Please create an account to participate in the Slashdot moderation system

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Space

NASA Shuts Down X-33, X-34 Programs 524

abde writes: "Sad news on Space.com -- NASA has canceled the X-33 reusable launch vehicle program due to cost overruns and severe budget cuts. Looks like we are stuck with the aging Space Shuttle [?] and NASA has relinquished the quest for cheap space launch capability. But hey, at least rich people get a tax cut (even if they don't want one)..."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

NASA Shuts Down X-33, X-34 Programs

Comments Filter:
  • I don't know where you got your bogus figures from. Clinton increased NASA's budget by 4.8% for FY 2001, and Bush increased NASA's budget by 2% for FY 2002.

    NASA's budget has remained approximately constant after adjusting for inflation since 1992; Clinton's budget increase for NASA in FY 01 was the first real budget for NASA since then.

    See http://www.aaas.org/spp/dspp/rd/ca01ag.htm#nasa [aaas.org]
    and
    http://www.space.com/news/spaceagencies/funding_20 02_010228.html [space.com]
  • The tuition measurement was the tuition at the time. Universities were a lot cheaper 25 years ago. :)

    You should have read the URL.

  • So many common day goods (flash freezing, microwaves, teflon ...) that we all know and love and depend on are direct spin-offs of the huge investment made in bleeding edge exploration. It is highly unlikely that any company could have afforded to develop these, had they even forseen the market.

    SO in a way, yes. NASA is welfare for scientists, but everyone benefits.

    In this light, I'd have to say that the budget cuts for NASA were the right thing. The ISS has never been that cutting edge or exploratary, so it is unclear what technological advances it would drive -- the earth is too close and will always be a crutch. A base on the MOON tho. Now that would be cool and useful!
  • by ansible ( 9585 ) on Friday March 02, 2001 @08:38AM (#390238) Journal

    Well, there's at least one project that has a better possibility of reducing launch costs to LEO. Check out Scorpius [smad.com] by Microcosm.

    Sure, it's not as sexy as new, untested wizz-bang technologies (like aerospike engines, composite H2 tanks, scramjets, etc.). It pretty much follows LEO on the Cheap [genastro.com] by Lt. Col John R. London. After reading this book, you'll start to really wonder why projects like the X-33 and X-34 were funded in the first place. You'll start to see the massive politics behind the space industry.

  • This is one of the best comments i have seen.

    I work 33% of the year to support uncle sam, and yet during tax time i still manage to owe more money then the deductions normally witheld from my paycheck

    Buying a condo was my tax break, being able to deduct my interest payments on my mortgage brought me to a manageable tax level

    Why should i as a person who has never taken disability, never taken unenmployemnt (althought i have been unemployed) and have my own healthcare and medical insurance be the one fitting such a huge tax burden for the people who actually make use of these services? Why should i pay for people to be unemployed whenever i can pay for my own education to keep myself from being unemployed?

    I make contributions to several different societies, from environmentalist to inner city foundations. I have my own life insurance, health insurance, disability insurance, retirement plan, savings plan, and cover my liability 100%.

    Why again am i working 3 months out of the year to protect someone who doesn't do this for themselves?

    Don't tell me they can't! I went to school, i did my work and still do my work and that is why i am here.

    I would be more then happy with a 20% tax bracket that allowed 13% more investment in myself and my direct future as well as supporting people who are trying to achieve independance

    This is totally off topic, but i'm glad NASA is streamlining rather then spending indefinatly.

    Even though i didn't vote for bush, if he can get this tax break through and revive the economy he will get my vote! And if nasa, the military and the general technology aspects of the us increase during his term, i will vote him next time.

    Until then, i'm fed up with how much i work to make everyone else life better when there is no one protecting my rights because i'm considered middle/upper middle class.

    I'm the one buying shoes, clothes, staying in the hotels, buying the meals, paying for cabs, paying for trains, flying around and spending the cash that supports the economy so why am i being taxed so heavily to let a government dictate who gets my money

    okay, offtope but i'm done hehe. some reason the tax part of this topic and postee pissed me off :)

  • by Thag ( 8436 ) on Friday March 02, 2001 @06:41AM (#390243) Homepage
    1. Set basic parameters for a desired launch vehicle: get x payload to y orbit for under z dollars/lb of payload.
    2. Guarantee to buy 5-10 launches from ANYONE who can come up with a viable launch vehicle (make them do a test flight first with a dummy payload of journalists). This gives them a chance of generating some cash flow out of the box.
    3. Provide legal/insurance umbrella for companies.
    4. Get the hell out of the way.
    5. There is no step 5.
    Jon Acheson
  • The Delta Clipper program was much more practical than the X-33 and X-34 programs. The DC-X scale prototype had already been successfully demonstrated, and used proven technology. I don't know why NASA didn't choose it for the X-33 program, but I suspect it is their standard mentality of always wanting to try some grandiose new bleeding-edge technology instead of using what we know we can build.

    There's nothing wrong with researching bleeding-edge technology, by all means we should do it. But when we're trying to build a "production use" vehicle, it should use proven technology.

    The X-33 concept relied on many unproven concepts. They've found that they can't even manufacture fuel tanks for it that will meet the extreme requirements!

  • As someone who works in and around NASA, this move doesn't seem to surprising to me at all.

    The reasoning for this move are, although sad, is rather obvious. People are not as interested in the space program anymore. Why?

    It is the combination of two things. First, the average American does not find space exploration exciting unless it is just that: exploration. Experiments and equipment testing, although necessary, just does not garner widespread public attention. This is an interesting catch-22 in our American society--the fact that people are so horrified when things go wrong (challenger) and blame lack of safety measurements etc, only to cut funding when not enough "exciting" missions occur in rapid succession. You can't have both, IMO.

    More importantly, the American people, and their associated representatives have been brainwashed into thinking that any money given to NASA is a frivolous investment, the funding of which could be better used on other programs. The idea that "space is our future" rarely applies anymore unless people see incredible advancements on a rapid schedule or politicians can find some political reasoning to voice their support.

    Which brings me to my second point. NASA has some real problems. Management fads are at the extreme in and around JSC. Politics and "pseudo-marketing" (hard to say NASA really "markets" anything, i hope you catch the distinction) have overrun the opinions and agendas of scientists and engineers. Which is where NASA's slogan of "better, cheaper, faster" becomes the biggest oxymoron in the world. NASA designs what must be some of the most complex, and most advanced machinery in the world. Not only that, but this machinery must withstand and incredible environment few can even fully comprehend. If you have read anything on the problems associated with building and designing the ISS, it is fairly plain to see that the technical achievment is very impressive. However, even with such incredible design potential, corners were cut that seem ridiculous in comparison to the money already spent. Likewise, the idea that "budget overrruns" are anything but to be expected in designing a reusable spacecraft is, IMO, ludicrous. Management yells, "we want safety and perfection!", and at the same time "hurry up!". The X-33 and 34 were great ideas that would have sped up and IMO, revitalized the space program. However, I'm sure that "public opinion experts" and budgeting gurus have stamped out these programs in favor of something more flashy like Mars exploration. Just don't be surprised if that runs way overbudget too.

    --rhad

  • The reason these millionaires are fighting against the repeal of the estate tax is because it doesn't affect them. Bill will never spend all of his billions, and neither will his kids. He's trying to look like a hero by saying "We make too much money already - please keep taking part of what we have earned." The people that would be most affected by this repeal is small-business owners. Right now, if your dad owns a coffee shop (or any kind of business) and dies, his estate is taxed. You may have to sell the shop just to pay those taxes! This is ludicrous. People should be able to keep what they earn, no matter how much or how little it is. We're taxed all of our lives anyway, so why is that money taxed again just because you die? Yes, it would help the rich keep more of what they earned, but it would help alot more people in the middle class keep the American Dream alive.
  • by pb ( 1020 )
    What does that mean when the *rich* fight against getting a tax cut?

    That's seriously bizarre. Oh well, I guess they can afford it. :)
    ---
    pb Reply or e-mail; don't vaguely moderate [ncsu.edu].
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • NASA is now strictly a research organization, albeit a benevolent one.

    "But let's be clear, it is a form of sponsorship for scientists, whose results are of interest only to other scientists. The days of NASA providing marketable benefits to the average American citizen are long gone."

    Mindsets like yours are extremely maddening! THE PURPOSE OF SCIENCE IS ***NOT*** MARKETABILITY!!!!! NASA was never intended to be a market research organization! Congress created NASA to put US space technology on a par with world-leading space technology, following the Soviet launch of Sputnik and the US launch failure in 1957. IT WAS NOT INTENDED TO PRODUCE MERCHANDISE!!! NASA EXISTS TO CONDUCT SCIENTIFIC SPACE RESEARCH!!!

    It is only the grace of God that any form of science ever results in economic benefits. The fact is, whoever learns how the world around them works, gains a significant advantage in the use of that world. Quite often, that results in a financial benefit--but, that is not the goal of pure scientific research! The idea that all worthwhile science results in immediate economic gratification is a form of brutish ignorance, on a par with people who question the need for a smoke alarm or fire extinguisher simply because they haven't ever needed one.

    NASA has a lot of problems, largely caused by people who don't know anything about science telling them what kind of programs they should be pursuing. For example, the United States probably should have a space station. However, the International Space Station is mostly a political and economic excuse, rather than the scientific research tool it might have been without outside interference. That's not to say that scientists always choose the most efficient way to conduct research; but at least scientists have a good idea as to the kind of research that should be conducted!

  • Developed countries are facing the problem of underpopulation, not overpopulation.
  • I work on the space program and the Shuttle does a damn good job. I have another question, why is it government has to re-invent the wheel everytime they decide to build something new? I've asked co-workers in the past, why don't we over time build new shuttles with upgraded equipment that would inturn be cheaper to launch?

