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How To Beat Congress's Ban Of Humans On Mars
Posted by
CmdrTaco
on Wed Dec 05, 2007 11:00 AM
from the or-just-stop-spending-on-wars dept.
from the or-just-stop-spending-on-wars dept.
An anonymous reader writes "Earlier this year, the House of Representatives passed a bill that would ban humans on Mars at NASA: "Provided, That none of the funds under this heading shall be used for any research, development, or demonstration activities related exclusively to the human exploration of Mars." The bill is held up in Congress and the anti-Mars language may be taken out. But in case the Mars ban becomes law, the Space Review has a handy guide on how NASA can beat the ban and continue its research and development without breaking the law."
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Subcommittee Stops Human Mars Mission Spending 343 comments
An anonymous reader writes "Last week's House Appropriations Subcommittee for Commerce, Justice, and Science FY08 budget markup would prevent work on programs devoted to human missions to Mars. According to a House Appropriations Committee press release, the markup language states that NASA cannot pursue "development or demonstration activity related exclusively to Human Exploration of Mars. NASA has too much on its plate already, and the President is welcome to include adequate funding for the Human Mars Initiative in a budget amendment or subsequent year funding requests." The Mars Society is already leading an effort to get the language removed."
Submission: How To Beat Congress's Ban Of Humans On Mars by Anonymous Coward
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Congress? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Congress? (Score:5, Informative)
Congress did not "ban humans on Mars". They stopped NASA's funding for a human mission to Mars and told it to concentrate on other things. Other nations, or private citizens of the US if I understand correctly, are free to shoot for it.
Parent
Re:Congress? (Score:5, Informative)
Congress did not "ban humans on Mars". They stopped NASA's funding for a human mission to Mars and told it to concentrate on other things. Other nations, or private citizens of the US if I understand correctly, are free to shoot for it.
Parent
Re:Congress? (Score:4, Informative)
And is my memory failing me, or did I read on Slashdot some time ago that the new director of NASA had already put a hold on all projects that were *only* for human exploration of Mars until such time as additional funding was allocated for that purpose? Since Bush's "Mars, Bitches!" plan didn't actually include any funding and NASA didn't want to get distracted from their other projects for an un-funded attempt at a legacy.
If that's true, then this is just Congress agreeing with the NASA director, saying "Yes, you should focus on other things, because we're not giving you extra money just for a manned mission to Mars for now at least".
Parent
Re:Congress? (Score:4, Funny)
Did you really mean that? I read it as:
Congress did not "ban humans on Mars". They stopped NASA's funding for a human mission to Mars and told it to concentrate on other things. Other nations, or private citizens of the US if I understand correctly, they are free to shoot at.
hmmmmmm
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Congress? (Score:5, Insightful)
Because Congress created NASA and has final say over the purposes and funding of all federal agencies.
Parent
Re:Congress? (Score:4, Insightful)
When you go to a restaurant do you order what you want to eat?
Or do you just give them your account number and they bring you whatever the chef wants to cook that day? Then the chef takes the amount of money he feels he needs from your account.
Because chefs know better than customers how to prepare a meal.
Parent
Re:Congress? (Score:4, Interesting)
Everyone is up in arms about how there's a lot of programs (like the Hubble and the spacestation) that we are abandoning. The reason we are abandoning them is because of a lack of funding. Why is there a lack of funding? One big reason is because we are spending money on human space-travel projects because of this goal to reach Mars. No, instead, let's keep funding the projects that are actually providing us with all sorts of valuable research.
Parent
Re:Congress? (Score:5, Funny)
Only sissies call it "parliament." Its proper reference is "freedom council of freedom and liberty justice."
America. FUCK YEAH.
Parent
Re:Congress? (Score:4, Interesting)
This is the kind of stuff that you need to figure out who did it. Then, you need to find out why. Most likely, the reason will be somewhat insane, but at least you know what you are dealing with. Then, after you know who and why, you work to make sure that it does not happen again. Ignorance is a powerful disadvantage.
