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Moon Government NASA Space United States

Mike Pence Tells NASA To Accelerate Human Missions To the Moon 'By Any Means Necessary' (theverge.com) 375

Today at the fifth meeting of the National Space Council, Vice President Mike Pence said the Trump administration is committed to sending humans back to the Moon by 2024, four years earlier than NASA's previous target of 2028. The Verge reports: Pence, speaking at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, noted that the administration will meet this goal "by any means necessary." He called on NASA to adopt new policies and argued that the space agency would need to embrace "a new mindset that begins with setting bold goals and staying on schedule." To do that, he said the administration may consider ditching some of NASA's current contractors -- which are currently developing new vehicles to take humans into deep space -- and using commercially developed rockets instead. "If commercial rockets are the only way to get American astronauts to the Moon in the next five years, then commercial rockets it will be," said Pence. "Urgency must be our watch word."

However, Pence offered few clear recommendations and changes that would help to accelerate NASA's return, apart from potentially switching rockets and contractors. "It was rhetoric about 'by all means possible' and 'we'll provide the resources necessary' and 'leadership is essential,'" John Logsdon, a space policy expert at George Washington University, tells The Verge. "I mean, they're all good words. But the devil's in the details."

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Mike Pence Tells NASA To Accelerate Human Missions To the Moon 'By Any Means Necessary'

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  • Wait, what? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Aighearach ( 97333 ) on Wednesday March 27, 2019 @02:05AM (#58339956)

    Setting bold goals and staying on schedule.

    So I guess, they sacrifice safety.

    • Setting bold goals and staying on schedule.

      So I guess, they sacrifice safety.

      Reminds me of a recent Boeing story...

      • Re:Wait, what? (Score:5, Interesting)

        by fahrbot-bot ( 874524 ) on Wednesday March 27, 2019 @03:47AM (#58340192)

        Setting bold goals and staying on schedule.
        So I guess, they sacrifice safety.

        Reminds me of a recent Boeing story...

        Or the Space Shuttle Challenge [wikipedia.org] and its o-rings.
        (Speaking of sacrificing safety for schedule.)

        • Let's not forget Apollo One, Jan. 27, 1967.

          Virgil "Gus" Grissom
          Ed White
          Roger Chaffee

          All because NASA used pure Oxygen in the capsule.
          Stupid, stupid, stupid.
          • Re:Wait, what? (Score:5, Informative)

            by fahrbot-bot ( 874524 ) on Wednesday March 27, 2019 @06:18AM (#58340434)

            Let's not forget Apollo One, Jan. 27, 1967 ... All because NASA used pure Oxygen in the capsule.

            Yes, but that wasn't really done to cut corners or to keep to the schedule, but because on other air mix incidents and/or concerns, Choice of pure oxygen atmosphere [wikipedia.org].

            The Command-Module redesign [wikipedia.org] included changing the air mixture and pressure while on the ground to be 64/40% oxygen/nitrogen and lower pressure (14 vs 16.7 PSI), with the mix changing to 100% oxygen and 5 PSI in flight -- the rational is detailed in the link. A 100% oxygen mix was kept in the suits to keep astronauts from getting the "bends" (decompression sickness) during the ascent.

            In addition, and probably most importantly, all the flammable materials were replaced with non-flammable or self extinguishing materials.

            • True, but I can't help but think if they had taken a bit more time instead of trying to reach Kennedy's goal, that perhaps such an accident would not of happened.
              There was a lot of pressure to meet that 'end of the decade goal.
              I have always believed their deaths were a result of pushing ahead without thinking through the safety of what they were trying to accomplish. The goal being more important than the means.

              Just an opinion.

              Of course, hindsight is always 20/20, and they were "going where no man had gone
              • On the flip side, by having the accident that they did, it drove a whole new focus on safety and drove change throughout the program. Without the accident it's possible more lives would have been lost in space
              • by geekoid ( 135745 )

                No, it would have happened because they had good reasoning for their decisions.

                It was all literally new. Never done before stuff.

                Stupid would have been not learning from it.

          • by geekoid ( 135745 )

            Ignorant. Not stupid. Same as the door design.

