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NASA Considers Privatizing Space Shuttles

panopticon was among the many who submitted a BBC story talking about NASA considering privatizing the space shuttles as a cost saving measure since those pesky shuttles cost $400M every time we throw one up into orbit. The article really doesn't say much beyond that.

307 comments

  1. First rule of government by InfinityWpi · · Score: 3, Troll

    If you don't wanna pay for it, find someone else who will. Hey, they did it with HMOs, and look how well that worked out...

    1. Re:First rule of government by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The reason HMO's suck is because of government! Half of every dollar spent on healthcare in the U.S. is spent by that good ol' ultra benevolent government.

    2. Re:First rule of government by overunderunderdone · · Score: 2

      If you don't wanna pay for it, find someone else who will. Hey, they did it with HMOs, and look how well that worked out...

      First off HMO's and NASA are rather different cases. Beyond that I don't think you can use HMO's as a "cover all" example of the efficacy of government involvement since the entire healthcare mess is largely the creation of government involvement.

      Or are you simply providing your .sig with an illustrative example.

    3. Re:First rule of government by bjtuna · · Score: 2

      No, that would be true if this was a Constitutional government.

      In reality, government buys whatever it wants because it can, and does, pay for anything on credit alone. Despite our taxes being so high, only a tiny fraction of the government's income is from taxes. Government spends on CREDIT, plain and simple.

    4. Re:First rule of government by Lunar5 · · Score: 1

      Its not so much the goverment wanting people to pay for its shuttle missions infact its the goverment we already do. Second some people dream of going into space all there lives and cant simply because they dont meet the requirements of NASA. The use of using shuttles for private use solves two problems. 1. Extra funding into the surplus to further our expanse of knowledge and space travel. 2. To give other people that couldnt cut the actual astronaught role, but lead a productive life a chance to do something they want to.

      --
      "Remember that and eye for an eye leaves 2 men blind and there still mad."
  2. previous poster is wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    please would someone re-moderate this wildly incorrect +3 post

  3. Commercialization of government projects... by Nijika · · Score: 1

    Reasonable enough I'd say. This seems to be working elsewhere. Anyway, look what happens when commercial entities get involved in government projects (read: the Internet). For good or bad, the Internet is everywhere now. I predict the same for space commerce. Space is pretty damn useful.

    --
    Luck favors the prepared, darling.
    1. Re:Commercialization of government projects... by keath_milligan · · Score: 1

      How about air-travel security?

    2. Re:Commercialization of government projects... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can think of nothing more frightening than allowing air-travel security to be run by a bunch of civil service deadwood with more interest in union benefits than anything else.

    3. Re:Commercialization of government projects... by crumley · · Score: 1

      Ah yes, security by ex-cons making slightly above minimum wage is ever so much more reassuring.

      --
      Preventive War is like committing suicide for fear of death. - Otto Von Bismarck
    4. Re:Commercialization of government projects... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What about air-travel security?! They shouldn't have it for the shuttle. If a terrorist could afford to get on board and hijack the shuttle we know for a fact that the Al Qaeda Network would be losing an awful lot of money. And what about the training costs? Wow. They'd be astronomical!

      *rimshot*

    5. Re:Commercialization of government projects... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes -- and see where the internet is now? Suck-city.

      Remember how nice it was _before_ all the money-sucking bastards got involved?

      Leave it to corporations to screw up a good thing.

      Space® -- brought to you by Microsoft.

  4. Is Considers? by prophecyvi · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    "NASA Is Considers Privatizing the Space Shuttle".

    How about "Slashdot Is Considers an EDITOR".

    Or "All Your Grammar Are Not Belong to Slashdot".

  5. Larry will pay for this by dropdead · · Score: 0, Troll

    You gotta figure Larry Ellison would be first in line. Any chance to look down on everybody at once would just yo good for him to pass up.
    On the bright side finally a place big enough for his ego.

    --


    By definition, a government has no conscience. Sometimes it has a policy, but nothing more. - Albert Camus
    1. Re:Larry will pay for this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Larry Ellison?
      Isn't he that foreign guy from Perfect Strangers?

    2. Re:Larry will pay for this by Johnboi+Waltune · · Score: 1
      The following is a radio transmission from the future, accidently trapped in a stray tachyon beam.

      Larry Ellison: Houston, this is the Space Shuttle Ellison, we're coming in for a landing.
      Houston: That's a negative, Ellison. Maintain low earth orbit and wait for landing clearance.
      Unknown: Greetings to planet Earth. We come in peace from a planet light years away from your Earth. We have come to bring peace to all, cures to all your diseases, and share all our advanced technology with you.
      Houston: Unknown craft, you are clear to land. Welcome to earth!
      Ellison: Fuck that, I'm a billionaire!! I'm landing first!!
      Houston: Ellison, watch your flight path! NOOOO!!! KABOOOOOOM!!!!!!!!!

      [End of transmission]

      --
      "The advanced societies of the future will be driven by competing systems of psychopathology." -JG Ballard
    3. Re:Larry will pay for this by Tackhead · · Score: 2
      > Unknown: Greetings to planet Earth. We come in peace from a planet light years away from your Earth. We have come to bring peace to all, cures to all your diseases, and share all our advanced technology with you.
      > Houston: Unknown craft, you are clear to land. Welcome to earth!
      > Ellison: Fuck that, I'm a billionaire!! I'm landing first!!
      > Houston: Ellison, watch your flight path! NOOOO!!! KABOOOOOOM!!!!!!!!!

      Radio Transmission received years later: We got rid of Larry Ellison for you, what more did you want, unicorns?

  6. Good idea. by j_hirny · · Score: 1

    ...but who will buy them? As far as I know, space shuttles are pretty expensive in use and conservation. I'm curious whether there is anyone, for whom it would be profitable to buy one. According to BBC, one launch costs 400$ million. Does anybody know how expensive one shuttle may be?

    And the risk of hijacking one and crashing into ISS... yikes.

    1. Re:Good idea. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The space shuttles we currently use cost $2 Billion, but three of them just went out of service... And to all the people talking about this lowest bidder crap, Lockheed Martin and Boeing are already doing this... so SHUT YOUR HOLES...

    2. Re:Good idea. by FatAlb3rt · · Score: 1

      I seem to recall it was about $5B. Three are currently outfitted for station docking with the fourth for non-station flights.

    3. Re:Good idea. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think "selling" and "buying" the orbiters is immaterial and quite meaningless wih this type of hardware. The issue is the cost of maintaining and operating the vehicles. Right now United Space Alliance (USA) (a joint venture of Boeing and Lockheed-Martin) has the contract for shuttle servicing, etc. The plan being kicked around it to extend that to orbiter operations and crewing. NASA would relinquish it's authority over the shuttles and instead contract out whatever flights it needs to whatever company runs shuttle operations (obviously it will be USA).

    4. Re:Good idea. by Tackhead · · Score: 2
      > ...but who will buy them?

      Precisely NASA's problem. The damn thing was obsolete by the time it was built.

      If I were the private owner of a space shuttle, I'd sell it for $5B to NASA.

      I'd then use $1B to fire off 10 Discovery-class missions for the hell of it, and the remaining $4B in cash to develop a reusable launch vehicle that would show the world just how obsolete the space shuttle was. Result -- world has $1000/lb (or lower) cost of lifting things to orbit. Space hotels in 10 years. Lunar or Martian colonies in 20. And exciting jobs for the talented folks trapped in NASA.

      Unfortunately, that's not on the table. What's on the table is NASA finding a sux0r to buy a $5B white elephant, and NASA spending the resulting $5B on shuttle launches to ISS. Result -- world has the same $10000/lb (or higher) cost of lifting things to orbit as it always did. But if it doesn't fall from the sky in 10 years, we have ISS, a $100B white elephant, to look at. And a bunch of frustrated, talented geeks, still trapped like flies in NASA's bureaucratic amber.

  7. hehe by TheMMaster · · Score: 3, Informative

    Just like putting the UK and Dutch railways into private hands... now THAT was a good idea ;-)

    For all non-europeans here (quite a bit) this lead to the most HORRIBLE service ever.

    --
    Fighting for peace is like fucking for virginity
    1. Re:hehe by IngramJames · · Score: 1

      I think you'll find the privatisation of British Rail exceeded all expectations! A recent poll blamed rail problems firstly on the management, then on the Labour government and lastly on the Tories who privatised it.

      As a blame-shifting exercise, John Major's privatisation has performed exceptionally well!

      After all, what other motive could there possibly have been...?

      --
      'No rational religion claims "supernatural" exists, that's an atheist slander.' - seen on slashdot.
    2. Re:hehe by osiris · · Score: 2

      Well, i'll admit that the uk railway system is pretty bad, but it wasbefore privatisation too. The duth railway system is brilliant. at least when i was over there, all trains leaving on time and running to schedule.

    3. Re:hehe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That was probably BEFORE it became a private company now, 80% (i believe) of the train leave late or don't leave at all!

  8. Not Interested. by SubtleNuance · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...Not this guy. Personally Im holding my wallet until the firesale on public buildings. The Statue of Liberty, Washington Monument and GoldenGate bridge... now thats a good investment. With the right re-naming, cross-marketing, and brand management strategy these are sure fire money makers!

    "The SubtleNuance Statue Of Plutocracy"... A Monument to Capitalism and Entrepreneurial Spirit.®© Now thats a sure winner. God Bless America(TM)!

    1. Re:Not Interested. by Jburkholder · · Score: 1

      >"The SubtleNuance Statue Of Plutocracy"...

      You forgot to throw in some meaningless punctuation characters like "::" or a wierd misplaced accent or prefix with odd lower-case letters (e or i seem to be preferred).

  9. Privatize them! by Debillitatus · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Why not? The Russians sent up that guy (Tito?) and had a massive infusion of capital into their space program. The Russians, of course, need money more than Americans, but everyone can use it.

    This is a good move in the right direction. As soon as someone works out a business plan that allows them to make a profit off of flying to the moon, Mars, etc., there will be all kinds of stuff in space. And this will of course drive costs down, just through volume and through increased R&D budgets. if this all goes according to plan, maybe one day there will be a permanent Lunar settlement with regular shuttles. This would be sweet...

    --

    Come on, give it up, that's

    1. Re:Privatize them! by carm$y$ · · Score: 1

      The Russians sent up that guy (Tito?) and had a massive infusion of capital into their space program

      20 million, to be precise. Not a really "massive" infusion, by the space agencies' standards.
      Also think about how many people could afford that... it's not a cash-cow.

      --
      -- No sig today
    2. Re:Privatize them! by xanadu-xtroot.com · · Score: 1

      Not a really "massive" infusion

      I'd call a "donation" (if you will) of 20 Million to a country that was paying their teachers with bottles of Vodka because they couldn't afford anything else "massive".

      --
      I'm not a prophet or a stone-age man,
      I'm just a mortal with potential of a super man.
    3. Re:Privatize them! by lys1123 · · Score: 1

      Corporations are not well known for long term or forward thinking. Privatization does not mean that we will see a McMoonBurger or Luna Hollywood any faster than we would if the government was still running things, because by the time you added shipping costs you would be looking at each hamburger being hundreds or thousands of dollars.

      Now, companies regularly spend millions of dollars on advertising and this is where we would notice a difference. Think about the Olympics and how every four years we see "Official Olympic Soft Drink" and "Official Olympic Running Shoe" everywhere we turn. Privatization of space will not lead to Heinlein's Luna City... but it may give you a chance to buy "The Official Operating System of the Jupiter Mission".

    4. Re:Privatize them! by Zspdude · · Score: 1

      It certainly is a stroke of genius, isn't it. All NASA needs now is a gutsy entrepreneur with $400 million......

      --
      What's in a Sig?
    5. Re:Privatize them! by ScumBiker · · Score: 1

      I want Heinlein's Luna City! That would be so extremely cool. More on topic, what about D.D. Harriman? The series of stories where the government isn't really involved in space travel at all. It's good ol' capitalism for Heinlein, thank you. There HAS to be a way to wrest the development of space out of the governments hands. Maybe if we all started a whisper campaign that there's diamonds on the moon or something.

      --
      --- Think of it as evolution in action ---
    6. Re:Privatize them! by carm$y$ · · Score: 1

      I'd call a "donation" (if you will) of 20 Million to a country that was paying their teachers with bottles of Vodka because they couldn't afford anything else "massive".

      Ok, 20 million may be a lot of money for Russian teachers, but still, they are just a drop in a bucket for their space program. And that was what te original article implied - getting funding for nasa.

      --
      -- No sig today
    7. Re:Privatize them! by isorox · · Score: 2

      think about how many people could afford that

      On some weeks you can win that much in the UK lottery. Theres a lot of people with £20m, and if they do win it, after the first half million on car/house/holiday, if they want to go into space, why not?

  10. What about Micro$oft? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They could sponsor one and it would crash, It would be a blue sky of death!

    The 'BSD is dying' troll is dying. Please send your postcards to him C/O Craig Shergold.

  11. I is considers this. by AugstWest · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    It no makes sense to me.

    Is to be confusing and not good.

    1. Re:I is considers this. by Dop · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Which brings up a question. Does SlashTeam have an easy way of changing the title of a submission after it's already been entered into the database? Or, even if they did, would they not do it, because then all the posts about the mistake wouldn't make sense?

  12. Space by crumbz · · Score: 1

    Considering the ISS budget with the shuttle support is approx. US$5.5bn, I think it is a good time to start re-examining unmanned missions. The ISS may turn out to be a bad platform for micro-gravity research among other things.
    At least it keeps the former Russian rocket scientists busy....

  13. This isn't a bad thing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Seriously, it will force NASA to reexamine the priorities of its missions, and only send up the most important experiments. NASA will be stronger as a result.

    Innovation is a byproduct of scarcity. Think about it.

    --
    Spaz!

  14. Inherent flaws by swordboy · · Score: 2

    The problem is that you typically do not want your space project going to the "lowest bidder". I can see some advantages as long as things are executed properly (i.e. - real standards to comply to and perhaps a fed funded oversight team). Maybe they could hire Argenbright Security while they are at it.

    In case you "could care less" about this, I would be quick to remind you that its your tax money (if you're indeed a US citizen) and this could potentially save quite a bit of it.

    Danger Will Robinson

    --

    Life is the leading cause of death in America.
    1. Re:Inherent flaws by sql*kitten · · Score: 2

      The problem is that you typically do not want your space project going to the "lowest bidder".

      How do you think the shuttle manufacturers source components?

      I can see some advantages as long as things are executed

      The lowest bigger who meets the specification. But remember NASA are the people who spend $10,000 to procure a hammer.

    2. Re:Inherent flaws by Fjord · · Score: 3, Insightful

      In case you "could care less" about this, I would be quick to remind you that its your tax money (if you're indeed a US citizen) and this could potentially save quite a bit of it.

      I thought the point is that it isn't our tax money. Instead, the launches will be privatized and the companies who use the services to lauch satellites etc will have to pay the full price. They will then take the risks involved in choosing one bidder over another, and the private organizations will come up with novel ways of increasing their payload/cost efficiency in oreder to maximize their profits or compete effectivly.

      I'm not 100% certain that this is a good approach, however.It very difficult for me to understand the economic game plan of the current executive in this country. Subsidizing launches is good for the economy in the way that lower interest rates and tax cuts are good for the economy. It seems like they are pulling with one hand while pushing with the other. Then there is just the factor that spinning off a new industry while the economy is receeding just doesn't seem smart to me. If these were boom times, then I'd be all for it.

      --
      -no broken link
    3. Re:Inherent flaws by pauljlucas · · Score: 1
      The problem is that you typically do not want your space project going to the "lowest bidder".
      Uh, all of the hardware that goes into a space shuttle already goes to the lowest bidder. NASA awards contracts to private companies to build the shuttle now.

      Remember those cheap O-rings made by Morton-Thiocol that failed causing the shuttle explosion?

      --
      If you reply, do so only to what I explicitly wrote. If I didn't write it, don't assume or infer it.
    4. Re:Inherent flaws by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The shuttle exploded because of the o-ring failure. However, you failed to mention that the air temperature at the time was below launch specifications (which is a design consideration. Keep in mind that the factor of safety for the parts of space shuttle is extremely small - something like 1.05 or smaller. This is done to keep weight down). Had they waited for a warmer day, the shuttle would have gone up without a problem.

    5. Re:Inherent flaws by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      $10,000 to procure a hammer? Can you provide a citation for that?

    6. Re:Inherent flaws by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Remember that those O rings (and the rest of the shuttle) were designed to work within a specified temperature range? Remember how it was an unusually cold day that morning? Remember how MT, as well as many others, advised them not to launch?

      I didn't think so, simpleton.

    7. Re:Inherent flaws by buzzbomb · · Score: 1

      All the government departments do that. It's NOT a $10 hammer...it's how they hide those "black projects." How else do you think they hide those billions of dollars from the general public for KeyHole satellite development and the Aurora project? They were hoping no one would dig down deep enough to see the "$10,000 hammer."

      Or the "$600 toilet seat".

      etc.

      etc.

    8. Re:Inherent flaws by isorox · · Score: 2

      Independance day, its how they fund things like Area 51 (and presumably the stargate).

      "You really thing they spend $30,000 of a toilet seat, 20,000 on a hammer do you"

    9. Re:Inherent flaws by palfreman · · Score: 1
      Subsidizing launches is good for the economy in the way that lower interest rates and tax cuts are good for the economy

      Subsidizing launches involves taking money by force from productive people and shooting it into space. That isn't good for an economy. It's good for people in military procurement, sort of, but even they would probably do better producing something that people actually buy of their own free will. Lower taxes and interest rates reward success and make risk-taking and investment cheaper. Those are good things, unlike $Bns being fired into space for "research"

    10. Re:Inherent flaws by fenix+down · · Score: 1
      I prefer to shuffle the blame a little more. Did you know that the only real reason the suits had to launch is that Reagan had a speech with a "teacher in space right now" bit written in?


      That's right. It was Reagan's fault. How's about that beeyatch! My blame shufflin' skillz iz mad better than joo's!


      (Oh, and the temperature was within the range MT gave them, IMSMC. I think it was the big changes in temperature earlier that were the problem, not that it was too cold at launch. I could be wrong though...)

  15. This *never* should have happened by sharkticon · · Score: 3, Insightful

    How did it ever get to the point where one of our greatest and proudest institutions needs to privitize one of their greatest resources in order to keep going? Americans everywhere should be ashamed at this rape of our space program, once the envy of the world.

    No other country in the world comes close to the US in terms of economic might, and yet it is near-third-world nations like China that are now expanding their space programs as we are selling off ours. Hell, they're even talking about putting men on the moon, something we did once and then got bored with. As a nation we have the attention span of a four year-old child, and about as much forward-thinking. We'd much rather forget about the future (and everything else) and concentrate on our televisions and big honking SUVs, despite the fact that our initial lead in the space race could have been leveraged into an unassailable one.

    No, this is just another symptom of the long, slow decline of the US into a narcissistic corporate paradise as the rest of the world forges on ahead of us into the future. It seems the only people here with any kind of enthusiasm are the ones that want to control your lives; everyone would rather let them get on with and have removed the intolerable burden of decision making.

    --

    1. Re:This *never* should have happened by Debillitatus · · Score: 3, Insightful
      How did it ever get to the point where one of our greatest and proudest institutions needs to privitize one of their greatest resources in order to keep going? Americans everywhere should be ashamed at this rape of our space program, once the envy of the world.

      You talk about this as if it were a horrible thing. What exactly is the problem here? It seems to me that the main reason to have the government involved in the space race in the first place is that it was such a big enterprise that it was completely out of the scope of any type of private investor. Now that the technology has progressed to a certain point, it becomes cheap enough for a corporation to get into the game.

      Two analogies: First, the simpler case of space travel, simply putting stuff into orbit. Think about it: as recently as 1957 (?), we were completely and totally amazed that the Russians could put something the size of a soccer ball into orbit for a couple of revolutions. Now, every little broadcasting company can put an intricate satellitein orbit which does any number of things. Unless you're claiming that the fact that we have private satellite communications is bad, this change to privatization of satellites has been very good for everyone.

