Vostok 1 40th Anniversary 147
ehintz writes "40 years ago today, 4-12-61, Lt. Yuri Gagarin slipped the surly bonds of Earth to become the first man in orbit. His 108 minute flight aboard Vostok 1 from Baikonur Cosmodrome was the stimulus causing Kennedy to make his famous Man on the Moon speech of 5-25-61, resulting in the moon landing of 7-20-69. We owe our comrades thanks for providing the competition that made it happen." ( michael : More links! The APOD notes that this is also the 20th anniversary of the first Shuttle launch. And NASA provides this image of a newspaper front page, which ought to convey the momentous nature of the event to those of us who weren't born at the time.)
Re:Hoo-yeah! (Score:1)
Re:That was probably the height of the Soviet Empi (Score:1)
Re:Russians are ignored. (Score:1)
Your country has no history! No tradition! Your country isn't as good as we were ever since the renaissance!
Coming from a country where the tradition is to surrender at an army that drops in their boundary.
Oh... nice troll btw. When you started up with the 'being female', and 'being catholic' it was obvious, and bringing in a story from your ex-bf? That made it pathetically obvious!
Moderators need a lesson in recognizing trolling!
Is the US the central focus of the Article? (Score:1)
The CCCP put the first person in space. Period.
Had nothing to do with the moon mission. Period.
Was an impressive technical feat, but aside from being the first "first" for the US Space program, had little, if nothing to do with the CCCP, the Kennedys, etc. (although it shows that some Presidents don't lie
Over the last few days, I have noticed an increase in the rehtoric being spewed on slashdot, about the Chinese, the Russians (seem to be missing Cuba) possibly due to the media stirring the pot in relation to the loss of an Navy AE-3 spyplane. For the record;
1-Sputnik was the first man made satellite to orbit the earth
2- Yuri G. was the first person into Space.
3- Soviet space craft orbited the moon before Apollo 11
3- Apollo 11 really landed on the moon (contrary to what I have seen on Fox
So, I have only one more question.
What has the US done lately?
Re:Jazz is based on African rhythms, the RIAA owes (Score:1)
Yuri Gagarin not First (Score:1)
I can't remember what show it was, though I think it was Nova or Frontline or something else on PBS..
--
Re:The Internet (Score:1)
The Web != The Internet.
The web is a subset of the internet. The internet existed decades before the web. That isn't to say that the web isn't very important, just that it isn't the same thing as the internet (which was, indeed, invented in the US).
The Internet (Score:2)
How about inventing the internet? I would put the internet at least on par with the printing press in its importance in the evolution of human society. It makes instantaneous global communication effortless to the point that people from arbitrary places in the world can gather at places like Slashdot and share thoughts in a manner far more effective than was possible before the internet's invention. It allows anybody to very easily globally publish their opinions with almost no barrier to entry, whereas before you had to be wealthy enough to own a publishing company or you had to invest a great deal of effort and time in spreading your message (slowly) by word of mouth. It's essentially the printing press with an order of magnitude more ease of use and effectiveness.
Yes, US citizens generally don't have enough world perspective regarding the accomplishments of other countries, but that doesn't mean the US hasn't pulled its own weight in terms of accomplishments.
Annoyed Engineer (Score:2)
However, it annoys me that Gagarin is remembered but the scientists that made it all possible are all but unknown.
Still, engineers doing all the work and someone else claiming all the credit is the way things always seem to go...
Re:Death and pissing good times (Score:1)
Re:Russians are ignored. (Score:1)
No one can deny the supreme magnitude of what was achieved, and in a scientific light this is fanatastic.
The political side was less savoury as the USSR milked the flight to show their 'superiority' for all it was worth, and yes I think this would be distasteful for any country.
The stuff about the discrimination is superfluous to all requirements and not a little patronising. Discrimination exists in all forms towards many types of people, not just Russians, women or Catholics.
Re:Stupid? (Score:1)
Maybe I should have put quotes around 'stupid' but I thought my meaning was pretty clear - that Gagarin, and indeed all early astronauts, took significant risks which some paid the price for with their lives. Heck the astronauts we have today are still brave - space flight is not the safest form of travel!
