NASA Can't Pay for Killer Asteroid Hunt 398
CGISecurity.com writes "NASA officials say the space agency is capable of finding nearly all the asteroids that might pose a devastating hit to Earth, but there isn't enough money to pay for the task so it won't get done. 'We know what to do, we just don't have the money,' said Simon 'Pete' Worden, director of NASA's Ames Research Center." But hey, it's just the potential end of the world, so nothing much to worry about there.
Lets assume they had the funding (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Lets assume they had the funding (Score:5, Funny)
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Use the money for something useful instead of finding out the effects of sending rats into space. [cnn.com]
Re:Lets assume they had the funding (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Lets assume they had the funding (Score:5, Insightful)
Well, there are three kinds of lubricants that would be reasonable for different tasks on Mars: petroleum, plant, and silicone. Plant, probably the easiest, wouldn't work for this task. Even processed plant oils, like soybean polyol esters, are not suited for high loading tasks. Plant-derived lubricants are only for mild conditions. They're also much more prone to degradation. Really wouldn't work. So, that leaves petroleum and silicone. Petroleum, you'd need long chain fuel oils -- saturated and unsatured hydrocarbons, linear and/or cyclic. Your base could also be phosphate esters, although they'd be low viscosity. Diesters might be good, as could short chain polyglycols. Silicone oils can be good by themselves or as additives. So, we have a few options for bases. But is that good enough? Not really, unless you want to wear through parts and oil like there's no tomorrow. What additives do we need? Anti-foaming agents (silicone is good for this). EP additives allow the lubricant to work in higher stress conditions (like mining), so that's things like sulfur, phosphorus, and chlorine compounds. You're still going to be getting particles in solution, though -- how to keep them there to prevent them from abrading the surfaces? Detergents: sulfates, phosphonates, thiophosphonates, phenates, or salicylates of barium, calcium, or magnesium. And/or dispersants. And heck, if this lubricant is to be used where there's combustion, you may need emulsifiers as well to allow it to mix with some water.
Now, let's chain back just one of those chemicals -- let's say a fuel oil. What do we need to produce a fuel oil on Mars? We need to use something like the Fischer-Tropsh process or Sabatier synthesis to turn CO2 + H2 into hydrocarbons. H2 comes from energy-intensive cracking of water. CO2 will have to be frozen out of the uberthin atmosphere in a huge facility. Of course, we'll get mostly methane from our hydrocarbon synthesis. Let's just assume that this tech advances enough that appropriate catalyst packs can be gotten to selectively make heavier hydrocarbons. You'll still need a whole distilling facility to process the hydrocarbons (picture a small oil refinery) to seperate. All of this power? Well, if it comes from nuclear, you better have a way to make nuclear fuel (and you don't even want to see the dependency chain on that one). Solar? Solar panels have an even bigger dependency chain. Solar thermal? Ignoring initial launch costs for that much mass, even if you can make the mirrors locally, you still need to make the heliostats. Once again, depenency chains. See where this is going?
Note how much I had to narrow the subject down just to get into this one set of resource dependencies. The simple fact is that modern technology spawns *huge* dependency chains, and on another planet, you simply can't live/expand a colony without modern technology. You can make some simplifying assumptions -- say, substitute HDPE for LDPE in a plastics task. But you couldn't generally, say, substitute HDPE for neoprene, teflon, polycarbonate, or nylon. Even simplified dependency trees will still be monstrous.
This assumes that everything we need *can* be found on Mars. What if it can't? What if we can't find, say, fluorspar? No aluminium industry (not only will that hurt construction and refining, but also would be a double-whammy for rocketry; you'd have to use titanium alloys (more expensive) for structural integiry and would have much weaker solid rocket engines). No hydrofluoric acid (needed by many industrial processes -- including the most realistic uran
Re:Lets assume they had the funding (Score:4, Insightful)
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Don't you just need a pick and shovel and a mule to mine with? Okay it's going to be hard to stick a space helmet on one but it's got to be cheaper than all the fancy hardware.
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Well, there are three kinds of lubricants that would be reasonable for different tasks on Mars: petroleum, plant, and silicone
Here's a question.. if we don't start developing the technologies we need for long-distance space travel.. what will you do when NASA ids
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Re:Lets assume they had the funding (Score:4, Funny)
I don't think any asteroids that have hit the world in the last 100 years are likely to hit it again any time soon....
