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Mars Government NASA The Almighty Buck Politics

Trump Wants $1 Billion For Private-Sector-Led Mars Exploration 172

President Trump's 2026 budget proposes over $1 billion for Mars exploration through a new Commercial Mars Payload Services Program, while simultaneously slashing NASA's overall budget by 25%. Phys.Org reports: Under the proposal, NASA would award contracts to companies developing spacesuits, communications systems and a human-rated landing vehicle to foster exploration of the Red Planet. Trump's proposed $18.8 billion NASA budget would cut the agency's funding by about 25% from the year before, with big hits to its science portfolio. The fleshed-out request on Friday builds upon a condensed budget proposal released earlier this month.

"We must continue to be responsible stewards of taxpayer dollars," NASA Acting Administrator Janet Petro wrote in a letter included in the request. "That means making strategic decisions -- including scaling back or discontinuing ineffective efforts." The new Mars scheme is modeled after NASA's Commercial Lunar Payload Services program that has benefited Intuitive Machines LLC, Firefly Aerospace Inc. and Astrobotic Technology Inc., though it has achieved mixed results. According to the budget, the contract to land on Mars would build upon existing lander contracts.
America's Next NASA Administrator Will Not Be Former SpaceX Astronaut Jared Isaacman

Trump Wants $1 Billion For Private-Sector-Led Mars Exploration

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  • by fluffernutter ( 1411889 ) on Tuesday June 03, 2025 @06:11AM (#65423977)
    Let me guess. SpaceX will provide all of this.
    • by wildstoo ( 835450 ) on Tuesday June 03, 2025 @06:27AM (#65423985)

      Yep, the perfect way for Musk to siphon public money into his pockets for decades to come. Even better - because it's "hard" and "nobody has done it before", the deadlines will be non-existent and the deliverables completely negotiable after the fact.

      Enjoy your kleptocracy.

      • by Cyberpunk Reality ( 4231325 ) on Tuesday June 03, 2025 @06:40AM (#65424001)

        Yep. Much like his endless Full Self-Driving promises to Tesla shareholders, Musk's promises of "Mars Real Soon" are vaporware, even moreso than the lunar lander services he's been paid for. This will be more wealth transfer, done at the expense of far more productive research and science.

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Tuesday June 03, 2025 @06:54AM (#65424017) Homepage Journal

          It was a space race when NASA was going to Mars, now it's looking almost certain that China will be the first to do a sample return mission, and at least 50/50 for them being the first to land humans there. Their sample return mission is scheduled to launch in 2028.

          Their human Moon landing is targeting around 2030 as well. I'd say at the moment it is 50/50 if China or the US will be the first to land people there this century.

          Does it matter? From a scientific perspective it's nice to have money spent on that kind of exploration and development, but a lot of it is just corporate welfare too. As someone in Europe I don't really care which of the two gets there first.

          • It was a space race when NASA was going to Mars, now it's looking almost certain that China will be the first to do a sample return mission, and at least 50/50 for them being the first to land humans there. Their sample return mission is scheduled to launch in 2028.

            Their human Moon landing is targeting around 2030 as well. I'd say at the moment it is 50/50 if China or the US will be the first to land people there this century.

            Does it matter? From a scientific perspective it's nice to have money spent on that kind of exploration and development, but a lot of it is just corporate welfare too. As someone in Europe I don't really care which of the two gets there first.

            I'd rather have a space race than warmongering. On or off planet.

            And for those looking at the 60s thinking we can afford both, fuck you. We can't. Vietnam was pointless. As near every war is.

            • And for those looking at the 60s thinking we can afford both, fuck you. We can't. Vietnam was pointless. As near every war is.

              The private sector gets rich on both space races and wars, so they're quite happy to promote and participate in both sets of activities. But wars, like fires, seem much easier to start - and sometimes they break out spontaneously. Starting a space race requires effort and planning.

              As for being able to afford a space race, I would argue that as a species we can't afford it. We're well on the way to rendering our planet marginally inhabitable by our kind, thereby potentially ending our civilization.

              We can't a

            • There is nothing about this that prevents warmongering.

              Please explain how this administration's actions in the middle east are not warmongering. I'm pretty sure that some people have a few things to say about his wanting to turn Gaza into some modern-day Gomorrah.

            • You do know that the entire point of the original space race was to establish the ability to nuke the other side, right?
              • You do know that the entire point of the original space race was to establish the ability to nuke the other side, right?

                Yes. And we've checked that box. To death, and then some. Hell, we're targeting the cockroaches with current stockpiles.

                Needless to say I was hopeful a 21st Century space race would have loftier goals. Perhaps starting with cleaning up the starting line (orbit) so the guy named Kessler doesn't confirm the only place us advanced rednecks are racing to, is orbit. To turn left and crash.