AHA! (Score:2)
Your Working Boy,
- Otis (GAIM: OtisWild)
Re:Russians are ignored. (Score:1)
Its pretty obvious that you are one of the "dispossessed and discriminated against" who wants everything handed to them on a silver platter. Wake up and smell the toast burning!!! The United States is where it is at today because our founding fathers wholly believed in the idea that one could get ahead if they WORKED HARD.
In the world, as well as in the United States, there are too damn many people like you who think that hard work counts for nothing. You sound like you are one of those that says they have the "right" to steal from those who work and achieve and "support" lazy, good for nothing asswipes. BULLSHIT!!! If someone wants to "stake a claim in society"...they better get off their ass and work for it.
As a citizen of the United States...I personally invite you, and your socialist vomit spewing freinds, including all members of the US's Democratic Party, to take a very long walk off a very short pier.
Re:Russians are ignored. (Score:3)
The A-bomb should not be underemphasized. It was developed at a time when virtually the entire production of the country was devoted to the war effort. For example, during the war, the Japanese managed to produce a handful of ships to replace the ones they lost. America on the other hand, produced thousands and thousands of ships, far outstripping the production of the rest of the world combined.
And, in the middle of that, the Manhattan project was completed. That effort was even greater than the effort required to go to the moon, and we did it with our spare production capacity.
So, I'm not sure what that woman is rambling about.
Re:No, I don't find it ironic at least (Score:1)
George Dubya Bush is the smartest president ever
is irony, and tragedy.
Um...no, that's not ironic. It might be sarcastic, but it's not ironic.
-David T. C.
Re:But cars are the main American sexual display (Score:1)
Finally I have an explaination of why I prefer walking, and why my pants are way too small. ;)
-David T. C.
Re:Occam's Razor (Score:1)
Huh? So...the people were inside the cameras? Or did they paint the crosshairs on the picture and decides to just not paint them over the rover and the men? Or did they paint the crosshairs on the backdrops? (Although that doesn't work, cause they moved the cameras, and the crosshairs moved. Maybe they used stop motion or something.)
Do you realize how stupid this 'proof' is? No matter how 'faked' you might incorrectly think the moon landing was, it's immensely easier to just paint crosshairs on the fucking cameras, whether those cameras are on the moon or on earth in a studio. And if for some reason you can't do that, you just paint them on a TV and broadcast and record off that.
Seriously, while the rest of the 'proofs' you gave have nice and logical explainations, this one doesn't even need proving, as it is completely nonsensical to start with, and is akin to claiming that because sometimes the 'walk/don't walk' signals don't match up to the traffic lights, the NSA killed JFK because they were worried about his affairs with prominate people. The connection literally doesn't add up. It's like claiming the week has 7 days instead of 10, and, thus, the CIA created AIDS.
You need to work on this argument a bit, and come up with a convincing explaination for NASA to a) paint crosshairs on each individual camera frame, and b) deliberately leave them off when they would have gone over a pure white background, instead of the rather more sane 'The white just blurred over the black from both sides and made us unable to see the tiny black line.'.
-David T. C.
Re:The surly bonds of Earth... (Score:1)
Damn straight I did. The original poem was written by a US pilot serving the RCAF in '41; he was fighting against the Germans, along with Communist allies. Remember the photos of Stalin, Churchill, and FDR? At the time the verse was written the Communists were our allies against the 3rd Reich. Just because Reagan lifted it to use for his Challenger speech doesn't make it off limits for the rest of us. And just what the hell is wrong with the Soviet's space efforts? Are we Americans the only ones allowed to be recognized for our space efforts? Wake up, the cold war ended years ago...
Regards,
Re:How negative / self-obsessed? (Score:2)
Mea culpa. I didn't mean for it to come across that way, but I see how it could. What it comes down to is this: I consider the moon landing to be one of the greatest accomplishments in the history of human kind, and the USSR was the prime motivator behind it. Yuri and the USSR earned their place in history with his flight; not only did they make that amazing feat of their own, they also pushed the envelope of space exploration by their goading of the US. There's no way the US would have done it in '69 without Sputnik and Vostok (and I strongly suspect Kennedy's assassination/martyrdom was also key here).
So, I celebrate both achievements, and appreciate just how closely they were related. And I raise my glass to the USSR and Yuri for both their groundbreaking flight and the resulting impact they had on the US space program. The moon landing almost certainly would not have happened when it did if we were honoring John Glenn as the first in orbit.