    Down here they build something then run it into the ground. Then they start over from scratch! The X-33 was bound to fail from the beginning! The X-34 was not a replacement, it was a test bed. Look at Columbia, its still flying but when they built the others they were able to make them lighter which enable higher orbit or more payload.

    What do you prefer, upgrade old PC reusing some parts or buy all new stuff from scratch? When the bloodsucking auto makers build a new model do they start over with completely different brake pads and rotors or due they use the old proven design?

    Maybe the shuttle could have evolved over 30 years into the X-33 instead of trying to start from scratch after 20?
  • Actually, if there was pure refined gold on the Moon, using todays launch veichles, it would cost more that it would return to bring it to Earth.

    --
  • It is not "illegal to engage in private spacefaring." There's a large launch-services industry (SeaLaunch being one notable one.)

    You seem to be right. I couldn't find any reference to that ban. I know I heard space activists complain loudly about things like that 10 years ago, but if there ever was such a ban, it must be gone now.

    I'm dissapointed in how the system is currently structured, yes. NASA has always been in a quandry due to it's untenable status. It's funding is completely at the whim of each administration and subject to a great deal of external manipulation & "adjustment". [...] Rather I see changing the status of NASA or some successor agency to a more stable one with a more reliable budget as being an answer.

    But every government agency is subject to those whims. It's inherent in the governmental system. I think the difference is that most agencies delivier tangible benefits to large groups of voters, so they're harder to mess with. And you can't restructure that away.

    NASA was created with the mission to win the space race part of the cold war. That mission is accomplished, so it's current purpose is pretty vague.

    On the other hand as I noted I don't see any supposed "privitization" being preferable. Already many STS services are privately managed yet there seems little cost savings.

    Is this odd? No - I don't think going to an extreme, particularly an extreme I consider an innapropriate response to be the optimal solution.


    This rhetorical trick of pretending there is only my alternative and a very extreme and scary one is called "false choice". In reality there are of course many different options.

    I found this article on a libertarian space policy. It makes a lot of sense to me. An interesting fact it mentions is that around 60% of space spending is already done by private industry.

    http://www.lp.org/lpnews/0005/libsolutions.html

    Favorite quote: "no government agency that runs with the efficiency of the Pentagon and the U.S. Postal Service will ever realize the dream of commercially viable orbiting stations or moon bases."

    Tell me, do you find it odd that you assert falsehoods, competely disregard the point of much of my posting then misrepresent my position ?

    Oh please. Don't be childish.
  • Guess where that 950millions really went to...

    Karma karma karma karma karmeleon: it comes and goes, it comes and goes.
  • See, everybody wanted to build a single-stage-to-orbit spaceship. If you do the math, you'll find that it's just barely not impossible to do this; but to do it you have to cut every possible corner. So, fairly quickly it was determined that the X33 would not actually reach orbit, but would be a hypersonic technology demonstrator.

    Exactly. The same thing happened to Rotary Rocket. [rotaryrocket.com] The original plan was to build a single-stage-to-orbit vehicle, but after problems with the "rotary engine" concept, it was downgraded to a suborbital technology demonstrator.

    Single stage to orbit rockets powered by chemical fuels are inherently marginal. Well over 90% of the vehicle weight at launch has to be fuel, so there are terribly restrictive weight constraints on the vehicle. (By comparison, a commercial airliner at takeoff is typically less than half fuel by weight.) This is the basic reason space travel is just barely possible.

    In some ways, that's the problem. If chemical fuels with twice the energy density were available, space travel would be straightforward. If the best fuels had half the energy density, chemical rockets would be hopeless, and atomic-powered space travel (which is quite feasable, provided you launch from somewhere isolated enough for atmospheric nuclear testing) would have been tried by now. But because it's just barely possible to do it with chemical fuels, we're stuck with a marginal technology.

  • In the 60's there was a fork in aircraft design: super-fast (Concorde) or super-large (Boeing 747).

    Both developments were underwritten by governments, UK/France for Concorde & US's DOD for 747.

    The market went with super-large. Why? Primarily efficiency; Super-large turned out to be more economical in a fleet then super-fast. Cost per passenger-mile was lower as was cost per passenger-hour. As a primary limiting factor is gate access it proved easier to get a (then) gate-and-a-half for a single 747 boarding then three or four for equivalant Concorde flights. Finally after supersonic flight was banned over land many of the planned Concorde routes were closed to it (I remember the Concorde gate at the Kansas City airport sitting empty for years.)

    The Soviets did fly their Concordski for many years though I believe they went out of service awhile ago. Aside from that no one has been able to figure out a model that would support wide-spread use of supersonic fight enough to underwrite development costs (Concorde has certianly never paid back it's R&D expenses.) Many countries have done extensive research on next-gen supersonic aircraft but none have shown a compelling economic advantage.

    Indeed aside from Canada underwriting Bombardier's progress in mid-size/mid-haul aircraft (& revitalizing that market) the only major development is Airbus's mega-development A380 with 555 seats. Promising to out-jumbo the 747 it has a several customers signed up & is going ahead with production development. Boeing has responded with yet another extension of it's 747 platform but has declined to commit to an entirely new aircraft.

    Many of the R&D projects on supersonic flights have now begun to be curtailed. As the industry moves further and further to giant aircraft and the problems of economical supersonic flight remain intractable a next-generation successor to Concorde becomes more & more unlikely. With it EOL'd at 2010 you better start saving now before the era is over.

  • He's saying that there is no real way to remove all the loopholes but eliminate as many of them and eliminate that nasty class warfare the democrats play with a flat tax.
  • Blockquoth the poster:
    without any signs of success.
    Except for the successful firing of the linear aerospike engine, one of the coolest concepts in aerospace.
  • I have thought about it from both ends, thank you very much. Have you?

    An inheritance is a particular form of gift that only occurs at death. Now I understand why they do gift taxes so that people can't just get around income taxes by giving and receiving gifts. But an inheritance gift isn't done for income tax avoidance purposes so that's not an issue. On top of that, have you thought of what these kind of financial concerns do to people in the grieving process? The kids want to fulfill dad's wishes to keep his dream alive but they have a very short countdown before they have to pay a crippling tax payment. Unless you are one of the super rich who can afford the expensive attorneys to finesse this, the process dumps a big burden to the grieving family. Now that's really fair and moral isn't it?

    Furthermore, the estate tax collects just about enough money to pay for the people who harrass grieving families into paying it. As a revenue generator, it's a wash. So guess what, the money doesn't go to the kids, it doesn't go to the tar-paper shack family on the other side of the tracks, it goes to pay treasury agents who have an upper-middle class income derived from financially pressuring families who have just suffered the loss of a parent. Oh I can see morality written all over this, can't you?

    The death tax is a form of institutionalized class envy enforced through state action. The last time I checked, envy, in all its forms, was considered a sin by most moral systems and certainly any system that I'd want to follow.

    I suspect that you really don't know the libertarian line here and have a fairly prejudiced idea about what libertarians believe in. Let me give it to you in a nutshell. Libertarians believe that the government is an institiution that survives by applying violence to accomplish societal goals. Libertarians believe that the number of areas where this is appropriate is small and shrinking and we would like to reduce and eliminate the level of government violence from as many areas of societal action as possible.

    DB
  • Blockquoth the poster:
    If I give you a dollar last year, and then $1.10 this year (but meanwhile your costs have increased 30%) I HAVEN'T CUT YOUR BUDGET. Unless of course, you're a bleeding heart that believes that all government programs are *entitled* to continual and eternal funding increases with inflation....
    ...or a right-wing warhawk who believes that the inability to fight a two-front war a la WWII versus two indpendent opponents each with the strength of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s is somehow an indication that the barbarians are at the gate and we're "selling out" the military.

    ...or a law-and-order candidate who feels that failure to keep the cop-on-the-beat budget implies a surrender to criminals

    . ...or a personal-automobile fanatic who believes that simple maintenance of existing roads is a plot of pot-smoking fuzzy-headed greenniks.

    The point is, it's easy to demonize this sort of thinking (that failing to adjust for cost-of-living is a cut in itself). But it's also virtually useless. If you ask the ordinary "citizen on the street", you'll find that, in their heart of hearts, they begin from a status quo assumption: Let's keep everything where it is now, EXCEPT...

    Economists have dealt with this paradox for so long, they've come up with mechanisms to cope. For example, things can be quoted in "real dollars" or "constant 2000 dollars" or whatever. This is more than a trick. Since money is just a measurement of your ability to purchase, inflation really does eat into your money supply. This year, with the same $100, you buy less "stuff" than last year. Thus, your $100 is worth less than last year -- and so, you've been given less than last year.

    As a child of the late 1970s, I understand inflationg real good... a failure to adjust for cost-of-living is a cut.

  • The reason I ask if you read the article in detail is that it states one thing, but cites facts which imply another. It is an impressive achievement of spin, but little else. Bush did not win a statewide recount, he won the recount based on undervotes in the counties Al Gore tried to have selectively counted (according to the article you cited). The article implies Bush won the state, when in fact they only discussed a subset of the existing data and ignored a large portion of the data gleaned from recounts in other, more republican areas which surprisingly favored Gore.

    Specifically, recounts conducted by the Orlando Sentinal [orlandosentinel.com] and further discussed in the Kausfiles [msn.com] indicate that the overvote in largely republican counties, ignored by both sides, would have resulted in a win by Al Gore by several thousand votes, even using the most stringent recount standards. The reason turns out to be the unambiguous votes by many first time voters, who voted for Al Gore, then wrote in Al Gore and marked the write-in box as well. As unambiguous votes they would have, by law, been counted for Al Gore. Apparently many people misunderstood the write-in box as a "confirmation" box, a sort of check to make sure the vote was counted correctly (and is a strong indication that voters really do need to be educated in exactly how the ballotting process works).

    The upshot is this: If Al Gore had gotten his way (selective recounts of Democratic counties) Bush would have been declared the winner. However, if the entire state had been recounted correctly, current data indicate that Al Gore would have won handsomely. It is an interesting ethics lesson, both that, had Al Gore done "the right thing" he would have won and no one could have reasonably denied him a recount.