From the reference, it seems that this is an attempt to keep NASA form being administratively destroyed by a Bushism. Remember the guy Bush put in place that started slashing everything else to make one thing happen. The NASA budget is so tiny compared to so many other budgets, the solution to achieve things is not to slash and burn, but to fund it. OMG! Look at everything we have gotten out of the space race so far. Microwaves (communications and ovens), new materials, better computing, better aircraft, and more!
So, the who is not so important, but the why is very important. To prevent another slash and burn like the last Bush appointee.
Maybe this language is needed. Remember how many things this administration has made happen for short sighted goals that have disastrous mid to long term impacts (yeah, nothing new, but they are very good at it). Would it actually be good to go for Mars at the expense of so many other things?
InnerWeb
Parent
That's how I read it. (Score:4, Informative)
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Congress? (Score:5, Funny)
Parent
Re:Congress? (Score:4, Insightful)
Robots are cheap and you can do more science per dollar spent using robots in space than you can using humans in space.
Parent
Re:Congress? (Score:5, Insightful)
I really really love the romanticism of humans on Mars. I really love the concept of terraforming, and I really wish it wasn't so damn dangerous to throw larger nuclear powered crafts up into space, as this could really open up possibilities, however it really is a low-return for the money you would throw at a human project.
As lovely as putting people into space is, it's expensive, risky and a hard case to argue. If we were a world all obsessed by expanding to other planets, we might even have had miniature civilisations on Mars by now, but as a whole, the obsession is looking after one self and not the far future...
Parent
Could the headline have been more misleading? (Score:5, Informative)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
I believe that the people lacking vision are those that want to spend billions of dollars rocketing a team of 8 people to a giant red rock in the sky when we haven't figured out how to fix problems at home first.
Re:Could the headline have been more misleading? (Score:5, Insightful)
Like the Aztecs did to the other tribes, but without the human sacrifice?
A nation that tries to deal with its social problems completely before tackling expansion and technological progress will be destroyed by the nations that don't.
Parent
Mars is stupid (Score:5, Insightful)
Its a DISTRACTION, didn't anybody notice how Bush has been trying to slow or stop climate science? He has NASA refocused on mars and neglecting other areas that he doesn't want or care about moving forward. Remember, he stopped a climate science probe that other countries would have paid to launch (it was already built) just because he didn't want any climate science probe backing this vast conspiracy of climate scientists scamming people about global warming. (we know he tried to censor government climate scientists, even after the public woke up.)
I've said it before; won't waste time doing it again even if I'd get mod up like I did before.
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Could the headline have been more misleading? (Score:4, Insightful)
The members of Congress were duly elected by the general populace of the United States; why NASA should attempt to ignore Congressional opinion is beyond me. If you happen to live in the U.S. and are upset about the situation (one way or the other), I urge you to contact [congress.org] your representative legislator(s) directly.
Parent
Re:Could the headline have been more misleading? (Score:4, Interesting)
No, it reveals the great frustration of US lawmakers with NASA for screwing up and mismanaging project after expensive project, year after wearying year. Between the overhyped and overpriced Shuttle program (and two very visible accidents on top of other problems), Hubble, the ongoing disaster that is ISS, and whole string of less visible projects... Congress simply doesn't trust NASA.
Historically, post-Apollo, NASA has tried to spin every project it can into being a precursor for manned Mars missions... Which Congress has historically been uninterested in funding. (This 'ban' isn't the first such, nor even the second...) Worse yet, NASA has also (historically) tried every trick in the book in the book to get around the 'bans', further engendering mistrust of them in Congress.
NASA has been hobbled practically since it's birth by the Shuttle - Station - Mars!! vision laid out by Werner Von Braun and enthusiastically endorsed by early NASA administrators. Yes Virginia - the Shuttle program has been around that long, the earliest studies are contemporary with the Mercury project. Many in NASA (at the time) felt that Max Faget and the STG represented a shortcut to beating the Russians and a way of getting early engineering experience before getting to the real task at hand - developing a shuttle and all the rest of Von Braun's vision.