Re:Lets assume they had the funding (Score:4, Insightful)
One in 45,000 chance suddenly doesn't sound so little, does it? Say the expected damage was 2 trillion dollars. Ignore the cost in human lives. This one NEO would justify a ~50 million program (assuming no other benefits from the program). Yet we're just talking about *one NEO* here. There are many thousands of NEOs. Most aren't as risky as Apophis. But it is important that we know about them, and refine their orbits as soon as possible. We're talking about very small odds, but very huge consequences. Each year that you don't look for them is a year that you're taking an unjustified (economically) risk. We can, and will, stop an asteroid if it is likely to hit us. But we need to know years in advance.
Re:Lets assume they had the funding (Score:4, Insightful)
Yeah, but why would they give it to you? As soon as we know it's coming, every bank on the planet is gonna throw hundred million dollar embezzlement parties.
Re:Lets assume they had the funding (Score:5, Insightful)
Why would that be the case? (Score:5, Insightful)
Seems like a questionable assumption to me. There's quite a bit we could possibly do about it, if we knew long enough in advance. It's only if we only knew about it a few weeks or months in advance, that it would probably be a bend-over-and-pucker-up moment.
There is a whole lot of ingenuity (and a whole lot of explosives) spread across the globe as a whole; assuming that people got together and decided that the continued survival of the human species is a Good Idea, I suspect we could probably figure out a way to annihilate or deflect a rock, given enough lead time.
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Everyone wants nuclear disarmarment...
And there's a big freaking rock heading towards our planet...
Two birds, one stone anyone?
Re:Why would that be the case? (Score:5, Funny)
Link for Armageddon (Score:2)
Re:Why would that be the case? (Score:5, Informative)
The point is to knock it off course. A small change in velocity early in it's travels can lead to a larger one in position over time, especially lacking friction.
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http://qntm.org/destroy [qntm.org]
Please note that the information at that site should be used for educational purposes only, and by no means should you actually attempt to destroy the world. ^_^
Re:Why would that be the case? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Why would that be the case? (Score:4, Informative)
Are you sure your not talking about our lawyer politicians? [wikipedia.org]
Right, NASA is easy to insult. But they pretty much try to do what they are told [wikipedia.org] with they budget they are allowed to have.
Vote a scientist [wisc.edu] into congress already.
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or... (Score:4, Funny)
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It's a slow slow process. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:It's a slow slow process. (Score:4, Informative)
I'd Rather Know (Score:4, Interesting)
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But in all likelihood any threat they find won't be destroying us within the next couple of years, it'll be something that will hit in 10 or 20 or 100 years. On those timeframes there are many things we can do, even if at this specific moment it could only be summed up as "let's give a load of smart g
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Sure we can. I saw a documentary not long ago that showed how we could fly onto the comment and drill a nuclear weapon into the core and explode it. All we need is to make sure Ben Afflack's schedule is empty.
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I fully intend to be reading and sending e-mail up to the last day of my existence, thank you very much. And, doubtless, someone will find a way to blame Micro$oft or SCO, causing a flood of responses for me to have to re
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About $1 Billion (Score:5, Insightful)
I have paid ~$50-60 for a few smoke detector and pay maybe a dollar or two a year to maintain the batteries in them.
I make an average amount of income so $50 is nothing when a fire could take my life. I've seen other people's houses destroyed by fires but never mine. I don't know if we see other planets regularly destroyed by asteroids or impacts but if you can make a case for it, then this analogy may be apt.
I also know that walking down the street in Prince George's County might result in your death. So do I hire a body guard to protect me? No. Why? Because I don't have the money for that. If I were a billionaire, I would definitely look into it and probably hire a driver too. I see people robbed and killed on TV so, again, if you can point to examples where planets have been destroyed, this analogy is apt.
Considering the war in Iraq has cost me, the taxpayer, $300 billion and I'm not sure that that is increasing my safety
In my opinion, all NASA needs to do is present congress with a scientific statistic claim with percent confidence of global destruction. If we have craters on our planet & there are bones of things that shouldn't have died lying all around, I'm guessing they could place something like a 1% chance of a decent sized asteroid hitting us within a couple thousand years. Given that information, $1 billion may not seem like a bad idea considering most of us employ smoke detectors with even less risk of harm/loss to us.
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We saw Shoemaker-Levy
Re:About $1 Billion (Score:5, Funny)
Congress is the roadblock. (Score:5, Insightful)
NASA doesn't need to justify it, we the people need to justify ourselves by putting people more concerned about advancing this nation instead of advancing their own status.
That $300 billion tab in Iraq is meaningless in this conversation as NASA's budget would still be what it is. The money would have just vanished down some vote buying program that forever indebts us.