Regards,
Re:Pretty sad (Score:1)
lol! Space envy! Just because I come from a country (uk) with no space program!
Pretty sad (Score:2)
"On April 12, 1981, twenty years ago today, the Space Shuttle Columbia became the first shuttle to orbit the Earth. In this gorgeous time exposure, flood lights play on the Columbia and service structures (left) as it rests atop Complex 39's Pad A at Kennedy Space Center in preparation for first launch. Flown by Commander John W. Young and Pilot Robert L. Crippen, Colombia spent 2 days aloft on its check-out mission, STS-1, which ended in a smooth landing, airplane-style, at Edwards Air Force Base in California. Ferried back to Kennedy by a modified Boeing 747, Colombia was launched again seven months later on STS-2, becoming the first piloted reuseable orbiter. The oldest operating shuttle, Columbia's 1981 debut was followed by shuttles Challenger in 1982 (destroyed in 1986), Discovery in 1983, Atlantis in 1985, and Challenger's replacement Endeavour in 1991. This shuttle fleet has now accomplished over 100 orbital missions. Today also marks the 40th anniversary of the first human in space, Yuri Gagarin."
Re:Is the US the central focus of the Article? (Score:1)
--TRUE
2- Yuri G. was the first person into Space.
--FALSE See above posts
3- Soviet space craft orbited the moon before Apollo 11
-- TRUE
3- Apollo 11 really landed on the moon (contrary to what I have seen on Fox
-- TRUE
So, I have only one more question.
What has the US done lately?
Spread trash throughout the earths near earth space, advance telecommunications to what it is today, made the first reuseable space vehicle (Ok I'm stretching it on that one.. the shuttle is just a glorified capsule) made the largest spy sattelite in the world (Hubble, so it has the side ability to take pictures of space objects, it makes great photos of russian nude sunbathers.)
the microprocessor,microcomputer,microwave ovens,internet,ion propulsion space probes,
want me to continue? I'm not saying that the country formerly known as the CCCP didnt do much, but we wre so far ahead of the planet in technology it aint funny. (except maybe Japan.. they are some clever buggers.)
Imagine what could be done if the planet banded together..
Re:Is the US the central focus of the Article? (Score:1)
Imagine what could be done if the entire planet banded together.
Re:Yuri Gagarin not First (Score:1)
There is a lot of evidence for failures being covered up, and it was a lot easier to keep a secret in the Soviet Union than the rest of the world.
According to the story I read, the Vladamir Ilyushun had a semi successful launch the day before Gagrin, but he crashed landed in China and languished there as an "honored guest" in a hospital for a year.
It would be an awkward situation for the Russian government to admit the Gagrin wasn't really the first man in space, so it's not totally outrageous. Besides, it's a bit increadible that the Russian space program never had any fatal accidents in its early days.
OTOH, propaganda comes from both sides, so it could all be a fabrication.
Re:I remember the fear... (Score:2)
If "all the worlds governments" are blocking private access to space, this would be a really bone-headed reason to do so. You could do the same thing with an ocean-going ship. Ever notice how many major world cities are coastal cities?
Even a small plane would probably work just fine. Remember those folks landing in Red Square with a Piper Cub or something like that?
And before anyone makes the obvious mistake, no, it's probably not relevant that an SSTO-ish vehicle could get there faster. This is very much a terrorist scenario, in which case it's not as important how long the weapon takes to get there.
Re:I belive sputnik had an impact too (Score:3)
Given National pride for your own country - a race starts to get humans in orbit. All the time the military is laughing all the way to the bank since a "civilian" agency is footing the bill to develop the technology.
Why do you think Republicans hated Clinton so much for "giving" rocket technology to the Chinese? (Apart from all the other reasons Clinton was hated by republicans)
Reds Deny Spacemen Have Died (Score:1)
Re:Russians are ignored. (Score:1)
As my mother used to say "if you've only nice things to say about Americans, don't say anything at all". Nonetheless, I think you're doing a disservice to the citizens of the US. I've read this story on a whole bunch of sites today, most of them american (bottomquark [bottomquark.com], for example).
If only america as a whole could realise that it is just another country.
