Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

A Generation Without a Moon Walk (The technology is no longer available to put a man on the moon)
Human Events ^ | 7/20/2009 | Joseph A. Rehyansky

Posted on 07/21/2009 7:13:45 AM PDT by SeekAndFind

Arthur C. Clarke’s epic 2001: A Space Odyssey was released shortly before I left for Vietnam. My wife and I saw it in New York City, and it mesmerized us. No, not the fantasy about the lunar monolith beeping toward Jupiter or the insanity of Keir Dullea, in his best role ever, trying to complete the mission alone after the HAL 9000 computer (voice of Douglas Rain) has killed everyone else aboard Discovery One because it decided that they were a threat to the mission; not the absurdity of Dullea surviving several seconds unprotected in the vacuum of frozen space; and certainly not him as a decrepit old man in a Louis XIV bedroom or the gigantic fetus floating peacefully in the galactic womb. Great special effects for that time, to be sure, and the symphonic music could not have been more appropriate to them: The Blue Danube Waltz and Thus Spake Zarathustra.

But what did that mean? Clarke was famously silent on the matter. He obviously didn’t know, either. He had become enchanted with the mystical and visual effects he could bring forth, “stretching the envelope” as the fighter jocks and astronauts still say. The proof? Try the dismal and nonsensical sequel, 2010. A view of cosmic evolution? Claptrap.

But what grabbed us that hot summer day was the logical inevitability of the first hour or so: mankind outward bound into the solar system. We’d have permanent competing scientific installations as the U.S. and the U.S.S.R. extended the cold war to a very cold spot -- the moon; regular commercial service between earth and the moon provided by Pan American, “The World’s Most Experienced Airline” (1927 - 1991); space-to-earth videophones a commonplace. The moon and beyond for a welcome time took my mind off my actual destination. On Christmas Eve I would listen to the Apollo 8 astronauts -- Borman, Lovell, and Anders -- in lunar orbit reading from Genesis on Armed Forces radio at the 11th Cavalry’s base camp near Xuan Loc.

On July 16, 1969, we watched the Apollo 11 launch on the TV in our motel room in Daytona Beach and then stepped out onto the balcony where we saw a tiny intense streak of yellow light arcing out toward earth orbit, the first phase of the moon-landing mission. Four days later in my parents’ tiny living room in West Orange, N.J., we held our breath as we saw the grainy, live, black-and-white image of Neil Armstrong climbing down the ladder and stepping onto the powdery surface.

The Apollo lunar voyages coincided almost precisely with my law school career. I was attending the Army’s JAGC Basic Course in Charlottesville, Va., when a classmate and I watched the night launch of Apollo 17 on TV in 1972. Apollo 18, 19, and 20 had already been cancelled -- budget cuts. William F. Buckley, Jr., and the poet and novelist James Dickey (Deliverance) were there. Thirty-three years later Bill would write:

“It was very cold and still dark when the moon-bound streak of fire shot up from the launch pad. Dickey the poet was frozen in awe and admiration. At breakfast he threatened to break the neck of a television commentator whom he heard saying that the cost of this lunar extravagance was the equivalent of 126,000 units of low-cost housing. Dickey was trembling with furious indig- nation that such vulgar measurements were being used to discredit the beauty and awesomeness of the enterprise we had just seen coming up from its womb on a Florida beach.”

We’ve heard it all before, of course. “If we can put a man on the moon, we can . . . .” [complete the sentence with whatever benefit you can imagine bestowing on society’s parasites at taxpayer expense]. As a matter of fact, we can’t -- put a man on the moon, that is. We would have to start from “Ground Zero,” where we were in 1961 when President Kennedy said, “I believe that this nation should commit itself to the goal, before this decade is out, of landing a man on the Moon and returning him safely to Earth.” The technology is no longer available, and even if it were, it would be primitive and obsolete. The first high-tech layoffs began at Cape Canaveral at about the time of the Apollo 11 launch in 1969. NASA knew what was coming. As a nation we were about to become the dog that chased the car and finally caught it, and then didn’t know what to do with it.

