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President Bush To Call For Return To Moon?

Brian Stretch writes " According to the National Review: 'When President Bush delivers a speech recognizing the centenary of heavier-than-air-powered flight December 17, it is expected that he will proffer a bold vision of renewed space flight, with at its center a return to the moon, perhaps even establishment of a permanent presence there. If he does, it will mean that he has decided the United States should once again become a space-faring nation.' Here's hoping. The article also includes talk of nuclear engines and using the moon as a testbed for going to Mars."

1,496 comments

  1. I couldn't agree more by ChaoticLimbs · · Score: 5, Interesting

    A moon base would be so much better than the ISS.

    1. Re:I couldn't agree more by ChaoticLimbs · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Empty space has no materials to build with and nothing to tunnel into. The moon has both. It would be a better platform for construction of hugely expensive wastes of resorces and time than empty space.
      If we gotta go to space at all, lets build a city on the fricking moon. Why not, budget's shot to hell anyway.

    2. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      "Why not, budget's shot to hell anyway"

      I've recently decided that large sums of money are simply imaginary. The united states owes hundreds of billions of dollars(trillions?). To whom? When does it have to be paid back? Imaginary. Keep on spending.

    3. Re:I couldn't agree more by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Watch out! More Bush-shit ahead! There is a reason folks in Texas called him "All hat, no cattle".

      If he appears to support the space programme, it will be to shuffle a few Billion$ into industries located in states that are expected to support him in 2004. Plus, he can't let the Chinese steal all the "Moonshot headlines".

      This administration has done more to undermine resarch, exploration and sound scientific inquiry than any more than 200 years of the Republic. Look what's happening to funds in NIH and NSF!

      If Bush praises your programme, lookout for the axe! I will quote from Molly Ivins' latest here:

      But then, in what is becoming a recurring, almost nightmare-type scenario, the minute he visits some constructive program and praises it (AmeriCorps, the Boys and Girls Club, job training), he turns around and cuts the budget for it. It's the kiss of death if the president comes to praise your program. During the presidential debate in Boston in 2000, Bush said, "First and foremost, we've got to make sure we fully fund LIHEAP [the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program], which is a way to help low-income folks, particularly here in the East, pay their high fuel bills." He then sliced $300 million out of that sucker, even as people were dying of hypothermia, or, to put it bluntly, freezing to death.

      Sometimes he even cuts your program before he comes to praise it. In August 2002, Bush held a photo op with the Quecreek coal miners, the nine men whose rescue had thrilled the country. By then he had already cut the coal-safety budget at the Mine Safety and Health Administration, which engineered the rescue, by 6 percent, and had named a coal-industry executive to run the agency.

      Don't be fooled.

      --
      "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
      Never been known to fail..."
    4. Re:I couldn't agree more by DavesWorld334 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      This would be the first thing Bush has done I would agree with. If he's serious, I could almost forgive him. If he *means* it, and we go, and we establish and maintain a manned lunar base ... I just might.

    5. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Offtopic

      Most of the national debt is actually owed to the American people.

    6. Re:I couldn't agree more by fatboy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      He then sliced $300 million out of that sucker, even as people were dying of hypothermia, or, to put it bluntly, freezing to death.

      Sometimes he even cuts your program before he comes to praise it. In August 2002, Bush held a photo op with the Quecreek coal miners, the nine men whose rescue had thrilled the country. By then he had already cut the coal-safety budget at the Mine Safety and Health Administration, which engineered the rescue, by 6 percent, and had named a coal-industry executive to run the agency.


      And I thought congress held the purse.

      --
      --fatboy
    7. Re:I couldn't agree more by a+whoabot · · Score: 1, Troll

      It owes it to the fed, which is owned by private banks. And the banks don't mind that those debts never get "paid". They get paid in otherways: such as inflation. Inflation is mainly really just the majority population(you) losing purchasing power to the banks. Things don't cost more: if you lived 2000 years ago and had a ounce of gold you could buy a nice toga and a nice pair of sandals. If you have an ounce of gold today you can buy a nice suit and some nice shoes. Inflation really isn't things costing more, it's your money(fiat currency) losing purchasing power. And it is lost to the guys who make the money(the fed: the private banks).

      So yeah, you're totally right it really is imaginary. The banks just invent it(really, they write checks to congress and the money doesn't exist before congress cashes them in for federal reserve notes at the treasury) in the idea that they'll make it back plus interest(inflation) when people spend it.

    8. Re:I couldn't agree more by TedCheshireAcad · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Yes, it would be the perfect place for my "laser".

    9. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Yeah!! Just like that tax cut he promised!! oh wait...that passed..YEAH!! Just like the prescription drug benefit he promised!!! erm damn it..he made good on that one too. Yeah!! Just like that War on Terrorism!!! Wait, he's still committed to that even though the press and liberals aren't...THIS GUY DOESNT MEAN WHAT HE SAYS!! LOOK AT ALL THE EXAMPLES!

    10. Re:I couldn't agree more by fenix+down · · Score: 1

      Eh, it worked for Lyndon. Only problem is Bush doesn't seem to have caught on to the whole "quit while you're ahead" thing that saved L. Jo's crazy Texan ass.

    11. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      what is this, a troll about inflation??

    12. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bah! It won't happen. Bush has already set up a massive increase in the US government deficit; there is simply no way that funding can be found for moon bases. Besides, even if he manages a second term, that'll only give the project presidential support for 4 years, at most - his successor will certainly axe it, as unaffordable.

    13. Re:I couldn't agree more by BizDiz · · Score: 1

      You have no idea what you are talking about. Salaries go to government workers, money goes to defense contractors, etc. This money is paid. They can't just print money to make up for it, or what you have wouldn't be worth much.

      The real key is that the debt is rather fluid; they rob peter and pay paul, and keep doing it. It is debatable whether this is good or bad, but your explanation doesn't involve real life.

    14. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about killing two birds with one stone?

      Push the ISS all of the way to the moon and land it there to do some real science and save some bucks.

      That would be a real engineering challenge

    15. Re:I couldn't agree more by Mr.+Troll · · Score: 5, Informative

      Umm, the Fed is most certainly NOT owned by private banks. See, thats why private banks BORROW from the fed, and the interest rate the fed charges these banks is the basis for the intrest rates charged to consumers.

      And reading the rest of your comment, it is clear that you have no idea how the Federal Reserve System works.....or really anything financial. I'm glad to see your ignorance has led to an unhealthy fear of monetary systems and of, well, logic.

      Please take a basic Econ course at your local college.....for your own benefit and for that of people around you.

      --
      Kiss my shiny metal ass
    16. Re:I couldn't agree more by biggerboy · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Molly Ivins? Give me a break. Her writing is complete and utter nonsense. And she's an idiot to boot. Her columns are nothing more than spite towards the Bush family. You almost could call her a Bush family stalker.

      Besides, you live in California, and you spell program "programme?" What kind of pretentious self-important Bay Area liberal are you? Oh, sorry for the redundant comment. "Bay Area Liberal" includes all the preceding adjectives.

      Just because you read something doesn't mean you know what you're talking about (typical Bay Area thing to do, though). And reading Molly Ivins pretty much sets your IQ back about 50 points (which might put you in the negative).

      Living in the Bay Area is great -- it's too bad about the people here.

    17. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They already have an artist's rendering of the proposed Lunar Module

    18. Re:I couldn't agree more by Adam_Weishaupt · · Score: 5, Insightful

      And I thought congress held the purse.

      You mean the Republican controled congress ?

      --
      "You don't need a weatherman/ To know which way the wind blows" -Bob Dylan: Subterranean Homesick Blues
    19. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow! Molly Ivins! She's credible!

      [hearty guffaws]

    20. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Troll

      you mean those people?

    21. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      mod parent up

    22. Re:I couldn't agree more by buffer-overflowed · · Score: 2, Funny

      And in inverse: The same could be said for Ann Coulter.

      Only Coulter is a lot younger and more attractive than Molly Ivins.

      --
      The key to the enjoyment of pop music is to replace any instance of "love" with "C.H.U.D."
    23. Re:I couldn't agree more by Penguinshit · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Tax Cut
      You mean your one-time "benefit" of somewhere in the vicinity of $300? Real big help there.. Just in time to help boost Christmas spending so he can claim a "recovery" and a "robust, booming economy". Bzzzt.

      Prescription Drugs
      You mean the watered-down piece of shit that not even some Republicans wanted to sign because it held no real benefits for the majority and was actually just a step closer to privatization of Medicare? Bzzzzt.

      War on Terrorism
      Are you even still in the room? We totally forgot about Osama (a real live admitted terrorist) so that Dubya could go spend billions of our dollars destroying Saddam (a bad guy, but no terrorist [and don't even START that bullshit about his hosting Al Queda because the evidence does NOT support that]). So now, instead of making the world safer by taking out a very dangerous terrorist group he has scattered them to the winds (think cancerous metastasizing) and has gone to great (and expensive) lengths to further destabilize the Middle East by creating a desert-style Vietnam situation. Instead of using the political and sympathetic capital showered upon us by the world post-9/11 he has squandered it to the point where we are now feared and reviled like never before in history.

      Oh, and did I forget squandering what was a budgetary surplus, creating the fastest-growing budget deficit this country has evern seen?

      Bush promised smaller government, fiscal responsibility, and a foreign policy of global cooperation. So far we have double the size of government, destroyed any sense of fiscal responsibility (all the while mired in a preventable recession) and bullied the rest of the world into hating us (even our allies are nervous these days).

      Sounds like a great job....

    24. Re:I couldn't agree more by the+argonaut · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No it's not owned by the banks, but the member banks elect most of the board members of the district banks who are then elected to the national fed board...so it's not too far-fetched to say that they "own" the fed. I don't think it's necessarily unhealthy to fear a quasi-governmental institution that has such a far ranging impact on the economy as a whole but really only cares about the interests of one particular group (being big banks). The fed far from being any sort of responsive democratic institution, although from your tone I doubt you would care.

      --
      fuck you.
    25. Re:I couldn't agree more by AndreyF · · Score: 1

      Just like that tax cut he promised!!
      The ones that he passed in the middle of soaring deffecits? Any economics 101 student will tell you how smart that is...

      Just like the prescription drug benefit he promised!!!
      Same idea... spending, spending, spending... borrow and spend... reminds me of what Argentina was doing, didn't turn out too well for them, though...

      Just like that War on Terrorism!!!
      Killing somewhere between 8,000 and 10,000 Iraqis, raising anti-U.S. sentiments to unbelievable heights (I wish there were a way to measure it...), and tying up the US in a lengthy occupation that will probably end up another failure.

      As was said, all hat no saddle. He sais he does the things he does, but terrorist threat is greater now than it was ever before, the tax cuts are going to hurt the economy more than anything else he could have done, and if you went out and researched anything beyond what Bush tells you, you'd realize how unbelievably full of shit he is.

    26. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They can't just print money to make up for it, or what you have wouldn't be worth much. You know, ever since they got rid of the gold standard, the U.S. pretty much can 'just print money', but they wouldn't make up for it, as it would just de-value the currency more than it already is.

    27. Re:I couldn't agree more by cheekyboy · · Score: 0

      Maybe the politions or bush familiy know that the earth is doomed, (end of myan cal 2012) and somethin badass will happen (according to the bible) so they are hedging their bets, build a moon base and at least have some escape route, at least for a while so they can come back to rule once again. :)

      I know if i had billions at disposal and black cia projects I would , in the name of 'national security' ofcourse!

      --
      Liberty freedom are no1, not dicks in suits.
    28. Re:I couldn't agree more by a+whoabot · · Score: 1

      I don't fear monetary systems. I'm not saying thi system is terrible, it's not perfect, but what is? That's my loose understanding of how the government/(congress) borrows money.

      It's my understanding that the private banks own the fed. As in, they own the stock. It's a central bank, is it not? That's how all central banks work, isn't it? The banks purchase the stock of the central bank. If not, who does?

      And, where do you think congress borrows it's money from? They don't get enough money from "plain" taxes.

      Like, I'm not trolling, I'll glad say that what I said isn't the entire story(this is huge economics, i don't any of us could explain the "whole thing), but I think that it's accurate to describe in layman terms how the governments borrow money, and why the banks don't mind to borrow it, even though it's never "paid'.

    29. Re:I couldn't agree more by strokah · · Score: 4, Informative

      Trillions ...

      The Outstanding Public Debt as of 04 Dec 2003 at 05:40:09 AM GMT is: $6,920,018,770,791.33

    30. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The ones that he passed in the middle of soaring deffecits? Any economics 101 student will tell you how smart that is...

      Something you are not: An economics student. Funny how people look at the deficit in terms of dollars and not % of GDP.

      Funny how JFK did similar things in a similar situation. They used to heckle JFK about tax cuts during soaring government spending. What a jerk he was right? Admittedly, his cuts were deeper for the common folk, but any cut is a good cut, people like you cost too much to nurse.

      If you are so smart and can-reverse engineer so easily the complexities of any problem, why dont you run for public office in the US or wherever you are and show the world how awesome you are. If you are really as great as you say you are being Mr. Sherlock and knowing the "right answer" for everything, you should have no problem showing the world and even the "evil, stupid' American public how right you are all the time.

    31. Re:I couldn't agree more by blair1q · · Score: 4, Informative

      Empty space isn't made of lunar regolith.

      Lunar regolith isn't weathered like the surface debris on Earth. Consequently, it's got sharp edges. It's less like play-sand and more like crushed glass.

      The astronauts reported that the stuff got into their suits between the hermetic joints, grinding into their skin. It also chewed up the lunar rovers.

    32. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you are so smart and can-reverse engineer so easily the complexities of any problem, why dont you run for public office in the US or wherever you are and show the world how awesome you are. If you are really as great as you say you are being Mr. Sherlock and knowing the "right answer" for everything, you should have no problem showing the world and even the "evil, stupid' American public how right you are all the time.

    33. Re:I couldn't agree more by fenix+down · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Well, I guess technically the queen is younger and more attractive than Cthulhu too, but that's not the adjective we traditionally use in these sorts of situations.

      And I have to say, if I had to screw a xenomorph, Ann would not be my first choice.

    34. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Hey, the French didn't bomb Pearl Harbor either, but our first offense in WWII was against the French in North Africa.

      Sometimes you have to think using strategery. You are probably a bright guy, how about putting your Bush hatred aside and connecting the dots?

    35. Re:I couldn't agree more by demaria · · Score: 4, Informative

      "You mean your one-time "benefit" of somewhere in the vicinity of $300?"

      In 2000 my tax rate was 28%. This year it is 25%. Next year it will be 25%. The year after it will be 25%. When did one time mean more than once?

      Or are you suggesting my federal tax rate in 2004 be the same as in 2000? Because (unless congress decides to pass a few laws) it won't.

    36. Re:I couldn't agree more by donutello · · Score: 0, Troll

      Tax Cut
      You mean your one-time "benefit" of somewhere in the vicinity of $300? Real big help there.. Just in time to help boost Christmas spending so he can claim a "recovery" and a "robust, booming economy". Bzzzt.


      No, you fucking moron. The Tax cut is not a one-time thing. The tax cut is for every year. Last year the tax cut was enacted retroactively. The $300 was a "refund" for the additional withholding that would not have happened had the tax cut been in effect the entire year.

      You know, if you're too stupid to know and understand that, you're too stupid to comment on any of the other policy decisions. People like you should do the whole world a favor and not vote - preferably eliminate yourself from the gene pool also. It's because stupid people like you, who think they understand what's going on but don't, vote that we have the problems we have right now.

      --
      Mmmm.. Donuts
    37. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Almost got me. I had my mouse button down on the link when I thought to look at the status bar. Whew!

    38. Re:I couldn't agree more by wmspringer · · Score: 3, Informative

      Because, as the 2000 elections clearly showed, being competant isn't the most important quality when running for office. Gore was obviously the one who knew what he was doing, but Bush got almost as many votes simply because he's more likeable. Heck, I think Bush is totally incompetant, but I'm happy to admit that he seems to be a nice enough guy.

      Anyway, Bush takes office and everything the Democrats predicted comes true. So what happens in 2002? The Republicans have massive wins across the country. Obviously being right isn't as important as being popular.

    39. Re:I couldn't agree more by AndreyF · · Score: 1

      of course! you're right. sorry. Greenspan is wrong

      too.

      So is George Soros, he sais sorry too.
      NOT

      but of course, you know all, including my major (economics), so please forgive the world's dillusions

    40. Re:I couldn't agree more by BizDiz · · Score: 1

      Yah, that's why I said "or your money wouldn't be worth much".... but, ummm, thanks I guess.

    41. Re:I couldn't agree more by saden1 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The Feds borrows against itself and the taxpayer.

      Banks are middle man that simply takes a cut by facilitating you, the taxpayer, borrowing from Feds.

      I wonder if we can cut the banks our of the loop and have a nonprofit organizations facilitate taxpayer borrowing from the government.

      --

      -----
      One is born into aristocracy, but mediocrity can only be achieved through hard work.
    42. Re:I couldn't agree more by mcpkaaos · · Score: 1

      Don't you think it a little weak that you sink to insults to make any kind of point? Taking to insulting and slamming other people sure makes you seem both educated and insightful. You're like bigot-lite!

      Blame it on the liberals! Blame it on the conservatives! Partisan politics, the race war for the 21st century!

      Intelligent.

      --
      It goes from God, to Jerry, to me.
    43. Re:I couldn't agree more by dhananjay · · Score: 1
      molly ivens notwithstanding, though you have essentially slandered her, bush is absolutely going to be lying if he makes huge promises about a base on the moon.

      left, right, whatever: mendacity and corruption and cynical political gamesmanship are easy to see (especially if you don't have knee-jerk reactions) and these guys have it in spades. (remember what rove said after the "war" started: "use the war" for political gain; and what rumsfeld said that awful day two years ago: "sweep it all up, things related and not" (emphasis added).

      god I'd love to see us on the moon, but these guys are liars and cheats, not dreamers and leaders. we'll need someone else to take us there.

      your ad hominem attacks are shameful btw and do not serve you well

      --
      If English was good enough for Jesus, it's good enough for everyone else.
    44. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unless you find more gold somewhere. Lot's of it. Maybe there are a few asteriods out there with some gold on them. Lot's of gold. Gold. GOLD.

    45. Re:I couldn't agree more by AndreyF · · Score: 1

      reliable or not, she's just stating facts...
      Bush has cut funding to a lot of programs which he has praised...
      you really can't justify an attack on such a fact by an assault on the person who noticed it...

    46. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gore only "knew what was going on" if you were stupid enough to believe it. Please, Gore was and is a pedant. He knew the right things to say though to convince the pseudo-intellectual liberals that he knew what was going on but the Emperor didn't have any clothes on.

    47. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unless, of course, Congress decides to do the responsible thing and stop running up massive deficits.

      Nah, you're right. Never happen.

    48. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      heh. so mister economist. now that the cycle of the economy is on an updraft, you dont think that the huge growth that we've seen just recently will create any tax revenue for the government?

      btw, george soros give huge amounts to the dems. he is discredited. for this issue. in fact for all issues. i dont care what a billionaire with a vendetta wants.

      also, your like to soros is broken.

      and if you read what greenspan said, he didnt assasinate bush like you wish he did.

      you know, if the american fallacy is on the verge of collapse, go short sell soem stock, or trade currencies betting against the dollar. if you were so smart and so sure of your economics, it would be trivial for you to make a shitload of money knowing the oh so scaaaary future (backed by over a century of fantastic American economic growth). Oh im sooo scared of the grim dark future!

    49. Re:I couldn't agree more by kevin+lyda · · Score: 1

      it's good to know just how strong this commitment to civil discourse the republicans suddenly have is.

      --
      US Citizen living abroad? Register to vote!
    50. Re:I couldn't agree more by HungWeiLo · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Some interesting news:

      Turns out Bush's Baghdad turkey and Baghdad British Airways rendezvous were both completely fabricated by the White House. Washington Post story here

      --
      There are a huge number of yeast infections in this county. Probably because we're downriver from the bread factory.
    51. Re:I couldn't agree more by Dr.+Zoidburg · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Debt? there ain't no debt. Look at this example:

      Bunch of people end up on a deserted island without any money (which would be useless cause there aren't any stores). Say Joe Banks is one of them. He happens to have some gold nuggets, which he lends to everyone else for a year for use as a monetary system. After the year, he demands all of his property back plus 1% interest. In one sense you could say "well he was without his gold for a year, so he deserves something in return"....but where are the people going to get the additional 1% of gold (assuming there was absolutely none on the island)? They don't have it, so now they're in debt.

      If by some miracle some gold is found by one of these folks in debt, they owe some back to Joe Banks...but Joe Banks didn't do an ounce of work to deserve it! It's slightly exagerated I know, but the point is this: if you can convince someone they are in debt to you even though they weren't, then they are now in debt to you.

      Here's another absurd thing about debt: if A owes B $10, and B owes C $10, and C owes A $10, is anyone really in debt?

      What's really funny is how the U.S. ditched the sole backing for it's monetary system (gold, something physical) for just T-bills (not really physical, just a printed image). Years ago, a sale involving cash transaction says "this $1 bill I'm handing you is a representation of the gold I personally own...being physically held in the fed". Now it just means "the fed says this $1 I'm handing you is worth something...or so they tell me...not sure what it really represents".

      What's even more funny is that the U.S. convinced a lot of other countries to buy into the "world bank"....which happens to be backed by...get this: U.S. T-bills! Every country that put its "money" into the world bank effectively "paid off" that much of the U.S. debt! As long as those countries don't pull out their money, the U.S. is not currently in as much debt as you think.

    52. Re:I couldn't agree more by HungWeiLo · · Score: 1

      Some interesting news:

      Turns out Bush's Baghdad turkey and Baghdad British Airways rendezvous were both completely fabricated by the White House. Washington Post story here

      --
      There are a huge number of yeast infections in this county. Probably because we're downriver from the bread factory.
    53. Re:I couldn't agree more by MegaHamsterX · · Score: 1

      You are correct, don't be fooled......

      The statements you have just made are.....flawed from a lack of perspective.

      If you think one side or the other is shortsighted you need glasses, you see this is a representitive republic, which means we end up with the most mediocre solution that is still partially functioning, sometimes not at all.

      The people in office are elcted by YOU, both sides cater to special interests for campaign funds so you can elect them, both sides make laws and approve funding to those special interests so they get more campaign funding so YOU see them and elect them. The situation is similar to spam, except more people buy partisan bullshit than spam products.

      If you would like them to stop, forbid them from any advertisement at all, only allow debates and baby kissing.

      Both sides suck, I prefer to elect those who occupy the lowest ivory tower.

    54. Re:I couldn't agree more by hazman · · Score: 1

      Well, by my calculations, assuming the reason for your tax rate reduction was soley due to the 'rebate' of $300, your income is only $10,000 dollars a year. There is no reason your tax rate should be anything greater than %15.

      Instead of getting Bush for president, I'd look into getting H&R Block for tax accountant.

    55. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      post AC with caution. they mafia here mods down ANYTHING remotely centrist, let alone "right wing."

      its so pathetic. you are so right about the communist mafia. i love you man.

      a few words on going AC

      WARNING, SLASHDOT NOW TIES AC COMMENTS WITH USER

      When you are logged in, /. ties your user account to any Anonymous Coward postings you make... Thus they know who posted it. To demonstrate this:

      1. Get mod points.
      2. Post an AC comment while logged in
      3. Change your dynamic ip, clear all cookies
      4. Log back in and try to moderate your AC comment... you can't!!!

      Please *log out* AND use another browser before making your AC comments.
      Your UID is being tracked, it's not Anonymous. Lots of people post lots of things to Slashdot as AC only because they believe it is really anonymous - it isn't. They hunt "trolls" (non-karma whores and non-group thinking bots) down.

      This is true. I used to be a bit more freestyle and witty AC and be a nice guy logged in [basically a karma whore]. After a short while, I could no longer moderate. Slashdot does brand AC posts with IP and then map them back to users. They lie about AC, AC doesn't exist if you re-use ip addresses.

      Big brother is watching. So while I might be a "troll" a lot of the AC things I said were to protect myself from Slash-bot groupthink. They punished me for voicing my opinion freestyle.

      They also revoke moderation FOREVER - $rtbl it is called, for any moderations of any post that have been secretly flagged annoying [Slashcode has hidden flags viewable by editors]. If you *EVER* mod up something an editor secretly marked annoying you NEVER moderate again, ever - ever even if your karma is capped.

      Also, Slashdot uses the friends system to track "trolls." Mark a troll you find funny as a friend *bang* $rtbl never to moderate ever again. My real account had many many good friends who had good karma, and a few funny trolls later, no more moderation for that account. Again, Slashdot is spying on its users to make the people who find certain things funny uneligible to moderate. You will never moderate again if you are a friend of a "foe or freak" of an editor.

      FACT: This is in Slashcode CVS

      Revision 1.7.2.5 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs] , Thu Feb 8 13:12:32 2001 UTC (2 years, 9 months ago) by pudge
      Branch: bender
      CVS Tags: v1_1_3_0
      Changes since 1.7.2.4: +18 -7 lines
      Diff to previous 1.7.2.4 to branchpoint 1.7

      log more AC info


      So AC is a scam here. Hitler-Malda screws AC posts in the ass. So now all you can do is go 100% AC, or , as they expect you to, KARMA WHORE. And it is so lame and unfair and probably illegal as they lie about anonymity.

      Also, sometimes when certain information becomes an active thread, they bitchslap the thread much later so that people think its "safe" to participate and the whole thing gets slapped.

      Protect yourself. Try and use proxies or a super good second browser with proxies that you never log into such as Opera (which makes it very easy to delete all private data). Thank you.

    56. Re:I couldn't agree more by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 1
      --
      "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
      Never been known to fail..."
    57. Re:I couldn't agree more by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 1
      Actually,

      The particular office in question was not elected by me. I was part of the +530,000 majority, who voted for Gore.

      The coup came from elsewhere!

      --
      "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
      Never been known to fail..."
    58. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bush beat Hillary to Iraq, now he wants to beat the Chinese to the moon. Anything to feed his ego.

    59. Re:I couldn't agree more by demaria · · Score: 1

      Perhaps I was in error. I meant to say my tax bracket (10, 15, 25, 28, 33, 35). I won't fully reveal my income but it is most definitely above minimum wage. :-) I'm curious how you calculated anything as I didn't give any numbers. If my salary in 2000 was the same as in 2003, all other things equal, I would pay less tax in 2003 than in 2000.

    60. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      "rubust, booming economy"
      You hate the fact that the economy is getting better don't you? The truth is you have such hatred for bush that you hope with every bone in your body that the recession inherited from the Clinton administration lives on until the 2004 elections. You actually hope for a bad US economy. That's funny considering what the principles of being liberal are SUSPOSE to be. But that's the problem, being liberal isn't what it was. Being liberal is now just hating Bush and hoping for another disaster so liberals can be in power. Now let's look at some FACTS; the economy is out of recession, and it is growing at rate of which we haven't seen in over twenty years.

      Prescription Drugs
      You mean the watered-down piece of shit that not even some Republicans wanted to sign because it held no real benefits for the majority and was actually just a step closer to privatization of Medicare?

      Yeah, the AARP, a truly conservative special interest group, supported passing of that bill. Funny how Clinton made promises of prescription drug benefits during both of his campaigns and yet it took Bush to get it done.

      War on Terrorism
      Are you even still in the room?

      What do you think this is, AOL? I'm not sharing a room with you. This is a forum.

      We totally forgot about Osama (a real live admitted terrorist)

      Would you like to ask the troops currently stationed in Afghanistan if we have forgotten about Al Qaeda or bin laden? How about the office of homeland security, I'm sure they don't give two shits about bin laden right? Of course the CIA and FBI could care less about him too.

      so that Dubya could go spend billions of our dollars destroying Saddam (a bad guy, but no terrorist [and don't even START that bullshit about his hosting Al Queda because the evidence does NOT support that]).

      I guess the dead Jews who were killed by Palestinian terrorists publicly bankrolled by Saddam don't count in your eyes. The hundreds of Kurds killed by chemical weapons and the recently discovered mass graves don't make you a terrorist.

      So now, instead of making the world safer by taking out a very dangerous terrorist group he has scattered them to the winds (think cancerous metastasizing) and has gone to great (and expensive) lengths to further destabilize the Middle East by creating a desert-style Vietnam situation.

      There hasn't been another September 11th yet has there? the terrorists have never been such a target before, Have you seen the AC-130 gunship video? the terrorists looked to be a little terrorized themselves. Also, for you to compare a conflict where the largest casualties occurred on September 11th, to a war which 58,000 Americans gave their lives, is a stretch at best, and an insult at worst.

      Instead of using the political and sympathetic capital showered upon us by the world post-9/11 he has squandered it to the point where we are now feared and reviled like never before in history.

      I didn't know the whole world consisted of the US, France, Germany, and Russia. We have more support with the war on terror than any previous War in WORLD HISTORY.

      Oh, and did I forget squandering what was a budgetary surplus, creating the fastest-growing budget deficit this country has ever seen?

      Reagan ran deficits with big defense spending and look where that lead us, The fall of the Soviet Union and the end of the cold war. Now your children won't have to learn "Duck and Cover!". I bet the fall of the Soviet Union really chapped your ass.

      Bush promised smaller government, fiscal responsibility, and a foreign policy of global cooperation. So far we have double the size of government, destroyed any sense of fiscal responsibility (all the while mired in a preventable recession) and bullied the rest of the world into hating us (even our allies are nervous these days).

      Bush has brought this country out of recession, and stood up to terrorism where pink panty wearing pussies like yourself would of stated "I for one, welcome our new terrorist overlords".

    61. Re:I couldn't agree more by kevin+lyda · · Score: 1

      "Sorry, I just don't suffer fools gladly."

      and yet somehow you live with yourself. i'm sorry you're not glad.

      btw, it's fun to do the math to see where your tax cut goes when you factor in state tax (hey all states are in the financial crapper - don't you start to wonder why?), increases in fees for local services, cuts to programs...

      most people spent that rebate check before they got it.

      but hey, what do i care, i moved to a real country with a gov't party that i disagree with a lot of the time but at least is generally responsible. my taxes didn't decrease the past two years but the economy is recovering.

      --
      US Citizen living abroad? Register to vote!
    62. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      US attacking the French in North Africa ?
      If I remember correctly the US attacked the Germans in North Africa with help from the French and the Brits.

      Germany occupied French North Africa, but that does not mean that the US army fought the French army there...

      Freedom Fries may be OK, but please leave history alone.

    63. Re:I couldn't agree more by disntrstd · · Score: 1

      I don't see what is so wrong with the 300$ tax cut. Why, with that money I have finally purchased enough duct tape to fully seal off my house from those pesky WMD. God bless America and the Bush administration!

    64. Re:I couldn't agree more by WaxParadigm · · Score: 5, Informative

      "Well, by my calculations, assuming the reason for your tax rate reduction was soley due to the 'rebate' of $300, your income is only $10,000 dollars a year."

      Well, by my calculations you're an idiot. The "rebate" was a one-time deal to get SOME of the tax cut into people's pockets before the next April when they filed their returns. The tax cuts were not $300 for everyone, but percentage cuts (and yes, the cuts effected all income levels).

      So, the guy who said it changed his rate from 28% to 25% is not making $10k as you calculate...and will definately recieve more than $300/year from these tax cuts. He was also correct at the rates, where you were way off. The previous tax rates of 15, 28, 31, 36, and 39.6 percent were replaced by a simplified rate structure of 10, 15, 25, and 33 percent.

      Instead of mocking people who are happy about the much-needed reduction in tax rates who might have voted for Bush, and using your own ignorance to back it up...you might want to actually educate yourself on the matter.

      It's amazing what information and simple logic can produce (understanding maybe?). You should try it sometime.

    65. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What is scary is the bad guys (the overseas type) have already shown publicly they can use and imitate the lessons provided by the last goverment. State of art science (weaponized psychology) which we may have only seen the beginning.

      Liberals are easy to defeat so long as there's a talk back button. They can't help but cheat because that's the only way they'll win (look up and to the left). Undoing the damage they've done is going to take decades.

    66. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yup, I guess thats why the chimp doesnt even bother to read and gets all his information from a select few ass-kissers or manipulators. Real smart.

      Hey Laura, RIF starts at home!

    67. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I could buy your argument, except if Alan Greenspan, the head Chancellor of US economics, has a serious problem with the idea, I'm going with him instead of a straight-C Yale student. Sorry.

    68. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You, o aptly named one, are a good example of the power of propaganda. If you were living in Germany in the 1930s you'd probably be ranting about the Jews. Really, do you just soak up and regurgitate everything your comrades at the NY Times tell you?

      To pick just one point from your Penguinshit, let's consider "We totally forgot about Osama...": do you REALLY believe that? Do you realize how seriously stupid that makes you sound?

    69. Re:I couldn't agree more by hazman · · Score: 1

      t = tax
      tr = tax rate
      i = income

      t = tr x i or t = 0.28i (basic tax calculation)
      t = 0.25i -300 (your proposition)

      substituting

      0.28i = 0.25i + 300
      (0.28 - 0.25)i =300
      0.03i = 300
      i = 10,000

    70. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your tax rate might be down for the next few years, but what most people don't realize is that within 5 to 10 years from now (when Bush is out of office/doesn't need votes to be re-elected), all the "wonderful" tax cuts expire, and you will be back to where you started from, and the budget will be even more FUBARed.

    71. Re:I couldn't agree more by danheskett · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I was going to college in NH during the last election.. I met *every* single candidate for President on the primary ballots in NH at least *two* times, including G.W. Bush three times, including a sitdown-meal, a five-person roundtable, and a 35-person private reception.

      I can say this clearly: by far, he was *the* most likeable, *the* most personable, *the* most appealing candidate on the surface. We talked about lots of things, including politics, policies, big issues, local issues, etc. He was literate, considerate, and lucid at all times.

      Gore, whom I met twice (one sit down meal, one private reception of about 50, total time spent was probably 2 hrs), was stiff, unfunny, whiny, condescending, and came off as overplanned. He called over the photographer several times for "candid" photo-ops. He gesticulated wildly hoping to get caught on camera in a typical political moment - you know, mouth open, looking smart, hands waving, looking concerned but involved in a pro-active way - and often succeeding.

      Bradely was brillant. McCain was fun and witty and likeable. But Bush shone.

      Was the election a popularity content? Who knows. But Bush definately can win a room.

    72. Re:I couldn't agree more by demachina · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I'm not sure what you would really accomplish with a permanent base on the moon. It has very low gravity, no atmosphere and its in doubt if there is water. If you want to do something useful in space put a permenent colony on Mars. Don't waste the time and energy planning another goofy Apollo strategy where astronauts spend huge amounts of time on the round trip to spend very little time there picking up rocks. Send cargo ships followed by a one way trip with colonists who are there to stay. Mars probably has enough resources that a viable, self sustaining colony can be placed there and it will be a nicer place to live than the moon, especially if you start terraforming.

      You've accomplished something if you establish a second home for humanity. You also create a real new frontier which is something this world desperately needs for the adventurous spirits.

      It would be one big positive for Bush in a sea of negatives if he actually made this happen but there are a bunch of doubts that arise:

      - One its become pretty clear he is using the U.S. Treasury's credit card to borrow and spend the U.S. in to an economic boom to insure his reelection. He is spending like a drunk sailor and this may just be more of the same.
      - Boeing is heading for fairly deep trouble. It can't compete with Airbus, its was caught cheating on launch contract bids and was suspended by the Air Force. The air force tanker contract was also designed to pump tax dollars in to Boeing but the deal stunk so bad they haven't been able to get it signed. I wouldn't be suprised if Bush wants a program to pump a whole bunch of tax dollars in to Boeing to keep it afloat.
      - NASA, like the DOD, is one big pork barrel. Politicians pour money in it to get votes and pump up the economy in the large number of places powerful politicians have managed to put NASA centers and contractors. It really isn't about space exploration any more. Its just a jobs program which is why the manned space program hasn't dont anything new in 20 years. A new space initiative will be doomed if it goes down the same path. It will be just like the ISS where vast sums are scattered around the country and squandered to no good effect.

      The only likely way you will be able to have an effective space program in the U.S. again is to gut NASA and start something more closely resembling the Lockheed skunk works in its glory days under Kelly Johnson. You need a lean, mean team of gifted engineers and managers in one place who are devoted to getting a job done and not in building empires and in a contest to see how big and bloated they can make their budgets and staffs. I really think an International Space Agency would be the way to go and pull all the best engineers from the U.S., Canada, China, Russia and Europe together in one place and tell them to get the job done. The down side is the politicians wont support it unless they get a share of the pork and it would be doomed before it started because of politics.

      --
      @de_machina
    73. Re:I couldn't agree more by hazman · · Score: 1

      Hey 'Discontinent Conservative",

      demaria replied to a post about the rebate. Given the information he provided I deduced that he was paying way too much in tax.

      Now go and change your Depends, Bush doen't need any additional propping, the national media is doing a fine job.

    74. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Kiss of death. It is his beginging and (hopefully) his end. This asshole acually took advice from m$ and embrasses and extends more than corp america. Everything he has touched has been for naught. Love it, kill it. I would want our space mission to be longer than his pres race, but I fear he wouldnt stop there. If he wins, he will understand (more than he does now) that a few "good" campains would lead the sheep better than just blood (and "american influence"), which is what our politions have been "pine'ing" for for a long time, IE carter , reagon, bush1, bush2, instability in the middle-east, ergo israel))).

      More than you see here. read along.

      A big difference between middle-east culutures, there they let you KNOW who is in power, here, they suppress it and live for another day. (walk quietly and carry a big stick me thinks.)

      Your OK to riot, since we figured out how that goes in the 1920's, it's called "minutemen regimens". Peaceful demonstrations are OK as long as they dont fuck-up our dinner parties).

      Welcome to 2000, its nice that the only un-discoverd country is space, and now we space bases will belong to us now, slaves)

      Sheep don't even understand weight and trajectory, so it looks as though we will soon have more than global warming to contend with (cbs news watch -- tide problems reflecting changes in coral reef patterns, USA refusess mining on moon cutback due to "econimic stability", here more about new Pepsi/Motorola merger at 9. Ben Aflick and Jo-lo might divorce!).

      Same as the new news, dytoko (or whaterver the hell it is) setup, Russia insists that it is financially infesable to cut pollution control, America agrees (cut Alaska project "long time ago".)

      Are we all lemmings?

      I was born under the mushroom cloud. Born on Offit Airforce Base (SAC) 1970, dad worked on the Polaris missile, I understand what it is to be hostile to offensive forces). We are NO LONGER UNDER THAT PRESSURE.

      Bush probly sees the Easter Bunny in church and Santa Claus in his pockets. Next one up (pres) is a dirty rotten egg! Revolution keeps going.

      I could go on.....

    75. Re:I couldn't agree more by WaxParadigm · · Score: 1

      Oh, BTW, I'm talking about the 2001 Bush tax cuts, not the 2003 Bush tax cuts ("Jobs & Growth Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2003"). This newer tax law is effective for 2003 and 2004. Details:

      -$600 child tax credit increased to $1000 (I've got no kids, so no dice for me).
      -Increased the "standard deduction" for married people filing together from $7950 to $9500. (Not that it matters much to me as I'll still probably be itemizing / using the long form...but maybe this will change that.)
      - Changes 15% bracket so that the top end is $23k for separate filings and $47k for joint filings...instead of $23k for joint filings (removes the "marriage tax penalty for SOME people" - again, not for me).
      - Accelerate the tax reductions %ages (my previous post mentioned the end-state tax rates...those are phased in. The rates for 2002 were 10, 15, 27, 30, 35, and 38.6.).
      - Increases the "alternative minimum tax amount"
      - and some other stuff like capital gains, dividend, and depreciation stuff.

    76. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      See

      http://www.kshitij.com/graphgallery/eurma.shtml

      shorting the dollar is a wise move.

    77. Re:I couldn't agree more by sparrow_hawk · · Score: 1

      Hmm... he's been praising the military for a long time...

    78. Re:I couldn't agree more by WaxParadigm · · Score: 1

      "Hey 'Discontinent Conservative'...Now go and change your Depends"

      I think you mean incontinent. Again, I'd like to encourage you to get a little more education. It just might help when you're trying to make a point or insult someone.

    79. Re:I couldn't agree more by demaria · · Score: 0, Redundant

      If it was that simple to compute taxes, then we would be sending our tax returns in via post cards. Have you ever done a tax return? Know what deductions are? Adjusted gross income? Guess not. Standard deductions? Itemized deductions? How about the fact that not all your income is taxed at 25%. Some is taxed at 10%, some at 15%, and some at 25%. Since that last part is missing from your equation, your last two posts can be declared 'completely wrong'. Forgivable if you're not from the US.

      Also, I never indicated that my tax cut was only $300.

    80. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      What, pray tell, is "real country" ?

      Perhaps one that flies so low under the radar that its

      • mostly harmless
      • of no particular interest to the socialist reactionaries who live for the opportunity to bitch about the USA (Dem or Rep admin) ?

      As to your "..econmomy is recovering", so is the US economy, much as it did under RR, whom I suspect you consider the Great Satan Himself, based on your socialist pronouncements. I suspect your "..economy is recovering" may be directly related to the improvement of the LARGEST ECONOMY IN THE WORLD. (ask the slavemasters in Beijing where they'd be wo/ the gullible USA consumer)

      I'm no Repbulican, but a strict Libertarian. The only thing I have to bitch about wrt GWB is the Medicare Bill.

      BTW: US Citizens take note: If you don't own gold or real estate now (prefereably the latter), you better start thinking about it. 30% of the population trying to prop up the other 70% ( who contribute *nothing* to the economy) is an economic disaster that makes the Great Depression look like a modest inconvenience.

      History's biggest Ponzi scheme is rocketing towards its ultimate end...

    81. Re:I couldn't agree more by kevin+lyda · · Score: 1

      is it just me or are a lot of people misspelling "idiot" as "libertarian" these days?

      "buy gold." what are you, william jennings bryan?

      muppet.

      --
      US Citizen living abroad? Register to vote!
    82. Re:I couldn't agree more by LS · · Score: 0, Troll

      Ok, you got your taxbreak. The country is still going to shit and Bush is still one of the biggest fuckheads alive.

      --
      There is a fine line between being a cultivated citizen and being someone else's crop. - A. J. Patrick Liszkie
    83. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Darn that Electrical College! If it weren't for those pesky 12th, 14th, and 24th Amendments....

    84. Re:I couldn't agree more by WaxParadigm · · Score: 1

      Hazman, If you don't want your next two posts to be completely wrong too, you might want to visit google. The first result for "income tax brackets" is http://www.savewealth.com/taxes/rates/ which will be helpful in getting a basic understanding (though you can count on these rates changing every year). These are just "income" tax...so they don't represent the other taxes taken out of your paycheck like social security, etc.

      demaria, you never indicated your tax bracket, but it's obvious that if you're single you make between $26k and $63k. LOL - that's one pretty specific guess huh?

    85. Re:I couldn't agree more by mabhatter654 · · Score: 1

      Sure, but your spouse got laid off...and stayed laid off for the last 2 years. Offsetting your 3% tax savings with a 30% household income cut...I'd venture very many americans would fall into that catagory right about now...but we still manage to make ends meet.

    86. Re:I couldn't agree more by Penguinshit · · Score: 5, Interesting

      recession inherited from the Clinton administration lives on until the 2004 elections.

      Actually, Bush inherited a nicely balanced budget (indeed, in the surplus) and an economy so hopeful that one of Bush's campaign ideas (thankfully swept under the rug) was to make Social Security based on the stock market (incidentally an idea that Clinton, Gore, and anyone with a fiscal brain said was a *BAD* idea). In fact, as late as last year Bush still floated that Social-Security-based-on-stock-market balloon during a speech. There's a real fiscal genius running the White House... The bubble was sure to burst at some point. But the fact is that by this time 2001 (2002 at the latest) the economy should have corrected and been back to a more stable state. Instead, because Junior wants to run apeshit through the world like some coked up playboy, we are grasping for economic straws during a time of incredible unemployment. Instead of paying attention to the problems at home, Junior wanted to go create problems in the world so he could show how just like his daddy he could be (and I voted for Bush Sr.). Junior can't hold daddy's jock.

      Yeah, the AARP, a truly conservative special interest group, supported passing of that bill. Funny how Clinton made promises of prescription drug benefits during both of his campaigns and yet it took Bush to get it done.

      But what you conveniently left out was that the AARP "supported" this legislation because, in their words, it was "better than nothing". In fact, they were pushing all the way for it to be brought back to the original proposal before the Republicans destroyed it in committee. In fact, in the AARP commercials their "support" is explained in this light.

      Would you like to ask the troops currently stationed in Afghanistan if we have forgotten about Al Qaeda or bin laden? How about the office of homeland security, I'm sure they don't give two shits about bin laden right? Of course the CIA and FBI could care less about him too.

      How about asking the troops in Afghanistan if there are enough of them to do the job required of them? How about asking if they really were thrilled about their numbers being diverted to Iraq? How about asking how busy the CIA is trying to track down the Fedayeen leaders so our troops stop getting cut down a couple of soldiers at a time on an almost daily basis? How about asking why, after a campaign promise of "smaller government", the government was almost doubled in size by the addition of a single (IMHO unecessary) Cabinet (your "Homeland 'Security'")?

      I guess the dead Jews who were killed by Palestinian terrorists publicly bankrolled by Saddam don't count in your eyes. The hundreds of Kurds killed by chemical weapons and the recently discovered mass graves don't make you a terrorist.

      Here's where you can really get yourself in trouble. Let's keep this simple. Saddam, in his effort to maintain his self-image as a big player in the Arab world, made a large public speech where he promised payments for Palestinian "martyrs". In fact, such payment has *YET* to be made (even well before Gulf-II). Saddam was a tempest in a teapot, easily contained by the UN actions post-Gulf-I. As for your point regarding the Kurds... well...:
      1. Bush Sr. urged the Kurds to rise up against Saddam post-Gulf-I. They did, expecting US support. US support did not come, they got slaughtered by an injured and vengeful Saddam.
      2. Iraq is not a "country". It is a confederation of disparate ethnic and religious parties who are quite frequently at bitter odds with each other, where the word "compromise" is not in their mutual vocabularies. A strong brutal leader is sometimes the only way to make all those parties behave. Is that a nice picture? Hell no. But it does accurately describe the shitstorm that is now present-day Iraq and why Western-style democracy probably won't work so well there. The biggest part of what makes our democracy work here is that the St

    87. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      if you are right, capitalize on it. a country going to shit will have lots of stocks to short sell. put your big fat frigging mouth where your money is and ouble down on short contracts for the S&P 500

      I FUCKING DARE YOU.

    88. Re:I couldn't agree more by mabhatter654 · · Score: 1
      not quite. Actually the last checks were basicly just an "adjustment" to your current years tax earnings. [i.e. money back you would have paid in] many people are going to get nailed by this. The tax rate may have gone down some, but the "rebate" checks are really comming off NEXT April's return...meaning it will actually be LESS this year for most people!

      It's never "free" money with politicans!

    89. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      alarmist saying Ponzi scheme.

      if this economy goes "great depression" the ROW is going to be in serious dire straights.

      clearly there are too many levels of derivatives going on right now, and there is an inverse pyramid building on the shoulders of the young, but to think that things will lie in default, well, ill put it this way, i dont think your relative wealth to your neighbor or to some other random person in some other random country will change that much, if at all.

      think relativistically. it works for physics, it works for econmics too. you will be relativly wealthy no matter what happens.

    90. Re:I couldn't agree more by uberdave · · Score: 1

      You're going to be able to do a lot more "real science" in the LEO's microgravity than on the lunar surface.

    91. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      oh, but listen her mister know it all. bush's economic team isnt made up of one man. you actually think Bush, the C yale student,is writing policy, or is a crack team of many people smarter than you doing it. i think the latter. he just signs off on it.

      too bad your a disgruntled type who didnt get a tax break because you dont pay any. (im insinuating a really low salary, something i expect of you).

    92. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      then place your bet.

      ever ponder to think a weak dollar benefits the US economy? (easier to export, amongst other things. ask anyone who sell shit overseas.)

      the problem is more complex that your two dimensional graph.

    93. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ever stop and think the EU's single interest rate for many different econmies is hurting them like you wouldnt believe.

      and if you borrowed "strong" money, wouldt you like to pay it back with inflated money?

      a weakt dollar is the best kind to use to pay off a loan that you probably have.

      if you really wanted deflation, and a super strong dollar, they could probably grant your wish. easily.

      you wouldnt like it but you dont have the nuts to actually research anything so you go on with yoyur delusions.

    94. Re:I couldn't agree more by assaultriflesforfree · · Score: 0, Troll

      What makes sense here is that money spent on space is a good short-term waste. Maybe in the long-long run, it'll turn into minute profits for the poor. That means that for the time-being, Bush can continue to divert resources from the poor to the rich. That's why this is an option, just like all the money he's wasted on the military... hugely inefficient for the economy, great for the few folks who stand to gain from it immediately.

    95. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      heh. you changed your homepage link mister Jeremiah Cornelius serial number #137. Its now http://jehm.net/humor/showphoto.php?nPicsID=121. A nude phote of Ussama buttfucking bush. cute. Well let the record show you dont have the fucking balls to backup any of your shit in this thread. Level headed people can rip you a new ass intellectually all day long and you come back with a cutsey political cartoon as your answer.

      You are a groupthinking, unintelligent ass. If you have any wealth, you will most surely squander it. You really need to get a set of fucking balls and at least argue you and Molly's fucking garbage propaganda.

      How I wish I could force you to stay a months or two in Lahore Pakistan or maybe timewarp your ass to some shithole in the USSR in 1975. Then lets see how fucking snarky you are with this trolling propaganda.

      Jeremiah. You suck dick. And you know it.

    96. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      no you dont get it. Jeremiah thinks the law should be bent to serve his needs. He comes up with cute one-liners and links to left wing propaganda character assisnating sites.

      Dont these idiots get it. The more they assisinate and ad-hominate Bush, the stronger he gets.

      Leave it to Jeremiah and his friends to make sure the 2004 "Florida Recount" is a fucking landslide with bush winning.

    97. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      id like you to link to any news company that sells shares of itself (read: a viable business) with any of this propaganda you have.

      stick to the WSJ and "The Economist" and maybe Janes. New media companies are generally entertainment, and 99% of the content on the web is propaganda from people like you. The "pure news", like The Economist, is largely ignored by the moron population but smart and wealthy people read it and get richer, not get involved with lowly partisan class warfare. have fun in the pits, Jeremiah prick. "Wealth is the product of man's capacity to think." and I know you arent smart enought to tell me who wrote that.

    98. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just because you don't like Bush, doesn't mean that he's one of the biggest fuckheads alive.

    99. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      note to self: revisionist history gets moderated up on slashdot.

      good one libs, keep chronicleing your lies right here. you defeat yourselves when you open your mouths.

    100. Re:I couldn't agree more by black88 · · Score: 0

      Bravo Penguinshit! Way to shut 'em down.

    101. Re:I couldn't agree more by mabhatter654 · · Score: 2, Flamebait
      Prescription Drugs
      you mean the plans the Reps kept shooting down when Clinton proposed them at the start of both terms?

      Saddam
      Really, GBI did encourage the Kurds to rebel against their rightful, recoginzed govt...notice Turkey refused to deal with them too...even with US occupation of Iraq. The Chemical weapons came from US-USSR cold war policies of selling "surplus" arms to higest-bidder dictators for quick cash. We are directly to blame for their deaths just as much as Saddam is.

      desert-style Vietnam situation
      This is more-or-less how vietnam started. That conflict [never actually a declared war...hun?] started as a knee-jerk reaction to commies. It was supposed to be a "quick" clean up to keep the French "serfs" down. But, The commies correctly avoided direct confrontation of superior force and dragged the war for years by "camping" for the US troops we kept sending [sotra like right now]...It's only a matter of time before the whole region is openly against us...at that point the UN will simply turn it's back and let us take it!

      more support with the war on terror
      funny how people "support" you at the business end of a fleet of B-52's! Bush has openly theatened/extorted/bribed many countries into compliance...that's nearly the same as support. They WILL knife us in the back for this when the time is right!

      Regan's defense spending also lead to the expectations of the wild profits that created the careless dot com boom/bust cycle, and set the stage for the business practices that Enron enbraced. As far as helping the economy, I don't really see how? We're still loosing GOOD jobs in most of the country at an alarming rate. Remember unemployment only counts those who GET it, not who it's run out for...the numbers are really MUCH higher, and the new jobs aren't as good as the old ones. He's only created larger, and more Orwellian government...the very kind Regan tried to put down in Cold war Russia. I was a kid when Regan was president, in high school when the "wall" fell...Bush has copied every, single thing I was told by the govt was WRONG with the commies in all but name. This is a very, very dark time for the US!

    102. Re:I couldn't agree more by Joey7F · · Score: 1

      I think they might just make more money! Wow, it is almost like the tax cut was a...investment?!?!

      I thought it was funny when a local restaurant owner (personal friend) decided to lower the cost of his food. Everyone thought that going from 6.95 to 4.99 for a burrito combo would end up driving up debt. It did...temporarily, but soon he was buying his food in bulk, figuring out more ways of serving more people more efficiently, and ended up making MORE money.

      Interesting huh?

      --Joey

    103. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      turkey was fake: so fucking what.
      BA 747 didnt see Air Force 1.: so fucking what.

      Hillary Clinton had an awful time with the troops saying things like:

      Mrs. Clinton contended, "The hard part started on May 1," referring to the date when President Bush declared an end to major combat operations there.

      Then, with an ill-timed laugh, the former first lady added, "The easy part, if you look at it, was the military part."

      Sen. Clinton's comment comes on the heels of a firestorm of protest prompted by her remarks on Friday, where she told G.I.s stationed on the front lines in Baghdad that Americans back home had "many questions" about President Bush's Iraq war policy.

      Yeah.

      You see the troops were happy to see Bush. And your liberal Queen, they fucking hate her.

      She also said of UBL:
      describing the al Qaeda leader as "a mythic presence" and "a recruiting tool."

      interesting. "mythic" maybe she and bill know something we dont.

      so hungweilo(because you are a quadriplegic?) you are debunked.

    104. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The dot com crap was and is specific to the liberal methodology and like all profiles is specific. The liberals still practice the same today.

      There's a big black blind spot and I wouldn't help remove it to save my own life. Never, ever, ever trust a liberal, it's sad I like so many other know this through first hand experience.

    105. Re:I couldn't agree more by martingunnarsson · · Score: 1

      A base on the moon would be really useful for scientists (and really cool!). To me the biggest problem is to produce/renew water and air. I'm sure there are solutions for this, and the rest shouldn't be that much harder than building a space station in...space.

      --
      Martin
    106. Re:I couldn't agree more by hazman · · Score: 1

      Discontinent,

      demaria's original reply stated that his tax rate went from %28 to %25 based on the rebate the parent stated. He mentioned nothing of tax brackets.

      You have learned revisionist history well, my son. Soon, you too will soon be broadcasting on the EIB network, just steer clear of the opiates, or is my warning too late?

    107. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Best post I have read on /. in some time.

      Inspired, and finally puts into words (albeit with a LOT more information and relevance) replies to the insane American hysteria over terrorists.

      I talk to a number of Americans on the internet (who I am friends with, and have nothing against before you think I am out to bash the American public) - the topic of the Iraq war has mistakenly come up from time to time, and I don't know WHAT the hell the media is feeding the USA, but it sure aint what the rest of the world is being fed. I had one of them telling me that I was totally wrong to be against the Iraq war, that American soldiers were out trying to prevent evil iraqi terrorists from coming to their homes to kill them and their children.

      I mean.. what the fuck is that about!! I don't need to rant about it as you have already made the points, but this is what the rest of the world is up against.. the US media and the US government bullshitting its citizens.

      Yes, Sept 11 was horrific, and you had the support of the entire world when that happened as I think it shocked everyone. I sat watching the coverage on TV and I just couldn't believe anything so evil could happen. But now thanks to your war mongering president, you have no support.. and its only thanks to his idiocy that the terrorism threat is worse than its ever been.

    108. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and don't even START that bullshit about his hosting Al Queda because the evidence does NOT support that

      So Salmon Pak is just some aberration?

    109. Re:I couldn't agree more by chrisbord · · Score: 0

      Economic growth is at a 20 year high (8.2%!), every single economic indicator is WAY up, and unemployment has been falling the past 3 months in a row, and is expected to follow.

      And with all the bitching about the budget, it remains only about 3-4% of GDP, roughly the same as in the last 50 years.
      When Bush took office, the collapse of the tech bubble (and to an extent the 9/11 attacks) rocked the world economy. Bush inherited a situation which was not going to go away until a massive anti-tech business realignment took place, and that meant huge numbers of tech workers in inefficient or unnecessary companies would be laid off and of course the lost wages hurt every sector, especially manufacturing. The ONLY way to reverse the situation was to encourage a lot of spending and facilitate the destruction of inefficient companies and creation of new ones. This is one heckuva task, made much harder by the rise of China's 1.3 billion workforce willing to work for nothing.

      But then Bush did something he wasn't supposed to do, and something that wasn't supposed to happen, happened! He cut taxes like crazy, increased spending to prop up jobs here in the U.S., agressively weakened restrictive business regulation, urged the Fed. to lower and keep interest rates low, and allowed the dollar to fall against foreign currencies, making our domestic made products cheaper to other countries. What happened? The economy is now growing faster than it has in 18 years, and every single economic indicator is way the hell up. We are in an economic boom and unemployment has fallen every month for 3 months and is expected to accelerate substantially. The liberals are shocked and have fallen back on a tactic that ignores trends and cause-and-effect, in favor of absolutes. All they can do is complain about the net loss of jobs, ignoring all sense of context because it doesn't fit their hateful conception of Bush as an idiot.

      I can't say I don't like watching them squirm though ;).

    110. Re:I couldn't agree more by Penguinshit · · Score: 1

      About as big an aberration as the "concrete proof" that Bush claimed he had regarding WMDs. That was the exact same intelligence he relied upon for Salmon Pak. Incidentally, there was ample evidence of the airliner parked there in 2000 (and even prior). You wanna make claims about that? We can trot out the tinfoil suspicions regarding Bush ignoring warnings pre-9/11... How do you wanna play it, Mr. AC?

    111. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually Bush decided to go after she made her announcement.

    112. Re:I couldn't agree more by falconfighter · · Score: 1

      Interesting? Sounds more like a trollbait to me....

      --
      "Give a man a fire, he's warm for a day, set a man on fire, he's warm for life."
    113. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you are 1 sick, scarry pup...