      Another example: transAtlantic boats. Columbus had to go begging to the government of Spain to get funding to send the first couple of boats over here,and they were putting them over here at the rate of about one every 2-3 years... But the mid-16th century, colonization was in private hands (in England and France, at least), and I'm sure you'll agree that transatlantic commerce got "a little better" as a result. Unless, again, you're arguing that Europe should still be sending boats over here at the rate of one every year or so...

      --

      Come on, give it up, that's

    2. Re:This *never* should have happened by ChuckDivine · · Score: 1

      You don't know much about NASA, do you?

      NASA has done some great things in the past. But it has failed at its most important task -- opening up space to anything but a governmental entity. Yes, we do have comsats, but that is a special case. Information has neglible mass and high value. So comsats work. Remote sensing -- another information based industry -- has possibilities.

      Other businesses -- ones that require real mass -- are another matter entirely. At $5000/kg to get mass into orbit, there is precious little we can do out there that makes real business sense.

      NASA doesn't even think much about democratizing space. This is perhaps because it isn't a democratically oriented institution. A few of us have noted how NASA's authoritarian regime actually frustrates progress in the field. So far we have not yet made much of a dent in the status quo. As more and more failures become apparent, perhaps we will.

      --
      "Beer is proof God loves us and wants us to be happy." -- B. Franklin
    3. Re:This *never* should have happened by Anthonares · · Score: 1
      How is a "lead in the space race" important at all? What does it matter if China puts a man on the moon?
      Space is not some forum for inter-nation political posturing (which it was during the Cold War). If you
      want to know why the US doesn't have an "unassailable" lead in the space race, it's because the space race
      is over.


      If China puts a man on the moon, then there's one more country that has the capabilities and know-how to launch
      people into orbit. Now, we need to privatize that knowledge as well so corporations can get in on the game.
      As soon as space launches become affordable (which would mean US$10/kg rather than US$1000/kg), then the world
      can start using space for what it should be, additional space for the expansion of human life and enterprise.


      Political posturing is a needless waste of taxpayers' money. Most people don't see the point in spending money
      on the space program, so let corporations do it instead. They will do it better, more quickly, and, in the end,
      more to everyone's benefit than NASA ever could.

      --
      *most people never really think about the consequences*
    4. Re:This *never* should have happened by Yet+Another+Smith · · Score: 2

      Well, This Economist article argues that manned spaceflight is a boondoggle. The basic idea is that there's never been any benefit from putting men where machines are better suited to go. I tend to disagree, but its important to remember that the shuttle is now a 30 year old piece of technology. They're the DeHaviland Comet (the first jet airliner) of space vehicles. Its time to make a 777 to replace those guys, venerable though they are. They just aren't efficient, and they don't make as much sense as they used to. If privatization is the way to go, then that would be OK by me.

      As for the loss of US prestige and vision, well, we aren't making Hoover Dams any more either. We found out that they were destroying the environment and Glenn Canyon was the last such dam. Those building projects were from an era gone past, but despite the fact that that era was past, America had not run out of tricks. As Lake Powell, the lake which has drowned Glenn Canyon, was filling with water, marking the last gasp of the big government construction projects, we were putting men on the moon for the first time. And even as we were reaching the pinnacle of our space flight technology between 1969 and 1980, when the Shuttle program was really getting going, other men were working quietly behind the scenes trying out this silly little idea to create a nationwide network of computers.

      If the US does drop the manned space program, would that not put more impetus into the X-prize? NASA's monopoly on American space resources might be due for phasing out. Let NASA go to an oversight role. Let real people get out there and take risks on the final frontier.

      It may turn out that this is a bad idea, but the reason will be a technical one, not because of lost pride or enterprising spirit. I think America still has plenty of both.

      --
      if ($it != $onething) {$it = $another;}
    5. Re:This *never* should have happened by overunderunderdone · · Score: 5, Interesting

      How did it ever get to the point where one of our greatest and proudest institutions needs to privitize one of their greatest resources in order to keep going?

      We no longer have the same urgent need for a space program that we had when we first developed it. NASA was never *just* about idle scientific curiosity. It was about developing the technologies needed for national defense and showing that technical superiority off to the rest of the world, for the sake of national prestige and it's accompanying international influence. When the Russians sent up Sputnik we were not shocked and dismayed because we thought that they might find out interesting facts about quasars before us but because they demonstrated the technical ability required to make *other* things like ICBM's, spy & communications satellites etc. We went to the moon to prove to ourselves and the world that we were capable of even more than the Russians - scientific exploration was a nice justification and byproduct. Today we have proven our technological, economic and military superiority, NASA no longer has those other more urgent (and more fundamentally related to the actual purpose of government) tasks and is left with the scientific exploration pretext and beaurocratic inertia.

      No other country in the world comes close to the US in terms of economic might, and yet it is near-third-world nations like China that are now expanding their space programs as we are selling off ours

      China is expanding their space program for the same reasons we no longer have. They are developing the technology to build ICBM's. Prior to the leaks of technology from western firms for the sake of the Chinese space program they did not have missles capable of hitting the continental USA - now they do. They are also concerned with proving their national greatness to placate their own populace and to increase their international influence. And finally as a very nice side bonus (and their pretext) they are acting as a private company would and seeking to make a profit. India wants to do the same things - particularly because of their rivalry with China.

      No, this is just another symptom of the long, slow decline of the US into a narcissistic corporate paradise as the rest of the world forges on ahead of us into the future.

      If the corporations can find a way to make a buck off of space we will far surpass the rest of the world in forging ahead into the future.

      It seems the only people here with any kind of enthusiasm are the ones that want to control your lives...

      In general it is government that *controls* your life - just think about what the word "government" means. In this example I as an individual may not WANT to support the space program but I am forced to by the government under the threat of fines, imprisonment and if I resist the ultimate force of government is the policemans gun. If I don't want to buy a Wintel computer I may forgoe using some computer programs and have occasional compatibility problems transfering files to other computers but Bill Gates can't put me in jail.

      ...everyone would rather let them get on with and have removed the intolerable burden of decision making.

      Again, you have it 180 degrees backwards. The private sector is generally a realm of many choices and lots of decisions. Government usually does not give you much choice. In the private sector I have a decision whether or not to support a non-profit scientific organization seeking to land on the moon. There may be many such non-profits to choose from or there may be any number of similar commercial projects whose products (space tours, astroid mined minerals, whatever) I have the decision to buy or not. If government decides to support such I project my only decision is whether I'm willing to go to jail to NOT support the project.

      There are good arguments for government involvement in just about anything, but increased individual decision making and decreased control of the individuals life are most emphatically NOT among them.

    6. Re:This *never* should have happened by meepzorb · · Score: 2

      >You talk about this as if it were a horrible thing. What exactly is the problem here?

      The "problem" is that, free-marketeer blustering aside, privatization of large government assets is just another form of Corporate Welfare.

      Tax dollars go into developing an asset for pure research. Republicrats in Congress get tired of paying for it and raffle asset off to corporate friends/sponsors. Corporate friends make lots of money (at US Taxpayer expense mind you, since we paid for the initial investment) while killing initial purpose of the asset (since 'pure research' isnt profitable). Taxpayers get ZERO benefit from this unless they happen to be significant shareholders, which very few of us are.

      At least with the current setup, NASA can function as a pure-research organization, with benefits available to everyone (including corporations which would like to exploit any developed technologies, using their own investment capital). Privatize it all, and the public benefit of the space program wont extend past cellphones and satellite tv. The space program, as science, will be dead.

      The supposed "efficiency" of large corporations was one of the most pernicious myths of the 20th century. If Corporate America were so damn efficient at exploiting technical opportunities, I'd be able to book my Pan Am flight to the moon right now.

      Still waiting...

      :M

    7. Re:This *never* should have happened by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      How did it ever get to the point where one of our greatest and proudest institutions needs to privitize one of their greatest resources in order to keep going?

      Simple: The best case scenario for socialism is inefficiency. If only they would have realized this 100 years ago before the damage was done.

      Americans everywhere should be ashamed at this rape of our space program, once the envy of the world.

      And there is nothing to say of the blatant rape of civil rights that has allowed the socialist agenda to advance over the past century?

      It seems the only people here with any kind of enthusiasm are the ones that want to control your lives

      Exactly -- the ones who insist on holding a gun to my head, stealing my hard-earned savings to fund thousands upon thousands of socialist programs that, in the end, accomplish only one thing -- advancing the power and wealth of government at *your* expense.

      Vote Libertarian

    8. Re:This *never* should have happened by Animats · · Score: 2
      How did it ever get to the point where one of our greatest and proudest institutions needs to privatize one of their greatest resources in order to keep going?

      Because space turned out not to be very important.

      In the early days of the space program, space travel was seen as the Next Big Thing after air travel. It was expected that there'd be large-scale commercial and military space operations, and that those would develop about as fast as aviation did. But it turned out that space was about as important as artic exploration. There are still bases at the North and South Poles (the former USSR North Pole base is used for tourism), but they're not very important.

    9. Re:This *never* should have happened by Ratteau · · Score: 1


      our initial lead in the space race could have been leveraged into an unassailable one

      Amen to that! Hell, we could've been Alpha Centauri as early as 1978; but hell, with the lead we had, we could've easily developed 40,000 settlers and got that huge-ass bonus for sending a full ship, plus developed fusion powered engines to ensure 100% probability of success -- and we STILL wouldve been there by now!!

    10. Re:This *never* should have happened by WolfWithoutAClause · · Score: 2

      Most space launches are already commercial, not governmental; indeed arguably the Space Shuttle isn't even a very good space vehicle- well its technically brilliant, but fundamentally and irrevocably economically flawed.

      Each launch of the Space Shuttle costs $400+ million. The russians can launch about 5 times for that price, and launch 5 times as much stuff. And although the Russian engineers are much cheaper; the Proton vehicle was designed from the ground-up for reduced costs; whilst the Space Shuttle design was damaged early on from aiming for more launches than the budget could sustain, and it will never recover.

      I find it difficult to believe that anyone except the goverment can afford it- and right now not even the government is willing to pay. The implication is that the Space Shuttle may very well be doomed.

      Finally, one thing you might like to consider- NASA is part of the government. Governments very rarely expand; businesses usually do, or die. Should a Government or a private organisation be in charge of space? Do you want Space to expand or stay the same?

      America doesn't need to privatise Space; but its a damn good idea... in many ways the question is moot already; industry is moving in.

      The bottom line is that space is massively overpriced right now- even the best launchers cost $2600/kg. The best estimate is that the price is heading for nearer $10-50/kg. Governmental subsidisies aren't going to do that- only launching a LOT will do that.

      --

      -WolfWithoutAClause

      "Gravity is only a theory, not a fact!"
    11. Re:This *never* should have happened by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      Because space turned out not to be very important.


      You do realize that that is exactly the type of short-sightedness to which the initial poster of this thread was referring.

    12. Re:This *never* should have happened by Sleepy · · Score: 2, Flamebait

      Another example: transAtlantic boats. Columbus had to go begging to the government of Spain to get funding to send the first couple of boats over here,and they were putting them over here at the rate of about one every 2-3 years... But the mid-16th century, colonization was in private hands (in England and France, at least), and I'm sure you'll agree that transatlantic commerce got "a little better" as a result.

      Interesting that you would use this example, since the very outcome of what you suggest was one of the largest documented instances of genocide. Colonization sounds so much better in the 4th grade history books, than say mass murder, rape, theft, broken treaties and enslavement.

      Privitazation does not equal progress. We already see what happens when we have privatized airline security. Privatization is certainly useful for some things, like sanitation and road building. Privatizing NASA is pure corporate welfare giveaways.

      A primary cause of NASA's huge expenses is the SAFETY measures they make. Nothing's foolproof, but NASA is responible for human life. Privatize them, and the resulting corporation will still put on a show they care about life... but it will be done through a filter called "risk assessment". Translated, that means "where is the sweet spot between protecting our personel assets vs. maximizing profit".

      See you in hell.

    13. Re:This *never* should have happened by monkeydo · · Score: 1

      The reason the NASA ahouldn't outsource this is because NASA would then be the only customer. If you read the article the unamed private corp. would get the shuttles, launch facilities, presonnel, etc. and resell the services back to NASA. Presumably the corp. would do the job much better and more eficiently than NASA thereby saveing the gov't money and still making a profit. This is what NASA did with orbiter maintenance.

      The problem is thus: If there are efficiencies and cost savings to be realized NASA should be able to do so. By privatizing the Shuttle program any realized savings will be mitigated by the fact that the private corp. adds profit to all costs. Since NASA is still the only customer there is no economy of scale, the is only artificially increased scarcity. This will actually lead to higher costs than neccesary.

      What should happen is NASA should simply start doing a better job. Whatever cost saving measures they imaging a provate company doing they should simply do themselves. The taxpayers paid for 100% of the development up to this point, if there are now savings or profit to be taken, it belongs to us, not Lockheed Martin or Boeing.

      --
      Si vis pacem, para bellum
      The only thing more annoying than a Libertarian is an (un|mis)informed Libertarian
    14. Re:This *never* should have happened by Necron69 · · Score: 1

      Oh please....

      What are you worried about, astronauts infecting the Moon people or the Martians? Maybe mass rape and genocide of the Venusians?

      NASA needs to get out of the space vehicle market and make room for the dozen or so companies dying to get in. They just can't get any investment money due to massive government red tape and government monopoly over space launches.

      I used to be an idealistic NASA fan. Not any more. Get the hell out of the way, NASA.

      - Necron69

    15. Re:This *never* should have happened by Betcour · · Score: 1

      What are you worried about, astronauts infecting the Moon people or the Martians? Maybe mass rape and genocide of the Venusians?

      Don't forget : everything that goes up also goes down...

    16. Re:This *never* should have happened by Evil+MarNuke · · Score: 1
      We already see what happens when we have privatized airline security.


      Get your facts right. The knifes used in the attack was placed on the airline and never passed through airline security.


      Now that we are on that topic, name one government department that work better then a commercial enterprise. It can be any government in the world.

      --
      The journey is better then the end.
    17. Re:This *never* should have happened by hawk · · Score: 2

      > No other country in the world comes close to the US in terms of
      > economic might, and yet it is near-third-world nations like China that
      > are now expanding their space programs as we are selling off ours.


      That, of course, is *entirely* why we're in this. Others have pointed out that NASA was not merely about technology, but it goes deeper than that. NASA was a front line of the Cold War. Even into the 1970's, there was serious concern that the U.S.S.R. actually would become more advanced and produce more than the U.S. There was concern about more countries falling into its orbit of slavery. NASA, the moon, and the shuttle were to demonstrate otherwise and win minds around the world.


      We won the space race and cold war *because* of the economic might of our system. That is, it is because the private system uses resources more efficiently that we were in a position to win. If you take a step back, the irony of complaining that a state enterprise used to prove the superiority of private enterprise over state enterprise is being transfered from the state to that very private enterprise is more than a little amusing :)


      hawk

    18. Re:This *never* should have happened by hawk · · Score: 2
      > Republicrats in Congress get tired of paying for it and raffle asset
      > off to corporate friends/sponsors.


      Presumably, it will be auctioned to the highest bidder, not raffled off.


      >Taxpayers get ZERO benefit from this
      > unless they happen to be significant shareholders, which very few of
      > us are.


      If you're in the U.S>, s/very few/almost all/. The middle class, directly and indirectly, owns the overwhelming majority of the assets. Not typically as stock shares, but through mutual funds and retirement programs.


      >If Corporate America were so damn efficient at exploiting technical
      >opportunities, I'd be able to book my Pan Am flight to the moon right now.


      If it weren't so damn efficient, you would have had to post in Russian. Assuming, of course, that the dictatorship had somehow collapsed without the U.S> on the outside, and that civil rights had somehow spread through the world, allowing access to such communications.


      hawk

    19. Re:This *never* should have happened by Debillitatus · · Score: 1
      Interesting that you would use this example, since the very outcome of what you suggest was one of the largest documented instances of genocide. Colonization sounds so much better in the 4th grade history books, than say mass murder, rape, theft, broken treaties and enslavement.

      Ok, so that was the canonical knee-jerk response to my example... I knew it would come from somewhere. Now, if you think it through instead of reacting, you'll realize that your response proves the point.

      The opening up of the Americas to European exploitation, of course, led to all kinds of atrocities. This is simply because at the time, Europeans considered their fellow humans a resource that could be acceptably exploited. But the argument is that the shifting of this to private hands meant that all of the New World resources could be exploited more efficiently. Sadly, some of these resources were human beings. But the argument still stands, that the privatization led to a better deal for the consumer (that consumer being the European).

      As I said before, giving the consumer what they want is not always a good thing. I gave different examples of this above, and the European colonization is another good example. But the argument still stands: privatization gives the consumer a good deal. The only question to ask is whether or not it is right that they get it.

      Privitazation does not equal progress. We already see what happens when we have privatized airline security. Privatization is certainly useful for some things, like sanitation and road building. Privatizing NASA is pure corporate welfare giveaways.

      I agree that privatization does not equal progress, in the same sense that giving people what they want is not always the best thing. SUVs are probably a good example of that. Personally, I'm all for the government stepping in and taking over airline security; I think that would be a good idea. But I'm sure you would agree that if this were to happen, this would definitely drive up the cost of airline tickets (by some estimates, actually quite a bit). In this case, I think it is obvious the high costs are worth it, but you will agree that the costs will be higher?

      In general, of course you can't make any statements about "good" and "bad" without looking at a particular situation, and weighing all of the factors.

      Do low costs justify anything? Of course not.

      Does privatization imply low costs? Definitely.

      --

      Come on, give it up, that's

    20. Re:This *never* should have happened by styopa · · Score: 2
      We no longer have the same urgent need for a space program that we had when we first developed it. NASA was never *just* about idle scientific curiosity. It was about developing the technologies needed for national defense and showing that technical superiority off to the rest of the world, for the sake of national prestige and it's accompanying international influence.

      True, that was its initial goal, goals change. We have ICBMs, we have spy satellites, we have gps and ways of communicating with troops via satellite. As new national defence issues arrise that need NASA then they have access to it, but instead of mothballing everything because NASA was originally created for military and defence issues ithas been able to adapt to become a huge foundation for scientific research.

      The private sector is generally a realm of many choices and lots of decisions. Government usually does not give you much choice. In the private sector I have a decision whether or not to support a non-profit scientific organization seeking to land on the moon.

      The problem is that funding fundamental reseach that does not have direct economic gain, whether through products or important patents, runs into the prisoners dilema. By having a government that forces us to pay for things that are benifitial for all of society, ie schools, infrastructure, fundamental reseach, so they actually move forward. It is the lack of having strings from the private sector attached to them that allows them to do an okay to excellent job. Sure some of these programs are not getting the desired results, but imagine the social retardation if public schools relied on private sector money with strings attached, like forcing advertisements in class.

      Some things should not funded on the basis of whether they can turn a (short term) profit. With the exception of Watson Crick Labs, the amount of fundamental and theoretical science being done in the private sector is pathetic. The studying of quasars and black holes has no economic return until our society can actually go to those places. Poster sales of cool space phenominon will not fund the Hubble Space Telescope.

      Turn NASA over to the private sector and space exploration will die until China or Russia shame our government into funding it. Unfortunately once that happens, there are several possibilites, none of which are very good.
      • A public NASA is recreated, all designs needed are either completely out of date or patented. Rebuild from the ground up.
      • We pay the private sector even more money than we are currently paying NASA, because now they know they can turn a profit and can set any price.


      The Libertarian view on scientific funding DOES NOT WORK because it relies on donations, which, even they admit, cannot drive an economy.