Except - in real life it didn't happen that way. The Apollo (Lunar) program was an accident of a) the Cold War, and b) the Kennedy assassination. Before he died, Jack Kennedy was already seeking to distance himself from, and minimize the program. When he was killed, Apollo was funded as his memorial. Even so, budget cutbacks started as soon as they could be managed - Apollo landing missions and post Apollo programs were being cancelled or cut back as early as 1966! By the time we actually reached the moon, the program was already running on vapors.
So far as public interest goes - just look at the TV numbers of the various landing missions. The great public interest, much ballyhooed by space fanboys, simply never existed.
Parent
Why? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Why? (Score:5, Insightful)
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
If NASA was based in Ron Paul's home district, I'd bet my dollar to your donut he'd be extolling the virtues of pork--errr... I mean--Martian exploration.
You need to dial your Cynacism-O-Meter up a notch and realize Libertarians are not so far from Democrats/Republicans as you may think.
Re:Why? (Score:5, Insightful)
Congress is trying to protect the other projects from being cannibalized to fund the manned Mars mission. And they want Bush to pony up the dollars for it if he's going to give NASA a mandate to put a man on Mars (as opposed to just giving the mandate with no funds, forcing NASA to divert funds from other useful missions).
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Really, all Congress seems to be asking is for the Administration to be honest with its funding requests: ask for the money needed to do wh
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
It's not for real. A real program would have a deadline within the career horizon of most members of Congress, and have a much larger budget tied to achieving substantial milestones every single year.
So, you take money away from real projects, like Earth climate measurement, and you give it to a show program that is not realistically connected to its ostensible ends. The current "Vision" is to establish a lunar base in 2020 -- so far so good, and to launch t
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
What does Congress have against funding for exploration of Mars?
At the present time Mars exploration is an inefficient method of purchasing voters. The money will instead flow to those interests that leverage the largest constituency of the dominant party [democrats.org]. What those interests are can be found here [aarp.org], here [afge.org], here [nea.org] and here [sierraclub.org], but mostly here [ama-assn.org]. All public proselytizing aside the recent change in US political party dominance has not and will not cause substantial disruption in the flow of funds here [wikipedia.org], because nothing raises the cost of voters for incumbent rulers as rapidly a
Easy (Score:3, Insightful)
Or plan to send a ship the opposite direct then are rotation and plan to meet up with it in 8 months.
Not quite... (Score:5, Informative)
Doesn't ban humans on Mars (Score:3, Informative)
Every dollar spent on Mars... (Score:5, Insightful)
Or defense contracts for companies owned by Nancy Pelosi's husband. [mypetjawa.mu.nu].
Or billions in subsidies to Fortune 500 agribusiness companies. [cbsnews.com]
There can be no funding for frivolities like the human exploration of space when so many of the needs of the Permanent Bipartisan State of Porkistan remain unmet...
Should NASA earn a weasel reputation? (Score:4, Insightful)
Regardless of whether one thinks that the "Mars ban" is a good idea, would it be good for NASA to get a reputation of using loopholes and subverting the intent of Congress? Even if NASA complied, space enthusiasts could inadvertently build such a reputation in the public mind.
Then what? Would Congress get more strict the next year, resulting in dozens of started-but-never completed projects? Would the public say, "Those NASA dudes can't be trusted! See how they handled the Mars ban? Let's use that money to subsidize professional football instead!"
Why stop at Mars? (Score:5, Insightful)
What's so wonderful about manned exploration of space anyway?
Transporting humans and all of their environmental requirements is ridiculously expensive. The risk for the travelers is ultimate. Alternatively, unmanned missions can go not only where no one has gone before, but also where no one will ever be able to go (e.g. the Venutian surface), and for a fraction of the cost.