              • That's simply not true.
                The initial point of rockets in space was to nuke the other side- for sure- but that was hardly a race.
                The US had the capacity, and the Soviet Union did not- full stop.

                By the time there was any kind of race, the soviets had caught up on capacity, and we were worried about prestige and throwing humans around the planet, and onto other planets.
          • by nomadic ( 141991 )

            Landing on Mars is the easy part, getting back off is the hard one, even with the lower-than-Earth gravity. China has a bit of an advantage in that the Chinese government is willing to risk astronaut lives a lot more than the US.

            • I think the hard part is surviving on Mars for any extended length of time without suffering severe radiation-induced illnesses. Heck, surviving even getting their and back has the same issue. We've basically never gone further than a week or so's round trip to the Moon, with only part of that outside of Earth's magnetic field. Now you're talking years (at least 2.5 years round trip), and while for no other reason than the sheer awesomeness of humans walking on Mars, there are vast technical and biological

              • Heck, surviving even getting their and back has the same issue.

                Bingo. It may be that the most humane thing to do is to send them with a gun and a single round.

                Current plans for getting people there are pretty fucking batshit crazy, with the plan for getting them back being some serious clown shit, with a timeline that is entirely divorced from the reality of the ongoing equipment tests.

            • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

              On what do you base that claim? So far no Chinese astronauts have been killed or badly injured, and the same cannot be said for the US.

          • by Sique ( 173459 )
            I don't think you would get out more than bragging rights for putting a person on Mars. Mars will not become Second Earth anytime soon[tm], except we invent planetary size artificial gravity. Otherwise, people born and grown up on Mars will not be able to visit Earth except with some really heavy machinery and life support systems, while at the same time be to large to fit in any terrestric vehicles/chairs/beds/rooms.

            To me, putting a human on Mars is just a waste of money.

        • The FSD promises may have hit a hard barrier.

          Musk claimed that cars with FSD 2.5 hardware would support FSD, then it became 3.0 hardware. This wasn't too bad because the 2.5 cars could be upgraded to 3.0.

          Now it looks like real FSD will require HW 4.0 and there is no upgrade path from 3.0 to 4.0. I don't understand why there isn't already a class action, asking for thousands of dollars back. for owners of HW 3.0 cars who bought FSD.

      • Yep, the perfect way for Musk to siphon public money into his pockets for decades to come.

        Correction. To siphon MORE public money into his pockets.
      • by nomadic ( 141991 )

        Fortunately he's incompetent and has already run Tesla into the ground. The company is basically living off schizoid incels buying the stock. SpaceX's success is largely based on the fact that they keep Musk away from actual management, but with Tesla a smoking ruin he's going to push his way into that and mess it up too.

      • Yep, the perfect way for Musk to siphon public money into his pockets for decades to come. Even better - because it's "hard" and "nobody has done it before", the deadlines will be non-existent and the deliverables completely negotiable after the fact.

        Enjoy your kleptocracy.

        Wow - an assertion that's supported by recent history, and which comes close to being an inevitable outcome, is downmodded as 'Troll'.

        Moderation here is getting really, really bad.

      • Yep, the perfect way for Musk to siphon public money into his pockets for decades to come. Even better - because it's "hard" and "nobody has done it before", the deadlines will be non-existent and the deliverables completely negotiable after the fact.

        And all his Starships will have Full Autopilot within 1-3 years ... :-)

    • Let me guess. SpaceX will provide all of this.

      Well, considering that NASA is being cut out, it ain't about any science.

      Maybe we can get Captain Katy Perry to lead the Mars missions?

    • “The new Mars scheme is modeled after NASA's Commercial Lunar Payload Services program that has benefited Intuitive Machines LLC, Firefly Aerospace Inc. and Astrobotic Technology Inc.”

      “a new NASA initiative called the Commercial Mars Payload Services Program .. would be modeled on a NASA program that helped to fuel the development of SpaceX's Falcon 9 rocket and Northrop Grumman Corp.'s cargo-hauling Cygnus.”
    • They are literally the only choice for space flight in the US. Even if you wanted to pay Russia to take you it would cost 10x as much, and if you chose NASA it would cost 100x as much. After Starship is built, the next cheapest option in the entire world cost at least 1,000 times as much. There is a reason Elon's companies work, because they are just simply better value and better execution. Look at Tesla's, easily the best cars ever made and cost the same as any other car companies low budget vehicle.
  • If someone can really get to Mars for $1 billion, then give it to them. Even give them $10 billion, in case there are budget overruns.

    We should increase NASA funding though. Cutting that is stupid.
    • If someone can really get to Mars for $1 billion, then give it to them. Even give them $10 billion, in case there are budget overruns. We should increase NASA funding though. Cutting that is stupid.

