Posted on 12/11/2002 12:51:40 AM PST by MadIvan
Thirty years ago today, Eugene Cernan and Harrison Schmitt stepped on to the Moon. They were the last human beings to do so. The two men left three days later with the inglorious remark from Cernan, as he climbed into his capsule: Lets get this mother out of here.
It wasnt only the astronauts that left that day. Imagination, inspiration, generosity of spirit and of means headed back to Earth as well. With blinding shortsightedness, the space programme was allowed to stall and has never recovered. Nasa wastes its time firing shuttles to and from an empty space station in the sky.
Cernans flight, on Apollo 17, ended a glorious decade of space exploration which was launched amid the optimism of JFKs Hundred Days. Never mind that the moonshots real goal was geopolitical and military, not scientific to get one over on a Soviet regime that had beaten the capitalists to the punch in every facet of space flight. Never mind the fact that it discovered little of any use.
For a too brief period mankind stopped staring at itself and peered instead at the stars. Hope defied gravity, millions of potential astronauts suddenly sat up and paid attention in science class, and self-effacing pilots such as Neil Armstrong and Jim Lovell became global superstars not least because they came up with better exit lines than lets get this mother out of here.
Apollo 17s final Moon landing was meant to mark the end of the beginning of space travel. It turned out to be the beginning of the end. Since then, Nasa has morphed into a vast, bureaucratic, unimaginative organisation presiding over a $60 billion floating white elephant: the International Space Station. This, the flagship project and the only one that could possibly recapture the spirit of the Sixties and Seventies, has descended into farce.
Decades of bloated overspending on one inept failure after another the loss of a $125 million Mars probe, for instance, because Nasa couldnt tell the difference between metres and feet has meant that the ISS budget has been so severely cut as to render the project useless. Nasas own analysts have concluded that plans to scale back its crew from seven members to three will leave it worthless as a science laboratory: those astronauts who do make it will be so busy with maintenance that there will be no time for any more than rudimentary experiments. And research, into the effects of weightlessness on the human body for instance, which is crucial to the next giant leap for mankind a manned mission to Mars simply will not be done.
Yet when the Russians took the truly imaginative and potentially lucrative step of actually taking the first paying tourist to the space station, Nasa humourlessly banned him from the American parts of the module. So a programme envisioned as a stepping stone to the planets has become a pointless vanity that circles the Earth for its own sake, while bleeding the taxpayers of 16 countries. Yet shuttles continue to come and go between Cape Canaveral and the ISS, adding a part here and a module there. Like Nasa, the space station no longer has any purpose beyond perpetuating itself.
Cernans frustration at the way Nasa has squandered the legacy of the Apollo astronauts is palpable. After Apollo 17, America stopped looking towards the next horizon, he said on a recent visit to London. The United States had become a space-faring nation, but threw it away.The vision that brought the Moon landings, Voyagers journey to Jupiter and Vikings mission to Mars, long ago went blind. Nasa has, unforgivably, missed an historic opportunity that may never be repeated. After consuming close to 3 per cent of the US budget for a quarter of a century, with such minuscule returns, politicians have become understandably reluctant to write more blank cheques. Cernans last footprint may have aged another 30 years before mankind makes it as far again.
Regards, Ivan
Had we sent people to Mars instead of the satellite, and made the same mistake, it might have led to loss of life as well as being much more expensive and a public relations nightmare.
Space needs to compete with other priorities, such as defense and exploration of inner space (eg deep ocean exploration). Man has probably logged more time on or around the moon than in the Marianas Trench, for example.
The fact of the space station is that it is a solution for a problem that has not yet been fully formulated (industrial exploitation of weightlessness and vacuum). With no positive ROI in sight, and budget overruns, it makes sense to scale back the space station project in favor of other priorities (eg robotic exploration). We already have a lot of data on the effects of weightlessness on the human body thanks to Soyuz, so I believe that is not really a critical justification for increasing space station resources at this time.
While I don't begrudge the moon shots and applaud a good romantic goal, I think it is also good to keep goals in perspective.
Before I shuffle off to Buffalo I want to see some wimpy liberal media-puke on TV whining about the terrible pollution in New Denver while a video plays on the screen behind him of a beer bottle and trash littered street in a bawdy Martian mining town.
Apollo was not about the Moon, not about exploring the universe, and not about boldly going where no man had gone before. Apollo was about, purely and simply, beating the Soviets to the Moon!. Once that goal was reached, we stopped going there. Put another way, what happens when you win a battle? You stop fighting it.
Space enthusiasts (and I'm one of them) cannot seem to comprehend this simple fact of life. We are doing nothing of any significance in space because there is no national imperative to do so. Thus, 30 years of stop-gap programs, the entitlement Shuttle, and make-work ISS.
Want to conquer the Solar System? Find something out there that'll make millions for somebody. Then, get financing and go do it. Quit thinking of Apollo as a template for the future -- it wasn't a plan to explore space; it was a battle in the Cold War (and one that we won, thank God!).
And stop moaning about our "lousy space future." The only ones responsible for that are ourselves.
For now we need someone to get the financial house in order and then move forward with some real exploration.
Let's not forget Tang and Pillsbury SpaceFood® Sticks
That's drama at a premium cost. We can do better by going to see a play at the local theatre and using robots to explore outer space.
One thing that JFK perhaps did not get enough credit for is redirecting feelings of nationalism during the Cold War from arms buildup to peaceful technology buildup.
Commercial space ventures exist where there is a demand. Sea Launch launches commercial satellites for profit. My guess is that there will be an commercial space tourism venture independent of the ISS within 10 years.
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