No arguments here. I'm still wondering why the UN didn't send election observers in. But consider: the Americans did put a man on the moon. And a plethora of probes on mars. And, with the ESA, they gave us hubble. The US advances in space have been phenomenal up to about 1972, irrespective of motivation. The tragedy is that they didn't use this momentum; we (humanity) should be fishing through holes in Europan ice by now.
The worst part about the cold war is that the US thinks they won. Trillions spent unnecessarily on 'defense', and the US are still trying to convince the world that they were not just right, but victorious.
A Toast to the First Hero of Space. . . (Score:2)
To Yuri Gagarin, first human in space. May he be but the first of untold numbers to come to explore the Final Frontier. . .
Re:Death and pissing good times (Score:2)
Re:Occam's Razor (Score:2)
Actually, while your at it, check out this site [reptiles.org], which reveals that the existence of the moon itself is just a conspiracy! (Yes, it's a spoof).
Re:Dead Cosmonauts: did you read it? (Score:1)
"His" autobiography contains memories like "in the orbit everything was just the same as on Earth" (zero-g, anyone heard about it?); there is no record of any orbital launch on that day (and US had capability to detect such occurence); flight trajectory data published was nonsense (half orbit in 15 minutes, other half in hour - good speed control)...
And when it comes to "dead in training", in the Soviet Empire it could mean anything - from getting killed by drunk driving to dying in failed launch to being executed for straying off Party line.
So the first CONFIRMED manned flight was American.
--
Re:Russians are ignored. (Score:1)
Who let W. at the keyboard again? (Score:2)
Re:Death (Score:1)
What are you on, crack? (Score:2)
How can you even begin to compare Russian contributions to America's?
Russian scientific advances, and let's call them what they WERE, Soviet scientific advances, came at the behest of a command and control economy whereby consumers were starved so that Soviet "technology" could compete and shine with America's. Guess what? America created technology AND built a middle class, all at the same time. The Soviets NEVER came anywhere near being able to do both at the same time.
And for 20th century discrimination in America, sure, it happened and still happens. People were denied job opportunities, some people OCCASSIONALY lost their lives due to white on black, Protestant on Catholic violence, etc. But in Soviet Russia (and even to an extent in present day Russia), MILLIONS were forcibly relocated from their homelands and FAWKING starved by Stalin and cronies.
By God, you can't begin to compare the two societies. Yes, the Soviet Union produced technology, but at what an evil expense to people's lives and personal freedoms!
----------------------------------
Re:In a truly rational society, women and Asians (Score:2)
And as for newspaper headlines, I prefer... (Score:2)
...the black-and-white one about halfway down the page of the T-shirts sold by The Onion [theonion.com].
How negative / self-obsessed? (Score:4)
The surly bonds of Earth... (Score:2)
I'm sure the poster didn't mean to take one of the most eloquent turns of phrase of the 20th century, "the surly bonds of earth..." [time.com], and apply it toward the Communists space efforts.
That quote, spoken by Ronald Reagan in 1986 (and paraphrased from a WW2 U.S. airman), is a tribute to the lost Challenger crew. Seems almost ironic to use it to describe a Russian cosmonaut.
Re:Yuri Gagarin not First (Score:1)
Dead Cosmonauts (Score:1)
Check out http://www.mcs.net/~rusaerog/dead_cosmonauts.html [mcs.net]
There is certainly enough conflicting infomation regarding the early soviet space program to raise serious questions as to who really was the first man in space. Right now the only thing we are sure of is that Yuri Gagarin was the first Cosmonaut who survived and was in good enough health to be an acceptable soviet hero.
This page was generated with the help of DOC++.
July 20 should be a holiday (Score:1)
The 'History'... (Score:1)
Yea, i'll agree that russia probably is ignored, but as with all fights, the Victor writes the history... we America did win the Space Race, as we made it to the Moon.
However, I dont feel as though russia is completly ignored, as they are always protatyed as our vile competitor. As for technology Russia has contributed to the World... I cant comment on that, as I cant think of much. But at the same time, NASA has contributed many things (ie Velcro).
I Think what is good here is that Russia is trying to do this. Do I Think they will succseed? I think its doubtful, but I wont underestimate the Russians. Why is this great, simple they've set a goal. Sure, we have one too, build the ISS.