I stand second to no one in my admiration for the cool, intelligent, and courageous men and women who constitute today’s astronaut corps. It has been a disservice to them that they have had nothing to work with for 37 years except vehicles in earth orbit, principally the Space Shuttle, that ungainly monstrous white elephant. What purposes has it served? Well, let’s see. It was instrumental in the building of the International Space Station. The ISS is . . . uh, oh yeah . . . to be used as a jumping off place for future lunar landings, the establishment of a permanent base on the moon, and future journeys where no one has gone before. Not in my lifetime -- not when President Obama himself has announced that “We’re out of money,” and he’s the guy who can print all he wants.

Yes, it launched, repaired, and maintained the Hubble Space Telescope, a magnificent scientific achievement that has contributed more to our understanding of the universe than anything has before. But in the first 16 years of manned missions, the U.S. did not have a single fatality in space. The Shuttle’s flaws have claimed 14 brave souls. It is due to be retired next year and its successor won’t be ready to fly until 2014, but don’t set your alarm clock by that prediction.

Yes, most of its missions have been resounding successes. But toward what great end? I recall the late Carl Sagan (Cosmos) being asked to comment on the triumphant conclusion of a Space Shuttle mission. He responded: “Ah, yes. Once again we have proved that tomato plants do not do well in Zero-G. This is not the exploration of space.” Some day we will look back at the Shuttle as a major wrong turn in the development of space travel, much as we now look back on dirigibles in the history of aviation.

The surviving Mercury, Gemini, and Apollo astronauts are very old men now. Two generations have become voters since Apollo 17. They cannot grasp the magnificence of the era when heroes walked the Earth, and the Moon, from pallid textbooks and old video footage. In 1995 our daughter, then 23, returned home from seeing Apollo 13. “Was it really like that?” she asked me. I told her that I remembered those excruciating days well and to the best of my recollection they hadn’t made anything up or left anything important out. She unintentionally quoted the words of Admiral Tarrant (Fredric March) at the end of The Bridges at Toko-Ri: “Where do we get such men?”

“Not under this roof,” I assured her.

During one of his “Jaywalking” bits on "The Tonight Show," Jay Leno asked a young woman if she knew the name of the first man to walk on the moon. “Armstrong?” she answered tentatively.

Leno said, “Good. What’s his first name?” She replied: “Louis!”

Leno looked directly into the camera and said, “I can’t do this anymore.”

My wife and I were not alone in seeing a straight line to the future in the summer of 1968 as we watched 2001. But Wernher von Braun’s “bridge to the stars” seems now as far away as ever.

-Mr. Rehyansky is retired from the U.S. Army and the Chattanooga, Tennessee, District Attorney's office and now serves as a part-time County Magistrate. He is a former contributor to National Review, and his writings have appeared in The American Spectator and other publications.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: moonwalk; technology
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-6061-80 ... 121-123 next last
To: cripplecreek
Apparently someone didn't know about the Negro Space Program
41 posted on 07/21/2009 7:52:41 AM PDT by PackerBronco
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 34 | View Replies]

To: ArrogantBustard

“Yes, we do have it. We haven’t forgotten anything about building rockets, and the engineering has improved.”

I have read several times where the Saturn V is a mystery in some ways to the current crop of scientists. Perhaps they could build a better version of the Saturn V, but they would be starting over.

“I think you’re completely wrong, and grossly unjust to today’s science and engineering community.”

Would that be the current science community that embraces Global Warming in order to further political agenda, (NASA), or to gain funding and favor? Doubting them is anything but unjust.

“Who’s “we”, Kemosabe? Our political class certainly lacks such drive ... and our welfare class lacks any drive.
Then, there’s the rest of us ...”

The rest of us is a very small group now. You’re not taking into account what the public schools have done to several generations of Americans. As proof, I offer you the election of Barack Obama. Not only that, without the support of the political class, the climb becomes very steep indeed.


42 posted on 07/21/2009 7:52:55 AM PDT by brownsfan (The public schools and the SRM, they are killing us.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 14 | View Replies]

To: ArrogantBustard

“We haven’t forgotten anything about building rockets...”

Most of the folks who did that work are long retired and/or passed on. Sometimes institutional knowledge about what works and what doesn’t is as important as book learning. Most of the engineers at NASA today haven’t a clue. What they have been told is fast and cheap. Buy off the shelf. Don’t design anything new.