    • Re:Wait, what? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by phayes ( 202222 ) on Wednesday March 27, 2019 @02:58AM (#58340112) Homepage

      No, Hopefully what they will be abandoning is the hugely expensive launcher and capsule that senator Shelby Has been forcing NASA to use as a means of shoveling tens of billions of pork to his constituants. If NASA were able to at last abandon the go-nowhere jobs programs called SLS & Orion — and if they used an equivalent amount of funding, missions to the moon would indeed be possible.

      The problem is Shelbly.

      • If not for pork, what is the purpose of landing on the Moon ?

      • Re:Wait, what? (Score:5, Insightful)

        by nucrash ( 549705 ) on Wednesday March 27, 2019 @06:56AM (#58340522)

        Senator Shelby isn't alone. There is a reason why the Space Shuttle was built from parts from 49 states. There is a reason why SLS and Orion likely have a similar distribution of vendors.

        Our government loves to espouse their hate of socialism but when finding ways to create jobs back in their states or districts, they gladly distribute military and other large programs across the US.

        • Re:Wait, what? (Score:4, Interesting)

          by strikethree ( 811449 ) on Wednesday March 27, 2019 @12:21PM (#58342156) Journal

          Our government loves to espouse their hate of socialism but when finding ways to create jobs back in their states or districts, they gladly distribute military and other large programs across the US.

          Kind of. They don't do it for Socialist reasons, they do it because they get kickbacks. Legalized corruption so to speak. It has nothing to do with Socialism other than it can look like Socialism from a certain angle.

      • by lgw ( 121541 )

        No, Hopefully what they will be abandoning is the hugely expensive launcher and capsule that senator Shelby Has been forcing NASA to use as a means of shoveling tens of billions of pork to his constituants. If NASA were able to at last abandon the go-nowhere jobs programs called SLS & Orion â" and if they used an equivalent amount of funding, missions to the moon would indeed be possible.

        And just to be clear, the director of NASA said much the same in recent testimony to congress. Of course, he didn't say "the SLS is a shit program you're forcing us to waste money on" he said "it's important we keep our commitments and stay on schedule" in the context of "let's just buy a ride on SpaceX".

    • Or increase cost.

      Or, if the cost isn't increased, accelerate the cost curve.
    • Re:Wait, what? (Score:4, Interesting)

      by Oswald McWeany ( 2428506 ) on Wednesday March 27, 2019 @08:17AM (#58340804)

      Setting bold goals and staying on schedule.

      So I guess, they sacrifice safety.

      Well, both of those are hard to do when every President sets a different goal for NASA. Most NASA projects take longer than the average President's term in office; every President comes in and completely changes what it is he wants NASA to do. How is NASA supposed to operate successfully if their mission and goals change every 4 to 8 years?

      NASA really should be given more independence with budget set out years in advance. Trump and Pence might give NASA one direction, two years from now President Justin Bieber might give them a completely different direction to take.

      / no one thought Trump had a chance at being President either

      • Setting bold goals and staying on schedule.

        So I guess, they sacrifice safety.

        Well, both of those are hard to do when every President sets a different goal for NASA.

        BAM! we have the winner here.

        Yup, Even with 8 years in office as has been the trend lately, NASA's goals and budget have been changed willy nilly by each occupant. NASA is just a political football, I'm amazed they function as well as they do.

    • Nope, just ditch the big/slow/inefficient/corrupt contractor-fucks who've been holding us back for over forty years: With a reusable heavylifter now extant, the only major remaining hurdle is how to deal with the dangerous, abrasive moondust - electrostatically would be my guess.
    • Not necessarily. Its no secret that the purpose of SLS is not to actually go anywhere but to provide political pork. They have milked the program for over 15 years and have nothing to show for it. I think they could get it up and flying very quickly with proper reform and motivation. We were able to get Apollo 11 on the moon within 10 years and at the time we had no idea what we are doing. Making a moon rocket aint cheap but it should be much faster and easier now. The lack of pace isn't due to lack of fund
    • It is NOT about staying on schedule. It's about finding better ways to play hide the pork.

      The article says Accelerate missions to the moon -- by any means necessary.

      The problem with Pence's lack of science knowledge is that too much acceleration to the moon could kill the cosmonauts due to G forces.