      It is interesting that when most powerful societies start to crumble it begins with an usurping of power and quickly followed with not funding scientific research, espeically NON-PROFITABLE research. Let's see here, Bush stole the election, NASA thinking of privatizing, fusion energy research being cut drastically, and particle research begging for money.
      --
      Disclamer - Opinion of Person
    21. Re:This *never* should have happened by Loundry · · Score: 1

      I agree with most everything you wrote except this:

      Personally, I'm all for the government stepping in and taking over airline security; I think that would be a good idea.

      What evidence do you have that supports this statement?

      --
      I don't make the rules. I just make fun of them.
    22. Re:This *never* should have happened by meepzorb · · Score: 2

      If you're in the U.S>, s/very few/almost all/. The middle class, directly and indirectly, owns the overwhelming majority of the assets. Not typically as stock shares, but through mutual funds and retirement programs.

      This is myth. Less than 50% of US citizens own any stock of any kind, even 'stealth' stock such as mutal funds and pensions.

      If it weren't so damn efficient, you would have had to post in Russian.

      Red-baiting. How 80s. This has nothing to do with my argument.

      Chicago-school thinking did wonders in Russia in the 90s didnt it?

      :M

    23. Re:This *never* should have happened by Debillitatus · · Score: 1
      I agree with most everything you wrote except this: "Personally, I'm all for the government stepping in and taking over airline security; I think that would be a good idea. " What evidence do you have that supports this statement?

      Nitpick: Do I need to show you evidence that I think it would be a good idea?

      I worded it most carefully, because I don't have much evidence either way. I do have a feeling that law-enforcement types (and especially federeally-trained law-enforcement types) could do a better job than the clowns they have there now. But it's more of a feeling than anything, which is why I worded it the way I did.

      --

      Come on, give it up, that's

    24. Re:This *never* should have happened by Sleepy · · Score: 2

      Get your facts right. The knifes used in the attack was placed on the airline and never passed through airline security.

      Oh PLEASE. Are you really claiming to KNOW how they got the knives on board? If you're just speculating, say so. If not, call the FBI with your "new evidence".

      Even since September 11, there have been several cases of weapons getting by private security.

    25. Re:This *never* should have happened by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Unless, again, you're arguing that Europe should still be sending boats over here at the rate of one every year or so..."

      Actually, that would be nice.
      Maybe then the Natives wouldn't have been
      exterminated by guns and smallpox

    26. Re:This *never* should have happened by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Question is, would federal security have done any better at stopping those knives? OK, a government security guard isn't concerned about profit and cutting costs. On the other hand (based on what goes on with other branches of the government) a government security guard isn't exactly worried about losing his/her job either.

    27. Re:This *never* should have happened by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is myth. Less than 50% of US citizens own any stock of any kind, even 'stealth' stock such as mutal funds and pensions.

      Not according to the SEC. 52% are in the market.
      Mostly in mutual funds.

      As for efficiency... If the government run space program is so damn efficient then why has it been 30 years since we walked on the moon?

      I wanna sleep in the first Lunar Holiday Inn
      before I die. It's certainly not going to
      happen while washington runs the space program.

    28. Re:This *never* should have happened by Sleepy · · Score: 2

      In this case, I think it is obvious the high costs are worth it, but you will agree that the costs will be higher?

      Sure costs are generally higher if the government runs things. That needs to be factored into any decision for where jobs belong. OTOH, the government is *generally* preferred when it involves the PUBLIC TRUST (police, fire, food inspection, etc).

      Government agencies tend to waste money, but so do private defense contractors. Accountability and protection for "whistle blowers" are key to preventing abuses in any situation.

      Personally, airline flights are TOO CHEAP and too frequent. These planes are not filled to capacity yet they fly anyhow. That's a lot of pollutants going into OUR air (no matter where you live). The airlines are broke and only survive because their investors have the clout to shakedown the US taxpayers for $15 Billion (with nary a cent for the 80,000+ laid off airline employees).

      I agree that privatization does not equal progress, in the same sense that giving people what they want is not always the best thing. SUVs are probably a good example of that.

      How about space-bound SUV's?
      Besides, I don't see how space can be fairly privatized. Who owns it, and who decides how the spoils are divided?

      Seriously, I envision such a thing as a huge welfare grant to corporations. Who is the US government to start selling space rights? Is this a task for the UN? Whose national coffers will the taxes on profits go into (or more likely, there won't be any taxes).

      In a planet that is rapidly warming, who is going to regulate how many space flights per year our atmosphere can handle? More likely, investors will argue the market will take care of pollution on its own.

      We already can't manage our resources here. Most animals do not poo in their drinking water... we dump plenty of things in our rivers (or we have just recently stopped, depending where you live).

      Space would be a dumping ground.

      Expect space to be "auctioned off", just like the FCC auctioned off the airwaves, and kept the profits (this exceeded the FCC's mandate).

      Sorry if this sounds gloom and doom, but I don't see anything in our past or present to indicate we are resposible enough for what's out there. We still fight over oil, fer christs sake.

    29. Re:This *never* should have happened by Animats · · Score: 2

      After 44 years of space exploration, it's hard to view it as short-sighted. Especially since progress in the last 30 years has been very limited.

    30. Re:This *never* should have happened by Sleepy · · Score: 2

      Question is, would federal security have done any better at stopping those knives? OK, a government security guard isn't concerned about profit and cutting costs. On the other hand (based on what goes on with other branches of the government) a government security guard isn't exactly worried about losing his/her job either.

      True, but the police generally do a good job, and this is a police job we are talking about. This is not a "big unknown".

      There are those that want to privatize the police forces also (which frightens the hell out of me!).

    31. Re:This *never* should have happened by adamy · · Score: 1

      Most animals do not poo in their drinking water...
      Actually, one of the water filter companies had a great picture of a moose in the middle of a stream taking a leak.

      I love nature, but I still filter the water I drink while camping.

      --
      Open Source Identity Management: FreeIPA.org
    32. Re:This *never* should have happened by dytin · · Score: 2

      The problem is that funding fundamental reseach that does not have direct economic gain, whether through products or important patents, runs into the prisoners dilema.

      Excuse me, but is research is "fundamental", it better have a direct economic gain. Otherwise, if it has no economic gain, then what is the point of researching, if not just for fun. Think about it, what is the point of just researching pure science, unless it will actually lead to something useful.

      With the exception of Watson Crick Labs, the amount of fundamental and theoretical science being done in the private sector is pathetic.

      Hmmm... I think that you forgot to mention pharmaceutical companies, as well as universities, computer companies, aeronautical companies (Boeing etc...) just to name a few. Sure, all of their research may not be "fundamental" science by its strictest definition, but their research does actually lead to products that are useful to all society (national defense from boeing, anthrax vaccines from phizer) If all research and development was done publically, we would find our country crumbling much like the USSR did.

    33. Re:This *never* should have happened by overunderunderdone · · Score: 1

      ...instead of mothballing everything because NASA was originally created for military and defence issues ithas been able to adapt to become a huge foundation for scientific research

      Yes, that is true but since scientific research is not a fundamental purpose of government or an urgent need NASA's budget has been and will continue to suffer.

      The problem is that funding fundamental reseach that does not have direct economic gain, whether through products or important patents, runs into the prisoners dilema. By having a government that forces us to pay for things that are benifitial for all of society, ie schools, infrastructure, fundamental reseach, so they actually move forward.

      A much better argument than the one I was responding to - remember I said there *were* arguments for government involvement but that individual decision making and freedom where not among them. I am not against government funding for scientific research but I recognise that it is a secondary priority for government. When it is funded it has for the most part been tied to governments primary goals (usually national defense) just as tightly as privately funded research has been tied to the primary goals of those funding it (profits). Research that does not serve the primary goals of those funding it is done on the margins in either case (admittedly the 'margins' of government are wider)

      To be fair to the idea of privatising NASA alot of the really expensive stuff they are doing is NOT primary scientific research but the (now) more prosaic (and potentially profitable) work of moving stuff into orbit. It will not matter to a research satellite that it was put into orbit by a government owned and operated rocket or by a private for-profit company. Also by your reasoning UMASS is a better research university than MIT because it is a public university and MIT is a private university. You may point out that much of the research at MIT is funded by government but that would likely be the case at a privatised NASA as well.

      Sure some of these programs are not getting the desired results, but imagine the social retardation if public schools relied on private sector money with strings attached, like forcing advertisements in class.

      We don't need to imagine a hypothetical scenario here. We already have many private schools most of which are not known to produce "social retardation" whereas that does seem to be the normal product of certain public schools.

      It is interesting that when most powerful societies start to crumble it begins with an usurping of power and quickly followed with not funding scientific research, espeically NON-PROFITABLE research.

      Can you give me some concrete examples? I can see the usurping part though I think you would find as many examples in history of usurpation preceding a rise to power as well (one thinks of Julius Ceaser crossing the Rubicon) but I'm not as sure you could make a case that ending the funding of non-profitable scientific research was the cause of a societies decline as opposed to a symptom of it.

      If you are right though I suppose we should be glad Gore's attempt to steal the election failed ;-)

    34. Re:This *never* should have happened by itguy · · Score: 1

      I seem to remember an article on Jerry Pournelle's website talking about the problems with NASA and one of these problems is that being a government agency, NASA cannot simply sack people who are not performing. NASA also has the usual "empire building" where different managers try to prove their dominance by building up their departments even if the new people do not add to the efficiency of the department. You also have the problem where managers are more concerned with internal politics than with the "Big Picture". Think "Dilbert" on a major scale.

      --
      If work was so good the Rich would have kept more of it for themselves
    35. Re:This *never* should have happened by Evil+MarNuke · · Score: 1

      I don't know about your town but in my town the cops only pull people over for speeding, hang out, and show up after a crime.

      The prevention of crime has little or anything to do with the police force. They are not there to insure your safety, but to maintain the peace.

      The main problem with airport security is the under paid workers. The only other job the people checking bags is McDonald. They are unskilled, underpaid, and untrained. The city or airport that contact the company accepts the lowest bidder. If you want to know how bad it is, the company that checks bags in Atlanta responded to 9/11 by increasing the wages of people that work there for five year by $2k to a whooping $17k a year. Goverment won't help becuase like the postal system, it's all about power and money, and nothing about security. Goverment solution to a problem is more government. Europain country tried government empolyee but went back to private company because it was a huge failure.

      American is great becuase of private company, not becuase of it's government. The rights we love so much are unalienable. They are not given to us by government. Goverments take away rights, not give them.

      --
      The journey is better then the end.
    36. Re:This *never* should have happened by Scorchio · · Score: 1

      Today we have proven our technological, economic and military superiority, NASA no longer has those other more urgent tasks

      A few months ago, over morning coffee, we decided that the British should get a mission together to go to the moon, nick the US flag and replace it with a Union Jack. No rock collecting, buggy driving, or any of that nonsense. That should get the whole space thing going again.

      However, judging by the trouble I had getting to Manchester by train the other night, I doubt we'll be getting to the moon anytime soon. *Sigh*

    37. Re:This *never* should have happened by zeno_2 · · Score: 1

      I really fail to see the link between efficiency and walking on the moon..

      Maybe they realized that the moon really does not have much to offer in terms of reserach, and they are now focusing on Mars. Is that not efficient?

    38. Re:This *never* should have happened by linca · · Score: 1

      Not counting the fact that fun is an important motivation for man's activities... You know, things like mathematics can wait quite some time before finding their applications. Without fundamental research, a few of the objects you use today would not exist (Computer, Car, TV, Electricity, CD player, etc). Without fundamental research, we'd be living like the Amishes. Problem is, no private company plans ten, twenty years ahead. That's the length it usually takes for fundamental research to find its application.

    39. Re:This *never* should have happened by hawk · · Score: 2
      >This is myth. Less than 50% of US citizens own any stock of any kind,
      > even 'stealth' stock such as mutal funds and pensions.


      I generally don't bother even seeing AC's, but having seen this one on accident, I'll point out its there. He cites the 52% figure from the SEC. Your "myth" is itself a myth. Furthermore, that 52% understates the situation. Over the course of people's lifetime, far more participate--of the 48% not currently involved, some are retirees or near-retirees on older fixed-benefit plans, which are becoming extinct. Of the rest, most will move into the 52% long before retirement (and that figure can be expected to rise.


      > Red-baiting. How 80s.


      Trying to dismiss reality as "red-baiting." How pink . . .


      >This has nothing to do with my argument.


      It has *everything* to do with your argument. While it's not popular to admit among the loony left, the mainstream portions of the political spectrum do acknwoledge that the cold war as a struggle to the death. The USSR gave plenty of hard evidence that they meant to follow through with their stated goal of world conquest. Had our system not been vastly superior in its ability to produce, they would have eventually succeeded.



      > Chicago-school thinking did wonders in Russia in the 90s didnt it?


      We'll neve rknow. I'm no chicago-schooler, but I'll acknowledge that their proposals would work far better than the industrial feudalism is Russia today and in the 90's. The chicago school advocates both a free market and capitalism; neither of these are present in today's Russia.


      hawk

    40. Re:This *never* should have happened by Loundry · · Score: 1

      Do I need to show you evidence that I think it would be a good idea?

      Hell yes you do! If you have no evidence, then what, pray tell, convinced you that your proposition is a good idea?

      The reason why I asked is because there is no evidence whatsoever that the federal government would do a better job of managing airport security than private companies would. If you disagree, then I expect that you will be able to show me said evidence.

      --
      I don't make the rules. I just make fun of them.
  16. offtopic my ass by puck71 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    "is considers"?? that's terrible!! :P

  17. sweet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sweet! I've always wanted my own space shuttle!

    now i just need to save up a couple of billion dollars...

  18. Good Idea for the Space Frontier by Sierpinski · · Score: 1

    Although the big corporations will probably get involved, I think that privatizing the shuttle system is a good idea. This will allow the rich corporations to start doing own business in space. Regardless of what they will be doing up there, (probably advertising... imaging looking through your telescope and seeing a Microsoft ad in space), it will inevitably lead to more discovery. The more people there are out there doing things, the more information we will get about our galaxy.

    Maybe some mailroom guy at Microsoft actually knows how to build a warp drive, but since he was caught playing digdug at work, he's already hit the "glass ceiling". This might allow his idea to come to fruition... you never know!

    I just hope that the space shuttles that carry people (or any for that matter) aren't using Windows. The BSoD (Blue Screen of Death) might actually cost lives then!

  19. The Slashdot Shuttle! by The+Turd+Report · · Score: 0, Funny

    It will be just like the Slashdot Cruiser! BTW, who was the lucky winner of the Slashdot Cruiser? *snicker*

    1. Re:The Slashdot Shuttle! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OK, gotta ask. I know they were trying to sell that stupid cruiser, but what's the deal with it. I know there is one. Tell me the story.

      -DFW : Banning never stopped me.

  20. Launch cost breakdown. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I suppose that's $1 for the actual launch and
    $399,999,999 for a new toilet seat?

  21. could be good by Manes · · Score: 1

    Given the lack of founds Nasa have had the recent years, I don't really see a problem with this, as long as they do it the right way.

    Getting high bids, people wanting to commit to a project, making people care about it, would certainly make sure privaticing would be the way to go. If they end up getting low bids from people not interested in anything but a short-time investment or free pr, they will be better of as they are today.

    I'd love to see the spirit people had way back when we first landed on the moon, but nasa needs more money for this to happen.

  22. Privatization risks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Would a private corporation have the controls in place that would be required to ensure safety or something as delicate as space exploration. I personally think it's a great idea. The less tax money of mine going to seemingly pointless programs (don't ge tme started), the better, but I sure as hell don't think we should sacrifice safety policy and procedure in the name of saving a few bucks.

  23. I Think That It Is A Great Idea by LaNMaN2000 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Not only will privitization of shuttle launch and maintenance help reduce costs for NASA (and give them more money to devote to other projects and the completion of the ISS), but it will be one more step towards the commercialization of space. Now, any company will be able to purchase space on the shuttle for satellites or even human cargo :-).

    Remember how many people (including many /.ers) were critical of the government's desire to open the Internet to commerce; now, few would argue that we have all benefitted from that decision. The barrier to entry (or exit, in this case!) is so high, for space flight, that an independent company would never be able to develop the type of technology that NASA has developed for the shuttle; it simply would not be ecnomically feasible for them to pour so much money into R&D. By giving them the ability to resell NASA technology in exchange for lowering the cost of shuttle launches, the government will be entering an arrangement that is mutually beneficial and could help form an industry.

    My only requirement for the company given the contract is that it have its headquarters in the U.S., because of security concerns and a respect for our national pride.

    --

    ByteMyCode.com: A Web 2.0 code sharing community.
  24. Next up by sandidge · · Score: 5, Funny

    Next you know we'll be seeing :

    Kellog's US Navy
    MSArmy
    Verizon Air Force
    Kotex US Marines

    (And, no, I have nothing against any armed forces. Kotex Marines just sounded funnier than any other.)

    1. Re:Next up by Tim+Macinta · · Score: 3, Funny
      Next you know we'll be seeing ... MSArmy

      Microsoft is one step ahead of you there. Check out this article on Microsoft's Army.

    2. Re:Next up by tswinzig · · Score: 3, Funny

      Kotex US Marines

      Gives new meaning to the phrase, "We will insert our Marines into enemy territory soon."

      --

      "And like that ... he's gone."
    3. Re:Next up by Midnight+Thunder · · Score: 1

      Or you could have Kotex Aerospace giving a new meaning to orbital insertion.

      --
      Jumpstart the tartan drive.
    4. Re:Next up by drinkypoo · · Score: 1
      Kotex US Marines

      The navy might be more appropriate - they're the ones with the submarines, right?

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    5. Re:Next up by Amazing+Quantum+Man · · Score: 5, Funny

      Nah. It should be the Trojans Navy...

      "Protecting you from enemy seamen!"

      --
      Fascism starts when the efficiency of the government becomes more important than the rights of the people.
    6. Re:Next up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At 3:02 EST:

      Next up (Score:4, Offtopic)

      God, I love the assholes who get mod points and spend them running through the old stories so they can mod shit Offtopic.

      "Hey, look, that guy made a funny observation that everyone seemed to like. However, he didn't mention Linux and giving AC head, so he's offtopic. I think I'll go jerk to anime porn now."

  25. Not the first time.... by Fenris2001 · · Score: 5, Informative

    If I remember correctly, NASA tried to find a buyer for the Shuttles in the 1980s....

    The reason no one bought them then, and the reason no one will buy them now, is the horrid expense of launching & reusing them - for example, on return to Earth, the Space Shuttle Main Engines are pulled, shipped to California, rebuilt to spec, and tested for ~75% of their design lifetime - any deviation during this test period results in the engine being scrapped. The Shuttle is an old design, and it wasn't efficient when it was new. Or consider the Solid Rocket Boosters, which actually cost more to retrieve and reuse than disposable boosters would.

    The BBC quotes a figure of US$400 million, but the total development cost of the Shuttle program is *much* higher - some figures I've seen give a total cost per launch of over US$1.5 billion.

    I think the solution to bringing down launch costs is to "open" the space program - let private companies build new launch vehicles, and have NASA test and certify them. This would allow NASA to perform more basic research, much like its predecessor the National Advisory Commitee for Aeronautics did from 1915 to 1958. This research, in turn, would lead to a new generation of launch vehicles.

    I'm not a rabid NASA-hater like some out there, but I do think the agency has too much to do, with too many people, and too small of a budget.

    --
    ---------------
    Vpered na Mars!
    1. Re:Not the first time.... by FortKnox · · Score: 2

      Although I'd *love* to see the shuttles and space system revamped to make it more efficent by someone other than the lowest bidder; opening up the space system allows for industry corruption. What happens when someone gets a monopoly in space? Everytime you try to star gaze you have to distinguise the stars from the MS logos? If we were to commericialize space, there will need to be some heavy duty restrictions.

      But I'm sure the illuminati already knows that... *loud ominious thunder*

      --
      Good quote, too many chars. Seriously, the slashdot 120 char limit sucks!
    2. Re:Not the first time.... by sql*kitten · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The reason no one bought them then, and the reason no one will buy them now, is the horrid expense of launching & reusing them - for example, on return to Earth, the Space Shuttle Main Engines are pulled, shipped to California, rebuilt to spec, and tested for ~75% of their design lifetime - any deviation during this test period results in the engine being scrapped. The Shuttle is an old design, and it wasn't efficient when it was new. Or consider the Solid Rocket Boosters, which actually cost more to retrieve and reuse than disposable boosters would.

      Quite. NASA, and it's budgets, are intensely political. The Shuttle camp were enormously influential, helped no doubt by political lobbying and kickbacks from key contractors and vendors, and hamstrung the various SSTO projects, which had the potential for cost effective shuttling between the ground and near-Earth orbits.

      The solution is to move all space activity into the private sector. Break up NASA and sell it off if anyone wants it, in an open auction. By all means keep a Federal agency to certify space vehicles as safe to launch (if launches are on US territory), but all the activity carried out in the private sector. If there's a business case for it, we'll have a man on Mars decades before NASA's bureacrats have even filled in the paperwork for that mission.

    3. Re:Not the first time.... by gorilla · · Score: 2

      The problem is that reusuable spacecraft has proven to be a mistake. It costs more to develop something which can be used multiple times, and then it costs more to individually produce components, then it costs more to do the recovery & restoration. When you have a production line, like the pre-shuttle rockets, and like ESA has, then you can concentrate on producing reliable & cheap components. It worked for Henry Ford, and it works for spacecraft.

    4. Re:Not the first time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Although I'd *love* to see the shuttles and space system revamped to make it more efficent by someone other than the lowest bidder; opening up the space system allows for industry corruption.

      Geez, take an anti-paranoia pill dude. If anything opening up the space program will reduce industry corruption. The only way you'd get a space monopoly is if the government mandates it.

      What happens when someone gets a monopoly in space? Everytime you try to star gaze you have to distinguise the stars from the MS logos?


      I'm sure the ESA and NASDA will have a good laugh at the attempt. They aren't going to stand idily by you know.


      If we were to commericialize space, there will need to be some heavy duty restrictions.


      WRONG! Aside from some restrictions on safety similar to the airline industry, you want to open it up as wide as possible. Openness and competition are the cure to corruption and monopoly, not the cause!

    5. Re:Not the first time.... by miniver · · Score: 2
      Although I'd *love* to see the shuttles and space system revamped to make it more efficent by someone other than the lowest bidder; opening up the space system allows for industry corruption. What happens when someone gets a monopoly in space? Everytime you try to star gaze you have to distinguise the stars from the MS logos? If we were to commericialize space, there will need to be some heavy duty restrictions.

      Excuse me? We've already got a monopoly in space -- it's called NASA. As for industry corruption, did you think NASA builds and repairs the shuttles themselves? Hell, no ... they're built by single-sourced aerospace contractors ... you can't get a better monopoly than that. Any sort of commercial competition for heavy lift capability would be an improvement over the current situation.

      --
      We call it art because we have names for the things we understand.
    6. Re:Not the first time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Take a anti-paranoid pill?

      Is your name Karl Marx?

      Cause your attitude is very communistic!

    7. Re:Not the first time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Quite. NASA, and it's budgets, are intensely political.

      Politics is only pervasive at NASA because NASA has become an immense, bloated bureaucracy. Money and politics are only the symptoms, not the cause of the problem. Once you recognise NASA bureaucracy as the cause, you recognise that throwing money at NASA only perpetuates the problem, not cures it.


      The solution is to move all space activity into the private sector. Break up NASA and sell it off if anyone wants it, in an open auction.


      Well, you're partly right. Breaking up a bureaucracy is about the only way to cure one. Unfortunately (or fortunately), all the technology developed by NASA is readily available, the land and buildings are government property, and all that's left to sell is the bureacracy, and there isn't much of a market for those (it's too easy to grow your own :-).

    8. Re:Not the first time.... by Winged+Cat · · Score: 2

      If one wishes to make it expensive, then yes, it will be expensive. And the companies that NASA contracted to were more interested in billing for high rates than actually developing cheap space access.

      That doesn't prove it can't be done. Just that NASA and its contractors seem incapable of getting it done.

    9. Re:Not the first time.... by Fenris2001 · · Score: 3, Insightful
      It costs more to develop something which can be used multiple times, and then it costs more to individually produce components, then it costs more to do the recovery & restoration.


      Not true for all situations - yes, as NASA and the majority of the aerospace industry does it, developing a resuable launch vehicle takes years and costs billions. But there are counter-examples. Take the DC-X (or Delta Clipper or Clipper Graham, whatever). It cost $60 million to build, and was finished on time.

      The technology already exists to build a fully reusable LV, with long-life thermal tiles and engines. Such an LV could reduce launch costs by an order of magnitude or more.

      Just because NASA can't operate a reusable LV doesn't mean it's "proven to be a mistake".

      --
      ---------------
      Vpered na Mars!
    10. Re:Not the first time.... by Azghoul · · Score: 1

      LMAO!!!!!!

      Oh man that's rich.

      How can you talk about "industry corruption" compared to American government?? You think having NASA gov't run is better?? LOL

    11. Re:Not the first time.... by arthurh3535 · · Score: 1

      So... according to you, it cost 88 billion dollars to develop the Space Shuttle? (5 launches a year, for sixteen years at 1.1 billion.)

      Do you have anything that vaguely resembles factual backing of this statement, or are we supposed to take your word for it?

      --
      No! It's a *SIG*. Keep the Special Interest Groups away! (Con joke!)
    12. Re:Not the first time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The problem is that reusuable spacecraft has proven to be a mistake.

      I haven't seen any such proof. Extending your argument, then reusable aircraft are a mistake. Spacecraft aren't that much more complicated.


      Seriously. Using the shuttle as "proof" that reusable spacecraft are a mistake is, umm, simplistic at best. Using the shuttle as proof that reusable spacecraft designed by committee are a mistake would be more reasonable.


      It worked for Henry Ford, ...


      Automobles are reusable, last I checked.

    13. Re:Not the first time.... by mlong · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately I think if it all goes private then it will mean the end of manned spaceflight and planetary probes. There is no profit in that stuff...if there was we'd see it privatized already. The only thing that makes a profit is launching satelittes. Now perhaps eventually space tourism and mining will be profitable but the costs to get into space are too high and will remain too high until some new technology comes around. I think at this point the governmetn will always need to be the "buyer" of these services to continue them but perhaps spaceship design, etc. could be privatized much like the military chooses aircraft from private industry proposals and bids.

      --
      //m
    14. Re:Not the first time.... by mlong · · Score: 1
      The problem is that reusuable spacecraft has proven to be a mistake. It costs more to develop something which can be used multiple times, and then it costs more to individually produce components, then it costs more to do the recovery & restoration. When you have a production line, like the pre-shuttle rockets, and like ESA has, then you can concentrate on producing reliable & cheap components. It worked for Henry Ford, and it works for spacecraft.

      Umm...cars are reusable. You're trying to compare it to mass producing cars or computers or whatever. A better comparison is with aircraft. They are reusable but fairly expensive and require a lot of maintenance. And that comes down a lot to safety issues...if you use cheap parts and it falls out of the sky, you got a problem. I can just see a cheap reusable spacecraft...the engine dies while you're in orbit, or you spring an air leak.

      --
      //m
    15. Re:Not the first time.... by Fenris2001 · · Score: 2

      No, what I said was it depends on whose numbers you use - the official NASA estimate has hovered around $400-$500 million since the beginning of the program. But other estimates vary if you include the costs of the payloads, or spread the R&D costs over a different timeline, for example.

      The point is, any way you look at it, it's not economical.

      --
      ---------------
      Vpered na Mars!
    16. Re:Not the first time.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      A better comparison is with aircraft. They are reusable but fairly expensive and require a lot of maintenance.

      Just to follow-up on your point. The principle reason airplanes are reusable is that they are designed to be reusable. Reusability (a.k.a., maintanence) is right behind safety as a design criteria for modern aircraft. The "problem" with the shuttle is that it was primarily designed to reach orbit, safety was second, maybe third in the designers' minds, reusability was waaaay down the list of design priorities. Remanufacturability is probably a better discription than reusability to describe the shuttle.


      Compared to the shuttle, aircraft maintanence is a snap.

  26. Maybe not a bad idea. by purduephotog · · Score: 4

    Take a look at the 50+ generation. They had the moon in their grasp and they turned their back.

    How many experimental craft have been 'scrapped' for 'budget cuts'- the government is a big, slow, uninteresting beast that plows over ideas. Whatever happeend to the dream of SSTO (single stage to orbit)?

    Throw 'market share' and a chance for profit in, then you have some businesses interested. Contractors don't deliver on time? Dock them. Don't coddle them.

    The moon was ours once... now every time I step outside at night and look up I see another example of failure.

    Venimus, vidimus, fugimus

    1. Re:Maybe not a bad idea. by StandardDeviant · · Score: 2
      then you have some businesses interested

      That isn't neccessarily a good thing... Would you want to ride into low earth orbit on top of hundreds of thousands of moving parts and tons of explosive chemicals assembled not only by the lowest bidder but by a profit-oriented lowest bidder with less internal supervision and more stakeholder driven profit incentive (i.e. greater incentive to reduce cost, even to materially inefficent extents)?

      Not that NASA or their cronies have a great track record either, but still...

    2. Re:Maybe not a bad idea. by LS · · Score: 2

      "The moon was ours once... now every time I step outside at night and look up I see another example of failure."

      Perhaps the failure is your own for not seeing that the moon has the same poetic beauty it has always had. Looking at the moon as another object of ownership is the exact point of contention with the privatization of space. Coca Cola has wanted to put an advertisement the size of the moon in space. That would be the day that I would officially become a criminal...

      LS

      --
      There is a fine line between being a cultivated citizen and being someone else's crop. - A. J. Patrick Liszkie
  27. Private shuttle manopoly by BluePenguin · · Score: 1
    Step one: M$ is the only company with the ability to buy they shuttle... and does it to prove it
    Step two: US Gov. Takes M$ to court because they have a manopoly on shuttle flights.
    Step three: Shuttle crashes frequently while M$ and US Gov go back and forth in courts.

    This has been a shameless joke at M$s expense... those who laugh will be assimilated at next reboot.

    :q!

    --
    If I can't see it in Lynx I'm not interested.
  28. learn to spel by saforrest · · Score: 0, Offtopic
    NASA is Considers Privatizing Space Shuttles

    What you say?

  29. It's been talked about before... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    This is not really new. United Space Alliance, the LLC bastard child
    of Boeing and Lockheed Martin has approached NASA before about buying
    or leasing a shuttle. I believe USA was particularly interested in
    Columbia because it has the lightest schedule during certain phases of
    Space Station construction. Outgoing NASA agency head Dan Goldin was
    reported to be all in favor of going forward, but the center director
    at JSC, one George Abbey Sr., was opposed and blocked the deal.

    The new emphasis on privatizing the program is a push by the new Bush
    administration, and was a bit of a surprise to many at USA. "Out of
    the blue" is how it was described to me. However, USA does not expect
    much to come of the new push anytime soon because three key positions
    at NASA are now vacant: Abbey has retired at JSC, Goldin is on his way
    out, and NASA Office of Space Flight assistant administrator Joe
    Rothenberg has announced his retirement. USA execs are NOT actively
    pursuing privatization discussions with NASA, and cannot realistically
    do so until these positions are filled.

    In other words, don't look for a privately owned or operated shuttle
    any time soon.

    1. Re:It's been talked about before... by duffbeer703 · · Score: 2

      Esp. since the Democrats in congress are going out of their way to stonewall all of Bush's appointments.

      --
      Conformity is the jailer of freedom and enemy of growth. -JFK
    2. Re:It's been talked about before... by Lemmy+Caution · · Score: 2

      I'm sorry, but this is the funniest bit of distortion I've seen in ages. The Republicans were extremely obstructionist with Democratic candidates (remember Jesse Helms blocking ambassadorial appointments?) during the Clinton administration, while the Republican nominees were getting a cakewalk before Sept. 11, and it is only getting easier for them. And the failure to block the appointment of folks like Ashcroft has resulted in horrid constrictions of civil liberties, including his attack on the right-to-death measure enacted in Oregon and his attack on medical marijuana. (Apparently, state's rights is only a slogan when the state wants the right to toe the Republican line.)

    3. Re:It's been talked about before... by hawk · · Score: 2
      >The Republicans were extremely obstructionist with Democratic
      >candidates (remember Jesse Helms blocking ambassadorial appointments?)


      Now wait a minute. It's not, "Republicans such as Jesse Helms were obstructions for Democratic candidates." It's more like, "Jesse Helms is an obstructionist."


      The current administration isn't having a much better time with him than the previous . . .


      hawk

  30. Security concerns and other misc. issues by GianfrancoZola · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I wonder if there is anything to be concerned about with regard to national security. With the shuttle program in federal hands, I'm assuming there is close scrutiny of contractors involved in building and preparing military payloads that the shuttle delivers into space.

    While the government has every right to keep sensitive information classified, they also have to keep the public informed (to a point) about what they're doing. If a private entity took over all the duties of deploying and maintaining the shuttles, would that entity be compelled to share as much information about what it's doing as the government currently does? How do intellectual property rights fit into this? Would a private entity at some point start claiming rights to knowledge derived from scientific activities that took place on one of its flights?

    OTOH, a private entity that can't rely solely on federal dollars may have more incentive to find ways to drive down costs and streamline the whole process. But hopefully not at the expense of safety.

    1. Re:Security concerns and other misc. issues by FatAlb3rt · · Score: 1

      The space shuttle is no longer in the DoD payloads business. I think that all stopped due to the Challenger accident or shortly after. Same with civilians in space.

  31. Read Feynman's report by Linux_ho · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Anyone who read Richard Feynman's report on the Challenger explosion knows the Shuttle design process was flawed from the beginning. Exhaustive testing of material tolerances and other bottom-up procedures used in modern aircraft design were ignored in the Shuttle design process.

    It costs so much for every flight because they basically have to rebuild the engine after every run. Parts that were not designed to wear fall apart or develop stress fractures in a single run.

    I would support privatization 100% if they would give Boeing or Lockheed a contract to redesign the shuttle based on what we have learned from the current design and its flaws. NASA bureaucratic BS was responsible for allowing many of those flaws to exist. Feynman asked, "Do NASA managers even TALK to the engineers they're managing?" Privatization of maintaining the existing fleet wouldn't save nearly as much money as a new design would.

    --
    include $sig;
    1;
    1. Re:Read Feynman's report by Linux_ho · · Score: 2

      Damn, the italics close tag was there in the preview screen.

      --
      include $sig;
      1;
    2. Re:Read Feynman's report by Man+of+E · · Score: 1
      I would support privatization 100% if they would give Boeing or Lockheed a contract to redesign the shuttle

      What about these X40 or so (I'm not sure about the number) reusable shuttles that Lockheed has been designing for years? Perhaps NASA is thinking of selling the old shuttle because soon they'll start buying a new fleet.

      The new Lockheed design is sure to have been expensive - considering that NASA basically paid for the thing, I wouldn't be surprised if it were an exclusive deal.

      --
      Ceci n'est pas une sig
    3. Re:Read Feynman's report by EccentricAnomaly · · Score: 1

      A new design like the X-33 and its leaky tanks?? When the government throws money at the big boys (Boeing and Lockheed) it makes it so no one wants to invest in the little companies with the really good ideas, like Beal.

      The Shuttle was, is, and has always been an experimental vehicle. It was the first vehicle of its kind and if they would have "designed it as an airplane" it would have cost many Billions more to develop.

      NASA should stick to researching new technologies and then distributing them for free, as per its charter. NASA should not give subsidies to some companies at the expense of others.

      --
      There are 10 types of people in this world, those who can count in binary and those who can't.
    4. Re:Read Feynman's report by Fenris2001 · · Score: 1

      Read "Halfway to Anywhere" by G. Harry Stine for a description of the politicking that got Lockheed the X-33 contract instead of Douglas. Douglas wanted to build a scaled-up DC-X, but Lockheed's lifting body was sexier, so they got the contract.

      --
      ---------------
      Vpered na Mars!
  32. Although the big corporations will probably.... by DAldredge · · Score: 1

    Well..Duh!!! How else has a few Billion to do this???

  33. Funny, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, really though, is privatising this really in the interest of national security? I mean, really, planes are one thing. But could you imagine terrorists getting ahold of a spaceshuttle full of explosives and blowing it to kingdom-come over top of a city?? Catastrophic if you ask me. Some things, (very, very, very few mind you), should be left in the hands of the governments.

  34. Great, I can see it now... by lys1123 · · Score: 1

    We have the first space tourist, and now the announcement that Nasa is considering going commercial? One has to wonder where this is leading.

    "Thank you for flying Nasa. This flight has been brought to you by the letter M and the number 7. Now sit back and enjoy your in-flight commercials."

  35. Competition by wangi · · Score: 2

    Fair enough, privatise the birds - but do it in a manner which will allow competition to drive down costs.

    Perhaps sell off each shuttle individually? Or perhaps more realistically split the inventory between two operators.

    1. Re:Competition by redcliffe · · Score: 1

      How does competition cut costs? I cuts them in maintience. It gets rid of people with expertise and promotes the morons. You would end up losing all the great minds of the program, and crashing all the shuttles after a few years.

  36. Were We Swindled? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They used a mission to repair a satellite (cost about $200 million) as a demonstration of the value of the shuttle. If the shuttle mission is $400 million, they could have launched two new satellites for the same bucks. Why do public officials use such lame reasoning? Why does the press let them get away with it?

  37. I see it now. by www.sorehands.com · · Score: 1
    You get on the space shuttle after going through the metal detector and have wand waived over you by some person that is like an idiot savant that is not good at math.

  38. Privatizing the shuttle or the maintenance? by Indomitus · · Score: 1

    I just read an article on space.com about a speech Dan Goldin (of course I can't find the link anymore) gave about fully privatizing the shuttle maintenance. Apparently they have already privatized about 40% of the jobs. Seems like that's a much better option than privatizing the whole thing and taking it out of NASAs hands all together. I wonder if this a real proposal or just something a couple of administrators and senators are tossing around?

  39. One step too far by Master+Of+Ninja · · Score: 0

    Privatizing space shuttles goes one step too far - $400m for a launch, where's the profit? What's going to happen will be something like in the UK. Someone else posted on the state of railways here, but I'm thinking of how the government is also trying to privatize the hospitals here as well - things start going down the drain very quickly when money runs out for operations.

    Either the cost of the launch will creep us as the governemnt has to pay the profit margin, or there will be cutbacks on the shuttle itself. And cutbacks can only be bad - i remember seeing that if the shuttle had 99% reliability, there still would be a possible one million faults with it. Cutbacks on the thing could make a flying bomb.

    And with the recent tradegy (in the US) security has to be a major aspect - how much damage could a shuttle do? Crashing it seems remote, but the technology could be stolen for nefarious purposes, and someone could probably modify it to make a super crop duster that could have unimaginable consequences.

    OK, I'm sure the thing will be under heavy military guard, and security with the company will be tight, but giving control of such a valuable technological and economic asset seems a bit short-sighted just to save money (refer to the railways in the UK to see the real cost of privatization).

    It just depends on how far privatization will go - unfortunately the article was a bit sketchy on the details. Anybody got more info?

  40. Corporate Sponsorship! by mikeboone · · Score: 1, Funny

    I think a Pizza Hut logo would be really sexy on the wing where the American Flag currently takes up valuable advertising space.

    1. Re:Corporate Sponsorship! by Knobby · · Score: 2

      How about we paint the external fuel tank to look a big trojan condom? .. Or atleast a couple cans of coke..

    2. Re:Corporate Sponsorship! by mlong · · Score: 1
      How about we paint the external fuel tank to look a big trojan condom? .. Or atleast a couple cans of coke..


      Nah that would add too much weight. The first few launches had the tanks painted white but they figured out by not painting them (leaving them rust colored) they could save a lot of weight and money. It'd be much better to have the ad on the tower...or perhaps during the count down they could do some ads... "10 9 8 coke is it 7 6 5 we like to see you smile 3 2 1

      --
      //m
  41. Would this hurt research? by xdangavinx · · Score: 1

    By privatising shuttle lunchs, would there be a conflict of interests of the objectives of what the goal of the missions will do? It seems that this many turn into a situation where the people who are putting up the money for the launches (be it one organization or a group of organizations) could threaten to pull funding if they don't get what they want to get out of the mission.

  42. Sure, have GM and Ford make space vehicles.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It may sound good, and who knows may even be a great thing, but I'm not too sure about privatizing. The last thing I need is GM or Ford making space vehicles with defects that fail and come raining down on my damn house.

  43. The private sector is inherently bad by sharkticon · · Score: 1

    What exactly is the problem here?

    The fact that the private sector invariably gives rise to the worst possible situation for the consumer, and that space should not be available for the obscene profit gouging that the US supports wholeheartedly. Given the fact that in every market our government has shown its willingness to bend over and take it from its corporate masters, why should space be any different?

    --

    1. Re:The private sector is inherently bad by Debillitatus · · Score: 1
      The fact that the private sector invariably gives rise to the worst possible situation for the consumer

      I can't imagine a statement less true than this. Would you characterize the corporate Internet in that way, i.e. that the American consumer is worse off with respect to the Internet than had it been held in government hands? Was ARPANet somehow better?

      You should have read your Economics textbook more closely. A free market always gives a good situation for the consumer, always gives an optimal situation for the consumer. This is simply known as the Law of Supply and Demand. For some empirical evidence instead, contrast the Soviet Union's consumer with the American consumer in the mid-80s. You would rather stand in line for toilet paper?

      I'll grant you that the free market does have its drawbacks. I think the biggest one may very well be the exact opposite of what you said, that the consumer does get exactly what he wants. For example, the American consumer wants big-ass gas-guzzling cars, and that is precisely what the American consumer gets, at a cheap price. Of course, this may end up being bad in many ways (environmental damage, for one). But the people are getting exactly what they want for the best possible price.

      In summary, I think it may be bad sometimes that the consumer gets what he wants. But your claim that the free market shafts the consumer is, at best, completely ridiculous.

      should not be available for the obscene profit gouging that the US supports wholeheartedly.

      Why should travel to the Moon and other planets not give some company a profit? If someone doesn't make a profit off of it, they're not going to provide the service. Contrary to what you may believe, people don't provide services out of the goodness of their heart. They want to get paid for their work.

      Consider the Internet again. The recent tech boom is of course attributable to the fact that all of these companies saw the Internet as a way to make money, and did so. The fact that there are so many CS-like jobs out there is only because a bunch of companies are making obscene profits.

      --

      Come on, give it up, that's

    2. Re:The private sector is inherently bad by overunderunderdone · · Score: 1

      The fact that the private sector invariably gives rise to the worst possible situation for the consumer...

      You are so right. Just the other day after 1.5 hours in the line at the DMV I was pondering "Why can't a trip to the grocery store be as simple as this?"

    3. Re:The private sector is inherently bad by medcalf · · Score: 1

      The fact that the private sector invariably gives rise to the worst possible situation for the consumer, and that space should not be available for the obscene profit gouging that the US supports wholeheartedly. Given the fact that in every market our government has shown its willingness to bend over and take it from its corporate masters, why should space be any different?



      This "fact" does not exist. Indeed, even a cursory examination of economic history reveals your statement to be completely false.


      I would go on at length, but basically I am convinced you are just trolling for people with enough sense to see you as a fraud, but not enough to keep from responding as if you were worth responding to.

      --
      -- Two men say they're Jesus. One of them must be wrong. - Dire Straits
    4. Re:The private sector is inherently bad by meepzorb · · Score: 2

      >Was ARPANet somehow better?

      Yes. Infinitely. I was there.

      :Michael (feeling wistful...)

    5. Re:The private sector is inherently bad by ichimunki · · Score: 2

      You would rather stand in line for toilet paper?

      What a crock. Last time I went to the store to buy toilet paper (and the rest of my groceries), I stood in line for 15 minutes at least. And then I had to pay for the stuff on top of that!

      And how about an even more egregious example as long as we're using anecdotal evidence to back up the pseudoscience of economics: I called my local telephone company a few nights ago-- a small company called Qwest-- to have some services I was no longer going to be using turned off, I had to speak with four different service persons and spend 27 minutes on the call. God bless that good old fashioned capitalism. Obviously questioning it means I'd rather stand in line, unlike now where I stand in lots of lines.

      --
      I do not have a signature
    6. Re:The private sector is inherently bad by scoove · · Score: 2

      The fact that the private sector invariably gives rise to the worst possible situation for the consumer

      Sharkticon simply makes no sense.

      Absent a private sector, there are no consumers.

      Remember the SAT test?

      Q: Subject is to Government, as Consumer is to:

      (a) Happy meal
      (b) Automobile
      (c) Business
      (d) Jogging

      Hmm... it's a hard one, I'll say! BTW, per gubmint bending over to corporate masters, you must be filing a different tax form than I am or must live in a different country. Please do tell, I'd love to move there.

      *scoove*

  44. Most horrible service ever? by mgw1181 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Guess you've never heard of Amtrak? :)

    1. Re:Most horrible service ever? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amtrak is a good example of a system in limbo. It's neither a government agency nor a private corporation. It's expected to provide rail service everywhere, and be profitable. If it were a private institution, it could be profitable, but a lot of areas would be without train service.

  45. Shame by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Americans everywhere should be ashamed at this rape of our space program"

    Hey hey HEY buddy! There`s a cue for American Shame feeling..get in line behind Foreign policy, popular culture, food, waistlines, Bush (old and young) etc

  46. This pisses me off! by Hazelrah · · Score: 1

    I think the leaders of the country have really missed the point of the space program. In an age when capitalism runs amuk (look at the Math World article posted earlier for what happens to quality ideas and creations), the government is loosing sight of what's important. We'd rather fight some pointless war in Afghanistan that we won't win, and I bet that costs a pretty penny. It's sad to see this proposal given any kind of serious consideration. I think the space program is an important key to our national future, and relying on people who ultimate objective is profit is not the point. There are many reasons the program should exist as a not for profit venture. First is the science. Companies don't want to do research on something they can't sell. Companies also don't care about human beings, so who the heck would want to ride on a shuttle where passenger safety is second to big bucks for shareholders. Third, NASA carries great national pride. Profit doesn't make people happy in the end, and ultimately NASA provides a piece of humanity's better half.
    Ultimately, I would rather see the whole shuttle program killed rather than being profitized. If the government wants to be so cheap when it comes to national pride, let the world see that the U.S. dump money into a pointless war than better itself.

    1. Re:This pisses me off! by overunderunderdone · · Score: 1

      I think the leaders of the country have really missed the point of the space program... We'd rather fight some pointless war in Afghanistan that we won't win, and I bet that costs a pretty penny.

      I think you have really missed the point of government or at least the stated "point" of the US government. Check the beginning of the U.S. Declaration of Independance and the Preamble to the Constitution for the governments stated purpose. Scientific advancement doesn't make the list but protecting citizens right to life, "providing a common defense" and "ensuring domestic tranquility" are prominently mentioned. Science is a "one off" activity at best.

      As for the war being pointless: Even if scientific advancement is a higher priority than "providing a common defense" of our lives and "domestic tranquility" (if I understand your priorities) impoverished, insecure or dead people are generally not very good at advancing science so if only as a practical matter to protect the space program we should probably try to defend our citizens from being killed and our society from massive disruptions by al Queada. It seems to me we have three options for an overall strategy.

      1) An offensive strategy - We destroy al Queada. Since they are taking refuge with their allies in Afghanistan this entails a war in Afghanistan.

      2) A defensive strategy - We could leave al Queada alone but build an impregnable defense. At a minimum this would probably require closing our borders, at least to arabs and muslims. Since it is only a matter of time before they develop or steal nukes we would have to restrict access to our ports,international air travel etc. and move anything we don't want nuked away from our borders with Mexico and Canada. We would also want SDI in case they use a more conventional nuclear delivery method.

      3) Surrender: We could seek to appease them. This is not a sure fire strategy (just ask Neville Chamberlain) It would be particularly difficult since al Queada has not even claimed responsiblity let alone made any specific demands. Also this is unlikely to work in the short run since even if we complied with (what we imagine are) their demands I doubt we could do so quickly enough to stop existing attacks that are planned. At an absolute minimum this would require pulling all our troops out of any muslim land, ending aid to Isreal, Bosnia, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Pakistan, Indonesia, the Phillipenes and India (for the sake of Kashmeer) and standing by as those nations adopted an Islamic "Republic" government essentially identical to the Taliban. It would probably also include a rather large sum of "danegeld". It may also entail ceding Spain to Morroco since bin Laden has decried the "tragedy of Andalusia" as fervently as the tragedy of Palestine. At worst it may entail adopting Islamic government ourselves though that would probably be a long time out.

      A sane strategy should probably involve some aspect of all three. Having an immigration and visa program which is more security focussed and pursuing foreign policies that don't alienate a large segment of the world's population are both important. Destroying a professed enemy with the capablity and inclination to attack and kill you is an absolute necessity.

  47. NASA has always been about the pursuit of science. by Meefan · · Score: 2

    ... and corporations don't really care about science. Engineering, yes, applied science, certainly - but pure science, the kind that NASA does? Not really. On the other hand, NASA has botched enough missions so that it seems *something* must be done. Is this a solution? Perhaps. Privatization, though, can have it's own share of worries and problems; HMOs are a good example.

    --

    ------
    http://cooltech.org
    If it ain't cool, it ain't coolt
  48. A Nude Clint Eastwood as commentary on privatizing by utdpenguin · · Score: 0
    I must admit to being a little concerned by this.

    What safeguards are put in to insure liability? I mean, a private ocmpany is looing at the bottom line. NASA exists not to make a profit, but to explore. Ergo, I wonder if a private company will be as liable to insure safety. Even NASA has had some diasasters and near disasters.
    (Aside, as if shooting Tom Hanks into space wasn't enough, what the HELL was up with "Space Cowboys" in which we got to see old geezers naked _and_ shot into space._

    If provate ocmpany cuts corners and a disaster results, can we hold them liable? Can we sue them? Some how giving somehting of the magnitude and ocmplexity of a shuttle to the lowest bidder unerves me.

    --
    In Soviet Russia you dant have to put up with these crappy jokes
  49. Yes, but can the free market.. by Meefan · · Score: 1

    support pure science? Most of what NASA does doesn't have a direct commercial application. Why would a corporation be interested in something like that? I mean, the entire DMCA and all the legal battles relating to it really don't say good things about how much big corporations support science, does it?

    --

    ------
    http://cooltech.org
    If it ain't cool, it ain't coolt
    1. Re:Yes, but can the free market.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ahem

      tang. velcro. port-a-potty body suits. The list goes on and on...

    2. Re:Yes, but can the free market.. by Catskul · · Score: 1

      Maybe a large collection of Universites Should look at this. Universities are Commertial, yet intrested in pure science and have a continual influx of fresh minds and Ideas, and have resources in every science dicipline.

      --

      Im not here now... Im out KILLING pepperoni
    3. Re:Yes, but can the free market.. by Nijika · · Score: 1

      I like to hold the misguided belief that NASA would be able to do pur science in paralell with commercial ventures... But probably not ;)

      --
      Luck favors the prepared, darling.
    4. Re:Yes, but can the free market.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I expect NASA would itself get out of the
      commercial side and concentrate it's
      resources on science. This could be a good
      thing for the science efforts at NASA. The
      company that runs the shuttles would then
      treat NASA as just another customer.
      This sounds like a good idea as long as they
      get a good price for the fleet (what's Columbias
      blue book value nowadays??)

  50. They are effectively private already by s20451 · · Score: 2

    For years, a private company called United Space Alliance has held the contract for space shuttle operations. USA is a joint venture of Boeing and Lockheed-Martin, the contractors responsible for constructing most of the space shuttle hardware.

    --
    Toronto-area transit rider? Rate your ride.
  51. This was our idea by FrankBough · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Weren't we talking about this the other day in the context of the ISS. Not exactly, maybe, but it all goes to the same end.

    If you take this out of the hands of the government then you can reduce the amount of interference it gets. By all means we should support government interference (in the public interest, of course) during development, but when a technology is well established it should run OK. Leaving it in government hands lays it open to streams of politicians who just can't resist fiddling.

    Let's face it - there already is competition in this market. That's why the Russian rockets and Arianes and so on are getting so much of the launch traffic. That's also why people are thinking of building new launch facilities commercially.

    Maybe if there is a profit motive behind it for someone, the shuttle will realise its original objective of being a low-cost launch vehicle.

    more on the original story here, BTW

  52. opposite of everything else in the wake of 9/11 by josquint · · Score: 1

    Odd...considering the Current Government Trend(TM) is to centeralize and take over and control things now. Especially big explosive things like planes!

    Which also begs the question... If terrorists hijack one of these puppies(which, i'd assume would be easier without the government 'security standards'), with millions of gallons of liquid H2 and O2... and ram it into something... ummm.. BOOM?


    1. Re:opposite of everything else in the wake of 9/11 by Jason+Earl · · Score: 2

      That's just stupid. First of all, I don't care who you are if you spend $5 billion on a piece of equipment you are going to secure it properly. Contrary to popular belief corporations that risk billion dollar assets do not last long. I guarantee you that the space shuttle is not going to be guarded by $5 rent-a-cops anytime soon.

      Secondly, if terrorists did get on board the space shuttle what makes you think that they will have any idea how to lauch or fly that bad boy. It's not like the space shuttle is equipped with a "crash into New York" auto-pilot button.

  53. Research by Man+of+E · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I have nothing against the private sector per se, but I agree that in this case it might not be a good idea.
    A lot of the R&D that happens on board the shuttle is quite subsidized, and I'm afraid that corporations are not going to be as friendly to researchers. What that means is that possibly some research projects won't be able to afford execution in space. We may somehow lose out on valuable basic research, which would be a shame.
    Perhaps the government could continue subsidizing research done on corporate spacecraft, through some extension of the NSF, or so.

    --
    Ceci n'est pas une sig
    1. Re:Research by Debillitatus · · Score: 1

      I think there's a valid fear of lost research here, but I think the situation would get even better. If the government laid out less money to NASA, then conceivably more money could migrate towards the NSF in the long run. Actually, I think this would lead to an increase in scientific research done in space, since the money could concentrate on the actual research up there, and we'd not have to spend so much getting the dudes in orbit...

      --

      Come on, give it up, that's

    2. Re:Research by Man+of+E · · Score: 1

      Good point, though I'm not sure the NSF is very high on the government's list of priorities right now (not that it ever has been, really) - it's all about defense now. I'm also not sure that selling the shuttles means that NASA gets less money from the government, just that it has more money to allocate to other projects instead of shuttle maintenance.

      --
      Ceci n'est pas une sig
    3. Re:Research by Debillitatus · · Score: 1
      Good point, though I'm not sure the NSF is very high on the government's list of priorities right now (not that it ever has been, really) - it's all about defense now.

      I think I have to disagree with this... The funding for the NSF rose quite a bit during the Clinton administration, and this is a trend which has been carried out so far during the Bush administration. For example, from 99 to 00 the funding grew at about 10%. See here for some numbers.

      Some complain because there's been a lopsidedness in NSF grants in recent years, that essentially way too much money has been going towards biology instead of basic math and physics. But the government has been very kind to the research community under Clinton, and, hopefully, this will continue.

      --

      Come on, give it up, that's

  54. that we won't win? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We shall see about that... we shall see. Perhaps if by "we won't win", you mean "we will win" or some such.

    No need to thank me. I find virtue is its own reward.

  55. No Way by red_dragon · · Score: 1

    You let a private corporation operate the Space Shuttle, and some dork will find yet another very tall building to crash it into...

    --
    In Soviet Russia, Jesus asks: "What Would You Do?"
  56. which is exactly how it should be (n/t) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    n/t foo

  57. NASA + eBay by robvasquez · · Score: 0

    Put the shuttles on eBay. I'll. Perhaps a BUY IT NOW $2 billion?

  58. Re:P.O.D by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Go dixie-chicks!

    W007!!

  59. Shuttle Buddies, Inc. by EccentricAnomaly · · Score: 1

    Much of Shuttle operations are already privatized and run by the United Space Alliance. USA is a joint venture by Lockheed and Boeing. They save costs in three main ways: 1) USA pays less than NASA... and NASA already pays much lower than the rest of the Aerospace industry (at least they did when I was job hunting last year). 2) USA cuts the deadwood. Since NASA employees are civil servants they pretty much have their jobs for life and NASA employs lots of people who don't really contribute to a project but have to be paid anyway. 3) USA can hire people when there's lots of work and fire them when the work load drops. NASA hires people and keeps them so its difficult to hire more people when the work load jumps.

    From what I've heard, USA does a good job as most of their people are highly motivated by manned space flight.. and I guess the salary doesn't look that small when you work with the Russian controllers who sometimes don't even get paid at all.

    This is not to say that privatization is always a good thing. Lots and lots of government contractors do a worse job and end up costing more than what they replaced... many charge so much it verges on fraud.

    --
    There are 10 types of people in this world, those who can count in binary and those who can't.
  60. Ooops. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    those pesky shuttles cost $400M every time we throw one up into orbit
    And it keeps falling down at that!!

  61. I know! by gleam_mn · · Score: 1

    If they farm the shuttle program out to M$ then M$ can integrate it with M$Passport which will make it so much easier to buy your way into space... and if you're good you can do it with someone elses money! Cool!

    --
    - The auditors said to secure the server... hand me that duct-tape -
  62. Go Further: Treat Space Launch Like a Utility by Thag · · Score: 4, Interesting
    This is a good first step, but more needs to be done. Many spaceflight enthusiasts believe that NASA has long been a major obstacle to achieving low cost access to orbit. This is because of beaurocracy, politics, the need to spread out programs across as many congressional districts as possible, and a nasty habit of choosing the approach that requires the most new, unproven bleeding-edge technology, instead of something workable and cheap.

    The more important step is to keep NASA from screwing up the next generation of space launch vehicles. Remember, the Space Shuttle was supposed to be cheaper than conventional rockets, but thanks largely to NASA it wound up being more like an order of magnitude more expensive.

    I believe it is crucial for the US to move our space launch development from a beaurocratic process to a market-based process. I feel it will lower the cost of launch, and provide impetus to try alternative approaches that have been ignored by NASA.

    I'd treat space launch capability like a utility. Just as the government must buy the electricity that people generate back into the power grid, I'd mandate that the government must buy a certain number of flights from all qualified vendors within a certain time frame after they come on line.

    Specifically:
    1. Begin by specifying the criteria for several types of launches: how much payload you want to get to which orbit for how much money per pound. I wouldn't necessarily be picky about SSTO vs. a staged approach: let the market sort that out.

    2. Pass legislation to provide "legal air cover" for private development.

    3. Declare that, if you can demonstrate launch capability by successfully launching a dummy payload (spare parts for ISS) within one of the sets of mission criteria established in step 1, the government MUST buy 10 launches from you within the next 5 years. (Note: That's 10 launches total per company for each type of mission specified in step 1: after 10 launches, a company should have enough cash flow to attract private investment.)

    4. There is no step 4, except to stay out of the way.

    Yes, if enough companies came forward and built working launch systems it might cost more than, for instance, the two billion NASA has spent on X-33. But we'd have many times more working launch systems! As X-33 so amply proved, we cannot expect a beaurocratic approach to give us even one working next-gen system for the same amount of cash.

    Jon Acheson
    --
    All opinions expressed herein are my own, and not those of my employers, who are appalled.
  63. Federal Government - Big Corporation...Difference? by chrome+koran · · Score: 1
    I'm not sure I see the distinction here...Since corporate money drives most Federal policy-making anyway, what will really change?

