ensure the funding is there to try to get to the Moon again?

No need. Just re-allocate the $billions$ promised to ACORN.

varmint 09-16-2009 08:33 AM

you're framing it wrong.

it's not about giving an extra $10 each to return to the moon. it's about diverting the $10 we already give to the NEA, and the $10 we give to foreign aid, and the $10 we welfare etc.

Pazuzu 09-16-2009 08:37 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Moses (Post 4901384)
No need. Just re-allocate the $billions$ promised to ACORN.

I'm trying to be serious. NASA has lost funds every year, there is no reallocation, you cannot reallocate money that doesn't really exist anyways. They need a PBS style infusion of funds directly from the citizens who are interested in supporting space exploration. I wonder if that's possible, and if the citizens would actually pay more money for space, or would they pull the "no more taxes period" flag and let NASA and it's projects die. If that happens, what's next? Is all federally supported science at risk?

flatbutt 09-16-2009 08:46 AM

[QUOTE=Pazuzu;4901358...................
This isn't just pointed at you red-beard, but at anyone willing to answer. Would any of you be willing to write a $100 check each year for 10 years, directly to NASA's accounting office, to ensure the funding is there to try to get to the Moon again?[/QUOTE]

I might be depending upon the expected return on the investment. Bases? Research?

I'd be more willing to write that check for research into alternative energy or a replacement for the internal combustion engine in the family car.

varmint 09-16-2009 08:49 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Pazuzu (Post 4901400)
I'm trying to be serious. NASA has lost funds every year, there is no reallocation, you cannot reallocate money that doesn't really exist anyways.


says who?


if the money is real enough for egypt to cash the check, it is real enough to divert ot nasa.

there is no such thing as a shortage of tax revenue. there is only government spending on things we don't need.

Gogar 09-16-2009 08:50 AM

NASA doesn't care about black people.

Pazuzu 09-16-2009 08:51 AM

"expected return on investment"

See, that's what I want to learn more about. Is the day and age such that we would need a return on investment, vs. just writing a check and saying "NASA has to survive, period, it's manifest destiny or whatever"? Do we need to get a return? What if we attempt to get back to the Moon, and fail, but really put a good push in and just can't pull it off? What are the limits to what we accept as a return from NASA? Do they need to come up with the next Tang?

This is all just for conversation's purposes. I know where I stand on it, I'm not going to be swayed by anyone, but I am interesting in the Everyman view of NASA right now.

Pazuzu 09-16-2009 08:57 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by varmint (Post 4901427)
says who?
there is no such thing as a shortage of tax revenue. there is only government spending on things we don't need.

They are not magically going to move money from something else to NASA. They won't, period. They never have, and they never will, the flow has always been the reverse of that. So, why bother saying that it's the solution, when in fact, it's not, since it simply won't happen.

The facts are, NASA is underfunded for it's projects. They have three options right now: Kill projects, kill sources of funding drains, or throw a big bake sale and have the public fund them directly. Or, shut down.

fingpilot 09-16-2009 09:26 AM

Welcome to the modern world of liberal speak.

BTW, Please don't PARF me, I got that from the NY Times.

gtc 09-16-2009 10:49 AM

Wouldn't we get more for our money by writing a check to the privateers?

Pazuzu 09-16-2009 11:50 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by gtc (Post 4901695)
Wouldn't we get more for our money by writing a check to the privateers?

Dunno, that's one of the Big Questions. Will the private companies have the drive that is lacking at NASA to push a project through to completion, at whatever cost? Do they even want to go to the Moon (space travel yes, space hotel, yes, but the Moon? I don't know if it's in their business plans...). Can they catch up with NASA, which has 50 years of practice, assets, resources, etc on them?

If properly funded, would NASA be able to do this, or would they boondoggle the whole thing too much?

Making the assumption that we honestly are talking about families paying $100 a year for this...it's a big risk to flip that coin and having the funds go private or public, since no one knows the outcome either way.

Esel Mann 09-16-2009 02:34 PM

Yes, private companies will and do have the drive and do have the know-how. The problem is the government has a stranglehold on space with respect to permissions, rules, regulations, laws, etc. As a result, space development by a private entity is a very, very, very expensive proposition.

The need for, desire, and financial gain with respect to space development are all there. The government has had decades to refine space development and yet we have minimal to show for it. What is the old saying? Never send a boy to do a mans job. The government needs to step aside and let private interests do what the government obviously cannot or will not do.

If you really want to see space development, and I'm talking a short timeframe here, as in less than a decade, contact your representatives. Get them to ditch NASA and pass legislation opening up the governmental stranglehold on space.

Nostril Cheese 09-16-2009 03:31 PM

I'm willing to give $20.

red-beard 09-16-2009 03:35 PM

NPR has fund drives. Why not NASA?

And I am being serious.

Aurel 09-16-2009 04:22 PM

How much $$ to put blackstronauts on the moon?
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