      Yes. Spacex is not NASA, and they are doing separate missions. If we're cutting out science, what are we going there for? And no - it isn't happening for a billion. 10 billion is sketchy.

      But the big question is - Is there ketamine on Mars?

      • I doubt it can be done for even ten billion. I mean, sure, you can get a spaceship into orbit and point it out Mars. We've done that enough times now. But putting people in that ship and having them arrive at Mars without them being irradiated corpses, that's where the money will go. And then you've got to get them down and back up out of a non-unsubstantial gravity well, and again, get them back to Earth without them being irradiated corpses.

        No way any of that can be done for ten billion. Ten billion is th

        • by tragedy ( 27079 )

          The irradiation issue is just a matter of mass for shielding along with a combination of space weather prediction and a radiation "storm cellar" area for periods of increased radiation from the sun. Acute radiation poisoning is simply not likely to be an issue and total radiation can be kept within a reasonable lifetime dose without doing much more than increasing lifetime cancer risk fractionally. Radiation keeps getting played up as one of the major challenges, but it's really not a big deal compared to o

      • But the big question is - Is there ketamine on Mars?

        There will be if Elon goes there, for multiple obvious reasons.

    • I remember in the mid-90s there was a proposal to get to Mars for $20B. If it can be done for $1B in today's money after 30 years of inflation, that's quite the value.

      Somehow I think this $1B is the entrypoint to a whole lot of sunk cost fallacy driving some serious 10+ digit corporate welfare.

  • fund NASA to the tune of $1bn.

    Of course, your South African Nazi friend wouldn't profit from that, which is your main concern really.

    • The first rover mission was $1BN, the latest rover mission was roughly $3BN. $1BN wont cover anything today. It has to be commerically led for an ROI vs tax payer funded science. Just because its led by private dollars doesnt mean science wont be moved forwarded. https://www.forbes.com/sites/n... [forbes.com]
  • by shilly ( 142940 ) on Tuesday June 03, 2025 @07:00AM (#65424027)

    It's hilarious to think that these tiny fascists can't even live up to the old joke about Mussolini getting the trains to run on time. There's practically nothing they ever set out to do and successfully accomplish, whether it's the overt or covert goals, except for shutting things down. Anything that requires an organisation to do something, as opposed to stopping doing something, ends in failure.

    They are so wildly inadequate, in every sense.

    • There goal is more-or-less to destroy government. They don't want the trains to run on time, they don't want the trains to run at all.
      • by shilly ( 142940 )

        I think that's mainly true, but not wholly. And they're not even massively effective at breaking things! They've broken lots, of course, because breaking is easier than fixing, but there's plenty of stuff they tried to break and failed. Taking 2tn of services out of the government is the most obvious example.

      • There goal is more-or-less to destroy government. They don't want the trains to run on time, they don't want the trains to run at all.

        They want to continually ask for funding to make the trains run on time, provided via taxpayer dollars, while never quite making the trains run on time, so that they can be justified in constantly asking for more funding to make the trains run on time. Fraud and waste are being screamed from the rooftops, while the biggest fraudsters in existence create the biggest amount of waste possible. It's all quite asinine, and I'm quite frankly flabbergasted that there's no way to stop it from continuing.

    • That is because they think they do not need cooperation. Do what they say or starve.

      Jokes on them, you can't force a caged bird to sing.

      Jokes on us, we will be forced to go through World War 3 because they do not believe other people really exist like they do.

      • Jokes on us, we will be forced to go through World War 3 because they do not believe other people really exist like they do.

        Oh, they believe other people exist. There needs to be other people to take advantage of. They simply see them as "lesser" people so that they don't need to feel guilt about what they're doing. There are people that matter, those above the million, or perhaps the billion mark on the asset scale, and those that don't matter, which is the vast majority of us. Those that don't matter are simply fodder for the money and data collection machines that those that matter control.

    • Biden administration literally gave $2B, double this amount, to "buy electric efficient appliances" for a town of 15 people. It went to a start up by the same lawyer that prosecuted Trump. That kind of fascism is incredible. Then you have Elon musk with literally the ONLY working reusable rocket in the world - where they charge 1/10th the cost for launching satellites to orbit. Once the new Starship is functioning the cost of sending payloads to orbit will be literally 1/1,000,000 that it was under NASA.
      • by tragedy ( 27079 )

        From a brief google search, this would appear to be some sort of scrambled reference to a grant to Power Forward Communities which was an energy efficient housing initiative. Basically just another debunked Fox News frenzied hit piece.

  • Translation... (Score:5, Informative)

    by zurkeyon ( 1546501 ) on Tuesday June 03, 2025 @07:11AM (#65424043)
    Elon gets a billion dollar bonus from daddy. Got it ;-)
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by mjwx ( 966435 )

      Elon gets a billion dollar bonus from daddy. Got it ;-)

      Oh, a certain amount will be funnelled direct to Trump... He's not doing this out of scientific curiosity.