Re:About $1 Billion (Score:5, Funny)
This sounds like an entirely rational, sensible argument. As a result, I predict that it will have absolutely zero effect on anyone in Congress.
As an alternative, I suggest you come up with some "evidence" suggesting that an asteroid impact would transform their children into mutants, preferably homosexual ones; or, that the asteroids are a Arab Terrorist Plot. Double points if the asteroid is Mexican.
Re:About $1 Billion (Score:4, Funny)
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In my opinion, all NASA needs to do is present congress with a scientific statistic claim with percent confidence of global destruction. If we have craters on our planet & there are bones of things that shouldn't have died lying all around, I'm guessing they could place something like a 1% chance of a decent sized asteroid hitting us within a couple thousand years. Given that information, $1 billion may not seem like a bad idea considering most of us employ smoke detectors with even less risk of harm/loss to us.
Normally I might agree, but we're talking the general populace here. You can show Congressmen and their constituents all the holes in the ground and Shoemaker-Levy photos you like, but we live in a world of "that's not my problem" and "can't happen to me" and "it's not going to happen tomorrow". Unless a sizable chunk of something streaks across the heavens, lights up the night's sky, and obliterates an area where there are a few hundred thousand people with cell-phone cameras and video cameras and a CNN
Tunguska Event (Score:2)
Why don't they just show them pictures and proof of the Tunguska Event [wikipedia.org] and play the emotional card a la Fox News? "Find out what is already going to kill your children!"
It may have happened in the middle of nowhere many years ago but if
Hope the MPAA doesn't see this (Score:5, Funny)
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What if the people paying the bills don't believe in the bones of things laying around?
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B-b-b-but those craters and bones were placed there in order to test our faith!
If an asteroid is going to hit the earth, obviously that is part of the end times, and the Rapture is nigh. Who are we to disrupt God's plan?
I jest. But the scary thing is that there are plenty
Re:About $1 Billion (Score:4, Interesting)
The real problem is that what NASA wants to do is pay $1 billion to FIND the asteroid, not to deal with the problem. Preventing it may not be possible, and if it is possible, could cost a lot more than the mere $1 billion.
So, the question is, is it worth x cash to get a smoke detector if the house is locked up tight and we can't get out of it. Or is it better for us to not know, as we can't do anything about it, and just continue on with our lives without worldwide panic.
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Yes but don't forget the rallying sound bite "They hate our freedoms"
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It is worked out on the basis that lets say 200 people a year die in a plane crash over a 5,000 year period that is just 1 million deaths.
If we got hit by a world killer or even a regional killer asteroid in the next 5,000 years the number of deaths would be a hell of a lot higher for a regional killer you are looking at millions of deaths for a global killer billions of deaths.
This proves two things firstly
*Scratches head* (Score:2)
Might be time to hassle my congresspeople again.
Earth-science priorities vs. Republicans on Mars (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Earth-science priorities vs. Republicans on Mar (Score:3, Insightful)
Eventually we are going to become extinct if not by an asteroid, then by the sun expanding into a red giant and gobbling up the Earth. The only way to eliminate extinction is to get our collective asses off this rock, into space and on as many planetoid surfaces as possible. That way at least a small part of humanity will survive.
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http://neo.jpl.nasa.gov/ca/ [nasa.gov]
They (try to) keep track of any asteroids 100m in diameter or greater that can come within 0.05 AU of earth.
The end of the world as we know it, (Score:3, Insightful)
Seriously, the British seem to be really obsessed with this, couldn't they kick in a couple of quid? How about the Russians, or the Chinese, or...
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They even held up a couple parts for the ISS until they got their checks.
They'll find the money (Score:5, Insightful)
If the thing is too big or too close and it's curtains for life as we know it, well, "eat drink and be merry, for tomorrow we die."
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If we don't know about it until it hits us (the likeliest current situation) then not only do we not get to try and destroy it, but we don't even get to party like it's 1999.
NASA vs. UNASA (Score:5, Interesting)
My question is - why is it the job of the US to protect the world?
Wouldn't this be a UN issue?
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The UN is powerless 'cos that's how the US (and others) want it to be.
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The UN is relatively powerless because that is the nature of international relationships. Each member nation of the United Nations is a sovereign entity, and agreements between such entities can only be reached through cooperation. This is the very reason why each permanent member of the UN Security Council holds veto power. If a sovereign nation disagrees with the rest of the world, it is still within its rights to
Re:NASA vs. UNASA (Score:5, Insightful)
Not to say that United States of America is a leader, but a leader would definitely take on the challenge, or at least a nation that wants to bill itself as a "world leader".
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Ok?