    114. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      your dem friends thought the WMD was real. to bad everything you say on the floor gets recorded, and here it comes:

      For Years Key Dems Recognized WMD Threat . . . But Now Howard Dean Has Changed Their Minds

      Dean On Dems: "'All these guys running say how terrible Iraq is,' Dean told Iowa voters ... 'Where were they four months ago when we really needed them to stand up to the president of the United States?'" (Jeff Zeleny, "Potential For War Troubles Field Of Democratic Hopefuls," Chicago Tribune, 1/20/03)

      DEM LEADERS BECOME DEAN LITE
      RIGHT BEFORE OUR EYES

      Dean Accused Sen. John Kerry Of Being "Dean Lite." "Speaking to the crowd minutes later, [Dean] added, 'I appreciate Sen. Kerry saying we don't want Bush lite, and we don't. But Sen. Kerry, we don't want Dean lite, either.'" (Joel Siegel, "Sen. Kerry Throws His Weight Around Upstate," Daily News [New York], 6/1/03)

      Dean Lite: Noun Or Adjective: "Dean is pulling the Democratic Party hard to the left - throwing red meat to liberal activists ... polarizing the electorate." (Deborah Orin, "Kerry Follows Dean's Lead," The New York Post, 7/17/03)

      Dean Campaign Accused Kerry Campaign Of Plagiarism. '"You get the feeling they're hiring Jayson Blair to write their speeches,' said Dean campaign manager Joe Trippi, referring to the New York Times reporter who had to quit because of plagiarism." (Deborah Orin, "Kerry Follows Dean's Lead," The New York Post, 7/17/03)

      REP. DICK GEPHARDT (D-MO)
      December 16, 1998: Said Any Delay In Attacking Iraq Would Give Saddam Time To Build WMD. "[W]e believe that the President has made the correct decision to undertake military action against Iraq at this time. Any delay would have given Saddam Hussein time to reconstitute his arsenal of weapons of mass destruction and undermine international support for our efforts." (Rep. Gephardt and Sen. Daschle, Joint Statement On Military Action Against Iraq, 12/16/98)

      October 11, 2002: Said "We Must Do Everything In Our Power." "'September 11 has made all the difference,' Gephardt said. 'We must now do everything in our power to prevent further terrorist attacks and ensure that an attack with a weapon of mass destruction cannot happen.'" (Craig Gilbert, "Congress OKs Force In Iraq," Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, 10/11/02)

      u July 20, 2003: Reports Indicate Dean Thought War Was "Mistake." "He [Dean] also has said the questions about the prewar intelligence and the continuing postwar violence have made it 'more and more clear ... what a mistake this administration made in launching a preemptive war in Iraq.'"(Ronald Brownstein, "Criticism Of War Seen As Risk For Democrats," Los Angeles Times, 7/20/03)

      Two Days Later: Gephardt Said Administration Has Made Us "Less Safe." "I'm running for president because I believe George Bush has left us less safe and less secure than we were four years ago... I'm seeking the presidency because foreign policy isn't a John Wayne movie, where we catch the bad guys, hoist a few cold ones, and then everything fades to black ..." (Representative Richard Gephardt, Remarks At The San Francisco Bar Association, 7/22/03)

      SEN. BOB GRAHAM (D-FL)
      December 16, 1998: Called For Regime Change In Iraq. "I hope that today's strike is the beginning of a sustained effort to move from containment of Saddam Hussein's regime to its replacement." (Sen. Bob Graham, "Statement About The United States' Strike On Iraq," Press Release, 12/16/98)

      June 23, 2002: Called WMD Threat And Merger With Terror Groups "Ultimate Nightmare Scenario." "What we're concerned about with Iraq is its intention and capabilities to develop weapons of mass destruction, and the merger of that capability with terrorist groups, that is the ultimate nightmare scenario..."(Fox News' "Sunday," 6/23/02)

      u July 10, 2003: Dean "Convinced More Than Ever" War Resolution Was Mistake. "'I am now convinced more than ever that it was a mi

    115. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you *really* think the slashbotting liberal cretins get running a business. these .com babies and ex-lifers at F500 companies dont aheva fucking ball or entrepenurial bone in thier body. they are lazy shits who bitch about everything and dont know anything about fiscal fundamentals.

    116. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you would presume to mention ad hominem ? you are the master of it. you are probably one of the worst character assisnators ive ever seen ona public board.

    117. Re:I couldn't agree more by MegaHamsterX · · Score: 2, Informative

      Or so you think......

      We have never, in the history of the United States, allowed a citizen to vote for the President, the populous only voices their opinion.

      The elctoral college for better or worse is the body responsible for electing the president,
      while many states have laws deigning that their representitives must vote with the popular vote, many do not.

      The election went fine, it didn't turn out the way you wanted, too bad, the election before Bush didn't turn out the way I wanted, didn't cry, just moved on.

      Anything to keep the man out of office whose wife banned 2Live Crew albums for sale down here, and arrested people for selling them.

      Art is free speech, your dislike of it does not give you the right to censor it, bible bangers, they're all alike, trust none of them, your party or not.

      I see them for what they are elected con-men

    118. Re:I couldn't agree more by ccp · · Score: 0, Troll

      If I remember correctly

      You don't.

      Cheers,

    119. Re:I couldn't agree more by Sivaram_Velauthapill · · Score: 2, Informative

      I'm not sure if that is a joke or not... the debt is very real all right. You are not feeling the impact now because it is not "out of control" yet. But you WILL feel the impact. If the US govt "defaults" on the debt (not possible under capitalism), they will get cut off from the world money supply. The currency will plummet.... you just need to look at other countries like Argentina, Ecuador, etc.

      Sivaram Velauthapillai

      --
      Sivaram Velauthapillai
      Seeking the meaning of life... @slashdot of all places ;)
    120. Re:I couldn't agree more by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 1

      No-one understands the "whole thing", and it's the problem with the economics-as-a-science proposition. Economics is as much about CHEATINg the "laws" of economics as it is about rationalising them.

      Greed is an important factor.

      --
      That was classic intercourse!
    121. Re:I couldn't agree more by Sivaram_Velauthapill · · Score: 1

      You can't cut out the banks without the collapse of capitalism because they are the heart of capitalism. The closest to what you are saying are credit unions and other community-owned institutions.

      BTW, you aren't really borrowing from the govt (depends how you look at it though). Overall, the government is borrowing from you (and other foreign investors). That's why the US govt has the debt and not you.

      Sivaram Velauthapillai

      --
      Sivaram Velauthapillai
      Seeking the meaning of life... @slashdot of all places ;)
    122. Re:I couldn't agree more by Micah · · Score: 1

      > (all the while mired in a preventable recession)

      How exactly was the recession preventable? Cycles happen. Everyone understands that the tech sector sent our economy skyrocketing at unsustainable levels n the late 90s. Eventually it had to pop. And if you're blaming the recession on Bush, please remember that the slide really got going by April 2000, several months before the election.

      Having said all that, as a mostly conservative guy, I *am* pretty ticked. I've been supporting Republicans most of my life on the apparently mistaken notion that they supported reducing the size of government. Guess it's time to switch to the Constitution Party...

    123. Re:I couldn't agree more by Sivaram_Velauthapill · · Score: 2, Informative

      (Quoted in reverse order--don't ask :) )

      As long as those countries don't pull out their money, the U.S. is not currently in as much debt as you think.

      A big IF there. Not likely in the near term but it's a dangerous game the capitalists are playing with USA (or for that matter any other country). If Japanese (who is the largest majority foreign owner of US debt), and a bunch of other foreign investors asked for their money back, USA will collapse overnight.

      What's really funny is how the U.S. ditched the sole backing for it's monetary system (gold, something physical) for just T-bills (not really physical, just a printed image). Years ago, a sale involving cash transaction says "this $1 bill I'm handing you is a representation of the gold I personally own...being physically held in the fed". Now it just means "the fed says this $1 I'm handing you is worth something...or so they tell me...not sure what it really represents".

      That's why, when capitalism collapses (which I think it will--probably within 50 years), make sure you convert all your assets into something tangible (eg. gold, house, buildings, etc). THe US dollar, as well as other currencies, are not backed by anything (other than trust). Unlike the olden (is this even a word? :) ) days, the govt cannot give you anything of value for your money. Modern currencies are nothing more than paper with some trust attached to it. Once you lose the trust, it is worth nothing.

      Here's another absurd thing about debt: if A owes B $10, and B owes C $10, and C owes A $10, is anyone really in debt?

      I think the individual IS in debt. However, the whole society has a net zero debt. For example, USA is in debt but the world as a whole is not.

      After the year, he demands all of his property back plus 1% interest. In one sense you could say "well he was without his gold for a year, so he deserves something in return"....but where are the people going to get the additional 1% of gold (assuming there was absolutely none on the island)? They don't have it, so now they're in debt.

      Under capitalism, you are allowed to default. A loan is a risky proposition. So if no one can pay it, thenthey will all default and the original guy "understands" that :)

      Sivaram Velauthapillai

      --
      Sivaram Velauthapillai
      Seeking the meaning of life... @slashdot of all places ;)
    124. Re:I couldn't agree more by chillmost · · Score: 2, Funny
      Only Coulter is a lot younger and more attractive than Molly Ivins

      Yeah but Coulter is really a man so it doesn't count

    125. Re:I couldn't agree more by BigDork1001 · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Tax Cut
      You mean your one-time "benefit" of somewhere in the vicinity of $300? Real big help there.. Just in time to help boost Christmas spending so he can claim a "recovery" and a "robust, booming economy". Bzzzt.

      Don't forget, while people got that $300 back because of federal tax cuts, how much did state taxes go up? What services are being cut because they can no longer be funded? How much was your school taxes raised? Property tax?

      While Bush made out like the good guy for giving people a few bucks, many are too uninformed or don't want to like to the fact that they are still getting taxed almost as much to even more because the states are now having to cover what the federal government cannot.

      --
      "Armed forces abroad are of little value unless there is prudent counsel at home" - Cicero
    126. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      where the heck did you take that story from? USArmy attacking French in North Africa during the WWII? and what else? have you seen Elvis somewhere around the corner yesterday? :)

    127. Re:I couldn't agree more by Lispy · · Score: 1

      You are so very right it hurts. ;-/

    128. Re:I couldn't agree more by cpghost · · Score: 1

      Watch out! More Bush-shit ahead!

      It's actually amazing. We're living in democracies, and have the right to kill the best initiative our governments are about to take w.r.t. the space program. Meanwhile dictatorial China is stepping forward and is on its best way of becoming the leading nation in this area.

      Heck, we're even dependant upon the russians to keep contact with the ISS! Meanwhile, at home, the political bickering happily goes on and on. What a shame!

      --
      cpghost at Cordula's Web.
    129. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sheesh! Another Deanie Weenie.

    130. Re:I couldn't agree more by Glock27 · · Score: 4, Informative
      Empty space isn't made of lunar regolith.

      Lunar regolith isn't weathered like the surface debris on Earth. Consequently, it's got sharp edges. It's less like play-sand and more like crushed glass.

      The astronauts reported that the stuff got into their suits between the hermetic joints, grinding into their skin. It also chewed up the lunar rovers.

      Of course, what's on the surface of the moon is much less interesting than what's underneath, since thats where humans will spend 95%+ of their time. It will take at least a few meters of lunar surface to protect them from radiation. Also, thermal issues are much easier a ways underground.

      I'm pretty sure "regolith resistant" spacesuits aren't a big problem, regardless.

      --
      Galileo: "The Earth revolves around the Sun!"
      Score: -1 100% Flamebait
    131. Re:I couldn't agree more by CrystalChronicles · · Score: 1

      Excuse the pun but all I see him do is beat around the bush.

    132. Re:I couldn't agree more by 0123456 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "Actually, Bush inherited a nicely balanced budget (indeed, in the surplus)"

      Bush is an idiot, but your very first sentence demonstrates that you have no clue either. The budget was never "balanced" while Clinton was in office: every single year that national debt was at least hundred billion dollars higher at the end of the year than the start. As with pretty much everything else Clinton did, he "balanaced the budget" not by actually, really, spending no more than he took in, but by redefining what "balanced" meant.

      "But the fact is that by this time 2001 (2002 at the latest) the economy should have corrected and been back to a more stable state."

      ROTFLMAO. You don't correct nearly a decade of economic mismanagement by Clinton in a year or two. Bush's policies have been insane, but the recession was an inevitable result of Clinton's perpetual low-interest-rate policies and the dot bomb speculative bubble they created.

    133. Re:I couldn't agree more by Darby · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I wonder if we can cut the banks our of the loop and have a nonprofit organizations facilitate taxpayer borrowing from the government.

      We already have. They're called Credit Unions.

    134. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Forty-eight countries are publicly committed to the Coalition

      countries? yes
      public no.
      most of the world does not approve of what the US is doing in the war against terror.

      Read these news items. These are countries from the coalition. None had a public opinion that supported starting the war in Iraq.

      Japan: 65% opposed
      Britain: two-thirds opposed
      Spain: 91% opposed
      Hungary: 82% opposed
      Poland: 63% opposed
      Czech republic: 12% supports it
      britain spain Japan Eastern Europe

    135. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      defend that statement. link to content that is unbiased and prove your statement.

      yeah, the US was such a war criminal during WW2. so bad. so bad. in fact, if the US didnt exist or get involved the world would be a better place?

    136. Re:I couldn't agree more by Chess_the_cat · · Score: 2, Insightful
      If Japanese (who is the largest majority foreign owner of US debt), and a bunch of other foreign investors asked for their money back, USA will collapse overnight.

      Please describe the world situation where it would be in Japan's interest for the USA to collapse overnight. Or Germany's interest, or the UK's interest. If the USA 'collapsed' the entire world would plunge into economic ruin and chaos. It ain't going to happen.

      As for going back to the moon, I had a feeling we'd be hearing something like this since China announced their desire to land there by 2020. I've always felt it was crazy that the Americans just stopped going after all their success there. To me, Man's greatest technological achievement is the ability to leave his planet. I'd say it's more important than the computer. And yes, we couldn't have done it without computers but one could argue that the ultimate application of the computer is space flight and in fact, it was nearly the original application as well. The Mark I was built to calculate artillery trajectories.

      At any rate, I'd love for Bush to announce that the US is going back ASAP. I'd want them to be there by 2010 at the latest and this time I want a promise that they're not leaving. Ever.

      --
      Support the First Amendment. Read at -1
    137. Re:I couldn't agree more by 10Ghz · · Score: 1
      I didn't know the whole world consisted of the US, France, Germany, and Russia. We have more support with the war on terror than any previous War in WORLD HISTORY.


      I remember seeing the list of nations that supported US's "war on terrorism". I remember laughing because that list included every frigging micro-nation that had uttered a good word or two regarding USA. It had such superpowers like Israel (Israel will say whatever it takes to please USA), Bulgaria, Romania, Palau, Marshall Islands, Tonga, etc. etc.
      --
      Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
    138. Re:I couldn't agree more by ZaMoose · · Score: 1
      In reply to your first point, the idea (apparently) is that lessons we learn from establishing a base on the moon will better allow us to do the same on Mars.

      To wit:

      If the president goes ahead with the plan to announce an ambitious new program to carry Americans beyond Earth's immediate gravitational pull, he will argue that the new lunar explorations are justified not only for what they themselves might produce but also as a means of developing the technology and skills necessary for a mission to Mars, which is expected to be mentioned, though in less-specific terms, in the address.


      Taken from this article on National Review Online.
      --
      I wish I had a kryptonite cross, because then you could keep Dracula and Superman away.
    139. Re:I couldn't agree more by Uncle+Joe+Steel · · Score: 1

      You either have a poor memory or poor knowledge.

      French North Africa was controlled and defended by Vichy French troops not Germans. When the US invaded Morocco and Algeria they fought the French. The US first engaged the German army at Kasserine in Tunisia after the French surrendered.

    140. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unbelievable,

      You guys did not mod this down? All subjective.

      I suppose you will not post this as a "5 Interesting"

      What a bunch of Liberal Monarchs thinking they will actually have a place at the ruling table of the monarchy they helped bring to fruition.

      You complain about your programs being cut, yet say Bush is spending like a drunken sailor.

      Hypocrites.

    141. Re:I couldn't agree more by 0123456 · · Score: 1

      "most of the world does not approve of what the US is doing in the war against terror."

      Actually I suspect that much of the world does approve of the actual war against terror, but Bush gave up on that long ago. It's the war against Arabs that's pissing us off.

    142. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      anyone mentioning Enron without mentioning Global Crossing is a partisan. I love how out of the top 500 companies in the US, one of them goes down, and people act like the whole thing is coming apart. amusing to watch. why dont you try brokering energy if you can espouse about enron so much, you must know everything about thier business.

    143. Re:I couldn't agree more by gnu-generation-one · · Score: 1

      "President Bush To Call For Return To Moon?"

      Can President Bush be the first to return to the moon?

      As the saying goes, "there is no second rocket"

    144. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      nations that want economic growth? nations that put the dollar above religions or ridiculous political talk. you fucking people live the life of a computer tv phone bearing western RICH MAN and then bitch about the fucking system. learn that money is king, and these countries that signed up need to play ball and not mentally masturbate over fucking bullshit at the UN.

    145. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the guy is a fucking moron blinded by partisan thinking and compltely incapable of critical thoughts.

      dont expect a response from him. he is a piece of fucking shit who karma whores and subscribes to slashdot groupthink to feel good. he loves karma more than thinking about the possiblity that something he says AMY in fact be wrong or not the best way.

    146. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you failed to respond to what all the dems had to say, PenguinSHIT.

      you pussy out whent the quotes and the links to real news sources come out.

      and you pussy out because if you believed in the shit you say you would be brokering this crap. and you would never put money on your thinking. nor would anyone else. you are predictable, moronic and sad. i love watching you fumble.

    147. Re:I couldn't agree more by johnjay · · Score: 1

      It would be one big positive for Bush in a sea of negatives if he actually made this happen...

      I'm not trying to start another pro-anti-Bush flame-war (that seems to be going on in thread above this one), but politically this seems similar to his "freedom car" plan (remember that? A hydrogen powered car based on a standardized, drive-by-wire platform built by GM; it will take approx. 10 years to develop).

      The similarity is that moon base the plan is ambitious, long-term, and will succeed or fail quite some time after Bush is no longer president (assuming he doesn't do something crazy like lose 2004 and win in 2008). In the near term, it will seem suspicously like pork-barrelling, as you mention in your 2nd and 3rd doubts. And, in the near term, he will probably reap the rewards of more investment in various space-related businesses around the country. If the moon base succeeds, his name will (should) be associated with it historically. If it fails, the funding will be quietly cut by some future administration, the government subsidies will have gone to nothing, and the man to blame will be out of office already and not bear the consequences of his poor investment. It's unlikely that his place in history will be diminished by a failed space program (look at Bush Sr.'s plan mentioned in the National Review article. I didn't remember that he wanted to go to Mars).

      There are lots of projects that need more than 4 or 8 years to come to fruition, and you can't automatically accuse a president of pork-barrelling when he plans further into the future than his current term in office. After all, we want a president that has long-term plans, as long as they are good ones. It's your call whether the we should risk the cost of failure (a) a small percentage of the budget wasted. b) NASA allowed to live, and fail, a little more). I think we should.

      Just think if the moon base is successful, and we return to the halcyon days of the 60s space programs. A man can dream, can't he? (This is always the point at which NASA asks for a contribution)

    148. Re:I couldn't agree more by Hittite+Creosote · · Score: 1

      If you knew history, then you'd know the British did fight against the Vichy French navy in North Africa though. Google for Mers el Kebir.

    149. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      this comment has no meaning. what the fuck is this supposed to mean?

    150. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      And with all the bitching about the budget, it remains only about 3-4% of GDP, roughly the same as in the last 50 years. When Bush took office, the collapse of the tech bubble (and to an extent the 9/11 attacks) rocked the world economy. Bush inherited a situation which was not going to go away until a massive anti-tech business realignment took place

      Some days I really wish Gore would've been President just to shut the whiners up. Everything would just be peachy if President Gore was in office. There would've been no 9/11 attacks, the world would be at complete peace, and employment would be at an all time high with low inflation, great interest rates, and a fabulously booming tech sector. Yes, some days I like to delude myself to believe that's true to feel what it's like to be a Democrat. This is not Jeb Bartlett's West Wing, and there are no writers waiting to clean up any loose ends before the end of the hour. Bush is doing the best he can given the circumstances and the hand he was dealt. So give the guy a farking break. Oh yea, and frankly I don't like Bush either. He's too fiscally liberal for my tastes.

    151. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "We totally forgot about Osama (a real live admitted terrorist)"

      'We' 'forgot'? What do you base this comment on? The stuff in your skull that is named after you 'nick' that you use as a substitute for a brain?

      Just because MTV doesn't post updates on the hunt for Bin Laden doesn't mean there's nothing happening.

      I guess that because *you* have stated 'we' 'forgot' I should treat such a statement as having something to do with reality.

      Not likely.

      Back to your regurgitated extreme liberal jiz swallower rant.

    152. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If any post deserves a rating of more than 5, its this one. A-freaking-men.

    153. Re:I couldn't agree more by Uncle+Joe+Steel · · Score: 1

      I believe this caused some concern during the planing for Operation Torch. The allies feared the memory of the attack on the French navy might lead some troops to put up stiff resistance since British troops were among the invaders.

    154. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yeah and the vichy goverment was so fucking legit. are you trying to tell people Vichy government isnt the same thing as german nazi controlled france?

    155. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      really, its a war agaisnt islam. islam is shit. are you to say otherwise?

      ask a native frenchman, maybe the type that fought the resistence in WW2, and ask him what he thinks of the islam infection in france? im sure he is thrilled.

      you know what. pick a side. islam or the USA. its the best line ive ever seen drawn in the sand. its even better than the USA vs. the USSR. its time to choose baby! which side you going to fall on asshole? because you know, islam will eventually kill YOU if you join them to topple what the satinic cult of Islam refers to as the "great satan."

      you need to live a few days in a supressed sharia law-abiding islamic town in the wild wild east.

      then you would fucking wise up.

      right now you are a PFY who doesnt know up from down, and you dont know how good you have it.

    156. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      wrong. a retort of this kind wouldnt even wash in a real debate. oversimplified, bias. its that simple. he discusses nothingin depth, nothing said there isnt opinion.

      and you say Amen.

      Moron.

    157. Re:I couldn't agree more by tiger99 · · Score: 1
      Your point is absolutely correct. However we are in an era of backwards progress at the moment (no supersonic airliner for example), mainly due to the escalating cost of everything, because software gets where it is not really needed.

      The Apollo moon missions were possible because they had minimal software, almost no safety precautions, and in many ways fell far short of what would be done, and possibly legally required today.

      Kennedy said that the US would put a man on the moon by the end of the decade, well IIRC they were actually a year or so early, sadly Kennedy did not see it. If Bush said that today, it would be 2 decades, not 1, and there would be a terrible disaster due to the use of M$ products somewhere.

      If people would resist the tendency to do everything digitally, whether it needs to be done at all or not, they could radically increase the viability of programs such as this.

      Even the ancient Space Shuttle suffers from feature bloat, how many temperature sensors was it that failed in the recent disaster? None of them was of the slightest use in maintaining safety, they were only there because someone thought it might be a good idea to monitor that which could not be worked around if it failed. Pointless. Nothing to do with the actual cause of the tragedy of course.

      There is an urgent need to return to simple, reliable systems, with of course a necessary degree of redundancy built in. It is amazing what can actually be done with hydraulics, analogue electronics etc, and in many cases you can get better control, by avoiding the sampling delay.

      If we can restore the notion of elegant simplicity, a return to the moon may well be possible, and even useful. Otherwise, it will never happen. But I hope it does!

      I wonder about the feasibility of manufacturuing raw materials on the moon, that would be a very interesting challenge, with useful spin-offs. Oxygen would be the first requirement, followed by water, then some kind of metal.....

    158. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly a kind of a guy to give you a sweet reacharound after savagely penetrating your ass with his throbbing member for 4 years.

    159. Re:I couldn't agree more by ViolentGreen · · Score: 1

      Exactly. The moon is much closer then mars. It will much more feasible to send a rescue mission if something does go wrong. Mars is a big step.

      In the 60's the goal was to put a man on the moon. They didn't try to do that in the first mission. They put a man in space first, then took the next step. It's the same idea.

      --
      Not everything is analogous to cars. Car analogies rarely work.
    160. Re:I couldn't agree more by F34nor · · Score: 2, Funny

      Did you read the report on Slashdot a few weeks ago? It said that solar farms on the moon could increase the average income of a U.S. Citizen form ~$30,000 to ~130,000. So if they are right this could be VERY good for the poor and middle class. We just better make sure that its power AND its money flow down to Earth.

      Never forget the lessons Gundam has taught us. Don't try and take advantage of people living in space, its easy to drop stuff from up there.

    161. Re:I couldn't agree more by ghjm · · Score: 1

      But what constitutes "wasted" vs "valuable" spending?

      If consumers spend a great deal of money on food at grocery stores, you get well-fed (perhaps even obese) consumers, as well as many jobs for grocery store employees and profits for grocery store shareholders.

      If government spends a great deal of money on highways, you get improved business efficiency and social mobility, as well as many jobs for highway construction workers and profits for construction company shareholders.

      If government spends a great deal of money on military adventures, you get lots of dead foreigners plus a few dead citizens, as well as many jobs for soldiers and civilian workers and profits for defense contractor shareholders.

      If government spends a great deal of money on space exploration, you get lots of interesting space photos, as well as many jobs for geeks and rocket scientists and profits for aerospace company shareholders.

      What difference does it make?

      -Graham

    162. Re:I couldn't agree more by cybercuzco · · Score: 1

      Because everyone knows its more important for a president to have a good personality rather than havve policies that are good for the country. I have no doubt that bush is a likable guy, that doesnt mean he was best qualified for the job, and it certainly doesnt mean hes not running the country into the ground now.

      --

    163. Re:I couldn't agree more by F34nor · · Score: 3, Funny

      Funny, sounds like your talking about the Space Elevator or the LEO Crane!

      If we want to get off this friken rock the Space Elevator is the only choice. 2 ton payloads, 8 climbers per ribbon 2 ribbons. A DEAL at 15 billion. So like I've said before...

      HEY NANOFIBER ENGINEERS, STOP READING SLASHDOT AND GET BACK TO WORK!!!

    164. Re:I couldn't agree more by tiger99 · · Score: 1
      His puppet Blair is doing exactly the same in the UK. He is putting university tuition fees up, to get more students!

      Socialism always has been an advanced form of hypocrisy, of course. Blair knows exactly what he is doing, and why, but I think Bush is just to stupid to realise.

      If you want to know who is behind this, look up Illuminati, Bildeberg, Trilateral Commission, or the Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion (and please don't confuse the latter with Jews, they are almost all not, and the issue, which is not racist, has been greatly mis-represented to encourage anti-semitism and anti-anti-semitism, which is what "they" want).

    165. Re:I couldn't agree more by Kombat · · Score: 1

      If the USA 'collapsed' the entire world would plunge into economic ruin and chaos.

      Oh puh-lease! Get over yourself. The US is roughly 5% of the world's population. I think the world would manage without you. You grossly overestimate your own importance on the world economic scale.

      The US carries a net trade deficit, meaning you consume more than you produce. You import more than you export. Meaning if you disappeared, it's not like the rest of the world would have to do without your excess production - rather, there'd simply be a few less guys consuming everyone else's products. Prices would drop a little worldwide, then settle again. Life would go on.

      It's comments like yours that are the reason the world calls the US "arrogant."

      --
      Like woodworking? Build your own picture frames.
    166. Re:I couldn't agree more by Zathrus · · Score: 1

      I'm surprised... because Bush on TV screams out for a public speaking mentor. There's a reason he's done so few press conferences -- he's absolutely abysmal on TV. No, I'm not a Bush basher, I'm a moderate, but I've yet to be inspired by even one of his appearances.

      Contrast that to Reagan or Clinton, both of whom had very powerful charismas both in person and on TV. Reagan, obviously, had a great deal of experience with cameras. Clinton, by all accounts (even the most vehement haters) was one of the most personally charismatic presidents we've had since JFK. Whenever I see George W. Bush on TV I'm reminded of a dorky high school kid that's out of place.

      Bush is going to win the next election. The Republicans are probably going to hold both houses of Congress too. It's not a situation I particularly like (as I said, I'm a moderate and Bush's politics are far too right wing for my likes; my politics are probably closest to Libretarian), but the Democrats are flailing about. They have no real platform, and they're failing to address serious issues in an alternate, but plausible manner.

    167. Re:I couldn't agree more by OOGG_THE_CAVEMAN · · Score: 2, Insightful

      OOGG want correct your misinformed view of financial system. Government borrow funds by selling Treasury bonds. Holders of bonds expect paid interest, not imaginary money.

      Also, banks, holders of money oppose inflation. OOGG have misfortune of holding caveman stone money, US Confederate currency, many old German marks. (OOGG learn hard way to avoid sovereign credit risk.) Inflation wipe out value of currency. Even US nickel once buy large candy bar. Now, same nickel buy 1/10 candy bar. OOGG need diet, but 1/10 candy bar less value than 1 candy bar. Bank with nickel in reserve lose value just as much as OOGG.

      Federal reserve notes are printed by Bureau of Engraving and Printing. Issued in exchange for funds held by Federal reserve. That is, Federal Reserve exchange real electronic money for real paper money.

      Summary: every thing you say completely wrong. Even stone age caveman have better understanding of money than a whoabot. Thank you.

    168. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
      I am amazed at how all you Bush haters conveniently forget about 9/11 when you cite 'examples' of how Bush has (fill in favorite grip here).


      If, in response to the destruction of the south end of Manhatten, he had used a dozen or so Cruise Missles to destroy another asprin factory, or an abandon terrorist training camp, like Clinton did, you'd be happy as clams.... until the center of your town got destroyed. Then, you'd be screaming your rear-end off, which is where most of your noise comes from anyway, claiming Bush is a coward or he doesn't care about the 'poor' or the 'inner city' folk.


      The arrogance of the Left is an amazing thing to watch. It is almost as astounding as their 'research' or their 'collective' memories, but not nearly as brazen as their re-writes of history.

    169. Re:I couldn't agree more by tommy_teardrop · · Score: 2, Informative

      While I agree with you that the next big target should be Mars, since that is the more interesting place in terms of scientific questions like the origins of life, but the Moon has a lot going for it too.

      The Moon would make a perfect base for a suite of telescopes. The dark side is the best location in the solar system (planet-side or in orbit) for radar telescopes. Both optical and infrared telescopes would also be well served by the location, with a combination of both very clear conditions, and a solid structure from which to build. The very low gravity means that you can build structures that would be completely unstable on either Earth or Mars. Mars has massive dust storms that makes the planet a far less useful observing platform.

      There is also a significant advantage in travelling to both Mars and the Moon for geological investigation. Mars has lost of erosion and possible life, but the Moon is a pure surface, recording the past right back to the earliest history.

      Not only does this give you a lot of information on the Earth-Moon system, but it also means you could use the subsurface in the same way that the ice cores from Arctic are used to measure the atmosphere back into the past, to record the history of the Solar wind back billions of years.

      There are lots of reasons to send people to the Moon, and to establish a permanent base there; it needn't be Mars or nothing.

      --
      -- IANAL, BIPOOTV
    170. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The United States produces about 25% of the worlds goods and services with that 5% of the world population. You can be damn sure that would be missed.

      The net trade deficit means that there is a corresponding inflow of foreign capital into the US. There isn't any magic way that US consumers persuade foreigners to send goods for free. Many investors overseas find no better place to put their money than the US economy through stocks and bonds. I'm sure they would be disappointed were the US to disappear. Sure, they can invest in China, but how stable is that system going to be over the next hundred years? You think China's overburdened, non-transparent banking system will really support the development of China into a modern Western-style economy? How sure are you really? Or would you like to invest in such underperforming economies as Japan and Germany?

      Comments like yours that indicate the need for better education on basic economic issues.

    171. Re:I couldn't agree more by ajax0187 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      When the stock exchange crashed in 1929, the United States' economy collapsed. It also dragged down with it the rest of the world, plunging most countries into a decade-long depression. Yes, the US only has a small percentage of the world's population, but we have a MASSIVE influence on world trade, world production and world consumption. If we go into a depression, we stop buying other countries' products. Sure, they can sell their stuff to other countries, but they sure as hell won't make as much money doing it. And if the countries need that level of money, they're going to be in trouble. Yes, they may just get off with a really tight budget, but there will be a few countries that will go down with us. And those countries will take down other countries, which will take down other countries, etc.

      --
      "By and large, language is a tool for concealing the truth." - George Carlin
    172. Re:I couldn't agree more by demaria · · Score: 1

      Will you please stop talking without reading? Quit while you're behind. I said my rate went down from 28 to 25 percent for several years. I said the rebate was not a one time thing. That was my point - that the $300 rebate was not a one time thing. I didn't say my rate went down *only due* to the rebate. Guess what - when the rebates were issued, my tax bracket was at that time 27.5%! It was in 2002 or 2003 when they accelerated the tax cuts it went to 25%. Didn't know that either?

      This isn't a right vs left wing thing buddy. Get out a year 2000 tax table and a year 2003 table. Look up the same income level. 2003 is lower.

    173. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Everything would just be peachy if President Gore was in office. There would've been no 9/11 attacks

      Yes, that's one theory about the 11/9 "attacks", certainly.

    174. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Gore was obviously the one who knew what he was doing
      And he even invented the internet!!
      Rumor has it, he could spell potato correctly, but no one asked him.

      If he were president now, we'd have already caved in to the terrorists and be sending them gobs of money with a post it note that says:

      Please don't hurt us anymore. We'll do whatever you want.

      Love in Allah,
      Little Al

    175. Re:I couldn't agree more by dalutong · · Score: 1

      Interesting. I had the opposite experience.

      I have met former President George Bush, the current President Bush, Clinton and his family twice, Gore, and several other politicians who were in the White House (Powell, etc.)

      President Bush struck me too. Though he did not come as being literate, considerate, or lucid. No, he was not a FOOL, but he did not impress me. When he spoke about topics of his own interest he was comprehensible, but when the questions strayed away from what he was comfortable with he seemed much less knowledgable.

      I am a moderate liberal, so I had known when he entered the room that I would not agree with his policies. His father was a Republican as well, however, and I did get the same feeling from him.

      I grew up in China and in other countries around the world, so I don't have the same "ah -- a good ol' American" feeling about him that some seem to have. My upbringing has also given me a better understanding of how the rest of the world sees us, however. Many foreign cultures base their measures of people on how respectful they are. I get not get the feeling that he was a very respectful person.

      Maybe his condescention grew while he was in office.

      --

      What comes first, finding a teacher or becoming a student?
    176. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's amazing how something like returning to space turns into the threads I've read here. Leave the politics for the other sites.

    177. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Oh puh-lease! Get over yourself. The US is roughly 5% of the world's population. I think the world would manage without you. You grossly overestimate your own importance on the world economic scale.

      I think you underestimate the connectedness of the world economy. Any time even slightly negative news comes out of an industrial power shockwaves are felt throughout the world economic system. If *any* major economic power (US, Japan, Germany, UK, etc.) collapsed overnight there would be *dire* circumstances for the world economy. If 33% (the US) 10% (Japan) or 5% (Germany/UK) of the world's GDP disappeared overnight you would see a dramatic shift in the outlook of the world economy very quickly.

      The US carries a net trade deficit, meaning you consume more than you produce. You import more than you export. Meaning if you disappeared, it's not like the rest of the world would have to do without your excess production - rather, there'd simply be a few less guys consuming everyone else's products. Prices would drop a little worldwide, then settle again. Life would go on.

      This is an exremely gross over simplification of a very complex economy and also extremely wrong. Because a country is a net importer of goods does not mean that they aren't a net exporter in other important areas?

      Also, by the very definition of being such a large net importer the US consumes goods that others produce (at the rate of $450B USD/year). This means that if any large net importer of good disappeared overnight the exporting countries would be forced do decrease production. Employers would be forced to lay off some of their workforce increasing unemployment, decreasing demand for goods in their own country.

      I'm not even getting into all the foreign capital invested in the US that would disappear if the US were to go away as some would wish.

      It's comments like yours that are the reason the world calls the US "arrogant."

      Please do try to look at things a little more balanced. If any major power collapsed rapdily it would be utter chaos for the rest of the world's economies.

    178. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      But Bush definately can win a room.

      So, apparently, could Adolph Hitler.

    179. Re:I couldn't agree more by Kombat · · Score: 1

      in 1929, the United States' economy collapsed. It also dragged down with it the rest of the world

      Newsflash: This ain't 1929 anymore. The rest of the world hasn't sat idle for the last 3/4 of a century. Things have changed a little in the past 74 years.

      If we go into a depression, we stop buying other countries' products.

      Like I said, prices would drop a little, then stabilize.

      Sure, they can sell their stuff to other countries, but they sure as hell won't make as much money doing it.

      Of course not. But they won't be thrown into "economic chaos and ruin," either. They'll simply make a little less.

      --
      Like woodworking? Build your own picture frames.
    180. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I guess the dead Jews who were killed by Palestinian terrorists publicly bankrolled by Saddam don't count in your eyes.

      How about the dead Brits who were killed by Irish terrorists publicly bankrolled by Americans?

    181. Re:I couldn't agree more by CrazyTalk · · Score: 1

      Plus, it would leave us with a place to store out nuclear waste. I just hope there is not a large explosion and the moon leaves orbit. Oh wait, that was back in 1999...

    182. Re:I couldn't agree more by 0123456 · · Score: 1

      "you know what. pick a side. islam or the USA"

      Why should I? I have no quarrel with Arabs in the Middle East: they don't interfere with my life on a daily basis, unlike the US government with its fascist policies.

      "because you know, islam will eventually kill YOU"

      I have several Muslim friends, and you know what? Not once has any one of them tried to kill me... unlike trigger-happy Americans.

      "its the best line ive ever seen drawn in the sand. its even better than the USA vs. the USSR."

      Line up folks for the great new sensation: 'Cold War II: US vs Arabs with AKs, RPGs and box-cutters'!

      Yawn. It's just another tired remake, a lame excuse to funnel trillions of dollars from hard-working taxpayers to the military-industrial-media complex. Screw that.

    183. Re:I couldn't agree more by drakaan · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Maybe "ruin and chaos" is a bit exagerrated (maybe not), but you're missing the point...the US's population is not the factor that makes the impact. What would make the impact is the rate of consumption here, and many countries know this...it's the reason that the WTO recently had to rule against US steel tarrifs...they were hurting other countries.

      To say "if you disappeared...there'd simply be a few less guys consuming everyone else's products." is quite possibly the largest world-economics-related understatement I've ever heard. Most Americans are workaholics and rampant conspicuous consumers, and as such get advertised to and marketed to by companies from every corner of the world. This, among other things, generates the huge trade defecits you refer to.

      We (the US) *are* arrogant, the issue is whether (for a given issue) we are deservedly so.

      --
      "Murphy was an optimist" - O'Toole's commentary on Murphy's Law
    184. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      grew up in China and in other countries around the world, so I don't have the same "ah -- a good ol' American" feeling about him ..*snip*...I get not get the feeling that he was a very respectful person.

      I get the feeling you have not been studying your engrish well my boy. The sad part about America is that they let people like you vote.

    185. Re:I couldn't agree more by Skald · · Score: 1
      If Japanese (who is the largest majority foreign owner of US debt), and a bunch of other foreign investors asked for their money back, USA will collapse overnight.


      No, it certainly wouldn't. First, not all debt can be called in at once; in fact, a lot of it can't at any given time. Nor, by the way, can most of it be paid at any given time, even if that were desired. Other forms of debt have early redemption penalties; assuming a great many Japanese investors simultaneously lost all confidence in their US Savings Bonds, they could indeed cash them, but they'd lose a significant amount of the interest calculated as part of our debt.


      Second, why would the US choose to collapse over this? While the US government has never defaulted on a loan before, other governments certainly have, without collapsing. And defaulting certainly isn't the only option; the US could try to call in debt from other countries (of which there's quite a lot), or it could, in part or in whole, monetize the debt (ie. print more money).


      Now, while these options all range from serious to dire, they're still far short of the collapse of the government.


      Unlike the olden (is this even a word? :) ) days, the govt cannot give you anything of value for your money. Modern currencies are nothing more than paper with some trust attached to it. Once you lose the trust, it is worth nothing.


      This is a half truth. Yes, people's confidence is basic to the value of money. But it always has been. There never were olden days where currency was backed on a 1:1 basis with physical commodities (though there were very (bad) olden days where physical commodities were used for currency). Even Great Britain, in the heyday of the gold standard, held a small amount of gold in reserve, relative to the currency it issued. Which means that if investor confidence failed, there could be a run on the banks.


      In short, credit is a necessary part of a modern economy. Digging up gold over here, only to bury it again in vaults over there, and restricting the money supply to the amount that you've managed to dig, is just a bad idea. As is pinning your currency to the questionable worth of a particular metal.

      --

      "The best we can hope for concerning the people at large is that they be properly armed." - Alexander Hamilton

    186. Re:I couldn't agree more by Uncle+Joe+Steel · · Score: 1

      Checking up a bit I noticed that the Guadalcanal offensive predates Operation Torch by 3 months (7 August 1942 vs 8 November 1942). So our first offensive of the war was against the Japanese.

    187. Re:I couldn't agree more by Jaysyn · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I like selling plasma too.

      Jaysyn

      --
      There is a war going on for your mind.
    188. Re:I couldn't agree more by NewWaveNet · · Score: 1

      Wait 10 years...when the law automatically goes back to the way it was.

    189. Re:I couldn't agree more by NewWaveNet · · Score: 1

      Clinton doesn't affect rate interest rate, that's the Fed's job...which you may note is totally indepenendt from either party's control. Clinton's policies had little to do with the size of the buble or its' velocity.

    190. Re:I couldn't agree more by ckaminski · · Score: 1

      And who's going to buy all your Nike shoes and Gap clothing?

      Just look at what the fall of the Nikkei the dot.Bomb crash and German instability have done to world markets. Now extrapolate that down to COMPLETE and UTTER economic destruction in either of said countries.

      You'd have lots of short-term financial ruin (except the top 1% money makers, who'd actually make money off the whole deal!)...

    191. Re:I couldn't agree more by simcop2387 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      At any rate, I'd love for Bush to announce that the US is going back ASAP. I'd want them to be there by 2010 at the latest and this time I want a promise that they're not leaving. Ever.

      i'd love for him to say that we are going back and leaving him there with no air.

    192. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The whole damn manned space program is a relic of the cold war. Get rid of it. Research un-manned vehicles if we need to find out what's out there. Gotta disagree with the Pres on this one.

    193. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The debt won't matter. Once the crusade to legalize mental illness is complete, all the wealthy homosexuals will happily spend their cash to purchase all the new items that feature gay couples in advertising blitzes. The influx of spending will reverse the debt.

      Their sodomy money will save America! Rainbows and pink triangles for everyone!

    194. Re:I couldn't agree more by Exidor · · Score: 1

      Especially if we sent Bush there!

    195. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      There is a reason folks in Texas called him "All hat, no cattle"

      Funny, I've lived in Texas since 1984 and most folks I know called Bush "A welcome relief from Anne Richards."

      Anonymous Kev
      Proudly posting as AC since 1997

    196. Re:I couldn't agree more by Yanray · · Score: 1

      I despise the way most people look at the federal budget like they would thier own check books. Companies/Organizations of all kinds keep debt. The fact that the US government is able and does keep a large amount of debt ($23,646 per US citizen) is actually quite reasonable. This is offset by assets that the US government controls. Just like any company or organization around the world. Show me a company/org/state that does not have debt and I'll show you a company/org/state that is not fully exploiting its' full potential as an org. entity. I for one fear the day we decide to pay down the national debt.

      However, the real question on the table is the current budgets allocation of resources to science vs. military/humanitarian/relief/rebuilding other nations spending.

      I have to agree that the return that the US will see on Applied Technology Projects (Fusion Reactor, Moon base, Micro-gravity manufacturing and 0-G Material Sciences, Robotics (AI), Super computing) is much higher then any of this humanitarian based nation building.

      Flame on....

      --
      --"Sorry for the inconvience." Gods Last Words to his Creation
      DNA, So Long and Thanks for all the Fish
    197. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      bible bangers, they're all alike, trust none of them

      Like homosexuals? Like Jews?

      Is there anyone else you'd like to paint with the broad brush of prejudice?

    198. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How would money made by private or government concerns on the moon be turned into increased income for the middle class?

      You'd have to have some kind of MASSIVE new welfare program for the middle class in order to start writing 60K checks to every citizen. This is less likely than a manned Jupiter mission before 2010.

    199. Re:I couldn't agree more by laird · · Score: 1

      "The budget was never "balanced" while Clinton was in office: every single year that national debt was at least hundred billion dollars higher at the end of the year than the start."

      According to Reuters and the Congressional Budget Office, you're wrong.

      Please go look at justinspoliticaljournal.cafeprogressive.com/4239a6 00.jpg. I'd embed the graphic here for reference, but /. doesn't allow that, so you'll have to copy/paste the URL, sorry.

      Just in case you're having trouble reading the graph, the red parts are deficit spending, and the blue bits (Johnson's last year, Clinton's last four years) are budget surplusses.

      Imagine how much better off those numbers would look if they weren't dragged down by the interest on the trillions of dollars of debt we inherited from the "borrow and spend" republicans...

    200. Re:I couldn't agree more by shpoffo · · Score: 1

      Sounds like a bunch of people pretending they can own anything..... All of this can be taken back to allodial land rights, fees, and soverign power. It's all imaginary - based on bully tactics and fear. Look into the Hopi water rights case for more along this line.

      Example: I give you a gold nugget and make you believe that I still own it. You feel you have to give it back to me because you're afraid that if you don't I'll beat you up. You delude yourself into believing that when you give me back your (my) gold nugget, you have to give me something else as well. This means that you have to make a claim over something else you didn't own (another natural resource) - which makes you feel powerful. (let alone the degerate loop that occurs when you vicariously enjoy the feeling I get when beating you up in the same way that you beat up others!)

      Perhaps this starts with 'Gift Law,' which is an arcane and archaic topic for any culture. My thought is is partial inspired by "OOGG the Caveman" in this comment graph.

      Lets go back to a time when we don't this language, we just have human-type creatures roaming about eating the reserves of nature and such. I pluck a fruit from a tree and eat it. Seems like a good thing, all the other creatures do it.

      One day I see another creature that looks like me, but it is weak and thin. I know that once I didn't eat food for a very long time and I got like that. I give it some of the food that I have in my hand. Later I see the same creature again and it is healthy and has gathered much food. If that creature gives some of its food to me then a precedent is set. Even if it doesn't, we both hold the memory of the time I gave it food. Am I responsible for, or involved in, the presence of all of that food?

      Perhaps building from there, perhaps not; I know how to find feathers that are different from those where I normally roam. No other creature seems to have these feathers. I give some of these feathers to another creatuere, and it puts them in its hair. Lots of other creatures now come around this one, and it leads them in finding food and doing other things. But the feathers begin to fade and weather, and when that happens the other creatures stop following that one. Does it go with that? Does it come back to me again? Do I give it more feathers? What if it brings food with it? What if it threatens me with injury to give it more feathers, or brings other creatures with it to threaten me. Maybe they don't realize I give the other one the feathers.

      Does any of the creatures own the feathers? Anyone could walk far and wide enough to find them - does anyone control them? If I give feathers to another can I take them back? If another walks around with feathers in their hair all the time, can they take feathers from another who has feathers by the area where it sleeps?

      And what about the bird who grew the feathers from its body?

      At some point we can ask "why do feathers grow?" and stir up the big pitch pots, but for the moment we're still talking about where resources come from, how do we make others believe they own them, and how we represent those resources (water, oil) with other resources (paper) by proxy.

      All of this also have tie-ins to other recent news stories about people claiming ownership of land on the moon, and trying to sell that 'property.' Can people actually own anything? What makes us think we can - the fact that we can hold it? point to it? describe it in more detail than anyone or anything else? Does a trout know more about water than we do? It can swim upstream and up waterfalls 'against' the energy of gravity and the current with less mechanical energy then our physics ascribes to it. If the trout know more than we do about water - do they own water?

      -shpoffo

    201. Re:I couldn't agree more by Eccles · · Score: 1

      Debt? there ain't no debt.

      Sure there is, it's just a question of from who to who.

      Most public U.S. debt is owned by private U.S. individuals. People with money loan it to the government in return for t-bill/treasury bond interest.

      The debt "servicing" -- interest on the debt -- is paid out of taxes.

      Now borrowing, like most other things, obeys the laws of supply and demand. The more that is being borrowed (more demand), the higher the payment (interest) for that borrowing. So deficits and debt are good for people with money, as they can make more money from that money. That money comes (mostly) from people who are working, and paying taxes on their salary. So debt serves as a transfer mechanism of money to people who already have money to people who haven't.

      If you turn 18 and get your first job, you're paying taxes, a significant percentage of which is paying interest on debt accumulated before you were even born. Money is being transferred from you to the people who loaned money to the gov't.

      --
      Ooh, a sarcasm detector. Oh, that's a real useful invention.
    202. Re:I couldn't agree more by supabeast! · · Score: 1

      "Mars probably has enough resources that a viable, self sustaining colony can be placed there and it will be a nicer place to live than the moon, especially if you start terraforming."

      We cannot do that without a better understanding of the long-term affects of space travel on the human body. Astronauts who spent a lot of time at the ISS suffer horrible physical atrophy, and a trip to Mars would have similar effects, and then at the end, the humans would not be returning to the Earth that their bodies are meant for, so the atrophy would continue in Mars' lower gravity. The long term effects could very well be deadly, and even if not, the people on Mars would never be able to return to Earth. The effects on children born there are entirely unknown.

      This is why we need to start with the moon. We have to learn somewhere close to home.

    203. Re:I couldn't agree more by AKAImBatman · · Score: 1

      No problem! You can take a nuclear generator with you and crack the Iron Oxide to produce oxygen! See? No problem. :-D

      (Yes, I'm being a smart-ass. Deal with it.)

    204. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Vichy Government was legit enough to the French soldiers who fought for it in the 40's. They were there, they were Frenchmen, and they believed in it enough to die for it. So who is revising history?

    205. Re:I couldn't agree more by Luscious868 · · Score: 1
      Gore was obviously the one who knew what he was doing.

      Ah, but was it really so obvious? I voted for Gore and I don't particularly like Bush, but Gore was not "obviously" the best man for the job. The race was just about 50 / 50. If what you stated above was so obvious, Gore would have been elected by a land slide. He was not. Given the almsot 50 / 50 result, it's obvious that the "man who clearly knew what he was doing" was, in fact, not so obvious.

      Obvious (from dictionary.com):

      1. Easily perceived or understood; quite apparent. See Synonyms at apparent.

      2. Easily seen through because of a lack of subtlety; transparent.p>

      If Gore was in the best man for the job, then that fact wasn't "easily perceived or understood" by the voters, which means that it certainly wasn't obvious. You see while Gore was vice president, Bush served as govenor. Many governors throughout the course of US history have successfully made the jump from govenor to president. The President and a govenor are both executives, thus experience running a state can help you if you get elected and must run the country. Which means both men, probably had a rough idea of what they were doing. That fact, was obviously reflected by the 50 / 50 result.

    206. Re:I couldn't agree more by simcop2387 · · Score: 1

      somehow i don't doubt that bush would be able to get one up there

    207. Re:I couldn't agree more by AKAImBatman · · Score: 1

      Really? Last I checked, there were several already there. Sure, that pesky scientific equipment wouldn't run anymore, but when compared to breathing...

    208. Re:I couldn't agree more by saden1 · · Score: 1

      Tried a credit union lately? They charge just as much as the Banks.

      --

      -----
      One is born into aristocracy, but mediocrity can only be achieved through hard work.
    209. Re:I couldn't agree more by demachina · · Score: 1

      "We cannot do that without a better understanding of the long-term affects of space travel"

      That premise is part of the same bullshit used to justify ISS and avoid doing anything for 30 years. The whole point of a fast one way trip to Mars is to minimize time in zero G and exposure to radiation, at least its a lot less than a round trip. We have all the info we need to know what the effects of zero G will be for that time period though it would be nice if the Mars passenger ship used centrifuge to generate 1/3 G to acclimate the crew for Mars. What we really need to know is what life will be like in 1/3g on Mars. Chances are it will be less bad than zero G on the ISS or the miniscule G on the Moon.

      Sitting in the ISS does very little to get us to Mars. Sitting on the Moon might be a beneficial starting point. The problem is the Moon is not very much like Mars at all and you run the risk of pouring a bunch of money in it, it proves to be uninteresting, people get tired of it and you never get to the thing that has a point which is to put people on Mars permenently.

      Build big, fast specraft, presumably nuclear powered and start sending cargo to Mars. As soon as the cargo ships start getting there safely and routinely, and there is a pool of essential resources send some real adventurers. It will capture the imagination of the world.

      --
      @de_machina
    210. Re:I couldn't agree more by tkg · · Score: 1

      To me, Man's greatest technological achievement is the ability to leave his planet.

      The techological advancements are a great side effect of the space race, but the real motivating factor has always been military/strategic. The US hasn't been back before now because the Soviet Union could't afford to pursue it so the US lost its main motivation. Now, with China showing an interest in the moon, the US sees a strategic motivation for returning.

    211. Re:I couldn't agree more by Zoshnell · · Score: 1

      And if we do then 5 kids will get uber mobile suits and constantly change sides in a confusing manner to save us from THE TERRIBLE SECRETS OF SPACE! At least thats how it appeared to me.

      --
      "Do you suppose that's why God lives in the Heavens? Because he lives in fear of His creations?" - Steve Buscemi
    212. Re:I couldn't agree more by demachina · · Score: 1

      The search for life, geology and telescopes are only going to excite scientists. Maybe if you actually found life that would be exciting to people in general but odds are against you and if you do find life in our solar system chances are it will be microbes. We spend way to much attention on the search for life to the detriment of doing something that has a certainty of making a difference.

      Building a colony on Mars produces real, tangible results. It expands our biosphere and gives humanity a fallback biosphere if we trash ours or an asteroid does it for us. Get a colony on Mars and you can do all the science you want but you can also build cities, mine resources, terraform and do something that means something long term.

      Chances are the space program will push the technology envelope again if we have to solve real problems on Mars, for example learning to live without fossil fuels.

      --
      @de_machina
    213. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      how does knowing the country is going to shit imply that he knows which stocks are going to hit the shitter?

      YOU ARE SO FUCKING SMART

    214. Re:I couldn't agree more by demachina · · Score: 1

      This is already done to an extent though the loans are generally a privledge reserved for large corporations. For example some of the pork in the energy bill that just went down in flames was a huge interest free loan to some lucky company(think Bechtel or Halliburton though I don't recall for sure) to build the missing pieces of a gas pipeline from Alaska to Chicago. Some lucky company would get free money to build something they would profit from greatly over the years with very little risk.

      So the non profit you are refering to is Congress though they do profit it from it in campaign contributions and they wont get carried away doing it because it would piss of Wall Street which also tends to have massive influence in congress and the white house.

      --
      @de_machina
    215. Re:I couldn't agree more by c1pher · · Score: 1

      and BY the people :-)

      --
      The Adult Happy Meal - "I'm lovin' it!"
    216. Re:I couldn't agree more by Shadowlore · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure "regolith resistant" spacesuits aren't a big problem, regardless.

      They are. They weigh more, and weight is a HUGE factor in getting out of the gravity well we call Earth.

      Honestly, what is under the surface isn't that interesting until we develop better fusion capabilities.

      --
      My Suburban burns less gasoline than your Prius.
    217. Re:I couldn't agree more by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "Most Americans are workaholics and rampant conspicuous consumers,"

      Yup....I think that the typical US worker, on average, only takes like 2 weeks (10 work days) per year off as vacation. I hear in Europe, that ya'll get like a month of vacation time. Is this true? I get 3 weeks a year, but, that is combo sick time and vacation time...so, I hope not to get ill, so I can take some time off here and there throughout the year.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    218. Re:I couldn't agree more by What42 · · Score: 1

      This would be the best solution for getting things into orbit. Would be expensive initially but wouldn't require heavy rocket fuel to get things into leo.

      --
      "Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former." -Albert Einstein
    219. Re:I couldn't agree more by willtsmith · · Score: 1

      No ... They rob the poor (all of them collectively) to pay the Rich. At least the theives in jail concentrate on stealing from the rich one by one.

      The most profound forms of theivery are the legal variety.

      You go Bill Mar. I hope to see a second season of Real Time.

      --
      -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!
    220. Re:I couldn't agree more by willtsmith · · Score: 1

      Not in my experience. They're the ones that only charge .50 per transaction on their machines. Checking and savings are FREE. Interest on both are higher.

      There is a simple reason. The members of the Credit Union collectively OWN the Credit Union. Depositing to a credit union means buying shares. When there is more money left over, it goes back to the shareholders ... YOU.

      --
      -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!
    221. Re:I couldn't agree more by willtsmith · · Score: 1

      I would love for Bush to announce this as well. It will show him as being the absolute waster of money once and for all. Everyone will have a field day with him.

      Don't expect his congressional delegation to go along with this nonsense. They are nervous enough already with the Billions spent on Iraq.

      --
      -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!
    222. Re:I couldn't agree more by assaultriflesforfree · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, but spending money on the military is one of the least efficient ways to help the economy. Anyone who claims it's a good way to do it has a distorted idea that supply-side economics wasn't a lie. The idea is this (and it works the same for space): To build a bomb, you pay a company a lot of money. The vast majority of that money goes to the higher ups of the company, who are already rich. Then, you blow up the bomb. It's gone... wasted, and you have no real investment. Highways are a bit different, as you haven't blown up the highway at the end of it. Still, you have to take into account that they largely act as a subsidy for oil companies and companies that make their money transporting things... They're definitely not intended to help the poor. Anyhow, with NASA, you just spend that money on giant rockets instead of bombs, and then waste the rockets. Same thing.

      The basic point is that Bush has done nothing more than repeat Reagan thus far, whose policy was one of going out into the world and looking for conflict after conflict in order to spend billions and billions on the military... Latin America, Syria, all of these places. They call it Keynesian economics. Coupled with massive deficit spending, these policies effectively transfer huge amounts of money from the poor to the rich and make sure that the government doesn't have enough money for social programs anytime in the near future.

      Again, maybe in the long-run, space expenditures will benefit the poor. However, these arguments don't seem valid. I sincerely doubt that Bush is aiming to invent the next small computer (which have in fact helped the rich much much more than they've helped the poor).

      I'm surprised that Slashdot would moderate me a troll for proposing such a concept. It seems that people are taking my words to mean that I think space exploration is a bad idea... Come on, I'm a physicist. I'd really like to see this at a more responsible time (i.e. we have money to spend on education and a bunch extra............ ok, now let's go to the moon). Proposing this now, with the economy in its current state, is just a display of utter contempt for the vast majority of Americans. I love space. I don't really think that Bush is suddenly doing this because he loves space, however. That doesn't make sense. What does make sense is that he doesn't have a country to bomb at the moment, and this is the next best option to giving your money to Boeing and then blowing up the product.

    223. Re:I couldn't agree more by What42 · · Score: 1

      "So debt serves as a transfer mechanism of money to people who already have money to people who haven't." seems to have a serious flaw in the logic of it. You are completely ignoring the fact that the people that pay most of the taxes are the people that make more money. Poor people pay almost zero income tax if they pay any. The current system is very unfair as the people that pay the least taxes get the most government benefits and those that pay more taxes get less benefits. We need to move away from a welfare state and back towards what the constitution says our country should be.

      --
      "Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former." -Albert Einstein
    224. Re:I couldn't agree more by QuackQuack · · Score: 1
      Actually, Bush inherited a nicely balanced budget (indeed, in the surplus) and an economy so hopeful

      Well, when the market and the economy tanks it drags tax revenues down with it. Most economists believe that running a deficiet during a recession is not a bad thing because of the stimulative effects.

      that one of Bush's campaign ideas (thankfully swept under the rug) was to make Social Security based on the stock market (incidentally an idea that Clinton, Gore, and anyone with a fiscal brain said was a *BAD* idea).

      As if the current system where current workers pay current retirees is a GOOD idea fiscally. Everyone knows it's going to become insolvent when boomers retire en masse

      But the fact is that by this time 2001 (2002 at the latest) the economy should have corrected and been back to a more stable state.

      The recession ended in 2001, growth since was sub-par for a number of reasons.

      Instead, because Junior wants to run apeshit through the world like some coked up playboy, we are grasping for economic straws during a time of incredible unemployment.

      Incredible unemployment? Hardly! Things were worse in the previous two recessions. Grasping at economic straws? Bush did all the right things to stimulate the economy:

      1. Low Interest rates (well thanks to Greenspan, who is theoretically outside Bush's influence)
      2. Tax Cuts
      3. Deficeit spending
      4. Allow dollar to weaken to boost exports
      --
      By reading this sig, you agree to the terms of my sig license.
    225. Re:I couldn't agree more by WaxParadigm · · Score: 1

      I think you've got the wrong picture of me. EIB network? I didn't know what that was - had to go look it up. Am I going to get addicted to pain killers? Not likely, I've got more of a sense of personal responsibility than that. (I'm not a Rush sympathizer - He is no more a victim than a burgler who gets shot breaking into someone's home - he brought it on himself through personal decisions in which he was too stupid/weak-willed to make a good decision.)

      I'm also not a die-hard Republican-or-Bush-no-matter-what kind of guy. I'm for smaller government, much lower taxes, civil rights, etc. You bet it pisses me off to see bills like the Pariot Act (clinton also did his share of power grabbing), Bush increasing social welfare programs instead of killing them (dems would do more of this), spending too much money, supporting the assault weapons ban (dems would do this), etc.