We may not be able to replicate the work done


43 posted on 07/21/2009 7:54:51 AM PDT by the long march
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 14 | View Replies]

To: DonaldC
Maybe China will carry the torch now.

The problem with that is that China isn't going to let some pesky treaty that prevents militarization of space get in their way. Space is the high ground and only a fool cedes the high ground to an enemy.

I look back at the Apollo 11 days and see that the whole world stopped to watch. They saw Russia's failure and began to doubt their power.
44 posted on 07/21/2009 7:55:02 AM PDT by cripplecreek (Seniors, the new shovel ready project under socialized medicine.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 30 | View Replies]

To: SeekAndFind

In 1989 an explosion on the battleship USS Iowa occured, taking out a main gun turret with three 16” guns and snuffing out 47 lives in the process.

The USS Iowa was launched in 1942 and the original guns were manufactured in the late 1930’s to the early 1940’s. But 50 years later, when the navy got around to making a decision on repairing the damage from the explosion, it was found that the US no longer had the capability to manufacture 16” guns to replace those destroyed in the explosion.

The 16” guns could fire a 2,700-pound shell over 24 miles. (record set @ 24.6 miles in January 1989)


45 posted on 07/21/2009 7:55:04 AM PDT by Iron Munro (If you cannot be a good example you can serve as horrible warning - like Obama.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Texan Tory
“We are also going to have to face facts. We are alone in this universe...”

Space is really, really big and we are really, really small. I believe we are "alone" in our "stellar neighborhood" but that there is life in abundance in the galaxy/universe, it's just that the distances are so great that the odds of meeting another race are just immense.

I believe we are stuck on this planet, we might put up some small science bases on Mars, maybe something on the a couple of the moons of Jupiter and/or Saturn...but until we get some kind of warp drive, we are stuck on this planet and we need to start figuring out how to live here without killing each other or the future is going to be a miserable place to live.
46 posted on 07/21/2009 7:55:52 AM PDT by The Louiswu (I live vicariously, through myself.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 35 | View Replies]

To: George from New England

Leno looked directly into the camera and said, “I can’t do this anymore.” “


Yet, I bet he does.


47 posted on 07/21/2009 7:55:56 AM PDT by UCANSEE2
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 20 | View Replies]

To: pnh102

Whats worse is that in a year or two we won’t be able to get an astronaut in space period, without begging a ride from the Russians or the Chinese. Disgraceful.


48 posted on 07/21/2009 7:57:40 AM PDT by Kozak (USA 7/4/1776 to 1/20/2009 Reqiescat in Pace)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 6 | View Replies]

To: George from New England

” Or better yet, are erased from history by publishers.”

Just like with the WTC statues. Thay wanted a black man to be represented.


49 posted on 07/21/2009 7:58:11 AM PDT by Niuhuru (The internet is the digital AIDS; adapting and successfully destroying the MSM host.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 20 | View Replies]

To: Richard Kimball

This post, and Shooter’s, are about as short sighted as it gets.

Mars may not be habitable. Don’t really know yet, but Jupiter and Saturn both have moons that might be.

To get there, we learn by going to Mars.

People talk about the space program like nothing good came from it beside interesting pictures.

We are STILL reaping the benefits of the material science of the space program. We learned the practical effect of Van Allen belt radiation and its overall effect on space travel. We came up with the technology to produce the ICBM and the SLBM. We own space militarily. Our command/control/communication capabilities supplied by advanced satellite technology allow warfighters on the ground to coordinate forces surgically on the battlefield.

I can’t imagine the number of armed conflicts the military advantages gleaned by the space program spared the US. It’s a big reason why the cold war stayed that way.

Doing technically hard things ALWAYS benefits us in innumerable ways collateral to the primary goal itself. Of all the programs, the space program is likely the one that has benefitted the average American more than any other program.


50 posted on 07/21/2009 7:58:19 AM PDT by RinaseaofDs
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 26 | View Replies]

To: LeavingNewYork
In the 1930’s we built the Hoover Dam..do you think we could, or be allowed to even attempt such an endeavor today?

Why, the environmental concerns would squash it before it even started.

51 posted on 07/21/2009 7:58:51 AM PDT by UCANSEE2
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 25 | View Replies]

To: The Louiswu

Actually I think it would be a great idea if Muslims could have their own planet. Then they could jihad all day without bothering us.