You call that a state? (Score:5, Funny)
Maryland [netstate.com]? Here in Texas, we call that a "county". Call me when you have something that can devastate a real state.
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Supernova insurance (Score:2)
A supernova would destroy the Earth and clearly kill all of us. Therefore we should spend whatever it takes to monitor the Sun.
Oh, and I suppose we need NASA to keep a death-clock for the heat-death of the Universe too.
And perhaps satellites to monitor the humongous black holes in the center of galaxies to make sure we aren't drifting towards any of them.
Oh, and we shouldn't eat charcoaled food either. Don't forget the blacken
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The sun cannot supernova. And BTW, we are monitoring the sun. All the time. It's not just a nova that poses a danger. How about solar storms? I would sure like to know if the Sun is about to spew electromagnetic radiation all over
us, especially if it was a very powerful storm capable of knocking o
news flash (Score:4, Insightful)
Hm. Nice planet. Shame if anything happened to it. (Score:4, Funny)
"Oh, not that we'd WANT anything to happen to Maryland, Congress. No. But, you know, sometimes things go wrong. Especially when NASA doesn't get funding. It makes NASA so disappointed when it doesn't get funding, and when you're disappointed, you sometimes don't look so hard for killer asteroids. You know how it is."
Finally! (Score:2)
They can barely get funding for exploration, with the myopic bureaucrats babbling on about how things like going back to the moon or a manned mission to Mars are a waste of money.
Head on back to your constituents and explain why you won't pony up a measly $1 billion for this project. We'll bring out some nice PowerPoint slides showing Barney the Dinosaur narrating what happened the last time a major asteroid hit the planet. Maybe add some clip
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Mission approved! BRB.
re: It's like the lottery! (Score:2)
$1 (Score:4, Informative)
Thats $1 per American. There shouldnt even be a debate.
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Last I checked, the U.S. isn't the entire world. Perhaps Europe, Russia and China could kick in a bit to save the planet too. If the rest of the world is going to continue to utilize the resources of the U.S. tax payer they perhaps the rest of the world had best be prepared to accept U.S. sovereignty.
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That's about $.05 per person on the planet. Lemme know when you manage to collect India and China's fair share, and I'll rummage through my couch for my family's.
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Ok, theyre shouldnt be much of a debate. We have been deficit spending for most of my life. Whats $300 million.
Life Imitating Art (Score:2)
What a shame! (Score:5, Informative)
That said, it's to the benefit of the entire planet and the entire planet should pitch in to help pay for it. Someone said, "So what? There's nothing we can do about it." Actually, given a few years notice, there's a lot we can do about it. An asteroid 5-10 years from hitting doesn't need much of a push to get it completely out of our way. It's when it's only a few months away that we're just completely screwed. But if there were an imminent threat of collision a few years out, I guarantee you, we'd figure out a way to move it. The world would definitely come up with the resources to figure out a solution.
It's a shame.. (Score:2)
Reality is, unfortunately, that war is expensive, especially when the current president thinks that money is just a bunch of numbers he gives to other people for things that go "boom".
Think out side the BOX (Score:5, Insightful)
Then set up a registry and offer the Discovery announcement, naming rights, and mineral rights to anyone that ID's them.
Hell, I would spend all night ID'ing them for the mineral rights alone
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Existing systems include (Wikipedia)
* The Lincoln Near-Earth Asteroid Research (LINEAR) team
* The Near-Earth Asteroid Tracking (NEAT) team
* Spacewatch
* The Lowell Observatory Near-Earth-Object Search (LONEOS) team
There is a real concern (Score:3, Insightful)
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The fatalism in this thread is bizarre (Score:4, Insightful)
essential human nature (Score:4, Insightful)
look at 9/11 for example, or the 2004 tsunami
the problem is, it's emotional. the emotions are hooked up to some other issue before the catalclysm hits us, then when it hits us, it becomes very emotional, and we start doing all sorts of crazy stuff, including stuff we don't have to do/ shouldn't do for our own good
and don't poopoo this fact about "other" people: you do the same thing, don't lie to yourself. like you can't find an example of what i just described above somewhere in your personal life history. it's essential human nature, and that includes your behavior, human
the lesson?
we better be hit with a big asteroid that takes out a country or a continent before we get hit with the one that takes out the planet
only in the former case will humanity's response be effective at saving itself
but if we get hit with the planet-killer first? we're flat out doomed. we won't be prepared. simple human nature dictates this fact
so the history of humanity is wrapped up in this coin flip: planet-killer or country killer. combine this random chance with essential human natue, and whichever hits us first determines whether or not humanity surivives
you're an idiot (Score:3, Insightful)
you go ahead and lay down and die. apparently, according to you, it's superior not to try and just accept death. what an ultranegative loser you are
Eh (Score:2)
Terrists in Spaaaaaaace (Score:3, Insightful)
Oh, and will you look at that, the same technology used to protect us from terrorists can also detect killer asteroids and potentially habitable planets in a galaxy far, far away.
