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To: Names Ash Housewares
"Astronauts build space stations,"

That's "space station", singular. The station also does such things as breeding worms, and other things so important that most people who follow the news can't name a single example.

"deploy space telescopes and probes to other worlds too. They spacewalk as well and have rescued Hubble more then once."

There could have been several new "Hubbles" for the cost of the shuttle, only abandoning the first failure. In any case, rockets do the job - and without killing as many government workers whose annoying families we now have to compensate.

"They ride the fire into orbit and come back home at Mach 24."

Very, very true.... Pointless, but true!

"I would trade places with them on launch day in a New York minute."

I, too, would screw taxpayers in order to joyride if I could -- I just need to invent some excuses, the way that NASA does.

11 posted on 02/17/2006 8:18:38 PM PST by SteveMcKing
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To: SteveMcKing

And astronauts bring back the visions of space, they bring back what its like to see our earth as an outsider. They bring back what its like to be a child of earth. To see our world as it truly is, an oasis in a vast black expanse.

They take human presence beyond our world. No machine can do this.

They teach us that the sky is not the limit, that there ARE no limits.

They keep an AMERICAN presense in space. If we dont. Someone else will certainly take the lead. China is seeking the high ground now.

There are reasons why this nation is where it is today.
Reasons why any of us are here at all. Brave people took the risks and went beyond the horizon. They did so on ships they knew may not return and on imperfect wings.

Astronaut Story Musgrave.....

"We have been a frontier culture. We were born out of exploration, we were born out of adventure. We were born out of the plains and the mountains. We've been a very physical kind of culture. And so, if you look at adventure, if you look at exploration, if you look at immersion in nature, a physical culture, and all those things, you can see directly how space flight relates to the way America has been born and how it evolved."


"You have to keep pushing the frontier not
just because it's there, but because that's how we find things that end up changing humanity," -Paul Hill, Mission Control


Why Space, Why Explore?

Astronaut Story Musgrave...........

We have no choice, Sir. It is the Nature of Humanity, it is the Nature of Life

The Globe was created and Life Evolved, and you look at every single cubic millimeter on this Earth, You can go 30,000 feet down below the Earth surface, You can go 40,000 feet up in the air and Life is There. When you look at the globe down there, you see Teeming Life Everywhere

It is the Power of Life, And maybe I am not just a Human up here, you know. Now Life is Leaping off the Planet. It is heading to other parts of the Solar System, other parts of the Universe

There are those kinds of Pressures. It isn't simply politics, it is not simply technology, it is really not just the essence of humanity, but it is sort of also, you could look at it as maybe the Essence of Life. I think Teilhard de Chardin, in Phenomenon of Man, I believe he put that incredibly well. So those kind of Forces are at Work. It is the nature of humans to be exploratory and to Push On

Yes, it costs resources and it does cost a lot, and there is a risk, there is a penalty, there is a down side, but Exploration and Pioneering, I think those are the critical things, it is the Essence of what Human Beings are, and that is to try to understand their Universe and to try to participate in the entire Universe and not just their little Neighborhood -Story Musgrave


One of my most convincing arguments for space exploration is the
analogy that Earth itself is a spacecraft. Everything we learn about
how to function and live in space applies directly to our spacehip
Earth. How to recycle air, water, how to generate and use power
efficiently, how to grow food in closed ecosystems. All of it is
important. All of this can benefit mankind in a world with a fast
growing population. Understanding other worlds is
how we understand OUR world better, to understand
how it formed and where it is going. Its our only home for now.


"We must not cease from exploration, and at the end of all our
exploring will be to arrive where we began, and to know it for the
first time."
T.S. Eliot



President Bush at the Columbia memorial at JSC................


"The cause of exploration and discovery is not an option we choose, It
is a desire written in the human heart."


And at the announcement of new American space policy...........


"Mankind is drawn to the heavens for the same reason we were once
drawn into unknown lands and across the open sea. We choose to explore
space because doing so improves our lives, and lifts our national
spirit."



Gallup survey.....

"More than three-fourths (77%) of the American public say they support a newplan for space exploration that would include a stepping-stone approach to returnthe space shuttle to flight, complete assembly of the space station, build areplacement for the shuttle, go back to the Moon and then on to Mars and beyond"



14 posted on 02/17/2006 9:24:21 PM PST by Names Ash Housewares
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To: SteveMcKing

I just wish that robotic craft had been around in 1492...that way the Spanish royals could have sent a probe over to see what the New World looked like rather than sending humans. That certainly would have worked out better. /sarcasm off


15 posted on 02/17/2006 9:28:46 PM PST by wxdawg (Virtute et armis)
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To: SteveMcKing

"That's "space station", singular."

There have been 3 formal space stations: Soyuz maintained by cosmonauts; Skylab repaired in space and maintained by astronauts; and the ISS built and maintained by both astronauts and cosmonauts. There have also been a number of on-board SpaceLabs flown in the shuttle bay that were essentially short-term space stations based on their configuration.


28 posted on 02/17/2006 11:11:03 PM PST by Kirkwood ("When the s*** hits the fan, there is enough for everyone.")
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To: SteveMcKing; Kirkwood
That's "space station", singular.

The present ISS is but one of a long line of predecessors. First Salyut-1, then Skylab, followed by Salyut-4, Salyut-6, and Salyut-7. These were followed by Mir which was on orbit for 15 incredible years.

37 posted on 02/19/2006 10:40:27 PM PST by FreedomCalls (It's the "Statue of Liberty," not the "Statue of Security.")
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