Yea, its a new venture for us, but its not that challenging, as say putting a man on the moon 30 years ago. Its also not just our own goal. This is both good, and bad.
The Bad: We have little accountablity, yes we share in trying to get it accomplised, and we want to see it done. I certanly do. But, its not firing up the nation like Kenedy did 40 years ago. Half the ppl in the country probably don't even care.
The Good: We're working together! Its a global community now, so this makes all the more sence. Global Econmy, Global Science. Has to be good.
Solution: Set a friggin goal that is a real challange, akin to the Apollo program. Put a man on Mars. I know we have plans to do it... but our government doesn't understand it... really. Perhaps doing the international thing with it will help. OR, why dont we try settling down on the Moon a bit... its been awhile since we've been there.
Seriously, there muse be some company out there willing to help fund an establishment on the moon... or a trip to mars.
Re:Russians are ignored. (Score:1)
Re:Annoyed Engineer (Score:1)
Re:What do you expect? (Score:3)
The Russians have earned respect and authority when it comes to space exploration, all without media spin. I do not believe that they have been "ignored" in any way. When Sputnik went 'round the world, everyone was listening to *beep* *beep* *beep* on the radio, when Yuri went into space, it was all over television. How many people tuned into the death of MIR? Greatness is for history to decide, not the media.
Also I would like to comment about your diatribe about hypocrisy, granted, sometimes anecdotes can add to a viewpoint, but to be honest it sounded like frustrated venting. I'd like to help you, or tell you that world is a perfect place, but it ain't.
Anyway this is just how I see things, I'm usually wrong most of the time but, hang in there.
-----
Re:I remember the fear... (Score:1)
Do you really think a similar article would have appeared in Pravda had we made it to space first? I doubt it.
"Evil Capitalist War Machine Sends Man Into Space to Threaten the State of Well Being of the Laborer in This Glorious Worker's Paradise," seems more likely. Well, ok, maybe that's a bit much, but still...
God bless the first amendment!
Re:In a truly rational society, women and Asians (Score:1)
Surely there are more factors to this decision than launch cost and weight such as skills, experience, personality/team dynamics (yes, seriously). By your logic, the best thing to send up wouldn't be women and asians, but small monkeys. Or cats. Sea urchins. Oh, wait, since we've made the jump from people to "lower" animals, send some tulips. Or some mold. Or perhaps a small piece of linoleum. Or air. Or vacuum! Oh, wait, it's already up there.
Sure, we have some prejudices in NASA and government agencies. Maybe even more than elsewhere. But I think we're moving in the right direction, and I don't think this is an example.
-Puk
p.s. If it was a joke, sorry about taking it seriously.
Re:In a truly rational society, women and Asians (Score:1)
Surely there are more factors to this decision than launch cost and weight such as skills, experience, personality/team dynamics (yes, seriously). By your logic, the best thing to send up wouldn't be women and asians, but small monkeys. Or cats. Sea monkeys. Oh, wait, since we've made the jump from people to "lower" animals, send some tulips. Or some mold. Or perhaps a small piece of linoleum. Or air. Or vacuum! Oh, wait, it's already up there.
Sure, we have some prejudices in NASA and government agencies. Maybe even more than elsewhere. But I think we're moving in the right direction, and I don't think this is an example.
-Puk
p.s. If it was a joke, sorry about taking it seriously.
dreams of peace - ethnocentrism (Score:1)
PS-I'm going to a yuri's night event (http://www.yurisnight.net) but instead of a bunch of space geeks sipping champagne in a museum it'll be a 9 hour underground party. Seems more fitting somehow L:)
Re:NASA Foul-up (Score:1)
Re:Yuri Gagarin not First (Score:3)
Yuri Gagarin WAS the first human into space. The origin of this rumor about dead cosmonauts is mostly a result of cold war propaganda.
Re:The surly bonds of Earth... (Score:1)
Er, not quite. The quote is from the poem "High Flight", by John Gillespie McGee, Jr., an American pilot flying with the Royal Canadian Air Force, who was killed during a training mission in 1941. The poem is supposed to symbolize the transcendence of flight, regardless of nationality. Reagan may have quoted the poem, but it had been used for years in many contexts. And I can't think of a better application of a poem named "High Flight" than for the first flight of Man off his home world.
hoax? (Score:1)
re: American Inventions (Score:1)
Oh great.