      I admit I still think this is better than what we'd have with Gore in office ... and I don't see a better replacement in the democratic candidates currently looking to sit in the oval office...but it's not because I pull a blanket over my eyes or tote a part line. I guess my tiff with Bush is that he's not as convicted as I expected him to be on certain things (named above) - and on those things he's hard to differentiate from democrats (who I disagree with on a lot more issues).

    226. Re:I couldn't agree more by willtsmith · · Score: 0, Troll

      The problems in those countries were caused by the US. The problem is the precarious nature of their semi-democratic societies.

      If the US was cut off from the world economy, we would be much better off. We would experience immediate inflation. But, we would also experience 100% employment.

      A strong democracy and vast resources of the US produced our wealth and prosperity. That democracy created levels of wealth equality unparallelled in near history. That is what creates prosperity.

      The system falls apart when wealth distribution becomes too schewed. The wealthy make investments for the sake of greed. When there is no potential return on investment, they will stop investing.

      In other words, when people are too poor to buy stuff, factories close. Put another way, when the rich have all the money, they needen't bother with the poor anymore. The supply for labor far outstrips the demand. The price of labor plummets. Less consumption follows and the cycle ends in a devastating depression.

      This is the lesson of the 1930s. The speculation and money traders certainly helped things along. However, the vast concentrations of wealth was the true cause of the problem. The super-wealthy already had most of the money. What could possibly be gained from investing?????

      This is what supply side econ leads to. It did so in the early part of this century. It is leading us their right now. We are bartering away are freedoms through WTO and NAFTA. We are spiralling back towards the bottom as wages fall. We are sending are machining equipment overseas to China.

      This of course is the dream of the supply siders. No longer can our democracy save us when our country is dependent for basic necessities from overseas dictators (China). The Newer New Deal won't help us when are defense intrests are heavily sub-contracted in China.

      When mega corporations hold all the cards, including democratic institutions, depression will be perpetual. Autocracy will reign.

      Thats just the way the Bushies would like it.

      --
      -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!
    227. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      uhm, i think what that really means is that it will make a few people A LOT richer, and maybe everyone else a tiny bit richer, if anything.

      there'll just be a bigger gap between the rich and the poor.

    228. Re:I couldn't agree more by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 1
      Yes.

      And cutting the funding and entitlements for healthcare, pensions and educational oppportunities to enlisted and NCO ranks!

      --
      "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
      Never been known to fail..."
    229. Re:I couldn't agree more by QuackQuack · · Score: 1

      Good post.

      It never fails to amaze me, for how smart the geeks here are ./ are supposed to be, when it comes to politics, they turn into imbiciles. Logic and reason go right out the window. It's rare to find intelligent political posts, they just seem to regurgitate the nonsense in the latest Michael Moore book, or whatever.

      I'm not saying everyone needs to agree with Bush, but at least present substantitive reasons for disagreeing, not the easyily refuted popular crap that keeps getting spread around here.

      --
      By reading this sig, you agree to the terms of my sig license.
    230. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only to the French and other brainless simpering idiots.

    231. Re:I couldn't agree more by ahodgson · · Score: 1

      Ya, taking the first steps to secure the future of the human race. What a waste.

      Now, Iraq, that's a waste. Unless you want to secure your access to 25% of the world's oil (and be permanently be parked next door to another 50%).

    232. Re:I couldn't agree more by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 1
      Florida's electoral votes were pretty clearly stolen. If there weren't a legitimate dispute about that, it wouldn't have gone to the Supremes. The court defied precedent and ruled without Constitutional guidance.

      You are still free to choose between Pepsi and Coke at Wall*Mart, or even between Intel and AMD at Comp*USA. You are free to form opinions derived from mega-multi-national owned "media" outlets.

      I believe we are about 10 years from living in the exact society portrayed in the movie Brazil. No, this is not rhetorical excess.

      --
      "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
      Never been known to fail..."
    233. Re:I couldn't agree more by cowbutt · · Score: 1
      Please describe the world situation where it would be in Japan's interest for the USA to collapse overnight. Or Germany's interest, or the UK's interest. If the USA 'collapsed' the entire world would plunge into economic ruin and chaos. It ain't going to happen.

      They might want to trade in their stock of dollars for euros if oil becomes increasingly traded in euros, rather than US dollars. Of course, there will be a trade-off between that and the implications of the US economy collapsing, which each government will need to weigh up for itself.

      Interestingly, Iraq under Saddam Hussein started trading its oil in Euros since November 2002 (and they did very well - financially speaking - out of doing so, too!) Iran and Venezuela have also reportedly considered the possibility.

      --

    234. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You failed to mention that we could build the biggest solar power stations ever imagined, and use them to power the manufacturing and construction. For example, I'd imagine that an Earth-to-Mars ship could be assembled on the surface of Luna far easier than out in space. "Reduced gravity" is still easier to cope with than "tools floating off when dropped". It also prevents having the debris of construction (paint flecks and bits of metal spit off by welding) from producing navigational hazards.

    235. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mr. Troll, you may want to check YOUR facts, because the Federal Reserve IS most certainly owned by the member banks, and NOT by the U.S. government. From Fed website:

      "All member banks hold stock in Reserve Banks and receive dividends. Unlike stockholders in a public company, however, banks cannot sell or trade their Fed stock."

      http://www.kc.frb.org/fed101/structure/fedreserv e. cfm

    236. Re:I couldn't agree more by willtsmith · · Score: 2, Insightful

      We could build wind farms in the middle of Great Lakes and generate a LOT of power. We could build them off our coasts. The return on investment and time to return would outstrip anything that you could generate in the next 100 years for lunar energy production.

      Why don't we do this. Because there are large petro-gas energy concerns that don't want it done.

      Why would Bush go to the Moon for energy unless he was going to immediately privatize it for his buddies ;-)

      If there is money to made in space, private industry will go there all by themselves. The real welfare whores are giant corporations who want citizens to finance their operations for "our" good.

      --
      -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!
    237. Re:I couldn't agree more by willtsmith · · Score: 1

      There is also a significant advantage in travelling to both Mars and the Moon for geological investigation. Mars has lost of erosion and possible life, but the Moon is a pure surface, recording the past right back to the earliest history.

      Not only does this give you a lot of information on the Earth-Moon system, but it also means you could use the subsurface in the same way that the ice cores from Arctic are used to measure the atmosphere back into the past, to record the history of the Solar wind back billions of years.


      If you want a moon rock, send a robot to get it. It's WAY WAY cheaper and puts no astronaut in harms way.

      --
      -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!
    238. Re:I couldn't agree more by Tackhead · · Score: 1
      > Are you even still in the room? We totally forgot about Osama (a real live admitted terrorist)

      *blink*

      Does anyone but you think that piece of camel shit is still alive? I'm still sticking to my "Buried under tons of rubble the day we dropped three daisycutters in Afghanistan in late 2001".

      A transcript concerning a day on which one such weapon was dropped, reads as follows:

      Q: Mr. Secretary, the other day, the United States took the extraordinary step of dropping a daisy cutter somewhere up in Tora Bora. You folks apparently had a pretty good idea of where someone you thought was. Have you found intelligence to borne out (sic) your hunch?

      Rumsfeld: Well, there are not a lot of those, [daisycutters in the inventory] so they don't use them frivolously. There's no question that when that was used, I thought it was yesterday -- was it yesterday?

      [ ...discussion on "when"... ]

      Rumsfeld: Well, very recently. That they felt they had good reason to use it in that location. Yes.

      Myers: And --

      Q: Mr. Secretary --

      Myers: And I just -- let me just add, Mr. Secretary, it was effective. I mean, we've been on the ground and it had the desired effect.

      Q: Which was what? What was the desired effect?

      Q: Can you describe to us anecdotally what the --

      Myers: The desired effect was to kill al Qaeda.

      Q: What sort of results are you aware of? What did your people on the ground see?

      Myers: Dead al Qaeda.

      (Laughter.)

      It's convenient for foreign and domestic policy reasons to pretend the camelfucker's still alive, but if we 'adn't nailed 'im to the media, 'e'd be pushing up the daisy cutters. 'E's kicked the bucket, 'e's shuffled off 'is mortal coil, run down the curtain and joined the bleedin' choir invisible! OSAMA... *thump thump thump* ...IS AN EX-TERRORIST!

    239. Re:I couldn't agree more by willtsmith · · Score: 1

      WHY????

      Yeah, because it's there I know. But mountains are typically climbed by loner wackos. When the mission fails, it's of little consequence to a nation.

      If we spend 500 billion to go to Mars, it better be for a damn good reason. Thus far, I haven't seen a reason that outweigh issues of medicare, infrastructure, border security, bio-terrorism preparedness, etc...

      One day I agree, it will be a great adventure. But that is something for a healthy, content, prosperous society to pursue. It's something for a peaceful united democratic world to pursue. We should sort out issues here on earth before we go off and try to mess up some other planet.

      Beyond that, I'm still hooked on the Antarctica argument. Antarctica has vast resources and is habitable. It ain't that friendly, but it has air. No one has tried to colonize Antarctica. Why???? NO PROFIT, SHITTY standard of living.

      The cost to colonize Antarctica would be a fraction of what it would cost to colonize the moon. Yeah, I know there are treaties against it. But why do you think they signed those treaties in the first place?????

      Let the Chinese go and spend their gulag labor capital on a moon base. It is a total waste of resources. The only practical derivative will be better technology for ICBMs.

      --
      -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!
    240. Re:I couldn't agree more by willtsmith · · Score: 1

      Congress WITH HOLDS the purse. They allocate the money, they don't actually spend it. The spending is reserved for the various agencies headed by the administrative branch. So in some cases, Congress will allocate money for seomthing and the President will choose not to spend it.

      Beyond that, the GOP congress has been pretty good about rubber stamping President Bush's budget proposals.

      --
      -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!
    241. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Penguinshit wrote: one of Bush's campaign ideas (thankfully swept under the rug) was to make Social Security based on the stock market (incidentally an idea that Clinton, Gore, and anyone with a fiscal brain said was a *BAD* idea). In fact, as late as last year Bush still floated that Social-Security-based-on-stock-market balloon during a speech. There's a real fiscal genius running the White House... The bubble was sure to burst at some point.

      Actually, it was the Clinton adminstration that first suggested investing part of the Social Security Trust Fund into the stock market; he just wanted the investments to be controlled by the SSA. What Bush is suggesting is giving investment control to the workers themselves, but limiting them to three broad, index-based funds. This plan is nearly identical to the Federal Savings Program that government workers participate in. Furthermore, if people could have invested in a broad stock market index for 30 years, they *still* would have been better off with the "post-bubble-burst" investments than with Social Security. Check out this chart tracking the price of a S&P 500 tracking stock. It only shows 10 years, which hides a lot of S&P growth, but between 1994 and 2003 (the most recent bottom of the S&P), the price went from 45 to 75 (about a 5.25% compound annual growth rate). If you havn't paniced and stayed in the market you see that it's now at 105 (over 8.8% CAGR). **That** is why personal investment accounts is better than Social Security.

      Also check out the other briefing papers which show that personal investment accounts are also better for poor people, minorities, and women than Social Security.

    242. Re:I couldn't agree more by ElGanzoLoco · · Score: 1

      It's only a matter of time before the whole region is openly against us...

      No, this has happened already (typing this from Cairo, Egypt, so I kinda know what I'm talking about.).

      --
      Hello! I'm a disaster waiting to happen!
    243. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The budget has not been balanced for about 50 years. Good, bad, or indifferent, the definition of what compromises the national budget changed during the Clinton administration. In other words, the accounting practices changed so that not everything was rolled into the national budget. I don't know right off if Clinton was directly responsible for the legislation or just the Congress critters. Either way, he had to sign off on it. A somewhat outdated explaination is here http://home.hiwaay.net/~becraft/Surplus.htm. It is interesting to note there are Democrats and Republicans in on this scam.

    244. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not that it's any consolation, but many Americans are pissed about this Christian crusade as well. America is becoming a 'free to practice any religion as long as it's christianity, but we'll be tolerant of others if you force us' nation.

      And we're not particularly pleased with the way other nations view us as a result of Cowboy George. Too much time was spent building national relationships to piss it way on a Bush family grudge.

      Fine, Saddam needed to go. But since it wasn't done 10 years ago, couldn't it have waited until Afganistan was done and with a less destructive approach?

    245. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is this a troll?

      Today the banks borrow very little compared to what the fed borrows from the banks! Since the 60's (I am guessing more than your entire LIFE) the government borrows from the banks big time. The "fed's rate" today is the rate the government pays for what it borrows! They will "help out" a bank, if it needs a fast cash flow, at a slightly higher rate, but they usually pay back pretty fast (compared to the fed who needs to borrow to pay back, basicly never paying back).

      The debt is currently at 6,921,129,943,128$ ... well a lot more by the time you read this, check http://www.brillig.com/debt_clock/ for an exact number. It increases 2.12 Billions a DAY, yep with a B!

      Well that is still far from "owning the fed", but plenty to have some influence.

    246. Re:I couldn't agree more by BizDiz · · Score: 1

      Ask William Jennings Bryant about this.

    247. Re:I couldn't agree more by kannibal_klown · · Score: 1

      I personally think we need more wind-power... seriously. I think it's greatly efficient, probably more so than our current solar cells.

      However, one major thing about putting them on the coast... we'd have to keep rebuilding them. Not even taking into account the hurricanes and tropical storms, we'd lose a lot to heavy storms.

      I do like the Great Lakes idea/location though.

    248. Re:I couldn't agree more by willtsmith · · Score: 1

      White House officials do not deny that they craft elaborate events to showcase Bush, but they maintain that these events are designed to accurately dramatize his policies and to convey qualities about him that are real.

      "This was effective, because it captured something about the president that people know is true, that he really cares about the soldiers and gets emotional when he sees them," Mary Matalin, a former administration official, said about the trip to Baghdad. "You have to figure out how to capture the Bush we know, even if it doesn't come through in a speech situation or a press conference. He regularly rejects anything that is not him."


      I'll paraphrase. They stage events and make shit up to portray things the way they want you to see them. When Hitler and Stalin did that, they called it Propaganda. When Bush does it, it's just good PR. They have to overcome that "obvious" "liberal bias" in the media.

      Isn't it so ironic that it was President Clinton who was so often accused of "Wagging the Dog". It's even more ironic that the "liberal media" were the one's accusing him.

      --
      -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!
    249. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is unfair, but not quite in the manner you think.

      In the U.S. and Canada (not sure about the other countries, social geography isn't my best subject), poor people are given government benefits to "help them get on their feet" but it really encourages them to be lazy (do no work, get barely enough money to live on, why work?).

      The government(s) originally wanted to tax just the rich (in my opinion it's because the rich became rich by tricking or bullying people into giving them money/products/services). But the rich tend to love politics, so they convince the politicians to create "tax deduction laws" that basically say "anything I buy that helps my business grow is tax free"...thus is born the capitalist framework: the larger the cashflow of a company means the "healthier" the market of that country. So of course politicians are going to support that law, it helps the businesses grow and move more cash which "strengthens" the economy.

      Ok, so now the rich hide behind all the deductions. Their company buys the big mansion, the fancy car, the expensive toys, etc. and gets a tax break for doing so.

      So the government steps back and notices that their tax income is a little low, so they start lowering the tax bracket. Eventually, the bracket meets the middle class people, who are typically not so educated with money and don't know how to hide behind tax laws, so they pay through the nose.

      So, in reality the unfair part is the lack of support for the middle class. But don't worry, it won't last much longer, a year or two ago Bush noted how in debt the average (read as middle class) citizen is. Either the government helps them, or they will just get bumped to either poor (and not working) class or rich (and not hiding from taxes) class. At that point the capitalist model falls apart.

    250. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You actually hope for a bad US economy.

      A small price to pay for a hope of getting rid of Ashcroft. I'd honestly give up my life if I knew for a fact that doing so would forever get rid of the PATRIOT Act and the rider on the latest intelligence spending bill.

      Some of us are willing to bleed for our country, both physically and financially.

    251. Re:I couldn't agree more by fifedrum · · Score: 1

      well stated, AC, You can never go wrong reminding the left about the wonders of Reagan. It really makes them squirm.

    252. Re:I couldn't agree more by bckrispi · · Score: 1
      ...when it comes to politics, they turn into imbiciles. Logic and reason go right out the window.

      Perhaps that's because when it comes to politics, logic & reason go right out the window.

      --
      Xenon, where's my money? -Borno
    253. Re:I couldn't agree more by willtsmith · · Score: 1

      The Dutch currently have windfarms located out in the ocean. I know they don't have hurricanes there but they do experience some pretty brutal conditions.

      One Somehow I think they could create mechanisms that would survive the pounding. The directionless variety wouldn't torque in side winds. The would simply spin faster.

      --
      -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!
    254. Re:I couldn't agree more by willtsmith · · Score: 1

      Waste not, want not.

      If we reduce our demand for oil the Middle East and the whole issue in general becomes less relevant.

      Increase CAFE standards. Get all cars over 30MPH. This creates jobs and stops money flowing to Saudi Arabis who in turn fund Al-Queada.

      Of course the Bushies are pretty chummy with the Saudi royal family. They are also hold fortunes that are derived largely from oil. So they wouldn't ever want to decrease energy consumption.

      And please, don't give me any of that rugged individualism crap about the Bushies. They made their oil fortunes by drilling in Washington, not Texas.

      --
      -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!
    255. Re:I couldn't agree more by Eccles · · Score: 1

      You are completely ignoring the fact that the people that pay most of the taxes are the people that make more money.

      If you are retired and invest in non-taxable securities such as T-bills, you aren't paying a dime in federal income tax. But you still get all the benefits.

      The current system is very unfair as the people that pay the least taxes get the most government benefits and those that pay more taxes get less benefits.

      If it's so unfair, move. Otherwise, it's the "little" people who maintain this country in such a state that the rich can make money. A-Rod pays his agent a lot more than a first-year player pays his.

      We need to move away from a welfare state and back towards what the constitution says our country should be.

      Ah, like not having a standing army to the tune of $400 billion a year plus?

      --
      Ooh, a sarcasm detector. Oh, that's a real useful invention.
    256. Re:I couldn't agree more by sethstorm · · Score: 1

      And it didnt help from his Skull and Bones "immunities", something well entrenched in Bush - and something worth ripping right out of him. That's the "good ol' American" feeling you seem to be missing. You're not missing a thing by not having it .

      --
      Twitter supports and protects racists - by smearing their critics with the "Hate Speech" label.
    257. Re:I couldn't agree more by F34nor · · Score: 1

      1st Wind farms suck. They are expensive, inefficent , hard to maintain, they kill birds, and they are unslightly.

      2nd Wind power is a form of solar power so why bother letting the sun heat the air pressurie it and have it move when you can have the sun hiit a solar arry in space with no atmosphere and beam the power to earth using a phased arry microwave laser?

      3rd if you are really hooked on wind... wind farms are bad. Gyromills are good.
      Surface winds are slow and irregular, the jet stream is FAST and consistant.
      People worry about planes but that's what no fly zones are for. Plus they sit at 20,000 feet, far below the crusing altitude of commercial jets.

    258. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Troll...oh wait, you've already acknowledged that.

    259. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh come on now, don't be shy. Tell us how you REALLY feel.

    260. Re:I couldn't agree more by F34nor · · Score: 1

      This is why Qubec want to suceed from Canada. ~70% of money generated in Canada is in Qubec, and ~70% of that money comes from exporting power to the US from the Qubec Hydro. (These people have so much money they use areogel windows for insulation.)

      Also like Alaska, residents get a ~2000 check each year from the sale of oil.

      Same concept. If we get a moon or orbital solar farm going we can sell power to the rest of the world. Imagine wireless power anywhere in the world. All you need is a phased array dish attenna, and billing address.

    261. Re:I couldn't agree more by jafac · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Mars' atmosphere has all of the problems and none of the benefits of a REAL atmosphere.

      The only thing Mars' atmosphere is good for is saving propellant on aerobraking. Otherwise, it's only a hazard to incoming craft who have to deal with re-entry (or just plain entry). That's one problem that Mars has that the moon does not.

      It's not thick enough to be useful for aerodynamic lift for aircraft.
      It does not contain the elements necessary to sustain life.
      It does not protect against solar radiation.
      It does not maintain a temperature range necessary to sustain life.
      It gives adverse weather a medium to operate in (ie. massive dust-storms).
      It would interfere with the optimal function of an astronomical observatory.

      Mars would also not be an efficient location from which to utilize solar-power. It's not known whether Mars has sufficient Uranium deposits to sustain nuclear power, and burning fossil fuels is obviously right-out.

      Don't even get me started on the technical hurdles to getting people TO Mars. The best solution to THAT problem I've ever heard was the room full of scientists who all volunteered to happily take a one-way-trip. (hint: that's not a solution. that's a compromise).

      Finally - if we go to the Moon, we could always go to Mars later. The Moon is closer, more well-understood, and has clear benefits, both scientific, and economic. I mean, what the hell, why not Titan?

      - -
      Now, politically speaking, it's always amazed me at how schizophrenic space exploration. As far as political ideology goes.

      It always seems like it's the Right who end up giving real support to space exploration. The Left end up ignoring it usually. And apparently, it's the Right's penchant for Jingoism and Pissing Contests that make it happen.

      Because ideologically, Space Exploration goes against pretty much everything else the Right stands for:
      Religious sucking-up (Bible says the Earth is flat, and the moon is simply a light in the sky, God gave us the Earth, but didn't give us permission to have the Moon, and it's all science anyway, which is just a conspiracy to force our kids to learn about the lie that is Evolution). Fiscal Responsibility/Low Taxes - spending millions on a single-shot rocket that gets burned up, so one guy can come back and tell us how awesome the view was.

      And the Left, ideologically, benefits MORE - because from space exploration, we get all these cool Earth-watching satellites and data telling us about global warming and how we're destroying the environment. And it promotes science and learning, which leads our children away from ignorance and barbarism.

      You'd think it would be the LEFT that would be funding space exploration more. But the deal is - and here's why it's schizophrenic; the Defense Industry are the ones who make the most money off of space exploration. And they also benefit the most from the technological development. (First, with ballistic missile technology, and now with ballistic missile interception technology). So you've got to look at space exploration as an R&D Tax Boondoggle for the Defense Industry. That's why the Left won't fund it. And why the Right will. Even though that's bass-ackwards for both party ideologies.

      That's how we know that ideology really has nothing to do with how both political sides in this country operate. It's all about biting pillows for industry.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    262. Re:I couldn't agree more by rothic · · Score: 1

      "One day I agree, it will be a great adventure. But that is something for a healthy, content, prosperous society to pursue. It's something for a peaceful united democratic world to pursue. We should sort out issues here on earth before we go off and try to mess up some other planet."

      The world's lack of healthfulness, contentedness, peacefulness, unity and "democracy" are not problems that can be solved with any of the tools at our disposal. Short of a long-term program of very sophisticated eugenics, whereby we can change the underlying substrate of human nature, we will never accomplish any of the goals you described. They are problems of an inherent nature which humans possess as a consequence of violent evolution. if we wait for these problems to be under control before we advance beyond the confines of our planet, then we're going to rot here on earth until the sun explodes.

    263. Re:I couldn't agree more by quax · · Score: 1

      Being a German I can attest to the desire of foreign countries to keep the USA economy afloat and if it wasn't for the Japanese central bank purchasing huge dollar amounts the dollar would have already devaluated much more than it has since the Iraq war started.

      Yet, the fact that the Japanese central bank has to do this attest to the fact that many investors move out of the dollar since the euro is well established as a second save haven currency. Given the unbalanced budget and the huge trade deficit I expect the dollar to devaluate further. I recently moved from Germany to the US. I had the choice to get a mortgage here in dollar or a personal loan from a German bank to buy a house. Interest in Germany is lower. If I expected the dollar to gain against the euro in the long run I would have been much better of with the euro loan, but for the given reasons I don't see that happen anytime soon, especially if Bush will be reelected.

      Japan now exports more goods to China (>30%) then to the USA. If this trend continues there will be less of an incentive for Japan to support a strong dollar. China currently relies on being able to export most of its goods to the USA, but as the Chinese economy matures this will become less important.

      Overall the world's macroeconomic trends seem to indicate that the dominance of the US economy over the rest of the world will diminish further at an accelerated rate. Returning to the moon may be an impressive example for technological prowess and being a big fan of space exploration I strongly support it, but it will not change economic fundamentals.

      The American century is coming to an end as the Asian one will come into fruition, but that does not necessarily mean that the USA or Europe will be any worse of.

    264. Re:I couldn't agree more by mikerich · · Score: 1
      The united states owes hundreds of billions of dollars(trillions?). To whom?

      There is an external debt which is funded by the issue of Treasury Bonds. A good portion of these are held abroad by European, Japanese and increasingly Chinese central banks. Currently about $2 billion a day is being added to the American debt through Treasury Bonds.

      Problem is, no one knows if there is a limit to the appetite for them, without a constant issue of debt, the American government will have to perform a massive correction in spending. Going to the Moon when the American economy is already badly-lopsided would not seem to be good economics.

      Best wishes,
      Mike.

    265. Re:I couldn't agree more by Coryoth · · Score: 1

      You are aware that several countries maintain permanent Antarctic bases?

      Jedidiah

    266. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I like the way you think!

    267. Re:I couldn't agree more by jafac · · Score: 1

      The fall of the Soviet Union and the end of the cold war. Now your children won't have to learn "Duck and Cover!"

      Duck and cover? What the hell? My kids are going to have to learn duck and cover because instead of going after Iran or Pakistan or North Korea, where they really DO have WMD *AND* delivery systems, we wasted time and resources on Bush's boondoggle in Iraq!

      Objectively looking at the scorecard, I'd say the terrorists are winning.

      I'd have to agree. I hear Foxheads all the time saying that "no terrorist attacks on US Soil since 9/11 is proof that Bush's policies work" - When, in fact, Al Qaeda hasn't attacked on US soil because 9/11 *worked* for them, they achieved their objective, they got us out of Saudi Arabia, and they made us sacrafice our freedom (via PATRIOT act). Now they're working on the next step - terrorist bombings in Saudi and Turkey ought to tell you what their next objective is.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    268. Re:I couldn't agree more by Darby · · Score: 1

      Tried a credit union lately? They charge just as much as the Banks.

      In fact, I work at one.
      Our rates are generally lower on loans and higher on dividends then the banks in our area. Not by a lot, granted, but every little bit helps.

      We are also generally easier to get loans from. The majority of our membership works for the same company, so we know where they live so to speak which is part of the reason for that.

      We try to recruit new membership, our sales team is on commission, and one of our goals is to increase our assets. The fact that we are a not-for-profit (different than non-profit) organization does allow and encourage us to act differently than banks in many ways.

      We don't actively recruit membership from every population segment we are legally allowed to, which we would if maximizing profit down to the last cent was our only goal. Our management is committed to slow, steady growth. This allows us to serve our existing members to the level they have come to expect while adding capacity to handle new membership as we grow.

      Also, we get free lunch more than anywhere else I've worked which is cool ;-)

    269. Re:I couldn't agree more by jdelisle · · Score: 1

      great post

    270. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Economics. Local college. Yeah. Right.

      You would do much better to read Mises I think.

    271. Re:I couldn't agree more by Chibi+Merrow · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't be suprised if Bush wants a program to pump a whole bunch of tax dollars in to Boeing to keep it afloat.

      Erm... Actually that was a program that started in Congress when Daschle was still speaker... And his wife was still Boeing's lobbyist... No connection to Bush whatever.

      One its become pretty clear he is using the U.S. Treasury's credit card to borrow and spend the U.S. in to an economic boom to insure his reelection.

      Keynes said governments should deficit spend during recessions and use booms to slash their budgets and recoup the deficit from the expanded economy. Most economists seem to like his theories. Government spending will NOT cause an economic boom, if anything it will hurt a vibrant economy by pushing out private firms. The economic recovery had nothing to do with government spending and EVERYTHING to do with tax cuts and increased sales.

      And as someone else already pointed out... A moon base will be used to develop the technologies and procedures for a Mars mission... Much like the Mercury/Gemini missions developed the technologies for the Moon Shot.

      I'd contend the major reason NASA is so much pork and so little performance is that they haven't had a mission--a dream, if you will--since the end of the Apollo program.

      --
      Maxim: People cannot follow directions.
      Increases in truth directly with the length of time spent explaining them
    272. Re:I couldn't agree more by dalutong · · Score: 1

      I know you're posting as a AC and you probably won't get this, but I will reply regardless.

      My English is just fine, thank you. I am sorry that I did not proof read my message before I submitted it. The typo likely made my message hold considerably less weight than it would have otherwise. Thank you for pointing this out.

      I think that you are wrong in saying that it is sad that people like me get to vote. You remind me of an old friend of mine. He felt that anyone who wasn't well read and well written was a fool. I could have said that he was a fool because he was not as well spoken as I was, or because he wasn't much of a programmer, or because he did not understand calculus, or because he had a weak grasp on the differences between the world's major religions and political philosophies. I could have said many things (for instance that he was a fool because he only spoke one language, or because he had not read much philosophy, or because he could not play the piano), but I did not. I respect most people and assume that they have something unique to offer the world.

      I do wish that people would make as educated a decision as they can when voting, but I wouldn't dare restrict anyone from making their decision.

      You engrish isn't so great, either, my friend. A comma should have been placed before "my boy." You also spoke of America as an entity that can make decisions. A more proper second sentence would have been, "What is sad is that in America people like you are allowed to vote." There are better sentences than that, but I don't want to add to or subtract from the content of yours.

      Thank you for your help, Mr. Coward.

      Feel free to laugh at me if I made a mistake in this post. I did not proof-read it.

      --

      What comes first, finding a teacher or becoming a student?
    273. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, your beef is that the Fed is run by people respected in the banking industry? Dude, forgive me for not being a little more alarmed about that...

    274. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://www.federalreserve.gov/faq.htm#frsq3

    275. Re:I couldn't agree more by Suidae · · Score: 1

      Hmm, just like NIMBY, Don't Cut My Budget, cut someone elses.

      If I were president, I'd just cut everybody, 2% across the board, then dump that stupid social security program. You want retirement benefits, save some fricken money while you can still work or have kids. I hear McDonalds is hiring.

    276. Re:I couldn't agree more by Bob+Vila's+Hammer · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What does this have to do with Bush giving a speech about going back to the moon? This is offtopic.

      It would be interesting to read if you actually had an idea on the solution (if there is one) of problems facing the US at this time, instead of perpetuating the useless bickering that occurs here almost every day.

      I think that going back to the moon is a good idea regardless of who is president. Maybe it will inspire peace in its wake and a change in the attitudes of both sides beating dead an old argument.

      --


      --"The perfect example of the man of action is the suicide." - William Carlos Williams
    277. Re:I couldn't agree more by the+argonaut · · Score: 1

      Maybe if I believed that what's good for banks is good for everybody I wouldn't be alarmed either, but that statement simply isn't true. As it stands they are ONE interest group but their interests are allowed to almost completely dominate the agenda of the Fed. It's billed to the public as an apolitical agency, but in reality it is a highly political body that happens to only have one real constituency that they cater to (again, banks, the bigger the better). Given the impact that the Fed has on the economy (and by extension everybody in the country as well as a big influence on the world economy), yeah, I would say that I'm more than a bit alarmed.

      A good reference on the subject is "Secrets of the Temple: How the Federal Reserve Runs the Country" by William Greider. It's a bit thick (around 800 pages) but a quick read considering. And quite enlightening.

      --
      fuck you.
    278. Re:I couldn't agree more by Sivaram_Velauthapill · · Score: 1

      You aren't even talking about supply side economics, or so-called neo-liberal economics. Instead, you are talking about capitalism as a system.

      The things you mentioned are the result of capitalism, regardless of what brand is practiced.

      When mega corporations hold all the cards, including democratic institutions, depression will be perpetual. Autocracy will reign.

      My theory is that capitalism will result in that. When that happens, the system will collapse and there will be a revolution :) During the Great Depression, USA instituted some socialist policies. That's the only thing that prevented the total collapse. Those measures are too small and too temporary, not to mention the fact that they are being dismantled. The problem is still at hand. Countries have simply swept the problem under the carpet for future generations to "discover"

      YOU cannot stop what is happening. The reason is because everything is happening according to the capitalist plan. Nothing is wrong; and everything is right. The world is closer to (pure) capitalism than ever.

      BTW, nice to see you supporting Kuicinich. I'm not American but at least he was one of the few who actually does what he speaks (eg. he voted against the Iraqi war).

      Sivaram Velauthapillai

      --
      Sivaram Velauthapillai
      Seeking the meaning of life... @slashdot of all places ;)
    279. Re:I couldn't agree more by laird · · Score: 1

      "The budget has not been balanced for about 50 years"

      Yes, it's sleazy to count money coming in for social security in the same category as income tax, etc., since that money coming in will ultimately need to be paid out to beneficiaries. But according to the article you linked to on "The Dixieland Law Journal" says that "80 percent of the president's supposed $237 billion surplus automatically disappears", which means that even after putting the money back into the Social Security fund where it belongs, the year that article was written (under Clinton, but it's not clear exactly when, since there are no dates or other publication details) there was still a budget surplus, just a smaller one than claimed.

      If people really cared about keeping the money straight, they would have voted for Gore, who campaigned on cleaning that situation up, instead of Bush. (Oh wait, they did!)

      More importantly, since Bush took office, and the Republicans are running all three branches of the government, not only have they kept up the sleazy practice of borrowing against the assets of the Social Security Fund, they've managed to drive even the "fake" numbers insanely negative.

    280. Re:I couldn't agree more by Sivaram_Velauthapill · · Score: 1

      No, it certainly wouldn't. First, not all debt can be called in at once; in fact, a lot of it can't at any given time. Nor, by the way, can most of it be paid at any given time, even if that were desired. Other forms of debt have early redemption penalties; assuming a great many Japanese investors simultaneously lost all confidence in their US Savings Bonds, they could indeed cash them, but they'd lose a significant amount of the interest calculated as part of our debt.

      I didn't mean it literally. What I was trying to imply was that investment to USA will stop. Yes, you cannot rely withdraw your money right away since most of these are long term bonds. BUT if people stop investing, it'll precipitate what I have described: foreigners stop buying US instruments->USA has harder time raising money->interest rates USA pays goes up->...->USA cannot afford to pay debt->USA defaults->USA gets cut off->capitalism collapses :)

      Second, why would the US choose to collapse over this?

      Because that's how USA finances their operations. In fact, USA can't even run their country without borrowing (that's why it has a deficit). Not all of this borrowing is local. I sort of said it above but just to reiterate... if investors stop investing in USA, it will have to pay greater interst to attract foreign investment. Costs will go up. This will make it even more difficult and drive up costs even more. You'll hit the point where you can't finance anything. Many poor or developing countries are like this (obviously it hasn't happend to USA yet).

      While the US government has never defaulted on a loan before, other governments certainly have, without collapsing.

      Technically NO country has defaulted. The way the rules are, COUNTRIES cannot default (even though, capitalism call for defaulting). At worst, what has happened is that countries have re-financed their debt. So countries like Indonesia, Argentina, etc have just refinanced their debt via the IMF. Incidentally, it is countries like USA that fund the IMF. Capitalists can't let countries collapse or else it is a threat to their system. I would GUESS that USA spends more money proping up failing regimes than giving money to starving people or drought-stricken countries, or something...

      And defaulting certainly isn't the only option; the US could try to call in debt from other countries (of which there's quite a lot), or it could, in part or in whole, monetize the debt (ie. print more money).

      Point 1: My understanding is that USA's NET debt is negative. That is, it owes more than it is owed. So even if you add up all the money that is owed to USA, it still won't be enough. In any case, a lot of US debt will never be paid back (capitalists know this too). Everything that USA pumps into the IMF, or money that USA donates as military "aid" (i.e. loans) will never be paid back. The poor countries that owe USA will never be able to pay back. Most people, including capitalists, know this in the back of their head--it's just that they don't acknowledge it. To put it another way, the countries that owe USA are in a MUCH WORSE situation than USA.

      Point 2: Printing the money generally doesn't solve anything. It depends on the specifics though (I'm not sure how it is in this case). If the debt is owed in foreign currency, or something like that, printing money doesn't help. Printing will only be useful if you owe US currency. I'm not sure what the case is here. All I know is that most poor and other failing countries run into problems because they owe money in foreign currencies. Printing money doesn't help in paying that off.

      In messages above, some people talk about countries switching to Euro. If USA owes Euros, for example, printing US dollars won't help.

      This is a half truth. Yes, people's confidence is basic to the value of money. But it always has been.

      That's not really true (you are correct in some se

      --
      Sivaram Velauthapillai
      Seeking the meaning of life... @slashdot of all places ;)
    281. Re:I couldn't agree more by Sivaram_Velauthapill · · Score: 1

      Please describe the world situation where it would be in Japan's interest for the USA to collapse overnight. Or Germany's interest, or the UK's interest. If the USA 'collapsed' the entire world would plunge into economic ruin and chaos. It ain't going to happen.

      It is not in the interest of capitalists to allow capitalism to collapse. USA is practicing capitalism, so is Germany, so is Japan, and so forth. Therefore, they wouldn't let each other collapse. This is precisely why USA pumps billions into the IMF to protect countries like Indonesia.

      So countries won't let others collapse. However, INDIVIDUALS don't care if they need the money. Even capitalists who spend all their time and resources blocking the collapse of USA (or others like Indonesia, Argentina, etc) will want their money back if they are desperate. You know, if YOU need to pay your debt/bills/whatever, you WILL want your money back. Are the Japanese (and others) going to stop investing or ask for their money back from USA just for the sake of it? Nope. But if they are desperate and if their economic conidtions are terrible, they will want their money back. Japan went into some deflation and has been stuck at that for the last 10 years (!) or so. If things don't improve and the country keeps declining (some people even speculate that Japan can't compete with China), then watch out.

      When it comes to economics, there really isn't a country called USA, any more than Canada or Japan. What you have are capitalist entities. The G8 acts together with one mind. They all think the same way, do the same thing, bail each other out, etc. Countries are more than happy to spend billions propping up each other (or bailing out failing situtations) than helping their own citizens. Capitalists and their institutions (eg. corporations) have no loyalty to any country. IBM, for example, is as American as Toyota is. Given the choice, they will be more than happy to move to another country tomorrow.

      I agree with you that if USA collapses, the whole world is going to go down with it. By this, I mean the economic system (not the political one). If USA goes down, it will be the end of capitalism (at least the modern version of it) and US imperialism. The impact will be similar to the collapse of British colonialism/imperialism. Some say the collapse of the British empire was massive, while others say it was irrelevant to an average citizen. Same thing here.

      To me, Man's greatest technological achievement is the ability to leave his planet.

      I disagree but that's your opinion and I can see why you think that. Going to space IS tough. It DOES take a lot of effort. However, there are many other things that are far more important IN MY OPINION. For instance, I consider THE INTERNET to be the greatest technological achievement in the last 200 years! Yes, I place that above flight, space ships, automobiles, etc. It may not be as sexy :) but it will have massive social ramifications. Internet is the modern day PRINTING PRESS. The printing press had the greatest impact on humanity in the last 500 years IMO. The internet will do the same.

      As a side note, my picks for the top technologies of all time are:
      ancient era: irrigation
      2000 to 500 years ago: writing
      500 to 100 years ago: printing press
      present to 300 years from now: internet
      300 to 500 years from now: genetic engineering
      500 to 600 years from now: space exploration and planetary terraforming


      That's my view. I would love to hear anyone's thoughts. You'll note that the time periods are shrinking (this is because scientific growth is non-linear). What takes us 20 years will be a joke in 200 years (can probably do it in 2 years).

      So based on my view, if you are a space fan, and if you can figure out how to live for another 600 years, you'll get your dreams ;)

      At any rate, I'd love for Bush to announce that the US is going back ASAP. I'd want th

      --
      Sivaram Velauthapillai
      Seeking the meaning of life... @slashdot of all places ;)
    282. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This post deserves +10, not +5.

    283. Re:I couldn't agree more by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      I guess the dead Jews who were killed by Palestinian terrorists publicly bankrolled by Saddam don't count in your eyes.

      The israelians kill back palestinians at a ratio of 3 to 1.

      They are bankrolled by the U.S.
      So I guess someone needs to bomb the states, pillage the whitehouse and kill Bush's children then?

      Or do the dead non-jews don't count in your eyes?

      There hasn't been another September 11th yet has there?

      Yeah, because those were SO frequent before...

      Bush has brought this country out of recession

      Wich he put it in in the first place!

      stood up to terrorism

      He did what?
      He did WHAT?

      What the hell?

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    284. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Send the entire Bush family as a group..
      Space family Bush

    285. Re:I couldn't agree more by Clay+Pigeon+-TPF-VS- · · Score: 1

      Gundam Wing was the worst gundam series that I have ever watched.

      --
      Viral software licensing is not freedom, it is in fact GNU/Socialism.
    286. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One of Hitler's many excuses for ousting, whoops I mean killing (don't want to get in trouble with the German Reichstag) the Jews was blaming them on the stock market crash which lead to the Great Depression in 1929.

      Funny how Presidents come and go, but the Chairman Alan Greenspan (a Jew) is there till he decides to retire.

      As long as Israel gets it's yearly 10 Billion US dollars for doing absolutely nothing, all will be well. On the other hand, if you piss of the Jews ... well let's just say John F. Kennedy said he would do whatever it takes to stop Israel getting nuclear weapons and we all know what happened to him. And I guess it's needless to say that Mordechai Vanunu is still in prison for telling a British newspaper that Israel had up to 200 nuclear weapons. That was over a decade ago!

    287. Re:I couldn't agree more by michael_cain · · Score: 1
      As long as those countries don't pull out their money, the U.S. is not currently in as much debt as you think.

      A big IF there. Not likely in the near term but it's a dangerous game the capitalists are playing with USA (or for that matter any other country). If Japanese (who is the largest majority foreign owner of US debt), and a bunch of other foreign investors asked for their money back, USA will collapse overnight.

      Certainly have to agree with you here. Both Japan and China are buying lots of dollars (in the form of US government debt) these days, to keep their currencies "cheap" relative to the dollar and let them continue to prop up their economies with exports to the US. At some point this will stop: either they will hold so much US debt that they won't be able to stand the risk, or they'll find another export market, or their domestic demand will grow enough that they don't need to export so much, or something. Whether things unwind nicely at that point depends on so many variables no one can possibly predict it (other than by "lucky guess"). It is probably in those countries' interests to have it unwind nicely -- if you hold $1T in US debt, you don't want to dump so much so fast that the dollar crashes and your remaining holdings are worthless.

      That's why, when capitalism collapses (which I think it will--probably within 50 years)

      But not here. There could certainly be problems -- currency crashes, local and even worldwide depression, etc. But the end of capitalism (which I think is what you're saying) implies that some other system will take its place. The currency system may be screwed up, but that doesn't mean that we'll give up on market economies and private ownership of capital.

    288. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So it would be okay to say, oh, Linux was "owned" by HP, IBM, Redhat? Most of the major players and contributors work for other for profit companies. It's not too far-fetched, is it?

      Reality check people--if it's not privately owned, it's not private. If you want to make a point saying it's unduly influenced, do that, but you'll still be laughed at--most of our banking system runs through private companies. There is nothing wrong with that. Unless you want to argue the top tier of our banking system should cater to a socialist view and make decisions utterly independent of the community it serves. In which case, I'll just laugh at you.

    289. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      DAMNIT! Enough with the Nazi references!

      M. Godwin

    290. Re:I couldn't agree more by danheskett · · Score: 1

      Because everyone knows its more important for a president to have a good personality rather than havve policies that are good for the country
      Did I say that? Why did you right that? Starting with "Because" indicates that you are rebutting what I said.. but I can't figure out what you are responding to..

      , that doesnt mean he was best qualified for the job
      I have news for you, I'd be willing to be bet that in the last 100 years there hasn't been a single president elected that was the the most qualified for the job.

      and it certainly doesnt mean hes not running the country into the ground now.
      Did I claim elsewise?


      Why did you post again? Just to piss and moan or what?

    291. Re:I couldn't agree more by jaoswald · · Score: 1

      Your link refers to radiothermal generators. They are NOT reactors. They are simply lumps of metal that stay hot for a long time because of internal radioactivity, and a device to convert that heat to electricity. RTGs have only moderate outputs, finite lifetime, but are compact, light, and robust. RTGs are basically nuclear batteries.

      A reactor is a totally different beast, depending on actively maintaining a steady chain reaction [as in REACTor] of atomic fissions. The fuel in a reactor gets much hotter in the pile than it would in a RTG source. It also gets used up (ignoring potential breeding) more rapidly than by natural decay. It requires a heavy, bulky, complicated, less robust amount of machinery and much heavier shielding than an RTG. In return for which you get buttloads of power which can be regulated.

      A RTG "decayor" is to a nuclear "reactor" what a pile of AA batteries is to a power plant.

    292. Re:I couldn't agree more by F34nor · · Score: 1

      You forget that despite the retoric we are a socalist country just like everyone else. Its just where you draw the line. Make it a federal municipal power station and devide the profit amoung the memebers. e.g. all U.S. Citizens.

    293. Re:I couldn't agree more by AKAImBatman · · Score: 1

      That's funny, because I never used the word "reactor". I said "nuclear generator". Check my original post if you don't believe me. Of course, it would be even cooler if we took a few of these up with us. 7.5 kW, here I come! That is, if I can get the damn oil companies to leave me alone.

    294. Re:I couldn't agree more by the+argonaut · · Score: 1

      So it would be okay to say, oh, Linux was "owned" by HP, IBM, Redhat? Most of the major players and contributors work for other for profit companies. It's not too far-fetched, is it?

      Actually, it is. But this point doesn't really interest me so I'm not going to spend time substantiating it (at least I'm honest).

      Reality check people--if it's not privately owned, it's not private. If you want to make a point saying it's unduly influenced, do that, but you'll still be laughed at--most of our banking system runs through private companies. There is nothing wrong with that. Unless you want to argue the top tier of our banking system should cater to a socialist view and make decisions utterly independent of the community it serves. In which case, I'll just laugh at you.


      Feel free. I'll laugh right back at you.

      Reality check yourself. I never stated that the Fed was a private institution (I believe the term I used is "quasi-governmental", which I will stand by). The industry it supposedly regulates and sets policy for constitutes the majority of its board of governors. The regional banks themselves are privately owned (the shareholders being the member banks of the each reserve bank). This doesn't constitute undue influence, it constitutes selling out.

      The important question to ask is what community does the Fed serve. If you think that it exists to serve banks, then I guess you're fine with the way it exists now. The Fed was created though not to stabilize banks but to stabilize the money supply and by extension the economy (setting banking policy was just the easiest means to do so). Unfortunately because of the system's design from day one it has mainly catered to the interests of banks (which are not always the same as the interests of everybody else). I'm not necessarily arguing that the Fed should cater to socialists. I'm arguing that the Fed should care about more than what's good for banks.

      --
      fuck you.
    295. Re:I couldn't agree more by Zoshnell · · Score: 1

      Its the only one I caught semi regularly. And it made my head hurt with all its twists and turns. I got Endless Waltz tho and I dug the fight scenes...

      --
      "Do you suppose that's why God lives in the Heavens? Because he lives in fear of His creations?" - Steve Buscemi
    296. Re:I couldn't agree more by F34nor · · Score: 1

      EXPENSIVE? HAVE YOU ANY IDEA HOW MUCH THE SATRUN V COST? For the love of god, the richest nation in the world put a high percent of GDP into it, that's some serious freaking money. I seem to rember and correct me if I'm wrong but, didn't each launch of a Saturn V express half or the world's energy expenditure for the planet for one year? 15 Billion isn't shit for capital cost for a physical link to space.

    297. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is essentially a mutually assured destruction situation. There are many things the US could do if somehow the majority of its debt was called in, and none of them are good for the world economy. If maliciousness towards the US was behind the debt recall, it would almost certainly backfire.

    298. Re:I couldn't agree more by jaoswald · · Score: 1

      If you think you are going to crack iron oxide with a 75 watt RTG source, I wish you luck. But don't expect to be breathing much oxygen.

      I'm extremely skeptical of the Nucell claims. Strontium-90 has decay power of about 1 Watt per gram. (1.14 MeV from two beta emissions to Zr-90, 5 * 10^12 events/gram sec, 1.6 * 10^-19 J/eV).

      But the Nucell battery claims to extract 7500 W per gram. Neat trick. Perhaps that 10 kV source they have hooked up to "start" it has something to do with it.

    299. Re:I couldn't agree more by AKAImBatman · · Score: 1

      If you think you are going to crack iron oxide with a 75 watt RTG source, I wish you luck. But don't expect to be breathing much oxygen.


      If you hook enough together you could get the power necessary. That being said, I was being a smart ass in the first place, so we won't let the facts get in the way. :-)

      I'm extremely skeptical of the Nucell claims.

      As you should be. The primary thing that gives it credence is that the inventor was a respected member of the scientific community. His later invention is being successfully used to reprocess nuclear waste. And yet, until I see a working prototype, I'm not going to get my hopes up.

      As to the power output, you need to calculate the kinetic output, not the thermal output. His invention works by decelerating electrons (or protons) in the same way that a generator converts rotary motion to electricity. A particle decelerator if you will. That doesn't mean that it actually works as advertised, but that's the theory behind it.

    300. Re:I couldn't agree more by What42 · · Score: 1

      Do you have a source for the 15 billion amount? The number sounds very cheap to me. If it's only 15 billion we need to start on this as soon as technologically possible. I'm for anything that can get us off this planet. If it can do it cheaply, even better.

      --
      "Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former." -Albert Einstein
    301. Re:I couldn't agree more by F34nor · · Score: 1

      Highlift Systems is quoting 15 billion for the space elevator. Thats for production. Materials research is not finised so that is THE limiting factor. As soon as we can produce long nanofibers we are good to go. The whole thing is made out of a 3 foot wide ribbon of carbon. Carbon is cheap. Granted it 22,000 km long but hey we have more than 22,000 km of High Tension Power lines in the US already. So its all a matter of perspective. Up rather than over.

    302. Re:I couldn't agree more by jaoswald · · Score: 1

      Look, the beta decay energy is kinetic energy of the electrons: one 0.2 MeV from the initial decay, with a 0.94 MeV happening afterward (half-life 64 hours) from the yttrium-90 product.

      That's all there is to it. Those beta particles have MeV energy (in the rest frame of the nucleus), and you aren't going to get 7000 MeV by decelerating or catching it in pixie dust in rotary motion or anything else.

      The thermal conversion of conventional RTG apparently is about 6% efficient. So, at most, even with some pie-in-the-sky absolutely perfect technique, you will only improve by a factor of 20. Not a factor of 150,000.

      I'm a trained member of the scientific community, and when I see someone ignoring conservation of energy in such a gross way, the person loses the "respected member" label pretty damn quickly. The "free energy" crowd is substantially more generous with their respect, but that hurts their credibility more than anything else. The physics arguments Brown lists are not nearly rigorous and are unpersuasive. Experimental results from these kind of "free energy" devices are usually fraught with all sorts of misunderstandings of the importance of phase in AC power transfer, and even the misunderstanding of what the term "50 watt light bulb" means.

      My advice: look for a different field to get excited about.

    303. Re:I couldn't agree more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmmm... that's cool, so if I was a wealthy Bush buddy, I get a tax break from 39.6% to 33%, a 6+% cut, so that gives me a whopping $66,000 of after tax money to spend (i.e. a 90K/yr pretax salary @ a 25% tax bracket). I guess the Lexus is out of the question! Instead, I better get the Porsche!!

      The tax cuts were cool, and the 300$ per child thing was cool (for those *who* have children, i.e. those who are not here at work now writing to slashdot, but picking up their kids at school)... But money doesn't grow on trees...[unless it's on paper ;) ] I hate to be a tax contributor in 15 years (wait I am!) to recover from this debt--I guess we'll all be citizens of the Iraqi democracy by then paying a lower tax rate ;p

    304. Re:I couldn't agree more by AKAImBatman · · Score: 1

      I won't argue with you about the energy conversion. Brown's work is extremely "pie-in-the-sky", None the less, weak nuclear force generators could have tremendous potential for portable devices such as cell phones and laptops. For example, a cell phone chews somewhere between 10-30 watts. If you could build a small generator (or "battery") that is ~20% efficient, you'd only need about 100-300 grams of SR-90 for power. Especially if you aimed a bit above the "standby" draw and dumped the energy into a battery. This would allow you to use less material and slow charge the battery.

      I'm a trained member of the scientific community

      Would you mind emailing me? I'm just now figuring out some of the stuff I blew off in high school physics, and there's an issue with beta radiation and electricity that's driving me nuts. I've asked a few people so far, but no one seems to know the answer (probably because they know electrical engineering, but not the physics of radiation). My email address is:

      j b a n e s 'at' t e c h i e . c o m

      Just remove the spaces and replace 'at' with @.

      Thanks!

    305. Re:I couldn't agree more by ccp · · Score: 1


      USArmy attacking French in North Africa during the WWII?

      Yeah, it really happened. Read you history.

      Cheers,

    306. Re:I couldn't agree more by mrBoB · · Score: 1

      To be more accurate, the whole world was experiencing a depression before our stock market crashed. Think post-WWI Europe... Britain was turning inward; they'd gotten beaten pretty hard. The Germans were trying to pay their war reparations with money they no longer had, and the French were taking anything they could from the Germans. This was killing was Europe; they did not yet understand the economic interdependance they had of each other. Further, U.S. investors were investing in Germany, and rather than build industry and infrastructure they spent the money on lavish living. When our market crashed, all these U.S. investors called on Germany to return the money. This plunged Europe deeper, and I'm not sure but would assume when German companies could not repay their foreign debts, those nations would too be totally screwed.
      Sorry for the history lesson. I just wanted to clarify that it was the entire world that F-ed up our economy following WWI. It's really OK though, because we soon picked up the pieces and really whooped some ass.
      -Robert

  2. Thank you China! by ericspinder · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Nothing gets America going more than a little competition.

    The article says nothing about the method, the cheapest way (just off the top of my head) would be to update the Saturn 5, but (I think) the best solution would be to leverage a Space Station (one in the "right" orbit) and use that as a way station. That way you could reuse a moon obiter lander repeatedly.

    --
    The grass is only greener, if you don't take care of your own lawn.
    1. Re:Thank you China! by Ty_Webb · · Score: 1

      Precisely! We just need that kick-in-the-pants be it Pearl Harbor-style to get us out of the Depression (albeit a very negative kick-in-the-pants), or a Sputnik-like one similar to China's plans. Three cheers for The Space Race Part Duex.

    2. Re:Thank you China! by Slack3r78 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      While that's a nice idea, the problem lays in the simple physics of it. It takes an enormous amount of energy to break the earth's gravitational pull, and once you've expended that much energy(read:fuel) you're just as well off coasting the rest of the way to the moon until you get picked up by the moon's gravity, rather than stop along the way.

    3. Re:Thank you China! by shoptroll · · Score: 1

      My thoughts exactly...

      As soon as we beat the russians the public lost interest in the whole space race... Now that other people are trying to send people there again we want to go back?

      Hmmm... Interesting seeing as there hasn't been any mention of the possibility of returning for a long time...

      Besides, whatever happened to the Mars missions? Are we gonna scrub those to concentrate on the moon again?

      --
      Insert Sig Here
    4. Re:Thank you China! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Could I have a Sputnik-like kick-in-the-pants to go, hold the Pearl Harbor-style?

      (It seems to me we had a Pearl Harbor-style a couple of years ago, and it still smarts.)

    5. Re:Thank you China! by Sosarian · · Score: 2, Informative

      Going directly from Earth may be cheaper than going from the space station.

      Rockets will have to carry fuel for the lunar trips to the space station, and also fueling and other maintenance modules/bays will need to be constructed and lifted to the space station. Which is big dollars, dollars which probably wouldn't result in a pay off.

      Here are some good papers that talk about many of these issues, be sure to have a look at the Mars Direct PDF, it discusses methods of going from Earth from Orbit and from the Moon (if a source of water could be found there)

      http://www.nw.net/mars/
      http://www.nw.net/mars/docs/md_reno.pdf

    6. Re:Thank you China! by TedCheshireAcad · · Score: 5, Funny

      If the moon flew planes into our skyscrapers, we would have people on it inside of a week. :)

    7. Re:Thank you China! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So wrong.
      So true.

      GO RIT! :-D

    8. Re:Thank you China! by Floody · · Score: 4, Interesting

      While that's a nice idea, the problem lays in the simple physics of it. It takes an enormous amount of energy to break the earth's gravitational pull, and once you've expended that much energy(read:fuel) you're just as well off coasting the rest of the way to the moon until you get picked up by the moon's gravity, rather than stop along the way.

      This is true, but there are other benefits to TLI (trans-lunar-injection) orbits that are based on an existing LEO (low earth orbit) station, rather than an earth-based launch:

      1. Orbital inclination. If the station is at the same inclination (which a station used exclusively for TLI would be) as the moon's orbit, it's a very very easy shot. No inclination burns/azimuth adjustments at launch.

      2. Orbital windows. TLI windows based on LEO are "wider" and there is no chance of atmospheric/meterological conditions screwing the window up.

      3. Large payloads. As you indicated, the bulk of spent energy is to get into LEO. However, for large mass projects, they can be ferried to an LEO station, assembled, and then (relatively) cheaply injected to the moon. Currently, delivering large-mass to a lunar orbit is impossible, we don't have a rocket or "space transport system" large enough to deliver both payload and TLI/Lunar Orbit/Descent propellent from an earth based launch site in one go.

    9. Re:Thank you China! by CrowScape · · Score: 1

      I don't quite think that's what the GP is saying. If you have a lander already available in lunar orbit, then that's less mass you need to worry about when you're trying to reach escape velocity, and thus less energy you need to expend. The craft wouldn't have to stop along the way, just have the proper path to hook up with the waystation orbiting the moon to use the lander. Perhaps you can even forgo the waystation and leave the lander in orbit all by itself.

      --
      common sense: noun
      What those who are ignorant of the subject matter think; usually wrong.
    10. Re:Thank you China! by shivianzealot · · Score: 3, Informative

      Nothing gets America going more than a little competition.

      Yup.

      The article says nothing about the method, the cheapest way (just off the top of my head) would be to update the Saturn 5,

      That sounds nice, but practically infeasable. IIRC, there are two Saturn Vs left in the world after Apollo and Skylab. These are in no condition to fly. One is sideways, partially disassembled, exposed to the elements, and "restored," at the Johnson Space Center in Houston (its actually a rather impressive display, if you ever get the chance to see it). I don't rememebr the current location of the other.

      More importantly, according to Bill Bryson's book, "A History of Nearly Everything," the bulk of the design notes and "plans" don't even exist any longer, thanks to NASA's thorough house-keeping. We're better off looking elswhere.

      but (I think) the best solution would be to leverage a Space Station (one in the "right" orbit) and use that as a way station. That way you could reuse a moon obiter lander repeatedly.

      If only to recycle landers, I don't think this would be practical. As far as the Apollo program goes, I believe the actual manafacture of the landers was pretty miniscule. Even if it does make sense as far as cost goes, maintaining a reusable space craft OFF Earth permanently is just asking for trouble. Astronauts can do some pretty impressive tune-ups as it is, but this would be a bit like keeping a destroyer seaworthy with only a mechanic's garage.

      But hey, who ever said I know what I'm talking about?

      --

      Bored with karma, be a fan/freak

    11. Re:Thank you China! by kinzillah · · Score: 1

      Actually, its been thought of to do this, but the systems are so damn old, that it would be just as expensive to design a system from scratch. So we might as well do it "right." Your idea seems to make sense, though, I thought the idea of a moon base was to not have to maintain something floating around on its own. :)

      --
      Douglas P. Price
    12. Re:Thank you China! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It'll be very interesting to see if this call to go to the moon is answered to with the same "gusto" as the previous one. IE, if the people now desire it as much as they did then, being told it by a republican (supposedly conservative fiscally) rather than a democrat (big spenders supposedly).