The only upside from a manned mission is that we feel all warm and fuzzy when our heroes return from the voyage. Big deal.
Sounds odd to say, but I'm with Congress on this one. I just wish they'd taken it farther.
Re:When they return.. (Score:3, Interesting)
I don't know of any fuel on this planet that will take a large enough payload of fuel to Mars for the return trip. Who said they would ever return? At current tech, it's a one way ticket.
You haven't seen any probes sent with enough fuel to return. You won't see it anytime soon. Fuel that is light enough to take, but has enough mass to provide thrust to escape Mars orbital velocity do
As I understand it, it's all about bang per buck (Score:3, Insightful)
As I understand it, it's all about bang per buck.
Easy! (Score:4, Funny)
Space Shuttle? (Score:3, Interesting)
Sending humans to Mars is stupid and pointless (Score:4, Interesting)
Sending humans to Mars is stupid and pointless. It's an idea trotted out by politicians every decade or so to distract voters, not something to really do. Congress is right to pull the plug.
Space travel on chemical fuels is just barely possible, and it's not getting any better. Chemical rockets work about as well as they did forty years ago. Chemical fuels haven't improved, and they're not going to. We've had liquid hydrogen/liquid oxygen for forty years, and that's as good as it gets.
Hence the fundamental problem. All spacecraft have to be so weight-reduced that they're fragile and unreliable. If spacecraft could be built with the weight budget of a jetliner, with about 50% of the mass at takeoff being fuel, they'd work fine.
Without fission, fusion, or antimatter power, or new physics, this isn't going to improve. We're stuck without a better power source.
There hasn't been a new power source for half a century now. First time since the Industrial Revolution that's happened. Most of the major problems in the world today, from global warming to the Middle East, come from that fact.
That's the problem. Mars is a sideshow.
"Exclusively" (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Should NASA be free to spend its own budget without Congressional oversight? Probably.
Absolutely not. NASA's budget comes out of my pocket, so I want some say in how it's spent. My congress critters represent me, and without their oversight I've got no say in the matter. Ditto the military, public schools, etc.
And yes, I realize that in practice I haven't got much say anyway, but the current arrangement is set forth by the Constitution.
Re:Has Washington Lost its mind? (Score:4, Insightful)
While I do think that this bill is dumb how do you figure that the us is getting plowed under on the innovation front?
The US still leads the world in Space exploration. There are some very interesting robotic missions going on right now.
The US is still a world leader in ICs And is the world leader in CPUs. Intel's core line, AMDs Barcelona, IBM's Power5, Suns' Sparc T2 are all very cutting edge.
The US still leads in Aircraft. The 787 and the F22 are prime examples of innovation. And then you Burt Rutan.
There is a lot of very innovative work in biology going on in the US.
Then you have Software. Apple, Microsoft, Intel, Google, and IBM, are all doing a lot of interesting research and development work.
I also worry about the future of technology in the US but when you make statements that are just flat out untrue people will dismiss your concerns.
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
What is Mars trying to hide?
Santa Claus [imdb.com], you dope.
Re:Inevitable (Score:5, Insightful)
Sure. And there is a market for maybe 5 computers in the world, 640K is enough for anybody, we don't need telephones because we have good messenger boys, flight of heavier-than-air vehicles is impossible, rail travel at high speed is impossible because humans would be unable to breathe and asphyxiate etc etc. Oh, and just for you:
To place a man in a multi-stage rocket and project him into the controlling gravitational field of the moon where the passengers can make scientific observations, perhaps land alive, and then return to earth - all that constitutes a wild dream worthy of Jules Verne. I am bold enough to say that such a man-made voyage will never occur regardless of all future advances.
--Lee DeForest
Have you learned nothing from past absolute statements?
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Have you learned nothing from past absolute statements?
Sheesh, way to not read my post at all. Where did I say it was technologically impossible?