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Earth's Groundhog Days Continue Thirty Years Later (Apollo moon mission)
Spacedaily ^ | 12/19/02 | John Carter McKnight

Posted on 12/19/2002 8:10:03 PM PST by Brett66

Earth's Groundhog Days Continue Thirty Years Later

Today marks the thirtieth anniversary of the end of the Apollo program when Apollo 17 returned to Earth in a flawless splash down in the Pacific Ocean. It is also the day we abandoned the universe beyond low Earth orbit and to commemorate the event I propose that we move that quintessential American holiday forward a couple months and declare December 19 - Groundhog Day.

As in the Bill Murray movie of the same name, our space efforts have been stuck in a loop, endlessly repeating the same events over and over until maybe, finally, we learn something and free ourselves to move on. Thirty years should be enough repetition of tax-financed circling in LEO: let's draw some conclusions and get on with building a spacefaring civilization.

In the movie, Murray played a cynical drone of a TV weatherman, someone who'd chosen to ignore his own talents in order to cultivate a superficial appeal, to his audiences and to the people in his personal life.

The repetition of one Groundhog Day forced him to develop skills and values enabling him to be of service to his community, to develop a popularity built on real utility and deep connection. NASA and the global space community, after a generation of Groundhog Days, are just beginning to learn the lessons that enabled Murray to break the cycle and move on.

Some of those lessons are beginning to generate real change, the kind of change necessary to put an end to thirty years of more-of-the-same in space and launch us into an era of progress and transformation.

What We're Doing Doesn't Work: If our goal is to build a permanent, sustainable human presence in space, we have to begin by acknowledging failure. We're not there; we don't have the "2001: A Space Odyssey" future.

The observation is obvious, but much of the space community has failed to draw the logical conclusion: the methods we've been using to achieve our goals have failed.

We've stuck ourselves with repetitive behaviors, and so we keep reliving Groundhog day. Dependence on governments and the aerospace giants who service them has failed.

A space-enthusiast effort focused on government-agency boosterism has failed. Entrepreneurial efforts ungrounded in incrementalism and ruthless financial realism have failed. "Space is cool" educational programs have failed. Success will require not just new approaches but an end to wasting efforts on the old ones. You can't dig your way out of a hole.

We're Only Fooling Ourselves: All of us in the space community have been like Murray's smarmy weatherman, pulling ever-more outrageous stunts, making increasingly grandiose claims, to grab the attention of fickle audiences. Nobody bought Murray's act, and nobody's buying ours.

The primary work product of NASA and Big Aerospace is "viewgraph engineering:" ferociously expensive studies that generate beautiful artwork of cool spaceships - and nothing else. Nobody other than newcomers believes any of the stuff will ever be built.

The cynicism behind such efforts, verging on corruption where public funds are involved, is corrosive to the credibility of the entire space enterprise. The same holds true with much of the outreach focused on schoolchildren: that captive audience has a fine nose for adult speciousness, and they're not buying outer-space gee-whiz: they can see the level of interest and attention paid to space by their parents and the media, and can see for themselves that the humans-in-space effort in particular is ghastly dull.

To be sure, our messages to our children are more a product of wishful thinking than the intentional design of space Potemkin villages perpetrated on taxpayers, but the disconnect between reality and the empty flash of presentations is equally discrediting.

Bureaucracies Aren't Bold: Another lesson that should be obvious, this one has escaped government space supporters and critics alike. Governmental efforts can't afford to fail, but they can afford not to succeed.

"We're still working on it" prevents blame and ensures a continued supply of funding to manage what must be an oh-so intractable problem. "We thought we had it, but it blew up" leads to messy investigations.

This simple rule of human behavior has several consequences for space. One is that very old technology will stay in service long past its intended life: better the devil you know.

Another is that simultaneously, research and development will focus on the most distant, blue-sky, projects, ones that can safely be studied for generations without incurring the wrath of legislators expecting results. Ignored if possible and stamped out if necessary are the incremental advances and completely new products that are the staple of commercial efforts.

Some of this is driven by the procurement process, which ensures that product development must meet current, not envisioned, needs, and must incur great documentation expense up front.

Some of it is the inevitable product of the bureaucratic mindset, which in all times and cultures values stability and self-preservation over innovation and progress. Bureaucracies excel at repetition, at established and routine procedures - at being stuck in Groundhog Day.