    • Elon Musk provides real value in his products and services. It would cost the government literally 10 times as much to use any other rocket company, and once Starship is up and running it would cost the government easily 5,000 times as much for the same amount of weight to orbit. See the logarithmic chart below, meaning every tick on the chart is 2x the previous one. https://space.stackexchange.co... [stackexchange.com]
      • Never said any of that. And absolutely none of it, changes his current relationship with "Daddy". Not hatin, just pointing it out. ;-D
  • To kill some astronauts?

    Couldn't we just shoot 'em instead and be done with it?

    Srsly, this is an untenable version of space travel. It's not the frigging Mayflower. If the radiation on the way doesn't kill them, the landing process in the skimpy atmosphere likely will. And there's the not small matter of getting them back.

    This is a Musk wet dream right out of the movies, and all the positive thinking in the solar system isn't going to make it sensible.

    PLUS, we've spent $93 Billion on Artemis and still no ci

  • If you aren't saying that in a Dr. Evil voice, you are seriously missing out.

    The orbiters on the STS program cost 10 billion to make in 1981 dollars. That would be about $50 billion today. Now, I know that Elon is doing what he can do to drive that cost down, but there is only so much you can do. We are comparing a reusable rocket vehicle that made it to LEO vs one that is going to Mars.

    Granted, Elon gets billions from government contracts. I don't think this extra billion is going to do much if he can'

    • by nomadic ( 141991 )

      "I don't think this extra billion is going to do much if he can't deliver HLS"
      Elon not deliver on a technology he promised?! That would be crazy.

  • The waste of money is shameful why explore another planet when we should be using the money and resources making this planet better, earth is our only home so it deserves the investment
    • The waste of money is shameful why explore another planet when we should be using the money and resources making this planet better, earth is our only home so it deserves the investment

      If all humanity had this mindset we'd still be living in trees.

      There will *always* be problems here. The cool thing about there being 8+ billion of us is that we can work on more than one thing at a time.

      You want to complain about "waste of money"? How about we stop funneling all the money into the hoards of a few billionaires first?

  • I mean, the level of corruption here is kind of blatant to the point of perversity.

    Elon wants the government to seize spectrum from companies that paid to use it first to give to his company.

    Elon got to destroy USAID, and hamstring several other agencies, that were investigating various companies he leads. Those investigations ranged from basic overcharging, possible aid of an adversarial foreign power, to blocking safety inspectors.

    He's gotten a sweetheart bonus to his HLS contract, despite missin
  • Taxpayer dollars (Score:5, Insightful)

    by ArchieBunker ( 132337 ) on Tuesday June 03, 2025 @08:33AM (#65424161)

    Says the man who is spending tens of millions on a vanity parade.

  • OH! THE DEFECIT! we have a deficit we can't afford this stuff, if we don't slash spending were all doomed!
    Haven't you heard? we have a deficit! We have to slash medicare and heating assistance! There a deficit you know!
    It will destroy us all!
    We can't afford to feed hungry children, there's a deficit don't you know!
    We can't give tax breaks to billionaires, oh wait that one doesn't count, never mind.
    But we have a Deficit! we need to cancel Supplementary food assistance for the poor.
    Sorry poors, there's a Defi

  • a few tickets for one way seats for Trump and some of his cronies; make the world a better place.

  • But starship after nine missions has yet to complete a single orbit of the Earth. They then have to perfect unmanned on orbit fuel, transfers, etc., etc. Musk seems to be good at taking existing established technologies, branding them and scaling them up, not so much on the new things. Which really points to sending robots instead of humans. If he wants a vanity project, let him fund it himself.

  • If the US Government gives Elon a billion dollars to go to Mars, his company will get to Mars with the same cost-efficiency and effectiveness that other aerospace companies have achieved on other NASA contracts, such as the gaggle of companies delivering the Space Launch System.

  • Put Trump and Elon on it, make it one way, and I'll donate now!

  • He wants it to be private sector led but with public funding? That's a good way to funnel money and get nothing back.
  • About bribing Elon musk? The 250 million he spent getting Trump elected though was money extremely well spent I'll give him that.
  • But every bit of research that is funded by this should be made open source and not patent-able.

  • What a crock of shit. I'm tired of being exploited by billionaires. He can pay for it himself.

  • So... why go to mars when other budgets are cut? Science? Prestige? That seems to be a lot of money that could be spent elsewhere. It seems to be an odd thing to do in the grand scheme of things.
  • I assume that this is combination of a hush payment and forward looking bribe to Elon Musk. The hush payment for keeping quiet about DOGE and the bribe to control content on X for future elections.

  • Now musk has criticised Tacos wonder bill,
  • That will cover like three Starships falling out of the sky?

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