    By all indications, Al Gore won the election, both in Florida and in the US as a whole. The Bush camp knew (or at least suspected) that this was the case and pressed ahead, taking the presidency without a full and proper accounting of the votes in the state (contrary to every other close election in the country, where recounts were in fact conducted, including hand recounts of ballats unreadable by machine).

    The fact that the opposing side behaved in a disengenous manner by not requesting a statewide recount and trying to select particular counties instead does not in any way diminish the fact that the Bush camp has usurped the electorial process and taken office in opposition to the explicit will of the American people. That makes him a usurper as far as I am concerned, and I strongly suspect history will, in time, agree, no matter the amount of spin his supporters may put on the issue in the short term.

    Finally, I should note that my point in referring to Dubya as the Usurper is not intended to somehow "drive him from power", but to be in his face that he doesn't belong there, he has no mandate, and he'd better tread softly and not attempt to shove his right-wing agenda down our unwilling throats. It is important that we as a people show as much backbone as we can, in a peaceful manner, lest such behavior be repeated in the future (perhaps next time by the democrats). Our democracy is more important than either of those clowns (and for the record, I didn't vote for either of them), and it does not serve our democracy at all for us to take this sort of thing without comment, nor for our so-called "fourth estate" to curry favor in an effort to enhance their access to public figures by promoting such blatently biased spin.
  • They are incorporated, but that does not prevent the IRS from forcing liquidity, especially when they're majority shareholders. Now, in their case, it's an absolute necessity to incorporate, but you're simply ignorant if you think incorporating is a magic bullet. First, there are significant additional costs (e.g., getting taxed twice). Second, the structure does not make sense for every company and the liabilities run all over the map. Incorporating may free the investor from direct personal liability, but it does not free the shareholders/investors from losing everything they put into the company.

    In any event, if you read my comments a little more carefully, you would have noticed words such as "shareholders". These, at the very least, imply that the companies are corporations.
  • I means they have an alternative motive. If they were really worried about the poor, they could more than make up for the tax cuts.
  • by small_dick ( 127697 ) on Thursday March 01, 2001 @07:49PM (#390364)
    these programs were not just nasa...they were ventures made up of several leading aerospace companies, many of whose shareholders are rich, and were hoping (obviously) for a nice production run, as well as high tech spinoffs that would keep the USA and her economy strong.

    In recessive times, sometimes it's not best to go into production, but just stick with r&d.

    the X34 and X33 were both fairly close to production, so a lot of r&d is already done.

    Here are linx for anyone interested :

    X33 [lockheedmartin.com] and X34 [lockheedmartin.com] and more in-depth stuff at x33 (nasa) [nasa.gov] and X34 (nasa) [nasa.gov]

    What a shame. The linear aerospike engine was in test, the frame and skin were waiting for the tank, and the launchpad is almost done.

    These technologies and programs would have created thousands of jobs as they trickled down through the US economy.

  • Because that would blow their cover. They don't give a shit about farmers, but they hold them up as a shield against those that say it is just for the rich.
    Dictionary example of a political pawn.
  • by Johnny Starrock ( 227040 ) on Thursday March 01, 2001 @07:53PM (#390369)
    Government involvment in space exploration is a good thing...

    I'm all for corporations getting involved in space, but without NASA real science will cease. Why? It makes no immediate financial sense. NEAR? Forget it, no one will go to a Gap on Eros. Pathfinder? Forget it, people want the SUVs, not the rover.

    Without NASA, we'd have never gone to the moon. We'd not have had Hubble. WE'D NEVER KNOW IF ANTS COULD SORT TINY SCREWS IN SPACE!!!

    The very least they could do is send that money to education, instead of spending it on some other frivolous cause.. More than likely that moeny will go to our wonderfully worthless space defense system. I know! Let's void treaties with our allies to protect ourselves against a non-existant threat!!
  • The linear aerospike engine was in test, the frame and skin were waiting for the tank, and the launchpad is almost done.

    If all that is true, then let NASA release the design to the public domain, and let private companies build it. That would create a lot more jobs.


    --

  • by Arker ( 91948 ) on Thursday March 01, 2001 @07:54PM (#390371) Homepage

    While you make a good point, it's just... wrong to use the word rich as you are using it, and the fact the media uses it that way is not an excuse. True rich people don't pay taxes, to any significant degree. They have accountants and lawyers and investments and lots of write-offs and loopholes - they aren't people that work for a good salary, they are people that have so much money IT supports them.

    The people that pay the most taxes, and thus the ones that benefit most from tax cuts, are not rich people - they are upper middle-class people that work for a living at well above average wages. They are usually professionals that have worked their way to the top of their field, senior database analysts, network admins, engineers, etc. Lumping them together with people that never need to work, that make far more money than they are likely to ever even see, simply by sitting on their arse and letting their money work for them, is bizaare and I dare say absurd.

    Sure, a guy that makes say, 100-160k/year is better off than the guy flipping burgers - but he's a world away from folks like Buffet, Turner, Gates or Bush. And he's the one shouldering the tax burden - not them.


    "That old saw about the early bird just goes to show that the worm should have stayed in bed."
  • by maggard ( 5579 ) <michael@michaelmaggard.com> on Thursday March 01, 2001 @07:56PM (#390373) Homepage Journal
    Of course now we're left relying on the Shuttles: Conceived in the 50's, designed in the 60's, built in the 70's, and now flying since the 80's.

    Refurbishing the vehicles can only go so far - the original design was a test and we've never moved beyond it. We've learnt a lot about high-performance hydrogen motors, thermal insulation, airframe requirements, etc. but it's all for naught if none of it is ever applied to a version two.

    Limiting the Shuttle fleet to 6 flights a year won't help things much. Sure it's less wear & tear but they're still getting long in the tooth and could be greatly improved on. Unfortunately there's been a requirement for some sort of great-leap-forward when really much of what's required is a simple evolution and refinement.

    Much of the basic question of course is why we're in space and what our goals are. I (and yes I'm not alone on this, no need for a poll) believe that there's incredible opportunity there. I also believe that a national program is a good because many of the costs are larger then industry is willing to pay (most of the supposed privatization is pay-us-we'll-do-it-for-you.)

    I don't entirely believe the folks that claim privatization is the solution-to-all-problems (Ride British railways lately? Electricity in California?) If commercial space flight truly *is* viable then why aren't more companies investing their own dollars into it and not trying to pry open the public purse?

    This seems one of those areas that public investment will yield benefits for everyone, much like hydro projects and managed public lands. Too big & long-term for companies to pursue independently but suited to governments.

    I don't see it being too long before we'll be able to 'capture' one of the closer asteroids (presumably one whose orbit brings it near to Earth) and eventually steer it someplace convenient. with it in place as a source of material we'd be able to construct nifty things like cost-effective power satellites and tele-operated mining & refining of materials for use on Earth.

    All of this requires however that we have a reasonable means of getting reliably and regularly to at least low Earth orbit and that is slowly slipping through our fingers. We know there's something like a .1% chance of an accident every launch, with only 4 aging orbiters we're putting a lot of eggs in very few baskets.

  • They are against repealing of estate taxes, not tax cuts. Two totally different issues.

    Oh, I see... When you were talking about millionairs being stupid, you were only refering to millionairs that were opposed to general tax cuts, not just the repeal of the estate tax? Well, then, I guess all your ranting and raving has nothing to do with this article. The article only talks about rich people opposing the repeal of the estate tax.

    By the way, if you want to be taken at all seriously by anyone who isn't a rabid Republican (i.e. most of us), you should get rid of that sig.

    ------

  • by Anonymous Coward
    Because the "rich" people comming out against the tax cut are what would be called "uber" rich. At one point BG was worth 90 billion on paper. W/ a death tax that would still leave 45 billion for his family. What he fails to see, and many apparently, is the farmer or small business owner who has worked all his life to earn 1-2 million. After a 55% cut, that doesn't leave much. Sure it might be $1 million. But keep this in mind. That farm may be worth $2 million. But the catch is that you must sell it to pay the 55% tax. Slashdot loves to point out the evils of corps. Well, if you levy a 55% tax and force people to sell their businesses to pay it, the only businesses w/ any power will be faceless corps.
  • Reading the comments in that tax article about meritocracy and mobility, it becomes painfully obvious why a person like George W Bush would want to abolish the estate tax. In fact, I doubt a better example has ever lived on this planet.

    (The Bushes, incidentally, are a wealthy, well-connected family with roots in the english monarchy many generations back. Their 'status' predates the formation of the USA.)

    --

  • by mech9t8 ( 310197 ) on Thursday March 01, 2001 @08:38PM (#390380)
    As I understand it, NASA has money under a program called the Space Launch Initiative (SLI). X-33 was funded under that program. NASA has decided that the X-33 wasn't using the money effectively, and has decided to distribute that money instead to numerous other related projects.

    Basically, they decided the technology wasn't there to put all there eggs in one basket (the X-33/Venturestar) and do so some more R&D. This is a smart decision and a Good Thing: pumping money into a project that's ahead of its time is exactly how we got stuck with the Space Shuttle.

    (In fact, the SLI budget has actually increased 64% in this budget. More money is actually being spend to develop cheap launching technologies.)

    Good article at http://www.spaceflightnow.com/news/n0103/01x33/ind ex2.html
  • I noticed that it is generally in the human nature, to be too short sighted when there seems to be no problem in the short range. It has happened numerous times before in the human history, that actions not taken in their due time had to be corrected (if there was such a possibility) when they became real problems.

    In the case of NASA, I think they are making a most severe mistake. The X-33 and X-34 were the first steps to opening the space for the rest of us. I believe that humanity strives towards the stars, and a convenient (read: modern and cheap) shuttle system is crucial for our first step outwards.