We Need to be Useful: Arguably, Apollo generated real utility for the American culture of its time. Soviet space efforts had severely threatened America's self-perception as a technologically advanced, can-do society. That image had to be redeemed, and through a grand gesture. Otherwise, the "space program" has provided little to meet the real needs of the community, be that America or the world.

There have been quiet triumphs: the general ability of remote sensing data has made a real contribution to safety and prosperity. Certainly communications satellites have been an immense boon.

billions of dollars later the promise of the Moon and the Apollo technology base is a fading memory of another time.

But much space effort, including, often, this column, lack grounding in the needs of the community - as it perceives them, rather than as we wish it did. Ours is not an expansive, bold, frontier-oriented civilization.

Projects designed to meet those needs will fail, for lack of demand. Scientific data is of only passing interest beyond a community of specialists: NASA's focus on scientific questions marginalizes its own efforts and leaves it open to charges of hypocrisy for projects with other, unconfessed, motivations, such as the ISS and the choice of Mars missions over those to Pluto or Europa.

What would be useful? Efforts increasing interconnectedness and communications: commercial suborbital vehicles fit that bill. A counter to fears of terrorism, more than to its actuality - which is why ballistic missile defense remains a priority.

So long as SUV sales continue to increase, our society remains unwilling to confront the consequences of its demands for energy and raw materials, and unwilling to perceive any need for change. Once it does, expansion of our material resource base may become useful quite soon, enabling solar power satellites and asteroid mining.

We Need Skills: We really do have things to learn before we can live and work in space and expand outward through the solar system. By focusing on endless human microgravity studies - and ignoring Russian data in the field - NASA has squandered opportunities to grow and learn during its long Groundhog Day.

Thirty years in LEO could have been put to use prototyping spacesuits, conducting crew composition studies, running simulated Mars missions, and developing a myriad other essential skills. Return to the Moon supporters have been among the most clear and consistent in recognizing and trying to address the need for many of these skills. We'll still have to learn them someday, and until we do, it'll remain Groundhog Day, and we'll keep endlessly repeating what we already know.

We Need to Start Small and Persevere: On the final repetition of his Groundhog Day, Murray's character had become a competent emergency medic, a good dancer, and a terrific piano player. His transformations weren't magical, but were the product of lots of time to practice, during his infinitely looping day.

The discipline to abandon his grandiose bluster in favor of daily incremental progress was one of the keys to his release. It is ours as well. A new generation of rocket entrepreneurs is starting small, building, testing and flying hardware in steady development.

Some of them will succeed, unlike the purveyors of giant orbital vehicle designs and "spend twenty billion dollars and they'll come" business plans. Some of the current crop of grad students will persevere in their disciplines, moving on eventually from volunteering on analog missions to running the real thing.

Some of the enthusiasts who keep working through this time when space is far from the public consciousness will hone immense talents to be applied when a new era opens. The grandiose dreamers won't be there, the burnouts won't be there. The folks who kept showing up for piano lessons will.

To our credit, we're beginning to learn some of the lessons of Groundhog Day. Some of the space advocacy groups are turning from a futile focus on government towards private action - either directly, as with the Mars Society's habs, or indirectly, through the Space Frontier Foundation's focus on training and encouragement for space entrepreneurs.

Those entrepreneurs are shedding the vices of their military-industrial competitors and taking a steady progression of small steps with real hardware. A very few advocates are beginning to address the question of how the space movement can be a productive, integrated, valued member of the global community.

The Spacefaring Web, that network of scientists, entrepreneurs and advocates, is becoming real, and honest, and useful. Thirty years isn't too much time for that: progress tends to be made by the old guard dying off.

We still have Groundhog Days ahead of us, but if we keep their lessons in mind, and if we persevere, one Groundhog Day not too long from now will be our last, and once again we'll move on, beyond Earth orbit and out for good into the universe.