Nukes delivered via the web disquized as music that blasts your ass to the moon in tiny peices resembling abstract art.
Brought to you by Microsoft-influenced integration.
Well, the British invented abstract spelling.
STS-1: First Shuttle Launch picture (Score:1)
Here's the small [nasa.gov] and large [nasa.gov] images of Columbia.
Re:Russians are ignored. (Score:2)
The US has contributed greatly to the world, establishing a country granted rights from the people. Not a country that bestows rights to the people.
Russia was kind enough to bring the world genocide surpassing even Hitler. The US brought a stance against communism.
Basically, if we suck, then why does everyone keep copying us? Stop watching our movies, stop buying our stuff, and stop moving here. No? Then stop complaining that everywhere else is better.
Re:In a truly rational society, women and Asians (Score:1)
Surprisingly enough, she never got a response...
Re:A Toast to all the Heroes of Space. . . (Score:1)
Hear, hear!
Here's to the ones who went first, who had nothing to guide them but faith in other people's best guesses, trust in their own luck and brains, and hope that there would be people following them.
joins his glass to others in salute...
Re:Russians are ignored. (Score:1)
If an enemy changes uniform, picks up another weapon and does not look like your old foe - it does not yet mean that you won.
Soviet Union had many problems. For one, stronger republics financed weaker ones. The dissolution of USSR cleansed the country, allowed to replace ossified political and economical system with hopefully better one.
Cold war had no winner at least because sides still have virtually same number of nuclear warheads pointed in each other's direction. The name of one participant changed, but not much more. Political climate started to improve, but events of last couple of years undid all that.
Re:You prefer the height of foolishness? (Score:1)
Some, yes, of course. Some. A small percentage. I think the writer was more critical of SUV owners than truck owners, though he did paint rather broad strokes.
I'm not so sure about that... (Score:1)
"resulting in the moon landing of 7-20-69"
That is of course if you believe that man has ever landed on the moon.
There is no real proof. The moon rocks aren't real proof IMHO.
Re:You prefer the height of foolishness? (Score:1)
And companys continuously getting variances and waivers so they DON'T have to comply..
What do you think would happen (environmentally) if all SUV's were charged and environment fee of 2000/year ? Do you think most people would stop driving SUV's ? Probably not.. Those things are the biggest gas pigs in this country.. We could help the envronment by NOT allowing cars with less then 30MPG to be on the road (thus FORCING manufacturers to get off the pots on this one)..
higher MPG = less gas/oil..
less gas/oil = less mining/drilling..
less mining/drilling = less chance of an environmental disaster like the Exxon Valdez.
Re:You haven't heard, did you... (Score:1)
Exactly.. They have no intention of giving us cars that can do 100mpg (they CAN do it though).. using the new electric/gas hybrid cars.. until they have their heads nailed to the wall by the govt. to comply with a law demanding 100mpg....
Or at least, the first person to return Unharmed. (Score:4)
Re:Different Standards between US-USSR space progr (Score:2)
AFAIK, the Amreicans used water landing from the beginning, utilizing the water cushioning effect, so it was possible for the astronauts to land inside the capsule safely, even at comparatively high descent rate.
Re:I belive sputnik had an impact too (Score:1)
Russians didn't invest too much effort into manned flight to the moon, they realized the greatest difficulty of such a mission - the return.
NASA Foul-up (Score:1)
Gagarin, a /. troll? (Score:1)
Re:I belive sputnik had an impact too (Score:1)
Yuri's Night (Score:2)
Neat idea, actually seems to have been started by Americans (at least according to the report on NPR this morning). And looks like it's sponsored by the UN Space Generation Advisory Council (?).
Attention Ham Radio Operators (Score:2)
There is a special event station operating in honor of Gagarin's flight. The call is R40G, and I worked him on 14.194 MHz a couple of nights ago. I don't know if they're putting out a special QSL card or something, but it was pretty neat anyway.
73 and good DX,
Matt
N9ZT
Before there was Timothy Leary (Score:1)
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page [cavalrypilot.com]
Fear of the Future: 40 Years of Lost Opportunity (Score:1)
Fear of moving into the future will destroy us.