    13. Re:Thank you China! by njchick · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Also, there is no "stop along the way". The kinetic energy of the spacecraft on the LEO is reused quite effectively.

      As for the propellant, it would be nice to have space tankers for delivering the fuel and only the fuel to LEO. A good part of the launch price is reliability. If you only have fuel on board, you can cut the expences. If rockets are 50% cheaper but 25% of them fail, it's still OK for the space tankers.

    14. Re:Thank you China! by orthogonal · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If the moon flew planes into our skyscrapers, we would have people on it inside of a week. :)

      If current events are any guide, we'd have troops bogged down in a quagmire, looking for non-existent Weapons of Mass Destruction, in a Middle Eastern country with no relation to the moon beyond its dominant religion using the crescent moon as a symbol of their faith.

      And regardless of whether or not the job was done, we would leave the moon just in time for our President to use the "victory" footage in his re-election campaign.

      In the meantime, the Justice Department would use the threat of moon-men to justify warrantless searches of your library borrowing, while granting even more power to the very intelligence agencies that failed to predict the attack in the first place.

    15. Re:Thank you China! by Media+Withdrawal · · Score: 1

      Nothing gets America going more than a little competition.

      Bah. Competition to do what? Have a few Taikonauts and Astronauts, hand-picked by Government Committees, plant a few flags and conduct sanitized, comittee-screened research? Old story. 45 years old. How much more accessible has space become since then?

      If you want to celebrate your anniversary some day by getting wild in orbit, or see your children walk on the Moon or Mars, just hope this Moon Race blows over before too many people defect from X-prize teams to cushy, go-nowhere jobs with NASA.

    16. Re:Thank you China! by 1u3hr · · Score: 4, Informative
      More importantly, according to Bill Bryson's book, "A History of Nearly Everything," the bulk of the design notes and "plans" don't even exist any longer, thanks to NASA's thorough house-keeping. We're better off looking elswhere.

      Bill Bryson is good for a laugh, but according to this Space FAQ:

      Despite a widespread belief to the contrary, the Saturn V blueprints have not been lost. They are kept at Marshall Space Flight Center on microfilm. The Federal Archives in East Point, GA also has 2900 cubic feet of Saturn documents. Rocketdyne has in its archives dozens of volumes from its Knowledge Retention Program. This effort was initiated in the late '60s to document every facet of F-1 and J-2 engine production to assist in any future re-start.
    17. Re:Thank you China! by clem.dickey · · Score: 1

      >One [Saturn V] is sideways, partially disassembled, exposed to the elements, and "restored," at the Johnson Space Center in Houston

      There is one similarly displayed, but indoors, at the Kennedy Space Center.

    18. Re:Thank you China! by joggle · · Score: 2
      That's not a problem at all. Another word for low earth orbit (LEO) is a parking orbit, a place where satellites can orbit a bit before heading to higher altitudes. You burn X1 amount of fuel to get to the LEO altitude, then burn X2 amount of fuel to cirularize your orbit. Then after doing whatever you feel like (such as docking with an orbiting lunar lander to be reused for this mission) and finally burn X3 amount of fuel to break out of earth's gravity well and get to the moon. An important point here is that you are accelerating on each burn, never slowing down (and thereby wasting energy), so either way you burn the same amount of fuel. The only downside is adding complexity to the mission--another chance for something to go wrong.

      To have a reusable lander, though, would require one substantially different than the Apollo mission (half of which was left on the lunar surface). It would need to be substantially heavier for the additional equipment it would need and probably need to be refueled in a way similar to how the ISS is refueled. Or perhaps use a lander similar to the original, simply rebuilding the bottom portion of it (containing the enormous amount of fuel needed for landing on the lunar surface), docking to the reusable upper portion, which would still require refilling for the launch from the lunar surface to lunar orbit.

    19. Re:Thank you China! by devnulljapan · · Score: 1
      If the moon flew planes into our skyscrapers, we would have people on it inside of a week.

      More like if Venus-funded terrorists flew planes into your skyscrapers, there would be a smoke and mirrors act to avoid upsetting the lucrative shady business dealings you and your pals have with the Venusians, so you'd quickly divert attention away from it by blowing up Mars and landing on the moon.
      Meanwhile, the whole world looks on in disbelief going "What the...?" but the UK stands up and says "We too would like a piece of that lucrative Venusian business...oh sorry I mean of course let's go liberate those moonies that blew up your buildings. Rah rah rah!"
      You'd send people and they'd end up mired in shit, with moon people chicking rocks at them screaming "SOD OFF! We don't want you here"
      And meanwhile, back at home everyone turns on the Simpsons and has another Coke(R).

    20. Re:Thank you China! by -Maurice66- · · Score: 1

      HAHAHA... your president would not attack the moon!:

      1) there is no oil.

      2) attacking Mars is better, since the moon men have a relationship to mars and mars is known to threaten the US. See all the videoproof on Marvin the Martian... he's real violent! (http://looneytunes.warnerbros.com/stars_of_the_sh ow/marvin_the_martian/marvin_story.html) and then there's Mars Attacks and more!

      I would say INVADE MARS!!!!

      M

    21. Re:Thank you China! by mlush · · Score: 1
      If the moon flew planes into our skyscrapers, we would have people on it inside of a week. :)

      No. The US would have men staging on Mercury, preparing to invade the Sun in search of all thoes Weapons of Mass Ejection

    22. Re:Thank you China! by dbIII · · Score: 1
      the cheapest way (just off the top of my head) would be to update the Saturn 5
      We no longer have the expertise to build a Saturn 5. The plans no longer exist, and there aren't a lot of people left of the original design team. It took quite a few years to put them together, and it would take a few years to get a similar project back up. Why do you think it too so long to build the shuttles?
    23. Re:Thank you China! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So go steal a moon rock, drop it on your house, then call Washington.

    24. Re:Thank you China! by Bazzargh · · Score: 1

      If the moon flew planes into our skyscrapers, we would have people on it inside of a week. :)

      If current events are any guide, we'd have troops bogged down in a quagmire, looking for non-existent Weapons of Mass Destruction


      But I'm sure we'd hear reports that they'd discovered some deeply suspicious green cheese.

    25. Re:Thank you China! by davesag · · Score: 2, Insightful
      If the moon flew planes into our skyscrapers, we would have people on it inside of a week. :)

      No, you'd still have bombed Afghanistan. Those plans were well in place well before september 2001. At last count the number of Afghans flying planes into american buildings was zero.

      A permanent base on the moon is of significant military improtance however. easy to launch nukes from, easy to hide what you aare doing, not a bad spot to keep 'enemy combatants' out of amnesty's sight. the moon will be used as a prison colony and bio-weapons factory before anything else.

      --
      I used to have a better sig than this, but I got tired of it
    26. Re:Thank you China! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You need to be more pithy: If Moon-men deliberately crashed into one of our skycrapers, we'd have blown up Mars within a week.

    27. Re:Thank you China! by Floody · · Score: 2, Informative

      Also, there is no "stop along the way". The kinetic energy of the spacecraft on the LEO is reused quite effectively.

      True, but just to be fair, the same is true of an earth-based launch. Apollo/Saturn launched into a very low "parking orbit" and then used all the kinetic energy from this to help perform TLI at just the right moment.

      Now, the most wasteful would be to attempt to rendezvous at some intermediate station (say in a clarksian geo-sync orbit), because it requires at least four major burns (probably more, with corrections) to get enroute:

      Burn #1: Establish nominal eccentricity on initial orbit (so we don't come right back into the atmosphere) [ok, this may not actually be a major burn, depends on launch]

      Burn #2: Rendezvous orbit for intersection with geo-sync station.

      Burn #3: Apoapsis burn at/near station rendezvous to match station's eccentricity.

      (note, now we have significantly less kinetic energy than we had at LEO because geo-sync is such a high orbit)

      Burn #4: TLI burn from station.

      The whole "stop along the way" bit was pretty amusing, but I originally chose to ignore it, just because space travel is all about orbital mechanics, and there is no "stopping" when you are in orbit: just transfering from one orbit to another.

    28. Re:Thank you China! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While that's a nice idea, the problem lays in the simple physics of it. It takes an enormous amount of energy to break the earth's gravitational pull, and once you've expended that much energy(read:fuel) you're just as well off coasting the rest of the way to the moon until you get picked up by the moon's gravity, rather than stop along the way.

      The downside is you have to carry a lunar-lander and earth reentry vehicle. More weight means less useful payload (and you have to carry your earth reentry vehicle all the way to the moon and back).

    29. Re:Thank you China! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No no, this is a bad thing because republicans are involved and I'm from Berkeley.

    30. Re:Thank you China! by jhines0042 · · Score: 1
      I don't rememebr the current location of the other.


      It is in Florida at Cape Canaveral. Also sideways, disassembled, restored, but indoors.


      Of course, they'd have to take the building apart to get it out.

      --
      42 - So long and thanks for all the fish.
    31. Re:Thank you China! by tommy_teardrop · · Score: 1

      True, but the real problem, as far as I've heard, is that Saturn V used a lot of little things, stuff like screws, that they just bought in from other manufacturers. All these things are no longer made to specification, so in order to follow the original plans, you'd have to make all the separate parts in house. Not impossible, but incredibly expensive, since it would all require retesting. In the end, it might be better and cheaper to redesign from scratch.

      --
      -- IANAL, BIPOOTV
    32. Re:Thank you China! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      precisely. i agree. the government needs to sell off nasa and privitize the industry. nasa is big slow innefficient has too many rules and is a general waste of money.

      we also need to greatly loosen the regulation of the space industry in this country. why is it that china finds it profitable to launch satellites into space but the us doesn't? partly because china's program is funded at the expense of their people (they have a space program but half the country is starving) and partly because of US regulations. the x-prize teams have to do about 1 year of paper work before each test launch. thats rediculous. just bring some guy out and say ok no houses around to get blown up, launch. it should take 5 minutes.

    33. Re:Thank you China! by Mycroft_514 · · Score: 1

      >That sounds nice, but practically infeasable. IIRC, there are two Saturn Vs left in the world after Apollo and Skylab. These are in no condition to fly. One is sideways, partially disassembled, exposed to the elements, and "restored," at the Johnson Space Center in Houston (its actually a rather impressive display, if you ever get the chance to see it). I don't rememebr the current location of the other.

      The other one is at Kennedy space center. It was exposed tot he elements for many years, but I hear they finally put a roof over it a few years ago. I'm not sure it was even restored.

    34. Re:Thank you China! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Space & Rocket Center in Huntsville, AL (home of Marshall Spaceflight Center) has a Saturn 5 on the ground in back and a replica Saturn 5 standing.

    35. Re:Thank you China! by amishdisco · · Score: 1
      If the moon flew planes into our skyscrapers, we would have people on it inside of a week. :)

      If the moon flew planes into our skyscrapers, we would have people on *Mars* inside of a week.

    36. Re:Thank you China! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Saturn V was way, way overdesigned as a launch vehicle, not that that's a bad thing, but all we really need is a Saturn V-class launch vehicle and the biggest design problems are the engines. If we have those (F1 and J2 (and they still make the RL-10s)), then about half the design problems go away. Not that the rest is trivial, simply not as overwhelming.

    37. Re:Thank you China! by Shadowlore · · Score: 1

      easy to launch nukes from, easy to hide what you aare doing,

      Not really. You have to get them there, and deal with the nasty surface. In order to hide you would need:

      * a way to get a nice BIG launch hidden
      * to do it on the dark side of the moon.

      Those two combine to make orbitally parked missiles a whole lot easier. But ground based ones are even easier.

      The moons harsh conditions preclude it being terribly useful for anything beyond eventual mining of material suitable for fusion.

      --
      My Suburban burns less gasoline than your Prius.
    38. Re:Thank you China! by Nimey · · Score: 1
      That sounds nice, but practically infeasable. IIRC, there are two Saturn Vs left in the world after Apollo and Skylab. These are in no condition to fly. One is sideways, partially disassembled, exposed to the elements, and "restored," at the Johnson Space Center in Houston (its actually a rather impressive display, if you ever get the chance to see it). I don't rememebr the current location of the other.
      The other one was at Kennedy Space Center in November 1987, in the same condition as JSC's. I'd imagine it's still there; a Saturn V is awfully large to move around.
      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    39. Re:Thank you China! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Restored to showroom condition... saw it a few weeks ago. Very impressive.

    40. Re:Thank you China! by killmeplease · · Score: 0

      I think that the space shuttle would be aptly suited for the mission to the space station before moving to the moon on a seperate craft. I mean the space shuttle is well suited for going to the space station and the move from orbit to the moon cannot be as reliant on power outside of the earth's atmosphere as Saturn V encountered in the 60's. You also have the tremendous payload of the shuttle to move fuel and building materials to the space station. Sounds great to me.

      --
      - Kill Yourself, spare us all! -
    41. Re:Thank you China! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh please, the weapons aren't non-existant. The only problem is, during the 12 months after September 2001, Iraq was able to smuggle off all the weapons while pretending that they had them the whole time... That's why Saddam wasn't able to come up with papers about the destruction of these weapons, they're gone.

    42. Re:Thank you China! by Azghoul · · Score: 1

      No, damn you, it's all an evil plot by these stupid Republicans to get more money out of oil and keep down the man!!

      Hmm, I just thought of something: If Republicans are stupid, how can they keep coming up with all these nefarious plots?

      Good joke though, the great-grandparent was. :)

    43. Re:Thank you China! by ralphclark · · Score: 1
      the cheapest way (just off the top of my head) would be to update the Saturn 5

      I doubt it. For two reasons.

      First, most of the engineers who built the Saturn V, and all of the senior ones, are long retired or even dead by now. In other words even if we only wanted to rebuild the Saturn V as it was in the early 1970's, by the time any such program gets started there is very little expertise on the particulars of the Saturn V booster system, and everything needs to be worked out all over again pretty much from scratch.

      Second, it's more difficult than you think to uprate an existing booster system that's already working near its maximum theoretical performance. A lot of fine tuning went into those big F-1 engines. If you try to change the design at all you have a whole new load of tuning tweaks to work out, just to stop the thing from exploding on the test rig.

      Having said that I have no doubt that the new booster program will borrow heavily from whatever documented experience of the Saturn program still exists.

      The Saturn V was surely the most awesome engineering feat ever accomplished. I would give up just about anything I own just to see one of those babies take off. There are very few sights in the world able to reduce a grown man to tears but that is one of them.

    44. Re:Thank you China! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      GA also has 2900 cubic feet of Saturn documents

      If you were project manager, could *you* be arsed reading through all that lot? Easier to start from scratch ;o)

  3. I'm Moving by php_pheen · · Score: 5, Funny

    Finally, an opportunity to live somewhere that doesn't suck... not yet anyway...

    1. Re:I'm Moving by Kneht · · Score: 4, Funny
      You'll find nothing sucks so hard as a vacuum though.

      --
      "Are you on some kind of medication?"
      "No"
      "Well, you should be."

      --Bean

    2. Re:I'm Moving by DarkBlackFox · · Score: 4, Funny

      It's a partial vacuum. It sucks by default.

    3. Re:I'm Moving by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You'll find nothing sucks so hard as a vacuum though.

      Wrong! That joke, for instance, sucks harder.

    4. Re:I'm Moving by feyhunde · · Score: 1

      Actually, since there is nothing there it can't suck. Only when we are exposed to it, we blow.

      --
      I'd say more, but my guild is raiding.
    5. Re:I'm Moving by mirko · · Score: 0, Offtopic
      1. not phonetically
      2. what about one hundred and one ?
      --
      Trolling using another account since 2005.
    6. Re:I'm Moving by hdparm · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      If you want to be really picky. However, did you also know that statistics show that 62% of all people who read that line from my original post, would have spent 1 minute or more actually spelling numbers?

    7. Re:I'm Moving by admiralh · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Actually, the number is "one hundred one". You don't use "and" until you get to the decimal point.

      7301.4 = seven thousand three hundred one and four tenths.

      Hopelessly pedantic since 1963.

      --
      Hopelessly pedantic since 1963.
    8. Re:I'm Moving by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I didn't realize the lack of female companionship among the slashdot crowd had reached such extremes.

    9. Re:I'm Moving by 1u3hr · · Score: 0, Offtopic
      Actually, the number is "one hundred one". You don't use "and" until you get to the decimal point.

      Only if "you" are American. "We" say "one hundred and one".

    10. Re:I'm Moving by Trejkaz · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      No, that is "seven thousand, three hundred and one, point four."

      --
      Karma: It's all a bunch of tree-huggin' hippy crap!
    11. Re:I'm Moving by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the earth did not suck, we would all fall off.

    12. Re:I'm Moving by iminplaya · · Score: 1

      Sure it does...but only 1/6 as much as the earth

      --
      What?
  4. And thus.... by bloodrose · · Score: 4, Funny

    Bush Phones Home

  5. What's the real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Must ... cover ... up ... economy problems ... iraq problems ... re-election soon ...

    1. Re:What's the real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      huh? The economy is booming. Try getting out of your basement once in a while

    2. Re:What's the real reason by cujo_1111 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Bush must really think that US citizens are stupid. As the new opposition leader in Australia said "President Bush is the most incompetent and dangerous president yet" or something like that. Not far wrong I think.

      --
      If I point out that you are incorrect, making me a foe does not make you any more correct.
    3. Re:What's the real reason by ergo98 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      it's the first time national corporate profits have ever hit a combined total of over a trillion dollars for on quarter

      Look up "inflation". It's the same trick that allows Hollywood to produce a new super biggest-box-office-of-all-time every couple of years.

      we all know it was because of Clinton and his *let's help the poorest people* mentality

      We do? Funny, but most people I know believe that it was the inevitable crash after a period of irrational exuberance (a bubble), to quote Greenspan. Couple that with the fact that capitalist economies follow almost regular cyclical swings, and the downturn was absolutely inevitable.

    4. Re:What's the real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's a laugh... try searching for 'miserable failure' in google and see what comes up... it ain't Clinton. Go ahead and try it.

    5. Re:What's the real reason by darxyde · · Score: 0

      You can read Mark Lathams comments here.

      --
      Hey relax fella, you need a rest, guy.
    6. Re:What's the real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are those trillion dollars adjusted for inflation?

    7. Re:What's the real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bush is going for the X-prize...?

    8. Re:What's the real reason by Rick+the+Red · · Score: 1
      Economy is doing just fine thank you
      Yet I'm still unemployed, thank you. And thank you, too, Mr. Bush (and I use the term "Mr." loosely). Mostly, though, I thank Ralf Naffer and the Supreames.
      --
      If all this should have a reason, we would be the last to know.
    9. Re:What's the real reason by jimmy_dean · · Score: 1

      Ok, so I agree with you...but I'm sick and tired of ignorant people giving the success of the 90's to Clinton. How does one man control a free market? They don't, and you're exactly right. It's economics, not a single president. But for heated political debate, I'll say it's because of Bush way before I ever say it's due to Clinton. :)

      --
      -> Sometimes, you just gotta break free from the shackles of proprietary code.
    10. Re:What's the real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yah, inflation over 3 years.. Get real.. If it were over a decade, sure.. But inflation isn't THAT big, keep digging deeper lil' buddy.

    11. Re:What's the real reason by jimmy_dean · · Score: 1

      Yeah so, the Internet is what people make of it. Many people don't give Bush a reasonable try. Why? Who knows. I guess people only value presidents who only give them what they want and don't value men who bring morality, honesty, and traditional values to the white house anymore. But why should I worry? I'll move to a country that values these long before a lack of these values brings destruction and chaos to our great America.

      --
      -> Sometimes, you just gotta break free from the shackles of proprietary code.
    12. Re:What's the real reason by Rotten168 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Read my .sig and choke on it, whiner.

    13. Re:What's the real reason by cujo_1111 · · Score: 1

      The next 12 months before our election should be quite entertaining.

      Hang on! it could be a bumpy ride!!!

      --
      If I point out that you are incorrect, making me a foe does not make you any more correct.
    14. Re:What's the real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Soooo.. Corporate profits are way up, and so is unemployment. I guess moving your HQ to bermuda so you don't have to pay taxes, then 'outsourcing' your production to a 12 year old in Tawain for a buck a day to keep production costs down, then cleaning out your remaining u.s. employee's 401ks really does help the bottom line. Don't worry, it's not like you'll ever actually get charged with anything.

      And the econimc gulf widens. What? It's not like a middle class is really needed.

    15. Re:What's the real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mentioned morality, honesty and traditional values... I thought you were talking about Bush? Bush's Accomplishments

    16. Re:What's the real reason by bryanthompson · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      How did that obvious troll get modded up?

      economy problems

      considering that the US economy was up 8.2% last quarter, which is the highest growth since 1984 -- when Ronald Reagan was president, i'd say it's becoming a lot less of a problem.

      the claims of a 'jobless recovery' are pure BS. First-time filings for state unemployment benefits dropped 11,000 to 351,000 in the week ended Nov. 22.
      The report also showed the number of unemployed still on the benefit rolls in the Nov. 15 week fell by a sharp 105,000 to 3.37 million, a level not seen since early February -- also from Forbes.

      Bush's approval ratings are still extremely high-- and as long as the democrats can't figure out what their agenda is, none of the nine dwarves are going to beat him.

    17. Re:What's the real reason by John+Miles · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Interesting. Sure enough, the first link when you search Google for "miserable failure" is www.whitehouse.gov/president/gwbbio.html... a page which certainly does not contain the terms "miserable failure".

      This can't possibly be a coincidence; it doesn't seem likely to be a bug; and it damned sure isn't a legitimate search result. What it is, is the first instance of overt politicization I've seen in Google's ranking system.

      I'm not a Bush defender, but this deliberate bogus query shows a lack of professionalism on Google's part that isn't the least bit cool. Google does not represent itself as a subjective editorial site. Search engines, like armies, are valuable public resources with the potential to do a lot of good or a lot of harm. They both work best when they keep their politics to themselves.

      --
      Dahlmann tightly grips the knife, which he may have no idea how to use, and steps out into the plain.
    18. Re:What's the real reason by the+unbeliever · · Score: 1

      You're either being too picky, or aren't looking in the right place.

      I'm a help desk jockey and I can't beat the recruiters off my phone with a stick.

      Granted, I'm not making what I made a year ago, much less two, but I *am* employed, and at a much higher wage than fast food would pay.

    19. Re:What's the real reason by Rick+the+Red · · Score: 1

      I'd been employed for 23 years before my last contract ran out. And I worked for three weeks this October. The work is there, but it's not steady and not like it used to be. And I'm not whining, I'm just saying the economy is more than any one index, and Bush conveniently ignores the unemployment statistics.

      --
      If all this should have a reason, we would be the last to know.
    20. Re:What's the real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Morality, honesty and traditional values?

      Morality is about the quality of an action being good and it's conformity to a standard of what is right. I would say the invasion of Iraq and the abandonment of Afghanistan is not accepted as the right thing to do.

      Honesty is about being truthful, whereas Bush isn't. look at all the lies he has fed the world on the reasons why he invaded Iraq: WMDs (where are they?) and the link between Saddam and Osama (utter bullshit).

      Traditional values is such a bullshit term. If you are talking about traditional US values then you could be advocating slave ownership or genocide of the native americans.

    21. Re:What's the real reason by cujo_1111 · · Score: 3, Informative

      It is not politicisation of Google. It occurs because more people have 'miserable failure' and 'Bush' on the same page than 'miserable failure' and 'Clinton' or 'Firestone'...

      Learn how Google works before accusing them of bias.

      --
      If I point out that you are incorrect, making me a foe does not make you any more correct.
    22. Re:What's the real reason by Canadian_Daemon · · Score: 1

      Economy is doing just fine thank you. Yah, if our dollar has any indication, it hit 77 cents US, so either canada is actually doing good (not likely), or.....

      --
      This sig is definitive. Reality is frequently inaccurate.
    23. Re:What's the real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      really? could you give them my number?

    24. Re:What's the real reason by PopCulture · · Score: 1

      Then you must also award GW with the job losses, the reduction in available jobs, and the increase in long term unemployed since he took office. OOPS! Not a good idea...

      --

      Here's to finally giving Bush his exit strategy in November
    25. Re:What's the real reason by jimmy_dean · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I guess that'd be true if you listen to the biased media. But if you read a wide spectrum of reports on what he does...more often than not he's reported as being honest and moral. And ABC, CBS, NBC, etc doesn't count...that's redundant...they all have the same bias. Once you've watched on, you know what the others will say too.

      --
      -> Sometimes, you just gotta break free from the shackles of proprietary code.
    26. Re:What's the real reason by Versix · · Score: 1
      If you liked that, try entering "french military victories" into the search box and hitting "I'm feeling lucky".

      These results are caused by lots of sites linking to pages with the specific intention of getting them a high PageRank. I'm surprised you haven't seen this sort of thing mentioned on Slashdot before - it's been in a few articles, but you can search for them yourself if you're interested.

    27. Re:What's the real reason by blamanj · · Score: 2, Informative

      Actually, it's the second link, not the first, at least when I do the query, YMMV.

      And, if you load the (cached version), you'll see that Google doesn't rely entirely on the search term being in the page, it can appear on links pointing to the page.

      Thus, we have links with the phrase "miserable failure" pointing to this page, and, not surprisingly, it is a highly rated page, so it show up first or second in the results.

      No conspiracy here, move along.

    28. Re:What's the real reason by fenix+down · · Score: 5, Funny

      God, this has to be like the 6th time I've explained this thing this week.

      Go to Advanced Search and check Occurances. Those are all the places Google looks for your search phrase in relation to a page. In the title, the URL, the text, and in links to the page. Thus, every time we say miserable failure W's bio moves up in the ranks.

      So, (miserable failure) Google is not (miserable failure) actually (miserable failure) conspiring to overthrow our beloved (miserable failure) leader, (miserable failure) it's just me. (miserable failure)

    29. Re:What's the real reason by Rick+the+Red · · Score: 1

      You're right. I'm too picky. I don't care to be a help desk jockey, I want to do what I'm good at. And I'm not looking in the right place, I'm looking where I live, with one of the highest unemployment rates in the USA. But I don't care to move, and things are not so bad for us that we have to move for me to find work. Maybe when we lose the house and have to move anyway...

      --
      If all this should have a reason, we would be the last to know.
    30. Re:What's the real reason by jimmy_dean · · Score: 1

      Nice FUD. :) Try again.

      --
      -> Sometimes, you just gotta break free from the shackles of proprietary code.
    31. Re:What's the real reason by cerebralpc · · Score: 0, Redundant

      Actaully the real reason that the search 'miserable failure' ranks so high in google is because so many blogs are linking his site to the words 'miseralbe failure'.

      God I wish I had something better to do than post here...

    32. Re:What's the real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I just hope he doesn't shy away from his old behaviour now that he's the opposition leader... some colorful langauge can make otherwise dull politics interesting ;)

    33. Re:What's the real reason by jimmy_dean · · Score: 1

      hehe, yeah...we'd better just blaim it on economics. :) Now if Bush one day claimed he was dictator, then we'd have something to worry about...wouldn't we?

      --
      -> Sometimes, you just gotta break free from the shackles of proprietary code.
    34. Re:What's the real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      don't value men who bring morality, honesty, and traditional values to the white house anymore

      You can take your "traditional values" and stuff them in your ass. It's not the 1950s anymore. And as for morality and honesty in the White House, I'll believe it when I see it.

    35. Re:What's the real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I always love how shrub backers start screaming about how the evil media conspiricy is out to get them everytime someone starts bringing up facts about the guy.
      "Only my information source counts! Everyone who disagrees with me is lying!" Yeah, thats reasonable.
      Idiot.

    36. Re:What's the real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      how didn't yours get modded down? I wonder.

    37. Re:What's the real reason by cujo_1111 · · Score: 1

      In one breath you mention a wide spectrum of media and then in the next breath you eliminate a whole host of media outlets. Nice way to prove a point.

      Even though the media says he may be honest and moral, I think the evidence does not support that. I think the US media outlets are just plain scared of being called unAmerican if they criticise the leader of the free world for being a liar or fuckwit...

      --
      If I point out that you are incorrect, making me a foe does not make you any more correct.
    38. Re:What's the real reason by PopCulture · · Score: 1

      funny, you ommitted FOX news from your tirade. Funny because viewers of ABC, CBS, NBC were the best sources of news during the whole 9/11 Iraq thing, as three quarters of FOX news viewers had a firm belief that Osama and Saddam were connected. Most FOX viewers thought that saddam was behind 9/11. Where's the bias there?

      just curious... because ABC, CBS, NBC viewers were not so badly misled.

      --

      Here's to finally giving Bush his exit strategy in November
    39. Re:What's the real reason by Malcontent · · Score: 2, Interesting

      "considering that the US economy was up 8.2% last quarter, which is the highest growth since 1984 -- when Ronald Reagan was president, i'd say it's becoming a lot less of a problem. "

      What's puzzling is that there is no rational reason for that kind of growth. The deficit is getting bigger, the trade deficit is getting bigger, the dollar is getting weaker, and the stock market is limping along. I for one am not convinced that those number are for real nor am I convinced that this kind of growth has any legs at all.

      Time will tell.

      "Bush's approval ratings are still extremely high-- and as long as the democrats can't figure out what their agenda is, none of the nine dwarves are going to beat him."

      Approval ratings or not slightly more then half of this country are democrats. He may get re-elected but like the last time it will be by the skin of his teeth.

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    40. Re:What's the real reason by pediddle · · Score: 2, Offtopic

      Are you daft? That unemployment benefits are a good indicator of the actual unemployment rate is a terrible myth.

      Did your stats say how many hapless people have been unemployed for so long that they don't even qualify for benefits anymore? Or how many people never qualified in the first place? All your stats mean is that the rate at which jobs are being cut is falling, but it doesn't mean that new jobs are being created any faster in replacement. That 105,000 drop is most telling of the truth, and is least supportive to your argument.

      There's a very important difference, especially when considering the poorest of the poor, those who don't have any income now that they've lost both their jobs and thier benefits.

    41. Re:What's the real reason by tbmaddux · · Score: 4, Informative
      ... this deliberate bogus query shows a lack of professionalism on Google's part ...
      This is merely an exploit of Google's PageRank algorithm commonly known as a "googlebomb."
      --
      Can't you see that everyone is buying station wagons?
    42. Re:What's the real reason by epukinsk · · Score: 2, Insightful
      That's what I was thinking too... people must be linking to Bush's bio, with the phrase "miserable failure" as the link text. But strangely, a google query for:
      miserable failure link:http://www.whitehouse.gov/president/gwbbio.ht ml
      Yields no results. So none of the pages that link to Bush's bio contain the phrase "miserable failure". Hmm... conspiracy theory is looking a little better.

      Erik
      b
    43. Re:What's the real reason by jimmy_dean · · Score: 1

      Yes, I elimated them as being redundant. If you read other things and listen to various radio programs on a wide spectrum like Rush Limbaugh versus NPR, Bill O'Reilly versus any liberal commentator, you'll see the wide spectrum of opinions. The left always says he's a liar, and the right usually upholds that he's not lieing. Can we really make a judgement from these things? Over time yes, we learn to trust various news commentators and of course one can't argue with the test of time. Some might say Bush lied on weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. First let me say that the search isn't over. Second, Bush was only reporting what his intelligence said. If you don't believe that, go take a look at a recent interview a couple of months ago of Hilary Clinton on the Today Show...she said that Bill Clinton received the same intelligence on Iraq.

      --
      -> Sometimes, you just gotta break free from the shackles of proprietary code.
    44. Re:What's the real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You do my friend. Look outside. The world awaits.

    45. Re:What's the real reason by JahToasted · · Score: 2, Informative

      read the fourth link from the search. Interesting the power a few blogs have... kinda like searching for "weapons of mass destruction".

    46. Re:What's the real reason by jimmy_dean · · Score: 1

      I watched FOX mainly during that time and I don't think they're linked. I also watched CNN, a lot too and listen to NPR. I also like to listen to Rush Limbaugh. Wouldn't you say I'm pretty varied there? I'm also on the Democratic party mailing list but I'm not a democrat. I like to cover my bases and make logical decisions based on a wealth of information. Not just from a single biased source.

      --
      -> Sometimes, you just gotta break free from the shackles of proprietary code.
    47. Re:What's the real reason by cmallinson · · Score: 1

      While FOX is definately the worst of the big US media outlets, ABC, CBS, NBC, and I'll throw in CNN, were certainly not the best sources of information. Having a 24 hour a day camera on Baghdad, or ground zero is not information. It's sensationalism. To me, the job of news media is to ask tough questions of the people directly involved, and to call bullsh*t if the answer isn't good enough.

    48. Re:What's the real reason by yourmom16 · · Score: 1

      Your spelling is a 'miseralbe failure'.

      --
      "We have got to make Stan understand the importance of voting, because he'll definitely vote for our guy." - South Park
    49. Re:What's the real reason by admiralh · · Score: 2, Offtopic

      the claims of a 'jobless recovery' are pure BS

      This so-called recovery has been going on for well over a year, and only now are jobs beginning to be created. That, my friend, is the textbook definition of 'jobless recovery'.

      The report also showed the number of unemployed still on the benefit rolls in the Nov. 15 week fell by a sharp 105,000 to 3.37 million, a level not seen since early February -- also from Forbes.

      Does that include the number of discourged workers who aren't even counted in the "benefit rolls", because their benefits have run out? No. Unemployment has been understated for a long time because these people aren't counted.

      And how does that number of people on the benefit rolls compare what it was at the beginning of George II's reign?

      Bush's approval ratings are still extremely high -- and as long as the democrats can't figure out what their agenda is, none of the nine dwarves are going to beat him.

      His ratings have been hovering in the 50's for a while now, well under what Clinton's were on the day of the impeachment vote. And some Democrats (Dean, Kucinich) do have an agenda, you just need to get your news from other places than Fox News to find out what it is.

      Hopelessly pedantic since 1963.

      --
      Hopelessly pedantic since 1963.
    50. Re:What's the real reason by davidstrauss · · Score: 1
      Hmm... conspiracy theory is looking a little better.

      Based on the "your search" return, I do not think Google parsed it in the same way you think it did. I think it literally searched for the "link:" text and the words. See how it parses this similar syntax in a notably different way, highlighing that it didn't treat it as standard search syntax: Google Groups Search. Google returns a lack of results with obvious parsing of the "group:" portion.

    51. Re:What's the real reason by TomHoward · · Score: 1

      If you have a look at google's cache of that page, it states at the top "These terms only appear in links pointing to this page: miserable failure". So apparently there are a hell of a lot of pages that like to Bush's bio that have the term "miserable failure".

      However strangly enough if you search for "miserable failure" and link:http://www.whitehouse.gov/president/gwbbio.ht ml you get no results!

      --
      Do you really think I'm go to put something novel here?
    52. Re:What's the real reason by kevin+lyda · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      muppet.

      people made the words "miserable failure" link to bush's bio on hundreds (thousands?) of web pages. get a clue.

      --
      US Citizen living abroad? Register to vote!
    53. Re:What's the real reason by octavian755 · · Score: 1

      exactly, people are so stupid when it comes to economics...now i'm not an economics buff, but people have to realize that a president can't turn an economy around in a couple of months. By the end of Clitons term, the economy was going into the toilet, but it is finally coming back. It may or may not be because of Bush, but even if it is, Bush will never get the credit. Instead the next president who steps into office and passes a quick bill through congress will get the credit.

    54. Re:What's the real reason by silvaran · · Score: 1

      I'm not a Bush defender, but this deliberate bogus query shows a lack of professionalism on Google's part that isn't the least bit cool. Google does not represent itself as a subjective editorial site.

      Calm down, monkey. Did you consider to think how the search engine works? Try clicking the [Cached] link in the search result and you'll see the following:

      These terms only appear in links pointing to this page: miserable failure

      Thus the explanation for why it's a valid hit (for Google), but doesn't contain the terms in the web page. A little google goes a long way.

    55. Re:What's the real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think that this is what you are looking for....

      Next time try a clue, or a google search or something.

    56. Re:What's the real reason by PopCulture · · Score: 1

      exactly. every US media oulet will show you a burned down building and tell you that 15 people died there earlier. It was a life changing event when I saw BBC show the faces of the bloody survivors (and the bleeding dead) that changed my mind.

      I live in Washington DC. I was at happy hour after work when Bush declared war on Iraq. Everyone at the bar cheered- and thats when I lost faith in what we are as a country. War is not to be celebrated- the end of war, sure, the victory- of course. But you don't go buying all your friends shots because your leader declares war. Whats wrong with all you fucks? Seriously. What is wrong with all you?

      --

      Here's to finally giving Bush his exit strategy in November
    57. Re:What's the real reason by mr100percent · · Score: 1
      May I reccomend international news, like Al-Jazeera and BBC News? They're basically like the coverage of CNN, only more international.

    58. Re:What's the real reason by GOD_ALMIGHTY · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I guess that'd be true if you listen to the biased media. But if you read a wide spectrum of reports on what he does...more often than not he's reported as being honest and moral. And ABC, CBS, NBC, etc doesn't count...that's redundant...they all have the same bias. Once you've watched on, you know what the others will say too.

      Ever consider that maybe your opinion is just plain wrong?

      If one person calls you a horse, ignore it.
      If two people call you a horse, look in a mirror.
      If three people call you a horse, buy a saddle.

      This so-called left wing media bias has never been proven. All research into it shows that mainstream journalism is actually pretty moderate, with the exception of Fox. How about a nice report by the University of Maryland showing that Fox viewers are the most likely to believe untruths about Saddams links with al-Qaeda, WMDs were found, and that the world supported the war in Iraq? PBS and NPR viewers are the least likely to believe any of these untruths.

      The Texas Republican Party's Platform includes such things as (these are directly from their site):
      Page 6 of the Platform:
      Christian Nation - The Republican Party of Texas reaffirms the United States of America is a Christian nation,
      which was founded on fundamental Judeo-Christian principles based on the Holy Bible. We also affirm the right
      of each individual to worship in the religion of his or her choice.
      Religion - The Party acknowledges that the church is a God-ordained institution with a sphere of authority
      separate from that of civil government; thus, churches, synagogues and other places of worship, including home
      Bible study groups, should not be regulated, controlled, or taxed by any level of civil government, including the
      Social Security Administration and the Internal Revenue Service. We reclaim freedom of religious expression in
      public on government property, and freedom from governmental interference.
      Page 7 of the Platform:
      Faith Based Opportunities - The Party encourages the Texas Legislature to identify and develop ways to
      increase the ability of faith-based institutions and community and business organizations to assist individuals
      and families in need.
      Page 8 of the Platform:
      Homosexuality - The Party believes that the practice of sodomy tears at the fabric of society, contributes to the
      breakdown of the family unit, and leads to the spread of dangerous, communicable diseases. Homosexual
      behavior is contrary to the fundamental, unchanging truths that have been ordained by God, recognized by our
      country's founders, and shared by the majority of Texans. Homosexuality must not be presented as an
      acceptable "alternative" lifestyle in our public education and policy, nor should "family" be redefined to include
      homosexual "couples." We are opposed to any granting of special legal entitlements, recognition, or privileges
      including, but not limited to, marriage between persons of the same sex, custody of children by homosexuals,
      homosexual partner insurance or retirement benefits. We oppose any criminal or civil penalties against those
      who oppose homosexuality out of faith, conviction, or belief in traditional values.
      Texas Sodomy Statutes - The Party opposes the decriminalization of sodomy.
      Page 9 of the Platform:
      This should wake the Slashdot crowd up
      Pornography - The Party believes, as do the vast majority of Texans, that pornography is repulsive, addictive
      and contributes to deviant criminal behavior. It exploits men, women, and children and degrades society as a
      whole. We call upon our governmental bodies to enforce existing laws regarding all forms of pornography in our
      music, film, telephone, computer, video, cable, Internet, and print industries. We must have more stringent
      legislation to prohibit access to and generation of pornography including virtual pornography and operation of
      sexuall

      --
      Arrogance is Confidence which lacks integrity. -- me
    59. Re:What's the real reason by strike2867 · · Score: 0

      Many actually argue that the great rise in our GDP and all other economic factors during Clintons presidency could be associated with Reagan. Its just sad that so many Americans are so short sighted.

      --

      Vote for new mod!!! Score:-2,Imbecile
    60. Re:What's the real reason by strike2867 · · Score: 0

      I like this guy. But that is probably the reason karma is bad.

      --

      Vote for new mod!!! Score:-2,Imbecile
    61. Re:What's the real reason by WaxParadigm · · Score: 2, Informative

      "This so-called recovery has been going on for well over a year, and only now are jobs beginning to be created. That, my friend, is the textbook definition of 'jobless recovery'."

      Actually, If you knew much about economics, you'd know that unemployment is a "lagging economic indicator"...meaning the economy begins to improve before you see a decrease in unemployment. I know it sounds really strange/backward...but that perception can't change this fact.

      If this is a jobless recovery? That remains to be seen. I doubt it it is/will be. I think many areas of our economy have corrected themselves, shed waste, made correct steps to increase/sustain productivity, etc...and we'll see non-trivial job creation in this recovery.

      One other thing, I think many people are short-sichted...complaining when war takes longer than a month or the economy takes longer than a year to turn. These things take time. An economic recession or boom feeds more of the same. If you're losing your job, you're spending less, people are making less, and they need to lay off more. It takes a bit of time to turn something like that around (especially since while our economy was in this decline we had the added "insult to injury" of the WTC attacks).

    62. Re:What's the real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Oh yeah miserable loser? You think that's funny you miserable loser? Yeah, ha ha, you miserable loser. Yep that fenix down is a real miserable loser. And guess what, miserable loser, one last time you're a miserable loser!

    63. Re:What's the real reason by ksheff · · Score: 1

      The govt is spending a lot on military hardware & supplies for current activity as well as getting readiness back up (Clinton's DOD shot a lot of cruise missles in Bosia and at other things whenever there was a scandal). Most of the budget increases are due to congressional pork frenzies which along with the tax cuts, do also help. A weak dollar helps US manufacturing because it makes our products cheaper in foreign markets, which helps drive consumption & production of those goods. What are the rational reasons behind any of the up & down cycles of the economy?

      What are you basing your democratic population stats on? Registered voters or the results of the last election? The latter just means that Gore had a better turnout in the states that he won, than Bush did. According to this, the counties that Bush won had more population and are growing faster than the counties Gore won. Other maps show the pop densities and the strength of each win. Combined with the shifting of electorial votes towards Republican-friendly states, I would guess a Bush win would probably be bigger than last time.

      --
      the good ground has been paved over by suicidal maniacs
    64. Re:What's the real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So some people believe that the economic performance lags by about four years from the policies that affect it? Four Years? A single bad quarterly report by a single company can cause an entire stock market crash in under one hour, yet a Government policy takes four years to have any affect at all? Good lord.

      I guess the only way to be sure is to stick around and see whats happening next year. Remember, that will be four years since George W. Bush took office and began to effect policies which should take four years to have any affect. By that argument (And coupled with the argument that Bush is doing all the right things, economically) then the economy should take a sudden leap up and unemployment should begin to fall sharply. Right?

      Yeah, right.

    65. Re:What's the real reason by famebait · · Score: 1

      "We choose to go to the moon, not because it is hard, but because it has been done before!"

      --
      sudo ergo sum
    66. Re:What's the real reason by Varitek · · Score: 1
      considering that the US economy was up 8.2% last quarter

      Lies, damned lies, and statistics . . . The US economy *wasn't* up 8.2% last quarter. It was up an *annualised* 8.2%. That is, if that increase kept up the entire year, it would have increased by 8.2%. Of course, it won't.
    67. Re:What's the real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Must ... cover ... up ... economy problems ... iraq problems ... re-election soon ...

      I guess you do not watch the markets. The economy is now on the upswing. Yahoo Finance
      Nor the polls Yahoo News

    68. Re:What's the real reason by glrotate · · Score: 1, Troll

      Does that include the number of discourged workers who aren't even counted in the "benefit rolls", because their benefits have run out? No.

      That's why BLS measures unemployment not just by the household survey, which is what you are referring to, but also by tyhe payroll survey. Learn all about it here Employment Situation Summary

      Note both of these may actually overestimate unemployment because they don't account for workers payed underthe table in cash.

      The reason for the recesion is clear. Clinton/Gore kept pumping and pumping the bubble. Where were they when Enron / Worldcom / Wall Street were up to their shenanigans? That's right hitting, up the ChiComs for campaign donations and hitting up interns for BJ's.

      We will never forget Gore claiming that Bush was "talking down the economy" in 2000. Everyone in the world except to D's realized the mess they had gotten us in.

      and FYI

      Bush's approval rating is at 61%

      And some Democrats (Dean, Kucinich) do have an agenda

      We know what it is.

      1. Raise taxes.
      2. Surreder to Hussein.

      Good luck with that platform.

    69. Re:What's the real reason by deanj · · Score: 1

      It's not Bush's fault. If Clinton had kept a closer eye on that huge internet bubble that was all bullshit accounting anyway and done something about it, you'd still have a job.

    70. Re:What's the real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's puzzling is that there is no rational reason for that kind of growth. The deficit is getting bigger, the trade deficit is getting bigger, the dollar is getting weaker, and the stock market is limping along. I for one am not convinced that those number are for real nor am I convinced that this kind of growth has any legs at all.

      It's real-- it's just that real economic growth takes time. In the late 90's, most of the other factors you mentioned were showing signs of strong "growth" but as we all know, it turned out to be rather hollow.

    71. Re:What's the real reason by deanj · · Score: 1

      Maybe you should read more about the connection between Saddam and Osama before blowing news organizations off.

    72. Re:What's the real reason by spike2131 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, it seems to be part of a concerted effort amongst varioius bloggers. Here is an example.

      --
      SpyDock: Scientific Python in a Docker container
    73. Re:What's the real reason by Pelorat · · Score: 1

      It takes about 12-18 months for the effects of tax cuts or raises to show up. All the 'leading economic indicators' are approximately 6 months behind the actual event horizon, as it were.

      Four years is a bit long for some things (but yeah, it's conceivable that some policies would take a very long time to take effect), but two is not outside the realm of possibility.

      As for a sudden leap, didn't the US economy grow by something like 7% this last quarter? Unemployment will fall, not necessarily sharply, but it will happen.

      Too many people have McPatience these days. The economy is not a thing that reacts instantly to anything.

      And the stock market is not everything. In fact, it's not much of anything. There's a whole lot more to the equation than the performance of the DJIA.

    74. Re:What's the real reason by epukinsk · · Score: 1

      You are definately right. From their features page:

      Who links to you?

      Some words, when followed by a colon, have special meanings to Google. One such word for Google is the link: operator. The query link:siteURL shows you all the pages that point to that URL. For example, link:www.google.com will show you all the pages that point to Google's home page. You cannot combine a link: search with a regular keyword search.

      Oh well.

      Erik

    75. Re:What's the real reason by PopCulture · · Score: 1

      In such a tightly coupled region, there will always be vague and irrelevant connections. your link does not sway my opinion any more than the pictures of Donald Rumsfeld shaking hands with Saddam in the 1990's.

      the fact of the matter is, most fox viewers were completely ignorant about some very important things.

      --

      Here's to finally giving Bush his exit strategy in November
    76. Re:What's the real reason by Luyseyal · · Score: 1
      Interestingly, the Bush administration still pursues a strong dollar policy in the face of the benefits of a weak dollar. Why? Because the strong dollar is the only thing keeping the trade deficit from undermining our credit rating on the international market.

      Interestingly, this feeds directly into his policy initiatives (i.e., going on a spending spree with money we don't have).

      His borrow-and-spend Republicanism is the perfect poster child for the Credit Card Generation.

      $0.02USD,
      -l

      --
      Help cure AIDS, cancer, and more. Donate your unused computer time to worldcommunitygrid.org. Join Team Slashdot!
    77. Re:What's the real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Asshole - this is the same damn thing that happened last year with the whole "Go to hell" thing that landed at Microsoft.

      People like picking on the over-menacing powers that make this world a shittier place. We're taking what little powers we have to try to get back at them. Google's just a machine, they're not making any sort of judgements on politics - they've been link-poisoned.

      And if you support W, then you've been politically brainwashed. No freedom-loving American with free will would choose W to lead them. There are plenty other republicans out there to support, we plead that you do so.

    78. Re:What's the real reason by John+Miles · · Score: 1

      OK, mea culpa. I did not know that was how Google worked. I'd respectfully submit that it takes a pretty seriously-broken search algorithm to allow this type of exploit, but, hey, it's Google, so it must not be broken after all.

      And if you support W, then you've been politically brainwashed.

      So saith the anti-Bush zombie army....

      --
      Dahlmann tightly grips the knife, which he may have no idea how to use, and steps out into the plain.
    79. Re:What's the real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No idiot, it takes a large, coordinated effort from hundreds and hundreds of websites to do it. I know it's hard for you Bushies to get the fact that a majority of people saying the same thing just might be right. George Bush has been a miserable failure.

    80. Re:What's the real reason by jimmy_dean · · Score: 1

      Wow, someone has a bias. Maybe you should ask the founding Fathers of this nation on what type of principles we were founded on. I think you'd fine most of the major ones were all Christians or at least believed in God like Thomas Jefferson. And of course I agree with you on the seperation of church and state. But how are these Texas GOP people pushing what they believe anymore than what Bill Clinton or any other Democrat does? Oh, and by the way, I'm both a Fox and an NPR listener. And I listen to NPR everyday whereas I watch FOX about once a week.

      --
      -> Sometimes, you just gotta break free from the shackles of proprietary code.
    81. Re:What's the real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      must... land... final... crushing... blow... to dems... who... have... no... ideas... or... leadership...

      [say again?]

      must...

    82. Re:What's the real reason by jimmy_dean · · Score: 1

      Yes, I read BBC News. Not much of a fan of Al-Jazeera but it is interesting, I'll give it that much.

      --
      -> Sometimes, you just gotta break free from the shackles of proprietary code.
    83. Re:What's the real reason by Darby · · Score: 1

      considering that the US economy was up 8.2% last quarter, which is the highest growth since 1984 -- when Ronald Reagan was president, i'd say it's becoming a lot less of a problem.

      When it falls as low as it has, tiny improvements are a large percentage increase without adding anything much.

      The report also showed the number of unemployed still on the benefit rolls in the Nov. 15 week fell by a sharp 105,000 to 3.37 million

      You do know that these benefits do run out, so that some number of these people are still unemployed, but now without benefits, don't you?

      And "only" 351,000 people lost their jobs in one week.
      You are actually trying to point to a 3% reduction in *new job losses* as some great improvement?!?

      Any good news is still good news, but it's silly to get excited about this news.

    84. Re:What's the real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm thinking your third-grade reading comprehension teacher could commiserate with Dubya in the miserable failure department.

    85. Re:What's the real reason by Ranten_N_Raven · · Score: 1

      Nice theory . . . but.

      I tried "lying bastard," but didn't get a Clinton Bio.

      I tried "commie traitor" and "communist traitor," but didn't get a Jane Fonda Bio.

      --

      READ the US Constitution, the Bill of Rights and the other amendments! http://lcweb2.loc.gov/const/const.html
    86. Re:What's the real reason by b-baggins · · Score: 1

      Wow. Being a liberal must suck. Constantly miserable and seeing only cynicism and duplicity in people and hating everyone who disagrees with you.

      Meanwhile, I'm sitting here excited about the prospect of having a manned base on the moon in the next ten years.

      --
      You can tell a great deal about the character of a man by observing those who hate him.
    87. Re:What's the real reason by GOD_ALMIGHTY · · Score: 1

      It doesn't matter that they were Christians. I'm a Christian, but I like my God seperate from my Government, because I honestly don't think Jesus gives a crap about what kind of economic or political system I live under.

      The translation of the Treaty of Tripoli ratified unanimously by the Senate and signed by John Adams states explicitly:

      Article 11. As the government of the United States of America is not in any sense founded on the Christian Religion,--as it has in itself no character of enmity against the laws, religion or tranquility of Musselmen,--and as the said States never have entered into any war or act of hostility against any Mehomitan nation, it is declared by the parties that no pretext arising from religious opinions shall ever produce an interruption of the harmony existing between the two countries

      Now explain to me how a Senate with many of the Founding Fathers, and one of them as President, passed this text unanimously if the United States had any theocratic bent at all. The United States was a Christian Nation only in the sense that most citizens (discounting all the Native Americans of course) believed in some form of Judeo-Christian tradition personally. However, this country was not founded to promote that, it was founded not to care at all.

      Trying to claim that it is otherwise is like those nutcases trying to claim the moon landing was faked. Their opinions don't derserve any attention because they are wholly without merit.

      This isn't a debate about the religious preferences of individuals or even populations. It's about the validation of one religious persuasion over another. The difference between the Texas GOP and Democrats is that there aren't such egragarious attempts to change the very fabric of the nations laws from the founding principles soley on that side of the isle (Copyright expansion, IP laws are bi-partisian). Note that I'm also not completely defending the Dems. They've pissed me off on quite a few things, mainly when they stray from progressive ideals and pander to the religious right or corporate interests.

      BTW, I watch Fox a lot, as well as CNN and MSNBC. I also listen to NPR daily and read a lot of stuff online. Being a political and historical junkie is a bit of a hobby for me. It's what I do instead of playing games (for the most part).

      If you count yourself as a conservative or a GOP member, you might want to take a look at the whackos representing you in public discourse. My dad has voted GOP since Reagan and is quite a libertarian, but he also can't stand Fox or Rush or most of the other "conservative" personalities. He thinks that they are entertainment and doesn't realize that the average GOP member believes the tripe those people spew as truth. Personally, I'm a progressive moderate, I don't want a Leftist Socialist dictatorship any more than I want a Rightwing Theocratic Fascist state, but the wackos on the left aren't running the Democratic Party, the whackos on the right are running the GOP.

      --
      Arrogance is Confidence which lacks integrity. -- me
    88. Re:What's the real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I just looked through the various Democratic candidates' agendas. I didn't see anything about "surreder" or even "surrender". Is there perhaps a Democratic candidate with whom I am not familiar? Perhaps you can post a link to his campaign site, article, or interview where he outlines his surrender plans.

      Fool.

    89. Re:What's the real reason by admiralh · · Score: 1

      The reason for the recesion is clear. Clinton/Gore kept pumping and pumping the bubble. Where were they when Enron / Worldcom / Wall Street were up to their shenanigans? That's right hitting, up the ChiComs for campaign donations and hitting up interns for BJ's.

      Clear to only the hard-line Clinton haters. Do you really think any significant regulation of Wall Street would have made it out of the Republican majority Congress? You can blame Clinton all you want, but hardly anybody outside of Alan "irrational exuberance" Greenspan and Warren Buffett was saying much during the bubble. It was most assuredly a bipartisan bubble.

      And James K. Glassman, the author of Dow 36,000, one of the most notorious of the pro-bubble books, is now a "well-respected" fellow at the conservative American Enterprise Institute and making big bucks on the corporate lecture circuit. Your claim about Clinton/Gore causing the bubble is disingenuous at best.

      And it seems you right-wingers are just obsessed over this BJ thing. As the advocacy group group said, censure and Move On.

      Bush's approval rating is at 61%

      As was mentioned in the same article that you quoted, it was a 5 point rise (61-5=56) from the previous poll taken four days before Thanksgiving, and it was probably caused by the pictures from his Thanksgiving trip to Baghdad.

      And as an added bonus, he's now got new pictures to use on the campaign to replace those discredited "mission accomplished" flight suit photos.

      We know what (the Democratic Agenda) is. 1. Raise taxes. 2. Surreder to Hussein.

      Ann Coulter? Is that you?

      Hopelessly pedantic since 1963.

      --
      Hopelessly pedantic since 1963.
    90. Re:What's the real reason by QuackQuack · · Score: 1

      "What's puzzling is that there is no rational reason for that kind of growth. The deficit is getting bigger, the trade deficit is getting bigger, the dollar is getting weaker, and the stock market is limping along. I for one am not convinced that those number are for real nor am I convinced that this kind of growth has any legs at all."

      Deficit speanding has stimulative economic effects. The stock market has done well this year. A weak dollar makes American exports cheaper to foreigners, so it too has a stimulative effect. The numbers are real because every new economic report lately corrabortes strong growth

      "Approval ratings or not slightly more then half of this country are democrats. He may get re-elected but like the last time it will be by the skin of his teeth."

      Actually the percentage of Democrats is down to less than a third of the people now:

      http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/politics/2 00 1295371_outlook29.html

      --
      By reading this sig, you agree to the terms of my sig license.
    91. Re:What's the real reason by Malcontent · · Score: 1

      In the last election more people voted for Gore then Bush. The margin was even higher when you combine the Gore votes with Nader votes.

      Time will tell but I suspect it will be the same the next election.

      "According to this, the counties that Bush won had more population and are growing faster than the counties Gore won."

      Bush won rural areas and Gore won in urban ones. I don't see where you get that Bush counties had more population. They may be growing faster but that's mainly due the fact large urban areas don't tend to grow very fast.

      "I would guess a Bush win would probably be bigger than last time."

      Time will tell. Nader won't be running this time so there won't be a third candidate to suck votes away from the democratic candidate. Presuming of course that Diebold does not rig the election.

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    92. Re:What's the real reason by admiralh · · Score: 1

      Actually, If you knew much about economics, you'd know that unemployment is a "lagging economic indicator"...meaning the economy begins to improve before you see a decrease in unemployment. I know it sounds really strange/backward...but that perception can't change this fact.

      Thank you for the condescending economics lesson.

      A big factor in economic recoveries is how quickly the jobs recover. This recovery has been far slower to regain jobs than the one following the 1990 recession, which was widely considered to be another "jobless recovery" that likely cost George I the 1992 election. Of course it is not literally 'jobless', its just that the jobs take longer to return than normal.

      One other thing, I think many people are short-sichted...complaining when war takes longer than a month or the economy takes longer than a year to turn. These things take time. An economic recession or boom feeds more of the same. If you're losing your job, you're spending less, people are making less, and they need to lay off more. It takes a bit of time to turn something like that around (especially since while our economy was in this decline we had the added "insult to injury" of the WTC attacks).

      So, when someone is jobless for a year, loses their house, and complains about the economy we should just tell them, "Stop being so short-sighted, these things take time." Maybe we should tell that to the banks that are foreclosing on these homes instead.

      And the ironic thing about the rhetoric surrounding the Iraqi war is that those of us who were saying "Give the inspectors time to finish" were brushed off, and now we're being told, "These things take time."

      Hopelessly pedantic since 1963.

      --
      Hopelessly pedantic since 1963.
    93. Re:What's the real reason by Lord+Ender · · Score: 1

      Perhaps it means people are working harder, or being more productive, or being more efficient because of access to better technology?

      --
      A slashdotter who didn't build his own computer is like a Jedi who didn't build his own lightsaber.
    94. Re:What's the real reason by jimmy_dean · · Score: 1

      Not a bad defense I must say. And glad to hear you're a Christian as well. I am not part of the GOP, I vote for the best man/woman at the time of the election. I've never blindly voted a straight ticket in my life and I never want to. I consider myself libertarian. And yes I agree it is very important about the separation between church and state and that shouldn't be changed. But I do in general see a lot of lack of addressing the important issues by people on the left. I think abortion is dead wrong - yet no one on the left really ever thinks that way. I don't care if it's progressive thinking...I think it's wrong and I'll almost never vote for someone who supports such a murderous act. If someone from the left said it was wrong and really believed that and in general had good economic and political views, I would vote for them over someone like George Bush anyday. Why does being on the left automatically mean that a politician supports (in general) big government, increase taxes, give more money to the poor people and forget that we are a nation of many people, poor, middleclass and rich, and support things like abortion and gay rights which they know will alienate anybody who follows most religions properly.

      --
      -> Sometimes, you just gotta break free from the shackles of proprietary code.
    95. Re:What's the real reason by glrotate · · Score: 1

      Do you really think any significant regulation of Wall Street would have made it out of the Republican majority Congress?

      Why would new laws be needed? Fraud was on the books back in '99. The Clinton Justice Department and SEC didn't need Congressional approval to enforce the current laws.

      Who cares about a bozo like Glassman? Nice try at conjuring up a strawman.

    96. Re:What's the real reason by ksheff · · Score: 1

      It's in the 1st link after the huge map. It includes the population totals of the counties won. One of the other links show the population density of the counties won and shows that 'Bush won rural, Gore won urban' isn't necessarily the case.

      --
      the good ground has been paved over by suicidal maniacs
  6. Wow.. I don't know if I'm happy about this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Earlier this year, the Space Exploration Act of 2003 was introduced into congress. It laid out a long-term, logical, realistic timeline for space exploration in a schedule that called for manufacturing facilities at the lagrange points and establishing permanent research bases on the moon and mars within 20 years. It was designed with an eye to what could best further the understanding and goals of science, and described oversight procedures to ensure that NASA actually kept to its schedule. It was about everything you could ask of a proposed revamping of the space program. The bill got almost no attention in the mainstream press, it was referred to a house subcommittee on 9/16/2003, and that was the last that was heard of it. I don't know if that means it's still alive or not, but either way, it's chances don't look good now.
    Maybe I'm just being pessimistic, but I suspect that by the time we actually figure out what this new plan is, it will turn out to be utterly unambitious, re-doing what we've already done (um.. let's go to the moon! yeah!) for the sole sake that we feel like we have to one-up the Chinese. I hope I'm wrong, but this appears it is going to be politics driving science, not the other way around, and I question its usefulness if it is going to be implemented in the same closed and uninclusive manner it's being planned.

    I mean, the direction of these plans look like they're being guided directly by NASA. I want to say that's a good thing. But NASA lately has shown a distinct lack of vision. NASA as of late has almost been more about lip service than anything-- being able to say, "Yup! We can get into low earth orbit!" or "We've got a space station!", but then not not actually caring what interesting or forward-looking things we can do as a result. This leads me to worry that if NASA is deciding what we do next, it will be the same sort of lip service-- just going to the moon for the sake of going to the moon, and not exploring what revolutionary or groundbreaking things that we could do in the process.

    On the other hand, this looks like it would involve an increase in NASA's budget. I've heard it charged the problem with NASA's lack of ambition of late is not the leadership, but just that they don't have enough money to do anything more than the bare minimum. An increase in funds might mean they would have breathing room to do great things again. And most of NASA's such problems-- the aimless floundering that's characterized the attempts to replace the Shuttle, for example-- have been due to a lack of direction. A clear set of direction and goals, any of them, no matter now small, could once again cause NASA to streamline and orient itself toward getting positive work done. Bush's plan would very likely provide that sort of orientation.

    Anyway, I just don't know what to think here. Am I being too pessimistic?

    1. Re:Wow.. I don't know if I'm happy about this by HiThere · · Score: 1

      Well, NASA has recently (the last two decades) been operating under a budget that was designed to destroy it, and with administrators that were designed to destroy it -- or at least not protest too vigorously about attempts to destroy from outside. But judging from the fact finding committees reports I think the original statement is more accurate. Possibly if the agency got a new budget and a new set of administrators it could recover. Perhaps.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    2. Re:Wow.. I don't know if I'm happy about this by zAmb0ni · · Score: 1

      Well, the Orlando Sentinel shares your pessimism.

      November 30, 2003 11:03 PM

      New NASA looks like the old one

      CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. -- The ``bold agenda for space exploration'' that the Bush administration has been crafting since August is expected to be long on rhetoric, but short on new goals and money.

      Internal NASA documents obtained by The Orlando Sentinel, and interviews with those close to the policy-making process, indicate the new vision being drafted for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration looks a lot like the old one.

      No final decisions have been reached. However, closed-door meetings of administration officials, including Vice President Dick Cheney, appear to be developing plans committed to the status quo, with no major new programs or specific destinations, no timetables and, most importantly, no significant spending increases...

    3. Re:Wow.. I don't know if I'm happy about this by JahToasted · · Score: 1

      I think I've read this comment before... ah yes, I have.

    4. Re:Wow.. I don't know if I'm happy about this by bluethundr · · Score: 1

      I'm wrong, but this appears it is going to be politics driving science, not the other way around, and I question its usefulness if it is going to be implemented in the same closed and uninclusive manner it's being planned.

      You make very valid points. But bear in mind that politics have always driven scienctofoc advancement in the US. The Eniac was invented to calculate firing tables for ballistics when this need was realized during WW II. The Arpanet was founded to provide for a distributed communications and computing network in the event of a nuclear war. And the Gemini missions were a direct result of Sputnik orbiting the Earth, as was the space program as a whole. Politcally, America NEEDS the competition of a major military power in order to innovate. Curiousity for scientific "pure knowledge" is not sufficient motivation for our government.

      --
      Quod scripsi, scripsi.
    5. Re:Wow.. I don't know if I'm happy about this by ocie · · Score: 1

      But NASA lately has shown a distinct lack of vision.

      NASA has never had its own vision. It isn't really its function. NASA didn't decide to go to the moon, Kennedy did. NASA decided _how_ to go to the moon, how to accomplish the objective laid out for it and it did a hell of a job. Without this sort of direction EXTERNAL direction, NASA is bound to flounder. It is like a powerful engine without a steering mechanism.

      --
      JET Program: see Japan, meet intere
    6. Re:Wow.. I don't know if I'm happy about this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But NASA lately has shown a distinct lack of vision.

      It's called being a mature, federal bureaucracy. There's no known cure.

  7. I thought we couldn't stay on the moon by AndreyF · · Score: 2, Interesting

    There will never be a permanent settlement on the moon. It's pretty well known by now that there is not enough water there to sustain any kind of colony of any sort (that ice cap turned out to be way too thin).

    1. Re:I thought we couldn't stay on the moon by irc.goatse.cx+troll · · Score: 1

      Bring our own water in decent quantaties and we can stay for a long enough time, especially when recycling it (thats non-gross speak for convering urine back into water).

      --
      Pain lasts, kid. Its how you know you're alive. Sometimes I think this growing up thing is just pain management-TheMaxx
    2. Re:I thought we couldn't stay on the moon by bluethundr · · Score: 1, Interesting

      There will never be a permanent settlement on the moon. It's pretty well known by now that there is not enough water there to sustain any kind of colony of any sort (that ice cap turned out to be way too thin).

      Scientific advances always have their naysayers. People who say "Sorry! Can't do that 'cause... x". Given the above statement it's reasonable to assume you would've told the Wright brothers "Heavier than air flight? No way!" had you been alive during those times.

      Well, to establish a permanent moon base, they'll have to do things a little like the way they did on the USS Enterprise. They will have to recycle.

      --
      Quod scripsi, scripsi.
    3. Re:I thought we couldn't stay on the moon by AndreyF · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Well, to establish a permanent moon base, they'll have to do things a little like the way they did on the USS Enterprise. They will have to recycle.

      Having abundant supplies of water that dosen't need to be recycled is also very important for a settlement (i.e. for rocket fuel in the form of liquid hydrogen and oxygen).

    4. Re:I thought we couldn't stay on the moon by agibbs · · Score: 1

      There is still a fair amount of uncertainty about the exact nature of any lunar ice. True the attempt to crash the Lunar Prospector into the ice cap failed to turn up any evidence of ice, but this is not proof that ice does not exist, merely that there was not ice able to be detected in the impact debris in this one place. As always it is much more difficult to prove the absence of something than to prove its presence (WMD?), but it is still to early to say that there isn't sufficient ice on the Moon.

    5. Re:I thought we couldn't stay on the moon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The entire time, I was praying "please let this person be talking about the aircraft carrier... I mean, I know it's news for nerds, but come on..."

      It's fiction, man! They don't have replicators or 100% efficient water recycling yet!

    6. Re:I thought we couldn't stay on the moon by timeOday · · Score: 1

      How do you nkow powered flight is the right analogy, and not alchemy?

    7. Re:I thought we couldn't stay on the moon by n.wegner · · Score: 1

      >How do you nkow powered flight is the right analogy, and not alchemy?

      Give me a particle accelerator and a breeder reactor to fuel it, and I'll show those nay-sayers how alchemy is done.

    8. Re:I thought we couldn't stay on the moon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why do you need the particle accelerator if you already have the breader reactor? Turning Uranium into Plutonium & Uranium isotopes is certainly just as much alchamy as Lead into Gold!

    9. Re:I thought we couldn't stay on the moon by timeOday · · Score: 1
      I know, but my point is that alchemy still (800 years later) isn't desirable or economically viable. I know we *could* make a settlement on the moon, but why and at what cost?

      I don't really want to pony up for a moon base, do you?

  8. hoax or no? by potpie · · Score: 0, Troll

    So are we really going there this time? ;)

    --
    Esoteric reference.
    1. Re:hoax or no? by Rick+the+Red · · Score: 2, Informative

      What do you mean, "this time"? We really went there last time, you know. Or are you one of those "Capricorn One" clowns?

      --
      If all this should have a reason, we would be the last to know.
    2. Re:hoax or no? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > What do you mean, "this time"? We really went there last
      > time, you know

      Care to cite your sources?

      Reputable ones, not from NASA or anyone else who says we went to the moon in the late 60s

    3. Re:hoax or no? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I do believe the parent was just making a joke...

    4. Re:hoax or no? by fenix+down · · Score: 1

      No, it's just the NRO making shit up again. The guy has a book about the shuttle coming out soon, so he's using NRO (The book store that pretends it's a news site!) to try and attract some attention.

      And if you're gonna troll Drudge for /. articles, could you at least have picked the one about making porn at NYU? That I would've been interested in.

    5. Re:hoax or no? by Droideka · · Score: 1

      Reputable ones, not from NASA or anyone else who says we went to the moon in the late 60s

      Wait. So you want sources that prove we went to the moon in the late '60s, but you disallow "anyone who says we went to the moon in the late '60s".

      I think I need say no more.

    6. Re:hoax or no? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you're catching on.

      If there are no reputable sources 'proving' anyone went to the moon (and there aren't) it's bleeding obvious we didn't. That's been known fact for a while

    7. Re:hoax or no? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you define "reputable sources" as "Only people who say we didn't" then of course your "evidence" shows that we didn't. Is logic so fucking hard for you idiots to follow you can't even see the huge gaping falacy in what you're saying? I believe that anti-Psycotic drugs have come on a long way in the last decade, you should ask your Dr. about them.

    8. Re:hoax or no? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      wow... i'm glad nobody thought that was serious. It sure is a good thing everybody picked up on the winking smiley face. It's a relief to see so many smart people who can tell a joke when they see one...

      by the way... this isn't sarcasm.

    9. Re:hoax or no? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      did u not see the winkey face or are you just an idiot?

  9. Aerospace Engineer by forlornhope · · Score: 1

    As an Aerospace Engineering major at WVU let me be the first to say, YIPPIE!!!! That is all. We now return you to your regularly scheduled trolls.

    --
    "We Don't Need No Truthless Heros!" - Project 86
    1. Re:Aerospace Engineer by cdelta · · Score: 1

      As a Mechanical Engineer at Lehigh University, let me be the second to say, YIPPIE! It's about time, as far as I'm concerned.

    2. Re:Aerospace Engineer by TedCheshireAcad · · Score: 1

      As a Slashdot Troll, let me be the first to say Natalie pr0tman and hot grits.

    3. Re:Aerospace Engineer by Versix · · Score: 1

      As a Robotics Engineer at Swinburne University, let me be the third to say, YIPPIE! Although it doesn't necessarily have to be manned :P

  10. The possible reasons why: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    1. There are weapons of mass destruction on the moon.
    2. Saddam or Osama, or both, may be hiding in a moon crater.
    3. The moon is made of oil.
    4. Don't want those pinko commie Chinese taking over our moon.
    5. Because the Mooninites are really funny and he wants to meet them.

    1. Re:The possible reasons why: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      I hear he's going to liberate the moon from Earth's orbit.

      Free the moon now!

    2. Re:The possible reasons why: by DavittJPotter · · Score: 0, Troll

      Or.......

      Fuck, the US economy is in the shitter! People are starting to figure out Bush is a fucking clown! Quick, look over there, America! Isn't the moon pretty!?! Hey, let's "go back" there! While we're there, we can remember to Fight Terrorism(TM), Support Democracy(R), and Be Free(TM)!

      --
      "If there's hope, it lies in the proles..."
    3. Re:The possible reasons why: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most of the recent economic indicators are showing an economic turnaround. And, even if it isn't real, if you make people think it is real, it's just as good... for a while.

    4. Re:The possible reasons why: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bush was quoted as saying, "I don't get it! We had a setback, a war, a victory, and a tax-cut. How is it not everybody loves me?"

    5. Re:The possible reasons why: by GraemeL · · Score: 2, Funny

      It's part of the missile defense plan. The moon is a great place to throw rocks from. Just ask Mike.

      Of course, he may learn that The Moon is a Harsh Mistress.

    6. Re:The possible reasons why: by bnenning · · Score: 1

      Er, ok. And I'm sure you'd have the same reaction if Gore had had better lawyers and was the one proposing this now.

      --
      How to solve most of our problems: 1.Lots of nuclear plants. 2.Cure aging.
    7. Re:The possible reasons why: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Offtopic
      the US economy is in the shitter!

      Ummm... What planet are you from? The economy is doing fine, and on its way up. Despite what the nine dweebs running for the office say, We actually have about 1.5 million more jobs now than when Bush took office.

      Take your typical blind rant somewhere else.

    8. Re:The possible reasons why: by anthony_dipierro · · Score: 1

      I'd say it's 3 and 4. The moon isn't made of oil, but a base on the moon could potentially be used to create an awful lot of cheap power, especially if we could find a nice source of radioactive material, but alternatively, through solar power. Then there's 4. Without a permanent presense, that flag up there doesn't mean shit. The moon could be very useful. We've gotta take it before anyone else does.

    9. Re:The possible reasons why: by brsmith4 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Perhaps you haven't read the news lately. Besides the declining value of the US dollar, as a direct result of a "weak" dollar policy by the Fed, the economy has started to do quite well lately. Yes, jobs are very slowly coming back into the picture, but thats just the way it works. There has been increased spending across the board and insane GDP booms which only means that more jobs will soon be available (of course, this also happened a few years before the 87 crash, but conditions were different: we were on a strong dollar policy and it was helping foreign economies more than ours). Go look this news up. Its been everywhere the past few days.

      Your comment wasn't insightful in the slightest. It was weak attempt at some sort of political message that has absolutely nothing to do with the current topic. To the moderators: just because you agree with a statement, does not mean its insightful or informative. If anything, its offtopic, just like my post.

      Please keep in mind, I have my qualms with the president. The war in iraq, guantanamo bay, the patriot act, and a couple of other things. I do not believe, however, that this economy was his fault, but that he is doing what he thinks is right to help.

      As for space: hey, he's a competative kind of guy. You have the Chinese and the EU taking stabs at space, along with the venerable Russians who have always been in the picture. The playing field is getting more crowded and he probably thinks that its time the 600 lb gorilla got back in the game.

    10. Re:The possible reasons why: by pherris · · Score: 1
      AC said:
      Ummm... What planet are you from? The economy is doing fine, and on its way up. Despite what the nine dweebs running for the office say, We actually have about 1.5 million more jobs now than when Bush took office.
      BWAWAWAWAWA! Yeah, Bush created 1.5M new jobs in India, China, etc. Hey AC, I got news for you: Bush lies!. What jobs have been created (which in no way makes up for what has been lost because of the dot bomb) in the US have mostly been "McJobs" (part time, no benefits and really shitty pay). BTW, Bush's own web site doesn't say he "created" 1.5M new jobs but "Without the President's tax cuts, as many as 1.5 million additional Americans could have lost their jobs.". This, of course, is total fiction.

      Bush sucks. He whores for the big corporations and Jesus freaks, and doesn't give a fuck about anyone else. As Zappa said:

      "Whats they do in Washington
      they just takes care of number one.
      And number one ain't you
      you ain't even number two."

      Try reading a newspaper outside the US like the Toronto Sun or the Guardian and find out what's really going on in the US and the world.

      Fucking coppertop.

      --
      "And a voice was screaming: 'Holy Jesus! What are these goddamn animals?'" - HST
    11. Re:The possible reasons why: by pherris · · Score: 1

      "Sir, I find your ideas interesting and would like to subscribe to your newsletter". - Homer

      --
      "And a voice was screaming: 'Holy Jesus! What are these goddamn animals?'" - HST
    12. Re:The possible reasons why: by Trejkaz · · Score: 1

      No, the WOMD will be there once Bush lands and sets them up. Can you imagine the moon as a fricking LASER PLATFORM?

      --
      Karma: It's all a bunch of tree-huggin' hippy crap!
    13. Re:The possible reasons why: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That flag up there doesn't mean shit anyway. It is a doctrine of international law, to which the USA has agreed, that the moon, like Antarctica, belongs to no one nation, and may not be exploited by anyone. Bad luck, mister American supremacist.

    14. Re:The possible reasons why: by ViolentGreen · · Score: 1

      5. Because the Mooninites are really funny and he wants to meet them.

      Just watch out for their laser. Jumping is useless.

      --
      Not everything is analogous to cars. Car analogies rarely work.
    15. Re:The possible reasons why: by deanj · · Score: 1

      Job growth is trailing economic indicator.

      The economy is growing.

    16. Re:The possible reasons why: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the last person who listened to a bush ended up lost and wandering around a desert for 40 years.

      (ok i would vote for bush if i voted but i never vote so whatever. but thats the funniest antibush thing i've ever seen. it was from a sign at an anti war rally in san francisco.)

    17. Re:The possible reasons why: by pherris · · Score: 1
      Try reading a newspaper outside the US like the Toronto Sun

      Sweet zombie jesus! What the hell was I smoking this morning? I meant the Toronto Star .

      --
      "And a voice was screaming: 'Holy Jesus! What are these goddamn animals?'" - HST
    18. Re:The possible reasons why: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is a doctrine of international law, to which the USA has agreed

      You assume the USA follows it's agreements.

    19. Re:The possible reasons why: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Iraq belongs to no one too. We will take the moon.

    20. Re:The possible reasons why: by randall_burns · · Score: 1

      The problem is that while there are 1.5 million new jobs, this hasn't kept up with the rate of immigration. Basically the US has 1.5 million new jobs and over 4 million new immigrants since Bush has come into office. Since most immigrants need to work, that means that we have a lot of US citizens either unemployed, on public assistance or downscaled in various ways.

    21. Re:The possible reasons why: by DavittJPotter · · Score: 1

      Actually, I have read the news. Quite extensively, and more than just US-centric media.

      My comment was a bit unformed, yes, I'll grant you that, but it was more intended in a sarcastic/funny tone. Damn the limitations of printed media!

      My main problem with our current administration is the fact that we're being fed our information in a very "1984" fashion - we announce a car bombing/suicide bombing in Iraq to whip up public fervor for the war, then the steel tariffs are lifted. People start to get back into their normal lives and the focus shifts from the war back to internal US problems, so our terror level is elevated, or "news of Al-Quida" (however the hell it's spelled today) hits the airwaves.

      I'm not trying to blame President Bush for all these things - God forbid one man would have such sway over the lives of hundreds of millions of people - but the current administration seems happy to rape and plunder our country for the benefit of the few. More and more jobs are being outsourced. People are working - but former skilled workers are parking cars or working jobs just to put food on the table. Yesterday on CNN the information on the crawler was that "Unemployment numbers climb 365K" - 365,000 more unemployed people on the rosters. Tech support jobs, programming jobs, and other 'mid-level' IT jobs are outsourced to India, or paid to H1B Visa holders for lower wages than they would pay to an existing US citizen.

      There was a great interview in Fast Company, where an executive made the incredible insight: "We want clean air, clean water, healthy living conditions, and well-made goods - but we don't want to pay for any of it."

      The global economy supposedly prevents any one nation from standing on its own anymore, what with the trade sanctions that the EU and Asia can use against us - the same sanctions that they decry as unfair when we threaten to use them to level the playing field (look for information regarding beef imports to Japan - coming from Japanese-owned ranches vs. American-owned) with these countries.

      As far as whether or not my comment was 'insightful' or not, it wasn't intended as such. You, however, are not qualified to tell someone what they do or do not consider intelligent/insightful/funny/stupid. That's what this whole system is about - on Slashdot, and in the US.

      Best Regards,
      Davitt J. Potter

      --
      "If there's hope, it lies in the proles..."
    22. Re:The possible reasons why: by brsmith4 · · Score: 1

      My friend, now that I understand that your reasoning is not just mindless rantings, i retract my intelligent/insightful/funny/stupid comment. I agree with you.

  11. I nominate Bush to be on first flight to the moon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    We always knew Bush was looney... now he's just plain lunar.

  12. Opiate of the masses by Sneftel · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Oh jesus. And how about some bread and circuses?

    --
    The opinions stated herein do not necessarily represent those of anybody at all. Deal with it.
    1. Re:Opiate of the masses by benzapp · · Score: 4, Insightful

      At least the Romans were able to accomplish more than your pathetic whining.

      btw, wheat has opioid peptides in it. It IS an opiate of the masses.

      Civilization needs a goal, without a goal, its just endless individualist pricks who all want to be different and be special. Simply existing is not enough. A person can't accomplish a damn thing on their own.

      Through unity, there is strength. From strength, comes power. With enough power, anything is possible.

      The Romans were able to create an island of civilization out of the natural world. No one was forced to live there. If you wanted to leave, you could. The Bread and Circuses line is a description of what happened when the Empire was collapsing. It doesn't mean anything that unifies a people is bad. When the Roman Empire was conquering the mediterranean, we don't say "That was just a way to control those stupid soldiers, har har". People moved into those conquered regions, civilization began anew into many of the modern countries of Europe.

      A large scale space program will employ hundreds of thousands of people, it could bring a minor revival to our industry, and give our people something to live for beyond watching TV and being consumers. This is the next step for humanity. This is our first step in expanding civilization, just as the Romans did 2000 years ago.

      btw, I would say we are far worse off than the Romans ever were. The only reason we aren't conquered by some more unified people is because we have nuclear weapons.

      Perhaps this is just what the people need.

      --
      I don't read or respond to AC posts
    2. Re:Opiate of the masses by Sneftel · · Score: 1

      Have you heard of the "broken window fallacy"? The basic idea is that employing thousands of people to accomplish very little of use isn't a good idea, that it's not necessarily productive to society.

      We could spend a billion bucks and send a guy to the moon. Or we could spend a billion bucks and find a cure for some fatal disease, or provide food and shelter to a large number of third-world citizens, or overhaul the nation's educational system, or... etc., etc., etc. I dunno about you, but it seems to me that "the people" might need, or at least want, any one of those a bit more.

      --
      The opinions stated herein do not necessarily represent those of anybody at all. Deal with it.
    3. Re:Opiate of the masses by geekoid · · Score: 2, Insightful

      All those thing come from having a larger goal.

      To continue with the Romans example, in order to accomplish "really big things"(RBT) you must have infrastructure in place. Like Roads, but Roads need people to build, and people can't build roads unles you get them food and water. If you begin having lots of people, you need to govern them, to govern them with a goal of growing your society, you must educate the people, and the must be healthy. Then people see opportunity, with opportunity comes competition, and independent means of making a living.

      The same applies to the RBT. you want to go to the moon, you need engineers, you need supplies, you manufactureres you need educated people.

      Well, that means you need schools. More kids go to schools, more kids become scientists, your liklyhood of many non RBT thhings take place, like feeding the hungry(crops with higher yields) better medicine, housing techniques.
      In order for use to truly become a space faring race, we will need better power, both storage and crating. Better power solutions help move us into new realms of science. A good power solution could actually make electric cars reasonably for the average person, that has a huge benefit enviromentally, thus reducing the amount of crap we breath, thus creating a healthier society.

      All these thing are linked.

      None of those things you mentioned can be done with just money. For example, the education system will not change unles the right people are in all the right places. I mean people who, above all, want a schools system thats better. Even at the cost of there own future careers.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    4. Re:Opiate of the masses by Charcharodon · · Score: 1
      Hmmm we spent billions to send a guy to the moon and we ended up with the largest and farthest reaching space programs on the planet, not to mention the thousands of innovations that came from it that made us into a technological and industrial leader.

      We've spent billion and continue to do so in the search for cures of diseases, and we are finding cures.

      We spend billions to provide food and shelter for the 3rd world. All we get is criticised for not doing enough, even though what we contribute out strips the rest of the world put together.

      We currently spend billions on the nation's education system. Of course "good intensions" has made it into a bloated and inefficient mess. If anything we need to start changing the rules so teachers and administrators that are not serious about education get the big boot to the butt.

      So exactly what exactly is your point again?

    5. Re:Opiate of the masses by Sneftel · · Score: 1

      I'm still trying to figure out what your point is. Who are you to decide what "enough" is?

      It's great that we got all these side benefits from the space program. But those were SIDE EFFECTS. And for every dollar that went towards a wide-ranging, general-technology-improving innovation, we spent a thousand bucks on deciding how to make a moon rover rove. So perhaps the "other stuff" would be a little more efficient at helping society?

      --
      The opinions stated herein do not necessarily represent those of anybody at all. Deal with it.
    6. Re:Opiate of the masses by DaveLatham · · Score: 1

      All right, but apart from the sanitation, the medicine, education, wine, public order, irrigation, roads, a fresh water system, and public health, what have the Romans ever done for us?

    7. Re:Opiate of the masses by don_oles · · Score: 1

      Oh man, you are so naive...
      Just think that humanity has still a very _LOT_OF_ things to do on Earth, and in space nothing will be found of use. _NOTHING_. Many people will be employed? Yes! At the cost of others.
      Open your eyes. It's called manipulation, and those who make up this program think not about you or science or about emploing other people. The only reasons of it are two mutual goals: more money into their hand, more control over the crowd.
      A better goal is to make an Earth a good place to live. And not just for 1% of the whole population.

    8. Re:Opiate of the masses by Cryogenes · · Score: 1

      The Romans were able to create an island of civilization out of the natural world. No one was forced to live there. If you wanted to leave, you could.

      WTF are you talking about. The Romans had millions of slaves, could they leave? In those times you had to be a rich guy to travel more than 100 miles (unless, of course, you signed up for the 25-year military service).
    9. Re:Opiate of the masses by retards · · Score: 1

      The Romans were able to create an island of civilization out of the natural world. No one was forced to live there.

      The Roman Empire was in most part successful because of it's ability to conquer new ground and thus provide millions of slaves for it's citizens. When the empire grew very large and the forces spread out thinly, victory was no longer as easy, and thus the slave trade subsided. But so did prosperity.

      Now, you may ask "So what!?". Well, your gilded vision of a glorious roman empire is a bit off. The romans were a miltitant, slavetrading, genocidial bunch who didn't have a lot of tolerance for dissent.

      People moved into those conquered regions, civilization began anew into many of the modern countries of Europe.

      Yes, some Romans moved in to replace those who were slaughtered or traded as slaves. Cities that surrendered quitely were allowed to be integrated into the Empire without a fuss and were allowed freedoms as long as they payed tax to the Emperor.

      I would say we are far worse off than the Romans ever were

      No, we ARE the Romans, where 'we' is the Western World. We have slaves all over the world picking bananas, making cell phones, growing rice, etc. for us to buy for next to nothing. Surrender quietly to our cause, and you get to join the Empire eventually. Get in our way, and we will bomb you into oblivion.

    10. Re:Opiate of the masses by Alexei · · Score: 2, Informative
      what we contribute out strips the rest of the world put together.

      This is simply not true. In 2001, the US spent about $10 billion in foreign aid, out of $50b worldwide. However, as a fraction of our GDP, our contributions are the smallest of any of the OECD countries, and as little as a tenth of the northern european countries.

      This year, of course, we have an $87b spending spree. Only $20b of that is going towards reconstruction, though (the rest pays for the military). As for whether that's foreign aid or payment for damages is up to you.

      Private aid might even score somewhat-- counting foundations, NGOs, private people sending money to their families, etc., the US sends $35b abroad every year. I can't find any equivalent statistics for other countries, though.

      About 2% of charitable donations in the US leave the country.

      References--
      1, 2, 3

    11. Re:Opiate of the masses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let's put some figures on this, shall we?

      Current worldwide spending on manned spaceflight: ~$9 billion per year.

      Of that, just over $6 billion is spent by NASA (the rest of NASA's budget goes on things such as Earth Science, Aeronautical Research, Space Science, etc.

      Putting it in context, the UK government spends more than $32 billion per year on the Scottish Office, nearly $17 billion on the Welsh Office.
      The Chancellor of the UK has $7.25 billion to run his Department (I'm from the UK, which is why these figures come to mind).

      NASA's budget has halved (in real terms) since its peak in 1967. How much of those billions "saved" have been spent to cure fatal diseases, or on third-world citizens?

      The money goes straight to workers. It bootstraps technological advancements. It gives spin-offs that we cannot predict - when that many inventive minds are given that much cash, we get huge spin offs. Sure, we could have got modern computers without going to the Moon - if people had decided to invest in that. But why would they? Who was it at IBM who said "There is a world market for maybe 5 computers"?

      Would investment in fetal heart rate monitors have occurred? Or radar-reflective life rafts? - to name but 2 spin-offs that have saved many lives.

      It is always manned spaceflight that is held up to be sacrificed on the altar of saving the world from poverty, anger, war, disease, uneducation ... all these ills exist, but sacrificing manned spaceflight will free up the same amount of money to fight them as rolling the spending on the Scottish Office back to year 2000 levels. I've never seen anyone argue that that would cure the worlds ills.

      When Columbus sailed from Spain in 1492, there were ghettos in Madrid that could have profitably had the money for his expedition spent on them. Should he have waited until there were no such problems in Spain? Bear in mind that those ghettos are still there today.

      Worldwide we spend $10 trillion per year on entertainment. That's the equivalent of nearly 10 NASA level manned space programs for every nation on Earth, from the USA to San Marino.

    12. Re:Opiate of the masses by 0123456 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "Civilization needs a goal, without a goal, its just endless individualist pricks who all want to be different and be special. Simply existing is not enough. A person can't accomplish a damn thing on their own.

      Through unity, there is strength. From strength, comes power. With enough power, anything is possible."

      It's so rare to see people openly avowing fascist ideals these days.

    13. Re:Opiate of the masses by 10Ghz · · Score: 1

      They brought peace

      --
      Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
    14. Re:Opiate of the masses by 10Ghz · · Score: 1
      This is simply not true. In 2001, the US spent about $10 billion in foreign aid, out of $50b worldwide. However, as a fraction of our GDP, our contributions are the smallest of any of the OECD countries, and as little as a tenth of the northern european countries.


      And don't forget, USA gives Israel (a modern nation of just 5 million people) more money than they (the USA) gives to entire sub-Saharan Africa!
      --
      Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
    15. Re:Opiate of the masses by ratamacue · · Score: 1
      Civilization needs a goal, without a goal, its just endless individualist pricks who all want to be different and be special.

      Let me guess: This "goal" you speak of is something that YOU personally value and consider worthy?

      Open your eyes. Government is nothing but a collection of "individualist pricks" just like you, me, the corporations, and everyone else on this planet. Individuals in government act in their own interest, just like everyone else. The difference is that individuals in government hold the "right" to invoke force as a means to an end, while the common individual does not.

    16. Re:Opiate of the masses by frostman · · Score: 1

      I too admire ancient Rome, but I must point out that the Empire frequently expanded to include people who didn't choose to be part of it.

      You may be free to leave, but if it's your homeland that has been annexed, that's not much consolation.

      On the other hand, life was often better under Roman rule (insert Monty Python voices here).

      --

      This Like That - fun with words!

    17. Re:Opiate of the masses by kruczkowski · · Score: 0

      So did Hitler. (or atleast that is what he told Germans during Riechstag)

      --
      hmm... for fun I enjoy launching DDoS attacks against 127.87.42.5
    18. Re:Opiate of the masses by stanmann · · Score: 1

      Yes, but what do we get from Israel???

      Well, for one, we got the most important communication tool of the last 10 years... ICQ.

      --
      Food not Bombs is a nice platitude but it breaks down when you notice that the Bombees are usually well fed
    19. Re:Opiate of the masses by stanmann · · Score: 1

      I have the right to invoke force... Money is force, intellect is force, a .30-06 is force, a 12 gauge is force.... etc

      now, just like the government, my use of force has concequences.

      --
      Food not Bombs is a nice platitude but it breaks down when you notice that the Bombees are usually well fed
    20. Re:Opiate of the masses by jafac · · Score: 1

      If you wanted to leave, you could

      Tell that to Spartacus.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    21. Re:Opiate of the masses by benzapp · · Score: 1

      Have you heard of the "broken window fallacy"? The basic idea is that employing thousands of people to accomplish very little of use isn't a good idea, that it's not necessarily productive to society.

      First of all, I didn't make a real logical argument so there wasn't any fallacy. Further, your post is indicative of the an argument ad populum fallacy. Your are assuming that which benefits the most number of people on earth must be good. I hold no such view. In fact, I don't even advocate space flight because it will be productive for society. I am arguing that it will be great, it will be remembered for all time to come, and it will advance humanity on a spiritual level. Human advancement should not be a popularity contst.

      I dunno about you, but it seems to me that "the people" might need, or at least want, any one of those a bit more.

      Your right, you don't know about me. When I say "the people" I am referring to MY people, not any other people. I don't care about people in third world countries, in fact they will be displaced eventually just as America displaced the Indians, Rome displaced the Carthaginians, and the Germans displaced Rome. A civilization that cannot provide for itself will always be displaced by one which is expanding. It is the natural order. There is a finite amount of resources on this earth, and as we approach 10 billion bodies here, technology and civilized society is a necessity. People who cannot adapt for the future will not survive.

      Further, I think there is way too much human life on this planet. Developing more cures for diseases will simply enhance the problem. A cured female will simply give birth to 5 children who will contract some new disease. What we need is MORE death, or at least eugenics. I also don't care about materialistic wants, such as food or shelter, or salvation from suffering. This is what an animal wants. A human should CRAVE death that comes from adventure, exploration, or battle.

      I think your value systems are simply a reflection of your corrupt society. Dream a little more, realize humans are more than animals, and that life should not be about contentment. It is through adversity that we grow, it great suffering that has lead to every human ehancement thus far. We can already see how ease of life is so corrupting, or are you ignoring it?

      --
      I don't read or respond to AC posts
    22. Re:Opiate of the masses by benzapp · · Score: 1

      Six years of peace is hardly anything special in human history.

      The Romans had over 100 years of no major wars. That means that by the time the next major war came, no one alive even remember what it was like. Try and imagine that. You probably can't considering it hasn't happened since then.

      --
      I don't read or respond to AC posts
    23. Re:Opiate of the masses by ratamacue · · Score: 1

      Don't muddy the waters. There are exactly 2 types of human interaction possible: voluntary and involuntary. Voluntary interaction is devoid of force; involuntary interaction relies on force. Examples of voluntary interaction include marriage, friendship, employment, and basically everything you do throughout the day, if you're not a criminal. Examples of involuntary interaction include theft, fraud, murder, and of course, the citizen-government relationship.

      You, as an individual, do not hold the "right" to initiate force. You may use force in self-defense, but if you initiate force, you are a criminal. Government, on the other hand, does hold the "right" to initiate force. Everything government does is based on force -- otherwise it would be private enterprise. At the very least, government must initiate force in order to generate revenue.

      The examples you give are not types of human interaction. They are examples of inanimate posessions (guns, money) and abstract concepts (intellect). They have no relation to force because they are not actions. For example, a gun does not decide whether to invoke force as a means to an end. It could be used as a tool of force (i.e. armed robbery) or it could be used as an object of voluntary interaction (i.e. shooting range). It is not the gun that determines whether a human interaction is voluntary or involuntary -- it is the human being.

    24. Re:Opiate of the masses by 10Ghz · · Score: 1

      I assume you haven't watched Monty Python alot?

      reference

      --
      Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
    25. Re:Opiate of the masses by benzapp · · Score: 1

      WTF are you talking about. The Romans had millions of slaves, could they leave? In those times you had to be a rich guy to travel more than 100 miles (unless, of course, you signed up for the 25-year military service).

      Slavery in the past was not quite how you think. Back then civilization was the exception, not the rule. If you wanted to, you could escape. It wasn't like slaves were chained or locked in cages all the time (with some exceptions I am sure). Most chose to stay.

      People did not have to be rich to travel those distances either. Who do you think was settling in the newly created towns? Immigrants from other parts of the Empire. It was encouraged.

      --
      I don't read or respond to AC posts
    26. Re:Opiate of the masses by benzapp · · Score: 1

      Another ridiculous randroid...

      There is nothing more illogical than this theory that "freedom from force" is ever possible.

      If humans do not use "force" to establish order and unity, they will fall apart. Other animals do not follow your stupid ethic. A single man by himself can't survive in nature, he will be eaten or he will starve.

      See, this is the whole problem with Randroids. They can only imagine the world as it is RIGHT NOW, where safety is virtually guaranteed and organized societies cover the entire planet. Their little fantasy world where no one can initiate force is DEPENDENT upon a vast police force ready and willing to impliment such a system. What reason do they have to protect you? Just your stupid little ethic?

      Force is how nature survives. All life must kill another living think directly or by proxy to survive. Imagine a small tribe of humans that allows its members to do whatever they want, not learn to throw a spear, not tend the crops for the winter, not take care of their children. In our modern world, randroids don't post much of a threat, just an annoyance. Even 150 years ago however, such people were DANGEROUS. One person shirking their duties could mean death for everyone, or a child having a fucked up future or none at all...

      In nature, there are no rights. Only survival. Everything else, is a manufactured system that is not indepdently meaningful. If it ceases to benefit the people, it is of no value.

      --
      I don't read or respond to AC posts
    27. Re:Opiate of the masses by stanmann · · Score: 1

      I'm not muddying anything... I use force when I choose to buy from a instead of b. I use force when I chooose not to sell to x and sell to y(using arbitrary reasons y asked first, I don't like the tone of x's voice, etc) I use force when I excercise my right to vote for g over f... these are all uses of pre-emptive force...

      --
      Food not Bombs is a nice platitude but it breaks down when you notice that the Bombees are usually well fed
    28. Re:Opiate of the masses by benzapp · · Score: 1

      Let me guess: This "goal" you speak of is something that YOU personally value and consider worthy?

      Yes, thats right. Of course, if I can pursuade enough people to follow me then it won't be just me now will it? You got a problem with that randroid?

      Government is nothing but a collection of "individualist pricks" just like you, me, the corporations, and everyone else on this planet.

      Ever read Plato's Republic? Some real philosophy instead of Atlas Shrugged??? There is a very easy way to ensure that Government is only made up of the best and wisest people. Such people would not be individualist pricks, but would instead realize that disunity is suicide.

      --
      I don't read or respond to AC posts
    29. Re:Opiate of the masses by benzapp · · Score: 1

      It's so rare to see people openly avowing fascist ideals these days.

      Not really. You think everyone reads Plato's Republic and thinks its just a fantasy? It wouldn't be a great book if it wasn't slightly persuasive.

      Maybe its not popular, but if you think the Athens vs Sparta debate ended in 1945, you are very mistaken. Democracy has been an abject failure in the post war world, it is time for pendallum to swing back again, as it has for the last 2500 years.

      You look at the popularity of eastern culture in the western world, the endless desire for materialistic fashions, the hedonism... People are desperate for some ideal to live for, something to give to their children and their grandchildren. How will we as a people be remembered in 1000 years?

      --
      I don't read or respond to AC posts
    30. Re:Opiate of the masses by ratamacue · · Score: 1
      safety is virtually guaranteed

      Is this a joke? Statisically, the US is one of the most dangerous "first world" countries to live in. But, the US has the most powerful, most expensive government (element of force) in the world. By your logic, the US should be the safest country in the world to live in, because the US government (the element of force) is the strongest in the world. WHAT HAPPENED? Their little fantasy world where no one can initiate force is DEPENDENT upon a vast police force ready and willing to impliment such a system.

      This is nonsense. In a pinch, your theory has already been disproved by (for example) the Amish. Peaceful anarchy is not only possible -- it is quite logically the ultimate social achievement. Unfortunately, we are taught by government from a very early age that force is the better solution.

      Unless you're a criminal, you interact with other people voluntarily. You do so on a daily basis. So do the people you interact with. They do not engage in voluntary interaction because they are forced to -- they engage in voluntary interaction because they want to. They do this because they realize that voluntary interaction benefits them more than forceful interaction would.

      If that can happen in your little corner of the world, then why couldn't it happen on a larger scale? As long as no one group is empowered with the "right" to initiate force as a means to an end, why wouldn't it be possible? (Note that force in self-defense is entirely acceptable. It is the initiation of force that I am concerned with.)

      Force is how nature survives.

      Force is how criminals survive. I survive through voluntary association, and I suspect that you do too.

    31. Re:Opiate of the masses by benzapp · · Score: 1

      Now, you may ask "So what!?". Well, your gilded vision of a glorious roman empire is a bit off. The romans were a miltitant, slavetrading, genocidial bunch who didn't have a lot of tolerance for dissent.

      Its not off. It sounds like a great place to me.

      Yes, some Romans moved in to replace those who were slaughtered or traded as slaves. Cities that surrendered quitely were allowed to be integrated into the Empire without a fuss and were allowed freedoms as long as they payed tax to the Emperor.

      Now that sounds like a great system. They had to pay a lot less taxes than I do, and they got all the benefits of being in the empire. Protection, secured trade, new markets... Why would anyone want to resist? Of course, its good to have a nice motivator.

      Get in our way, and we will bomb you into oblivion.

      I think slavery is much more humane.

      --
      I don't read or respond to AC posts
    32. Re:Opiate of the masses by ratamacue · · Score: 1

      I really don't know how to answer that. It's like you're looking truth in the face, and denying it.

      Please explain, in detail, exactly how a consumer invokes force as a means to an end by choosing to purchase Coke over Pepsi.

    33. Re:Opiate of the masses by ratamacue · · Score: 1
      Of course, if I can pursuade enough people to follow me then it won't be just me now will it? You got a problem with that randroid?

      Persuasion is not an initiation of force. So no, I wouldn't have a problem with that at all. Socialism, on the other hand, depends on the initiation of force. So which one is it? Are you talking about socialism or free enterprise? There's your answer.

      There is a very easy way to ensure that Government is only made up of the best and wisest people.

      If there is, I'd certainly like to know about it. Every government since the beginning of time has abused its power over the people, empowering and enriching the elite few at the expense of individual freedom. This "method" you speak of -- which ensures that our rulers are "wise" -- is still theory, no?

    34. Re:Opiate of the masses by jhwang · · Score: 1

      When I say "the people" I am referring to MY people, not any other people. I don't care about people in third world countries, in fact they will be displaced eventually just as America displaced the Indians, Rome displaced the Carthaginians, and the Germans displaced Rome.

      I guess the natural order of things would have been to let the Saddam Hussein's Sunnis to displace the Kurds (and Kuwaitis), the North Vietnamese to displace the South Vietnamese, the Soviet Union to displace the Third Worlders in Western Europe in 1945. Oh wait, the superior American civilization stopped them all (except for Vietnam).

      The British empire at it's peak was the height of "civilization". But 3 decades after 1914, it was completely displaced by the Third World you don't care about. How does that work with your progressivist theory of history?

      Dream a little more, realize humans are more than animals, and that life should not be about contentment. It is through adversity that we grow, it great suffering that has lead to every human ehancement thus far. We can already see how ease of life is so corrupting, or are you ignoring it?

      What sort of adversity brought about the Green Revolution in 20th century agriculture that raised more people out of subsistence farming and complete poverty in 50 years than the entire rest of human history? Starvation and disease had been around for millenia. Do you mean to say that adversity was somehow "necessary" for the technological and social conditions that led to the Green Revolution?

      Actually, I agree with you that people should have noble goals. But these aspirations should be informed by history. One of my ideals is that in a liberal democracy, we can negotiate with others regarding what kind of public ideals should be and gain followers through inspiration rather than coercion.

      Unfortunately, democracies throughout history have a tendency to corrupt themselves through military and imperial overreaching.

    35. Re:Opiate of the masses by benzapp · · Score: 1

      Is this a joke? Statisically, the US is one of the most dangerous "first world" countries to live in.

      Yeah, you have a .0005% chance of being murdered in Chicago, and a 0.000073375% chance of being murdered in New York. There were 587 murders in New York in 2002. Out of a city of 8 million. Crime in the US, despite being higher than moster western countries, is hardly on the scale of a major war.

      The US also has the largest number of non-white people in first world countries. There is a direct relationship between cultural disunity and crime. The more homogeneous your society, the lower your crime rate.

      Crime is virtually unknown in Japan, and is much lower in Ireland than say France or England where many members of other races have immigrated. This is a bigger issue in Europe right now because many cities went from being crime free to crime ridden in just the past 10 years. Of course, the Japanese just laugh.

      This is not to say that any particular race is prone to crime, only that different races have a hard time coexisting, for whatever reason.

      In a pinch, your theory has already been disproved by (for example) the Amish.

      Firstly the Amish are NOT pacifists. They don't believe in organized militaries, but they do own guns and they will defend themselves. They also live in the middle of nowhere, and keep to themselves. In congressional hearings regarding the draft, they have said that if they were required to defend their immediate homeland in the event of an invasion, they would. As far as initiating force, they haven't gotten to a point where it is necessary. Mostly this is due to them living within the borders of the nation's largest superpower. They are already having trouble procuring more land today, so I don't think they will be growing that much more.

      Let us not forget as well that the Amish are living on land that was conquered from the Native Americans. The Amish directly benefit from others who made that land available to them. In fact, pretty much every American except for those on the eastern seaboard, are directly benefitting as a result of some idiots not following your ethic.

      Peaceful anarchy is not only possible -- it is quite logically the ultimate social achievement

      Only if you consider peace desirable. Some people lament the advent of modern warfare, battle is when men feel most alive. In a sense, technological advancement has robbed us of an essential component of our humanity.

      They do this because they realize that voluntary interaction benefits them more than forceful interaction would.

      That may be the case now, but when a substantial minority of the population no longer feels that system is benefiting them, they will no longer abide by it. This was the situation in France prior to the French Revolution. Desperate people do desperate things.

      I do not deny people live by your code in times of peace and when circumstances allow it, but eventually the population of the world will exceed what our earth can support. Modern technology will not provide an infinite bounty. When that happens, competition for scarce resources will be decided in battle. It has happened, and it will happen again.

      Force is how criminals survive. I survive through voluntary association, and I suspect that you do too.

      Of course, I can't address that on a personal level. But chances are, you are living on land right now that was taken, by force, from someone else against their will. You may not be a criminal directly, but I would say you are by proxy.

      --
      I don't read or respond to AC posts
    36. Re:Opiate of the masses by benzapp · · Score: 1

      Persuasion is not an initiation of force. So no, I wouldn't have a problem with that at all. Socialism, on the other hand, depends on the initiation of force. So which one is it? Are you talking about socialism or free enterprise? There's your answer.

      This has nothing to do with economics and materialist distribution of wealth.

      If there is, I'd certainly like to know about it. Every government since the beginning of time has abused its power over the people, empowering and enriching the elite few at the expense of individual freedom. This "method" you speak of -- which ensures that our rulers are "wise" -- is still theory, no?

      That is only a problem if you believe individual freedom matters. The US has lots of individual freedom, but is culturally dead. There was correspondingly little individual freedom in Florence or Venice during the early Renaissance, but far more culture.

      Is the freedom to say whatever you want all that important if you have work at a job you hate and which offers you no direct expression of your human soul? Do you believe you have freedom of speech even though you can do nothing more than whimper? Are you truly free if you can't even raise 3 children, enough to replace yourselfand your mate? Are you free if you can't devote your life to the perfection of a craft, and are instead made obsolete by technological advancements?

      No, I think you don't know what freedom is. Bullshitting on slashodt is not freedom. Being able to choose a major of study in college is not freedom. Working 80 hours a week and putting your single child in day care is not freedom. Having to work in Wal Mart when you are 55 because you can't afford to go back to school to become a doctor is not freedom.

      You are living in a fantasy world.

      --
      I don't read or respond to AC posts
    37. Re:Opiate of the masses by benzapp · · Score: 1

      I guess the natural order of things would have been to let the Saddam Hussein's Sunnis to displace the Kurds (and Kuwaitis), the North Vietnamese to displace the South Vietnamese, the Soviet Union to displace the Third Worlders in Western Europe in 1945. Oh wait, the superior American civilization stopped them all (except for Vietnam).

      your point?

      What sort of adversity brought about the Green Revolution in 20th century agriculture that raised more people out of subsistence farming and complete poverty in 50 years than the entire rest of human history?

      I have no idea what you are talking about. It is pretty common knowledge that by every measure, most third world areas are far worse off today than in 1890. I can tell you that much of the Green Party ideology was first implimented in Germany under National Socialism. It shouldn't be a surprise that both parties also fight International Finance, except today they use the term "globalism". As far as environmental programs, the necessity in Germany was overpopulation and the needs to prevent industrialization from destroying the countryside.

      Do you mean to say that adversity was somehow "necessary" for the technological and social conditions that led to the Green Revolution?

      Now you are putting words in my mouth. There is nothing truly unique to the Green Party ideology. If you are talking about environmentalism, yes the adversity was impending ecological disaster. I would call that a potentially major problem.

      Unfortunately, democracies throughout history have a tendency to corrupt themselves through military and imperial overreaching.

      Why is that a corruption? Maybe its just the cycle of life. And why is it unique to democracies? I don't know of any society that hasn't tried to expand. Thats what happens when people have sex and have children, then their children have children... They have to go somewhere.

      --
      I don't read or respond to AC posts
    38. Re:Opiate of the masses by stanmann · · Score: 1

      This is basic Randian theory, by buying coke vs pepsi I am using force on pepsi and potentially causing them harm...

      --
      Food not Bombs is a nice platitude but it breaks down when you notice that the Bombees are usually well fed
    39. Re:Opiate of the masses by ratamacue · · Score: 1
      Firstly the Amish are NOT pacifists.

      You don't have to be a pacifist to operate on the principle of voluntary association. Pacifism is irrelevant to the concepts I'm trying to explain.

      In congressional hearings regarding the draft, they have said that if they were required to defend their immediate homeland in the event of an invasion, they would.

      According to Rand, force in self-defense is moral and acceptable. The initiation of force is what is immoral and unacceptable. The Amish do not force any members of their society to work or otherwise contribute to the society, nor would they force any memeber to take up arms to defend their society. If they took up arms in defense of their society, that is a moral and acceptable use of force (not an initiation of force). Therefore, the Amish are entirely consistent with Rand's philosophy.

      As far as initiating force, they haven't gotten to a point where it is necessary.

      You still misunderstand the concept of force as a means to an end (the initiation of force) vs. voluntary association as a means to an end. If the government initiates an attack on the Amish, and the Amish invoke force in self-defense, then the government is the initiator of force (the immoral party) and the Amish are still moral and just.

    40. Re:Opiate of the masses by benzapp · · Score: 1

      You still misunderstand the concept of force as a means to an end (the initiation of force) vs. voluntary association as a means to an end. If the government initiates an attack on the Amish, and the Amish invoke force in self-defense, then the government is the initiator of force (the immoral party) and the Amish are still moral and just.

      Forget the self-defense angle, I forgot you were a randroid and not the green... I get your point.

      So, when the American government initiates force against the inferior native americans, clearing them from the land so the Amish can live there, thats ok?

      --
      I don't read or respond to AC posts
    41. Re:Opiate of the masses by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      The romans were a miltitant, slavetrading, genocidial bunch who didn't have a lot of tolerance for dissent.

      Oh please. Rome was well known as a melting pot. They had slaves, but they certainly weren't genocidal.

    42. Re:Opiate of the masses by jhwang · · Score: 1

      your point?

      I was responding to your post: "I don't care about people in third world countries, in fact they will be displaced eventually just as America displaced the Indians, Rome displaced the Carthaginians, and the Germans displaced Rome.

      You make it sound like ethnic cleansing is inevitable in the third world. If I understand your point correctly, some crude Social Darwinism will eliminate these weak societies, totally discounting the ability of the people in those societies to reform their nation-states. Military force and power is essential to understanding international relations. But there are many other factors to consider.

      My response merely cites examples where previous eliminationist tendencies were *stopped* rather than encouraged by an outside power. And that outside power is the U.S. which has a history of having idealistic foreign policy. (Obviously balanced by realist and other schools of thought.)

      You make it sound as if some combination of demographic and/or military force will eventually eliminate the people who live in the third world. If I understand you correctly, you claim that those lands will then be taken over by individuals from some outside civilization. Though starvation, disease, and illiberal governments are serious issues in some of these countries (esp. subsaharan Africa), your concept is ridiculous. What outside military power do you expect will come in to conquer, say, Zimbabwe?

      I have no idea what you are talking about...There is nothing truly unique to the Green Party ideology.

      Obviously. When I say "Green Revolution" , I refer to the "process of technological development of agricultural techniques that began in Mexico in 1944 and has since spread throughout the world." Basically, it's disproved Malthus. (Or pushed off his deadline farther into the future, depending on your point of view.) I am NOT refering to the Green Party.

      The reason I raised it was in response to your idea that "great suffering that has lead to every human ehancement thus far". yes, yes, desperation is the mother of all invention, except when it ISN'T. I was pointing out the Green Revolution, a massive advance for humanity, was not in itself a response to suffering. Why? b/c the kind of suffering that comes from subsistence farming has existed for thousands of years. My point is that suffering alone is not enough for these advances. You need other factors like the proper social and technological conditions for this "adversity" to do anything constructive.

      OK, i admit it's not the greatest example. What about the arts or pure math, where people advance frontiers b/c they enjoy it. It's about fun, not suffering.

      Why is that a corruption?

      What I said was: "Unfortunately, democracies throughout history have a tendency to corrupt themselves through military and imperial overreaching." Why is this a corruption? Because democracy is about an idealism about how people relate to each other and can form a voluntary society and a represntative form of government. A government based on positive patriotism rather than merely negative fear of force. Unfortunately, these ideals are often forgotten (corrupted) both internally and when waging imperalist and expansionst wars abroad. I don't mean defensive wars, although there's a lot of gray area between imperalism vs. defensive military action.

      I have nothing against society expanding. I do have a problem when it expands at the expense of our democracy. In the process of reaching out militarily, we corrupt our Republic internally. You're probably right that this is inherent to all growing societies. That doesn't mean we shouldn't be aware of the dangers and fight to hold onto our ideals. Many of the Founding Fathers themselves were concerned about this corruption from foreign adventures.

    43. Re:Opiate of the masses by benzapp · · Score: 1

      You make it sound like ethnic cleansing is inevitable in the third world. If I understand your point correctly, some crude Social Darwinism will eliminate these weak societies, totally discounting the ability of the people in those societies to reform their nation-states. Military force and power is essential to understanding international relations. But there are many other factors to consider.

      I guess that sounds about right. Generally speaking "ethnic cleansing" implies a massive organized attempt to relocate certain people involving concentration camps and what not. I don't think it will happen quite that way, usually such expansions are much more subtle. Such as Rome. People think that visigoths sort of swooped into Rome from modern day Germany and sacked the city. German tribes were already living in north Italy by the early 400's. It took 200 years for American Indians to really be forced onto indian reservations. Most ethnic cleansing is much more deliberate, such as it was first used by the British against the Dutch and German settlers in South Africa in 1902. Of course, there was Germany, and the US with the Japanese... I don't if it will happen along those lines.

      As far as Africa, I wouldn't be surprised if Arab states try to expand into South Saharan africa. Most of Arabia is tremendously overpopulated. I also think its likely China will try to expand north into Russia.

      Most expansion is really occuring like non-whites moving into formerlly white nations. In 50 years, it is likely 2 of the 5 largest white nations will be no longer be majority white (US and France) Most will have substantial non-white populations. Is there a planned system of ethnic cleansing? Not really, but white people will still be fewer than 1% of the world's population in that time.

      My response merely cites examples where previous eliminationist tendencies were *stopped* rather than encouraged by an outside power. And that outside power is the U.S. which has a history of having idealistic foreign policy. (Obviously balanced by realist and other schools of thought.)

      I see your point, I was referring more to population growth out of necessity. The US is still not overpopulated to the extent say Germany is, or China, or India. The US was becoming involved in those issues for political reasons.

      Obviously. When I say "Green Revolution" , I refer to the "process of technological development of agricultural techniques that began in Mexico in 1944 and has since spread throughout the world." Basically, it's disproved Malthus. (Or pushed off his deadline farther into the future, depending on your point of view.) I am NOT refering to the Green Party.

      Interesting stuff, I hadn't heard about it. Most fertilizers and advanced forms of wheat were developed in Germany in the 19th century however, and this WAS down out of necessity as Germany has not been able to produce enough food since the 1870's. Even the hearty red wheat grown in much of the midwest was brought to the US from the Germans expelled from the Ukraine who eventually settled in the Dakotas. Also, need was the

      It sounds like a typical Rockefeller foundation plan though, they have always been concerned about overpopulation.

      I was pointing out the Green Revolution, a massive advance for humanity, was not in itself a response to suffering.

      If you are talking about the motivations of the Rockefeller foundation, I would say you are right. They were always concerned with third world overpopulation, especially in Mexico which could result in hordes of Mexicans coming into the US. Of course that happened anyway.

      The technology they used however created as a result of need, starvation, and want.

      OK, i admit it's not the greatest example. What about the arts or pure math, where people advance frontiers b/c they enjoy it. It's about fun, not suffering.

      Your right, this is much better. Its a tough question, I would read Nietzsche to get a

      --
      I don't read or respond to AC posts
    44. Re:Opiate of the masses by retards · · Score: 1

      Really? How about Carthage? The Romans slaughtered all of it's inhabitants, then the livestock, then burned the city and promptly after that pulverized the rocks the houses were built with.

      Rome was a melting pot if you succumed to it, but if you resisted there was no mercy.

    45. Re:Opiate of the masses by retards · · Score: 1

      Its not off. It sounds like a great place to me.

      Wow. I guess you must be really special since you seem to assume that you would be a slave owner and not a slave. But I guess that's what all imperialist think, that they are better than most other people.


      secured trade, new markets... Why would anyone want to resist? Of course, its good to have a nice motivator.


      China can provide you with all that. Let's hope they invade your country and give you all that you ever dreamed of.

      I think slavery is much more humane.

      Of course it. How convenient that it also provides you with the alternative not to work yourself but force others to do it. I wonder exactly who you feel should be your slaves.

    46. Re:Opiate of the masses by ratamacue · · Score: 1
      So, when the American government initiates force against the inferior native americans, clearing them from the land so the Amish can live there, thats ok?

      Of course not. The europeans were wrong and immoral, because they invoked force as a means to an end. I'm not going to back-pedal on my philosophy just because I live on land that was acquired by force hundreds of years before I even existed.

      However, neither the victims nor the aggressors are alive today, so this is water under the bridge. It's simply history, and hopefully we can learn from it.

    47. Re:Opiate of the masses by ratamacue · · Score: 1
      I think you don't know what freedom is.

      I certainly do, and this ain't it. Freedom is (you guessed it) voluntary association. In general, the bigger the government, the less voluntary association, and therefore the less freedom. I find it amusing that you list everything that's wrong with the world today, and then conclude that our "freedom" just isn't worth it due to all the problems in the world.

      Wake up. We are NOT free. We never have been.

      You are living in a fantasy world.

      It's beyond me why I bother responding to these mindless insults, but speaking of fantasy worlds, how about the one where everything is provided by the all-powerful state, and everyone happily lives their lives as slaves to whoever holds power?

    48. Re:Opiate of the masses by ratamacue · · Score: 1

      Stay out of it, troll.

    49. Re:Opiate of the masses by stanmann · · Score: 1

      You know, I'm not... but even if I was...

      you shouldn't claim to be a Randian unless you understand rand.

      --
      Food not Bombs is a nice platitude but it breaks down when you notice that the Bombees are usually well fed
    50. Re:Opiate of the masses by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Ok, maybe they were a little brutal, but my point is that they weren't "genocidal"; they didn't try to wipe out people simply because of their race. They were known to have people from different places and races, and if you willingly assimilated you were fine.

  13. Money? by Squideye · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Bush's government doesn't have the money to pay for his military enterprises.

    It lacks the money to provide for basic infrastructure.

    At a time when commercial space flight is being touted as the most logical course, Bush is now saying that he wants to send people back to the moon?