    Machiavelli compared the actions of a prudent man to an archer. The archer can not be sure that the arrow will descend too much during its flight. And the proper solution is not to discard arrows, but send them a bit higher.

  • oh mighty troll master...just follow the links and the truth will be revealed.

    and private companies were building it -- with government support -- the same way airbus is kicking the shit out of boeing.

    the USA is going to stagnate heavily in technology if the best we can do is wait for rich people to spend money on high risk projects. historically, it doesn't work.

  • The Right Stuff seems to paint the picture that in the 50's the Air Force had it right the whole time and NASA screwed it up. In the 90's, the AF seemed to have huge sucesses in space deployment, except for projects where congress made them do things NASA's way. Now in the 21st century, the Air Force is funding another round of low cost expendible rockets (they have too, they're running out of old ICBM's and the shuttle can't lift a MILSTAR), and NASA seems to only be interested in doing things the least cost effective way possible. I'm not saying that total militarization of space is the answer, but someone needs to do SOMETHING about NASA.
  • I'm hoping that the Military will atleast get its act together and militarize space properly. We need obiting battlecrusiers. :)

    The military is what kicked the airline industry into high gear. Before World War II, the airline industry was struggling to stay afloat transporting a few thousand passengers a year in old biplanes, hoping they didn't crash too often.

    After WWII, the airlines got to use all the aircraft technology developed during the war. The first post-war airliners were converted bombers, which were larger, faster and more efficient. The airlines were now capable of the holy grail of Making Money! The military is much more interested in efficient development and use of technology, since the consequences of inefficiency are high (being blown to smithereens.) If the military decided they needed a much larger presence in space (for missile defense for instance,) chances are a cheap launch vehicle would be developed in a hurry. A few years later, the military technology would trickle down to the civilian market and we would have cheap spaceliners.

    This almost makes me want a good Cold War style arms race between the U.S. and China, if it weren't for the risk of nuclear Armageddon. If Dubya decides to build a missile defense system, China and Russia would respond by building zillions of ICBMs, which would prompt the US to improve the missile defense, creating a higher demand for space launches, thus necessitating the development of a cheap, reusable, reliable, high-turnaround launch vehicle. Hopefully the civilian market for launches, manned spaceflight and colonization will develop before someone presses the Button.

  • Several points. First of all I think that you should read up on the tax situation and how it is working.

    Second, these desicions are made within NASA, and with the cost overrun of the space station, there is just less money to spend on these projects. Why would NASA cut this project? Its simple, the technology has been proven, and in order to make something like this a reallity it will take huge sums of money. When the time comes that NASA needs a new reusable launch vehicle, they will recieve the funding to do it, and it will cost more than expected, just like the shuttle and the space station.

    NASA does not like to take on more than one project, and have shown themselves to be best when working towards a finite and defined goal, with little distraction and lots of money.

    There is also money in the budget for further development on new technologies, and when the time comes that they are needed, they will be given more funding.

    This is how NASA has always worked, regardless of the administration.

  • by tenchiken ( 22661 ) on Thursday March 01, 2001 @08:47PM (#390394)
    I actually would not even grace it that much. Reality check (with statistics from Time/Newsweek etc):

    Myth: The poor pay most of the taxes in America
    Reality: The lower classes in america do not pay any taxes. As you go up, the tax burden goes up.

    Just look at the tax cut. The bottom run of the tax scheme goes from 15%->10%, a 33% cut. The top rung goes from 36%->33% about a 9% cut. Further realize that only about ~120 million american's even pay taxes in the first place. The others actually get money back, even though they never paid anything.

    Myth: But they just deduct everything.
    Reality: Ever heard of the AMT (Alternative Minimum Tax?)The AMT is an amount that you can not deduct under, and as usual, it is a very high number in the higher brackets.

    Here is a good argument about the mostly liberal billionairs that spoke up. [time.com] The wealthy are conservitive, but right now, no changes is a liberal position.

    BTW, Boeing and Lockheed Martin are about to loose the JSF. GE did make a bonaza on the air market a few years back, but that's clinton's territory, the defense industry is getting ready for another round of base cuts, and budget cuts (Bush's new money goes to get our millitary people off of food stamps... yes you read that right).

    BTW, the Economist [economist.com] has a pretty good write up.

    BTW, one of the things that Bush is trying to do is get rid of the hump in the tax code between 20k and 27k where there is strangly a 31% tax, surrounding two 16-16% ranges. Oh... yes.. now I remember why that is there, so the poor stay poor.

    As for the rest and the entire argument about "payroll taxes" thoose taxes are social security and medicare, programs that are completly seperate. If you don't like that tax, repeal Social Security ;-) (C'mon... I dare ya).

    Why should there be a tax cut? The percent of the GDP that is being eaten [whitehouse.gov] is the highest it has ever been.
  • I suggest people who start complaining about tax cuts being focused on the rich try giving it some thought instead of just shooting from the hip. You may think that you could make a tax cut that isn't aimed at the rich, but it just doesn't happen. You see, when you focus a tax cut on the lower tax brackets, you might think that the poor can take advantage of it, and the rich can't. But that simply isn't true.

    First, the lower and even middle class do not have the resources necessary to take advantage of tax laws. How many of you have known someone who barely jumped passed a cutoff for a tax bracket, and ended up with less money than if they had earned less? I had a friend in college who made $4000 less because she earned $2000 more.

    So, a tax cut for the lower classes would not make much difference for many people. But how about the rich? Could they take advantage of them? Hell, yeah! The more money you have, the more likely it is you have a full time accountant working for you. That means they can take advantage of all of the best tax dodges - perfectly legally, too, although they don't always stop there. It's fairly simple for a millionaire to be in a low tax bracket, especially after retirement. Remember it's income tax, not bank account tax.

    The point is, it doesn't matter for which tax bracket you intend a tax cut, it is for the rich.
  • That statistic is quoted from the American's for Tax Justice. As you might imagine, they happen to be a rather liberal partisan bunch. Their projections were done ignoring the fact that Bush changes tax ranges as well, and also the fact that Bush does not change the AMT (which they failed to take into account).
  • Well, let's assume not. Though I don't approve of government programs in general, I've got to say that the cut programs would be ones on my personal save list. But your comments on taxes betray a real lack of understanding about what is going on. Rich people pay more taxes, so OF COURSE in a straight line cut, they are going to save more. Let's see: If I pay $500,000 in taxes, a 10% tax cut would mean I save $50,000. (Though still paying, please note, $450,000!) Whereas, if I pay 5,000 in taxes, my savings would be $500. Duh. Is this horrible? I think not. People with a large income tend to be the most productive people. What do you want to do, give people a disincentive to be productive? We already do way too much of that, imnsho. Jeez....next you'll be telling us that government actually makes good and efficient use of our money that it takes.....
  • And yet another who doesn't get it. The reason that Warren Buffet, in particular, is against repealing the death tax is because it puts him out of several convenient tax shelters, meaning every dollar he "earns" will now be taxed, instead of sheltered in trusts and such.

    If you look closely, the loudest opponents of the repeal tend to be of two groups: the very rich (who will now get all their income taxed) or the estate lawers and CPA's associations (who would lose their source of income; namely, helping the very wealthy escape government taxation of their assests). Seems these two groups aren't all that concerned about "meritocracy" after all; they're out to save their own fat paychecks.

    Ask the farm family from the midwest whose $1 million farm has to be liquidated after the death of the parents simply to pay off this tax. Double-(or sometimes triple)taxing someone's income just ain't right...

    -------------
  • There are certain endeavors that will necessarily have to be government programs. The military is an obvious example. I would submit that space exploration is another. The reason for this is that there is little about space exploration that is profitable. Now, there are some space-related tasks that are always going to be in demand for example, such as launching satellites. But let's face it -- there's not much innovation involved there. You strap your spacecraft on top of a Delta 2 (which is a Boeing vehicle, BTW) and launch the sucker. It's been done so many times that it's become routine and (relatively) inexpensive.

    For other fields related to space exploration, such as the development of the Hubble Space Telescope and the Next Generation Space Telescope or the exploration of the outer Solar System, things are a bit different. I find it hard to believe that if NASA were dissolved tomorrow, aerospace companies would be falling all over each other to spend considerable amounts of money to do research. It's not profitable, and that is the paramount concern when a company weighs the merits (and demerits) of a particular venture. Lockheed-Martin is not going to spend millions of dollars to send a vehicle to study the atmosphere of Pluto. Raytheon is not going to spend millions of dollars to develop space-based instruments to study the effect of gamma-ray bursts.

    Now, I would submit that these are important areas of study. Many people would disagree. But the end result is that if we want to do these things, we have to fund them publically. There is simply no profitable way that private companies can do these things on their own. The result of this is people that are unhappy about the way that their tax dollars are being spent, and that's fine. I cannot fathom a government that could spend its tax revenues in a manner that is acceptable to every last one of its citizens. The question is whether or not the expenditure is justified.

    In the grand scheme of things, NASA's budget is a tiny fraction of the entire federal budget, and it is for this reason that I am continually puzzled by those who make NASA their favorite whipping boy when it comes to government waste. If people want to complain about NASA, fine .. but why aren't these same people complaining about Congress spending billions of dollars on aircraft carriers the Pentagon doesn't even want simply because the contractor building the carrier happens to reside in a key Senator's congressional district?

    Now, I am not claiming that NASA can't do things better. There's a lot of red tape that can be cut. But let's not throw the baby out with the bathwater.
  • Bill Gate's net worth is equal to the net worth of the bottom 50% of the people in the united states. Rich people do pay more taxes, but thats because they can afford to do so. Would you rather the government place the same tax burden on everyone and force the poor to starve to death?