The only scientist to ever visit the moon, Geologist-Astronaut
Harrison "Jack" Schmitt is photographed standing next to a huge,
split boulder at Station 6 on the sloping base of North Massif
during the third Apollo 17 extravehicular activity (EVA-3) at the
Taurus-Littrow landing site. This picture was taken by Commander
Eugene Cernan on the second last day (Dec 13, 1972) that man was on the moon.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Government; Technical
KEYWORDS: apollo; future; goliath; moon; nasa; space
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1 posted on 12/19/2002 8:10:04 PM PST by Brett66
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To: *Space; RightWhale; anymouse; RadioAstronomer; NonZeroSum; jimkress; discostu; The_Victor; ...
Ping.
2 posted on 12/19/2002 8:10:46 PM PST by Brett66
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To: Brett66
Very provocative article. I think the wakeup call for the U.S., in regards to a revitalization of our space program, will be when the Chinese put a man on the moon.
3 posted on 12/19/2002 8:32:43 PM PST by Archangelsk
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To: Archangelsk
It will probably take that to shake us out of our low Earth orbit slumber, but I hope we have enough common sense to revive our moon efforts before they go there. We have a nice expensive space station in LEO already, it should be a lot easier to go back to the moon with the ISS as a staging point.
4 posted on 12/19/2002 8:36:48 PM PST by Brett66
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To: Archangelsk
"I think the wakeup call for the U.S., in regards to a revitalization of our space program, will be when the Chinese put a man on the moon."

The question is: WHY?

We can understand that totalitarian government (or those with ample tax revenues due to prosperity and a motivated public) will be able to do grand things that land the President's signature on foreign bodies.

However, Apollo was a rare moment in human history: when computers were advanced enough to make controlling complex systems possible, but just before computers made humans unnecessary on the flight. Give me missions than send and recover Imax cameras (or with HDTV video streams) for 10% the cost of manned missions, and let ME experience the event. I don't need an inarticulate fighter jock to go there so that I can identify with the experience. Humans were needed back before pocket calculators. They are no longer needed, and only make the process immensely more expensive, or impossible.

5 posted on 12/19/2002 8:50:55 PM PST by Atlas Sneezed
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To: Beelzebubba
The problem with your argument is that as long as we are stuck on a single planet, the human race is highly vulnerable.

As the movie Armageddon, with all its inaccuracies, showed.

We need to spread out and colonize the solar system and (eventually) the galaxy.

Keeping all your eggs in one (highly vulnerable) basket is not very smart.

6 posted on 12/19/2002 9:04:37 PM PST by Restorer
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To: Beelzebubba
The question is: WHY?

Because there is a valuable energy source, helium 3, that is waiting to be exploited. You can read about it here.

I don't need an inarticulate fighter jock...

I'm quite sure our pilots in the Gulf would disagree with you. :-)

7 posted on 12/20/2002 7:25:12 AM PST by Archangelsk
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To: Archangelsk
"Because there is a valuable energy source, helium 3, that is waiting to be exploited."

Nifty. Now explain why MY tax dollars should go toward this boondoggle that the free market would never touch, when there is plenty of energy on earth, and saving money will leave more for the free market to develop improved sources.
8 posted on 12/20/2002 7:42:59 AM PST by Atlas Sneezed
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To: Beelzebubba
Now explain why MY tax dollars should go toward this boondoggle that the free market would never touch, when there is plenty of energy on earth, and saving money will leave more for the free market to develop improved sources.

Because if we don't the Chinese will. Unless we start looking a quarter century or greater down the road we will cede our position as the top power in the world. The explotation of space resources, and its derivatives such as a population more attuned to science and hard education, should be a national priority. Our current status is threatened and I, for one, do not want my country to slip to the ranks of second tier.

Yes, this will entail sacrifice and your tax dollars (mine too), but I'm willing to make the investment for a more robust and secure America.

9 posted on 12/20/2002 8:33:40 AM PST by Archangelsk
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To: Archangelsk
Plus the fact, there are resources in space that can be used to better ourselves not found on Earth. I'm for private industry in space.
10 posted on 12/20/2002 8:38:05 AM PST by KevinDavis
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To: Brett66
Astronaut Cernan was on Lou Dobbs last night. During the interview cernan mentioned that since a 77 year old colleague had returned to space he is working on a plan for a 17 year old to fly in space. this is very interesting since I happened to send an e-mail to Boy Scout Headquarters yesterday and suggested that the million strong Boy Socut organization could hold a fund raiser where each scout would try to sell, (cookies candy whatever) to net $20 per scout. The $20 Million raised would used to buy a Soyuz seat and allow one scout to camp out at the ISS for a coupla days!

I e-mailed Lou Dobbs and am trying to network to Cernan as well. I've communicated with NSS headqtrs in DC as well. John Travolta was the keynote speaker at the kick off of the Centennial of Flight ceremonies held by the Smithsonian. He is a noted flying afficiando and I tried to e-mail to him through one of his fan sites but...

