kali o. wrote:Pffft...because it's funded like shit. NASA was like 5% of the budget in the 60's...now it's .5%. Nevermind on a worldwide level. Space needs to make a comeback in the public consciousness, like it did with the space race.
I'll be happy to take possession of that seventeen-billion-dollar "funded like shit" program if anyone likes.
Pouring a bunch of money down NASA's throat is...not necessarily going to produce results by default. I noted that when the competition between Google Earth and NASA World Wind was going on. If anyone was paying attention to that...World Wind was...I'm not going to say "complete garbage", but it felt like it next to Google Earth.
I dare anyone to point to one thing NASA is doing that can't be done for a tenth, if not a hundredth, of the cost by the private sector. Yes, I know space research and spacecraft construction are expensive, but you should be able to do something worthwhile for $17,000,000,000 per year, and I can't think of much lately that qualifies. I'm willing to bet that I could get a reasonably next-gen hydrogen suborbital prototype craft into at least suborbital range myself for under eight figures after the research I've done on hydrogen, though it would probably take a few years. NASA is getting eleven figures. What are we getting for it, other than satellites?
The real push is going to come from the private sector - SpaceX, Armadillo Aerospace, et cetera - and from the potential profits of space mining. For instance, the lunar regolith is basically perfect for solar panels from what I hear, and likely full of other rare minerals besides. Lots of asteroids are full of gold, space diamonds, et cetera.
Someone needs to come up with an actually viable, mining-capable orbital or lunar craft, and the entire thing will snowball from there.
“I would unite with anybody to do right and with nobody to do wrong."
--Frederick Douglass