    Many taxes are not proportionate. The social security taxes are collected primarily from low and middle income people, but these funds are often "borrowed" to pay for other government programs. Property taxes are linear. Sales taxes are linear and often affect rich people less. Use taxes like vehicle registration, fishing permits, park passes are paid mostly by middle class and poor people. Many rich people hire accountants to create tax shelters or divert their funds to non-profit organizations that operate as charities to promote the causes of rich people. Dubaya's daddys rich friends put him in office. This tax cut is for them, the ceos of enron, philip morris and time warner and as a result a larger portion of the tax burden will be shifted to middle and low income people. Rich people are not special people crowned by god, they often got rich because of oportunities they were afforded by living in this nation, because of our system of laws and government infastructure. Its only fair that People who reap the bennifits of our system pay their share.

    The worst part about this proposed tax cut is that in the future, when this money could have been used to fix social security and improve education, the poor of our country will be the ones really hurt by this. Bend over america its time to bow down the ruling class.

    Thank god dubaya wasnt able to produce a heir to the throne.
  • Oh, so it looks like these "rich" people don't trust themselves since even with this tax repeal they still would be able to donate all their money to some worthy cause.
    Repealing this tax promotes freedom as anyone who not wishes to pass their wealth "down the lines" can still do so but others who are not willing to go that way are free to do what they want.
  • The reason the descendents of Carnegie and Rockerfeller are not among the wealthiest
    people is because estate taxes are doing
    thier job. The high "death tax" was intended
    to prevent financial dynasties. People of
    all walks of life, including those from wealthy
    families, are supposed to have to work, or otherwise make their own fortune. Or at
    least their children. Or their grandchildren.
    Maybe you're rich enough that your estate, divided among Uncle Sam and all your descendents
    down to your grandchildren, will be sufficient that your great grandchildren never have to work.
    The whole idea of the estate tax is to make that very uncommon. Unamerican, even.

  • You say the top 1% in this country pay 23% of the federal tax bill. You seem to be suggesting that they should pay only 1%; that's only fair, right?

    But what you don't say is that the top 1% in this country have 90% of the wealth! The bottom 50% have about 5% of the wealth. So if they're paying 4% of the taxes, then they are paying their fair share easy. And the taxes on the top 1% should be quadrupled.

    So sorry, but it is not "fair" that the rich should pay so much less in taxes when they have a greatly disproportionate amount of wealth. It is unfair for all the rest of us.

  • by Ektanoor ( 9949 ) on Thursday March 01, 2001 @08:16PM (#390419) Journal
    So US where are we now? Where's the Moon base. Where is the permanent all-mighty Space Station? Whereis Man on Mars? Where is the Hypersonic plane? Where are the powerful and dynamic Shuttles, the space robots + probes + telescopes + ++++++ that you promised long ago and which would roam every corner of our Solar System and look further and further into the Universe? Where is the XXI century on the edge of the Future?

    Sincerly, the only thing I see from those tons of popular science that you guys gave as "sure" for this time, is the attempt to create the "weapons of the future". No matter the absurd, the danger and the stupidity. Sorry people but I do remember what we had as "promised" by 1975. Masers, lasers, anti-ICBMs and some other stuff was already on study by then, and there were predictions that our damn XXI century would see such weapons. Well, just a little ago /. talked bout masers and Marines... And anti-ICBM whoopla is running full-steam on Pentagon.

    So let's predict what we will see 30 from now...
    The remains of ISS rising from a Florida swamp... The budget was to tight to reach the Atlantic and Russia was always cash stripped or Europe din't give a bunch or Japan was to afraid to see falling in the Pacific. Anyway, after so many years the ship was not only fungy but also radioactive. So finally no one will mess with Florida swamps.

    A mess of small and useless high-speed rockets for US taxpayers happyness. And to help other taxpayers not to forget their own military.

    Shuttleland, the only solution to this piece of technological scrap. Well at least kids will be happy.

    A whole trashyard of commercial, subcommercial, protocommercial and ex-commercial satellites. And a few military satellites for commercial purposes (I'm not kidding! That's started to happening now!..). And all debris that come from them.

    Man on Space. Man on Space... Man on Space? That's a hoax! And you believed that we got to the Moon? Yeah, and tell me that we reached Mars with space probes...

    Star Treck will be a long forgotten series and Star Wars turn to a silly fantasy film. 2001 will just be what it was - some madness from some schizo. Aliens will no longer bother us so we calmly close X-Files and go play basketball.

  • I have no idea where this misinfomation came from, but, here goes.....

    Bill gate's father is a well-known family in Seatle. Bill Gate's had a million dollar trust fund before he even went to Harvard. Of course, before he even went to Harvard, he graduated from a prep school (who's tuition was 3x harvard's). His father was, and is ``one of the richest and most prominent lawyers in the state of washington.''

    http://philip.greenspun.com/bg/

    If that's not a privileged family, I'm not sure what is. :)

  • by tbo ( 35008 ) on Thursday March 01, 2001 @09:39PM (#390423) Journal
    But hey, at least rich people get a tax cut (even if they don't want one)..."

    Not sure whether this is offtopic or a troll, but it's definitely not relevant to NASA. As someone pointed out, NASA got a 3% funding increase this year--the first in 7 years. I fail to see how Bush's tax plan has anything to do with the cancellation of X-33, X-34.

    That said, the people trashing Bush's plan seem to have no knowledge of economics. First of all, really rich (and even some moderately rich) people will be unaffected by the plan. They already dodge estate and income taxes through tax loopholes and offshore investments, etc. I know this because my ex-girlfriend's parents sheltered a good chunk of money in Luxembourg, and now live happily on their yacht without paying any substantial taxes. If they die, no estate tax will touch any of that money. The only thing affected will be their house. In other words, with an estate tax, if you're rich and you want to leave a fortune to your kids, no problem. If you want to bequeath your farm or family home, tough luck.

    So who does benefit from the tax cut? The middle class, primarily, especially professionals earning in the $50K - $150K range. Lower income people do benefit, too, just not as much.

    Finally, I suggest you study the Laffer Curve [vistech.net] to see why tax cuts can actually increase net tax revenue, as they did during the Reagan years. "What?" the liberals shriek, "the deficit increased during the 80's!" Yes, but that's because spending drastically increased. Tax revenues actually increased in response to tax cuts, just not enough to keep up with spending (Reagan poured tons of money into the military in an effort to win the Cold War). Look up the stats if you don't believe me.
  • by zencode ( 234108 ) on Thursday March 01, 2001 @08:16PM (#390425) Homepage
    "...but the general public really doesn't give a hoot about space. Space used to be a nationalistic thing. The moon landing (which did occur) is probably the one thing that really brought together the US as one nation. Since then, there's been interest in space, but it has been dwindling."

    i think you have it backwards. the public isn't interested because we haven't done anything worth being interested in.

    My .02,

  • by BRSQUIRRL ( 69271 ) on Thursday March 01, 2001 @08:17PM (#390427)
    One word: inflation. A budget increase of 3% is meaningless if inflation has increased by more than that amount over the past seven years (the time span since their last budget increase).
  • by Ukab the Great ( 87152 ) on Thursday March 01, 2001 @09:40PM (#390431)
    ...actually got off the ground and flew around. Okay, so it crashed and burned after a few flights. But that's still one better than the X-33, which crashed and burned today while still on the drawing board. For those who don't know, the Delta Clipper was a rocket designed three or four years ago that could take off and land vertically (in a sort of 1930's Buck Rogers type style). The Delta Clipper's design was not as high-tech and complex a design as the X-33. It certain wasn't sexy. But the damn thing got at least several thousand feet in the air, performed all sorts manuvers unusal for rockets taking off from earth, and had several successful landings (before it went up in flames). If NASA had stuck with the project and produced a really big Delta Clipper, we might have had a totally reusable launch vehicle a year or two ago. But that just wasn't good enough for NASA (Sigh).

    There seems to be a recurring theme in high technology where an already-existing, simple solution that solves annoying problem is passed over for the promise of some ridiculously complex and grandiose scheme that never materializes.

  • Do your part and start smoking.
  • by Greg@RageNet ( 39860 ) on Thursday March 01, 2001 @08:17PM (#390433) Homepage
    Who's been the biggest beneficiary of the US government's actions as of late?

    Why that would be those who get subsidized heating oil, food stamps, and diapers for their little brats they shouldn't have had because they knew they couldn't afford them. Based on the amount paid in vs. benefits recieved the lazy, unproductive leaches of society (i.e. the unworking poor) are certainly the biggest beneficiaries.


    dividends and increased share prices, which are already taxed at a lower rate than earned income.


    BZZT! wrong! 'Capital gains' is taxed at 20%, thats' after the corporation pay's its tax rate of 36%, an effective tax rate of ~50%

    When will people like you realize that punishing the productive of society (i.e. the rich) while rewarding the unproductive (i.e. the poor) taken to it's logical conclusion results in a society where everyone is unproductive and society crumbles.

    Get a fucking job like the rest of us busting our asses to get ahead.

    -- Greg
  • by Alien54 ( 180860 ) on Thursday March 01, 2001 @08:20PM (#390439) Journal
    The following is interesting, as the author makes interesting points re: the x33 and x34 cancellation:

    I expect a number of people will be distressed at this. I am not. The Space Station was an ill-designed nightmare. The US space program desperately needs on-orbit assembly capability. To do that we need space suits that don't require pre-breathing before use. NASA has known this for 20 years, and has had such suit designs available since 1980. I have a signature in my log book of a NASA test subject in a 12 psi above ambient suit, signed after about 6 hours in it, attesting to general comfort. Of course he was a 22 year old rigger not a 45 year old Ph.D. which is what NASA sends up. The whole manned space program is a shambles because we don't have decent suits.

    Without on orbit assembly capability -- I mean real work in space done by riggers who can do a day's work -- things have to be pre-assembled and taken up in big chunks, which means shuttle which means a BILLION DOLLARS A FLIGHT for 50,000 pounds or so. What we need is 20 million a flight for 10,000 pounds and that would be achievable but "there is no urgent need for that" because -- well because the stupid space station ate it all. The shuttle and the space station ate the dream. Make no mistake about that. Those monsters need to GO and be replaced by smaller, operations driven, flexible re-usable designs.