If anyone can ehlp in this matter we can get the kids off the ground. My Space University proposal is at www.nssnt.org. Any help networking would be appreicated.

11 posted on 12/20/2002 8:47:47 AM PST by Young Werther
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To: Archangelsk
Yes, this will entail sacrifice and your tax dollars (mine too),

Oh-oh... something wrong here. ALARM!

May the visions of sugar plums keep dancing in your head.

12 posted on 12/20/2002 8:55:21 AM PST by johnny7
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To: Beelzebubba
MEMO

From: Queen Isabella
To: Mr. Christopher Columbus

RE: New Route to India

Chris, we've been considering your offer to find a new route to the spice merchants in India, and we're having second thoughts about funding the effort. We mean, there are a number of established roads and waterways that we can use to get there, so we don't see the need to develop new ones. Besides, spice consumption should remain level for the foreseeable future, and we seem to have enough to go around. It sure seems like a lot of danger to take on for such a small result.

Certainly, there couldn't be anything new to learn from such a voyage anyway, as Europe has already mapped the whole world, we're quite sure. This particular indisputable fact brings me to a suggestion for you: Perhaps you could map the coastlines of Europe for us. You know, travel back and forth along the shores for a few decades and really record the details.

We wish you excellent luck in whatever you do, Chris.

Royally Yours,

The Queen
13 posted on 12/20/2002 9:39:03 AM PST by Frank_Discussion
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To: Young Werther
That sounds like a great idea, maybe some corporate sponsors would be interested. Probably in about 2-3 years it will be possible to buy a quick sub-orbital trip to the edge of space and back for around $90,000. Not as cool as staying on the ISS, but far more affordable and could be funded by bake sales, etc. Definitely affordable to corporate sponsors.
14 posted on 12/20/2002 9:42:35 AM PST by Brett66
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To: Frank_Discussion
"Chris, we've been considering your offer to find a new route to the spice merchants in India, and we're having second thoughts about funding the effort."

But she DID fund it, because she stood to make money. Was it funded from her own wealth, or was there an income tax back in Spain for such things?

Secondly, even if Columbus had not gotten her funding, there is no evidence that other efforts would not have led to the development of the Americas. The market would have taken care of it.
15 posted on 12/20/2002 9:48:07 AM PST by Atlas Sneezed
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To: Brett66
Here's reality: We are at war. All thought of of a manned space program ended for this generation on WTC911. Nothing is going to happen in space development until we finish the war. Whether it is 4 or 20 or more years away, the war's end is when we can take a look around and decide to go to Mars, the moon, mine asteroids, and get out of the hellhole of earth.
16 posted on 12/20/2002 9:48:29 AM PST by RightWhale
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To: RightWhale
I don't think NASA will be doing anything substantive in space for at least 15 years. However the X-Prize contenders will be flying in 3 years or less. Transorbital will launch their Lunar sattelite next year. It's a very exciting time, as long as NASA isn't considered part of the development of space.
17 posted on 12/20/2002 9:56:42 AM PST by Brett66
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To: Beelzebubba
Her money was Spain's money. Not an Income tax per se, but there you go.

I know she funded it, that's why I wrote it the way I did. All I'm trying to say is, government and private entities both have the views I satirized in the 'Memo', and try to imagine if it continues. Basically speaking, all exploration is speculative, and you never, ever know what you will find. Even Lewis and Clark explored (via government funding) without knowing what lies ahead, other than that there were probably more trees beyond the forests they could see in front of them. I think that whole boondoggle work out pretty well in the end.

As far as the market taking care of it, in Columbus' case it certainly did, as the Queen speculated on the potential market. Beyond that successful speculation a whole new HUGE continental landmass was a surprizing bonus.

Right now, we have a climate that says "there is no market" as far as space is concerned. The climate is wrong. No matter who funds it, it will take a speculative visualization of that market in space.

For what it's worth, I know private enterprise will really open the doors to development. It always has. Until that time, however, the very modest sums spent by the US government will just have to do, until private money and effort takes the reins.
18 posted on 12/20/2002 10:02:18 AM PST by Frank_Discussion
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To: Brett66
TransOrbital was to launch a structural test article today, I wonder how that's going?
19 posted on 12/20/2002 10:04:49 AM PST by Frank_Discussion
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To: Young Werther
Yeah Baby! I will contact my Scoutmaster post haste!
20 posted on 12/20/2002 10:05:31 AM PST by Frank_Discussion
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