mhaze
Banned
- Joined
- Jan 10, 2007
- Messages
- 15,718
And another 12B lander module...They included a $2B lander module...
-Bri
And another 12B lander module...They included a $2B lander module...
-Bri
Well, that makes no sense. There were solid practical reasons to go back to an Apollo style capsule, notably the entire launch system price per launch would have been half that of a shuttle launch. The back end first capsule reentry is fundamentally far, far safer than a winged system. The shuttle was eating up the money that could have funded a half dozen other things. It was obsolete, and it was risky. And we were just dodging the bullet on another catastrophe.Looks like MHaze and Newt G want to follow in George W. Bush's footsteps; Today John Glenn was giving interviews for the 50th anniversary of his historic flight, and he blames The Shrub for the destruction of NASA's manned spaceflight effort. By telling NASA to go to the Moon and Mars without one dime of additional funding, said Glenn, there was no choice but end the shuttle program early and cancel many important unmanned science programs.
ETA: And NB: in that last sentence, it's clear that's Newt's promises include new technology and not just implementing what we already have on as small a scale as might possibly fit a minimal definition of his promises. He is not talking about anything that is "timid".
MHaze, Genius, now knows spaceflight better than John Glenn!
Sorry, that should be MHaze, SUPER-Genius.
You can't possibly believe that, can you?
I've quoted this text from the transcript of his speech like half a dozen times already--and it's paraphrased accurately in the thread title:
By the end of my second term we will have the first permanent base on the Moon, and it will be American.
ETA: And NB: in that last sentence, it's clear that's Newt's promises include new technology and not just implementing what we already have on as small a scale as might possibly fit a minimal definition of his promises. He is not talking about anything that is "timid".
Since leaving Florida, Newt's campaign has not returned to this topic. I think even he realizes it was a dumb thing to say.
Carry on, mhaze.
You've made it look "certain", a "promise" (that had to be fulfilled or he was lying, and you've alleged that because he "promised" it, it had to be thru a government program and not private companies working for a prize.
I haven't omitted it. You're the one who explicitly denied that Newt promised a permanent base on the moon by the end of his second term.No, he certainly isn't talking about anything "timid". Neither are you "timid" in lying by omission. Here's the first sentence you left out, let's now look at it in context.
Yes, these goals are his campaign promises. Again, they're even couched in terms of his winning the presidency (twice, actually). Why don't you consider these to be campaign promises?So, I’m going to give you a set of goals and then I’m going to make a set of observations about how to achieve those goals.
By the end of my second term we will have the first permanent base on the Moon, and it will be American.
No, I haven't.By leaving out the statement about "goals" you and some others in this thread have seriously misrepresented Newt's comment, haven't you?
[ETA: A prize offered by whom? Private companies? Again, the overall context of this is a presidential campaign. Newt even expressed the promise in terms of him winning the presidency for two terms. He is promising government action of some type that would result in a permanent moon base and a continuous propulsion rocket capable of reaching Mars very quickly by the end of his second term.]You've made it look "certain", a "promise" (that had to be fulfilled or he was lying, and you've alleged that because he "promised" it, it had to be thru a government program and not private companies working for a prize.
Can you tell me who in this thread has said that it had to be through a government program?
Well, you haven't done too well on supporting the argument that they are not realistic goals. Repeating it doesn't make it true, and continually calling on so-called "experts" who don't even have the premises of the argument right doesn't get you to home base.Can you tell me who in this thread has said that it had to be through a government program?
I'm sorry, but even if we take it to mean that they're just goals and he doesn't expect them to be realized (even though his phrasing clearly indicates otherwise), they're not particularly realistic goals. It's also silly for Newt to say that if we allocate money for an X-prize that's never spent we haven't lost anything.
-Bri
Well, it's part of Newt's campaign to become POTUS, and it was couched in terms of his winning two terms as president, and the proposal for "how to do it" involved $10 billion from NASA's budget, so I'm not sure how it could be described as other than a government undertaking.
Well, you haven't done too well on supporting the argument that they are not realistic goals.
By the way, is Newt's talk about a fast engine for Mars a fantasy? Here's the actual thing he is talking about, VASIMR.
Yes, I do refer to your "evidence of experts".Other than presenting evidence of experts who don't think they are realistic goals, you mean?
Also, you seemed to indicate that you agreed that the Mars rocket isn't particularly realistic in 8 years.
I don't think anyone said his ideas are fantasy, just that they aren't likely to be accomplished as he described in the time frame he gave.
-Bri
I don't think that's overly torturing the wording or the intent of Newt's suggestions. He wanted NASA and the US to undertake facilitating private space flight. So yes, we could give the government and/or it's politicians some credit if they did that through prizes.Right, it would certainly be a government undertaking regardless, even if the technology wasn't actually implemented by the government, but the government only offered the prize.
.....
....You're the one who explicitly denied that Newt promised a permanent base on the moon by the end of his second term.
Yes, these goals are his campaign promises. ....
BTW, the most likely result from any manned Mars mission is going to be dead astronauts. If not dead promptly, dead from cancers within a very few years.
There is simply no way to shield that you can afford to send to Mars.
You can go during the quiet part of the solar cycle, but quiet is only relative.
The only alternative is a rocket that can sustain a very high acceleration for weeks at a time and so get to Mars and back in a couple months. And we don't have a clue how to do that yet.