    - - -

    In 1989 Gen. Daniel Graham, Max Hunter, and Jerry Pournelle went to then Chairman of the National Space Council VP Dan Quayle and persuaded him to start a small reusable rocket program. That became the DC/X and the concept was proved with 11 successful USAF flights before NASA took it over and destroyed in on the first flight, thus eliminating any threat to the Shuttle.

    A fuller discussion of all of this by the same author is found here [jerrypournelle.com], entitled "Why Have NASA?"

    But the bottom line is that NASA has gone the way of the boondoggle, and may in fact be committed to a body of technology that is in fact stopping us from getting the show on the road.

    Gee, but this sounds very familiar in a slightly different context.

    Understand, I want them to get going, and do it right. But are they going about it all wrong?

  • by jeffwolfe ( 127324 ) on Thursday March 01, 2001 @08:20PM (#390440)
    Well, speaking as a private contractor that works very closely with NASA, I can assure you that there is plenty of incentive to "make the thing work right." Beyond the ordinary professional pride, there's also this whole issue about bungling contractors having little chance to get future contracts. :-)

    As someone who has myself worked on government contracts, I can say I've seen companies screw up royally and then turn around and get the next contract to fix it. In the space business, this is especially a problem because there are so few companies with the necessary qualifications to perform the work.

    But it goes even further than that. There are indeed incentives within a government contract situation to do the job "right." There are also disincentives and waste (most of them motivated by politics.) The question is, with those incentives and disincentives, does the federal government on balance do a better job than the private sector does (or would). Look at the astounding successes of the private development of early airplane technology and the relative lack of success of government funded space technology for your answer. The government had the ability to send an airplane into suborbital space over thirty-five years ago (X-15), and now can't duplicate that even with a multi-billion dollar budget.

    At any rate, it just irks me when people (not you) try to portray NASA as some sort of Cash Black Hole where the taxpayers' money is sucked in, never to be seen again. The majority of that money is pumped right back out into the private sector.

    And if the program were cancelled and taxes reduced accordingly, all of the money would be in the private sector, not just "a majority" of it.

  • "Wealth" and "Income" are two different things. Wealth isn't taxed until it is sold for a net gain, income is taxed yearly.
  • they'll reinstate these NASA programs. Yeah, right. If they keep my tax cut, they'll just shovel my money down the same deep dark hole they're already putting it in.

    Post your flip comments about people choosing a tax cut over a NASA program when I actually get some sort of CHOICE over where my money goes.

    I don't see anybody on either side of the asile giving a shit about any space programs right now, they're too damn busy pandering and handing out entitlements. Even if they kept my tax cut, they give it to someone else, not to NASA.
  • Let's post a one-billion dollar prize for the first group to recieve good data back from a probe at Pluto containing XYZ instruments. (One billion dollars may be too high or too low, adjust as needed.) Why wouldn't that work?

    Who pays the one billion dollars?

    Or, more succinctly: how is this (conceptually) any different than a government contract? :-)
  • OK I'll byte.

    Clinton was a wiz at garnering soft money contributions. The Law was passed in 91, he was elected in 92. What else can you say he was a natural. :)

    Clinton is the symtom, (not that that obsolves him) soft money is cause. He was just shead of his time

    Wave goodbye to the last non-bought politicians. A few more elections and there won't be any non-corrupt politicians left.

    I can't wait for nanotech (point out Moores law to people.) in this level of corruption. Well maybe they will think I am smart and not low level format my brain (yea right)

    Until Soft money is stopped NOTHING WILL CHANGE! EVERYTHING COMES BACK TO SOFT MONEY!!

    If Jesse Ventura(sic?)reruns for Govenor of Minn in 2 years he won't take any monetery contributions. His logic is the prior 4 years are his resume. Do you think Bush or any of the incumbant republicrats can or will say that. Na nobodys that nieve.

    Don't blame me I voted for Nader (in NY)

    This was test and only a test, if it were a real rant people would listen, get really pisssed of and do somthing about it.

    :)

  • It's kinda sickening to see obviously intelligent people like yourself going along with the politicians' vote-buying schemes. They are very nearly to the point where a majority of the voting public will pay no taxes at all (the reason Daschle keeps bringing up how a person making $25k will get no cut is because that person, right now, pays *NO* federal income tax. Sounds good 'til you know that, right?).

    Once a majority of the public is recieving government handouts and paying no taxes, they're in the pockets of the politicians and lobbyists, and they'll start passing corporate/government control stuff that makes DMCA look tame. There's a very important reason the US was not designed to be a democracy (it's a representative republic), and it's being subverted as we speak.
  • I'm 21, and I've already given up all hope of getting social security. Instead of a tax cut, fix that situation and then the national debt. Everybody is so greedy they don't see they are fucking themselves in the ass in the future!
  • Okay, you burned your +1 bonus posting this drivel, so I guess I'll respond.

    You are a moron.

    When you jump past a tax bracket boundary, there is NO FUCKING WAY you are going to make less. You see, only the income above the boundary is taxed at the higher rate. Thus you will always get some portion of every marginal dollar regardless if your income is 10,000/year or 250,000/year.

    Example: You make $50,000 and pay $10,000 in taxes (a 20% rate). You get a one-dollar raise which brings you to $50,001, putting you in the 50% bracket. Your new tax bill is $10,000.50.

    This is just another example of why you should never believe anything that starts with "I had a friend in college that..."

  • NASA is inefficient and tends to do things poorly.

    I wouldn't say this. NASA has had some well-publicized failures, but how quickly we forget July 4, 1997. The Pathfinder Mars mission was an incredible success, far exceeding the mission parameters and expectations, and it came at a price tag that was a minute fraction of the tremendous cost of the 1970s Viking missions. Humans fuck up from time to time, and because NASA is run by humans, NASA fucks up from time to time. But please .. let's not attempt to marginalize NASA's successes by shining the spotlight on their failures.
  • What a bunch of shit.

    Brav-O. Fascinating response.

    But... actually, he's right about the intent of the fraimers, AFAIK. I'm not sure it makes much of a difference, though, considering the body of case law that over the years has given us the "liberal myth" that most subscribe to today.

    Hey...maybe I can start my own church for tax purposes.

    Perhaps so. Let us know how it goes.

    --
  • "The top 1% in this country pay 23% of the federal tax bill." Which is neat trick considering that the top 1% of the country control 38% [thestandard.com] of the wealth. (Other sources cite similar or larger numbers, it's admittedly a hard number to measure.) So, when are the rich going to pay their fair share?

  • by TheDullBlade ( 28998 ) on Thursday March 01, 2001 @09:52PM (#390478)
    there would be mining colonies on the moon, and human expeditions out to Jupiter by now.

    But cutting their budget won't help at all. Higher government has to allow spaceflight without consulting NASA, which has become a hideously bloated incompetent bureaucracy which barely manages a handful of projects through gratuitous spending. Cutting the budget without removing them will only hurt the handful of projects they do manage.

    If you have any doubts about NASA, look at the shuttle. Look at it's original purpose as an experimental vehicle, and look how they've ignored the data it brought in and its lousy performance and how they've made it their main launch vehicle.
    ---
  • It is not "illegal to engage in private spacefaring." There's a large launch-services industry (SeaLaunch being one notable one.)

    There are the usual government regulations about not putting up things like other nation's spysats & weapons & preventing technology transfers but there's nothing preventing you from going & launching your own vehicle provided you get all the proper paperwork signed (again mostly safety & export regs.)

    Indeed there's a number of groups (rapidly dwindling) competing for a series of prizes regaring different types of launches.

    As to the US Government protecting some sort of NASA monopoly no, that's not the case either.

    NASA has pretty much gotten out of the launch-for-hire business for other gov't departments and indeed doesn't even always launch it's own missions when private industry is cost-effective.

    I'm dissapointed in how the system is currently structured, yes. NASA has always been in a quandry due to it's untenable status. It's funding is completely at the whim of each administration and subject to a great deal of external manipulation & "adjustment".

    On the other hand as I noted I don't see any supposed "privitization" being preferable. Already many STS services are privately managed yet there seems little cost savings.

    Is this odd? No - I don't think going to an extreme, particularly an extreme I consider an innapropriate response to be the optimal solution. Rather I see changing the status of NASA or some successor agency to a more stable one with a more reliable budget as being an answer.

    Tell me, do you find it odd that you assert falsehoods, competely disregard the point of much of my posting then misrepresent my position ?

  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday March 01, 2001 @07:11PM (#390481)

    On Wednesday, a nation on Earth slashed its space program, gutting the Pluto, Solar Probe, and X-33 programs.

    In retaliation, we have destroyed one of their cities.

    Reinstate the space program, or we will be forced to destroy one city per week.

    Klaatu barata nikto.

  • Yeah, so now lets deal with some real statistics.

    The top 5% in america make more then 140k per year, and the top 20% make 80k a year. Thoose people pay ~75% of the taxes. Remeber, that is just income.

    Then factor in Capital Gains. Heh.
  • Thankfully The Economist understands the value of paragraphs.

    Aside from that your posting is primarily a political screed - it's fine as such but I don't see any need to elaborate upon it other then "I disagree". I disagree with both your political & your economic analysis.

    However I do appreciate The Economist.

  • by roystgnr ( 4015 ) <roy&stogners,org> on Thursday March 01, 2001 @10:01PM (#390490) Homepage
    The DC-X got off the ground and flew around. They demonstrated vertical powered landing and crossrange maneuvering with it, and they managed to fly it twice in 24 hours; killing two of the "but that's impossible" objections to VTOL RLV designs.