52 posted on 07/21/2009 7:59:05 AM PDT by Niuhuru (The internet is the digital AIDS; adapting and successfully destroying the MSM host.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 21 | View Replies]

To: pnh102
"Of course, there are tons of business and psychology majors"

LOL!

We'll leave all that engineering and risk taking stuff to India and China. Once they start building colonies , the USA contribution will be providing Public Policy guidelines for colonists (Taxes, Entitlements and Extraterrestrial Torts), and of course support for space-based community organizers.
53 posted on 07/21/2009 7:59:20 AM PDT by indthkr
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 6 | View Replies]

To: the long march
We may not be able to replicate the work done

Replicate?

We wouldn't want to do that ... the underlying technology of metallurgy and other materials (for example) has changed dramatically for the better since then. If "we" really wanted to go to the moon again, we'd want a XXI Century rocket (scaled up from current designs, just like the Saturn V was an extrapolation from previous designs) ... we would NOT want to just rebuild the Saturn V.

Your point about lost institutional knowledge is valid ... and a good reason for not just dropping things like NASA just dropped big rockets in the late 1970s ... but it's not a mission-killer. Just a major annoyance.

54 posted on 07/21/2009 7:59:45 AM PDT by ArrogantBustard (Western Civilization is Aborting, Buggering, and Contracepting itself out of existence.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 43 | View Replies]

To: Richard Kimball

“While I would love to explore, when Columbus sailed for the new world, there was at least the promise of solid land and air and food when he got there.

Despite what Star Trek says, we don’t see that on the horizon.”

There was a time not long ago when the mere thought of going to the moon was pure silliness due to the impossiblity of it. Going to Mars?! Not even a whimsy.

Can you imagine putting the library of congress on a few small disks? We can, you know.

If we don’t reach, we won’t find out what is in our grasp. And the side benefits of such effort is not insignificant.


55 posted on 07/21/2009 8:01:28 AM PDT by brownsfan (The public schools and the SRM, they are killing us.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 26 | View Replies]

To: PackerBronco

This is a joke, right? I ask because sometimes I see stuff that a lot of blacks take seriously.


56 posted on 07/21/2009 8:01:40 AM PDT by Niuhuru (The internet is the digital AIDS; adapting and successfully destroying the MSM host.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 41 | View Replies]

To: Alberta's Child; pnh102

“space exploration DOES have to “pay off” at some point.”

AC - I have to respectfully disagree with some of your premises. If we only look to go where there is a possibility of a commercial pay off, we will only cheat ourselves. Exploration is by it’s nature a reach into the unknown. Mankind’s progress can be measured by these “reaches”, whether in exploration, science or other endeavors. If we stretch ourselves, we may fail - we have no assurances. History is littered with failures and successes, often times success being built on the back of failure. I fully realize that we have budgetary constraints. But, we have to find a way to keep “reaching”, because if we fail to reach, we most assuredly will fail to achieve. As a nation, we will be left behind. If we stretch and reach, our best days may indeed lie ahead.-—JM


57 posted on 07/21/2009 8:03:32 AM PDT by Jubal Madison (Sic Semper Tyrannis)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 19 | View Replies]

To: The Louiswu
that 357,000 / day becomes quite a force to be dealt with.

Depends on how many you have die / day.

Abortion,Wars,Murders,Eugenics,Earthquakes,Fires,Starvation,Volcanoes.

Just to name a few.

58 posted on 07/21/2009 8:12:35 AM PDT by UCANSEE2
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 32 | View Replies]

To: Iron Munro
US no longer had the capability to manufacture 16” guns to replace those destroyed in the explosion.

Our old gun factories at the Washington Navy Yard are now full of office workers. It's amazing what they used to build here.
59 posted on 07/21/2009 8:15:42 AM PDT by Thrownatbirth (.....Iraq Invasion fan since '91.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 45 | View Replies]

To: BOBTHENAILER
"This guy's quoting you."

Wish it made me feel better!!!

60 posted on 07/21/2009 8:15:55 AM PDT by SierraWasp (Galloping suffocating American Socialism stinks like BO!!!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 18 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-6061-80 ... 121-123 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson