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Neil deGrasse Tyson: How Space Exploration Can Make America Great Again
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Pretty inspiring interview. I think it's a shame that we're letting NASA wither on the vine. It's myopic and short sighted to try and save the comparatively minuscule amount of money that NASA funding entails and forego all of the innovation and advancement that goes along with space exploration. |
I hold this man in the same Brilliance as Dr. Michio Kaku and Dr. Carl Sagan. I find Dr Kakus string theory very interesting.
True visionaries, who I wish had control on our space funding, rather than fat beaurocrats who used to be bankers and lawyers. I love stuff like this. Science would have been my calling, had I not been so lazy as a youth.:nope: |
If space exploration will bring back our heavy industry and manufacturing sectors, reverse the trend of economic globalization, re-invigorate the dollar and change our disasterous foreign policy, then I am all for space exploration. If, as I actually suspect, we are going for hundred-trillion dollar sightseeing tour of the cosmos, then I am not for space exploration. Much of Dr. deGrasse-Tyson's rhetoric smacks of doing this because it is 'neat'. I think that this money is better spent at home, regardless of the promise of a utopian Star Trek-style future. You can't eat a fiberoptic cable.
/neo-luddite mode |
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I am blinded by my interest in men and women like this. So yes, I am biased. I feel we truly need to get back to science and industry to prosper. The consumerism, and re-sell my house for double thing is not working. |
Escapism...! :D
:woot: Anyhow, what remains to be the weakest part in fantasies about space exploration and longtime stays in space, is this: the human body. To what degree roboits can make the need of human presence on location obsolete, remains to be seen. Some scientists claim it is the weakness of biologic tissues that makes them assume that the overwhelming majority of civilisations still living in the galaxy will be found to be robot-run civilisations, machiones, computers - or "their" "technical" equivalent of these human inventions. |
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Great article. I agree 100%, Mookie, we should keep social programs funded but some focus should be shifted to national priorities like NASA. That program has given so much in research, knowledge, and glory. Two areas I support will always be NASA and cancer research. And, we should possibly encourage recipients of social spending to become organ donors. That way they could "give back". I'm one, I think everyone should be. |
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:D :yeah: |
well, we need to really rethink our spending: starting with the 500 pound gorilla which is our enormous defense budget. We can then start to fund projects like this, revitalize our roads and balance our budget.
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Medical science? You might as well donate your remains to Sociology... or Voodoo... http://i43.tinypic.com/352hges.jpg :O: Quote:
... while we are at it why not throw in the Department of State as well; we can call it: http://img341.imageshack.us/img341/5...command234.jpg |
Why does it always have to be about "making America great" Why can't we work to further humanity. :hmmm:
Exploring space should be a Terran endeavor not a nationalistic endeavor. |
Just to help put things in perspective, the money spent on the last bank bailout was more than the entire 50 year budget of NASA.
Out of a budget dollar, how much do folks think NASA gets? Thirty cents? Twenty cents? Try again, less than half a penny....I think we should actually spend more. I'd hate to see where the US is in 10 years if we take away all of the science, exploration, and education NASA provides. However, they need to find a focus or set a goal. Something they've been sorely lacking since the Apollo program ended. |
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Today the Non-militarization of space is enforced by good will. How long will that last when we start to invite the Grand Poo-bah of Stoneage-a-stan to work with our rockets? |
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Exactly, until humanity gets past this age of petty nationstates, where sleazeball dictators like the US Congress exist, we will never be able to truly unite and explore the solar system and beyond. |
Funding exploration is nice - a lot potential technology innovations there. What I don't think is that it would make America great as I don't see how you could keep work in USA. In case you decide to go on with this please remember to ask National People's Congress to send you Christmas card.
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We need more scientists like Neil deGrasse Tyson. He does such a great job of explaining science in a way that is clear and interesting.
When Dr. Tyson was on the Daily Show a week or so ago he pointed out that the Apollo program only got the amount of funding it did because of the Cold War competition with the Soviets. We spent tons of money to beat them to the Moon, then when we figured out they weren't going, we stopped going. He made the comment that if the Chinese decide to build a base on the Moon, we'd be back there in under two years. I am a scientist and, not surprisingly, I'm all for spending more on space exploration. I also think basic research (what some people call "blue sky research") is vital to the advancement of science. Applied science and engineering is what converts discoveries into useful things for humanity, but you can't plan out a breakthrough discovery. Breakthroughs don't necessarily happen by accident, but they do happen by pushing the current boundaries of what is known. Oftentimes this requires doing research for the sake of doing research, as some people would put it. "Blue sky" research is what keeps science and technology growing. It's also what helps inspire young people to go into those fields. At a time when the President (and others) regularly talk about how the US needs to encourage more children to go into science, math, and engineering, it seems foolish not to increase the funding of one of the highest profile, most advanced scientific organizations in the world (that being NASA). Unfortunately, most of those making the decisions in the government don't have any appreciation for the value of science. They only see it as another metric to compare how we're supposedly superior to other countries. Until some other nation develops a space program that might be more advanced than the US's, they're not going to start sinking big money into NASA again. |
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