      Oh, wait. Pence is working for America, right? Yeah, he is on our side.
    • Setting bold goals and staying on schedule.

      So I guess, they sacrifice safety.

      Of course... neither Pence or Trump will be going in the journey, so why do they need to waste time and money on things life safety? After all, any- and every-one apart from the aforementioned two are expendable and replaceable.

    • Setting bold goals and staying on schedule.

      So I guess, they sacrifice safety.

      Yes, this is why the new design will involve a nuclear powered trebuchet and remove the need for life support. After all the goal is to a get human to the moon, while that being alive and returning thing are details that can be worked out after?

  • Ah, very good then [fanpop.com]

    And the dish ran away with the spoon...

  • Hrmmm (Score:5, Funny)

    by sjames ( 1099 ) on Wednesday March 27, 2019 @02:14AM (#58339978) Homepage Journal

    NASA director reads the memo again:

    by any means necessary

    Hrmmm, clickety clickety clickety...Wall funds diverted to NASA!

    • Re:Hrmmm (Score:4, Interesting)

      by hcs_$reboot ( 1536101 ) on Wednesday March 27, 2019 @02:29AM (#58340032)
      All of this is an attempt to save face looking at the various tangible Moon projects from China and others. I'll believe it when NASA says "we'll go to the Moon in 20xx" and xx<25.
      • Re:Hrmmm (Score:4, Funny)

        by Freischutz ( 4776131 ) on Wednesday March 27, 2019 @02:39AM (#58340066)

        All of this is an attempt to save face looking at the various tangible Moon projects from China and others. I'll believe it when NASA says "we'll go to the Moon in 20xx" and xx<25.

        They already did that and succeeding administrations changed the priorities. I'll believe NASA is going for a moon landing when they actually touch down. Then they can get busy building a wall to keep people from the Mexican part of the moon from invading their crater with 'caravans'.

        • All of this is an attempt to save face looking at the various tangible Moon projects from China and others. I'll believe it when NASA says "we'll go to the Moon in 20xx" and xx<25.

          They already did that and succeeding administrations changed the priorities. I'll believe NASA is going for a moon landing when they actually touch down. Then they can get busy building a wall to keep people from the Mexican part of the moon from invading their crater with 'caravans'.

          When the Chinese land ans start establishing their systems on the moon, the same politicians who stood in the way of NASA at every turn will shit their pants and scream about how NASA dropped the ball and allowed the Chinese to achieve space superiority. Then we'll act. Worked for Sputnik and the Russian BM systems being developed.

    • NASA director reads the memo again:

      by any means necessary

      Hrmmm, clickety clickety clickety...Wall funds diverted to NASA!

      Just tell trump that they are going to put all those scary foreignese "invaders" on the moon and he'll go right for it.

  • Show me the Money! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by neoRUR ( 674398 ) on Wednesday March 27, 2019 @02:17AM (#58339990)

    Yes, show me how its all going to be paid for, and most of it will be contracted out.
    I'm all for going to Mars and sending someone there.
    Pushing people to develop new technologies or think differently will help drive innovation.
    But don't cut current programs and funding just because someone wants to get to Mars in their term.

    • by bazorg ( 911295 )

      I'm all for going to Mars and sending someone there.

      Agreed. Send Trump & Pence :D

    • by guruevi ( 827432 )

      NASA has about the same funding (adjusted for inflation) it did in the 60s when they did go to the moon. Technology has cut the costs significantly, the only thing preventing us is corruption, the right hands have to get greased, and political infighting as to which state is getting the production facilities.

    • by c ( 8461 )

      Yes, show me how its all going to be paid for, and most of it will be contracted out.
      I'm all for going to Mars and sending someone there.

      It doesn't need to be expensive. I can think of plenty of people (including the dude mentioned in the article subject line) who could be sent on a very cheap Mars mission. For some definition of "sent", "mission" and even "Mars" which may not emphasize their comfort or survival.

    • NASA would have plenty of money if they weren't forced to throw it down the hole into the money pit that is SLS. They've been at that for 15 years and have spent billions playing with shuttle spare parts and have nothing to show for it. They cant even get an upper stage put together. Its not a funding issue. Its a corruption issue.
    • by AC-x ( 735297 )

      Yes, show me how its all going to be paid for

      I mean, they could reduce the US military budget by $100 billion and still be spending more than twice what China does...

