Posted on 09/22/2005 8:56:22 AM PDT by Dan Evans
WASHINGTON The U.S. Senate approved Sept. 21 a bill that would clear the way for NASA to buy the Russian Soyuz vehicles it needs to continue to occupy the International Space Station beyond this year.
The bill was introduced Sept. 15 by Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Richard Lugar (R-Ind.) to provide temporary relief from provisions in the Iran Nonproliferation Act of 2000 that bar U.S. purchases of Russian human spaceflight hardware as long as Russia continues to help Iran in its pursuit of nuclear know-how and advanced weapons technology.
Lugars bill, S. 1713, changes the law to permit NASA to buy any Russian space hardware or services it needs for the International Space Station program until 2012.
The bill was approved the morning of Sept. 21 by unanimous consent, a Senate procedure that allows non-controversial legislation to bypass a floor vote.
The U.S. House of Representatives also is considering amending the Iran Nonproliferation Act to permit NASA to buy Soyuz vehicles, but it has yet to take any legislative action.
The House could either pick up and pass the Senates bill or introduce a bill of its own that would have to be reconciled with the Senate version before becoming law.
Without relief from the Iran act, NASA could soon find itself unable to send its astronauts to the space station for extended stays. A Soyuz capsule set to carry a new two-person crew and one space tourist to the station Sept. 30 is the last one Russia is obligated to provide at no charge to the United States under a bilateral agreement.
NASA and the U.S. State Department formally asked Congress in June to amend the Iran act to permit the United States to make use of Russian space technology in its space exploration plans.
Those were the days.
I'd take that one small step further and say that NASA needs to be taken out of the Administration altogether, and let the engineers go!
Private industry and privately funded research is the way to go.
If space travel is sufficiently worthwhile, inspiring, or entertaining, it will happen because donors and investors will voluntarily pay for it.
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IIRC, now the Russian space program has a beter safety record that us.
The silver lining is that the Shuttle program can finally be let go and NASA can put their resources into the new program. The construction of the ISS is about done anyway, not finished, just done.
"I'm no big fan of NASA but if they can find something better and cheaper, let them do it. "
"If the ride is mo fly, then they must buy"
Is that figured in deaths per flight or failures per launch?
They won't go. Not enough short-term profit in it for me. Better to trade energy futures and speculate in real estate. To hell with creating or learning anything.
If space travel is sufficiently worthwhile, inspiring, or entertaining, it will happen because donors and investors will voluntarily pay for it.
Right on. "Entertainment Nation" strikes again. Better to stay home and pop the pills. Cheaper that way. I can keep more of my money in my decrepit, stoned-out hands.
Outsourcing the government???? Excellent idea. At least we could fire our employees.
Right. I'm with you. Cheaper is always better. If we can save a few pennies here and there to pinch in our decadent fingers, who gives a crap about being a technologically strong nation? Who cares about being even a strong nation? Hell, who even cares about being a nation, as long as I can keep more of my money for myself? Hey, we're alike, you and I. Money, money, money, the soul and center of everything...
Dick is obviously making something "perfectly clear" to the commies.
During the industrial revolution, scientific research was funded by wealthy patrons. That is changing because our tax structure makes it increasingly difficult to make money as our income increases. If government weren't taking 40% of our wealth, most of space research would be funded by private investors.
NASA recently gave Burt Rutan $6 million to generate some paper on a new design for vehicles to service the ISS. Burt actually built a prototype and tested it for the same price.
Here's the website.
First, would you buy a Russian made car?
Second, have you seen the Russian space program's safety record?
We are just never going to consider (Are we??) that "little" things like this are part of a much larger picture of globalism, weakening all sense of national identity. There will be no United States or Russia before long, but a global system under which the United States will have no sovereign will, not sovereign initiative, no sovereign economy (Hello, NAFTA, CAFTA, GATT, etc.), no sovereign exploration spirit, no sovereign defense posture, NO SOVEREIGN EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT, just NO sovereignty.
Russia has a LOT more man-hours in space than we do and they have a wealth of practical knowledge about things that go wrong. NASA is smart not to ignore that knowledge.
"Better and cheaper" doesn't mean "Cheaper is always better."
Value and price don't mean the same thing.
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