Private Spaceflight Law Shot Down 50
wiggles writes "MSNBC says that bill HR3752, which allows private, suborbital tourist flights, has died. We'll have to wait until next year for this one. According to the article, 'The bill would have put private-sector suborbital spaceflights on much firmer regulatory footing. It was approved overwhelmingly by the House back in March but languished in the Senate for months.'"
Mexico (Score:4, Insightful)
Take a trip to Mazetlan, see the beautiful sights, enjoy some tequilla, and then fly into outer space as the highlight of your vacation!
Re:Mexico (Score:2)
Re:Mexico (Score:5, Interesting)
For one NASA flight, a frog was brought along on a mission for research testing, and as soon as they entered a zero-G environment, the frog not only puked, but actually inverted it's entire actual stomach outside of it's mouth, wiped the stomach walls clean with it's little front feet in a frenzied panic, and then shoved the stomache back down it's throat. After that, the it was fine.
There have been many times, particularilly after drinking tequila, in which I wished I was capable of doing that.
Re:Mexico (Score:1, Insightful)
it's mouth
it's little front feet
it's throat
"its".
Re:Mexico (Score:2)
thanks
Re:Mexico (Score:2)
I'm sure that would be a really great way to pick up girls at a party, chuckle.
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Won't happen, Pentagon won't allow it (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Won't happen, Pentagon won't allow it (Score:2, Insightful)
Right, because we have a vast fleet of military spaceships, and it's not like anybody could ever put a commercia
Re:Won't happen, Pentagon won't allow it (Score:3, Insightful)
Right, because we have a vast fleet of military spaceships, and it's not like anybody could ever put a commercial satelite into orbit from a French-owned island near the Equator.
Of course none of that is true. But the Pentagon has the best means of accomplishing those things -- budgetary and expertise -- and they don't want any new kids on the block messing with their potential superiority. Further, they have repeatedly exhibited their hostility towards private space ventures, and with this administration
Re:Won't happen, Pentagon won't allow it (Score:1)
Re:Won't happen, Pentagon won't allow it (Score:1)
Re:Won't happen, Pentagon won't allow it (Score:2)
Re:Won't happen, Pentagon won't allow it (Score:3, Informative)
It has nothing to do with the Pentagon.
Sen Inofe from Oklahoma held it up because the definition of a suborbital rocket ("`suborbital rocket' means a rocket-propelled vehicle intended for flight on a suborbital trajectory whose thrust is greater than its lift for the majority of the powered portion of its flight") could be read to mean that Rocketplane, a venture in his state, would fall un
Moving Forward (Score:2, Interesting)
It does open a bidding war (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:It does open a bidding war (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:It does open a bidding war (Score:2)
Obviously the US needs a state on the equator - prefferably on the east coast so launches go out over the ocean.
What's that Mr Bush? Brazil needs liberating? YES SIR! I'll get right on it!
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Re:It does open a bidding war (Score:2)
Brazil and Bush... that's waxing poetically, if ever I saw....
why do we need the US's permission? (Score:4, Interesting)
If I was looking to make money off of this, I'd go to Canada or Mexico, start sending people out into space, and make millions while the whole thing gets fought out in court, generating millions of dollars worth of free advertising. I'd probably end up selling the company before a decision ever comes around, and go live in Costa Rica.
What's the US gonna do, shoot down passenger space craft just because congress can't get a bill through? Talk about a PR nightmare!
Re:why do we need the US's permission? (Score:1)
Re:why do we need the US's permission? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:why do we need the US's permission? (Score:2)
Re:why do we need the US's permission? (Score:2)
Re:why do we need the US's permission? (Score:1)
DEAR GOD NOOOO!!!!
The UN sucks, it's not really relavent for anything.
Re:why do we need the US's permission? (Score:1)
Re:why do we need the US's permission? (Score:1)
No, they don't send letters. They pass resolutions. If you violate the resolution, they pass another resolution that says how pissed off they all were that you violated the first resolution. This process continues until in disgust, the United States pushes the UN aside and kicks your ass for violating the resolutions.
No tears yet (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:No tears yet (Score:2)
Concern for passenger and crew safety is commendable of course but let's face it, we're dealing with an inherently risky venture here and everyone involved in a space flight would know this regardless of whatever safety standard is mandated.
It's in the industry's own self-interest to implement the highest possible safety standards itse
Re:No tears yet (Score:2)
I'm a little unclear on this part of the bill: (Score:2)
Is this suggesting that the government would be prohibited from being compensated, or that private industry would be prohibited from being compensated. If that latter, then ...?
In short, although I initially supported this bill (i.e., before I actually read any of it), now I'm not so sure...
Re:I'm a little unclear on this part of the bill: (Score:2)
On the other hand... (Score:2, Informative)
"More serious explanation"? (Score:2)
What more of an explanation do they need than this: Space is hard. People will die exploring and exploiting space. They'll know what they're getting into before they close the hatch, and will agree to take that chance.
That pretty
This is nonsense (Score:2)
There are no laws preventing commercial space flight. This was an attempt to regulate it and therefore restrict commercial space flight. This bill failing is a good thing for privite space missions. It would have been bad had it passed.
Re:This is nonsense (Score:4, Informative)
No, it's been regulated by the FAA since 1991. This bill would have just changed the regulations a bit. In any event this is still suborbital flight we're talking about.
Re:This is nonsense (Score:2)
Other agencies, like the FCC, FBI, and even NASA have all been wanting to get their hands into the cookie jar, and with the bill it is very obvious that only the FAA can run the show except for some very minor issues (like the FCC controlling telemetry frequencies for spacecraft). For that this
Re:This is nonsense (Score:1, Informative)
When they got approval, the gov't said "ok, you can fly, but not with paying passengers."
I agree that it should be as you say, but the U.S. isn't that free of a country anymore.
Re:free space! (Score:1)
Good! (Score:1)
books don't have phones! (Score:1)
From a more recent article: (Score:3, Informative)
From here [msn.com]:
The Republican leadership tried to push the bill through by suspending the chamber's rules through a voice vote, but Rep. Jim Oberstar, D-Minn. -- who voiced firm opposition to the bill on safety grounds -- called for a yea-and-nay breakdown and noted that a quorum was not present. That stymied the GOP's procedural maneuver, and further action was postponed.
The bill's sponsor, Rep. Dana Rohrabacher, R-Calif., argued during the 40-minute debate that new legislation was needed to resolve the Federal Aviation Administration's role in regulating piloted suborbital space launches, and that the FAA would be able to step in if a spacecraft was found to be unsafe for the crew or passengers. Oberstar, on the other hand, believes that the bill is too lax in that regard, and that the FAA would have to stand by until someone is killed or gravely injured.
Rohrabacher said failure to act could drive the infant suborbital space travel industry out of the country. "Don't strangle this industry and drive these entrepreneurs offshore," he pleaded.
Re:From a more recent article: (Score:2)