Re:OT (Score:1)
One simple fact: the first practicing religion in France is now Islam.
The idea that the world has waited for America to mix cultures, races and civilizations is Yet Another "America is pioneer" Myth.
Re:You prefer the height of foolishness? (Score:1)
>cars with less then 30MPG to be on the road (thus FORCING manufacturers to get off the pots
>on this one
Fine, let's see you haul lumber or pull a boat in your 30mpg vehicle. Some people who own trucks actually have work to do. Dumbass.
You can't fight the marketplace by mandating minimum fuel economy standards. If gas is cheap, people will WANT to buy big cars. There's already a law called CAFE (Corporate Average Fuel Economy), that mandates a fleet average of about 27.5mpg for cars (20.7mpg for trucks), with penalties if the average of all the cars you sell fall below that. It doesn't work. They build lots of small cars and practically sell at a loss just to keep their average up.
Revell used to make. . . (Score:2)
I treasured it in my younger days, and of course, have no idea what happened to it.
Here's to you Yuri, may you orbit eternally.
KFG
I second that (Score:1)
Re:Russians are ignored. (Score:1)
The US has contributed greatly to the world, establishing a country granted rights from the people. Not a country that bestows rights to the people.
We may have started out as a country that granted rights from the people, but I believe that we have become more of the other, a country that is bestowing rights to the people. See Report on the Texas Censorware Bill [slashdot.org]. If you have been reading Slashdot regularly and keeping up with the different laws that are trying to be passed in congress, you have to agree that this is seeming to be more of the pattern.
Of course, that's just my opinion, I could be wrong.
Re:Russians are ignored. (Score:2)
Re:Annoyed Engineer (Score:1)
I belive sputnik had an impact too (Score:3)
Re:Russians are ignored. (Score:5)
it is not nearly as creative as other nations were at their peaks, like Britain, Spain, France and Greece. What has America done that compare?
Jazz. Rock n' roll. The Internet. The A-bomb. The moon. The skyscraper. Abstract expressionism. All within just over 200 years. I don't deny that much came before, and much more is to come, but America is doing pretty well.
As a woman, I am attacked because of my gender far more here than anywhere else I have been. As a Catholic, I have been attacked.
How many countries have you been to where women are not allowed to leave the house alone, or own property, or vote, or work? How many countries have you been to where people are routinely bombed/shot/imprisoned for being Catholic? I'm not sure what exactly you mean by "attacked", but Americans have it pretty easy, compared to much of the world.
I would like to see america and the males of america adopt a position of humility, and allow the dispossessed and discriminated against, such as Russians and women, to breathe free and stake their claim in society.
This comment doesn't even make sense. That's the whole point of this country.
Inventions... (Score:2)
So Americans built the moon? Kick Ass!!! I'd like to see any other country top that!!
Sorry, had to be done, otherwise we wouldn't have waves.
Mod me Mad
Re:Different Standards... (Score:2)
So. That is not even close to any point. He was the first man in space! Who gives a Fsck how he got down.
Another point to remind you people is that while Americans were fairly open about what they were doing and the Russians were fairly secretive we still have to look at how they were landing.
Americans, because they were open about it, landed their crews in the oceans. The Russians were landing their crews on dry land. I'm sure I'd jump out too and take my own chance rather than strap myself to a several ton weight and hit the earth at God knows what speed. Besides that there was some sort of malfunction on the craft that forced Yuri Gagarin to eject and land by parachute. Malfunctions happened to Americans too.
Please God don't let me fuck up.
What was that?
Everything is A-OK! -- The Right Stuff
Death (Score:4)
I remember the fear... (Score:4)
Mostly I remember the fear. Everyone knew that a missile that could put up a ship the size of Vostok could put an h-bomb on any city in the world. We started having air raid drills at school and the city tested the air raid sirens for the first time since WWII. The Soviets had sworn to bury us, they had h-bombs, and now there was no way to deny that they had a way to deliver them.
It's hard to believe just how badly the entire US was scared by this single event. One night I heard a police siren and ran for the basement thinking it was an air raid siren.
In many ways this was the beginning of the end for the Soviet Union. It convinced us that they were a real threat. A threat so great that they had to be removed. It took a long time and nearly bankrupted the US but there is no Soviet Union any more.