  • By any chance, is there a "christian" prophecy which includes human presence on the moon?

    • by Freischutz ( 4776131 ) on Wednesday March 27, 2019 @02:40AM (#58340074)

      By any chance, is there a "christian" prophecy which includes human presence on the moon?

      Yes, it says that a group of space cadets will go there in the reign of god-emperor Trump to build a wall.

    • By any chance, is there a "christian" prophecy which includes human presence on the moon?

      Well, there is Iron Sky:

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

      That works . . . kinda sorta . . .

  • Get your ass to.. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by MrKaos ( 858439 ) on Wednesday March 27, 2019 @02:32AM (#58340038) Journal

    Mars^H^H^HMoon^H^H^H^HMars^H^H^HMoon

  • by RyanFenton ( 230700 ) on Wednesday March 27, 2019 @02:34AM (#58340044)

    Not because it is hard, but because we think it sounds easy. And will look good.

    Because the real service we offer, is to allow the crueler half of a large generation empty remembrances of what they used to like the idea of, as we strip of it of meaning.

    I've been to science/media conventions where folks in upper-level NASA positions (often conservatives) speak frankly on these subjects, along with a lot of engineer coworkers that spent time on the - none of this lines up at all with anything they'd want.

    Ryan Fenton

    • >"Not because it is hard, but because we think it sounds easy. And will look good."

      Welcome to politics!

  • by bradley13 ( 1118935 ) on Wednesday March 27, 2019 @02:51AM (#58340090) Homepage

    That means two things, neither of which is going to happen:

    - Increased risk, including a likelihood of deaths.

    - Reducing Congressional oversight, so they can't micromanage NASA's budget and force NASA to hand out pork to the "right" Congressional districts.

    Realistically, it would probably also require a third thing: firing the NASA bureaucracy that has grown up in service of Pournelle's Iron Law.

    So, no. Not going to happen. NASA as it exists today is not capable of doing this job.

    • by imidan ( 559239 ) on Wednesday March 27, 2019 @03:44AM (#58340182)

      I think you're right, but I would add two things:

      - Appropriate mix of using contractors and in-house development. SpaceX and others are showing that they can get payloads, soon including people, into orbit. NASA should recognize the commodification of the basics and focus the big government dollars on space tech that the commercial guys won't touch right now. Of course, that means giving up on a lot of pork spending, in line with your item #2.

      - Adjust the budget to realistically accomplish the goals. I suspect this means increasing the budget, but I don't know.

      Anyway, as I said, I think you're right, which is to say: none of this is going to happen anytime soon.

      NASA does a lot of stuff, and a lot of it (Earth observation missions, for example) works really well. But for these moon shot missions, nothing is at stake. Someone like Mike Pence says we're going to the moon for no particular reason, and nobody cares, and nobody believes we're actually going to the moon, so when we don't go, it's not a surprise to anybody--in fact, they've all forgotten that Mike Pence said anything about it in the first place. So who cares if we failed?

      • While I don't disagree with your position as stated, there are things at stake. Even if the commoners don't think of it as strategy, the leaders of nations are reaching toward the heavens and staking their claim. They're taking the high ground. Humanity is expanding outward and whoever leads the charge from the best defensible position wins. It's no longer the US and Russia in the solar neighborhood dick waving contest. India has shot down a LEO satellite showcasing their prowess and China has landed on the
  • - give us more money. Give us half of the budget allocated to the military. Give us half of their seven hundred dollar toilet seats and three hundred dollar spanners.

  • by Hognoxious ( 631665 ) on Wednesday March 27, 2019 @04:00AM (#58340224) Homepage Journal

    "Urgency must be our watch word."

    Why? Is it going somewhere?

  • by misnohmer ( 1636461 ) on Wednesday March 27, 2019 @04:36AM (#58340266)

    I'm not sure what "any means necessary means". Does NASA get a blank check from the government? If Elon says for 10 trillion he can get us to the moon earlier, they'll fund it? If it involves paying large sums to Russia of China, that's ok too? How about safety? Send 10 rockets, as long as one makes it there that's fine, even if 9 crash and burn? Who exactly decides what means are necessary?