    I'm all for the new frontier. It would be great if people were inspired about space again. But Bush does not deserve to be the one to get us there. He couldn't even manage the Houston Astros.

    1. Re:Money? by bersl2 · · Score: 1

      He couldn't even manage the Houston Astros.

      He was a part owner of the Texas Rangers, not the Astros.

      He also wanted to become the commissioner of MLB, had he not become (I think) governor of Texas.

    2. Re:Money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Eh? We lack the money to pay for basic infrastructure? Slashdotters are so dumb apparently they have to make stuff up now.

      Idiot.

    3. Re:Money? by TheCodeFoundry · · Score: 2, Insightful

      This scored a 5: Insightful?

      "Bush's government" : Let's stop being so partisan and call it the United States Government, shall we?

      "Houston Astros" : Uh, get your facts straight, buddy. Mr. Bush never owned or managed the Houston Astros. He owned (NOT managed) the Texas Rangers.

      Slashdot....Stuff people make up.

    4. Re:Money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think that those billions of American taxpayer dollars that Bush pledged for aid and AIDS relief in Africa would be better spent on this program, don't you?

      As for Bush not being able to manage the Astros, I'm with you. We need someone financially savvy, like Hillary Clinton. C'mon, anybody who can get a >$100,000 return on a $10,000 [shady]investment[/shady] in less than a year ought to be able to handle it.

    5. Re:Money? by develop · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I believe President Bush was the managing general partner of the Texas Rangers - not the Houston Astros. He actually did quite well turning a large profit when he sold the team. In fact, he made the most of money of all his relatives - simply by buying and selling the Texas Rangers. The Rangers were bought in 1989 for 86 million dollars and sold in 1998 for 250 million dollars.

      This is all off topic - but then again you received moderation to "insightful" and I disagree, your incorrect.

      Technology is the core "product" of the United States. The United States businesses (yes, the top ten) are mainly technology based and we make a large amount of money trading this technology. Therefore I believe pushing space flight can bring nothing but good things to the United States.

      Did you know that the oil business in this US is not getting oil but rather producing technology for finding and refining oil?

    6. Re:Money? by Wes+Janson · · Score: 2, Informative

      Do you know anything about history? For well over a hundred years it has been standard practice to replace the previous administration's people with your own. As we became increasingly political and competitive with the growth of our nation, this practice formed. Appointing friends, donors, and the like-minded to positions of power is the status quo in Washington. So when they refer to Bush's government, in a very real sense it is referring to the people he has chosen to run the country (in part).

    7. Re:Money? by Jeremi · · Score: 1
      "Bush's government" : Let's stop being so partisan and call it the United States Government, shall we?


      The Republicans control the White House and both houses of the legislature. The only thing the Democrats can do at the moment to influence any decision is filibuster. How is it not Bush's government?

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    8. Re:Money? by 3263827 · · Score: 1

      Coming from someone who's country's idea of sound spending is cutting their defense budget to the bone, your opinion isn't worth a damn. Also, he wasn't a manager for the Houston Astros, he was the owner of the Rangers. Now I know Canada has a baseball team (for now), but that doesn't make you an expert on the sport...

      Come back when Canada can carry its own weight, and not ride the coat tails of the USA. And, I say this as an expatriate Canadian, so you can't accuse me of being an ignorant American...

    9. Re:Money? by ncc74656 · · Score: 1
      Do you know anything about history? For well over a hundred years it has been standard practice to replace the previous administration's people with your own.

      A fairly sizable number of people in high-level government positions are hangers-on from the Clinton administration (the CIA director comes to mind as one example). Bush should've cleaned house, but he figured he'd try to make nice with the Democrats instead...that's what that whole "new tone" thing was all about. (Fat lot of good it did him, too.)

      --
      20 January 2017: the End of an Error.
    10. Re:Money? by donutello · · Score: 2, Funny

      This scored a 5: Insightful?
      "Houston Astros" : Uh, get your facts straight, buddy. Mr. Bush never owned or managed the Houston Astros. He owned (NOT managed) the Texas Rangers.


      You must be new here.

      --
      Mmmm.. Donuts
    11. Re:Money? by aftk2 · · Score: 1
      I think that those billions of American taxpayer dollars that Bush pledged for aid and AIDS relief in Africa would be better spent on this program, don't you?
      Oh don't worry. That's not getting funded either.
      --
      concrete5: a cms made for marketing, but strong enough for geeks.
    12. Re:Money? by Squideye · · Score: 1

      The joke is funnier if I say "Houston Astros". But of course, it's technically true that he couldn't manage them, since he didn't have the opportunity. :)

    13. Re:Money? by TwistedGreen · · Score: 1

      "Bush's government" : Let's stop being so partisan and call it the United States Government, shall we?

      Why? Do you deny that almost half (or more than half, depending on who you ask) didn't vote for Bush, and thus probably feel a bit trod upon by the whole thing?

    14. Re:Money? by Squideye · · Score: 1

      Man, I was going for a 2:Funny.

      "Bush's Government" is a pretty straightforward way to refer to "The US Government under the Bush Administration" without wasting time arguing on the Internet.

      Houston Astros vs. Texas Rangers. Space-related snideness. Look, it's a quick post, and I think it got my point across. Bush needs a whole staff of fact-checkers to tell him the wrong age for a kid he's discussing in a public address. I didn't remember which Texas baseball team he owned (ownership as a type of financial management). So I chose the funnier one, and guessed wrong.

      You can correct without mockery. But thanks for calling me your buddy.

    15. Re:Money? by zangdesign · · Score: 1

      When the bulk of the government is controlled by Republicans insisting on ramming their neoconservative ideology down the throat of the world at gunpoint, I think it's safe to say "Bush's Government".

      When Republican elected officials will violate longstanding tradition to redistrict the opposition party out of existence, I think it's safe to say "Bush's Government".

      When the government assumes the right to jail citizens without trial or access to defense, and it occurs under the purview and at the request of President Bush, I think it's safe to say "Bush's Government".

      Sorry, but I look at Washington and I see no little or no conscientious dissent from ANYONE there, and I get more than just a little pissed. We've lost the last shreds of our honor to the despicable actions of a few terribly-misguided individuals and no one is pissed?

      I'm definitely laying this one on Bush. As Chief Executive, it is his duty to provide a vision and a direction for the nation, but so far he has been myopic and misdirected. I think it's definitely safe to say "Bush's Government".

      --
      To celebrate the occasion of my 1000th post, I will post no more forever on Slashdot. Goodbye.
    16. Re:Money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Either Dem or Rep in office would have made a difference in where the US military is today, or in the results.

      Plus the boycott would still be in place which means things would be alot worse.

      Like the liberals are know for they're human rights successes and not their propaganda. Give us a break.

      Lost the "black vote"
      Lost the "female vote"
      Lost the "jewish vote"
      And all it took was a few short months without constaint repetition.

    17. Re:Money? by deanj · · Score: 1

      Apparently you're denying that he's much more popular now?

      Clearly, some people have changed their minds since the election.

    18. Re:Money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you're going to criticize at least get your facts straight. It was the Texas Rangers not the Houston Astros.

    19. Re:Money? by TwistedGreen · · Score: 1

      Yeah, well, some people don't have minds to change.

  14. I like science and all, but... by rolocroz · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...is now really the right time to be doing this? There's a lot going on in the US right now (Iraq war, etc.) in the middle of a recession, and going to the moon just doesn't seem like the greatest idea for us right now.

    --

    I meta-mod all positive moderation Unfair, because it's abuse of the system.

    1. Re:I like science and all, but... by dekedogger · · Score: 1

      I vote for sending robots into space. It is a lot cheaper for doing science. I think the technology of smart robotic explorers is more interesting than the technology of life systems for human space travel. Is there life on Mars? Remote roving biology stations will answer that question for a reasonable cost in the first half of this century.

    2. Re:I like science and all, but... by Anonymous+Meoward · · Score: 1
      ...is now really the right time to be doing this?

      No.

      That was easy...

      --
      --- The American Way of Life is not a birthright. Hell, it's not even sustainable.
    3. Re:I like science and all, but... by deemah · · Score: 1
      ...is now really the right time to be doing this?

      And why do you think he's suggesting it? Look at the state of the US last time there was a kick start to the space programme.

      Perhaps I'm overly cynical but the space programme has always been a ratings puller. The thought of "our boys" putting themselves on the line for the "betterment of mankind" is something the public will always get behind.

      It's similar to starting a war as soon as you're inaugurated - in times past, that was the way to get the public behind you. With the advent of mass media and world-wide news the public are far more discerning about where they get their information. Simple propaganda just doesn't work.

      That, or I'm just a cynical old coot

      --

      Your mouse has moved. Please wait while Windows restarts for the change to take effect.

  15. Here's a first. by theparanoidcynic · · Score: 2

    If Dubby does push for us to get serious about space travel again it would be the fist time I ever agreed with him on something. :p

    --
    Only in a Slashdot fantasy can a Slackware install turn into several hours of sex . . . . .
  16. Re:A small step for mankind...... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    YAY! Republicans have finally left that stodgy old '50s stereotype and stepped into the 60s!

  17. $500 Billion in debt. by khasim · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Do we have the money to fund this?

    We need to do it but I don't know if we can afford it.

    1. Re:$500 Billion in debt. by theparanoidcynic · · Score: 1

      We could afford things if we didn't try to fund programs with tax cuts and didn't go on absurd millitary adventures . . . . . .

      --
      Only in a Slashdot fantasy can a Slackware install turn into several hours of sex . . . . .
    2. Re:$500 Billion in debt. by Bootsy+Collins · · Score: 1

      Do we have the money to fund this?

      Of course not.

      We need to do it but I don't know if we can afford it.

      We need to do it at some point. Do we need to do it right now? Of course not.

    3. Re:$500 Billion in debt. by jimmy_dean · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      What, so you like being taxed? Do you honestly like giving the government 40% of your paycheck...your hard earned money? Since when is giving back to the citizens such a bad thing? And look what it's done - it's given the economy a chance to rejuvinate - to get back on it's legs. And that's exactly what's happened. If you're so ungreatful, go live in a country that like s taxing it's people like most countries in Europe. I for one like living in a republic, and not a social democracy.

      --
      -> Sometimes, you just gotta break free from the shackles of proprietary code.
    4. Re:$500 Billion in debt. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would rather be taxed and pay for what I am using than make my children and grandchildren pay for it.

    5. Re:$500 Billion in debt. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A rat done bit my sister Nell, with whitey on the moon.
      Her face and arms began to swell, and whitey's on the moon.
      I can't pay no doctor bill, but whitey's on the moon.
      Ten years from now I'll be payin' still, while whitey's on the moon.

      The man just upped my rent last night, and whitey's on the moon.
      No hot water, no toilets, no lights -- but whitey's on the moon.
      I wonder why he's uppin' me? 'Cause Whitey's on the moon?
      I was already payin' fifty a week, and now whitey's on the moon.

      Taxes takin' my whole damn check,
      Junkies makin' me a nervous wreck,
      The price of food is goin' up,
      And as if all that crap wasn't enough,
      A rat done bit my sister Nell, with whitey on the moon.
      Her face and arm began to swell, and whitey's on the moon.
      Was all the money I made last year for whitey on the moon?
      How come there ain't no money here? Hmm! Whitey's on the moon.
      Y'know, I just about had my fill of whitey on the moon.
      I think I'll send these doctor bills -- airmail special --

      To whitey on the moon.

      -- "Whitey On The Moon", Gil Scott-Heron (1970)

    6. Re:$500 Billion in debt. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ouch. Good point.

    7. Re:$500 Billion in debt. by kubrick · · Score: 4, Informative

      Um, I think you'll find the debt (current account deficit) is $7 trillion. $500 billion is the amount the most recent Budget is in deficit -- i.e. spending more than it brings in.

      --
      deus does not exist but if he does
    8. Re:$500 Billion in debt. by jimmy_dean · · Score: 1

      Alright, then you send more of your paycheck to the government. I for one like to decide what I want my money spent on in a free market. If you like giving to the government so much, why not go live under a dictator in some other country like Cuba? I'm sure you'd get your money put to good use there.

      --
      -> Sometimes, you just gotta break free from the shackles of proprietary code.
    9. Re:$500 Billion in debt. by bigberk · · Score: 4, Funny
      Um, I think you'll find the debt (current account deficit) is $7 trillion
      Actually, it's only $6,918,260,082,500.99 (I love how they throw the .99 in there, like that fools us eh?)
    10. Re:$500 Billion in debt. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The person to whom you replied said that they'd rather pay for what they use than stick the bill onto their kids and grandkids.

      You took exception to that? You think not leaving your grandkids in debt is comparable to acquiescing to a dictatorship?

      Congratulations. Your post was the dumbest thing I've read today.

    11. Re:$500 Billion in debt. by cujo_1111 · · Score: 1

      ... the light of a hundred stars cannot match the light of the moon ...

      What about our good mate Sol?

      But in real terms, all stars produce more light than the moon...

      --
      If I point out that you are incorrect, making me a foe does not make you any more correct.
    12. Re:$500 Billion in debt. by jimmy_dean · · Score: 1

      I know what they were saying. Of course debt is bad and no I wouldn't want to put it onto my kids or grandkids down the line. But I'm saying taxes suck...period.

      --
      -> Sometimes, you just gotta break free from the shackles of proprietary code.
    13. Re:$500 Billion in debt. by timeOday · · Score: 1
      We need to do it at some point.
      Why? Our parents already took care of it.
    14. Re:$500 Billion in debt. by js7a · · Score: 4, Interesting

      At a rate of $25,000 per second the cents columns don't mean much.

    15. Re:$500 Billion in debt. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      they only suck because you are too ignorant to realize that society works for everyone and should be mintained by everyone.

      but im thinking you probbly take society for granted by this point in the conversation.

      A M E R I C A N!!
      how did i kno

    16. Re:$500 Billion in debt. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      thanks nice troll

    17. Re:$500 Billion in debt. by cheekyboy · · Score: 1

      Add in off the book stuff and a bit of enron accounting and 'un counted' military stuff... its approaching 680mil.

      Most of that debt is being bought by asia, so you are going to have to pay it back and more espcially as for each 1% of currency devaluation, long term interest rates would have to rise to cover it.

      --
      Liberty freedom are no1, not dicks in suits.
    18. Re:$500 Billion in debt. by akuma(x86) · · Score: 1

      Interest rates are low. Foreigners are more than happy to finance the US because they know it's a safe haven. Since when is the US going to default? It's not like we're Russia or Mexico or Brazil.

      Our credit is good, so why shouldn't we borrow? Why is debt automatically considered a bad thing?

      Running defecits can be good sometimes. Government spending can boost domestic economic activity and create wealth. As long as debt isn't a large percentage of GDP (it isn't) we're fine. Using debt to finance growth benefits everybody.

      Did you pay for your house in full or did you go into debt? With interest rates so low (a reflection of foreigners willing to finance US debt), the government should take advantage.

    19. Re:$500 Billion in debt. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      '"human spirit" bullshit'

      Geez. And I thought I was cynical. Without human spirit we are either machines or water sacks, maybe both. Certainly not thinking, living, feeling, and dreaming beings.

    20. Re:$500 Billion in debt. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you honestly like giving the government 40% of your paycheck

      The clocks tell me that my day has 24 hours, but I only see 16-17 of them. In fact, everybody believes that they have 24 hours in a day, but nobody really gets more than 17. We can try to reclaim those 7 hours, but we'll only hurt ourselves. In truth, it is a mistake to expect that we can use the 24 hours as we please.

      If you're so ungreatful...

      I don't have to be grateful for tax cuts. If the tax cut was enabled by cutting some government program I like, then I'd be upset. If I believed that taxes were government-sponsored theft, I wouldn't be too impressed that the thief promises to steal 3% less next year.

      I for one like living in a republic, and not a social democracy.

      The irony of this statement is that, classically, a republic is supposed to be a government which works for the public good, and a democracy is supposed to be a government controlled through popular decision. One might expect that a democracy, guided by fickle and short-sighted masses, would try to eliminate taxes for common people; but that officials in a high-and-mighty republic would force taxes and helpful social programs on their people.

      Perhaps the poster should have said, "I for one like living an anti-social anti-republican democracy, not a social democratic-republic." :)

    21. Re:$500 Billion in debt. by dbIII · · Score: 1
      Do we have the money to fund this?
      Simple - tax Hollywood, after all, they are a successful chunk of the economy - except on paper where they barely break even. Then after that, go after the music industry. If they want a whole lot of anti-piracy laws they should at least pay their fair share of taxes. They are going down under their own weight anyway, so if tax bills break the music companies the musicians who don't get paid are not going to be any worse off anyway.

      I still don't understand why people expect Iraq to roll over and be nice faster than North Carolina did. This is war, people get hurt!

    22. Re:$500 Billion in debt. by Anarchofascist · · Score: 1

      Aw c'mon, of course you do [disclaimer: IANAA]

      --
      Once more unto the breach, dear friends, once more, Or close the wall up with our American dead!
    23. Re:$500 Billion in debt. by olman · · Score: 1

      Who says bureaucrats don't have a sense of humor?

    24. Re:$500 Billion in debt. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Break Apart Microsoft And Confiscate All Their Money. Thats 10% Of The Debt Paid For And A Friend Made Forever On Slashdot.

    25. Re:$500 Billion in debt. by kubrick · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I did wonder about that whole "on book/off book" thing. Is this the "black budget" that the radar-cloaking planes, etc. are developed with?

      --
      deus does not exist but if he does
    26. Re:$500 Billion in debt. by kubrick · · Score: 1

      I guess I did round it off... still, I'm sure I could quite happily live on my margin of error. :)

      --
      deus does not exist but if he does
    27. Re:$500 Billion in debt. by doja · · Score: 1

      Listen, here's the thing: less taxes would be good if there was also less spending. This president has spent more than any other before, and continues to spend and promise to spend. This is nothing like the "small government" of your traditional conservatives. Witness this.
      Witness the latest spending on Medicare.

      If you're interested in one explanation for why the current administration is cutting taxes so much while boosting spending (on everything, including, it now looks like, going to the moon), please google around for Grover Norquist's strategy to budgeting that he calls "starve the beast." Or, listen to this interview. It's pretty scary.

    28. Re:$500 Billion in debt. by clambake · · Score: 1

      why do we *need* to do it, at least at this point in time?

      For the exact same reason why we *needed* to jump into Iraq... i.e. we don't, but what the hell, it's something to do.

    29. Re:$500 Billion in debt. by jafuser · · Score: 1

      For real fun, watch the pennies of your own PERSONAL share of the national debt accumulate alongside the full debt.

      --
      Please consider making an automatic monthly recurring donation to the EFF
    30. Re:$500 Billion in debt. by Viceice · · Score: 1

      Because we want to go to Mars. After that we want the rest of the solar system and beyond.

      To get to mars and stay there, we need to send alot of rockets, and by getting to the moon, we can build and launch more efficiently, due to it's lack of gravity. That and we can do tonnes of research on living on a hostile rock.

      --
      Sometimes I wish I was a plumber, then I'd know how to deal with other people's shit.
    31. Re:$500 Billion in debt. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      See, that "PERSONAL" thing is full of shit. If I sent in $23,749.20, would my PERSONAL share go down to 0 and stay there? No.

    32. Re:$500 Billion in debt. by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      As long as debt isn't a large percentage of GDP (it isn't) we're fine.

      So 70% isn't a large percentage? We aren't using the debt for a purpose. We are using the debt because we are stupid. Someone that runs up credit debt that continually grows thinks they have it under control until it is too late. Over $300 billion is "lost" every year in interest payments. That is $300 billion that we would have to spend elsewhere or get a tax cut.

      I pay less than 5% of my annual expenditures on interest payments, and my debt to income ratio is near average for the US. The government pays over 300 billion out of 2,200 billion, or about 14% of gross on interest payments. And it is only getting worse.

      Debt is an unnecessary drain on national resources which should be eliminated at the first opportunity.

    33. Re:$500 Billion in debt. by djh101010 · · Score: 1

      Last I checked, when Nasa spends money on a project, it's used to pay people to do things or make things for them. The high-tech industry benefits directly by having more projects to work on, and indirectly by getting new technologies that Nasa is _very_ good about sharing.

      The rest of the world (non hi-tech folks) benefit indirectly by the fact that we techies then go and spend the money we earned doing stuff for Nasa, *and* in that they get the benefit of the new technolgies as well. That money could be spent on a whole lot less useful stuff.

    34. Re:$500 Billion in debt. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, maybe if you died. Otherwise, I guess you have to keep paying for the roads, the military, and so on...

    35. Re:$500 Billion in debt. by akuma(x86) · · Score: 1

      So 70% isn't a large percentage?

      No, you are calculating incorrectly. Debt as a percentage of GDP is smaller than the majority of countries. You are using accumulated debt to GDP, when you should use the debt service payment to GDP ratio.

      Over $300 billion is "lost" every year in interest payments. That is $300 billion that we would have to spend elsewhere or get a tax cut. ... Debt is an unnecessary drain on national resources which should be eliminated at the first opportunity

      Unless that debt is used to finance growth that exceeds the debt repayment. What if the money loaned was used to contribute OVER $300b in economic growth? That's why we use debt-service/GDP ratio. If we grow the GDP (aka - economy) more than the debt service, we come out ahead.

      Governments run defecits all of the time. Contrary to popular belief, the sky is not falling. Provided that markets for goods and capital remain open, flexible and unfettered, market forces will be enough to "defuse" the deficit "incrementally". Meaning, if the US tries to accrue too much debt, interest rates will rise (implying a more risky investment) and foreign investors will not be as likely to provide capital. It's a self regulating system.

      Debt has been used to finance things like highways and schools. Things like infrastructure, scientific research (a category under which a mission to the Moon would fit) and education are INVESTMENTS, which use debt in order to finance future growth. This is in fact how we got out of the great depression -- huge public works projects put people to work and then war bonds appeared to finance the war.

      We should not use defecit financing when doing so would cause "too much" growth which would lead to inflation. When the economy is weak, the government spends more to stimulate growth - it's called fiscal stimulus.

  18. Running Dogs of Capitalist Imperialism by RealProgrammer · · Score: 0, Redundant

    All your base are belong to us.

    --
    sigs, as if you care.
    1. Re:Running Dogs of Capitalist Imperialism by RealProgrammer · · Score: 1

      That was supposed to say:

      All your moonbase are belong to us.
      --
      sigs, as if you care.
  19. Weird by AaronStJ · · Score: 1

    Huh. Looks like we geeks may get what we want. And president Bush will be the one giving it to us. Odd.

    --
    Stupid like a fox!
    1. Re:Weird by Saganaga · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I'm a geek, and I agree with almost everything President Bush has done. So what is so odd, you insensitive clod?

    2. Re:Weird by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

      I'm a geek

      You misspelled "redneck."

    3. Re:Weird by slaker · · Score: 1

      Most people I've met don't revel quite so much in their own stupidity. I'd certainly say that's odd.

      If you develop what doctors call "cancer" in the near future don't worry too much, it's probably just the last remaining goodness in your body trying to escape. You won't miss it much. Just, you know, stay away from sunlight and garlic.

      Also, the grandparent poster was refering to "geeks" in the sense of someone who is comfortable with technology, not sideshow attractions - an important Republican voting bloc as I understand things - such as yourself.

      --
      -- I wanna decide who lives and who dies - Crow T. Robot, MST3K
    4. Re:Weird by Saganaga · · Score: 1

      Wow. I'm speechless...that's just spooky...how did you know so much about me?

      In all seriousness and putting aside all namecalling, you really need to step back and ask yourself, do you really honestly believe that anyone who is pro-Bush is an idiot? If you really do, you are going to have to write off a lot of your fellow Americans next November when Bush steamrolls over Dean (or whatever other chump the Dems nominate) with a 45+ state landslide. Ouch, that's going to hurt a bit.

      But I suppose a year from now, you'll just retreat into your little happy world where everyone else is an idiot and you and your left wing friends are the only smart ones. Smart, but so very alone.

    5. Re:Weird by donutello · · Score: 1

      Don't worry. On Slashdot, we will still find a way of making him the villain of the piece.

      --
      Mmmm.. Donuts
    6. Re:Weird by slaker · · Score: 1

      I see a strong correllation, yes. Of course, I'm from the state that elected Dan Quayle and Dan Burton to congressional seats, which might have an impact on my opinion. While I'm at it, where's the right-wing equivalent of a Paul Simon or Daniel Patrick Moynihan? I don't see a lot of intellectuals on that side of the aisle, and frankly, what I do see isn't exactly possessed of a scintillating wit.

      I really do believe that the interests of the American people don't even make "W's" top-ten list when he assembles his list of presidential priorities. I believe that he's been criminally bad for our country and for its interests, and that the sitting, invisible vice-president has committed prosecutable felonies related to his notes from meetings on US energy policy. I note with some derision that "W" ALWAYS speaks from prepared statements and almost never takes reporter's questions (i.e. his handlers don't think he can hold his own with the press), and that the media has played soft-ball with this administration almost from the get-go.
      Scroll up or down inside this thread, click on some of those links others have helpfully collected (like the Atlantic Monthly article), and I think it will be very easy to see how I arrived at these opinions.

      And yes, your original comment simply begged for an old-school flame. I'm glad you're one of the lucky elephants who can form multi-syllabic words into coherent sentences, but if you raise your head up out of the sand in November of next year, I think you'll be the one looking for the special fairyland where there are WMDs in Iraq and US energy policy isn't the verbatim will of Exxon-Mobil, while the rest of the world celebrates its freedom from the petulent behavior of the present administation.

      --
      -- I wanna decide who lives and who dies - Crow T. Robot, MST3K
    7. Re:Weird by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not worth trying to argue with Bush supporters. They've all been brainwashed to the point where they don't even know they've been brainwashed. Pretty sad really.

    8. Re:Weird by FunkSoulBrother · · Score: 1

      Alone, but plenty of support in Minnesota, I'm sure. . :-)

    9. Re:Weird by bnenning · · Score: 1
      I see a strong correllation, yes.


      So do I occasionally, but the other way. It's very easy to see what you want to.


      I don't see a lot of intellectuals on that side of the aisle


      Newt Gingrich. Antonin Scalia. William F Buckley. Thomas Sowell. Milton Friedman. You don't have to agree with them, but they're not idiots. Sorry to break it to you, but intelligent people really can disagree, and your conviction that anyone with an opinion different from yours is a moron is not going to persaude many of them.

      --
      How to solve most of our problems: 1.Lots of nuclear plants. 2.Cure aging.
    10. Re:Weird by deanj · · Score: 1
      Considering the leading candidate right now, Howard Dean was on Hardball saying: "I believe, to Iran is pressure through the Soviet Union. The Soviet Union is supplying much of the equipment that Iran, I believe, most likely is using to set itself along the path of developing nuclear weapons. We need to use that leverage with the Soviet Union and it may require us to buying the equipment the Soviet Union was ultimately going to sell to Iran to prevent Iran from them developing nuclear weapons."

      Uh...there is no Soviet Union.

      I don't think anyone should being going around pretending "We're smarter"... particurally since the president has continually outmanuvered all these "smarter" people.

    11. Re:Weird by Saganaga · · Score: 1

      Not from this Minnesotan!

      Actually, MN has a very good chance of going to Bush in '04, which has got to be troubling to the Dems.

    12. Re:Weird by LittleGuy · · Score: 1

      I'm a geek

      You misspelled "redneck."


      Try "High Tech Redneck" - Country Meets Star Trek.

      --
      Mod Karma -1: I sed bad wurds. If I cep my mouf shut, I wud be at riyses.
  20. Sadly impractical at this point by Slack3r78 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    While I love the idea and think it'd be a great thing to do, I feel that it'd also be pretty much financially impossible to make happen as things stand right now. Going to the moon would cost billions upon billions of dollars when the government's already running a half-trillion dollars a year in the hole. This time, there isn't the pressing urge for dominance and brass-balls bragging rights that there was during the peak of the cold war, and without such a rivalry, I doubt the motivation exists within government to find funding for a project this massive in scope.

  21. Baby Steps by The+Snowman · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Going to Mars seems to be a popular idea. Before we try establishing a permanent base on Mars, even unmanned, I think we need to prove ourselves by going back to the moon AND staying there. I.e., establish a moon base, even a small one.

    Obviously the moon is much closer. More importantly, we don't need to worry about the synchronization of our orbits. The moon is always roughly the same distance away from us no matter what day of the year it is. This makes it a much easier target to hit than Mars no matter what time it is.

    --
    24 beers in a case, 24 hours in a day. Coincidence? I think not!
    1. Re:Baby Steps by Jardine · · Score: 2, Funny

      Not to mention that the moon people seem a lot less hostile than the martians. Damn martians keep shooting down our probes.

    2. Re:Baby Steps by Sosarian · · Score: 1

      You should read The Case for Mars.

      Going to the moon really is a waste of time as far as a permanent venture. All materials required for the survival of men living on the moon would have to come from Earth.

      There is a good chance that a mars mission could be self sufficient.

      http://www.nw.net/mars/

    3. Re:Baby Steps by The+Snowman · · Score: 4, Interesting

      All materials required for the survival of men living on the moon would have to come from Earth.

      If men can live on the ISS for many months at a time, I am sure they could at least do the same on the moon. Basically, you need food, water, and air. Two of those can be recycled. Food would be the only issue, but I imagine it would not be tough to find room to build a big enough kitchen on the moon ;-)

      I agree that a Mars mission is far more promising in terms of advancing our species and science. But the moon has advantages. Like I said, its proximity makes travel easier, especially in an emergency. I forget the mission number but one of the Apollos had a ruptured oxygen tank and barely made it back to Earth safely. On a Mars mission, with a year or two travel time, they would have died for certain. Refilling supplies is a much shorter trip. This means it is cheaper and emergencies are easier to handle.

      The government will find ways to screw this up. By going to the moon first they can make their mistakes and learn from them before going to Mars. Mars is for sure a much more important goal. My point is just that the moon is a step along the way.

      --
      24 beers in a case, 24 hours in a day. Coincidence? I think not!
    4. Re:Baby Steps by AndreyF · · Score: 1

      Obviously the moon is much closer.

      Yes, but there are a lot of factors that make Mars a much more likely target for a permanent settlement. the lack of water on the moon is just one deterrent from building a colony there.

    5. Re:Baby Steps by Sosarian · · Score: 1

      Certainly it should be encouraged that technologies be developed that can be used in flexible mission requirements, be they moon or mars.

      Even at 2 or 3 days transit, the moon is many many days more away than that if you have to prepare a launch vehicle. Although an emergency launch from the moon to get back to Earth would not be out of the question.

      Had NASA determined there was a high likelyhood that the shuttle would breakup on re-entry and decided to launch a rescue/repair/inspection mission, it would have been weeks to mobilize all these resources on Earth. Too late for those astronauts.

      And with the recent shuttle disaster the space program decided not to launch any more shuttles to the space station relying on Russian rockets to fulfill supply missions. I'm not sure moon residents could have this luxury.

      It sure would certainly be easier to convince the president to sneak out one night and visit the moon (even at a week total time), than it would be to Mars.

    6. Re:Baby Steps by Have+Blue · · Score: 1

      You don't just need a kitchen, you'd need a raw material production system- some form of agriculture. And I don't think *that* has ever been successfully done in space.

    7. Re:Baby Steps by frostman · · Score: 1

      Plus, the Moon is smaller.

      If your supplies crash land on the wrong side of it, you just moon-walk over and pick them up.

      On the other hand, your monkey is going to be a lot less happy there.

      --

      This Like That - fun with words!

    8. Re:Baby Steps by Viceice · · Score: 1

      Applo 13. They made a blockbuster movie out of it.

      --
      Sometimes I wish I was a plumber, then I'd know how to deal with other people's shit.
    9. Re:Baby Steps by The+Snowman · · Score: 1

      Applo 13. They made a blockbuster movie out of it.

      I knew there was a problem on this mission but I couldn't remember if it was the launchpad fire or the busted oxygen tank.

      --
      24 beers in a case, 24 hours in a day. Coincidence? I think not!
  22. Next man on the moon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

    My vote is to stick 'Dubya' into a spacecraft and fire it off toward the moon. If it hits, great... if not... who cares? Either way it's one less f***ing moron here on planet earth.

    1. Re:Next man on the moon by bwian · · Score: 1

      I'm sure there are loads of French, Russian, Chinese and German taxpayers who would help fund a one-way ticket for Dubya to get to the moon. But I'm not sure how much oxygen would be in the budget, or if they'd pay for the return journey.

  23. Where are the Slashdot k00ks? by Rotten168 · · Score: 2, Troll

    You know, the tinfoil hatters who will now claim that we never landed on the moon and this is an attempt by Bush to steal the next election and distract us from Iraq.

    1. Re:Where are the Slashdot k00ks? by rolocroz · · Score: 1

      They all got debunked.

      --

      I meta-mod all positive moderation Unfair, because it's abuse of the system.

    2. Re:Where are the Slashdot k00ks? by Oriumpor · · Score: 1

      [NASAL VOICE]
      It was physically impossible for the apollo rockets to even leave the eliptical that to believe that it could reach the moon is preposterous.
      [/NASAL VOICE]

      IT'S NOT A FOIL HAT, IT PROTECTS ME FROM ANY EMF RADIATION THAT COULD DRIVE ME INSANE.
      [/INSANITY]

      Whew, now that that's over with. I don't quite see how any attempt to get human beings back to the moon could be lauded by anyone. The moon is a nearly limitless basestation for solar energy. The lefties will be confronted with: This is a limitless source of energy. and the Righties: this is a bountiful opportunity ripe for the picking.

  24. Arthur C. Clarke is da man... by crazyfreakid · · Score: 1

    On to Europa!

  25. A Step In The Right Direction. . . by MikeDawg · · Score: 3, Insightful

    IF Bush makes this statement during his speech, I will be completely in shock. As much as I dislike Bush, I think the United States definetely needs to reestablish a space presense, and on the moon, that would be great. The ISS is turning up to be more hype than anything else, anything more established.

    By creating a real, strong, presence on the moon, we would research and develop much more technology, at a more distinguishable rate, and the rewards would be plentiful enough based on the technology that develops from increased space expenditure. Even if the moon is completely dead, and there are no resources, and no valuable information for us to gather on it, I think we would still come out ahead in this situation.

    --

    YOU'RE WINNER !
    Another lame blog

    1. Re:A Step In The Right Direction. . . by crazyfreakid · · Score: 1

      You're right, I've been kind of wondering what the next big thing would be... Hubble is on the way out, ISS is just a pretty face... Here's hoping Bush (as much as I hate the guy) can pull this off, which will be a little tough, unless you wanna privatize the public school system.

    2. Re:A Step In The Right Direction. . . by Saganaga · · Score: 1

      Gosh, I wonder if it would ever be possible for the stereotypical slashdotter to avoid telling us ONCE AGAN how they don't like Bush? *YAWN*

    3. Re:A Step In The Right Direction. . . by crazyfreakid · · Score: 1

      meh, just makin sure it's obvious. I'd rather be repetitive than misinterperated.

  26. oh great by Oriumpor · · Score: 1
    So they're gonna put nuclear engines on the moon and send it to mars. I mean... wait... I should prolly RTFA.... (ten minutes later)

    uhh... I still can't tell if dubya wants to send the moon to mars or not.

    But still,
    (Others in Congress have argued that the space shuttle should remain on the ground permanently.)

    Is a real reflection of how much our society values space exploration anymore.
    1. Re:oh great by crazyfreakid · · Score: 1

      Congress arguing that the space shuttles should be permanently grounded isn't due to us putting a low value on space exploration, it's due to us putting a high value on the people we send up there, not to mention the expensive equipment.

    2. Re:oh great by ruprechtjones · · Score: 1

      "...put nuclear engines on the moon"

      It's "nukular". And you must pronounce "to" as "t..." or "tah" for short. God bless 'merican powers of enunciation...

      --
      Kip Hawley is an idiot.
    3. Re:oh great by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      G'day mate. 'ow are ya?

    4. Re:oh great by ruprechtjones · · Score: 1

      que?

      --
      Kip Hawley is an idiot.
  27. Where are we getting the money for this again? by generationxyu · · Score: 1

    Cause, last I checked we didn't exactly have a surplus.

    --
    I mod down pyramid schemes in sigs.
    1. Re:Where are we getting the money for this again? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      We've never had a surplus, just to be accurate. Congress has consistently taken money out of the Social Security "Trust Fund", filled it with IOUs, and then used it as part of the General Fund. That's how it has appeared there was a surplus, but in actuality there never was. I wish people would quit perpetuating this 'surplus' crap.

  28. Mars society.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Mars Society won't be happy...

  29. Yup, Bush calls for return to moon! by Kirk+Troll · · Score: 5, Funny

    That's the best idea I've ever heard! Lets rocket Bush to the Moon! ;)

    1. Re:Yup, Bush calls for return to moon! by Lord_Dweomer · · Score: 1
      " That's the best idea I've ever heard! Lets rocket Bush to the Moon! ;)"

      I hope Lance Bass is a Republican!

      --
      Buy Steampunk Clothing Online!
    2. Re:Yup, Bush calls for return to moon! by strike2867 · · Score: 0

      Actually we've never tried sending someone to the sun, Bush seems as good a man as any trailer trash collecting welfare checks.

      --

      Vote for new mod!!! Score:-2,Imbecile
    3. Re:Yup, Bush calls for return to moon! by in7ane · · Score: 1

      To address any concerns he may have - just tell him that he'll be going at night.

    4. Re:Yup, Bush calls for return to moon! by CrystalChronicles · · Score: 1

      I got a better idea. Lets rocket the rocket up Bush's moon.

  30. Oh no! by Call+Me+Black+Cloud · · Score: 2, Funny

    Coincidentally, I just rented a couple of the Space 1999 DVDs from Netflix and all I can say is this is a bad idea. Magnetic fields will hurt the lunarnauts' brains and make them attack the other colonists!

    And need I mention the Terrible Space Secret? I think not...

    I will say Space 1999 had the coolest looking ships of any series. They actually seemed to be well designed and functional.

  31. Er ... by B3ryllium · · Score: 1

    I always thought he might be a bit looney, but this would sinch it.

    I'm VERY curious to see what the next election will bring.

    Someone claiming to be a time traveler once suggested that in 2004/2005, America would be hit with a civil war ... every day that goes by, it looks more and more like he might be right :)

  32. because it's there by larry+bagina · · Score: 1
    A proposal in a speech doesn't mean much. The last State of the Union address talked about funding for hydrogen cars on par with the Manhatten project. Maybe if hydrogen cars would track down evildoers and smoke them out.... but I digress.

    The moon was an appealing target in the 1960s to show the USSR did not have superiority. No offense to other countries, but we just don't have that challenge anymore. Today's enemies are camel-fuckers living in tents in some 3rd world country.

    --
    Do you even lift?

    These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.

    1. Re:because it's there by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Go fuck yourself, idiot. There's a world outside of USA, it'll probably run you over before you know it's there.

    2. Re:because it's there by Slack3r78 · · Score: 1

      Correction: A proposal in a speech for this administration doesn't mean much. Remember that the original man on the moon campaign was sparked by a speech given by Kennedy at Rice University.

      That said, I do agree with you - I'll have to see it before I'll believe it. The Bush administration seems to talk big on issues like this, but fail to come through on actual execution if for no other reason than they say "Hey, wouldn't this be cool?" before taking cost into account.

    3. Re:because it's there by mirko · · Score: 1

      Today's enemies are camel-fuckers living in tents in some 3rd world country.
      why is someone living in a tent a camel fucker ?
      what about American Indians ?
      Are you an ethnologist ?

      --
      Trolling using another account since 2005.
    4. Re:because it's there by frycarson · · Score: 1

      I think the implied meaning is camel-fuckers who happen to live in tents. The American Indians, last I heard, were lacking camels.

  33. It's About Time! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Finally someone is beginning to realize that the American technological structure has gone to hell and we need something to revitalize it. We reached a zenith of advancement 30 years ago and have been hiding from the stars ever since...

    And for those saying that "it costs too much money", consider this...

    for every $1 that the US spent on the Apollo program, $23 went BACK into the economy. This (if done right) will do far more than any phoney tax cuts ever will.

    1. Re:It's About Time! by larry+bagina · · Score: 4, Informative
      for every $1 that the US spent on the Apollo program, $23 went BACK into the economy. This (if done right) will do far more than any phoney tax cuts ever will.

      Where does that figure come from? US government programs are horribly inefficient. Like Corn ethanol that midwestern farmers insist is the next big thing... most of the money goes to ADM. For every $1 in revenue ADM has related to corn ethanol, the US gov't spends $30. It would be far cheaper to just pay the corn farmers to pick their pud than to pretend corn ethanol will ever be useful.

      Anyhow, tax cuts are just as good for an economy as gov't spending. That tax cut money goes somewhere, maybe it goes into a bank account and the bank can lend the money out for someone to buy a house. Maybe it buys a yacht. Maybe it buys something else. That's better than being in the gov't coffers and ending up paying for a study on some senator's pet project with little or no redeemingvalue.

      --
      Do you even lift?

      These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.

    2. Re:It's About Time! by jimmy_dean · · Score: 1

      Thank you, it's about time I found another person who thinks logically on this website. I thought slashdotters called themselves *scientists* - it never ceases to amaze me sometimes just how ignorant people on this site really are. You'd think pro-big government and scientist would be oxymorons. But there's plenty of that type of thinking on this site. And it's sad - if only they would truly think critically instead of being suckered in by the extremely biased media.

      --
      -> Sometimes, you just gotta break free from the shackles of proprietary code.
    3. Re:It's About Time! by Excen · · Score: 1

      It would be far cheaper to just pay the corn farmers to pick their pud than to pretend corn ethanol will ever be useful.

      Have you ever had a drink with Bourbon in it, or Bourbon itself? The mash to make Bourbon, according to some regulatory commission which I don't remember the name of, has to be made of at least 51% corn in order to call itself that name. I know you were talking about the denatured crap they put in gas, but still, good quality, smooth sippin' corn ethanol kicks ass.

      /Alcoholic College Student

      --
      "No beer until you finish your tequila!" -Leela's Dad
    4. Re:It's About Time! by kevin+lyda · · Score: 1

      "That's better than being in the gov't coffers and ending up paying for a study on some senator's pet project with little or no redeemingvalue."

      like, say, arpanet?

      schools?

      national defense?

      national health care - oh wait, it's us folks in europe with national health care systems who spend less money per capita on health care then the usa does on its private system, sorry, ignore that one.

      taxes pay for maintaining a society. as with all things, you get what you pay for. i pay just a bit more taxes since moving to ireland and i get a national health care system (that i can supplement with private insurance), lower cost education, decent social programs, arts programs, etc. i don't seem to get snipers on highways, school shootings, and starving children.

      so, you know, kinda think that's worth a few extra euro a month.

      --
      US Citizen living abroad? Register to vote!
    5. Re:It's About Time! by sparrow_hawk · · Score: 1

      Paying farmers to pick and destroy their corn (which was done under FDR) would not reduce our reliance on foreign oil, which has habitually got us into scrapes like Iraq.

      Gasoline with ethanol added does, while also being better for your car. And E85 -- 85% ethanol, not 10% -- uses less oil and costs about $0.10 less than regular gasoline where it's available.

    6. Re:It's About Time! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i don't seem to get snipers on highways, school shootings, and starving children.

      No, you just a) start WWI, b) start WWII, c) don't do anything in Bosnia, and d) have a resurgence of anti-semitism. Yeah, that's something to look forward to.

    7. Re:It's About Time! by kevin+lyda · · Score: 1

      a) ireland, as part of the uk at that time, only supplied cannon fodder to wwi.

      b) ireland was neutral in wwii.

      c) ireland is neutral in general.

      d) disagreement with israel's policies regarding the palestinians is not anti-semitism. and ireland, like various european nations, takes responsible steps to combat racism in all forms. we're not perfect but i don't remember any police force in america asking for cultural training to properly deal with immigrants like the police did here. and i wouldn't cast stones - a white supremacist group was arrested with a large number of cyanide bombs in texas in late november. authorities fear they haven't found them all and the people they captured aren't talking. in addition listen in on the rhetoric being spouted by limbaugh (either), hannity and coulter to name a few.

      thanks for playing however.

      --
      US Citizen living abroad? Register to vote!
    8. Re:It's About Time! by larry+bagina · · Score: 1
      Gasoline with ethanol added does, while also being better for your car. And E85 -- 85% ethanol, not 10% -- uses less oil and costs about $0.10 less than regular gasoline where it's available.

      The capper, though, is the claim that it takes more energy to make a gallon of ethanol than you get by burning it. One of the most vocal proponents of this view is Cornell University ecology professor David Pimentel. In an analysis published in 2001 in the peer-reviewed Encyclopedia of Physical Sciences and Technology, Pimentel argued that when you add up all the energy costs--the fuel for farm tractors, the natural gas used to distill corn sugars into alcohol, and so on--making a gallon of ethanol takes 70 percent more energy than the finished product contains. And because that production energy comes mostly from fossil fuels, gasohol isn't just wasting money but hastening the depletion of nonrenewable resources.
      --
      Do you even lift?

      These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.

    9. Re:It's About Time! by danila · · Score: 1

      Anyhow, tax cuts are just as good for an economy as gov't spending. That tax cut money goes somewhere, maybe it goes into a bank account and the bank can lend the money out for someone to buy a house. Maybe it buys a yacht. Maybe it buys something else. That's better than being in the gov't coffers and ending up paying for a study on some senator's pet project with little or no redeemingvalue.

      Nothing personal, but people in capitalist countries have a fundamental problem grasping these ideas. The economic growth basically depends on how much of GDP is spent on new means of production as opposed to consumption goods. Of course, there are efficiency issues, but these are related to the quality of management in the government, not to some inherent inefficiency of the government. And quality of management can be improved if you build accountability and transparency into the government.

      If the government would spend 15% of GDP per year on fundamental science, R&D and new industrial/infrastructure projects, the economy will grow faster than if these money were spent on houses, cars, yachts and tourism. There are fundamental flaws with democracy and liberal market economy and lack of investment (a result of rampant consumerism) is one of them. A good planned economy run as a well-managed corporation can potentially be much more efficient. Basically, technocracy would be a perfect answer, if only it was feasible to establish through political reform...

      --
      Future Wiki -- If you don't think about the future, you cannot have one.
    10. Re:It's About Time! by Paul+Jakma · · Score: 1

      Many Irish fought in WWII. Indeed, the UK to this day still maintains at least two Irish regiments (The Royal Irish Regiment and the Irish Guards) today, composed of both northern and southern Irish. Lt Col. Tim Collins, who was accused of war crimes (by an american major i think, after Tim made some critical remarks about american conduct (something along lines of 'trigger happy')), is Irish. One of the UK forces soldiers killed in Iraq was in fact from Dublin. For his funeral, iirc, the Irish government gave permission for soldiers from his regiment to attend (ie in their capacities as british soldiers - dress uniform). Indeed, from the telegraph story below, this funeral made history: first time british soldiers have walked the streets of Dublin in uniform since 1922.

      Ireland being neutral: Ireland made Shannon Airport available to the US military for stop-overs and refuelling for the planes which ferried troops and supplies over to Iraq.

      More info from googling:

      http://www.thewildgeese.com/pages/iriraq.html
      h ttp://www.rte.ie/news/2003/0424/iraq01.html
      http: //www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=%2F news%2F2003%2F04%2F25%2Fnfune25.xml

      --
      I use Friend/Foe + mod-point modifiers as a karma/reputation system.
    11. Re:It's About Time! by Paul+Jakma · · Score: 1

      Err... the charges against Lt Col Tim Collins were of course found to be baseless (the irony was he was accused of mistreating POWs - by an american!). He's also the guy who made some stirring speech to his troops (irish) the eve of the war whose words impressed Bush so much he had them framed and hung on his wall (in the oval office?).

      --
      I use Friend/Foe + mod-point modifiers as a karma/reputation system.
  34. Like Mars? by skydude_20 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Didn't Slashdot say Bush was going to announce Project Prometheus(go to Mars) in his last State of the Union? I think I'll just wait and see what he actually says in his speach before I get too excited.

    --
    Jesus saves souls and redeems them for valuable cash prizes
    1. Re:Like Mars? by samurairas · · Score: 1

      It's cool, Project Prometheus is in a secure, undisclosed location.

    2. Re:Like Mars? by banzai75 · · Score: 1

      And unfortunately, you can't really believe what he says in those speeches anyways.

      I can see it afterwards... "The CIA told me we were going to the moon. Really! How was I supposed to know the data wasn't true?"

  35. Agreed! by ath0mic · · Score: 2, Funny

    It is time to liberate the people of the moon!

  36. Never trust this guy... by mikeg22 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    After the "Clear Sky Initiative" (reducing emmission limits on some of our heaviest polluters), changes to the "Clean Water Act" (reducing environmental protections on 1/5 of nations water sources), and the "Healthy Forests Initiative" (boils down to allowing logging in protected areas), I wouldn't be surprised if "Going back to the Moon" meant "Nuking the Moon and using the bits and pieces to build parking lots in Yellowstone."

  37. makes sense by Lord_Dweomer · · Score: 0
    Well, this makes perfect sense. The Chinese are striving for the moon, so Bush just wants to get back there...setup a nice base....and um.....prepare things so we have an easy time "liberating" them once they land there.

    --
    Buy Steampunk Clothing Online!
  38. Well, Duh! by Rick+the+Red · · Score: 2, Interesting
    using the moon as a testbed for going to Mars.
    Geeze, if we can't establish a base on the Moon, how do they think we can do it on Mars? Since a Mars mission will be several months long I thought it was a no-brainer that we'd first need to prove we can stay on the Moon for more than a few days.
    --
    If all this should have a reason, we would be the last to know.
  39. With What Money? by jIyajbe · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Bush has done everything he can to give the U.S. a massive $6E12 deficit, and now he calls for this?

    He knows there is no way the congress can, or would, appropriate the money for this, given the deficit, so he's just blowin' smoke for PR (read: election) purposes.

    Sorry, George. Ain't fooled.

    --
    "Don't blame the log for the fire." --Andrew Ratshin
    1. Re:With What Money? by Dumbush · · Score: 1

      make that 7E12

    2. Re:With What Money? by mamer-retrogamer · · Score: 1
      Bush has done everything he can to give the U.S. a massive $6E12 deficit

      Don't let the facts get in the way of your argument...

      Thanks to the US Treasury Fact Sheet on the Gross National Debt we find:

      Estimated gross federal debt for fiscal year 2000: $5.687 trillion

      Estimated gross federal debt for fiscal year 2003: $5.948 trillion

      Via the magic of subtraction we find that the nation debt has increased around $0.261 trillion under GWB's watch thus far. An increase of around 1.5% per year.

      At this rate, the national debt will have increased about 6% under Bush's first term. Compare that with the nearly 30% increase in Clinton's first term. (Both of these, however, are eclipsed by the over 70% increase in the national debt in Reagan's first term).

      -Mike

      --
      Schrödinger's cat is not amused—maybe.
  40. Can he even spell "space"? by samurairas · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I love the idea of expanding space exploration, and it has a good chance of bi-partisan support, but with the already grossly engorged nation budget, how in the hell are we going to fund something like this? Just plunge deeper into debt? Furthermore, I haven't seen much to address the management issues at NASA being done...this could wind up going very, very wrong.

  41. ...in other news by Nostrada · · Score: 0, Troll

    Bush will also announce further tax cuts for the rich in order to finance the journey to the moon.

    Hey, it worked for the invasion of Iraq!

    --
    Cheers, Nostrada
  42. second term by ruprechtjones · · Score: 2, Insightful

    hmm. smells like re-election politics to me. "keep me in office, and I will return us to the moon within my second regime... er, term as your president..."

    --
    Kip Hawley is an idiot.
    1. Re:second term by jimmy_dean · · Score: 1

      Yeah, so...that's politics. How could he get elected if he only promised things that people don't want? I can see it now - "I George Bush promise to bring you increased taxes next term if you elect me again as president!" Oh wait, sorry...those are Democrats who do those kinds of things. My mistakes. :)

      --
      -> Sometimes, you just gotta break free from the shackles of proprietary code.
    2. Re:second term by Narchie+Troll · · Score: 1

      I want taxes to be raised.
      90% on the top bracket sounds about right to me.

    3. Re:second term by anubi · · Score: 1
      Oh, they will get their money all right. Take some courses in macroeconomics. You will see that governments, by using the convenience of the printed "dollar" as a unit of accounting for wealth, is able to exact substantial sums for its own use without having to get it from anybody.

      When the government feels the need to, they can introduce or subtract dollars in circulation by actions by the Federal Reserve Bank, such as buying/selling Government obligations, playing with the federal funds rate, or setting deposit margins required by banks.

      For instance, to make things look a bit rosier for retailers this Christmas, the government has pumped a lot of cash into circulation through actions designed to lower the interest rates. Now, on the surface this looks good. But the trouble is that now banks make loans against deposits. Those dollars the bank just "created" in the form of a loan are now in the marketplace, competing with earned dollars. Yes, things sell. The prices of houses takes another upward plunge. Yeh, we are all rich, yes? But did our pay keep up with the rising costs? A lot of us are trapped in this "jobless recovery". At the end of this, we are gonna see this whole scenario repeat... a lot of people who got themselves into debt are not gonna be able to pay it off when the interest rates inevitably rise to their rightful place a few points above the underlying inflation rate that this monetary policy is generating. Who's gonna plunk down the half-million dollars for the house you paid a half-million for when the interest rates were at 5%? Yeh, another round of foreclosures. A lot of people again lose all. A lot of bankers end up writing off loans.

      I don't profess to know all the answers, but it is damn apparent to me the government is doing all they can do to rosy the economy by playing games with numbers... as I have yet to see much investment in our underlying infrastructure that supports our economy - actually I perceive the underlying infrastructure is being systemically depleted to fund these games. When I see our factories shutting down and our prize crown jewels, our technology, being exported/outsourced/ then re-imported, it scares me. Its like watching a generation station shutting down, but the control room still has power from the battery backup. Some wise-ass sold the generators, and sold management on how he really fixed the cash flow problem this week, without mentioning that next week we won't have ability to generate power.

      Example: At the college I am attending, I just took a course in Intellectual Property Rights. It was packed to the limits. Several dozen students failing to enroll early enough were turned away. Down the hall was another class, Data Structures, which is one of those "bottleneck" classes through which all computer science students must pass. One section was being offered this semester. Six students. Bottom line, as I see it: About fifty students studying how to litigate over what six students will produce. Helluva way to run an economy.

      Its gonna be interesting watching how they try to pull the next golden egg out of this dying goose.

      --
      "Prove all things; hold fast that which is good." [KJV: I Thessalonians 5:21]

  43. Millions of slashdotters heads explode... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    torn between their opinions that bush is the anti christ and their hope for some moon babes...

  44. First Iraq, now the Moon by roman_mir · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Bush sure has his priorities straight - conquer the world, first Iraq, then the Moon and then maybe even Cuba. But seriously - can the States afford anything right now that has nothing to do with their social programs? I normally would never question the necessity for the space programs etc., I am all for the further development of science and progress of humans into the space, but I don't see how US can pay for this right now, whith the kind of spendings they have in Iraq....

    One thing for sure: if there is any life on the Moon, they better pray that there is no oil there, or they will have to be 'liberated'.

    1. Re:First Iraq, now the Moon by TwistedGreen · · Score: 1

      There's no life on the moon.

    2. Re:First Iraq, now the Moon by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      Yeah, ok, I bet you don't believe it is made of cheese either?

    3. Re:First Iraq, now the Moon by fifedrum · · Score: 1

      'can the States afford anything right now that has nothing to do with their social programs?'

      how about we slash those bloated, wasteful, inhumane "social programs"?

      troll.

  45. Promises trustworthy? by HiThere · · Score: 5, Interesting

    When I look at his record for the promises he made about things I was in favor of... I'll believe him after he delivers. Even then I'll check to make sure he didn't sabotage the project, so that it will fold immediately after he leaves office.

    OTOH, Texas has this big space center, so this might be a way to spread some cash around back home. So it's possible he doesn't have any motives other than the obvious ones. O, and he has this brother who's governor of Florida. They might be in for a cash infusion too. OK. He has "legitimate" reasons. But the first paragraph stands. (He's so far welched on most of the promises that I thought important.)

    --

    I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    1. Re:Promises trustworthy? by Imperator · · Score: 1

      Congressmen and senators try to funnel pork back home. Presidents don't need to. Texas will vote for Bush in 2004. He'd rather spend the money in Pennsylvania or Michigan.

      --

      Gates' Law: Every 18 months, the speed of software halves.
    2. Re:Promises trustworthy? by johnjay · · Score: 1

      There are factories all over the entire country that are involved in these big projects. Each part of a new jet is built in a different voting district. This way, every politician can go home to his voters and say "sure the B2 is costing the gov't a lot of money, but that money is being spent right here in our city. That's why I voted for it. That's why you should vote for me; I create jobs." It's not just Republicans, all the politicians do it because it's just good politics.

      (Full disclosure: I live in Massachusetts, home of the Big Dig, a.k.a Tip-ONeil's-gift-to-his-state)

      There's a lot of bellyaching on this topic about spending going out of control. That's not just Republicans who are to blame. If the Democrats really wanted to stop the spending, they could cause trouble like they're doing for the Republican judicial nominees. The Democrats spending all the money they can, just like the Republicans. The Democrats blame the Republicans, saying it's a Republican controlled congress. The Republicans blame the Democrats, saying the Democrats are the tax-and-spend party. The most recent budget is the worst pork-barrel mess that's been passed in a long time.

      Our best hope as voters is for the Supreme Court to change the rules on gerrymandering so we can vote all of those fools out of office. Read about it and check the news on the Dec. 10th hearing.

    3. Re:Promises trustworthy? by the_mad_poster · · Score: 1

      He plans to do just that. There was a headline in the local paper the other day about how Dubya views PA as a "keystone" (har har - funny.. we're the "keystone state") of his re-election bid.

      That's why it irritates me when people say he and his administration are stupid. They're not, they're very smart. They're also very good at looking very dumb which makes them very attractive to the "average" guy. Ick.

      Honestly... why would I WANT to vote for someone "average" for such an important position?

      --
      Alito: A vote for Alito is a punch in the eye to put that bitch back in her place!
  46. Say one thing and... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ". . . it is expected that he will proffer a bold vision of renewed space flight, with at its center a return to the moon. . . "

    Which like his other "visions" that he has shared with us in his speaches, will be immediately followed by him lobbying his friends in Congress into cutting NASA's funding by about half. And like the other times this has happened, there will be next to no coverage of this second phase. He will be hailed as a brave and progressive leader in the world of scientific exploration, even while NASA crubles into a publically funded low cost research lab for corporations that find thier research facilities in India and China inadiquate.

  47. Reacting as usual by Bugmaster · · Score: 1

    Once again, America is following someone else's lead into space. I think it's an unfortunate artifact of our political system that no major scientific project can be planned more than 4 years ahead -- because the next president will start by cutting costs, and the first things to cut are always the nonessential niceties, like space travel and medicare. Only a major embarassment, such as a Communist nation (Russia in the past, China currently) waving at us from orbit, can prod America into doing something entirely new and daring. Well, I guess it's better than nothing...

    --
    >|<*:=
  48. Re:In other news... by Olmy's+Jart · · Score: 1

    Booo hisss... Old joke...

    Badda bimm...

    That joke predates Clinton so you can't attribute it to him, even... My God! I heard that as a child (and I'm in my 50's). Benny Godman could have told that joke... (Ok... Anyone in this crowd even know who he WAS?)

  49. That gives me an idea by ObviousGuy · · Score: 1

    Recycled bottled water.

    No waste at all. Save the environment while quenching your thirst.

    --
    I have been pwned because my /. password was too easy to guess.
    1. Re:That gives me an idea by Rick+the+Red · · Score: 1

      Better use returnable glass bottles, then. Or was that so obvious you failed to mention it?

      --
      If all this should have a reason, we would be the last to know.
    2. Re:That gives me an idea by ObviousGuy · · Score: 1

      I was thinking plastic recyclables.