I think it is the connection between space flight and weapons technology that has caused all the worlds governments to block private access to space and space flight technology. The availablity of cheap simple space ships like the DC-X make it just to easy for someone to carry out atomic, chemical, or biological attacks anywhere in the world. Just build your weapon, hijack a ship and BOOM!
StoneWolf
Re:Russians are ignored. (Score:2)
Anyway, cheers to Gagarin. At that time, you really had to be mad to get satellized! This is what makes them heroes.
Re:The surly bonds of Earth... (Score:3)
Boy, are some people ignorant.
That's a rather famous poem by John G. Magee called High Flight [citynet.net] that's been posted in every American airforce bay from here to Cape Canavaral.
From the referenced page:
That was probably the height of the Soviet Empire (Score:2)
Too bad that Capitalism is an unstoppable (and possibly planet killing) meme, instantly absorbing any competing ideology, stripping the ideology of it's danger, and reselling it.
In a truly rational society, women and Asians (Score:4)
For all their talk of rationality and science, geeks and engineers are just as full of their stereotypes as those hated jocks. Case in point, NASA, a geek paradise.
If they were truly rational at NASA, they would look at launch costs of $22,000 USD a kilo, and conclude that the lighter the astronaut they launch, the more scientific payloads they could carry, and the more consumables they could carry, thus allowing longer duration missions.
And who would the lightest astronauts be? Women and Asians, that's who. But no, your typical Space Shuttle crew looks more like a cleanly shaven Linux kernel developers meeting than a multicultural experience, mostly white men, with perhaps a token woman or Asian.
As an American taxpayer, I am outraged at this inefficiency. Join me in writing your congresspersons to rectify this.
If you're not an American, consider emigrating, or perhaps you could ask ESA to allow more women and Asians on Ariane missions.
Re:Or at least, the first person to return Unharme (Score:2)
Re:Listen to the first cosmonauts online! (Score:2)
Dead Cosmonauts: did you read it? (Score:2)
Russians are ignored. (Score:2)
So it is very good to see Russia given its proper dues on an American site, even if it is a counterculture site such as this.
If only america as a whole could realise that it is just another country. This may be its hour in the sun, but it is not nearly as creative as other nations were at their peaks, like Britain, Spain, France and Greece. What has America done that compare?
Hypocrisy is the problem. As a woman, I am attacked because of my gender far more here than anywhere else I have been. As a Catholic, I have been attacked. My ex boyfriend thought it was because people were jealous.
I would like to see america and the males of america adopt a position of humility, and allow the dispossessed and discriminated against, such as Russians and women, to breathe free and stake their claim in society.
Re:Russians are ignored. (Score:3)
You are right when you say that the Russians have contributed great things to science, etc. Their main problem was that they had brilliant people, but they could not put those ideas into use. For example the physics behind American Stealth technology is based on the discoveries of a Russian scientist that the Soviets could not put into practice.
The great thing about the USA is that we have become so successful, politcally and scientifically, in such a short time. We have no dillusions that we are better than the cultures before, but we do accept new ideas and we at present are the most technologically advanced country in the world. The USA has the resources to fund the most scientific work and thus is going to continue to be the most scientifcally advanced country.
Now if we thought we were this great empire that all should worship, then I can assure you that we would be introverted and would not share our discoveries with others, but we want to create a global society.
The US has its problems, but it recognizes them and it will fix them, and it has fixed many of them. You act as though Europe has no problems, but that is just as ignorant as saying that the US is tuck on itself.
Have a nice day!
Stupid? (Score:3)
It's often dangerous to do something that nobody has ever done before, but we'd never get anywhere if nobody did anything until it could be pronounced "safe". That's why we have test pilots.
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Different Standards between US-USSR space program (Score:3)
I don't wish to take anything away from the Russian space program. However, although it appears that the USSR program was flawless through the late 50's and early 60's, in fact recent documents point out that the Soviets suffered numerous failures, but were able to prevent them from becoming known. The successful Sputnik launch occurred after 3-4 secret failures.
The Americans, on the other hand, were operating entirely under the eye of the world's press. Even though they were working up the same learning curve as the Soviets, every failure they made was a public debacle.
Another interesting (and suppressed) fact is that Gagarin ejected from his capsule and parachuted to the Earth while the capsule crashed below him.