    Companies also don't care about human beings...

    NASA does? Any huge bureaucracy does? Tell it to the astronauts who burned to death in that Apollo rocket while sitting on the launch pad.

    Can I draw a possibly stretched parallel here for a moment? The exploration/colonization of the Americas (North, South and Central) was originally in the hands of big government agencies in England, Spain, Portugal, France and Holland. Checking the historic record, we find that they killed off a whole bunch of people (native as well as their own), failed miserably as often as they succeeded, and generally created an enormous mess which the world is still trying to clean up centuries later. The most successful feats of the time were pulled off by individuals who were motivated primarily by personal glory (Columbus, Magellan, Hudson, et. al.) and were willing to make any sort of personal sacrifice to write their names in history books.

    NASA no longer has that spirit. Its primary motivation is keeping its budget intact, and its management is seeking to keep its power base. Want to explore space in the next 50 years? Take the project out of government hands and put it in the hands of companies that are driven by individuals who are highly motivated to succeed. They will find ways to get the job done. Maybe some people will die...I for one would happily climb in the first rocket to Mars EVEN if you told me there was a 25% chance I would be killed before I got there.

    --

    It's not funny till someone gets hurt.
  64. What am I missing here? by Bollie · · Score: 3, Funny

    Please follow this chain of logic carefully... I spent a lot of neurons trying to fit this into my brain.

    1 NASA finds shuttles expensive to maintain.
    2 They find it so expensive because shuttles expend $400M of non-recoverable fuel, components and morons per flight.
    3 NASA might want invest in a project with higher construction costs but lower maintenance costs.
    4 BUT NASA has canned the X-33 and X-34 programs.
    5 This means NASA is NOT interested in a project with higher construction costs but lower mainenance costs.

    Right. Incidentally, since NASA is not interested in space flight anymore (it seems), Bruce Willis is not going to save us when the big one hits. That means the Empire State Building will very soon be hit by a meteor. Poor NYC.

    1. Re:What am I missing here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The $400 million figure is not exactly realistic; the raw cost of a shuttle flight is about $150 million for fuel, external tank, boosters overhaul, shuttle maintenance, etc. By far the largest part of the cost is the $3-4 billion spent on maintaining KSC facilities for the shuttles; $3 billion divided between six or eight launches a year is a hell of a lot of money per launch.

      So, of course they don't want a spacecraft that's simple to operate and can be launched from an airport; what would happen to all those NASA jobs at KSC and other facilities?

      Seriously, like almost all bureaucracies NASA is and always has been primarily a welfare program; space exploration is only a secondary objective.

    2. Re:What am I missing here? by Mr.+Eradicator · · Score: 1

      Don't forget the almighty ISS. Why is NASA in budget trouble? Ah yes, because they spent an extra $5 billion on that heap of junk slowly falling towards Earth.

      Why we ever made that thing an international project must be _totally_ political because it's not like any of the other countries are pouring money into the ISS like we are. Then Russia basically pushes the civilian-space-tourist crap on us because they see a way to make money on the deal.

      We should have never made it an international project to begin with. Such an idea is too Hollywood to work out well. We should have either done the entire thing ourselves or told the other countries that they had to pay equal shares to support its construction/maintenence (including shuttle launches to support it).

      If it weren't for that damn program, I'm sure they wouldn't have to discuss this issue about privatizing the shuttle.

      NASA needs to fire the managers that let the whole ISS $$ fiasco get so bad.

      --

      That's Mr. Eradicator to you.

      trance-port
    3. Re:What am I missing here? by Tackhead · · Score: 2
      > They find it so expensive because shuttles expend $400M of non-recoverable fuel, components and morons per flight.

      Nitpick: If shuttle launches actually expended morons at NASA (assuming the morons were either unrecoverable or NASA decided not to recover them), then shuttle launches would be a lot cheaper by now.

    4. Re:What am I missing here? by redcliffe · · Score: 1

      This is evidence of why most humans should stay at home and not leave. You are illogical. Why do we need 15 different national space programs all trying to do the same thing? What does it gain? Why not consolidate all these groups into one, and get something worthwhile done. It is the only logical path forward.

  65. Profit??? by dpilot · · Score: 2

    So far there appears to be the same chance for profit in space that there is in broadband and the web. In other words, nebulous and unproven, dependent on government supports and regulation, and a bunch of shirt-losing and money-destroying has already been done.

    I don't credit US business with being sufficiently visionary to do anything with space. Space is a long-term thing, and a quarter-to-quarter focus just won't hack it. Space has 'worked' so far for business because the government has wanted stuff, and business will deliver it -- for a price.

    I once read quite an analysis about why business would never develop a breakthrough launch technology on their own. It essentially works out to a combination of corporate and government business practices.

    Maybe if we would allow someone to pull a 'Zephram Cochrane' and move their business off-planet to escape taxes and environmental reguations...

    As for the Space Station, (and the Shuttle, for that matter) the thing that annoys me even more than the money waste by NASA is the government's response. "If you can't run this sprint, we're going to tie one leg and one arm behind your back, then expect you to run it faster." IMHO, the Space Station has been cut below viability. Unless we can get a re-entry vehicle and hab module up there, no science will get done because it takes the whole crew for maintenance.

    --
    The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
    1. Re:Profit??? by WolfWithoutAClause · · Score: 2

      Broadband and web? Profit? Cisco is doing pretty OK. Other companies too; although there is a major recession right now- that won't last; trust me, I work in the industry. Bandwidth growth outstrips Moore's law and has done for a couple of decades.

      'a bunch of shirt-losing and money-destroying has already been done'

      All techs start with lots of expense, lots of high prices and lots of money spent. The point is that is now past and there's lots of prior art- lots of books you can buy telling you pretty much what to do, and what not.

      'I don't credit US business with being sufficiently visionary to do anything with space. Space is a long-term thing, and a quarter-to-quarter focus just won't hack it. Space has 'worked' so far for business because the government has wanted stuff, and business will deliver it -- for a price.'

      'IMHO, the Space Station has been cut below viability.'

      Oh dear, how sad, never mind.

      Actually Boeing and all the other aerospace companies have been feeding at the government teat for decades now. The mother is showing signs of kicking the prodigal sons off- and they already learnt to feed themselves quite well thank you very much. Space industry is worth $100 billion worldwide. NASA only gives them $20 billion. You do the math.

      The point is that the businesses won't create breakthrough launch tech without a good reason. They need a good reason. The market (and there is a space market now) is starting to give them a reason.

      The costs of space access have a long way they can fall. Even with conventional rocketry costs down at $10/kg do not seem totally out of the question but are not in reach at the moment, and new launch tech can probably do even better than that.

      --

      -WolfWithoutAClause

      "Gravity is only a theory, not a fact!"
  66. Whats old is new again by maggard · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Back when the STS debuted the announced plan had been to quickly spin it off into private management. Of course 48-hour turnaround and low costs were also much ballyhood features too. Indeed at one point Eastern Airlines (remember them?) folks were brought in to watch a few flights and get a feel for how they could take over regular operations.

    These days Lockheed handles most of the service & maintainance contracts on NASA facilities with NASA oversight. Turnaround time remains months and flights are steadily being reduced due to budget constraints. Low cost has also not been realized, certianly not within an order of magnitude of the original predictions.

    Of course the STS fleet remains an experimental one. These are the first generation designs developed in the 1970's with only upgraded subsystems since then. The logical next step of a second generation applying the lessons learned isn't even being discussed much less implelemented leaving the the aging (though refurbished) four orbiters the US's only manned spaceflight capability.

    Statistically more accidents must be anticipated reducing the program 25% each time. With R&D not even begun in an organized fashion a replacement generation is itself at least a decade off even if fast-tracked. I fear it is not a promise of a bright future the US sees but a slowly dwindling legacy.

    Indeed NASA just released a report calling for reducing staffing & facilities on the ISS (angering it's internationial "partners" who weren't even given copies of the report in advance of the press conference in spite of their own considerable contributions to the project.)

    Elsewhere the USSR is actively looking for any partners with which to continue it's own program, the ESA has it's own launcher and program along with involvement in the ISS, the Japanese projects slowly advance, and China is reportedly almost ready to launch it's first manned orbital mission and has published its goal of going to the moon.

    Like so many other areas of endeavor the US seems to pioneer then not follow up on it's advances. With realistic possibilities of power generation and manufacturing now becoming a possibility it seems the US is content to allow its manned spaceflight programs slowly wind down.

    -- Michael

    ps Many could argue that outsourcing STS operations would free up NASA funds and personel for producing a follow-up program. Were this the plan this would all be a good thing but no such intentions have been announced nor does there appear any support for such.

    --
    I don't read ACs: If a post isn't worth so much as a nom de plume to its author then I wont bother either.
  67. Whole Hog by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If the government wants to privatize it, let them go whole hog and privatize the whole thing. I don't want my tax paying money to subsidize any more corporate endeavors than they already do. What really busts my gut is when the taxpayer helps subsidize the costs for huge projects and never see any of the profits once they happen.

    I'm still paying sales tax on the Target Center even though all the costs have been paid. Target makes money on it now, but I'm still paying. For years Target avoided a downtown Minneapolis store citing they'd never make a profit. The city gives them $60 million to build one anyway and the principle negoitator for the city gets a VP job after her term is up.

    In the 80s Ed Meese got the government to subsidize Sematech to develop computer chips to compete against the lower priced imports from Japan. Once they were profitable a few years later none of the subsidies were paid back, let alone any sharing of the profits.

    I won't mention the tobacco industry.

    Feh. No more subsidized losses and privatized profits.

    If private companies want to get into space let them design and develop a better alternative.

  68. Don't forget the X prize! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There already is a group trying to kick start the private space tourism industry. Check out http://www.xprize.org

    1. Re:Don't forget the X prize! by Winged+Cat · · Score: 2

      Yeah, and they spent most of the prize money donations on promoting the thing, instead of keeping it as prize money like they promised.

      Still, it could be a good use of NASA's money to fund the prize, then back off and see what happens.

  69. X - Prize by Sgt_Nikon · · Score: 1

    Maybe Nasa should up the ante for the xprize with the condition that they get the plans and such on the winning vechicle. Then maybe the teams would have more insentive to get on with it.

  70. Free Ride from the USA by sad+sack · · Score: 1

    Why dont we just send a bill to the same agency that is spose to collect all that back owed money from all the other country's the US has bailed out? As far as privettising the space agancy it wont work to many gov black op's progects that have to get off the ground...just think sorry uncle sam but bill gates out bid you for cargo room again..... hes launching his windows to the world....

  71. Public should reap benefits by DaoudaW · · Score: 1

    Right! American taxpayers spent tens of billions on the development of the space-shuttle now we should balk at spending $300 million per flight to use the danged thing. It'd be like buying a $50,000 car and then leasing it out when the price of gasoline hits $2.00 per gallon. note: Actually the $300 million per flight includes lots of overhead. The direct flight related costs appear to be _only_ $90 million..

  72. didn't know that by darkwhite · · Score: 1

    Uh... I didn't know the SSMEs were pulled, rebuilt and tested... disassemble and check the blades, yes, but this seems to imply something more complete. Can you give me a link to where the process is described?

    --

    [an error occurred while processing this directive]
    1. Re:didn't know that by Fenris2001 · · Score: 1

      Had one, but it moved - I'll try to find it again.

      --
      ---------------
      Vpered na Mars!
  73. Bush admin. told congress the same this morning by Condo · · Score: 1

    OMB representative Sean O'Keefe told the House Science Committe:

    "Shuttle privatization moves NASA away from owning and operating infrastructure, towards buying services from the private sector, and focusing on world-class science, technology, and exploration."

    Last paragraph of his testimony on Internation Space Station cost overruns and what to do about future Human space flight.

  74. How is this supposed to work, excatly? by RayBender · · Score: 1
    Can somebody explain to me how this is supposed to save money? We're not talking about competition - unless NASA sold half the Shuttles to one company and half to the other and proceeded to buy launches from the cheapest one.

    What will ACTUALLY happen is that NASA will be giving away a monopoly on manned space access to a consortium of large companies, with little or no incentive for anyone to save money. If by fiat it is decided that money has to be saved, the only way to do that is buy reducing staff. I think it is clear that the Shuttle is not a safe system to run and maintain shorthanded (about 4 years ago they cut people, then had to rehire when they almost lost a Shuttle, on Eileen Collins' flight as I recall.)

    Pivate enterprise and competition works fine when there are many customers and a lot of potential profit (and thus many interested companies). Manned spaceflight is not that kind of animal (yet), and you are fooling yourself if you think it is. Sure, manned spaceflight is a must on the long term for species survival, and as such warrants investment by government. BUT, at present there is little profit to be made by private companies (how many millionare space nuts are there, really?), especially if they are saddled with the Shuttle.

    The only result from privatising the Shuttle further will be a dead crew and a dead program, brought on by overzealous cost cutting. And don't forget, its much easier to kill a private program ("It wasn't profitable") than a government one (which annoys senators and congressmen).

    --
    Human genome = 3 billion base pairs = 6 GBit. Windows + Office = 20 Gbit. Which is more impressive?
  75. hmmmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Me thinks that alowing it tobe privatized will led to the cops become more and more powerful, until they decide to form the corperate court and start imposing thier rule onthe....oh wait, thats SR sorry the real world and SR are become too close for my tastes :)

  76. Re: bad idea by Phil-14 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I think the plan is they sell it to the usual
    suspect cost-plus contractors they work with already
    like Boeing or LockMart and then buy back the shuttle
    launches from them. This isn't going to save any
    money, it's just an accounting trick.



    It isn't even real privatization. It'll still
    remain a government run and funded program after
    it's done.

    --
    (currently testing something about signatures here)
  77. Space: the final bankrupter by code_rage · · Score: 3, Insightful
    A few years ago, there were several smallish companies working on commercial launchers: Beal Aerospace, Kistler, & Roton come to mind. The big hogs were feeding at the trough (LockMart's X-33).

    Of these projects, only Kistler is still standing.

    Meanwhile, the joint TRW / LMT / Alenia "AstroLink" project has quietly died. This project was to bring advanced broadband technologies into reality, building a constellation of communications satellites. The decision to terminate this project must be seen as an entirely rational one, in light of falling prices in global telecom capacity.

    NASA's Space Shuttle, contrary to public opinion, is not the reason that access to space is expensive. In fact, the Shuttle is not even a market consideration because no commercial entity has the slightest bit of interest in launching payloads on Shuttle.

    I'm not sure what will be accomplished by spinning Shuttle off to private enterprise. Here are some hypotheses:
    1. Establishes a budget firewall. Perhaps. This might have the effect of making the decision to launch a Shuttle a more rational economic decision. The weakness in this hypothesis is that the fixed costs of maintaining and operating the Shuttle fleet will need to be paid by some party, and there is no indication that it can be done without massive subsidies. Ultimately the costs will be borne by NASA, so what will have changed?
    2. Frees the Shuttle program from the Federal bureaucracy. I'm not so sure. Shuttle will still be primarily serving NASA's high value / heavy launch needs. All of the same contracting rules and documentary paperwork will still be in force.
    3. Permits radical changes in Shuttle doctrine to be considered. Possible. NASA mucky-mucks vigorously opposed Dennis Tito's trip to ISS, and perhaps they have realized that they blew an opportunity to capitalize on the biggest PR event of the Station so far. By pushing Shuttle out to a commercial operator, maybe someone will create a passenger module which could carry 20 Dennis Tito's into space. That could never happen while Shuttle is under NASA's wing.
    4. Hot potato hypothesis My personal favorite. Under this scenario, NASA just wants to be free of Shuttle, and doesn't much care how.
    5. Cut off Shuttle R+D, free up NASA brains for other research Another strong possibility. Astronauts will tell you that the Shuttle is still not an operational flight vehicle -- that it has flown only about 100 times, and that far more research is needed. There are some squirrely hypersonic and transonic issues which are more than an idle curiosity -- they could destroy the Shuttle and kill the crew. Handing Shuttle off to a commercial entity might free up some brains at NASA to go work on the next generation of technology.


    It's probably the right economic decision. NASA cannot hope to make progress on affordable access to space until they can establish a firewall against that drain of money and talent. It is my hope that NASA's space research programs will turn away from operations (missions) and will start research on basic technologies such as materials, propulsion, rail launchers, etc for 'affordable' access to space. Just as NACA's airfoil research laid the foundation for a vibrant and competitive aircraft industry in the 1930's, NASA should develop the foundations of a vibrant and commercially competitive launch industry.

    However, I fear for the Shuttle Astronauts. Although NASA's safety record has been good under Goldin, the Shuttle program is already stretched too thin on safety and maintenance. It's an amazing vehicle which requires a standing army to launch it safely.
    1. Re:Space: the final bankrupter by gorilla · · Score: 2
      However, I fear for the Shuttle Astronauts. Although NASA's safety record has been good under Goldin, the Shuttle program is already stretched too thin on safety and maintenance. It's an amazing vehicle which requires a standing army to launch it safely.

      Get rid of them. There is no benefit to putting people into space.

  78. What about sponsorship? by MrResistor · · Score: 2
    I don't think I'm in favor of privatising the shuttle. It's a publicly owned scientific tool, and the public should continue to reap the benefits without having to deal with some corporate agenda. It could certainly be managed more efficiently, but I don't think privatisation is really the answer, especially if it just means contracting out the operation.

    What about Corporate sponsorship, though? How much would Pepsi pay to have their logo on the space shuttle wing? How much would Nike pay to be the Official Footware of the US Space Program?

    --
    Under capitalism man exploits man. Under communism it's the other way around.
  79. Re:I call dibs.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Colombia is a country. The orbiter is named "Columbia".

  80. Re:Federal Government - Big Corporation...Differen by code_rage · · Score: 2

    The individuals who work for NASA and its contractors definitely do care about the Astronauts. The Apollo 1 Astronauts did not die because of lack of concern, but because the risks were high and the technology was immature.

    Your 'New World' analogy seems to indicate that we should accept more risk to human life... doesn't that undercut your argument about the Apollo Astronauts?

    I would say that the Challenger accident was more like the type of bureaucratic lack of concern you mention. Happily, that type of thing is behind us.

    Most employees of NASA and its contractors also want desperately to engage in a vigorous exploration program, but Shuttle/Station is the only game in town (at least for manned exploration). Even a bad game is better than no game. If NASA's goals were set by a democratic vote among NASA and contractor employees, we would likely have a very different space program. Unfortunately, Congressional pork barrel politics determine policy. Hence, instead of exploring the vast reaches of our Solar System, our space program is designed to occupy the vast reaches of Congressional districts.

  81. Bad cost figures by sohp · · Score: 2

    It doesn't cost $400m to launch a shuttle. The incremental per-launch cost is $150 million US. Other numbers that attempt to amortize the total cost of the program and non-shuttle-specific support facilities come up with higher numbers but they are suspect. Another false estimate comes from taking the total shuttle budget for a given fiscal year and dividing it by the number of launches. Of course NASA is a political agency so depending on what their policy goal is you'll hear different numbers from, but in this article there is no source stated for the cost figure.
    See SPACE SHUTTLE MISSION COSTS in the sci.space FAQ controversy section.

    1. Re:Bad cost figures by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The low marginal costs mean that if you have decided to build and operate shuttles, then using them to fix $200-million satellites might create a small net payoff. However, the page you reference shows that average cost is way above marginal cost (up around $billion/launch). So, if the shuttle is overall a good idea (worth its average cost), then diverting a mission worth $billion to fix a $200-million satellite is a bad idea.


      The privatization lets the government swallow all the fixed costs and lets the private firm reap a profit from a share of the feeble returns generated by the huge investment by NASA. This write-off turns a big loser into a profit-maker. This is a political victory for privatizers, but for the public it only hides the losses and will either increase long-run costs by the amount of private profit or lead to the death of the program so that no subsequent return of investment is realized.

  82. Re:Big Deal!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No one's going to _buy_ them per se. It's more like take over their operations with the goal of turning a profit with them while also serving as NASA's prime contractor for manned spaceflight.

  83. I guess they get it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seems like NASA geniouses finally get it.
    Mankind won't survive after 200 years because we will all be dead from pollution. No time to move to another planet and there are no "Space Odyssey" superintelligent cubes in Saturn. So, lets sell it all folks, while some actually still think this is cool.

  84. What about the infrastructure by n-baxley · · Score: 2

    What about all of the infrastructure that goes into a shuttle launch. Not only do you have the launch facility itself, but the backup landing site, maintenance hangers, control rooms, etc. Would a private company be "buying" these facilities as well? Would they lease them? What about the NASA transport planes for the shuttle, and the booster retrieval which I believe is done by the Navy. Would we be giving these service to a private company free? Buying a shuttle is one thing, launching it is even feasible, but to put the whole thing together, you need a massive amount of infrastructure.

  85. fa! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The space shuttle is of "strategic importance"? Give me a break!

  86. Who would want to? by chinton · · Score: 2
    What corporation in their right minds would want to take over the shuttle fleet? There is no way they could make any money if it costs $400 million per launch. Remember that the current shuttle fleet is really an experimental fleet. They are all first-generation test-bed type craft that should have been replaced a long time ago, perhaps by an X-33 style ship.

    Second, how many non-government entites out there could run the shuttle fleet if they wanted to? Boeing, Lockheed, and GE are the ones that come to mind that have the size to handle it -- assuming that it would be a US-based company to take them over.

    Nice idea in theory, but it probably won't happen to the current fleet. Hence, since there is no replacement under development, it probably won't happen at all.

  87. So instead of building them safer... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    they'll be designed to explode just rarely enough to remain profitable.

  88. More neo-liberal "economics" by sharkticon · · Score: 1, Troll

    You should have read your Economics textbook more closely.

    You should perhaps start looking at a wider range of economics textbooks.

    A free market always gives a good situation for the consumer, always gives an optimal situation for the consumer. This is simply known as the Law of Supply and Demand.

    In simplistic models yes, but they fail to take into account many of the realities of real world economics - the lack of perfect information for instance. They also don't take into account human capital either, although neo-liberals are quite happy about leaving such concerns out of their propaganda.

    For some empirical evidence instead, contrast the Soviet Union's consumer with the American consumer in the mid-80s. You would rather stand in line for toilet paper?

    The Soviet Union was a mess, sure. But look at it today with a far freer market than the US - massive corruption, waste and poverty. My, what a success.

    --

    1. Re:More neo-liberal "economics" by Debillitatus · · Score: 1
      You should perhaps start looking at a wider range of economics textbooks.

      Let me see if I get this right. You're asserting that there are Economics texts which agree with your earlier statement (paraphrased) "The consumer always gets the worst deal in the private sector"? I would love to see a reference on that one.

      (Regarding supply and demand...) In simplistic models yes, but they fail to take into account many of the realities of real world economics - the lack of perfect information for instance. They also don't take into account human capital either, although neo-liberals are quite happy about leaving such concerns out of their propaganda

      I will certainly grant you that Supply and Demand is not perfect; it describes an equilibrium situation, and if the conditions change rapidly enough, or if, as you said, there isn't a perfect flow of information, it will not work as well. But it is definitely true (and is true on principle and has been determined empirically) that in a static situation, the consumer gets the best deal in a free market.

      Ok, so your argument then is that if the market flucuates rapdily, then SD does not accurately predict prices. Are you then really going to assert that the government would be better equipped to deal with pricing in a rapidly fluctuating market? This seems even more preposterous. We all know the speed at which the government can react, and it's actually much slower than the market. I would argue that the only time the government has a fighting chance against the free market is in the static situation. This is why feudalism worked well for a while; during the Dark Ages, technological growth was slow enough that tight government control could react to it. It would be inconceivable now.

      Also, I don't know what your definition of neo-liberal is above. You are saying that neo-liberalism is pro-free-market? I would think you would style that neo-conservatism if anything. (?)

      The Soviet Union was a mess, sure. But look at it today with a far freer market than the US - massive corruption, waste and poverty. My, what a success.

      True enough. I am not asserting that a lack of government, e.g. anarchy, is preferable to a government. But the present Soviet Union is perhaps not a good example, because it has serious problems which trancend its economy. But I will agree with you that a rapid switch from a tightly-controlled economy to a completely unregulated free economy is dangerous. But again, this in no way supports your assertion that the free market inherently shafts the consumer.

      --

      Come on, give it up, that's

    2. Re:More neo-liberal "economics" by hawk · · Score: 2
      > But I will agree with you that a rapid switch
      > from a tightly-controlled economy to a completely unregulated free
      > economy is dangerous.


      This still misses the central problem with his argument. Russia does *not* have a free market under any useful definision, nor is it capitalistic at the moment.
      A free market allows trade to occur, uhh, freely. Capitalism pays the output from resources (capital, labor, land, etc.) to the owner of that resource. While the two terms are often used interchangably, they're not.


      The U.S., in general, both is capitalistic and has a free market. Russia has neither, and might better be described as industrial feudalism. Shareholders are unable to control the directors of business, who answer only to themselves. Successful business are still taken away by governments, other business, or the mob (and the lines between these aren't clear). Russia would benefit massively from free markets and capitalism, but it doesn't seem to be in their future.


      hawk

  89. Well... who could be the one to rent a shuttle? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It is a quite old link, so there was already
    an answer to this question :)

    http://www.quuxuum.org/~evan/bgnw.html

  90. Bait... by SaturnTim · · Score: 1


    oh, come on. Do you really think that congress would let this happen? Do you really think nasa wants this?

    i've seen it before. Congress asks a department to cut their budget. The department makes up some outrageous scheme, and says it's the only way they can work within said budget. Congress decides they can't let it happen, and the department gets a little more cash.

    Of corse, if they were to sell them, they should sell to the Department of Defense. Just slap a few machine guns on the front of it, and they will buy a dozen of 'em...

    --T

    --
    http://www.theMediaBunker.com
    1. Re:Bait... by redcliffe · · Score: 1

      > Of corse, if they were to sell them, they should sell to the Department of Defense. Just slap a few machine guns on the front of it, and they will buy a dozen of 'em...

      Good idea. Then give the DoD's funding to NASA.

  91. CHA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'd be happy to pay for someone to write CHA on the moon!

  92. Jumping to conclusions... by Guppy06 · · Score: 2

    I think most of you are over-reacting to this. They're talking about privatizing the manned space fleet, but that doesn't mean they have plans to deck the shuttle fleet out with ads as if they intended to participate in the Daytona 500.

    The USPS has been semi-independant from the federal government since 1971. The Postmaster General is no longer a cabinet position, so they don't have to directly deal with whatever political party is in power in Congress. They're now self-sufficient, supported only by the income they make on the fees they charge and not by federal tax dollars. And yet I have yet to see any corporate logo on any mail trucks, nor have they been bought out by UPS.

    So what's the problem if we set up the shuttle fleet the same way?

  93. Space Shuttles Are Old by rela · · Score: 1
    I hate to sing such a dull refrain, but why are we still using those things? Shouldn't we have some cheaper, fully re-usable, and much cooler alternative by now?

    Oh, what's that, after the moon race we chopped nasa's budget to nothing? What's that, there's not enough commercial reason to develop spaceflight? Oh, ok. Sorry.

  94. The answer was *so* obvious by scoove · · Score: 2

    How did one of (glowing flattery removed about a gubmint boondoggle organization that blows money and still can't get a mission right)our institutions need to privitize one of their greatest resources in order to keep going?

    Funny. The poster has the answer to his question in the next paragraph:

    No other country in the world comes close to the US in terms of economic might

    Bingo. Ever consider the reason for us being the greatest economic might could just be that we permit corporations to exist with only a moderate amount of governmental tyranny and confiscation?

    Yet the poster gets lost in the next sentence - so close, yet...

    and yet it is near-third-world nations like China that are now expanding their space programs

    And you'd expect a totalitarian government to do otherwise?

    Hell, they're even talking about putting men on the moon, something we did once and then got bored with.

    Uh... you wouldn't have happened to notice that we've got:

    1. a war going on that has been estimated to cost at least a billion bucks a month
    2. a recession that is killing major sectors of business, leaving less companies for the government to tax/loot.
    3. citizens overwhelmingly opposing new taxes, preventing the non-corporate tax base from being looted
    4. a ton of baby boomers drooling about being non-producers and getting that retirement/social security.

    And you want another moon project? And we keep wondering why liberals have such disasterous personal lives?

    As a nation we have the attention span of a four year-old child, and about as much forward-thinking.

    I'd say your dreams are about as pragmatic as a four-year-old. What's money anyways?

    We'd much rather forget about the future (and everything else) and concentrate on our televisions and big honking SUVs

    Ah, an ELF/ALF liberal. We call you a "target" in my parts of the country.

    So what is the real, deep-rooted motivation of this poster and his kin?

    It seems the only people here with any kind of enthusiasm are the ones that want to control your lives

    He does seem so enthusiastic, doesn't he?

    *scoove*

    1. Re:The answer was *so* obvious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Ah, an ELF/ALF liberal. We call you a "target" in my parts of the country."

      What does that mean , that you kill people you consider too liberal?
      hardly the sort of thing you should be glib about.
      Unless you are a big admirer of McVeigh.
      Hero of yours, by any chance?

  95. Useless Trivia of the Day, #1! by DarklordJonnyDigital · · Score: 1
    If I remember correctly, it's estimate that it costs something's own weight in gold to send it up in the Shuttle. Perhaps that's why you see all those satellites with gold foil all over them - NASA is just trying to get its money's worth out of the launch. ;)

    Maybe that's why they don't send fat guys into space, too.

    1. Re:Useless Trivia of the Day, #1! by WolfWithoutAClause · · Score: 2

      Yeah ~$10000/kg, and the estimated real cost (what it should cost anyway) is nearer $10/kg or atleast $100/kg. Nobody is anywhere near that of course right now although some are at $2600/kg or so.

      --

      -WolfWithoutAClause

      "Gravity is only a theory, not a fact!"
    2. Re:Useless Trivia of the Day, #1! by hether · · Score: 1

      Other useless trivia, the first song played in space was Fly Me to the Moon - Frank Sinatra

      --

      Most people would die sooner than think; in fact, they do.
    3. Re:Useless Trivia of the Day, #1! by DarklordJonnyDigital · · Score: 1
      "Other useless trivia, the first song played in space was Fly Me to the Moon - Frank Sinatra"

      Actually, radio waves broadcasted from Earth can reach the planet's upper atmosphere, and no doubt space itself. Technically, the first song in space was probably whatever Marconi first played when he was testing his new-fangled 'wireless' contraption of his ;)

      You probably couldn't hear much of that radio signal in space, though - if Master of Orion 2 has taught me anything it's that such things as laser cannons and radio waves dissapate with range. You're probably right anyway... ^_^

    4. Re:Useless Trivia of the Day, #1! by hether · · Score: 1

      Beats me! I wasn't basing my opinion on my knowldege of technology, but rather an NPR Morning Addition interview with Quincy Jones yesterday said that Buzz Aldrin came and told him about it later. Quincy had helped produce that Sinatra song.

      --

      Most people would die sooner than think; in fact, they do.
  96. About Time, Too! by LittleGuy · · Score: 1

    One of the eternal complaints that has made the space program the whipping boy of budget cuts is that "money goes 'out there' and is, therefore, wasted instead of doing something altrustic (feed the poor, pave roads, build school, bring World Peace, blah blah blah"...

    Thing is, it should be organizations such as the Smithsonian, National Geographic, the Planetary Society, etc. to be sponsored by the private sector to launch into manned space exploration on their own.

    --
    Mod Karma -1: I sed bad wurds. If I cep my mouf shut, I wud be at riyses.
  97. Whats next? by axehind · · Score: 1

    Whats next? Ad space on Tanks?

  98. Losing people is EXPENSIVE by Galvatron · · Score: 1

    Look at the payouts post-Sept. 11th. United and AA have had to pay millions per death on their planes, plus the entire industry is in the dumps. Look at Firestone/Ford. Any time a company is in any way responsible for deaths, they get into Big Trouble. In contrast, when police kill people, they get off scot free.

    --
    "The question of whether a computer can think is no more interesting than that of whether a submarine can swim" -EWD
  99. Sharkticon's confusion by scoove · · Score: 2

    Debillitatus writes:
    Was ARPANet somehow better?

    Interesting/excellent example. In 1991, I did a feasibility study for bringing Internet to a rural community in our parts. Everything looked good - Sun was going to donate servers, we had an expensive but tolerable loop cost for a fractional T1 (I worked for a carrier that helped discount the cost substantially), and the community was fully behind the project.

    Then I got the Internet DS0/56 Kbps dedicated quote from our regional - MIDNET. They didn't have any model except for a dues basis, which their member universities paid annually. They calculated dues on the number of students you had and figured our town's population would be a great unit to use in the calculation.

    The total cost for a 56 Kbps connection? $85,000/year, payable in advance. (Quick everybody: how much does your cable modem connection cost each month? Or perhaps a better comparison would be a single ISDN B channel).

    Even then, I could have ordered a DS3 local loop for less (and if I paid in advance, I'd be certain to get a discount). What were they thinking?

    I looked at MIDNET's organization and cost structure, trying to comprehend what I must have been missing. They had:

    - free offices paid for by the universities
    - employee benefits paid by the universities
    - data centers paid for by the universities
    - operations employees and network engineers that were on university payroll
    - backbone links that were billed to the universities, that they put their own commercial traffic over (against NSFNET AUP)

    and numerous other abuses. Oh, and they had 35+ PhDs working for them that required outrageous dues (cost divided by number of institutions served = dues, we later found out).

    What did I do? Created the first ISP in the region and stole away most of their non-educational business. Drove the bastards into unemployment. I was proud to be one of numerous CIX members who drove that filthy, corrupt, good-old-boy NSFNET "Oh We'll Give the Internet to Baby Bells and ANS" scam out of business.

    You should have read your Economics textbook more closely.

    Debillitatus, I don't think they offer high school econ until at least 11th grade, so it's not fair to criticize him yet.

    At the same time, he needs a stern warning that unless he opens his eyes and loses the angst-filled hate-focused upper middle class attitude, he's going to be another unemployed loser eventually bunking with a big furry guy named Bruno.

    Then again, the Bruno's of the world /do/ need company...

    *scoove*

  100. Re:NASA has always been about the pursuit of scien by WolfWithoutAClause · · Score: 2

    Um. No.

    Apollo 11 had nothing whatsoever to do with science. It was a purely political move to thumb the American nose at the Ruskies.

    Basically they have been living on the political goodwill and pork barrel politics ever since.

    Privatisation would do one thing- it would allow space to grow. There are fairly good reasons to think that a ticket to space could reach as low as $10,000 per person in the long run. NASA can't do that as they are limited by their budget, and constitutionally are not allow to turn a profit at all.

    Last year space was a more than $100 billion industry IRC. NASA cost maybe $20 billion.

    --

    -WolfWithoutAClause

    "Gravity is only a theory, not a fact!"
  101. Charge 'em by Bobo+the+Space+Chimp · · Score: 1

    Ok, let's see. $400 million per launch.

    400/20 = 20 Titos per launch.

    Or, propose to Hollywood elite and other egocentric rich:

    Bonk your honey in space!

    10 couples per launch. Put up a Hyatt Regency module on the space station and go for it. Sheesh!

    --
    I am for the complete Trantorization of Earth.
  102. Strategic role? by $pacemold · · Score: 1

    From the BBC article:

    > Senator Bill Nelson, a former astronaut, said this was the
    > worst time of all to consider such a move. He pointed to
    > the shuttle's role in putting intelligence satellites into orbit.

    Last time ANY intelligence satellite was put in orbit by Shuttle was on November 25, 1991, nearly 10 years ago. It's much more effective and cheaper to use Titan 4 for these.

  103. pure research by Evil+MarNuke · · Score: 1
    Tax dollars go into developing an asset for pure research. Republicrats in Congress get tired of paying for it and raffle asset off to corporate friends/sponsors. Corporate friends make lots of money (at US Taxpayer expense mind you, since we paid for the initial investment) while killing initial purpose of the asset (since 'pure research' isnt profitable). Taxpayers get ZERO benefit from this unless they happen to be significant shareholders, which very few of us are.


    Ummm, didn't the internet get started as pure research government project? No wonder why it has ZERO benefit!!!

    --
    The journey is better then the end.
  104. Insights from Nasawatch by ectoraige · · Score: 3, Informative

    If you're interested in NASA, NASAwatch should by your first port of call. They tend to get all the leaks etc. way before the rest of them.

    This one was noted on it back in September:

    Word has it that Ron Dittemore, Space Shuttle Program Manager at JSC, will be holding an all-hands meeting today to discuss "shuttle commercialization".

    According to NASA sources, Dittemore will be discussing an NGO (Non-Governmental Organization) concept that has been developed that would operate the Space Shuttle program. This concept has been under development for the last 9 months. Dittemore will reportedly pitch this concept as being seamless as far as civil servants are concerned with equivalent benefits, significant sign-up bonuses, and guaranteed job security. Dittemore has reportedly expressed personal interest in heading this new organization.

    Behind the scenes there is little interest among Dittemore's crowd in actually saving the government money. Rather, this is simply seen as a way to lower the number of federal employees involved in America's civil space program.

    Update: Note from someone@jsc.nasa.gov:

    "Mr. Dittemore spoke about a "concept" where a private company would run the Space Shuttle Program. It was not commercialization, but "privatization". It has nothing to do with saving money. It will probably cost the government more money. He said it was in the interest of safety.

    Since NASA cannot hire new people and grow them to be managers/engineers, there is no one to run the program safely in the future. That is true since most of the shuttle program folks came from MOD which is mostly all contractors now. This "concept" will work only if all the right people
    with the right job skills needed to run the program safely, accept the offer to move over. Highly unlikely. We are talking about mission operations, flight design, flight directors, astronauts, program/project managers, ground operations, aircraft operations, launch operations, etc. Only the civil servants in the Engineering Directorates appear to be spared from this excercise in futility. He said it would happen in 2 years. That's unbelievable, the way the government works!"

    --
    Vs lbh pna ernq guvf, ybt bss abj. Tb bhgfvqr. Syl n xvgr.
    1. Re:Insights from Nasawatch by ectoraige · · Score: 1

      Sorry, that link should be http://www.nasawatch.com

      --
      Vs lbh pna ernq guvf, ybt bss abj. Tb bhgfvqr. Syl n xvgr.
  105. Scrap the ISS and the Shuttle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Both the Shuttle and the ISS are collosal wastes of money, and should be scrapped. Why do we care how prolonged weightlessness affects the human body when we can't afford a manned space mission such as a trip to Mars anyway? Instead we should focus on making spaceflight more practical and cheap. New ways of getting to space cheaply such as lightcraft would enable profitable space based economic activity that could deliver real benefits to real people.

  106. BBC reporting by $pacemold · · Score: 1

    Did anybody notice that BBC articles are very lightly edited lately?

    The picture on the right, "Manhattan from space", actually depicts the smoke clouds from WTC attack over Brooklyn;

    The flat statement "Each launch costs around $400m, which is why most of the flights to the International Space Station (ISS), for example, use cheaper Russian rockets" is not exactly true:

    There were 11 Shuttle flights to the ISS, and 11 Russian flights: 3 with the crew (one with Expedition 1 and two with visiting crews, so-called taxi flights to replace Soyuz before the end of its 6 months design life), 5 Progress freighters, and 3 station component flights (Zarya, Zvezda and Pirs).

    Cost may play a role in selecting Progress and Soyuz, but here are also more important technical reasons:

    Progress major role is a tanker that can refuel Russian segment engines that are used for orbit correction; Soyuz is primarilly a lifeboat that remains always docked to the ISS. Shuttle as of today can't deliver fuel to the station, and the maximum flight duration of the Shuttle is about 2 weeks, making it unsuitable for the lifeboat role.