      --
      I have been pwned because my /. password was too easy to guess.
    3. Re:That gives me an idea by fenix+down · · Score: 1

      Made With 100% Pure 42th Street Station Hobo Piss

  50. Saturn V does is no more, what rocket to use? by MrJones · · Score: 1

    Did you know that the blue print of Saturn V rocket where destroyed before the Shuttle progeam started?
    So, what rocket can be used instead?
    Atlas 4? Delta 4? Who knows!

    --
    Get my e-mail after a captcha test in: http://tinymailt
    1. Re:Saturn V does is no more, what rocket to use? by forlornhope · · Score: 1

      Stop propogating that myth. The plans for the saturn V are safe and archived somewhere. Im willing to bet that a citizen could get a hold of them with a freedom of information act request. Infact I think that would be a great research project for a university to update the saturn V. Hmmm... Im at a university. I have to go... to do something totally unrelated to the Saturn V... Hoitght!!!

      --
      "We Don't Need No Truthless Heros!" - Project 86
    2. Re:Saturn V does is no more, what rocket to use? by The+Snowman · · Score: 2, Interesting

      So, what rocket can be used instead?

      Probably one that is launched from space, possibly the ISS. In the past there has been talk about a space launch platform in orbit. It is potentially much cheaper and easier to go from Earth to orbit to the moon than straight from Earth to the moon. Of course, this depends on us developing better propulsion systems.

      The basic idea is that we can use existing technology to get into orbit, then have a new spacecraft that does not need to be able to enter the atmosphere and land -- it only "flies" in space. This allows extreme flexibility in design and mission capability since it doesn't need wings, those pesky tiles, huge engines, etc.

      --
      24 beers in a case, 24 hours in a day. Coincidence? I think not!
    3. Re:Saturn V does is no more, what rocket to use? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess it's a good thing a number of then are scattered variously about the country. Time for a little reverse engineering...

    4. Re:Saturn V does is no more, what rocket to use? by MrJones · · Score: 1

      Really? I was really sad when I hear that the plans where destroyed. I hear it in the Discovery channel, so I think it was correct.

      They say that the Saturn V blue prints where destroyed in order to focus 100% on the STS Shuttle. But I never think that was a good idea. Saturn V have taken us to the moon after all.

      Many thanks for the info!

      --
      Get my e-mail after a captcha test in: http://tinymailt
  51. Moon Supremacy by afternoon · · Score: 1

    Well, if you want to convince the world that you really are the superior force, an all-American vantage point in the (short-range) heavens says supremacy like nothing else. Not even invasion.

    Returning to the moon in whatever form and for whatever reason fits the neocon/PNAC goals very well.

    But I too hope that some good will come out of it and not just a single-minded, politicised NASA.

  52. Actually by commodoresloat · · Score: 5, Funny

    He's just figuring we might find WMD there.

    1. Re:Actually by Dumbush · · Score: 1

      remind him to bring back a sample!

    2. Re:Actually by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nah, even Bush isn't that stupid.

      He's looking for oil instead.

      (Did everyone [who could] vote in 2000? I did, and it sure as hell wasn't for Bush. And I'm sure gonna vote in the next election too)

    3. Re:Actually by giblfiz · · Score: 1

      He's bound to find them too. On the moon a big rock is a WDM. (anyone here read "The moon is a harsh mistress?"

  53. How about... by Fear+the+Clam · · Score: 1, Funny

    America proposes to send just Bush to the Moon? I'm sure such a proposal would do much to re-establish cooperation with other countries.

  54. not just for drinking by AndreyF · · Score: 1

    water would be required not only for drinking, but for many fundemental functions of a colony (we would need to bring a lot of water).

    back in march they thought there was lots of water on the moon, but new data shows that this is very unlikely.

  55. George Bush and the moon? Great Idea! by Robotron2084 · · Score: 1

    He could be the first presidential astronaut!

    Maybe we can get him to stay there and leave us alone...

    "And that's one small step for us folks, and... hey guys, where are you going? Wait! What about my tortillaaaaaaaas!!!!"

  56. $500 Billion in debt. by monadicIO · · Score: 2, Insightful

    why do we *need* to do it, at least at this point in time? Would we necessarily learn more about the moon , or anything else than we already do?

    I understand getting the space shuttle program back on track, because tonnes of experiments carried out in zero (or near zero) gravity has substantial implications for us here on earth. Perhaps the first landing on moon was a test of technology (and the "human spirit" bullshit), but what good is it going to do to go to the moon again? It's not ever going to support life, nor
    is there any real chance of "mining" the moon once we've wasted all resources here on earth.

    --

    The law of excluded middle : Either I'm foo or I'm foobar

  57. Those were there before he was.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Darrrrrr..

  58. Alternate Headline: by eidechse · · Score: 1

    Unsatisfied with merely pissing off most of Earth, the Bush Administration announced it's intention to start annoying the rest of the Solar System.

  59. Don't get me wrong... by KC7GR · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think our country getting active in space exploration again is a great idea. HOWEVER -- Is it just my paranoia, or does this seem like one of many diversionary tactics of the current administration, designed solely to pull public attention away from the fact(s) that:

    (1) bin Laden ('Old Salami BinBox' to me and some of my friends) is still at large.

    (2) No matter how much spin has been put on it, the Iraqi war never had any solid justification that I can see. And Hussein ('Saddened HoseHead') is still at large as well.

    (3) Our economy is still a shambles.

    (4) The 'YOU-CAN-SPAM' bill is all but signed into law, thus (very possibly) bringing about the end of viable E-mail as we know it.

    (5) The RIAA and MPAA continue to run roughshod over fair use rights.

    I could go on, but I think we all get the idea. This is an election year coming up. The Shrub will pull out anything he or his advisors can think of to try and get himself reelected, and I really think that this is just one example.

    Mod this down if you want. Heck, label it "Flamebait" if you want. I don't pretend to have even a hint of one answer, let alone all of them, but it certainly seems to me like there are other more pressing problems that need dealing with than making another trip to one very dead and airless rock.

    --

    Bruce Lane, KC7GR,

    Blue Feather Technologies

    1. Re:Don't get me wrong... by Alaska+Jack · · Score: 3, Insightful

      1) So? Come on, get serious.

      2) Why we went to war. You've heard the saying that no one is so blind as he who will not see?

      3) I assume you're talking about the recession, which started when Clinton was in office, according to official government figures. Well gosh, where to begin.

      Service Sector Hiring Hits 3.5-Year High

      NASDAQ, Dow Soar on Productivity Gains

      For Home Loans, a Steady Market

      Two Reports Indicate Recovery Is Taking Hold

      Productivity Makes Best Gains in 20 Years

      Auto Sales Rise with Economy

      Shares Reach 18-Month Highs on Manufacturing News

      Holiday Spending Shows Strength

      Reports Indicate the Economy is Continuing its Expansion

      Economy's Growth Is Revised Upward to 8.2%

      U.S. Economic Growth Hits New Records

      Number of New Jobless Claims Fell Last Week

      Housing Starts In October Near 18-Year High

      Economists Expect An Increase of 135,000 Jobs

      Consumer Prices Steady After Four-Month Climb

      Durable Goods Jump, Jobless Claims Drop

      4) Sure. We're going to the moon so Bush can distract us from a bad e-mail bill passed by Congress.

      5) Sure. We're going to the moon so Bush can distract us from the RIAA and MPAA.

      I could go on ...

      I'm sure you could. But I'd rather you didn't. - Alaska Jack

      This block of text inserted to overcome Slashdot's stupid average-characters per line rule: WHEN in the Course of human Events, it becomes necessary for one People to dissolve the Political Bands which have connected them with another, and to assume among the Powers of the Earth, the separate and equal Station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God entitle them, a decent Respect to the Opinions of Mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the Separation. WE hold these Truths to be self-evident, that all Men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness -- That to secure these Rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just Powers from the Consent of the Governed, that whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these Ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its Foundation on such Principles, and organizing its Powers in such Form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness. Prudence, i

    2. Re:Don't get me wrong... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      bin Laden ('Old Salami BinBox' to me and some of my friends)
      Wow, you are a huge dork. Though, it did take some balls to admit this in public.
    3. Re:Don't get me wrong... by Rupert · · Score: 1

      > 'Old Salami BinBox'
      > 'Saddened HoseHead'

      In much the same way, I used to refer to Radovan Karadzic as 'Rubber-band Carrot-bitch'.

      I was the only person who thought it was funny then, too.

      --

      --
      E_NOSIG
    4. Re:Don't get me wrong... by jafuser · · Score: 1

      I love how you defend the current administration's self-indulgent behavior, then quote the Declaration of Independence of all things...

      Have you actually read what it says?

      --
      Please consider making an automatic monthly recurring donation to the EFF
    5. Re:Don't get me wrong... by ivan256 · · Score: 1

      It's amusing that engaged blather gets modded up, and comments that contain actual, well referenced, substance get modded down as overrated.

      I think it's time that the "Overrated" option become subject to meta-moderation like the rest of them.

    6. Re:Don't get me wrong... by Alaska+Jack · · Score: 1

      Actually, I specifically chose *that* block of text because I passionately believe in it, and find it incredibly moving.

      Also, you really ought to read my post again. You are so ready to see me as "defend[ing] the current administration's self-indulgent behavior" that you overlook the fact that I don't actually *do* that anywhere in my post.

    7. Re:Don't get me wrong... by Alaska+Jack · · Score: 1

      Say, can you help me understand how this works?

      The moderation results on that comment were:

      Moderation +1
      20% Insightful
      40% Overrated
      20% Interesting

      How many people actually voted on the post? Why don't the percentages add up to 100? And the post was almost totally factual--why would anyone mod it as overrated?

      Thanks for whatever insight you can provide.

      - AJ

    8. Re:Don't get me wrong... by ivan256 · · Score: 1

      My guess would be that there were four moderations, two up and two down, and that the math in slashcode is broken (obviously). There is no way to tell for sure how many moderations there were...

      People mod things as overrated because they want to reduce the score of things that go against their opinions. The overrated moderation choice is not subject to meta-moderation, so they use that one because they know they are unfairly down-modding a comment that is truly insightful and don't want to loose moderation privlidges through unfair meta-mods. It happens in political threads, discussions about game systems, threads that defend microsoft... It's just broken.

    9. Re:Don't get me wrong... by yourmom16 · · Score: 1
      Are weapons of mass destruction really a reason to go to war? By your logic we should go to war with India, Pakistan, North Korea, The United States, and several other countries. In fact the United States is the only country that has used all three types of WMDs, and North Korea has made threats against us. We have proof that these other countries have weapons of mass destruction, but no proof that Iraq has them.

      There is also doubt as to whether he had WMDs. The article you linked to states:
      Almost everything we knew about Saddam's weapons programs and stockpiles, we knew because the Iraqis themselves admitted it.
      So we believe anything they say unless they say they destroyed their WMDs? How do we know they didn't exagerate the numbers of WMDS to appear more dangerous? Once we attacked, and Saddam knew we wanted to depose him, why didn't he use the WMDs? He had nothing to lose by doing so. Why would he build WMDs, and not use them, even defensively? Are they meant only as decorations?

      --
      "We have got to make Stan understand the importance of voting, because he'll definitely vote for our guy." - South Park
    10. Re:Don't get me wrong... by Alaska+Jack · · Score: 1

      You know, when you communicate via computer like this, in a forum where argument reigns supreme, it is difficult to avoid seeming hostile or aggressive in your replies. As you read this, try to keep in mind that I'm neither. You raise some good points, but I think if you consider them a little longer, you'll also realize each has an answer.

      1. Are weapons of mass destruction really a reason to go to war? By your logic we should go to war with India, Pakistan, North Korea, The United States, and several other countries.

      This is one of those arguments that seems to makes sense--after all, shouldn't we be consistent in our actions?--until one thinks about it carefully.

      Perhaps the foremost rule of war is "Choose Your Battles." Just because there are more than one threats to our security doesn't mean we are somehow obligated to respond equally to all of them. It's like saying we can't arrest all murderers, so we shouldn't arrest any. Or that we shouldn't have helped England in WWII, because we didn't help China against the Japanese.

      More specifically, in the four cases you cited there are all good reasons not to go to war.

      a) India. India is a peaceful and remarkably stable democracy. There is no threat it might provide nuclear weapons to Muslim fanatics. After all, India is mostly Hindu, and the Islamofascists hate them just as much as they hate us.

      b) Pakistan. Pakistan already has nuclear weapons. This is worrisome indeed. So why don't we go to war with Pakistan? Because they might use them against us. Think about it. We went to war against Hussein in part because we didn't want him to become like Pakistan. But in the case of Pakistan itself, it's too late.

      c) North Korea. North Korea may or may not already have nuclear weapons, but it doesn't need them. It's already got an ace in the hole: Thousands of pieces of conventional artillery dug into hardened emplacements and pointed at Seoul, pop. 10.5 million. It's difficult to imagine any scenario against North Korea that doesn't result in the deaths of >100,000 South Korean civilians.

      d) The U.S. We'd go to war ... with ourselves?

      2. There is also doubt as to whether he had WMDs.

      There certainly is doubt about whether Saddam had WMDs. There was also some doubt about it before we invaded Iraq. *That's why we invaded*. You really ought to read that Weekly Standard article again. That was the whole point. The UN demanded that Hussein satisfactorily demonstrate that he did *not* have WMDs. He refused.

      3. How do we know they didn't exaggerate the numbers of WMDS to appear more dangerous?

      Well, if this is in fact what he did, he succeeded. He did indeed make Iraq appear more dangerous. Of course, it was an incredibly stupid thing to do. In a collossal misreading of the Americans, he failed to understand the affect that 9/11 had on them. After that attack, the Americans decided they could no longer afford to ignore the potential "danger" he presented.

  60. DAMNIT! by Anis_a · · Score: 1

    I *knew* I should have gone into fungineering...

  61. Gimme a break. by Feztaa · · Score: 3, Funny

    Nothing but more lunacy from the Bush administration.

    1. Re:Gimme a break. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nice, insightful comment there. How about adding some content like: There is nothing valuble on the moon at all, and this is a worthless attempt to win a stupid pissing contest with china.

    2. Re:Gimme a break. by Lord_Dweomer · · Score: 3, Funny
      1. Make bad pun
      2.?????
      3.KARMA!!!!!

      --
      Buy Steampunk Clothing Online!
    3. Re:Gimme a break. by Feztaa · · Score: 1

      Nice, insightful comment there.

      Insightful? I was trying to be punny.

    4. Re:Gimme a break. by Feztaa · · Score: 1

      Sorry to burst your bubble, but funny mods don't increase Karma anymore, unfortunately.

      There should be a +1, Punny mod :)

  62. Words of JFK... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "There is no strife, no prejudice, no national conflict in outer space as yet. Its hazards are hostile to us all. Its conquest deserves the best of all mankind, and its opportunity for peaceful cooperation many never come again. But why, some say, the moon? Why choose this as our goal? And they may well ask why climb the highest mountain? Why, 35 years ago, fly the Atlantic? Why does Rice play Texas?

    We choose to go to the moon. We choose to go to the moon in this decade and do the other things, not because they are easy, but because they are hard, because that goal will serve to organize and measure the best of our energies and skills, because that challenge is one that we are willing to accept, one we are unwilling to postpone, and one which we intend to win, and the others, too.

    It is for these reasons that I regard the decision last year to shift our efforts in space from low to high gear as among the most important decisions that will be made during my incumbency in the office of the Presidency. "

    but, then again, this dreamer was shot too.

  63. HOW? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I would like to know how we are going to "return" there if we never went in the first place. Somebody needs to fill Dubya in here...

    Moon Movie

  64. On Bizzaro World... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The republicans are a lunar myth!

  65. why?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why do /.ers get moist over NASA stuff? Stop spending our grandkids money on this stuff. We can't pay our current bills let alone spending a gabillion dollars for some more moon rocks.

  66. Re:Thank you China! (and Russia) by vik · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The cheapest way with current technology might well be to use Russian rockets. 'Course that puts a big ding in the presidential pride, right? A bit like the way the last series of American rockets using Russian engines only worse.

    International organisations such as The Artemis Society know a lot more about this kind of thing than you realise. I work for TransOrbital, so I know what I'm on about. I speak here in an unofficial capacity, by the way.

    Resurrecting Saturn V won't work. The teams are disbanded or dead of old age, the buildings re-used, the launchpads were demolished for the shuttles, and they don't make the tools to make the bits anymore.

    Personally, I'd be a lot happier if it was an international effort. That way when the US Government gets cold feet again, or is unable to meet its end of the bargain again, the mission will continue and mankind as a whole gets something out of it.

    Vik :v)

  67. lets drink our rum by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    we can't even find funding (millions) to keep hubble in orbit, or give all our troops flack jacks, yet we are talking about putting a space station on the moon (billions)?

    dont get me wrong, i'll pay extra taxes if it means that we get a station on the moon, but realism sinks in.

  68. Tax and spend Democrats^H^H^H^HRepublicans? by mooman · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Has this guy got a clue about budgets?

    Sorry, I'm sure to get modded as a troll for this, and I'm jazzed about our space programs getting money they need, but I'm also more terrified of the condition this country is going to be in under Dubya's rule.

    I mean, if you haven't seen this chart, check out:
    Bush's Budget Deficit (Google cache, an original is at http://dean-justinspoliticaljournal.cafeprogressiv e.com/4239a600.jpg)

    $87 billion for Iraq, tax cuts aplenty, and now he wants space ships too? Oy.

    --
    In the Portland, Ore area and like card games? Check out: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/portlandgames/
    1. Re:Tax and spend Democrats^H^H^H^HRepublicans? by jimmy_dean · · Score: 1

      If you think President Bush is bad, check out what Clinton proposed in his last State of the Union Address:

      http://www.markblackburn.org/Papers/StateOfUnion Sp ending.htm

      Kinda makes Bush's spending seem pretty mild. :)

      --
      -> Sometimes, you just gotta break free from the shackles of proprietary code.
    2. Re:Tax and spend Democrats^H^H^H^HRepublicans? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Very good point, sir. Bush should stop spending taxpayer money on foreign aid.

      I wonder, though, are you averse to massive government spending in general, or only when it is implemented by Republicans?

      Me? I favor less taxation and less spending, no matter what particular side of the American political coin is heads up. I'm crazy like that.

      By the way, you'll never get modded down as a troll here when you have negative things to say about $REPUBLICAN.

    3. Re:Tax and spend Democrats^H^H^H^HRepublicans? by mooman · · Score: 3, Insightful

      An AC spaketh: I wonder, though, are you averse to massive government spending in general, or only when it is implemented by Republicans?

      No, only when it doesn't directly help the American people.

      I'm not inherently opposed to the programs, it's just that *right now* is a bad time to be trying all this stuff. After a recent layoff and several months of unemployment, I'm lucky to have a found a job, despite it being back at about my 1996 salary. Each month I'm continuing to have to tap into more and more of my home equity just to keep the bills paid. There are huge problems with growing poverty in our own country, our education system is slipping through our fingers, healthcare costs are rising at rates triple (or more) than inflation.

      I just want to see some of those issues fixed (or at least addressed) before we start more rhetoric about foreign countries to invade and other planets (or satellites) to commandeer.

      The sad jest in my original subject line was that it used to be the Democrats with the bad rap for running up big spending tabs and now they are being completely outclassed by this Republican president with a Republican congress. I'm not dissing the Republicans... I'm just afraid of them. I want there to be something left of this country for my daughter to look forward to. Hopefully something worthwhile.

      --
      In the Portland, Ore area and like card games? Check out: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/portlandgames/
    4. Re:Tax and spend Democrats^H^H^H^HRepublicans? by jgardn · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I agree. It's high time the Republicans lived up to their campaign promises and started cutting back federal programs. Welfare, medicare, and social security are all due for a checkup and rewrite.

      However, space exploration falls under the constitutionally duty of the federal government to fund science. Bush is perfectly within his party's vision and the bounds of the constitution in proposing this. I want my tax dollars to fund this.

      --
      The radical sect of Islam would either see you dead or "reverted" to Islam.
    5. Re:Tax and spend Democrats^H^H^H^HRepublicans? by Malcontent · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      When clinton proposes govt spending the republicans call him evil when bush does it the democrats call him evil. It's not what you do it's who does it that matters. Don't believe me? Try this on for size.

      During the Iran Iraq war Saddam Hussein launched chemical war against the iranians and the kurds. He killed hundreds of thousands of his own people. The UN security council drafted a resolution to condemn him. The US vetoed that resolution. Who was running the US? Reagan, Bush sr, Rumsfeld and Cheney!. The same people that now claim that Saddam is evil were at the time helping him.

      Also consider this. Bush has created a brand new govt branch. He has grown the size of the govt more then anybody else in recent history. He has also (almost) created the largest entitlement program since the advent of medicare and social security (the drug benefit). He is running enourmous deficits. Despite all that he is the darling of the conservatives who supposedly are for smaller govt and fiscal responsibility.

      If clinton had done what bush is doing FOX news would be comparing him to satan on an hourly basis. When bush does it they love him.

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    6. Re:Tax and spend Democrats^H^H^H^HRepublicans? by cheekyboy · · Score: 1

      $2million per minute is going to china!

      Thats a big amount of cash flow, thats not coming back.

      --
      Liberty freedom are no1, not dicks in suits.
    7. Re:Tax and spend Democrats^H^H^H^HRepublicans? by donutello · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Between 1992 and 2000, the US was the sole champion of crushing sanctions against Iraq. The US bombed Iraq several times in that period, including 1998.

      This is the same Iraq that supposedly didn't have any WMDs.

      Clinton also shot cruise missiles into Afghanistan and Africa which missed more than they hit to deflect attention from the Monica Lewinski case.

      --
      Mmmm.. Donuts
    8. Re:Tax and spend Democrats^H^H^H^HRepublicans? by donutello · · Score: 1

      It's not "Bush's" budget deficit. It's the United State's budget deficit.

      The US economy (along with the rest of the worlds) is in the shitter right now. The main factors for this are:
      - The bubble from 1999
      - Revelations of corporate scandals that occurred during the last presidents watch.
      - The terror attacks of 9/11.

      But sure, go ahead and blame Bush. Just don't be surprised when the majority of the country disagrees with you come 2004.

      Last time I checked Germany and France were running record deficits too. Are those Bush's fault too?

      --
      Mmmm.. Donuts
    9. Re:Tax and spend Democrats^H^H^H^HRepublicans? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No--Republicans don't tax and spend--they spend alright, but they don't tax. So our choices are

      Republicans--spend more, but pay with credit cards
      Democrats--spend more, but pay with cash or check

    10. Re:Tax and spend Democrats^H^H^H^HRepublicans? by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Between 1992 and 2000, the US was the sole champion of crushing sanctions against Iraq. The US bombed Iraq several times in that period, including 1998.

      Nice definition of "sole" you've got there, bud. If by "sole" you mean only one apart from Britain, etc then you're spot on.

      This is the same Iraq that supposedly didn't have any WMDs.

      Uh, it didn't have them then and it doesn't have them now. Or did the coalition suddenly find a massive stockpile of them in the last five minutes?

      Clinton also shot cruise missiles into Afghanistan and Africa which missed more than they hit to deflect attention from the Monica Lewinski case.

      Too true. But those measures weren't exactly opposed by Republicans at the time, were they?

      --

      "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
    11. Re:Tax and spend Democrats^H^H^H^HRepublicans? by Jugalator · · Score: 1

      The main factors for this are:
      - The bubble from 1999
      - Revelations of corporate scandals that occurred during the last presidents watch.
      - The terror attacks of 9/11.


      Maybe you should include "redundant war in Iraq" there too.

      Last time I checked Germany and France were running record deficits too. Are those Bush's fault too?

      ??? No.

      --
      Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
    12. Re:Tax and spend Democrats^H^H^H^HRepublicans? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If clinton had done what bush is doing FOX news would be comparing him to satan on an hourly basis. When bush does it they love him.

      Clinton also shot cruise missiles into Afghanistan and Africa which missed more than they hit to deflect attention from the Monica Lewinski case.

      Enough said.

    13. Re:Tax and spend Democrats^H^H^H^HRepublicans? by Malcontent · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      " Between 1992 and 2000, the US was the sole champion of crushing sanctions against Iraq."

      So? I was talking about the 80s. After Bush sr. attacked iraq then the sanctions were imposed. You are right though they were crushing. During that war the US targetted lots of infrastructure. We bombed the shit out of water treatment plants, bridges, roads, electrical plants and such. Then imposed sanctions which drastically slowed the ability of iraq to rebuild hoping that the thirsty starving masses would revolt. It was a sad miscalculation which ended up causing almost a million deaths while still keeping Saddam in power.

      " The US bombed Iraq several times in that period, including 1998."

      Between 1998 and the current war we bombed them whenever we wanted. We were imposing a no fly zone which meant that we were partolling the skies pretty much constantly. I don't think a month went by without some sort of a bomb falling on some body.

      "This is the same Iraq that supposedly didn't have any WMDs"

      Huh? They didn't have WMDs? How could they have developed them while they were under continuous overflights and surveillance? That was a lie and you believed it. You are not alone though lots of people believe it too even though there is not one shred of evidence to back up the proposition. It's kind of like believing in god I suppose, maybe you don't need evidence, you believe what you choose to believe.

      'Clinton also shot cruise missiles into Afghanistan and Africa which missed more than they hit to deflect attention from the Monica Lewinski case."

      Yes I remember that. At the time Rush Limbaugh called him a murderer on TV. I noticed that Rush hasn't called Bush a murderer though which just goes to prove my original post.

      BTW I notice that lots of people are comparing Bush to Clinton these days saying in effect "see bush isn't any more evil then clinton. Clinton bombed haphazardly too!". I never thought I would see people saying that Bush is no worse then clinton so therefore it's all good.

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    14. Re:Tax and spend Democrats^H^H^H^HRepublicans? by Performer+Guy · · Score: 1

      But goods are coming back, and of course you're buying that stuff. It's almost impossible to buy anything that ain't made in china or at least has components made in China these days, but sooner or later inflation will drive the cashflow from China to some other country.

    15. Re:Tax and spend Democrats^H^H^H^HRepublicans? by feepness · · Score: 1

      Each month I'm continuing to have to tap into more and more of my home equity just to keep the bills paid.

      Here's an idea:

      1. Live within your means.
      2. Save a significant part of your income.
      3. Profit!!

      Really is a government that raises your taxes and spends it on welfare going to help you with your costs?

    16. Re:Tax and spend Democrats^H^H^H^HRepublicans? by strike2867 · · Score: 0

      Majority? Thats funny. Just like the majority of the US voted for Bush in the 2000 election.

      --

      Vote for new mod!!! Score:-2,Imbecile
    17. Re:Tax and spend Democrats^H^H^H^HRepublicans? by caluml · · Score: 1
      I'm sure to get modded as a troll for this : (Score:4, Insightful)

      Heh, that age old trick is still working...

    18. Re:Tax and spend Democrats^H^H^H^HRepublicans? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What the hell is a DemocRepublican?

    19. Re:Tax and spend Democrats^H^H^H^HRepublicans? by jafuser · · Score: 1

      It's kind of like believing in god I suppose, maybe you don't need evidence, you believe what you choose to believe.

      This is what's wrong.

      We elect people to high positions in office who suffer from mental illness in believing in 2000-year old fairy tales and fictional omnipotent characters. Then we wonder why they act so irrationally.

      --
      Please consider making an automatic monthly recurring donation to the EFF
    20. Re:Tax and spend Democrats^H^H^H^HRepublicans? by jafuser · · Score: 1

      I wonder, though, are you averse to massive government spending in general, or only when it is implemented by Republicans?

      "Tax and Spend" is better than "Spend and Spend".

      You have to get the money from somewhere. You don't cut taxes and increase spending unless you want the system to fail.

      Pushing the cost off to your descendents is not showing a whole lot of personal responsibility (which the Republicans trumpet as one of their primary doctrines).

      --
      Please consider making an automatic monthly recurring donation to the EFF
    21. Re:Tax and spend Democrats^H^H^H^HRepublicans? by jafuser · · Score: 1

      No, but a government who levies taxes for social services creates jobs here at home. Leaving it up to private industry means some of the money for jobs will go to overseas contracts.

      It may cost a little more to do some social services in the public sector, but it creates more of a re-investment in our country than the private sector would accomplish.

      Most conservatives argue that we need everything to be private becuase it is more cost-effective. But I ask you, when you're shopping for something, do you always buy the absolute cheapest generic product, or do you spend an extra few cents for better quality?

      If you do buy the generic, it's probably because you're unemployed.

      --
      Please consider making an automatic monthly recurring donation to the EFF
    22. Re:Tax and spend Democrats^H^H^H^HRepublicans? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      + Insightful

      Excellent summary.

    23. Re:Tax and spend Democrats^H^H^H^HRepublicans? by TALlama · · Score: 1

      It's called a boondoggle: you pay people lots of money that doesn't technically exist for a project no one technically needs, and the money you inject in the economy starts the engine turning again.

      Those of us who live in LA can thank boondoggling for most of our freeways. Boondoggling built many public parks. Tennessee has dams because of boondoggling. The Great Depression was on it's way out because of boondoggling, when that greatest boondoggle of all came along: World War II.

      It's an old practice, and it's worked many times before. It might just work this time.

      --

      - The Amazina Llama

    24. Re:Tax and spend Democrats^H^H^H^HRepublicans? by Malcontent · · Score: 1

      "'We elect people to high positions in office who suffer from mental illness in believing in 2000-year old fairy tales and fictional omnipotent characters. Then we wonder why they act so irrationally."

      You and I know that an non believer would never get elected.

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    25. Re:Tax and spend Democrats^H^H^H^HRepublicans? by don.g · · Score: 1

      I'd imagine that someone who rubbished the deeply held beliefs of a sizeable subset of the population would have some difficulty getting elected, too.

      --
      Pretend that something especially witty is here. Thanks.
    26. Re:Tax and spend Democrats^H^H^H^HRepublicans? by Malcontent · · Score: 1

      This is a pretty typical jihadist response. To you there is no difference between me not believing in your god and me be "rubbishing" your religion. In other words you are either with us or against us.

      To most jihadists there is no middle ground. There is no possible way I could not believe in your god and yet let you go on believing what ever kind of god you want to believe in.

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    27. Re:Tax and spend Democrats^H^H^H^HRepublicans? by cheezedawg · · Score: 1
      Hmmm- interesting. Here you say:

      During the Iran Iraq war Saddam Hussein launched chemical war against the iranians and the kurds.

      But a few posts down you say:

      You are not alone though lots of people believe it too even though there is not one shred of evidence to back up the proposition.

      So I guess the fact that we saw him use chemical weapons isn't enough "evidence" to you that he was developing WMD's?

      The UN security council drafted a resolution to condemn him. The US vetoed that resolution.

      You know, you really shouldn't make stuff up when the facts are publically available. During the 1980's the security council passed about 12 resolutions against Iran and Iraq, and the US did not veto a single one of them. Out of these resolutions, 5 of them delt with Saddam's use of chemical weapons:

      Resolution 540, which "condemns all violations of international humanitarian law, in particular, the provisions of the Geneva Conventions" was passed by a vote of 12-0 with Malta, Nicaragua, and Pakistan abstaining.

      Resolution 582, which "deplores... the use of chemical weapons" was passed unanimously.

      Resolution 598, which also "deplores... the use of chemical weapons", and was also passed unanimously.

      Resolution 612, which "condemns vigorously" the continued use of chemical weapons, was adopted unanimously.

      Resolution 620, which "condemns resolutely" Iraq's use of chemical weapons, passed unanimously.

      Also consider this. Bush has created a brand new govt branch. He has grown the size of the govt more then anybody else in recent history.

      We still only have three branches in our government (exective, legislative, judicial), so I assume you are talking about the new Department of Homeland Security (under the executive branch). But that wasn't as much growth as it was a reorganization, and besides, providing for homeland security is one of the most important roles of the Federal government.

      He has also (almost) created the largest entitlement program since the advent of medicare and social security (the drug benefit). He is running enourmous deficits. Despite all that he is the darling of the conservatives who supposedly are for smaller govt and fiscal responsibility.

      You obviously don't listen very closely to conservatives, then. They have been extremely critical of the spending increases and entitlement programs that Bush has supported.

      --
      "The defense of freedom requires the advance of freedom" - George W Bush
    28. Re:Tax and spend Democrats^H^H^H^HRepublicans? by cheezedawg · · Score: 1

      Then imposed sanctions which drastically slowed the ability of iraq to rebuild hoping that the thirsty starving masses would revolt. It was a sad miscalculation which ended up causing almost a million deaths while still keeping Saddam in power.

      I think you are a little confused. The sanctions were only intended to diminish Saddam's capabilities to continue his weapons programs. Food, medicine, and humanitarian supplies were never restricted by sanctions. On the contrary, during the 90's the UN urged Saddam several times to buy more food and medicine, and the (somewhat misguided) Oil For Food program was established to facilitate that. However, Saddam knew he could use the sanctions for in his propoganda efforts against the United States, so he intentionally withheld supplies from his people (while building himself lavish palaces).

      The blame for the suffering of the Iraqi people rests soley on Saddam Hussein. It is silly that a leader of a country that is as rich in natural resources as Iraq is would allow his own people to starve.

      --
      "The defense of freedom requires the advance of freedom" - George W Bush
    29. Re:Tax and spend Democrats^H^H^H^HRepublicans? by feepness · · Score: 1

      Most conservatives argue that we need everything to be private becuase it is more cost-effective. But I ask you, when you're shopping for something, do you always buy the absolute cheapest generic product, or do you spend an extra few cents for better quality?

      If you do buy the generic, it's probably because you're unemployed.


      You've brilliantly pinpointed the exact problem with bigger government. Government is a monopoly enforced by men with guns. The private sector allows choice.

    30. Re:Tax and spend Democrats^H^H^H^HRepublicans? by don.g · · Score: 1

      I don't have a problem with your sharing my beliefs.

      I was referring to the comment you quoted, which referred to adherents of presumably judaeo-christian religions as those who "suffer from mental illness in believing in 2000-year old fairy tales and fictional omnipotent characters". Utterance of such statements by someone who was trying to get elected by any but the most fiercely atheist constituency would likely be political suicide: it's not just disagreeing with people's beliefs, it's saying that they're insane because they do.

      --
      Pretend that something especially witty is here. Thanks.
  69. Bush should land on planet earth first by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and may be he could:
    - get the fuck out of Iraq
    - fix: record budget deficits, record unemployment, record trade deficit, record low of the dollar against the euro, rising healthcare costs, crumbling education system, etc.

  70. Let us boldly go... by slamb · · Score: 5, Insightful
    ...where we've been 30 years before.

    He'll have to do more than say "let's go back" before I call his plan bold. Okay, so he might mention the idea of establishing a permanent Lunar base and of going to Mars. As the article said, his father already did that:

    On July 20, 1989, President George H. W. Bush marked the 20th anniversary of the first Apollo moon landing with a speech at the National Air and Space Museum in Washington in which he called for a permanent American presence on the moon and, ultimately, a mission to Mars.
    ...but it's been 14 years and his speech is all but forgotten. If Dubya. wants to do better, he'll need a plan to make it happen. And I don't believe he and his administration are capable of that sort of vision.

    I'd like to see this Lunar base and Martian mission. But I don't have high hopes that it will be any time soon. And I don't believe that Dubya will have anything to do with it.

  71. Re:In other news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you're not Jack Benny, you're stealing my material!

  72. Deficit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Right up until the Bush administration, I would have been the biggest cheerleader in the world. But this is coming from the guy who is running a single-year budget deficit of five hundred billion dollars, $500,000,000,000.00


    I cringe at the thought of adding another couple of hundred billion to that particular pile.


    This is a budget deficit. It matters. It will hurt.

  73. Permanent moon base by bender_is_great · · Score: 2, Funny
    Finally, public transport to my "10 Acre Lifestyle block".

    Now, where did I put my deed and lunar map...

  74. What we really need is a real vision... by krbvroc1 · · Score: 1

    I've been hoping for years that a President will pronounce to the country, like John F. Kennedy did, that he has a serious challenge for our nation and our national security depends on it.

    And no I'm not talking about wasting time or money going to the moon. I'm talking about a full mobilation of our nations resources to tackle the problem of alternative fuels. Like NASA was challenged, and the nation was captivated, we need a similar program for alternative fuel research, implementation, and production. I mean massive funding and resource allocation, not a few tax breaks that allows Detroit to say they are working the issue while draggint their feet for another decade.

    Unfortunately, I think the true purpose for going to the moon again would be to rape her of her resources and commercialize her. No thanks.

  75. December 17th should give you a clue. by twitter · · Score: 5, Insightful
    At a time when commercial space flight is being touted as the most logical course, Bush is now saying that he wants to send people back to the moon?

    Hopeuflly, Bush will try to unleash and provide a framework for America's creative genius. The big company / NASA / politics aproach is not working. The consolidate aero companies are currently wracked with scandal, though it's hard to think of ways to provide nuclear propulsion without heavy industry. The Wright Brothers were bicycle makers, but they beat out the whole world with it's huge companies, landed aristocrats and tyrants. We did it 100 years ago and many people are working to do it again today with cheap manned space flight. I don't know how Bush can encourage that kind of effort, but I know that it can and must be done. We shall see what Bush has to offer on the 100th aniversery of heavier than air flight. Simply paying attention to that day is a very good sign.

    This is way better talk than the defeatist nonsense heard just a few years ago about ignoring the infinite resources waiting for us in space. Pro nuclear, pro space, great stuff.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

    1. Re:December 17th should give you a clue. by Ars-Fartsica · · Score: 1
      I don't know how Bush can encourage that kind of effort, but I know that it can and must be done.

      Why?

      Why is cheap manned spaceflight a priority? Its already well known that manned spaceflight has no long term viability for our species - it is clearly understood we can only thrive on Earth.

      There are a million causes more deserving of research money, from nanotech to proteinomics. Why bother with the space race the US already ran?

    2. Re:December 17th should give you a clue. by bnenning · · Score: 1
      Its already well known that manned spaceflight has no long term viability for our species - it is clearly understood we can only thrive on Earth.


      Yes, and heavier than air flight is impossible, and there is a worldwide market for five computers.

      --
      How to solve most of our problems: 1.Lots of nuclear plants. 2.Cure aging.
    3. Re:December 17th should give you a clue. by Squideye · · Score: 1

      And oil reserves will last forever. And the environment won't fall apart. And there's plenty of room for everyone.

    4. Re:December 17th should give you a clue. by bnenning · · Score: 1
      And oil reserves will last forever.


      Quite possibly.


      And the environment won't fall apart.


      Well, we're still here...


      And there's plenty of room for everyone.


      Every human in the world could fit comfortably into Texas. Perhaps we will hit a limit eventually, in which case it would be nice if some of us could move offworld.

      --
      How to solve most of our problems: 1.Lots of nuclear plants. 2.Cure aging.
    5. Re:December 17th should give you a clue. by kyletinsley · · Score: 1
      Every human in the world could fit comfortably into Texas. Perhaps we will hit a limit eventually, in which case it would be nice if some of us could move offworld.

      Yeah, if all everybody wanted to do was stand in one spot and not move around a whole lot. But all those people have to piss and shit somewhere, and I nominate you for being the guy who has to stand near THAT corner.

      Nevermind the fact that you can't GROW anything on the land if people are standing all over it all day. And it's kind of hard to farm in Kansas if everyone in the world is standing around in Texas. So give up any ideas you had about eating too...

      No, people really DO need to be spread out across the world in order to live "comfortably".


      And the environment won't fall apart.

      Well, we're still here...

      Humans have only been able to have a real significant impact on the temperature and chemical composition of the air and oceans for about a hundred and fifty years... And there are more people living on this planet currently than the combined total of all people of all previous generations. Resource consumption and industry output is increasing at an exponential rate.

      I don't think the fact that we're not living in the Matrix's "cloud world" yet means that we're not having a serious negative impact on the environment...
    6. Re:December 17th should give you a clue. by dexter+riley · · Score: 1

      Bush will try to unleash and provide a framework for America's creative genius

      December 17th? I thought all our creative geniuses were skipping work to see Return of the King that day!

    7. Re:December 17th should give you a clue. by Squideye · · Score: 1

      Er, I agreed with you until your bizarre response. Environmental depredation, overpopulation (especially in lower-tech countries) and the calculable end of energy reserves are serious considerations.

      The point is that offworld settlement has to be an option, or, as a species, we'll have a nice built-in "sunset clause" (obPoliticalJab) unlike any of Bush's overtures to martial law.

    8. Re:December 17th should give you a clue. by stanmann · · Score: 1

      Given that the earth's population is ~6.5 million...They could fit comfortably in the area's of the world where english is spoken natively(US,Canada,UK,NZ, and AUS ... giving each person NLT 1 acre of land....

      --
      Food not Bombs is a nice platitude but it breaks down when you notice that the Bombees are usually well fed
    9. Re:December 17th should give you a clue. by kyletinsley · · Score: 1
      Given that the earth's population is ~6.5 million

      6.5 million huh... There's 2.5 times that many people currently living in the state I live in. Better check those decimal points again...
    10. Re:December 17th should give you a clue. by stanmann · · Score: 1

      OK, it is a typo... I did the calculations against 6.5 billion and used 247 acres per sq kilometer... and used the US Canada and Australia...

      US--9,629,091 * 247 =~2.37 billion acres
      Canada--9,220,970 * 247 =2.27 billion acres
      Australia--7,617,930 *247=1.88 billion acres

      6.52 billion acres
      Sizes taken from Cia factbook...

      --
      Food not Bombs is a nice platitude but it breaks down when you notice that the Bombees are usually well fed
  76. This just in... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Bush wants to be the man in the moon!


    Senior advisors to the Bush administration are reluctant to inform Bush that this isn't possible, and have decided to let him live in his own fantasyland.

  77. What about Vega? by Stile+65 · · Score: 1

    Those Vegans might have some dirty nukes pointed at cow-eating infidels...

    --
    I claim first use of "Error No. 0B" - or "No. 0B error." It'll be the new ID 10T!
  78. A reply to those who freak out at 'nuclear' by iamnotayam · · Score: 1

    Realize that the nuclear of today is not the nuclear of yesterday.. our understanding of physics is better, the engineering is better and we are now aware of the importance of safety mesaures to protect the environment in the case of spacecraft failure.

    -

    1. Re:A reply to those who freak out at 'nuclear' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      We can't allow any possibility of radiation leaking into space.

      Won't somebody please think of the children?!

  79. Why? by ShallowThroat · · Score: 0, Troll

    Why bother? Establish a permenant base on the moon to do what exactly?
    Explore? Been there, done that.
    Science? Benn there, done that too.
    If this is just to stimulate the economy, then i guess it's better than warring against iraqi civilians.

    --
    The "Insert Quote Here" line is almost as predictable as inserting an actual quote.
  80. $500 Billion in debt. by sithkhan · · Score: 1

    It is a shame that your predecessors never thought about this, eh? Nothing like The Great Society or the Public Works Program.
    Look, if we go to the moon, we will be investing money in research which will lead to new products that we can sell to everyone else. Remember all the cool things we recieved from the Space Race? Plus, being a geek was cool!

    --

    is it that bad seein a hot chick again? if i see a hot chick walkin down the hall i dont say "repost"
  81. Good... by herrvinny · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Until Bush grants NASA a good chunk of cash (35 - 45 billion sounds about right) and somehow passes a law preventing the next administration from rolling back the grant, I won't be convinced. What if he just spouts rhetoric, then never funds it fully (remember fuel cell cars in the state of the union)? It's just a load of hyperbole until that time.

    NASA needs to *know* that the cash will be available to fund crazy stuff, stuff that's way out there. We'll have to rebuild/repair quite a bit, launch facilities, bigger rockets, a massive hiring spree (NASA's hemorrhaged quite a few talented people in the last decade).

    If this is for real, perhaps I'll switch my major (from cs, of course) to someone more related to space....

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

      They told Clinton there were a bunch of interns, but that didn't work.

  82. Finally... by vec+sibarra · · Score: 1

    we might be getting back to von Braum's original vision. Back during America's first display of interest in the space program he called for a sensible program of exploration to establish a firm presence in space. First orbital missions, then moon missions, establishing a (hopefully productive) colony on the moon, and use that infrastructure to stage a Mars mission. However, due to the threat of a Communist outer space, we bypassed this plan and went straight to the moon. IMHO, we would have been better off in the long run if we had followed his plan. But then again, the public didn't know the whole picture of the Russian space program - they just saw a fleet of ballistic missiles dropping from Sputnik XIV. Anyway, I hope that this renewed initiative, whatever the timing, gets us off of this planet. I say it's about time.

    --
    They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety - Benjami
  83. I knew Jack Kennedy, and you sir. . . by kfg · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I don't really want to burst anybody's bubble here, but it ain't gonna happen.

    We are not living the same political age as when Jack sent us to the moon, nor is Bush in the same position of political power that Jack was when he sent us to the moon.

    Bush can say anything he wants, but it's going to go through the same political process as anything else he suggests at the moment.

    Need I point out that his stock is a bit low at thet moment and this looks like an obvious ploy to to parlay patriotism into personal support?

    The problem being that in 1957 we were blindsided by an outside "enemy" nation and clamored to regain a feeling of national supremecy.

    Bush has blindsided himself.

    This rocket ain't gonna fly.

    KFG

    1. Re:I knew Jack Kennedy, and you sir. . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Kennedy: Lower taxes = good thing.
      Bush: Ditto.

      Kennedy: "Defend freedom and liberty at any cost, throughout the world."
      Bush: Ditto.

      Kennedy: Let's go to the Moon.
      Bush: Ditto.

      Democrats: Yay, Kennedy! Boo, Bush! (repeat ad nauseam)

    2. Re:I knew Jack Kennedy, and you sir. . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Kennedy: Banging Marilyn Monroe and Jackie Kennedy

      Bush: Banging Laura Bush

      I don't care if GWB turns up in the next Paris Hilton tapes, there's no comparison in this category.

    3. Re:I knew Jack Kennedy, and you sir. . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Kennedy went to the moon because the Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba failed and he needed a distraction. End of story.

  84. Kennedy? by warnerpr · · Score: 1

    OK, did any one else find it strange that the article didn't mention JFK? I mean it is sort of an obvious lazy thing to mention, so maybe since it was so obvious the author found it best to ignore it. Or maybe it is because mentioning a Kennedy in a positive way or implying that the president is taking hints from JFK would be very out of style for National Review.... just a random observation.

  85. Okay, before you flame people by Idou · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Just think for a second . . .

    We have just given a major tax break.

    We have gotten into a "perpetual" war, with no end in site (LAST month was the bloodiest for us . . . exactly WHEN did major combat end!?). We have already committed $83 BILLION dollars, and we will have to commit more.

    Domestic problems (healthcare, SS, etc . . .) remain neglected.

    Our surplus budget has become a major deficit.

    I have always thought space expoloration to be the most nobel activity any nation could invest in, but is this REALITY, folks? Seems to me that this is more about distracting us from the HUGE problems that exist, than anything else.

    I thought the idea was to either go commericial or international with space exploration . . . I think our relationships with some MAJOR space fairing nations are still weak as a result of our unilateral military adventures, so I doubt we could do this internationally . . .

    So we are going to fight an expensive and costly war (this is starting to look more and more like Vietnam, thought I am too young to know that for certain), give MAJOR tax breaks, AND return to the moon.

    Come on . . . some ideas are ambitious and some things are just political agendas to get you looking the other way.

    --
    Sdelat' Ameriku velikoy Snova!
    1. Re:Okay, before you flame people by toddhisattva · · Score: 1
      Okay this isn't really a spelling flame. But how can you criticize Dubya when you can't choose the correct words? Maybe English is not your first language. If it is your first language, well then you're an idiot English speaker. Maybe you are a Republican trolling by pretending to be a stereotypical frothing-at-the-mouth rabid dog Democrat.

      "end in site"
      That's "sight," imbecile.

      "most nobel activity"
      It's "noble" you stupid pile of shit.

      "space fairing nations"
      That's space faring nations. You're such a pathetic idiot. Please, just go crawl away and die. You're wasting oxygen that could be better put to use by the most brain-damaged jackass imaginable.

      Bush is far from my ideal President. I've never voted for him. But I'm grown up and honest enough to understand that he is at least doing some things better than I or any number of leftist simpletons could. If all you can do is spout facile crap you heard from Michael Moore, you aren't smart enough nor are you honest enough to give Dubya a fair appraisal.

      So go away and die. You know it's the right thing to do.

      Kill youself! Do it! Kill yourself! Do it! Kill yourself! Do it!

      Anyway, if English is not your first language, then please ignore the flamage and take it as constructive criticism!

    2. Re:Okay, before you flame people by orthogonal · · Score: 2, Funny

      Domestic problems (healthcare, SS, etc . . .) remain neglected.

      Now you're just wrong about that!

      Reichsminister John Ashcroft will not neglect to secure full funding for his SS.

      Of course, to do this, some luxuries will have to be dispensed with, just for the duration of the war. Luxuries like that pesky 4th Amendment. And like "designated free speech zones" for demonstrators. After all, anyone who criticizes the government is supporting terrorism.

      But be confident, Citizen! We're doing all of this to keep you safe during the Permanent Crisis. We'll even tell you know what opinions are safe for you to believe!

      And of course, if you disagree, we'll be happy to record your objections. Just let us see your papers, Citizen!

    3. Re:Okay, before you flame people by strike2867 · · Score: 0

      Yes, people shouldnt be just sayin stuff they heard from Michael Moore. In fact his numbers: 11,000 die compared to canada's 160+(dont care enought to get exact numbers) are his way of blurring the facts. I looked it up and the rates per 100,000 that die because of fire arms are 3.76 in US and .76 in Canada. Michael Moore does need to be more objective, but his overall message should be understood by most Americans. Even if they do not follow it.

      --

      Vote for new mod!!! Score:-2,Imbecile
    4. Re:Okay, before you flame people by skajake · · Score: 1

      >> We have just given a major tax break.
      This is helping drive an economic boom that will lead to greater tax revenue

      >>We have gotten into a "perpetual" war, with no end in site
      There is an end in sight, you are choosing not to see it and are helping increase public opionion that we are failing, which in turn gives Iraqi dissenters hope.

      >>Domestic problems (healthcare, SS, etc . . .) remain neglected.
      Untrue, we just expanded Medicare larger than ever before. SS funding is untouched.

      >>Our surplus budget has become a major deficit.
      This is due to a federal budget attempting to proffer both capitalism and welfare state simultaneously. Agreed that the outrageous social spending has to be squelched. (Medicare alone is > $400 Billion)

      Bottom Line... This IS a reality. And it will prompt scientific advancement like never before. Just as all endeavors that our country has had into space before. Regardless of the political motivation, this will be great for science.

      --

      ~ Maintainer of the Skajake Projects

    5. Re:Okay, before you flame people by deanj · · Score: 1
      "Kill youself!"

      It's yourself, you moron.

    6. Re:Okay, before you flame people by Zak3056 · · Score: 1

      Domestic problems (healthcare, SS, etc . . .) remain neglected.

      Four hundred billion dollars for medicare is neglect? I'd hate to see your definition of "massive expansion!"

      --
      What part of "shall not be infringed" is so hard to understand?
    7. Re:Okay, before you flame people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      There is an end in sight

      Really? Where? You haven't fallen for that "they'll be an Iraqi government set up" bit have you? So Iraq will have it's own government. Well, so did South Vietnam, and a fat lot of good it did them.

    8. Re:Okay, before you flame people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      South Vietnam became Communist because the US pulled out having failed to commit seriously enough to the conflict.

      This would be akin to the US being beaten by Saddam's Army and fleeing, causing Saddam to extend his rule. This is a totally different ball park bud. Sorry.

  86. Oh the irony by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Now all the slashdot liberal weenies can't whine about Bush (again).

  87. Maybe he's not so bad after all? by Ignorant+Aardvark · · Score: 1

    Personally, I believe getting off this Earth is the single most important thing to us as a species. Currently, we have all of our "eggs" in one basket, and one single thing can take us all out - a bad asteroid, a nuclear war, etc. I really hate Bush in all other aspects, but if he has a vision for getting off this planet and none of the Democratic candidates do ... I will grudgingly vote for him.

    1. Re:Maybe he's not so bad after all? by unamiccia · · Score: 1

      Yes, it has been our first priority to get off this planet for one hundred million years, so if Bush has a symbolic plan to go visit the moon again, let's all go out and vote for him, because four years from now may be too late.

      Are you out of your mind? Bush turned a budget surplus into a half-trillion-dollar deficit. If space exploration is important to you, your first priority is to get rid of the Republicans who want to bankrupt government in order to kill it. If you "grudgingly" intend to vote Bush so you can see Republican billboards on the moon, then go ahead -- he'll give you just the thrill you want. But if you want real space exploration, vote for someone whose party isn't dedicated to weakening the state until it can be drowned in the bathtub. Corpses in bathtubs do not sponsor exciting space programs.

    2. Re:Maybe he's not so bad after all? by rimmon · · Score: 1

      Thanks, your post saved my time to type it myself :-)

    3. Re:Maybe he's not so bad after all? by Richard+Allen · · Score: 0

      Allll of a sudden liberals are concerned about too much spending ...

  88. $how me the Mooney by Ranger · · Score: 1

    Ha! Ha! Get it? M-O-o-N-e-y! $-h-o-w.

    If Bush, Jr. turns out to be a one-termer like his dad, he needs to have a legacy besides completing the transformation of the US into a police state that started in 1947 and accelerated under Clinton.

    Anyway, if Bush, Jr. really commits us to returning to the Moon and it's planned properly and funded generously, he'll get my vote in 2004. 2009 isn't that far away for the 40th anniversary of the first Moon landing. Wouldn't that be feather in his cap?

    Let's see how long this comment will take to get modded down to Troll.

    --
    "You'll get nothing, and you'll like it!"
  89. Why did they cut NASA funding? by bigberk · · Score: 1

    If they want to go back to the moon, why the hell did the government cut science research funding to NASA and universities over the years? The government's approach has been to cripple NASA (everything must be cheaper, smaller, quicker).

    You don't just "go" to the moon. It would be great to see the government offer more funding to science and NASA though. Could even kick-start the economy within a decade, or in the very least keep it from utter collapse.

    1. Re:Why did they cut NASA funding? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To get to the other side?

  90. off shoring in the extreme? by spoonyfork · · Score: 1

    Perhaps Bush could get some cheap Russian rockets and have some outsourced Indians fly them around for pennies on the dollar. USA! USA! USA!

    --
    Speak truth to power.
  91. Imminent Threat of Not Going to the Moon by unamiccia · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Look, the U.S. needs to go to the moon starting tomorrow the way it needed to go pulverize Iraq on March 19. There's no hurry. In fact, a little bit of deliberation will make the U.S. a better space explorer, just as a little bit of patience might have made Bush a hero in Iraq instead of the biggest goof in world politics since Napoleon.

    The United States budget will run almost a half trillion dollars in debt this year. Now, some of my fondest memories are of playing sick to watch moon landings in grade school, but I'd much rather spend money on educating kids and college students today who can do space exploration right ten and twenty years from now -- if we've dug out of the financial mess we're wallowing in now.

    So no symbolic Republican missions to reproduce 1969 on the moon, thank you. If you're an American and want nonsymbolic space exploration in your lifetime, work to defeat George W. Bush and elect a president who will restore fiscal sanity to the United States. If we're lucky, the president after that, or the president after that, will have a chance to send human beings somewhere useful.

    1. Re:Imminent Threat of Not Going to the Moon by 3263827 · · Score: 1

      How much more deliberation is necessary? We've been deliberating for decades. Decades for God's sake. And all we have to show for the money we've shoveled done the rathole known as NASA (at least since the early 70's) is a crappy space station, a shuttle that is almost the exact opposite of its design requirements, and an robotic explorer team at JPL/Caltech that get's treated like the redhaired stepchild.

      Besides, debt isn't always a bad thing. Going into debt to fund a lunar base and eventually a martian base would pay off handsomely.

      The problem isn't money, or NASA, but shortsightedness. I don't understand how everyone assumes the Chinese can afford a lunar mission, but somehow the world's richest nation can't. It's simply a matter of priorities.

  92. Re:Thank you China! (and Russia) by ericspinder · · Score: 1, Informative
    The Russians are experts at getting and staying in Low Earth Attitude. I might be wrong, but I don't believe that they ever even tested a large booter like the Saturn 5. but...

    A Saturn 5 is a huge vehicle containing an small command module and a tiny lander. Because of this, the Apollo missions couldn't take that much equipment with them, or stay all that long. Which cut out most of the science. In order to get anything "real" done, a better way must be used than the "old" method. Otherwise it will just be (mostly) another publicity stunt. but...

    As far a "the old Saturn 5 team being disbanded", NASA keeps everything and I am sure that the few remaining staff would jump at the chance to get the program running again.

    So what's the answer, I don't know lets hash it out here, save NASA some trouble.

    --
    The grass is only greener, if you don't take care of your own lawn.
  93. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 partisan alarm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Q: If you are so smart and can-reverse engineer so easily the complexities of any problem, why dont you run for public office in the US or wherever you are and show the world how awesome you are. If you are really as great as you say you are being Mr. Sherlock and knowing the "right answer" for everything, you should have no problem showing the world and even the "evil, stupid' American public how right you are all the time.

    Your partisanship is shown by your "Bush-shit". Too far to the right OR left is a bad thing. Grow up pal. The world is a lot more complex than black and white.

    +5 for this ? Blatant partisan ship and an incredibly light bibliography and nothing going on that would ever be considered illegal enough for even an indictment to be handed out. Cute. +5.

  94. Why do you want to go to the moon? by Ieshan · · Score: 1

    Why do you want to go to the moon so badly? I mean, besides for kicks, and there are plenty of places on earth I'm sure you haven't been that are just as wonderous and magnificent, there isn't much of a reason: it's devoid of natural resources that one would need to survive.

    What happens if you're up on the moon and there's another space flight halt? What's the point of going back and forth?

    The point is: We have no resources on the moon, and we have no cheap way of getting them there. Come up with THAT, and we'd be there in a heartbeat.

    1. Re:Why do you want to go to the moon? by Tokerat · · Score: 3, Interesting


      The moon mas plenty of resources, such as it's LACK of atmosphere. Do you think in any way the air on earth, or it's magnetic field, or it's clounds or airplanes or radio waves bouncing around inside it make it easy to use radio telescopes and such? The moon has little to none of that interference. Much less than low earth orbit, even. Solar power collection? 24-hour free solar energy beamed to earth? Yea, the moon is SO overrated.

      And if you think that they're going to cancel space flights and deny someone taking off to return from the moon then you must be trolling. Let's leave them up there to definetly fir as opposed to taking the chance they might survive...good call.

      The reason we don't go there now for cheap is we haven't done it in 30 years. Think about 30 years ago: big bulky unefficient cars, clunky appliences, computers the size of your house.

      I'd say we're about ready for another wack at it.

      --
      CAn'T CompreHend SARcaSm?
    2. Re:Why do you want to go to the moon? by CrowScape · · Score: 2, Informative

      Short term, you're right, there's no resources that one would want to go to the moon for. Long term, you can chemically extract oxygen and water from lunar rock. Since the moon has 1/6th the gravity of Earth, it becomes a very nice fueling station for longer trips to places where you will find those resources that are worth going into space for. The moon is simply a stepping stone, not an end.

      --
      common sense: noun
      What those who are ignorant of the subject matter think; usually wrong.
    3. Re:Why do you want to go to the moon? by Mad+Marlin · · Score: 1
      The moon mas plenty of resources, such as it's LACK of atmosphere. Do you think in any way the air on earth, or it's magnetic field, or it's clounds or airplanes or radio waves bouncing around inside it make it easy to use radio telescopes and such?

      While there are several good uses to such a sterile environment, radio telescopes are a bad example. Radio telescopes don't make money.

      24-hour free solar energy beamed to earth?

      Beamed to the earth by what, a microwave beam I assume? And I am supposed to trust government workers that it won't get mis-aligned, accidentally pumping all of those free gigawatts of energy into, say, L.A.? And how exactly is it free if we have to send all of those solar panels as such to the moon? Do you have any idea what FedEx charges to ship stuff to the moon?