Well, ain't that a coincidence. TWAT succeeds yet again!
Bathtub drowning (Score:5, Insightful)
Budget cuts are effectively impossible now, as discretionary spending, defined as non-obligatory, is now a tiny percentage of the Federal budget and essentially irrelevant in cost cutting.
How does one cut then? Apparently the neocons are using a new trick: spend like maniacs. Eventually discretionary funding, like NASA, becomes impossible because so much of the budget has gone towards military and privatization expenses. So much was spent that they had to borrow trillions to keep spending more.
Effect is that the government owes so much that the largest non-discretionary line item, outside of the military, is simply paying yearly interest on the debt. So the two biggest expenditures are now the military and paying out national treasure to service the debt of the money lent to us to cut taxes and spend like fools.
End game: government has three purposes: spending on military, spending on now-privatized government services, and debt service on monies borrowed to spend in the 2000's (and the Reagan 80's) on tax cuts. Government becomes a military contractor, a corporate contractor, and a welfare fountain for the very wealthy, while never actually paying off the debt incurred to give tax cuts to those same very wealthy.
And NASA doesn't get funds, the NSF gets defunded, a chain reaction of penury resulting from this spending NOW. The neocons get their new, streamlined government which looks a lot like a classic fascism, with direct-to-corporation payments, with no spending on things not deemed necessary to fund guns or debt. Bankruptcy.
Both financial and cultural. Other nations without ideological madness spend less on military and tax cuts, keep government services cheap by using civil service, and keep debt low or nonexistent, as Canada or Norway does. Neocon ideology will cripple the future of the U.S., as we are consuming our present and future human capital to enrich the wealthy of today.
There is no such thing as "spending on tax cuts" (Score:4, Insightful)
Look, I've grown much less libertarian over the years. I'm now OK with money being taken from people (including me) by force and spent on "good things".
However, I'm still not OK with pretending that we're not doing that. The money is ours, the government takes some away by force and spends it. Them's the facts.
There's no such thing as "spending on tax cuts". That would be like my wife wanting to buy something, me objecting, and then her saying "well, you would just 'spend' the money on savings or paying off debt if I don't spend it!". The one thing is spending, and the other isn't.
Priorities (Score:2)
What about Halliburton? (Score:5, Funny)
Fear market is tapped out (Score:2)
The problem is many sciences use human hazards (read end of the world) justification for increased funding: seismic research, volcanology, climatology, oceanography. The fear market is tapped out.
Ironically (Score:2)
He has an implied point (Score:3, Interesting)
But hey, it's just the potential end of the world, so nothing much to worry about there.
So maybe the rest of the world can chip in?
Duck and Cover (Score:2, Funny)
That's a bit of a stretch to just say. (Score:4, Insightful)
I don't buy this for a second. In fact, I suspect that if the resources of the entire planet were committed, over a number of years, it would probably be possible to put a breeding population of humans on another planet, with at least a small chance of surviving and propagating the species. Or of digging deep subterranean caves and squirreling away some people down there, etc. Or of blowing the incoming asteroid up with nuclear weapons, deflecting it with some sort of propulsion unit / system of complex mirrors / etc.
In short, I really don't think there's any particular reason why we couldn't ensure our own survival, if we (a) really wanted to, and (b) knew about the impending problem long enough in advance. While funding NASA's search would do nothing about problem (a), it would do a whole lot about (b). Which, to me, puts us about 50% closer to surviving than if neither (a) nor (b) are true.
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asteroid_deflection_
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So yes they will spend money "looking" for terrorists but they won't ever "find" enough to call the job done.
Bonus points for locking up innocent people and trying to make them look like bad guys to save face by the way.
Re:A contrarian look at it (Score:5, Insightful)
The amount of people whom it will kill.
The capacity we have to do something about it.
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Contrary to what YOU may think, the danger of getting hit is (and always has been) non-trivial. A middling-sized brick hit Tunguska only 99 years ago, and did as much damage as the largest H-bombs of the cold war could. And when Comet SL9 broke up and hit Jupiter in 1994, the largest fragment had a 6 TERATON detonation with a fireball the same size as Earth. There's plenty more where they came from.
It's money w