NASA Chief Tells the Critics of Exploration Plan: "Get Over It" 216
mknewman (557587) writes "For years, critics have been taking shots at NASA's plans to corral a near-Earth asteroid before moving on to Mars — and now NASA's chief has a message for those critics: 'Get over it, to be blunt.' NASA Administrator Charles Bolden defended the space agency's 20-year timeline for sending astronauts to the Red Planet on Tuesday, during the opening session of this year's Humans 2 Mars Summit at George Washington University in the nation's capital."
How the west wasn't won (Score:2, Informative)
This is a good analysis [spacefuture.com] of NASA. It's a good oldie, but it should be read more often.
Re:What a monstrosity posing as a webpage (Score:2, Informative)
Hey, dumbass!
Browser settings. On your computer. Not his.
Hey, dickhead!
I like to allow people to post code samples in monospace format. Arker abuses this function on this site by choosing the "code" option when he should not. There's no discriminator option in the browser for "Fix only Arker's jackass choice of posting format while leaving responsible users' posts alone".
I would settle for simply having his comment threads excised from the entire forum, but that's not an option in Slashcode.
Re:How the west wasn't won (Score:5, Informative)
Not to overly criticrise your analogy, but I prefer nonfiction to fiction in my decision-making process.
This is a good analysis [nasa.gov] of NASA. It's a good oldie, but people should read it more often.
I would note that it was valid then, when it was written, it was valid when Columbia fell apart, and it is valid now.
And it is an EXCELLENT reason why Nasa shouldn't be messing with asteroid capture. Fortunately, it is more likely that our country will be glowing embers, than that NASA will see this accomplished. And I view that glowing embers bit as a negative, brought about by similar egos by similar wackos in OTHER government offices (including Putin's Russia).
But yes, I am very glad that other problems are likely to make this problem a moot point.
Re:How the west wasn't won (Score:5, Informative)
Re:How the west wasn't won (Score:4, Informative)
Because NASA did all the heavy lifting.
SpaceX build on what NASA did.
SpaceX does 1 thing.
SpaceX still doesn't have a viable way to make a profit.
SpaceX is still at least a decade from getting someone to ISS.
It's like asking why Ford doesn't have the same operating costs as a mechanic shop.
Re:On, to Mars! (Score:4, Informative)
Well, lets look at the federal budget, so we can judge on "extra tax dollars".
The 2015 spending budget is $6,293.7 billion.
NASA gets $16.6 billion, or 0.26%, or $52.13 per person.
Defense gets $820.2 billion or 13.1%, $2,575.37 per person.
The F-35 has $875 billion allocated to the project.
Our defense budget isn't just high. Our spending is 36% of the world's defense spending. The US spends about as much as China, Russia, Saudi Arabia, France, United Kingdom, Germany, Japan, India, and South Korea *combined*. If we reduced our military spending to the level of the country that spends the most (China), we could trim 452 billion from military spending, NASA could be paid 27 times over.
GE was paid about 10% of the NASA budget for avoiding paying taxes. The taxes they don't pay count for more than the entire NASA budget. GE makes most of it's money from the US government.
You know, I wouldn't mind 1% being dropped from killing people in other countries, or threatening to do it. I wouldn't mind if companies like GE weren't allowed to skip paying taxes, to reduce our tax burden, and double NASA's budget. I wouldn't mind if they skipped trying to build the F-35 fighter, and doubled NASA's budget.
So, which do you want? An airplane that we don't need? Wars that serve no good purposes? Paying corporations for avoiding taxes? Or to advance the knowledge and reach of the human species?