    • If it involves paying large sums to Russia of China, that's ok too?

      I'm pretty sure this administration would have no problem with paying large sums of taxpayer dollars to Russia. China, I'm not so sure about.

      • by radja ( 58949 )

        NASA has cooperated with the Russians in the open for a long time, and have paid them millions of dollars. Those Soyuz flights to the ISS weren't free.

      • Your joke is so last week. Besides, its Congress that approved NASA the funding to buy seats on Russian rockets, not the Trump admin.
  • Try a rocket, I hear that's the best way way to accelerate moon missions. Or any kind really.
  • Why? (Score:2, Insightful)

    by DogDude ( 805747 )
    We have millions of Americans who still cannot afford to go to the doctor, who cannot afford education, who cannot afford housing, and this asshat thinks we need to send people to the moon to do what, exactly?
    • We have millions of Americans who still cannot afford to go to the doctor, who cannot afford education, who cannot afford housing, and this asshat thinks we need to send people to the moon to do what, exactly?

      I can barely get mod points and I have none at present to vote you down with, but apparently all you have to do is cut and paste this from a similar post that always gets made the last time Slashdot talked about going to the moon or Mars and you'll get 5 points. I've got news for you pal - in your lifetime I don't think we'll ever have people in the USA who can all afford to go to the doctor (health insurance issues are likely to get worse over time, not better because nobody has a workable plan to fix th

    • To plant another flag of course!

    • So cut NASA completely is what I'm hearing you say?
    • My god, what an original and insightful comment! I don't think anybody [wordpress.com] has ever thought of that before!

      Okay, let's math shit up. NASA's 2018 budget is approximately $21.5B (0.49% of the Federal budget) and the number of Americans living below poverty is approximately 39.7 million. Assuming there's zero administrative costs as well as zero costs in printing and mailing checks, that works out to be approximately $541.56 annually per poor person. Yep, that's going to make HUGE difference in people's lives alr

  • Why 2024? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by netlag1 ( 4094715 ) on Wednesday March 27, 2019 @06:30AM (#58340458)
    Why is Pence so hot to get to the moon asap? What could possibly be scheduled for 2024 that the vice president would want some great publicity for?
  • by andydread ( 758754 ) on Wednesday March 27, 2019 @06:46AM (#58340498)
    He did say by any means possible!
  • by nucrash ( 549705 ) on Wednesday March 27, 2019 @06:59AM (#58340534)

    That's right, Mike Pence, the young Earth creationist, wants us to go to the Moon by 2024. This is a man who doesn't understand science or history of us getting to the Moon. He doesn't understand money either because NASA had 5% of the budget at that time. Currently NASA has what, half a percent of the budget?

  • to Trump's vanity. He has no vision. Everything he does is looking backwards. Bring back coal, go to the moon; what's next, fly a hot air balloon around the world?

    Even if we go back to the moon, will Trump supporters believe we did it?

  • The speed at which NASA gets things done depends upon how deeply they are funded. Since funds come from the US government they have power over the progress of NASA. They have cut funding deeply and left NASA in a hole for a couple of decades. Now, due to Trump's insanity the tax revenues for the US will decline. Obviously when firms like Harley Davidson and Ford effectively leave the US all together the hand writing is on the wall. Trump's trade policies were stated as the reason Harley was leaving the US.
  • by Pyramid ( 57001 ) on Wednesday March 27, 2019 @11:11AM (#58341674)

    Does this mean there will be adequate funding and an absence of political meddling?

  • Where's the line in the Malignanat Carcinoma's federal budget for next year where NASA gets a 100% increase, from $20B to $40B?

    Oh, I see, like any sleazy CEO, do more with less!!!

    Datum: At the height of the Moon Race, in the sixties, NASA's budget was also $20B... in 1965 dollars. Adjusted for inflation, that would be about $180B or $200B now.

    Anyone who wants more in space... without increasing the budget is a liar.

  • by Locke2005 ( 849178 ) on Wednesday March 27, 2019 @11:47AM (#58341936)
    Trump's proposed budget contains CUTS to NASA funding! I've never seen an administration that contradicted themselves so much!

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