    However, I don't think it even broke the sound barrier; the DC-X was a tiny rocket compared to the Delta Clipper design. The DC-Y was the proposed suborbital follow on, which got beaten by Lockheed Martin's "gee whiz" design for the X-33 contract (you'll notice I'm not arguing with your "NASA == ignorant slut" assertion), and the Delta Clipper was the orbital rocket that would have been built with the lessons learned from DC-Y. The Delta Clipper never got past the initial design proposal phase. In fact, the company proposing Delta Clipper got merged into Boeing shortly thereafter; don't expect to hear anything about it again.
  • by Scrymarch ( 124063 ) on Thursday March 01, 2001 @10:01PM (#390492)
    The moon landing (which did occur) is probably the one thing that really brought together the US as one nation.

    Apart from the Declaration and War of Independence, you mean? :)

  • Well, then how do you explain the fact that nn 1998, the richest 1% paid 35%+ of our nation's taxes ?

    It's not "the richest 1%" it's "the top 1% of wage-earners." There is a big difference.


    "That old saw about the early bird just goes to show that the worm should have stayed in bed."
  • I'm sure you understand economics much better than Warren Buffett

    It was said earlier, Buffett makes a good deal of money from his Insurance company holdings. Insurance companies that sell 'estate tax insurance'. Thus very obvious reasons for him to oppose the end to the estate tax. No?
  • Warren Buffet's a moron. He can afford the lawyers to do fancy tricks with his money, meanwhile one of the oldest and most prestigious black newspapers, the Chicago Defender, is about to be sold -- probably to a large corporation -- because of the stupid estate tax.

    On the contrary, he's smart -- smart enough to wrap his cynical motives (attempting to squelch rising competition from the next lower class, which in his case is the million-, as opposed to billion-, aire) in Mom and flag and apple pie.

    As you say, Buffet (and the other really rich) can cloak their assets fairly easily. The people a few steps down the totem pole are millionaires on paper, but have most of their assets tied up in businesses, land, etc, which will get the anal probe as the owner assumes ambient temperature.
    /.

  • you shouldn't have posted this as AC. I would like to discuss it. See, the US President is typically the singlemost influential person responsible for the political mood here in the US, and if Nasa is suddenly scrapping a bunch of projects in response to the new administration, who better to blame? and it seems obvious to me that all the recent news about NASA projects facing the axe is more than coincidental to the new administration finally getting a head of steam on.
  • by costas ( 38724 ) on Thursday March 01, 2001 @11:54PM (#390502) Homepage
    I am tired of all the DC-X supporters here: the DC-X was an unbelievably cool idea that was executed well, but had one major flaw: no failsafe, no possibility of recovery in case of failure (parachutes don't work if you're close to the ground) which was demonstrated by the loss of the DC-Y.

    Now, the X-33 (I forget LM's moniker pre-approval) could glide back into earth, had craploads of power to get to orbit, and if successful, the technologies that would have been developed around it, would have revolutionized space travel (the aerospike engine would be enough).

    The curse of the X-33 was those damn cryogenic tanks and that old foe of aero engineers: center of gravity. The X-33 is basically a triangle, with a CG at about 2/3 of the way back. Now, if those cryo tanks need to work, they need to be big and strong. And where can you fit big, heavy tanks? in the back of the plane of course, which will cause the CG to move even further back, say 70-75% of the fuselage length. That's, for all intents and purposes, unflyable.

    However, the X-33 did develop some kick-ass new thermal tiles, it proved the concept of the aerospike engine and it will still give us great technology for the next generation of spacecraft. What was basically disproven (and it was its demise) was lifting-body spacecraft (that CG thing again).

    My guess: Rockwell's entry to the old X-33 competition, which was basically an updated Space Shuttle, would have been the prudent, conservative choice. If that idea is combined with what NASA can salvage from the X-33 technologies (aerospike, monocoque design, thermal tiles) the 3rd generation (in effect) shuttle will simply kick ass.

  • by tomcrooze ( 33802 ) on Thursday March 01, 2001 @07:14PM (#390511) Homepage
    These programs were supposed to bring faster, cheaper, and safer space transport? What happened?

    I believe that most people (excluding /.) are not as interested in space anymore. Granted, there are those who salivate over the idea of mining asteroids and getting rich, but the general public really doesn't give a hoot about space. Space used to be a nationalistic thing. The moon landing (which did occur) is probably the one thing that really brought together the US as one nation. Since then, there's been interest in space, but it has been dwindling. Truly, there haven't been any large media events attributed to space, with the exception of the International Space Station.

    But go out into the general public (which doesn't include /.) and I'll be you that there'll be more than one person who believes that tax dollars would be better spent on education and civil services than on space.

    The government does have some business in space, but as of late, there have been a large number of private corporations that, I believe, will take over getting people and things into space and onto other celestial bodies. The government already depends on private contractors (Boeing, Lockheed-Martin), and it very well may relinquish its space influence to legislation.

    However, I am all for space exploration, because once we kill Earth off with the various negative global influences, we're going to have to find somewhere else to live.

  • If commercial space flight truly *is* viable then why aren't more companies investing their own dollars into it and not trying to pry open the public purse?

    This article [dallasobserver.com] from the Dallas Observer tells the story of Beal Aerospace. Billionaire founder Andy Beal put about $200M of his own money into creating a private launch services company. Warning: it's not a happy story.
  • by Bishop923 ( 109840 ) on Thursday March 01, 2001 @09:26PM (#390549)
    But hey, at least rich people get a tax cut (even if they don't want one)..."

    From the article:
    The decision to terminate both X-33 and X-34 were made internally by NASA and were not a White House decision, Stephenson said.

    Just because you don't like the current administration doesnt mean that they are the root of all things evil, hell NASA just got its first budget increase in 7 Years. They felt that the funding nessecarry to fix what was obviously a flawed design from the beginning, could be put to better use on other projects.

    NASA should be applauded for wanting to put thier funds where it could be more effective instead of throwing money at a project that doesn't work.
  • by msodfjsalfhlskdhf ( 210858 ) <m0o0j0o0NO@SPAMbigfoot.com> on Thursday March 01, 2001 @09:27PM (#390567) Homepage

    The problem with the Estate Tax, as I see it at least, is that it really bites farmers and ranch owners in the arse if they don't prepare well enough before their deaths. They don't have the large cash reserves to pay for ingenious little accountants like the "biggies" such as WillyG do.

    Keeping the estate tax is one thing, but making it fair for cash poor, hard working people and towards the uber-rich people it is supposed to affect is something that needs to be done if it is to stay.


    ====
    If all comedy comes out of tragedy, let the killing begin...

  • by uncleFester ( 29998 ) on Friday March 02, 2001 @02:44AM (#390598) Homepage Journal
    But hey, at least rich people get a tax cut (even if they don't want one)..."

    So who is this mighty Timothy who deigns us with his apparently oh-so-correct opinion? Is it fair the wealthy pay more % in tax then you? Why? For what earthly reason? Or are we simply assuming they deserve to pay more simply because they must have obtained it through some improper means?

    I come from a farm background, and if you look at the balance sheet (including assets) we would probably be classified as 'wealthy' to you. Does that mean it's fair we have to fork over 70% of those assets to the government if my father dies? Is it fair we are paying ~45%+ in taxes compared to your measly ~33%?

    I seriously suggest you go somewhere and take your foot out of your ass.. and while you're there consider what actually makes our capitalist sociecty (in the US) actually work. If you continue to punish the wealthy you will stifly any true progress in this country (I would dare say we see some of that currently).

    OBPotshot: Go tell Linus he owes more taxes. Doubt he'll give you a peck on the cheek.

    .. but I'm only a dumb hick, so what do I know, right?
  • by thetzar ( 30126 ) on Thursday March 01, 2001 @07:28PM (#390601) Homepage
    You do, of course, realize that it was because a private venture failed that the X-33 was canned. Lockheed-Martin couldn't keep its contractual obligations, so NASA cut them off. So much for our savior, the private sector.
  • by jeboyer ( 24453 ) on Thursday March 01, 2001 @07:29PM (#390605)
    I'd argue that it's not so bad as it sounds: "...NASA has relinquished the quest for cheap space launch capability." I'd say instead, they may have taken an important step to get closer to cheap launches. Chances of the X-33 ever flying were slim at this point, and an commercially-viable follow-on funded by LockMart corporate funds (VentureStar) even slimmer.

    What actually happened today was that NASA refused to add funds to the sinking program from the Space Launch Initiative, which is intended to actually develop viable launch options for the future. There's more in the NASA press release at spaceref.com [spaceref.com]. NASA intends to spend 900+ million over the next couple of years on access to space--that hardly sounds like they are giving up. I suspect that they can find more promising projects to fund than X-33. Of course, there are probably more wasteful ones, as well...

  • by cgadd ( 65348 ) on Thursday March 01, 2001 @07:30PM (#390609)
    Nasa's budget didn't get cut to pay for lower taxes. Nasa's budget increased by 3 percent. Here's a quote right from space.com:

    "The overall budget request is $14 billion, up from the $13.6 billion NASA got last year -- the first increase for the agency in seven years."

    See!!! It's an increase, not a cut. Someone needs to go back to school and learn math. Not only is it an increase, it's the first one in 7 YEARS!!!!

    But Nasa realized that they need to do a better job of spending their money, so they axed programs that were going nowhere fast.

  • by cje ( 33931 ) on Thursday March 01, 2001 @07:30PM (#390610) Homepage
    Can you demonstrate that a "private effort" would cost "10 times" less?

    Are you aware that the vast majority of the work done for NASA missions is done by private contractors (i.e., Lockheed-Martin, Raytheon, Boeing, etc.)?
  • by hey! ( 33014 ) on Friday March 02, 2001 @05:56AM (#390674) Homepage Journal
    The bible says, "Man does not live by bread alone." Of course man does not live at all without bread, but it doesn't say that does it? I take this to mean that once the basic necessities of living are taken care of, a person has to turn his attention to the issue of meaning.