  107. The fate of the russian space shuttle by morcheeba · · Score: 2
    Oh, no! Please don't end up like the Russian Buran in Gorky Park!!!. The Buran is russia's strangely shuttle-esque reusable orbiter. The test article is now a restraunt, and the 3 real ones are in storage.

    The Kosmos-Zemlya company formed by NPO Molniya, the park, Kosmoflot and headed by Gherman Titov, is trying to make a buck by using the test article as the framework for a new space motif restaurant. Videokosmos has produced a video production of Earth views to be shown in simulated port holes as up to 60 patrons eat from 100 varieties of space food for a cost of $70
  108. that's a little too late by mj6798 · · Score: 2
    The space shuttles are already overdesigned, dangerous, fairly useless, and overly expensive pieces of equipment; why would anybody want to buy them at this point? Now, privatizing the ISS might be worth thinking about: it, too, is a white elephant, but the waste and cost has already been sunk into lifting those useless parts into orbit. Now that they are there, a commercial enterprise might figure out how to do something useful with it (even if it is just a space amusement park).

    I think privatizing significant parts of NASA doesn't make sense at all at this point. But if people are going to attempt that, they'll have to come up with a better proposition than this. The time to privatize is before the design begins, and you have to make sure that the private entity actually bears the launch costs: only then will rational self-interest result in cost-effective designs.

  109. Re: 777? by jaoswald · · Score: 2

    First of all, the *747* is a 30 year-old technology, the DeHavilland Comet is 50 years old. 747s still get sold today and make a profit for their owners.

    The reason a DC-8/747/777 got developed is because there was a huge *profitable* market for intercontinental flight. There is no corresponding market for space flight. There is a market; that is, people are willing to pay money to go into space. Unfortunately, it is not a profitable one. Not enough people are willing to pay enough to support the capital necessary to create the infrastructure.

    There is a profitable market for satellite launches. By unmanned rockets, not by expensive Shuttle launchers.

    The point is that you have to convince people with billions of dollars (for something on the order of a 777) to lend it to you so that you can design and manufacture the thing, with the idea that PROFITS from selling it will be enough to make it worth their while.

    If there were an argument to be made for this, then it would likely have been made already, and you would be worried about spaceport security these days. The fact that manned spaceflight is still not a commercial reality probably means it isn't going to be any time soon.

    Why spend billions of dollars to make a unprofitable activity slightly less unprofitable?

  110. *Never* this it should have happened by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How did it never receive to go al grain where an of our needs the largest and to retain proudly of institutions al privitize an of its Betriebsmitteln the largest? The Americans should that it for all ashamed parts in this infraction of our program of the place after the envy of the world is.

    The country comes can program no another in the world nearly that WE into concepts of economically, and however suggested nations of the world of third as a China that now its place spreads, is while we sell removed our. The hell, it yet approximately men should speak into the moon, something we a time ago placing and then we bored received with. During a nation, that we the place of the attention of a four old boy of the year, and around have, therefore much thinker of the advancing. We make is largely forgot a large business more well around the future (and that everyone more) and the concentrated into our television and SUVs that the horn, in spite of which fact touches that could have itself our intial lead in the occupation of the place, to furnish us in an unassailable.

    This is not that it straight another symptom of the slow and long decadence of that WE in a narcissistic the Betriebsparadies while the remainder of the world falsifies on of us in the future. The only people here with any class of the enthusiasm that seems is to be controlled that that wish its life to some; all that somewhat would allow, received have that it in with, and they have the intolerable load herausgenommen to make of decision.

  111. I think we should privatize so that ... by WillSeattle · · Score: 1

    we can kill the space program.

    After all, isn't that the real reason to propose this?

    It's not like space travel has ever been profitable, or cost effective. The sunk costs will continue for at least two more decades.

    And yet, if we stay on this rock we'll be just another blip in the soundtrack of the universe, a bug squished by a raindrop, the sentience of a WinXP PC until you turn it on.

    --
    --- Will in Seattle - What are you doing to fight the War?
  112. Instead of going overboard... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ...why not go with the obvious, more, er, sensical solution? Namely, use russian launchers instead of the shuttle. I would have said "use unmaned rockets like the Titan or Delta IV" (I can't remember the exact designations, sorry), which can only be cheaper than the shuttle, but I remembered that russian launchers are even cheaper than american launchers.

    Or, if you don't want to use russian launchers, why not try the Ariane 5 (the biggest, current one, IIRC)?

    What I am trying to say is that:
    (a) you don't need to privatize the quasi-30 years old (ack!) shuttle to save money to put ISS components in space;

    (b) unmaned launchers are cheaper than the shuttle;

    (c) russian launchers are cheaper than american launchers (I remember an order of less than half the cost, if I heard correctly).

    If you push this kind of logic a bit further:

    (d) why not pay for a 2nd Soyouz (??) to be used as additionnal "emergency return space" instead of developping the costly X-3whatever?

    (e) and why not use a modified Leonardo/Donatello cargo module as living quarters? I'm sure the ESA could finance one or two such modules -- no?

    (f) etc.

    The ISS cannot provide any ROI if you stunt its development. Some significant R&D could be achieved, even some *industrial manufacturing* could be provided (zero-g must be a God-send for something, I'm sure of it) if all the facilities are sent up there. You could even do satellite repair if there were enough facilities *AND* personnel (how much does a satellite cost and how much does it cost to put it in orbit?).

    So we need the additional lab space as well as additional personnel: right now, the current crew is more busy keeping the place going than performing any "real" experiments.

    As long as no short-sighted so-called cost-cutting measures are acted upon, the ISS could become a very valuable asset for everyone. You only need some common-sense in management of this project, which starts with finding a cheaper way to send all the necessary bits and parts in orbit.

    Think about it: not only the US would save money, but the russians could use the additional revenue to finish their part of the ISS. Two birds with one stone!

    1. Re:Instead of going overboard... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In other words, you're just saying "use what exists already, why replace what can be used right now?". Makes sense to me.

      I dunno about costs of using Soviet rockets vs. costs of US rockets, though, does anyone have any numbers on this?

      I'm also curious to know: while the Soviets could do it with their Proton rockets, do the European have the hardware that could lift what needs to be added to the ISS?

  113. very true... and.... by josquint · · Score: 1

    Good point. A jetliner is relatively 'cheap' compared to something like a shuttle. %-)
    And i'm guessing a company interested in something like that is going to be a little more professional than our airlines seem to have been.

    My main point was the irony of it. The fact that most of our government has gone "control freak" (ie, making passenger screeners fed employees). while NASA wants to publicize something of this magnatude

  114. Pizza Hut by BigBir3d · · Score: 2, Informative

    They started it all back in 1999 with the plastering of a logo on a Russian rocket...

  115. Um, don't look now , but the Conservative by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    revolution has all but run its course.
    Oh, boy Microsoft is going to own outerspace.
    I am so happy.
    It's always when a movement looks to be at it's
    peak that it is starting to decline.
    Cons like, no love to talk as if they are on the outside fighting an uphill battle, but the truth is they have been the idealogical fatcats for a good 10- 15 years. Well, now they are the establishment and have been for a while, tho they
    like to pretend otherwise.

    The right likes to think that only the Left is
    dogmatic, but they are dogmaticlaly hidebount rsist even when the evidence
    shows otherwiswe.
    Even when the security of the Nation and the health of the economy are at stake, they resist
    federalising Airport Securtiy. Sorry , our little blue playbook, says that is a no no.
    Yeh, I know it will increase the federal payroll
    and might put pressure to raise taxes.
    Well, if osalami gets his way,there won't be much of a functioning economy to generate taxes of any
    kind, high or low. If you don't want to pay taxes move to Russia, the tax compliance rate there is low. Of course the local Mafia has usurped some of the government's power. But maybe that'a a good thing if you are a Con.

    We have reached the limits of privitisation.
    it's had it successes, to be sure, but lately it
    is more and more a disaster as the cons try and
    push into every area.
    That company that was the sole mfr of Anthrax
    sure did a great job. Took the money and run.
    Ditto for those companies running jails.
    lot of horror stories coming out.
    Yes, Liberalism went too far, as has Conservatism.
    the recent crisis has reminded us that we need
    strong public infrastructure.
    The limits of conservatism have long been reached.
    They just don't know it yet.
    Here's to the pendulum swinging back.

  116. Good Luck, NASA! by Mr.+Foogle · · Score: 1

    I just don't see how you could take the shuttle fleet and make a profit off of them.

    For just one problem, the number of people required (required, they're not fluff) to run the program amounts to thousands per shuttle. Possibly more, this is off the top of my head.

    A commercial aviation carrier gets by with maybe 40 people per bird, and they just barely break even.

    The shuttle just was not designed to be profitable. The design is a political one, designed like all such .. to do many things, none of them at all well.

    If anyone is interested, you'd be better off building an efficient space fleet of your own.

    --
    Display some adaptability.
  117. Not really... by prSpectiv2 · · Score: 1

    I don't mean to be argumentative, but most of the federal government's income really DOES come from fees and taxes as shown by kiplinger over here.

    That's what the whole fuss over a budget surplus was about not too long ago, since the government was taxing more than it spent. Also, so long as the budget is balanced, most federal bonds that are floated simply pay off older debts.

    Unfortunately, it looks like recent events have thrown out any hope for a balanced budget any time soon.

    --
    Nice guys don't finish last. In reality, they're abducted halfway through the race.
  118. 400 billion per launch... !!!?!?!?!!!!?!?!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    never realised how much it costs to launch a shuttle - ouch!!!

    as *keen* as i am on human space exploration these costs make it pretty hard to justify... billions and billions to find some bacteria on mars or a new place to mine stuff...

    the World Health Authority claims they can ERADICATE polio from the earth ... if they could get the $1 billion to do it... thats only 2.5 shuttle launches, sorta puts it in perspective

    private companies may well reduce the costs.. even if they halve them its still **** expensive.. and what corners will they cut on safety to be able to reduce these costs? astronaut's life insurance premiums will increase more than the savings :P

  119. How odd! by arthurh3535 · · Score: 1

    I hadn't heard that payloads counted towards the development or even launch costs of a vehicle.

    Quick! Someone call the trucking and railroad companies! That totally changes the entire accounting methods of the US infrastructure!

    We'll name the new accounting system...

    Bias towards your political axe-grinding accounting!

    --
    No! It's a *SIG*. Keep the Special Interest Groups away! (Con joke!)
    1. Re:How odd! by Fenris2001 · · Score: 2

      Not in the case of commerical carriers, but if the payload was developed by NASA (i.e. Chandra or Hubble), then it does.

      --
      ---------------
      Vpered na Mars!
  120. So when the shuttles are privately owned by Lars+T. · · Score: 1

    Who is going to fly them? NASA astronauts or people from the corporation?

    --

    Lars T.

    To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

  121. They did it with water in S. America by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Can you imagine what would happen if they privatized the water supply? Well guess what, that's what they aim to do, and they even got away with it in South America (I think Uruguay). Water prices doubled the day it went into effect.


    Privatization is nothing more than a money-grab. Don't be fooled by the rhetoric.

  122. Er, no. by palfreman · · Score: 1
    That is rubbish. I don't know about the Netherlands, but UK railways' improved loads after going private. Passenger numbers trebled in 8 years too - a big deal when you think that they had fallen every year since nationalistion in '47. How anyone thinks moving hundreds of tons of steel, people and goods at high speed on rails is best done by a government department I'll never know. The service improved a lot too, at least where I am. Virgin trains didn't, sure, but Virgin is a crap company anyway and Richard Branson seems to survive entirely off his own ego and financial praline - he definitely isn't making any money.

    Drifting back on topic, I think flogging off NASA is probably just what they need. The military requirements and the rivalry with the USSR have both gone, so now it is just a business for sticking up comms sattilites. Time to cut it loose. The Russians are already catching up with customers, now you can buy yourself a space trip for a few million. Good luck to them.

    1. Re:Er, no. by 0123456789 · · Score: 1

      That would obviously explain why Railtrack has just gone bust, since they were doing such a brilliant job. (&lt- that was sarcasm, by the way)

      A quote from here shows you're also wrong about train performance:

      "The Shadow Strategic Rail Authority (SSRA) said punctuality worsened on routes run by 20 out of 25 train companies. "

      And of course, the safety record has improved immeasurably since privatisation, without incidents such as Ladbroke Grove and Hatfield... (&lt- More sarcasm)

      Just as well that Air traffic control was privatised with a similar model here in the UK three months ago. Being the successor to Rail privatisation means it couldn't possibly fail. (&lt- Yet More Sarcasm)

  123. Better yet,... by bcrowell · · Score: 2
    ...eliminate the artificial government subsidies for sending humans into space.

    The plain, hard truth is that nationalism is the only justification for the shuttle program.


    Commercial applications? The killer app is communications satellites. Nope, there are not people aboard them.


    Science? The ISS's science program has been scaled back to essentially zero. Probes do lots of good science, without having humans aboard. The shuttle program is scientifically useless. There's a reason why NASA's science programs are never expected to go head-to-head with other science programs in a peer-reviewed competition for funding: it's because an honest scientific peer review would never fund what NASA does.


    Military applications? Satellites without people on board do a good job of surveillance. If the military needs to send up a satellite, the space shuttle isn't their cheapest option.


    Space tourism? Cool application! Note that NASA acts allergic when anyone tries to talk to them about this, which is currently the only valid reason humans should be going into space.

  124. Re:I think we should privatize so that ... by hether · · Score: 1

    No, privatization will make for a competitive industry. We can take bids for things like they did with cleaning the shuttle and save money.

    --

    Most people would die sooner than think; in fact, they do.
  125. take the blinders off, us folks! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    No other country in the world comes close to the US in terms of economic might

    The European Union has been on par, and with the current recession in the US, you're no longer number one. Deal with it.

    despite the fact that our initial lead in the space race could have been leveraged into an unassailable one.

    Your lead was never that spectacular, and it really only existed during the 2nd half of the 60s. The Russians kicked your butt before that, and if it wouldn't have been for 100+ ex-Nazis who decided to continue playing with rockets on US money, you would have never made it to the moon first.

  126. Lies about the Shuttle costs. by arthurh3535 · · Score: 1

    That's an interesting cavieat.

    So your saying that NASA gets to have an exception because, well, it's NASA?

    *NOTHING* carried on the Shuttle should be considered part of its development cost, because amazingly enough, that had nothing to do with with the cost of designing and making the Shuttle.

    Amazing that! I'm sure that the Air Force would be amazed at their spy satallites being included into NASA's costs.

    What you are doing is artificially inflating the costs of the Shuttle to 'prove' that it is too expensive.

    When you pull the lies out of your statements, the Shuttle actually end ups being a fairly competitive vehicle.

    As a matter of fact, with the Shuttle, more flights a year makes it cheaper. It can easily get down to the 400 Million per flight that NASA quotes.

    And when you consider that the Shuttle carries a crew of five to seven and its payload and its capabilities of recovering payloads, the Shuttle is a pretty damned good deal.

    A lot of people love to complain about NASA because we aren't on Mars and don't have space stations like in 2001.

    Damn. Real life doesn't meet unreal expectations. Too bad. Deal with it.

    NASA might not be perfect, but that's because of the politics involved.

    Until the politics of space gets cleaned up, NASA has to make do with what it can do and what its told to do.

    And that can be damn tough.

    Arthur Hansen

    P.S. It seems odd to me that Fenris keeps getting modded up while my responses aren't.

    --
    No! It's a *SIG*. Keep the Special Interest Groups away! (Con joke!)
    1. Re:Lies about the Shuttle costs. by Fenris2001 · · Score: 1
      The point is that it doesn't matter if it's $1.5 billion per launch, $400 million per launch, or $100 million per launch - no commercial operator could make money using the Shuttle to launch payloads, and they know it.
      Until the politics of space gets cleaned up, NASA has to make do with what it can do and what its told to do.

      That is exactly right - but NASA's bureacrats *are* the problem! We need to get the vested interests of middle managers out of the space program.
      Damn. Real life doesn't meet unreal expectations. Too bad. Deal with it.

      All great things in human history were accomplished by people who made unreal expectations into concrete realities, people who refused to "deal with it". Once, it was an "unrealistic expectation" to consider going to the Moon, but we did it in less than ten years!
      --
      ---------------
      Vpered na Mars!
    2. Re:Lies about the Shuttle costs. by arthurh3535 · · Score: 1

      The point is that it doesn't matter if it's $1.5 billion per launch, $400 million per launch, or $100 million per launch - no commercial operator could make money using the Shuttle to launch payloads, and they know it.

      That is only marginally the point, and you know it. You are trying to obscure the fact that you purposefully inflated the costs to make your point seem "valid".

      Is it so tough to say you screwed up?

      And you are *quite* incorrect that at $100 million that no one would ever make money off of the Shuttle. There are several launcher that make decent money at that point.

      (This of course ignores that the shuttle also bring a support crew up there at the same time. Something *no* other launcher does. Oh, and recover/repair things too. I'd love to see you do that on some other launcher.)

      You are basing the Shuttle against the lowest cost light-weight launchers out there, not the median cost of a comparable lifter. You're comparing apples to walnuts (not even to oranges!)

      But that's because you're trying to shoehorn the shuttle simply as a satallite launcher. Something that it isn't soley built for!

      No wonder it fails in your eyes!

      **Until the politics of space gets cleaned up, NASA has to make do with what it can do and what its told to do.

      That is exactly right - but NASA's bureacrats *are* the problem! We need to get the vested interests of middle managers out of the space program.

      No, NASA does what it does because that's what Congress tells them to do. They manage to get by and actually still do exploration and science while feeding the US national ego at the same time.

      ***Damn. Real life doesn't meet unreal expectations. Too bad. Deal with it.

      All great things in human history were accomplished by people who made unreal expectations into concrete realities, people who refused to "deal with it". Once, it was an "unrealistic expectation" to consider going to the Moon, but we did it in less than ten years!

      And haven't been back because we didn't do it right!

      I'm sorry, I don't want another "Flags and Footprints" mission any time soon.

      --
      No! It's a *SIG*. Keep the Special Interest Groups away! (Con joke!)
    3. Re:Lies about the Shuttle costs. by Fenris2001 · · Score: 1

      I'd love to continue this conversation - but not in this forum. E-mail fenris@nmt.edu instead.

      --
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      Vpered na Mars!
  127. Because competition is good. by Thag · · Score: 2

    It spurs people on to try harder, and keeps the beaurocrats under control. Also, because it tends to make people try different approaches to see what works. With a monolithic development path, you get wedded to the One True Path, and can't get off that track until its failure is undeniable. It takes generations to get anywhere that way, which is why we haven't seen much progress since the Apollo missions.

    Also, when you have multiple teams competing, people have no ability to hide their own failures by saying "well that was clearly just not possible," because chances are, the other team is doing it and getting it to work.

    Jon Acheson

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    All opinions expressed herein are my own, and not those of my employers, who are appalled.
  128. [OT] Your sig by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    By the way, Slashdot now supports sig-dash insertion! That means it'll put dashes and a line-break in FOR YOU when you read the page. People who like things smushed together can leave it that way. People who like their whitespace and dividers can have it.

    1. Re:[OT] Your sig by Bobo+the+Space+Chimp · · Score: 1

      Wow, it works! It's still not the optimal solution, but that's better than adding a few cr's and a .

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      I am for the complete Trantorization of Earth.
  129. there was never anything stopping them before by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There was never anything stopping any company from going up there before. But nobody really bothered. We cant just give all a way to corporations. As soon as it looks like theres no money they will just cancel it. At lease the goverment can just throw money at it!

    The key to space exploration and development is INERNATIONALLY! Just becasue the space station hasnet gone as well as planned doesnt mean its the wrong approach. Lets not forget that this is the first attempt to do something like this- every aspect is new, every piece of the station it state of the art. This isnt like putting up pre-fabbed track houses.