    The fact that we've never bothered to return to the moon begs the question of whether there was ever a practical reason for going there in the first place. "We choose to go to the moon, not because it is easy, but because it is hard." It's hard to say if the world is any different because Kennedy uttered those words, but I think it is in ways we utterly take for granted.

    Environmentalism; human rights; political union; free trade; the fall of totalitarianism. These are all trends which existed before the space race, but for better or worse needed a fundamental change in the way we view ourselves. The kind of perspective you get by looking at your planet a big blue marble from a qurter of a million miles away.

    I also think it is very significant that the US did not claim the Moon territorially in the colonial tradition. Like all acts of great leadership, the moon program worked on many levels: science for the scientists, technology spinoffs for industry, basic research for the military, national pride and dominance for the chauvanists, elevated spirit for the idealists, and a message of transcendence of petty national interest for our allies.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 02, 2001 @05:57AM (#390675)
    You are wrong in the particulars of this situation. The Usurper, for all his faults, is actually increasing spending on the SLI program sixty four percent.

    ...and you are wrong in calling George Bush The Usurper. He didn't usurp anything, he won the election fair and square, according to the recount done by the Miami Herald. [miami.com]

    And that final tally includes all of the Gore votes manufactured by the Democratic canvassing boards.

  • by cje ( 33931 ) on Thursday March 01, 2001 @07:40PM (#390690) Homepage
    Irrelevant. Government work done by private corporations is still government work. If Lockheed-Martin had been working on the X-33 with an aim towards using it for profit, rather than using it for getting money from the government, they'd have a much bigger reason to make the thing work right.

    Well, speaking as a private contractor that works very closely with NASA, I can assure you that there is plenty of incentive to "make the thing work right." Beyond the ordinary professional pride, there's also this whole issue about bungling contractors having little chance to get future contracts. :-)

    At any rate, it just irks me when people (not you) try to portray NASA as some sort of Cash Black Hole where the taxpayers' money is sucked in, never to be seen again. The majority of that money is pumped right back out into the private sector.
  • by ConceptJunkie ( 24823 ) on Friday March 02, 2001 @06:05AM (#390704) Homepage Journal
    >But americans are "ignorant" - they haven't received a good education, they simply don't know stuff, because they haven't been told, or they haven't asked, or whatever.

    Ignorant? Why you dad-blasted commie sumbitch faggit! We 'merkans aren't ignorant. We knew enough to come over here and kick the injuns off our God-given land (otta send 'em all back to Africa if you ask me!), and kicked the English off our God-given land (and whooped 'em again in Dubya Dubya 2!) and created the greatest nation in the world. If yer so dern smart, how comes Eye-re-land is still owned by the Russkies!?

    Ignorant? That's the dern stoopidest thing I heard since Canada became a state. You otta stay in Eye-re-land with all those other commie pinkos and sit and eat weener schnitzel and surrender to Germans or whatever it is you do over in that sissy part of the world with yer pronography and yer wimmen with hairy armpits and eatin' snails and whatever.

    Ignorant? It's a good thing you ain't here, 'cos me a Smith and Wesson got a few words for people like you. At least in 'merka we don't have no sissy king or queen or whatever. We got President Dubya, a real man with real principials and integruity... and if you don't like it we can just shove a noo-cyoo-lar missile up your nose like we shooda done to Saddom an' Kadoffy an' Hitler an' Krooshef an' George III....

  • by superdan2k ( 135614 ) on Thursday March 01, 2001 @07:44PM (#390718) Homepage Journal

    Well, with the X-33 program (VentureStar), NASA got shafted (to put it nicely) by Lockheed-Martin (IIRC, this was the contractor). They approached NASA, hat-in-hand for $900 million, for which they would provide a reusable shuttle that would cut cost-to-orbit by an order of magnitude. This vehicle would use the Aerospike engine and composite fuel tanks to keep vehicle weight down.

    This was initiated by the then-CEO of Lockheed-Martin. He also informed NASA that any cost-overruns on the program would be eaten by his company.

    Well, not long after that, he retired, and was replaced by a new CEO, who thought that VentureStar was a BadIdea(tm). He decided that if it went over $900 million, that Lockheed-Martin would have to go back on its word as a corporation and ask for more funding from NASA. Which is exactly what happened.

    Furthermore, the continual failures of composite fuel tanks forced LM to return to old-style aluminum ones, which jacked the vehicle's dry-weight up, and put them right back where they started.

    Clearly, the big aerospace firms regard NASA as a form of corporate welfare. They get some money, they go to work, come up against something, have to quit working, and come back for more money.

    It used to be that when the government needed something, they would specify their needs in a document, say "this is what we'll pay, and you can keep any profit you can make." This is how it was done in World War II when new aircraft were needed. This is how it should *always be done* -- but it's not. In the space program, it's the contractor telling the client what they need and not the other way around. This is why a company like Rockwell gets the contract for the Space Shuttle (they were left out of the Apollo program, and this was done to soothe burned egos), and delivered a poorly-realized, over-engineered piece of shit.

    If this sort of thinking continues, then there is no future in space exploration, manned or otherwise.


    ----------------------------------------
    Yo soy El Fontosaurus Grande!
  • by The Cunctator ( 15267 ) on Friday March 02, 2001 @04:40AM (#390719) Homepage
    This is a fun troll to respond to, because federalism is a fun issue. Also, I'd like to say that complaining that the Constitution didn't explicitly permit the establishment of a space agancy is pretty amusing.

    Yes, NASA faces budget cuts. NASA is illegal. It shouldn't have a budgegt AT ALL.

    Of course, the legality of NASA clearly has nothing to do with its budget. And the word you're looking for is "unconstitutional", not "illegal".

    The National Aeronautics and Space Act of 1958 [nasa.gov] justifies the establishment of NASA by stating "The Congress declares that the general welfare and security of the United States require that adequate provision be made for aeronautical and space activities."

    The Congress was given by the Constitution [cornell.edu] "Power To...provide for the common Defence and general Welfare of the United States".

    The tenth amendment [cornell.edu] does not abridge that power.

    Here's a transcript of an excellent panel discussion [federalismproject.org] on the concept of federalism, states' rights, and the enumerated powers doctrine; with such gems as:

    The states are in fact in favor of federalism - of a sort. Witness the support for devolution, the fight over unfunded mandates, and an endless stream of 10th and 11th Amendment cases. But the federalism they want isn't competitive federalism. It's what the antitrust lawyers among you will recognize as a horizontal-vertical conspiracy.
    and
    As Gordon Wood once put it, if you ask about the relationship of this federal Constitution to democracy, you have to understand that democracy was the problem to which the Constitutional Convention was called to frame a response. The problem of populist democracies in the state legislatures was part of the Convention debate as early as May 31. Randolph of Virginia observed that the general object of the Convention was to provide a cure for the evils under which the states labored - that in tracing these evils to their origin, every man had found it in the turbulence and follies of democracies.
    and
    What speaks cleanest, the supremacy clause, actually binds state officers directly to federal law. As the Supreme Court said back at a time when it was a little closer to the beginning -- 1876, to be exact -- the laws of the United States are the laws in the states.
    and perhaps most to the point:
    The choice is this -- are the basic decisions of Government going to be made by judges or by the people you elect? If judges insist that the propriety of legislation, or the necessity of it, be demonstrated to them, then they are really in charge. And you are not going to like that because you don't get to throw us out of office every two years or every four years or every six years. You know, it takes murder to get rid of a federal judge.
    Here's some notes on the enumerated powers doctrine [findlaw.com].

    --

  • by Tackhead ( 54550 ) on Friday March 02, 2001 @08:00AM (#390726)
    >A bunch of the richest people in the US came out against repealing the death tax. But they don't get it. Their kids will get hundreds of millions or billions after the death tax.

    And - most of these folks aren't even paying the death tax. They can afford a $1M/y accountant to structure their affairs so that they don't pay a cent.

    If Warren Buffett and the other signatories believe it's moral to pay half their net worth to Uncle Sam when they die, they will retain every right to do so whether the death tax is repealed or not -- the IRS will be happy to accept a check from their estates.

    As for me and my house, we'd prefer to keep what we managed to purchase (with after-tax dollars, no less!) during our lives, and pass those assets down to our heirs.

    For those who don't have kids and don't want any - given the probability that you'll outlive your parents... have you considered naming the EFF or FSF as beneficiaries?

    Or to get us back on topic -- how about The Planetary Society [planetary.org]?

  • by Bwah ( 3970 ) <RndmNmbr@@@gmail...com> on Friday March 02, 2001 @10:12AM (#390727)
    I hate to respond to this so late in the thread, since it's likely that no one will ever read this ... however I think all of the posts I have read so far have missed a point here.

    The cancelation of the X-33 and X-34 doesn't mean the projects were a failure! The amount of data and experience gained on these two project is very large. Hard to measure even.

    Remember these are X planes. They are experimental. The goal in these programs is not necesarily to produce a production ready space/aircraft (that's what the next phase called EMD is for.) These were essentially research programs. People throught that the technology and processes to develop this type of spaceplane (in the X-33s case) existed and were solid, but they were not entirely correct. If you recall they had gotten to the point where the original fuel tank design had to be scrapped, they were now carryin fuel in what was originally the cargo space and hauling payloads in external pods, etc. It was turning into a kludge. (IMHO anyway.)

    Canceling this program now is good because it means that someone higher up in the management food chain recognizes that continuing at this point would cost more than starting over. They realize that some of their base assumptions for the project are wrong, and think that now they know enough to rethink it and do it right. This must have been a hard decision to make, but I think it was the right one.

    In summary, don't think of this as the end of the effort to produce this type of spacecraft, just a slight dip in the slope of the learning curve. (Errr ... or so I hope. :-)

    Sigh. Must now return to doing "real" work. The horror.

THEGODDESSOFTHENETHASTWISTINGFINGERSANDHERVOICEISLIKEAJAVELININTHENIGHTDUDE

Working...