    4. Re:Why do you want to go to the moon? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly! The moon is quite a way off. Besides taking a while to get there (even at escape velocity speed ...about 7 miles per second or 25200 mph) and once you are there, you have to slow down and stop (or crash). Astronauts insist on food for the trip! Current prices IIRC are $25 million U$ to get 1000 pounds of cargo into low earth orbit, getting to high earth orbit is a bit more, the moon only a small bit more, say $26million U$ for every 1000 lbs of cargo. 2 astronauts are 400lb or $10,000,000. A moon base the size of the ISS (1,005,021 pounds) would cost $25125525000 US ...$25.1 Billion U$. As I see it, NASA's budget for '02 was $72.3M, for '03:$93.5M, '04:$108.7M, '05:$87.6M... altogether we are about $24 billion shy even if we shut NASA down for a few years to save our pennies. So much for moon base alpha.

    5. Re:Why do you want to go to the moon? by TehHustler · · Score: 1

      Am I the only one thinking that mining the Moon is a bad idea, what with all that water back on Earth... Fuck up the tides, and you'll know about it.

      --

      TheHustler
      http://www.elmarko.org/ - Useless bilge
      http://www.asylum-games.co.uk/ - Co-Founder
    6. Re:Why do you want to go to the moon? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And how exactly is it free if we have to send all of those solar panels as such to the moon? Do you have any idea what FedEx charges to ship stuff to the moon?

      We're already sending millions of $'s worth of solar panels up into space in a weekly basis. What did you think all those satilites work on; love?

      There are also plenty of solutions to the "Misaligned Microwave" problem. This isn't Sim City.

    7. Re:Why do you want to go to the moon? by TopShelf · · Score: 1

      That would take a whole lotta mining to have any effect on the tides. I suspect any mining efforts would focus on the most valuable materials by weight/volume, since transportation would be kinda expensive...

      --
      Stop by my site where I write about ERP systems & more
    8. Re:Why do you want to go to the moon? by madprof · · Score: 2, Funny

      It isn't?
      Damn and I was looking to living in an Arco...

    9. Re:Why do you want to go to the moon? by CrowScape · · Score: 1

      Keep in mind the mass of the Moon, and that of Earth, is not and never has been a constant. Tens of thousands of tons of material rain down on Earth every year, and don't you think the moon is exempt from the bombardment. It would take a hell of a lot of transport for mankind to put a dent in the mass of the Moon with that much accumulation. Despite the growing mass of these two bodies, the moon is still inching its way furthur and furthur from Earth, eventually it'll break free. That is, if the sun doesn't swallow up the inner solar system first.

      --
      common sense: noun
      What those who are ignorant of the subject matter think; usually wrong.
    10. Re:Why do you want to go to the moon? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Solar power collection? 24-hour free solar energy beamed to earth?

      *cough* You plan on building your lunar solar power plant on the sunny side of the moon?

    11. Re:Why do you want to go to the moon? by Patrik_AKA_RedX · · Score: 1
      Beamed to the earth by what, a microwave beam I assume? And I am supposed to trust government workers that it won't get mis-aligned, accidentally pumping all of those free gigawatts of energy into, say, L.A.?
      Use a very wide beam. Then the energy/volume will be pretty low and birds don't get BBQed.

      Or fill buckets and lower them down with a long cable.
    12. Re:Why do you want to go to the moon? by Tokerat · · Score: 1


      ...I envision that a ring all the way around the moon or at least a few stations at regular spacing all cabled together to broadcast at earth from the most convinient location could work nicely. Costly? Yes. Benifits? R&D and some of the world's energy problems solved...sounds like we should at least look into it to me.

      They'll be brownouts every eclipse, though...

      --
      CAn'T CompreHend SARcaSm?
    13. Re:Why do you want to go to the moon? by arivanov · · Score: 1
      Think about 30 years ago: big bulky unefficient cars

      So once again what is the difference between them and the average SUV americans drive today? So I do not quite see the logic in this justification...

      --
      Baker's Law: Misery no longer loves company. Nowadays it insists on it
      http://www.sigsegv.cx/
  95. With what money? by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

    The US would be a lot better positioned to secure a return on Kennedy and Johnson's investment in space R&D, if we hadn't squandered Clinton's surplus on open-ended wars in Afghanistan and Iraq and handouts to the oil companies that are threatened by space mining. Instead, China, India and Japan can be "first to be second", standing on the shoulders of giants in America's space program, unencumbered by corporations with vested interests in 20th century scarcity economics. Moonbase Ishi?

    --

    --
    make install -not war

  96. rofl, mod parent up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    that was great..thanks for the laugh. needed one today.

  97. star wars by i_should_be_working · · Score: 1

    i'm all for the space program, but given who we're talking about, i can't help but be pessimistic. how many billions of dollars are going to be spent on space 'defense'? spy sattelites, rockets, space-bourne bombers. how high up does a country's air space go anyway?

    this could be great, but it could be another way that this government is trying to entrench it's self as the world's only super power.

    man, i never sounded like such a radical left conspiracy nut before this guy took office

    1. Re:star wars by aldousd666 · · Score: 1

      I do think that the real reason any president enters a 'space race' is so when they spend money on Star Wars programs it can be disguised as 'space exploration cash.' I'm not leftist at all. I can't think of any other reason they'd be doing it. Pride isn't in the interest of Billions of dollars anymore these days. At least, not that I know of.

      --
      Speak for yourself.
  98. Will he serve turkey there? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And more important, will we find the missing weapons of mass destruction cleverly concealed in a crater?

    Will the Lunarians be ready for Western Democracy?

    Will this speech be enough to distract us from realizing that George Bush is a Gray Alien?

  99. whitey on the moon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    weird article... mentions $500 shuttle launches to a worthless space station then claims...

    "NASA's budget has been far short of lavish since the last time the agency was aiming for the moon."

    ...but evidently collecting sunbeams on the moon will pay for the venture...

    "It has recently been suggested that sunlight collected on the moon and beamed to Earth could provide a no-pollution source of power."

    but perhaps i'm being naive... perhaps al qaida's on mars already...

    i vote space noodle!

    1. Re:whitey on the moon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      That Gil Scott Heron piece is a true classic. One of my favorites. While sure not to be popular with much of the /. crowd who tend to be head-the-sand libertarians and blind to racism /flamebait, here are the lyrics

      A rat done bit my sister Nell with Whitey on the moon.

      Her face and arms began to swell and Whitey's on the moon.

      I can't pay no doctor bills but Whitey's on the moon.

      Ten years from now I'll be payin' still while Whitey's on the moon.

      The man just upped my rent last night cuz Whitey's on the moon.

      No hot water, no toilets, no lights but Whitey's on the moon.

      I wonder why he's uppin me. Cuz Whitey's on the moon?

      I was already givin' him fifty a week but now Whitey's on the moon.

      Taxes takin' my whole damn check,

      The junkies makin' me a nervous wreck,

      The price of food is goin' up,

      And as if all that shit wasn't enough:

      A rat done bit my sister Nell with Whitey on the moon.

      Her face and arms began to swell but Whitey's on the moon.

      Was all that money I made last year for Whitey on the moon?

      How come there ain't no money here? Hmm! Whitey's on the moon.

      Ya know, I just about had my fill of Whitey on the moon.

      I think I'll send these doctor bills

      airmail special....

      to Whitey on the moon.

    2. Re:whitey on the moon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      seriously - that poem speaks volumes and it's totally relevant. the ISS and space shuttle programs are no less corporate welfare than the current iraq debacle. billions are spent and you gotta ask yourself who's benefitting?

      (i think the original poster meant $500 million...)

  100. Give me a break by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Jesus what kind of person would vote for King George because of lying piece of shit propaganda and self aggrandizement?

    Question is, why haven't you voted for him already? It's what he has been all about since the beginning.

  101. Doom and gloom (not to mention partison politics) by Hexydes · · Score: 1
    Why would you badmouth Bush? He is at least trying to get things going with space. Who cares if they don't come to fruition? Its really not up to him, all he can do is try to get the ball rolling and hope that Congress will alot money for the program to be carried through.

    Unless you are actually AGAINST space exploration, why would you ever speak ill of someone trying to inspire people to become interested, especially at a time when the future of space exploration in America is in more doubt than ever.

    Really lame.

  102. Not new, and not necessarily accurate by jfoust · · Score: 2, Informative

    While the National Review article might be news to most Slashdotters, this is not news for those who have been following the ongoing space policy review by the Bush Administration. In late October SpaceRef.com first reported that a likely outcome of the policy review would be a call for resuming human flights to the Moon, with a Presidential statement on the issue coming as early as the Wright Brothers centennial speech at Kitty Hawk. On Monday SpaceRef.com followed up that original report with a new one, stating that "the return to the Moon by U.S. astronauts possibly by the end of the next decade" had become the "default" position of those planning the new policy. The National Review article doesn't add anything these two SpaceRef reports already provided.

    There is no guarantee, though, that these reports are accurate. On Sunday the Orlando Sentinel reported (alternate link) that any new national space policy would differ little from current plans. This report was based on an analysis of internal NASA documents obtained by the newspaper along with interviews with those in the know. This report is actually not necessarily contradictory with the new SpaceRef report: if you're not planning to send people back to the Moon until the end of the next decade, there's little you need to do differently in the near term.

    If you're curious about the current interest (or obsession) some have with crafting a new "vision" for NASA, I recommend the articles "The vision thing" and "Vision revision" at The Space Review. (Disclaimer: I'm the author. :-) This should give you an idea that while many in Washington believe there needs to be a new national space policy or vision, there is little consensus about what that should be. Thus, don't expect any major changes soon.

  103. i don't care who says we're going to the moon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    who cares if bush is saying lets go, i wouldn't care is kim jon crazy north korea said we should go...lets just go!

    NOW!
    I mean, what the heck!? right?

    I mean, we already went there, but then we decided that our money should go to killing asians and trying to get people to all use the same bathrooms and share seats on busses.

    Seriously, sometimes I get really angered at the state of things.

    How many brilliant chemists could be working on propellants and materials, but are instead working on celine diones newest fragrance?

    More to that, I've heard that the amount americans spend on perfume and makeup annually is something like 50 times what NASA is bugeted for mars research!!!!!!!!!!!!

    So basically, if we all stop wearing deadorant we can bounce around in 1/3g over the iron rich deserts of our best friend planet, the god of war.

    I prefer that to staying dry all day.

  104. A call to arms. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    We must reach the moon first and build a military base to prevent terrorists from using it against us!!!

  105. Yeah, that's exactly what I thought... by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Q: Which of the states are most closely associated with the space industry?

    A: Texas (Houston, home of NASA) and Florida (site of the Kennedy Space Centre).

    Q: Which of the states are most closely associated with the Bush family?

    A: Texas (where George W. was Governor) and Florida (where Jeb Bush is Governor).

    Wow. What an amazing coincidence!

    Now Texas is a republican stronghold and real Bush country. So sending a few billion dollars Texas's way is a great way of saying thank you to the folks back home.

    On the other hand, Florida is up for grabs. Remember, when the Supreme Court stopped the recount process after the last Presidential election, Al Gore was slightly ahead, and looked like he would have won the Florida vote. Of course, it wouldn't have been so close if all thousands of black voters (90 percent of whom voted for Gore) hadn't been illegally stripped of their votes by wrongly being labelled convicted felons, if the butterfly ballots hadn't have been used (at Pat Buchanon admitted himself, those Jewish voters weren't voting for him), if those chads hadn't been such an issue and if the Republicans hadn't got away with having hundreds of overseas ballots that were clearly not properly filled in time and/or authenticated count in their favour.

    Either way, even if you say that Bush was the legitimate winner (which, as I illustrated is a highly contentious point), you have to concede that the Florida voting process was far from perfect and that the state is a key battleground for next year's election.

    So, given that Florida's where the war was won/lost(/stolen) last time around, it's doesn't hurt Bush 2004 if Florida's got a big reason to feel good about the current administration.

    It's a bit like the illegal steel import tarriffs. The Bush administration knew that they were illegal, the knew that eventually they would be forced by the WTO to abolish them or face severe consequences, but they did their job. While the tarriffs were in place, US steel manufacturers got a nice boost, despite being inefficient compared to their global counterparts, and lots of people in the steel industry had a good reason to vote Republican rather than Democrat when they last went to the ballot box.

    Yep, if you want something in business or politics there's nothing like an old-fashioned bribe to grease the wheels and open the doors.

    --

    "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
    1. Re:Yeah, that's exactly what I thought... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a Texan, I say FUCK YOU.

    2. Re:Yeah, that's exactly what I thought... by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 1

      As a Texan, I say FUCK YOU.

      Wow. What an eloquent argument. And people say the art of debate is dead.

      By the way, as a Texan, you should be pissed off at Dubya rather than proud of him - after all, it was your state taxes that helped make him rich, courtesy of all the money, tax breaks and other incentives thrown at the Texas Rangers ballclub. Selling his stake in the Rangers (a stake which he didn't pay a penny for, by the way) is how Dubya made his money. Heck, he even managed to make more money on that deal than his granddaddy did laundering Nazi cash.

      --

      "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
    3. Re:Yeah, that's exactly what I thought... by Danathar · · Score: 1

      Oh Please....tired arguments by tired people. Every major political figure at the national level does evil things. Tell me Clinton or Reagan, or Johnson, or Ford was any worse. Carter was honest, but naive.

      Do eveybody a favor, if you are going to make a point. Try saying something new, other than repeating the same stuff other people have said. You sound like a robot repeating a mantra.

      Oh...and by the way, how bout saying something about the topic. Other than "they are trying to funnel money to texas" Gee...shall we talk about Robert Byrd of West Virginia....or how bout some other Senators. Am I supposed to be surprised about gov officials funneling money/jobs back to their home states? Wake UP! It happens ALL THE TIME! W did'nt invent it.

      Space travel rules! Go for it, money be damned!

    4. Re:Yeah, that's exactly what I thought... by GileadGreene · · Score: 1
      Q: Which of the states are most closely associated with the space industry?

      A: Texas (Houston, home of NASA) and Florida (site of the Kennedy Space Centre).

      Actually, I think you'll find that California is bigger in the space industry than either TX or FL. The states you mention house the primary NASA centers for manned space and for launch, but the bulk of the space contractors are based in California, Colorado, and the DC area. And NASA itself has centers scattered sll over the country, many of them contributing to the space program.

    5. Re:Yeah, that's exactly what I thought... by kruczkowski · · Score: 1

      Califonia also. The Jet Propultion Lab is there and so is Edwards AFB. The testing center for expermental aircraft.

      --
      hmm... for fun I enjoy launching DDoS attacks against 127.87.42.5
    6. Re:Yeah, that's exactly what I thought... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Remember, when the Supreme Court stopped the recount process after the last Presidential election, Al Gore was slightly ahead, and looked like he would have won the Florida vote."

      Talk about your revisionist histories! Of course, those of us without our heads in our asses remember quite clearly that Al Gore did not come out ahead in a single official recount. Instead what was happening was that, as the chads piled up on the floor of election offices, Gore's numbers were increasing slightly (funny how that works).

    7. Re:Yeah, that's exactly what I thought... by Scudsucker · · Score: 1

      It seems that those with their heads up their asses forget that those votes were certified by Katherine Harris, the Republican Secretary of State and Bush's campaign manager, who for some reason was in a hurry to have the first count (which coincidentally had Bush ahead) as the official count.

      Its also "funny" how illegitimate overseas ballots were counted if they were for Bush, in one case a Republican election official even allowed workers to take home some of those ballots and finish filling them out so they could be counted.

    8. Re:Yeah, that's exactly what I thought... by thales · · Score: 1

      "On the other hand, Florida is up for grabs. Remember, when the Supreme Court stopped the recount process after the last Presidential election, Al Gore was slightly ahead, and looked like he would have won the Florida vote."

      The Gorebot was never ahead in any recount, finished or unfinished and lost an official recount held by Floridia Newspapers that supported him by a larger margin than the offical totals

      "Of course, it wouldn't have been so close if all thousands of black voters (90 percent of whom voted for Gore) hadn't been illegally stripped of their votes by wrongly being labelled convicted felons"

      Under a law passed by the Democrats when they controlled the state.

      "if the butterfly ballots hadn't have been used"

      The ballots were designed by a Democratic Controlled Election board.

      "overseas ballots that were clearly not properly filled in time and/or authenticated count in their favour."

      That was in accordance with a Federal law passed at a time when Democrats controlled Congress, and the ballots were quite legal.

      The Shrub is no Prize, but at least he's not out of touch with reality like the Bush Bashers are.

      --
      Quemadmodum gladius neminem occidit, occidentis telum est
    9. Re:Yeah, that's exactly what I thought... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nothing is eloquent when spoken with a texan accent.

    10. Re:Yeah, that's exactly what I thought... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Parent -1 Flamebait

    11. Re:Yeah, that's exactly what I thought... by nathanm · · Score: 1
      Q: Which of the states are most closely associated with the space industry?

      A: Texas (Houston, home of NASA) and Florida (site of the Kennedy Space Centre
      [sic]).
      Those sites you mentioned are where some of the NASA facilities are located (don't forget Vandenberg AFB in CA), but most of the money actually goes to the defense contractors who build everything. They're located in many different states, in addition to the ones previously mentioned.

      Besides, all the US Supreme Court did was tell the FL Supreme Court to stop making the rules up as they go. Three separate recounts by media and others after the election confirmed that Bush won the Florida votes. Regarding the butterfly ballots in West Palm Beach County:
      • They were designed and approved by Democrats.
      • Sample ballots were mailed to every household with detailed instructions.
      • Pat Buchanan got 30,000 votes there in the Republican primary, so is it unreasonable to think that 3000 would vote for him in the general election?
  106. My first post here. by dinodipp · · Score: 1

    Hi it's embarrassing and i can't even blame it on being drunk, but if he puts people on the moon im (and this is big for me)thinking he might have some qualities. Before, i was thinking it was unwarranted to go in to iraq. But now it seems you guys really are going to need the oil. Go Go Go Im sorry if the english is off. Im from scandinavia (and yes the girls are tall and pretty)

    1. Re:My first post here. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bush isn't all that bad. He's like your angry little friend who always gets in bar fights, but can also offer you good friendship and advice.

      Half warmonger, half leader.

      hopefully he will employ some of your tall girls for the moon base 8D

  107. Bush and his role models by bgeer · · Score: 1
    First Bush thought he was Teddy Roosevelt, but apparently lost interest when he found out Teddy Roosevelt created national parks rather than drilling them. Then he wanted to be Winston Churchill, but between his poor speaking skills and the way he alienated Europe that one didn't work out either.

    So now he wants to be JFK? Let's just hope he doesn't find a Nixon biography next.

  108. oh! by gunfinger · · Score: 1

    ...perhaps even establishment of a permanent presence there.

    for a second there i thought you meant he was volunteering.

    --
    ### http://www.gunfinger.com ### greed / tec
  109. Budget? by Excen · · Score: 1

    I may be being a troll here, but I have one simple question for Bush:

    HOW ARE YOU GOING TO PAY FOR IT $HITHEAD?????

    The U.S. government is completely broke. We are currently over $100,000,000,000 in the hole this year. We don't have any money. We doooooooooon't have any farking money? Do you not understand that even the United States government can't just print money to cover it's losses? What? Are you going to borrow it back from Haliburton? It's not like you are going to raise taxes this close to elections?

    Mod me flamebait, but I'm just asking. . .

    --
    "No beer until you finish your tequila!" -Leela's Dad
  110. Re:Thank you China! (and Russia) by geekoid · · Score: 1

    Not if yoou just need it for human delivery.

    IF a permenant station on the moon is truly the goal, then we need to send stuff there first. Large containers with supplies, communication satalite, GPS system. then deliver people there to work, then bring them home the old fashioned way, for now. Once a base with a regular population turnover has been established, then begin using new methoids for arrival. Methods that have been in planning and building while settlement takes place.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  111. I'm just concerned that... by jcwren · · Score: 1

    ...they'll want to start storing nuclear waste on the dark side of the moon, and then it'll blow up, and hurl the moon out of orbit, and Martin Landau won't be around to know what to do.

    On the bright side, Fox will have material for "When Moons Explode".

  112. Forgetting something.... by vwjeff · · Score: 1

    Much of the technology we use today can be directly traced back to our space program and the Apollo missions. Where would we be today? Does typewriter ring a bell? (BTW, I love my IBM Correcting Selectric II. Just trying to contrast.)
    I read a post that said Bush was just doing this for Texas and his brother in Florida. Of course he is helping, we need it. What was left out was the thousands of jobs, especially in the Tech industry, that will be created. What we need are jobs and a vision for the future. The tech industry won't continue to expand and flurish without a push. A well formed space program will create new technologies that will affect us all. for the decades to come.

  113. You are all about hate by jgardn · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    I think this poster has summed up Bush's opposition.

    If Bush decided to save some cash and announce a cutback in NASA and the space program, he would be flamed.

    If he announced bold new steps in the space program, he would be flamed.

    Bush's opponents don't oppose Bush ideologically -- they hate him for being Bush.

    Blind hatred is no way to treat a fellow citizen. At least the KKK hated blacks because they were black. You hate Bush for no reason at all!

    --
    The radical sect of Islam would either see you dead or "reverted" to Islam.
    1. Re:You are all about hate by Ars-Fartsica · · Score: 1
      At least the KKK hated blacks because they were black.

      ???

      Oh I get it, hating someone because of his (lack of) ideas is worse than hating someone because of the color of their skin.

      You got modded up for this????

    2. Re:You are all about hate by kevin+lyda · · Score: 1

      no, i hate bush because he's destroying america, his programs abuse society's most vulnerable, and he's letting his campaign contributors loot the public coffers.

      call me weird, but i get a bit tetchy when someone tries to destroy the sweat and blood of millions of americans over 200+ years. pardon my bile if i see public officials pissing away our money to make people who already have more money then they need richer.

      so yeah, i hate bush. and i hate what he stands for - greed, lies and indifference to most of his fellow citizens.

      --
      US Citizen living abroad? Register to vote!
    3. Re:You are all about hate by tres · · Score: 1

      I don't know which is more idiotic, what you wrote, or the half-wit who decided it was insightful.

      The only person around here that's all about hate is you. Sounds like you never made it past high-school, so I'll let you in on this little thing called "projection," look it up sometime. No one is espousing or defending hatred, except you, mr. KKK.

      Until now.

      Congratulations, you are the one and only retard to make my foes list. You are worse than the trolls, the flamers, the retards and the general assholes that crawl around the fray of Slashdot with nothing better to do with their time than to post idiotic, meaningless, offensive posts. But at least they know what they are doing, at least they have the decency and intelligence to know what they are writing is offensive and meaningless; it's their purpose. You, on the other hand, you are stupid enough to write something essentially as trite and meaningless as, "everyone don't like prezitend bush just 'cuz he's cooler than they are" and then to go on to defend the KKK.

      You are the posterboy for everything that makes the USA such a f***ed up place to live in. Only in the USA could someone with feces for brains, like yourself, say something and not only get away with it, but find some other crack baby that will moderate you up.

      I served four years in the Army defending the freedoms retards like you. So you can take your hate and your "fellow citizen" bullshit and stuff it right back up your ass. What's the last thing you did, "for your country?"

      Collect tax breaks? I thought so

      --
      Notes From Under *nix: blas.phemo.us
    4. Re:You are all about hate by davesag · · Score: 1
      sorry but am rotflmao here.

      Blind hatred is no way to treat a fellow citizen. At least the KKK hated blacks because they were black.

      are you really that stupid? I honestly don't know where to begin to damn this statement all to hell.

      To quote L7, you just made my shitlist.

      and who the hell modded you up as insightful? what a world.

      --
      I used to have a better sig than this, but I got tired of it
  114. Thank you Mr President. by kwpulliam · · Score: 1

    And, for all the naysayers who bemoan spending tax dollars in space, please get your facts straight. The tax dollars get spent in Texas, and Utah, and California, and Alabama, and Virginia, and Ohio, etc etc etc. - There is nowhere to spend the money IN space

  115. Re:Thank you China! (and Russia) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A few words of advice just so you don't get totally lost the first time you happen to visit the moon.

    YOUR GPS WON'T WORK

    That is all

  116. Idiot. by BamaPookie · · Score: 1

    He probably still thinks it's made out of cheese.

  117. Won't happen, announced or not. by EoRaptor · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I'm going to be completely pessimistic here, and say that it won't happen.

    We have no confirmation that Bush will announce any such plan, and while republicans love to spend money, especially on handouts for big business, this one may be a bit steep.

    Additionally, should he announce this, NASA is in no shape to accomplish it. The agency is bloated, outmoded, and far to political. It's long since ceased to be a research and engineering agency, and is now a political animal, intent purely on justifying its budget to congress. It may still be capable of science, but only for political end, and no longer seems able to do science for science's sake.

    The only hope, strangely, comes from the military. The recent JSF development program proved that project can still be done with efficiency and transparency, and any hope for space must rest on the same idea (and, if possible, the same team). Both Boeing and Lockheed-Martin both worked with the JSF Development committee, so it wouldn't be a radical change for them. It would be the end of NASA, though the name might survive.

    I can see no other way to accomplishing this. Any furtherance of NASA as the entity it is today is doomed to bog down in a hell of bloated management and endless waste. I doubt such radical steps will be taken though, and I must therefore pronounce any American moon mission doomed.

    Sorry.

    1. Re:Won't happen, announced or not. by Scudsucker · · Score: 1

      The agency is bloated, outmoded, and far to political. It's long since ceased to be a research and engineering agency, and is now a political animal, intent purely on justifying its budget to congress.

      In defense to NASA, Congress had a great hand in making said mess. Senators cared little for scientific advancement and cared a lot about brining home some pork to their home state. Its amazing how a blathering "all taxes are evil! Evil!" Senator will love a bloated, wasteful government program if it brings jobs to his state. Phil Gram was a perfect example of this: big government, high taxes, blah blah blah, and then turned around and said "I'm carrying so much pork I've got trichinosis". I heard somebody say that one reason why the shuttle program hasn't been improved or replaced is because it makes jobs for 30 states.

      So NASA learned how to play the game and promotes projects that create lots of jobs for the home states of a few senators.

      The only hope, strangely, comes from the military.

      No pork there, either.

  118. bush is dumb by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you know it's true

  119. About: Nuclear Powered Engines by MikeDawg · · Score: 1

    About: Nuclear Powered Engines.

    We have had incredible successes using nuclear engines in Navy submarines, wouldn't using a nuclear engine in a space shuttle be the next step? I'm a big fan of nuclear energy!

    Hell, back in high school debate, I used to argue for nuclear power as an alternative energy source all the time!

    --

    YOU'RE WINNER !
    Another lame blog

    1. Re:About: Nuclear Powered Engines by hndrcks · · Score: 1

      Sorry, knowing this administration, the next moon engine will be designed by Halliburton and use shitloads of Iraqi crude as fuel.

      --
      Everyone will start to cheer when you put on your sailin' shoes.
  120. It's all about the Military by tbond_trader · · Score: 3, Interesting

    This is all about the militarization of space. You can read their plans from the new american century website.

    Quote: To increase their
    effectiveness,
    ground-based
    interceptors like the
    Armys Theater
    High-Altitude Area
    Defense System
    must be networked
    to space-based
    systems. pg. 64

    as will be discussed below, space dominance
    may become so essential to the preservation
    of American military preeminence that it
    may require a separate service.

    http://www.newamericancentury.org/RebuildingAmer ic asDefenses.pdf

    If you've never heard of the NAC website, it's a think tank with all the leading NeoCons behind it. Dick Cheney, Paul Wolfowitz, Richard Perle, Donald Rumsfield...etc..

    http://www.newamericancentury.org/statementofpri nc iples.htm

    The PDF was 2000 and if you read it, is become American policy.

  121. Wasn't the 60's moon program a money maker? by doug · · Score: 5, Interesting

    If I remember correctly the original 60's moon missions made money. Yep, they were "cash positive". Not directly of course, but all of the spin off technology added more to the economy than the taxes it took to pay for it.

    Perhaps it would have been a better investment to take that money and put it in the stock market. I don't have those numbers, and even if it was, who cares? It was a wonderful program because it advanced basic science, created high paying jobs, gave us something positive to look forward to, and "grew" the economy. For a government program, it was a hat trick and then some.

    I have no idea if a modern moon or mars program could do that again, but wouldn't it be worth trying? Even if it only broke even economically, wouldn't we be ahead in science and national pride?

    Personally I'd like to see more private investment in space, but I think that there is going to have to be a core of federal money to get the ball rolling.

    - doug

    1. Re:Wasn't the 60's moon program a money maker? by Obiwan+Kenobi · · Score: 1

      Personally I'd like to see more private investment in space, but I think that there is going to have to be a core of federal money to get the ball rolling.

      Haven't you ever seen Fight Club?

      "The Microsoft Galaxy. Planet Starbucks..."

      No, please don't let the Moon be "brought to you by Nike"

    2. Re:Wasn't the 60's moon program a money maker? by ProfBooty · · Score: 1

      http://spaceplace.jpl.nasa.gov/spinoffs2.htm
      http ://spaceflight.nasa.gov/shuttle/benefits/index .html
      http://members.tripod.com/spaceracehistory/ spin.sh tml
      the above links deal with technologies not necesscarily from the 60's, but are a list of spin offs according to nasa (though i think the fisher space pen was around prior to manned space flight, even though the book that came with my pen says differently).

      some noteables:
      bar codes, and CAD

      from what i have heard from people in the space industry, every 1 dollar nasa spends puts back 4 bucks into the econonmy as a result of spin offs. I'm not really sure how this is quantized though.

      --
      Bring back the old version of slashdot.
    3. Re:Wasn't the 60's moon program a money maker? by jafac · · Score: 1

      Well, since all the money that went into the stock market in the 1990's ended up in accounts in Barbados belonging to corrupt executives who remain unpunished by the current Administration, I wouldn't say that the stock market was a good investment.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
  122. Re:Thank you China! (and Russia) by bsharitt · · Score: 2, Funny

    The Russians are experts at getting and staying in Low Earth Attitude. I might be wrong, but I don't believe that they ever even tested a large booter like the Saturn 5.

    Well, they did test one, it just blew up on the launch pad.

  123. No, no, no, it's a misprint! by SkOink · · Score: 1

    What the submitter meant to say way:

    President Bush to call for return to moonshine!
    He is a Texan, after all :)

    --
    ---- I'll take you in a Hunt deathmatch any day.
  124. C'mon! Support your statements people... by SoupaFly · · Score: 2, Informative
    According to this site, Bush's approval ratings are not extremely high. They're actually pretty average, somewhere around 50-60% (which is neither high nor low).

    Here's an interesting chart that plots approval ratings for many recent Presidents (Clinton, Reagan, Carter...). I don't know how accurate it is, but it is nice to have some visualization.

  125. Practicality? by TooManyNames · · Score: 1

    I'm sorry if this sounds like a stupid question, but really, why is the moon such a temptation? While I realize that there have been several innovations related to space exploration, some of which can be tied to lunar landings, I just can't justify the exorbitant amounts of money needed to go to the moon. Now we're talking about setting up a permanent colony on the moon? I mean, it's great that people are responding to competition and all, but why do we need to play along with this colossal money pit? I realize that somebody will label me as some troll against humanity due to my lack of jumping aboard the moon wagon, but I just don't see the relevance of another lunar landing or, God help us, a Mars landing (manned). Please, enlighten me if there were significant technologies that were directly related to the lunar landings; technologies that completely compensated the enormous costs involved.

    --
    "Is not a sentence" is not a sentence. Well damn.
  126. Re:Thank you China! (and Russia) by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 4, Interesting
    I might be wrong, but I don't believe that they ever even tested a large booter like the Saturn 5. but...

    They tested their moon rocket, the N-1, several times in the 60s and early 70s. Each one blew up, mostly due a combination of bad luck, design bureau infighting, and a design that used 30 engines on the first stage alone. (What are the odds of no problems with that?)

    They had better luck in the 80s with the "Energia" core booster for their space shuttle clone, the Buran. It was designed so that it could be launched without the heavy shuttle and with extra booster units to achieve very impressive payloads. It successfully launched their shuttle for one unmanned orbital flight, but IIRC the project was canceled after that.

  127. She appears to have her facts correct. by khasim · · Score: 1

    You can argue interpretation, but what I've seen of her work has been factually accurate.

  128. Re:Thank you China! (and Russia) by Floody · · Score: 1

    Bunk. GPS uses atomic clocks and trilateration, not the earth's magnetic field. A GPS system would work just fine on the moon. You'd need a constellation of lunar GPS sats and a lunar-based GPS receiver, though, so I guess you would be more correct in stating "YOUR CURRENT GPS WON'T WORK"

  129. Seriously there might be oil there.... by cheekyboy · · Score: 2, Interesting

    There are some scientists etc, that say that a lot of asteroids deposited OIL to earth, because there are a lot of the major hydrocarbons in the rocks. Now also they have found a lot of oil is real real deep down in the earth near where large asteroid impacts have been found to be after disecting the earth with satelites/remote sensing. I doubt a lot of the oil thats real deep down got there by plants if those rocks themselves have been underground for billions of years. If those rocks never saw the surfaces then how did the oil get there?

    So im not saying its the reason for going there, but imagine if deep test drilling did reveal 'solid' oil or oil mixed in the rock in the form of lots of hydrocarbons.

    read some of these

    http://earthsci.org/newsop/opinion/asteroid.html
    http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/planeteart h/ asteroid_oil_991213.html
    http://unxmaal.com/mt/ar chives/001857.php

    interesting though it is.

    --
    Liberty freedom are no1, not dicks in suits.
  130. Not a conspiracy, just the power of blogs by da_anarchist · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Woah, stop with the conspiracy theories. This actually all came about as a result of a coordinated effort by one particular blog. They decided to create the "Miserable Failure Project" and asked for their readers to stick in a link to this page to establish a link between Dubya and the term "miserable failure", which has worked out exactly as they hoped. There is more info at that link if you're interested in the juicy details.

  131. How can you tell it's from the National Review? by ndinsil · · Score: 4, Funny

    The crack about Congressional Democrats would likely challenge a presidential declaration that the sky is blue.

    In the interest of equal time I'd like to point out any such declaration would likely contain amendments authorizing Ashcroft to eat babies of suspected terrorists, promoting Justice Scalia to Pope of the One True Faith, and paying Halliburton $1 billion to stripmine Yellowstone and sell the tailings as a food additive.

  132. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by wmspringer · · Score: 1

    > Bush was accused of it but Gore didnt call for a statewide recount, just recounts in democratic strongholds.

    Which was dumb of him, since we later found out that a statewide recount would have given Gore the election. Not that it mattered, since the supreme court stepped into something that was none of their business and handed Bush the election..

    >hey, name a SINGLE piece of legislation that Bush vetoed when teh DEMS where in control.
    >You cant. he never vetoed ANY legislation to DATE.

    Which is another reason he shouldn't be in office. The whole point of our system of government is checks and balances: each part is supposed to keep the others from getting out of hand. The opposing parties are supposed to keep bad bills from getting out of congress, and the executive is supposed to veto any that do.

  133. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    so now you are smarter than the majority. its the same mobocracy that gives the parent to all of this crap a +5 insightful. you like mobocracy when the mod thinks like you. you hate it when it doesnt. and when the "mob" doesnt agree with you they are "wrong" because you *KNOW* for a fact your mind is better. You think you are better at thinking on behalf of others than they are for themselves. This is a typical delusional archair disease. If the mob is so stupid, sell them something that is cheap to make with a lot of markup, say Beer, and make a ton of money and forget all this shit about thinking for other people.

  134. Not the first time google has done such a thing... by ThomasFlip · · Score: 2, Funny

    Just type in "weapons of mass destruction" and hit "im feeling lucky", a windows error screen pops up with a few funny Bush bashing statements.

    --
    If the dollar is an "I owe you nothing", then the Euro is a "Who owes you nothing." - Doug Casey
  135. I didn't know by certsoft · · Score: 2, Funny

    I didn't know Halliburton built space rockets.

  136. Going out of Business sales. by khasim · · Score: 1

    You're right about it not having any legs.

    We've lost millions of jobs already.

    Having a one quarter spike is NOT going to off-set the losses we've already seen.

    We're $500 Billion short on the budget.

    I'm waiting for someone to do a chart showing the past 20 years. That way people will see what this "big" recovery is.

  137. Re:Thank you China! (and Russia) by donutello · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    It sounds like you haven't absorbed enough of the "Everything American is sloppy and inferior. The rest of the world is so much superior than the US" programming.

    Please report back to your programming classes or you will be banned from Slashdot.

    Thank you.

    --
    Mmmm.. Donuts
  138. Oink, Oink by Animats · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Sounds like another Bush pork program. Remember Reagan's "National Aerospace Plane"? And the Strategic Defense Initiative? Total flops, but big profits for some contractors.

    Besides, NASA is too incompetent to bring this off. They haven't been able to build a new launch vehicle in over thirty years. But they've spent more money trying than they spent on Apollo.

    NASA has been described as "the world's largest sheltered workshop". For good reasons.

    1. Re:Oink, Oink by ocie · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Nasa has had no incentive to build a new launch vehicle. This is just like communism: no incentive leads to no effort. I don't mean to imply that NASA employees are not hard working, or smart, but that the organisation itself had no incentive.

      Take this example. Say you have some Engineers and tell them "I want you to design a car. I'll let you decide what size, how many people it will hold, what kind of fuel it will use, etc. I don't care how long it takes, r if you ever come up with anything useful." How realistic is it that they will come up with anything.

      On the other hand, if you tell them "I want you to get me to the top of that mountain and back here safely, and I want to leave in the next 5 years." They will have the correct motivation.

      NASA thrived under the latter scenario, but has no direction under the former.

      --
      JET Program: see Japan, meet intere
    2. Re:Oink, Oink by wjsteele · · Score: 1

      I have to disagree with the "Strategic Defense Initiative" being a flop. In fact, it worked perfectly. The SDI Strategy (is that redundant?) was there to "force the hand" of the Soviet Union. Ronnie Ray Gun knew that the Soviet economy was in trouble and SDI was "implemented" to make them realize that they could not compete with the US on a military scale. The Soviets also knew this and so backed down. They tried real hard (think REYKJAVIK) where President Gorbachiov tried very hard to convince President Regan to "hold off." President Regan refused to pull SDI off the table, because he knew the Soviets couldn't compete... (in fact, he knew they couldn't do it because he also knew we couldn't do it. But, most importantly, he also knew the Soviets THOUGHT we could do it.)

      I think it was a briliant gambit, that ended 40 years of the "Cold War."

      Bill

      --
      It's my Sig and you can't have it. Mine! All Mine!
    3. Re:Oink, Oink by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They can get to Mars using a modified Space Shuttle booster. According to Zubrin, anyway.

      New launch vehicle? No, put what we already have to good use for once.

    4. Re:Oink, Oink by Scudsucker · · Score: 1

      I think it was a briliant gambit, that ended 40 years of the "Cold War."

      I disagree. You may be leaps and bounds over you adversary (i.e. our within-3-meters missile targeting technology vs their hope-it-lands-within-a-mile), but that doesn't mean much when said adversary can still kill you 1,000 times over.

      The one who deserves the credit for the change in Soviet Russia is Gorbachev , and his policy of glasnost, or openess, not Reagan, who merely continued a 40 year long arms race.

    5. Re:Oink, Oink by jafac · · Score: 1

      Lockheed lost a BUTTLOAD of money for the National Aerospace Plane (if you're talking about the X-33).

      And SDI is not NMD, and Raytheon is cranking out PAC-3 missiles like there's a tomorrow which we don't want to spend in a radioactive cloud. So I think SDI was a roaring success, just a tad too optimistic with regard to schedule. . . SDI's gonna happen. It's just not going to be happening on a feasible scale for about 30 years. It's a worthwhile investment, considering how poorly the non-proliferation effort has gone. ($150Billion to invade a country with NO WMD, while Pakistan, Iran, North Korea, etc are developing WMD and delivery systems unmolested.)

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
  139. A better measure. by khasim · · Score: 1

    The PERCENTAGE of people living at or below poverty (without re-defining the poverty level).

    Whether this number is increasing or decreasing each year is what matters.

  140. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    so, now you want Bush to have vetoed DEM legislation? make up your mind pal.

    anytime the system works for your agenda you praise it. any time a person legally uses the system that doesnt jibe with your agenda you attack. makes for a weak argument. i remain utterly non-partisan and completely unconvinced of anything at this point.

  141. Hurray! We *MUST* Get There Before the Chinese by egg+troll · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    While America may have its faults (the anti-God secular humanist agenda being a prime one), I think any reasonable person will admit that the United States is generally a force for good in the world, and having the United States Armed Forces maintaining a military base on the Moon, capable of sending one hundred tons of steel encased rock to any place on the globe is no worse than the thousands of thermo-nuclear weapons that the US already has ready to launch in minutes.

    But, you need only read "The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress" by noted patriot and moral American Robert Heinlein to realize what kind of trouble an unscrupulous, inscrutable adversary could cause the world if they controlled the Moon. Do you want to see Western Civilization in peril, under the yellow light of the moon? Do you computer geeks want to be told you can no longer buy Taiwanese RAM, under penalty of a Tunguska like event?

    So, it's about time the keen strategic minds of President Bush's cabinet have realized that if we don't go back to the Moon and stake our rightful claim ahead of our oriental competitors.

    (A tip of the hat to Mr. Rightmann.)

    --

    C - A language that combines the speed of assembly with the ease of use of assembly.
    1. Re:Hurray! We *MUST* Get There Before the Chinese by Scudsucker · · Score: 1

      the anti-God secular humanist agenda being a prime one

      Oh, what "the anti-God secular humanist agenda" are you talking about, exactly? The United States is probably the most religious country in the western world, likely because we never had a state-sponsored religion shoved down our throats to create a backlash (i.e. Ireland and Italy). A politician who regularly mixed their religion and their politics together would be an oddity in Europe, as opposed to most Republicans and a few Democrats here. Its a wonder its taken almost 50 years to challenged that little addition made to the Pledge of Allegiance back in the mid-fifties.

    2. Re:Hurray! We *MUST* Get There Before the Chinese by Trolling4Dollars · · Score: 1

      Please do not reply to eggtroll, that is MY task. It only "eggs" him on further if anyone but me replies. eggtroll is my current interest. I will follow him as he posts and post this exact response every time. HAND

  142. Re:Actually Democrats were there first by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually, the moon is where Clinton stored America's memory on the Democrats dealings with the bearded Beaner while he was in Bosnia with those kooky frat boys of his. .

    The moon is like that closet on Bloom County....
    its filled with republican and democratic skeletons...its just liberal media seems to overlook the dems.

  143. Award for first kneejerk liberal anti-Bush post! by Overly+Critical+Guy · · Score: 0

    I was waiting for someone to, in an article about an announcement about a new moon program, bash Bush in SOME way.

    Congratulations on being a predictable left-wing nut!

    --
    "Sufferin' succotash."
  144. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    thak you for pointing out the stupidity of partisanship. as a non partisan, ever partisan AUTOMATICALLY disagrees with anything i say.

  145. That is a TV show. Look up "fiction". by khasim · · Score: 1

    Just so you know.

    1. Re:That is a TV show. Look up "fiction". by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just so you know.

      Just have to be a smart ass, don't ya? Couldn't resist? Or are you really that humor/sarcasm impaired?

  146. Alcoholics anonymous, cocaine anonymous... by aquarian · · Score: 1

    ...now, how about DEBTORS ANONYMOUS! Get that guy to rehab (again), before he ruins us all!

  147. And Microsoft's Response? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Find out what MSN.com has to say for the words Miserable Failure!


    Find out what MSN.com has to say for the word Linux



    Is this a sign of the end times? MSN is looking more objective than Google. No more "Linux Sucks" returns from MSN?!?

    1. Re:And Microsoft's Response? by DesertFalcon · · Score: 1

      No, this isn't because MSN is more objective, it's because MSN's page ranking algorythm isn't as good.

      I know that sounds backwards, but it's not; Google takes into account the words used in a link to a page, and MSN does not. If enough teenie boppers link to current-pop-star's page using the words "sex god" in the anchor tag:

      <a href='current-pop-star.com'>sex god</a>

      Google figures that this guy must be a sex god, since everyone's saying he is. Search on sex god, find some loser who can't sing but sure looks good on a poster. On the other hand, MSN takes into account none of this, and therefore doesn't rank pages as accurately as does Google.

      --
      --- 11 meters/second, or 24 miles per hour - the airspeed velocity of an unladen European swallow. Really.
  148. Re:Actually Democrats were there first by kevin+lyda · · Score: 1

    yes, the liberal media. do you mean the new york times which did the lead reporting on whitewater? or do you mean the network news programs that harped on gore's "lies" and yet failed to do things like look into bush's sealed records as governor (and don't be fooled, they're not unsealed now, they're "unsealed") or look into bush's record in the national guard (um, where was he that last year? hm?).

    liberal media my ass. right wing media, pretty much. lazy-ass media, oh yeah.

    --
    US Citizen living abroad? Register to vote!
  149. Leave it to private enterprise by ivaradi · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I think the best for everyone would be, if Bush announced that all barriers currently hindering private firms in their attempts to launch their vehicles into space (mainly licensing and other bureaucratic nonsense) would be immediately abolished.

    Of course, he won't do that. Any government's worst nightmare is about people flying around the space freely, out of their control. After all, the colonization of North America occured due to high taxes (and their consequences) in Europe. Nowadays, the taxes are much higher than then, so there is even more incentive to flee from them. Travelling in space may be dangerous, but at the current level of technology, it is probably not more dangerous, than going from Europe to America on a ship was in the 17th century.

  150. ..I guess they had .. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ..better get that film set at Area51 moved and re-set up, and the flag planted on the moon before anyone else notices its not really there

  151. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by fenix+down · · Score: 2, Funny

    Bush didn't steal the election, for Christ's sake, the Supreme Court did. As was befitting the fact that elections are not fucking football games the Florida Supreme Court happilly ignored both Bush and Gore and did what they felt would satisfy them that the law was being upheld. Sadly, the Supreme Court was under the impression that elections are fucking football games in which it is the responsibility of the candidate to fight his side and tough shit for the voters if he doesn't.

    Since then, of course, the numbers of conservatives in the country have exploded (I think we're down to 20-something% willing to call themselves "liberal" now) resulting in the 2002 election, and the Democratic party has splintered into Clinton vs. DLC vs. Dean vs. confused conservatives (as much to blame for 2k2 as anything else) while the Republicans have transformed into fucking Voltron or something under DeLay, crushing their enemies and seeing them driven before them to the lamenting of their women.

    Ultimately, though, I think that'll be what fucks the Republicans. They aren't made for unity. It burns up all the talk-radio power just holding them together at this point. Sometime soon, sooner if Bush loses, maybe 6 months later if he doesn't, the Christan/neocons are going to have to break with the normal Republicans. Sadly, I think the real Republicans are going to get the shit end of that deal. I just hope somebody's around to slow down the flying monkeys once they shed all those damn rational people that've been holding them down.

  152. Here's something for you to chew on. by khasim · · Score: 1

    How about if Bush announces a balanced budget, and sticks to it, that doesn't cut social security or education but does include enough funding for NASA to get to the moon?

    People don't hate Bush because he's Bush.

    People hate his "if you ain't with me, you're against me" policies.

    The situation is a LOT more complicated than you believe.

    We have states (OR) that do not have enough money to pay teachers.

    We've lost millions of manufacturing jobs.

    We have a HUGE deficit.

    We're sending over $100 Billion to Iraq.

    We're still sending money to Afghanistan.

    Meanwhile, we still have things like the financial mess that is taking BILLIONS of dollars out of people's retirement funds.

    Yeah, this is just because his name is Bush.

    1. Re:Here's something for you to chew on. by pjl5602 · · Score: 1
      How about if Bush announces a balanced budget, and sticks to it, that doesn't cut social security or education but does include enough funding for NASA to get to the moon?

      Boy, you've got your priorities straight... Save the children and the seniors. Balance the books. But don't cut my pet projects (NASA). Why can't we cut education? There is so much waste there, it's not even funny. And social security... I bet you think there is actually a lock box (or "trust fund".) Bzzt. No such thing. All social security taxes collected go straight into the general fund. Thanks LBJ and the congress of the time for screwing social security.

      We have states (OR) that do not have enough money to pay teachers.

      According to this, the Oregon State Department of Education budget is $5,782,266,211. That does not include money from counties and municipalities. And they somehow can't afford to pay teachers? I somehow don't think that lack of money is the issue but rather how it is (mis)spent.

      We've lost millions of manufacturing jobs.

      Our labor costs (thanks to increased national wealth) have priced us out of the manufacturing market. So life goes. If you are intent on having domestic manufacturing, prepare to pay a lot more for everything...

      We have a HUGE deficit.

      While it's a large dollar amount that I'd love to see lowered, relative to GDP, it's not so bad. During the Carter administration, IIRC, the deficit/GDP ratio was over 6%.

      Meanwhile, we still have things like the financial mess that is taking BILLIONS of dollars out of people's retirement funds.

      First off, nobody has ever been guaranteed a profit investing in the stock market. The fact of the matter is, Ray Charles could have made money in the late 90's by simply pointing at the business page of the paper to pick his stocks. The market was way overvalued and investors were all too happy to pour money into it. It's no suprise that many companies fudged their books to get better valuations which turned into more investor activity. On a personal note, my 401K is kicking ass and has been for the last year, thank you...

      C'mon, be honest, you hate Bush because all the other "cool" liberals do.

  153. of course the US can afford it by snooo53 · · Score: 1
    Everyone has been going on about how we can't afford to go back to the moon, pay for Iraq, etc.. etc... I say, why not? Who cares if we go into even more debt? I mean honestly. Lots of people spend beyond their means... and the US economy more than has the means to pay back any sort of debt interest and all. Not to mention, they will never default on it.

    So I say, let's spend the money and get off this rock once and for all. The potential benefits of making space travel/commerce easier will only make it easier to pay back whatever piddly sum they spend to go back to the moon. Even 20 billion dollars works out to what? Like $50 a person. Not to mention it'll be scaled based on income. Whatever. That's your cable bill for the month

    While I'm at it I think i'm gonna go buy that Athlon64 I've been eyeing too.

    --
    The sending of this message pretty much inconveniences everyone involved.
    1. Re:of course the US can afford it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Everyone has been going on about how we can't afford to go back to the moon, pay for Iraq, etc.. etc... I say, why not? Who cares if we go into even more debt? I mean honestly. Lots of people spend beyond their means... and the US economy more than has the means to pay back any sort of debt interest and all. Not to mention, they will never default on it.

      The value of the dollar has been decreasing because banks/investors are less willing to lend the US money. This will have an effect on your economy (Argentina was in a big crisis recently because investors pulled out).

      Besides, paying rent costs a lot of money. It's rather uncertain what the ROI shall be (and whether the return will go to EU/China/India while you are bankrupt).

  154. Going to the moon? Why? by fbg111 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Am I the only one who thinks that going to the moon at this point in history is not a good investment? For our current state of technology and economy, it is simply an unsustainable endeavor. We're still using chemical rockets for propulsion, and haven't even perfected nuclear fusion yet, forchrysakes.

    Yeah, we can get there, but just think for moment how much cost and effort setting up and maintaining a permanent moonbase will cost us. You thought it was expensive to resupply the ISS, well how many bank-breaking rocket trips per year will it take to support a few people living on the moon, much less Mars?

    Wouldn't a wiser investment be to put that space exploration money into fusion research, and the superconducting supercollider, and whatever other "high science" research projects are waiting in the wings or are just a glint in a Caltech professor's eye? How about we first devise a more workable propulsion system and more efficient and transportable energy source, things that also have the fringe benefit of being applicable on Earth, before we spend umpty-five-gazillion on going back to the moon?

    --
    Flying is easy, just throw yourself at the ground and miss. -Douglas Adams
  155. Some Clarity by parsnips · · Score: 1

    Why do people who bash Bush, with arguments that are not even coherent, get modded up? For example all of the "Poor Economy" posts, does anyone on slashdot not read the news? (8+% gdp growth, highest in 20 years) I think people with ideological differences are mad because Bush is stealing their issues, and getting his accomplished. In other words things are getting done in Washington.

    1. Re:Some Clarity by presearch · · Score: 1

      The 8% is just from playing games with statistics.
      Things go in the shitter for 3 years, stuff wears out, life goes on,
      and certain things (including replacement war hardware) have to be replaced.
      Suddenly =he= gets credit for 8% growth.
      If you worship those numbers, you probably also buy Powerball tickets.

      I hear our chocolate ration is also going up by 8%...

  156. 40 TRILLION already on the hook by Ars-Fartsica · · Score: 1

    You can throw in the social security and medicare we already know we will owe for those alive right now through to 2040. Estimates for this period range from $40 TRILLION and UP. Tese are the government's own numbers!!

    1. Re:40 TRILLION already on the hook by kubrick · · Score: 1

      Is that the projected CAD, or doesn't this take into account projected profits from other areas?

      Still, it does make you wonder... either the debt gets repaid, or the world financial system falls over. Neither alternative seems very enticing.

      --
      deus does not exist but if he does
    2. Re:40 TRILLION already on the hook by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      future CAD:

      White House Shelved 44 Trillion Deficit Report?
      By Peronet Despeignes of the Financial Times
      May 30, 2003, 10:21
      Thursday 29 May 2003

      Study commissioned by O'Neill sees $44 trillion in red ink

      The Bush administration has shelved a report commissioned by the Treasury that shows the U.S. currently faces a future of chronic federal budget deficits totaling at least $44 trillion in current U.S. dollars.

      The study, the most comprehensive assessment of how the U.S. government is at risk of being overwhelmed by the "baby boom" generation's future healthcare and retirement costs, was commissioned by then-Treasury secretary Paul O'Neill.

      But the Bush administration chose to keep the findings out of the annual budget report for fiscal year 2004, published in February, as the White House campaigned for a tax-cut package that critics claim will expand future deficits.

      The study asserts that sharp tax increases, massive spending cuts or a painful mix of both are unavoidable if the U.S. is to meet benefit promises to future generations. It estimates that closing the gap would require the equivalent of an immediate and permanent 66 percent across-the-board income tax increase.

      The study was being circulated as an independent working paper among Washington think-tanks as President George W. Bush on Wednesday signed into law a 10-year, $350 billion tax-cut package he welcomed as a victory for hard-working Americans and the economy.

      The analysis was spearheaded by Kent Smetters, then-Treasury deputy assistant secretary for economic policy, and Jagdessh Gokhale, then a consultant to the Treasury. Mr. Gokhale, now an economist for the Cleveland Federal Reserve, said: "When we were conducting the study, my impression was that it was slated to appear [in the Budget]. At some point, the momentum builds and you think everything is a go, and then the decision came down that we weren't part of the prospective budget."

      Mr. O'Neill, who was fired last December, refused to comment.

      The study's analysis of future deficits dwarfs previous estimates of the financial challenge facing Washington. It is roughly equivalent to 10 times the publicly held national debt, four years of U.S. economic output or more than 94 percent of all U.S. household assets. Alan Greenspan, Federal Reserve chairman, last week bemoaned what he called Washington's "deafening" silence about the future crunch.

      President Bush signed into law a $350 billion tax-cut package on Wednesday saying:' 'We can say loud and clear to the American people: You got more of your own money to spend so that this economy can get a good wind behind it."

      The estimates reflect the extent to which the annual deficit, the national debt and other widely reported, backward-looking data are becoming archaic and misleading as measures of the government's solvency. Mr. Smetters, now a University of Pennsylvania finance professor, said tax cuts were only a fraction of the imbalance, and that the bigger problem "is the whole [budget] language we're using."

      Laurence Kotlikoff, an expert on long-term budget accounting, alleged in a recent Boston Globe editorial that the Bush administration suppressed the research to ease passage of the tax-cut plan.

      An administration official said the study was designed as a thought-piece for internal discussion -- one among many left every year on the cutting-room floor -- and noted the budget's extensive discussion of projected, 75-year Social Security and Medicare shortfalls.

    3. Re:40 TRILLION already on the hook by kubrick · · Score: 1

      It estimates that closing the gap would require the equivalent of an immediate and permanent 66 percent across-the-board income tax increase.

      Yowza. That in itself would ruin the economy, especially if corporate taxes increased by a similar amount and couldn't be avoided by juggling the books...

      --
      deus does not exist but if he does
  157. Flame on by Charcharodon · · Score: 1, Insightful
    A tax break is not a break after years of tax increases, it's an adjustment back to a more sane level. If anything more programs should get the axe. Money doesn't solve problems, people do, and until the American people and the world at large care enough to step up and give their time there will always be problems.

    As far as the perpetual war, you must have been asleep in history class. We have not stopped being "at war" for nearly the last 50 years. Try reading a few history books and get a clue. While you are at it look to see who has actually been starting them.

    Suddenly the lack of free health care and SS is a problem. When exactly in our history has either been free, and please tell me why they should be? I whole heartedly support emergency care as well vacines and preventative medicine, but full medical coverage will put us in a hole that we will never be able to dig ourselves out of. If you want free health care go live in Europe, but don't whine about the 60% income tax.

    These HUGE problems have always existed and always will exist, so when exactly is the right time to goto the moon? The last time we went was when we were on the verge of global nucluer war! Which for some odd reason causes todays issues to pale in comparison

    A duh, there are no other MAJOR space fairing nations other than Russians and they cannot afford to pay the bills, so why should we wait around for the Dutch to start a space program?

    This current conflict looks nothing like Vietnam, as sad as the casualties are, it's not even close. We are not currently fighting with one hand behind our back like in Vietnam, and our opponent isn't being backed by a major Cold War super power. If anything people are saying we are being too rough on the insurgents.

    1. Re:Flame on by CGP314 · · Score: 1

      If you want free health care go live in Europe, but don't whine about the 60% income tax.

      That's just what I did : P

      Call me crazy, but I think that everyone should have access to universal health care.

    2. Re:Flame on by kruczkowski · · Score: 1

      My flight is leaving Monday.

      --
      hmm... for fun I enjoy launching DDoS attacks against 127.87.42.5
    3. Re:Flame on by yourmom16 · · Score: 1
      A tax break is not a break after years of tax increases, it's an adjustment back to a more sane level. If anything more programs should get the axe.

      I agree with you, however they are increasing spending so cutting taxes is a bad idea.

      --
      "We have got to make Stan understand the importance of voting, because he'll definitely vote for our guy." - South Park
  158. How would you quantify that? by Ars-Fartsica · · Score: 1
    Its all speculation. How do you calculate the benefits? What specific technologies are we referring to? How do we know these technologies would not have appeared within a reasonable time frame in any case?

    For example, the moon shot did nothing for computing that would not have appeared soon enough anyway.

    1. Re:How would you quantify that? by doug · · Score: 1

      The two that I remember are velcro and miniturized TV cameras, but the list I saw was longer. I seem to remember a TV commercial from the 70s mentioning that tang (the orange flavored drink power) came from NASA too.

      I agree that they could have been figured out elsewhere without using goverment money, but when? A decade or two later? If only six months, then that might not have been worth it. But what would be the cost if they were engineered by non-Americans? I imagine that those sorts of things generated lots of patent money that came into the US.

    2. Re:How would you quantify that? by yourmom16 · · Score: 1
      I imagine that those sorts of things generated lots of patent money that came into the US.

      The government cannot hold patents.

      --
      "We have got to make Stan understand the importance of voting, because he'll definitely vote for our guy." - South Park
    3. Re:How would you quantify that? by doug · · Score: 1

      Understood.

      But when did I say the government held those patents? Money coming into the US is not the same as money going to the government. We haven't hit 100% taxation yet.

      - doug

    4. Re:How would you quantify that? by yourmom16 · · Score: 1

      If the inventions were from NASA who else would hold the patents?

      --
      "We have got to make Stan understand the importance of voting, because he'll definitely vote for our guy." - South Park
    5. Re:How would you quantify that? by doug · · Score: 1

      You are right. That is the origin of some neat stuff. nedit comes from an internal project at some research lab, and since they can't sell the software, they simply give it away. But the government does very little of this sort of thing. It is far more common to hire a contractor to do the work. Most of the work done at NASA is outsourced or joint ventures with companies. When Lockheed does something for NASA, guess who gets the patent? I believe that NASA gets unrestricted rights to use the patent, but Lockheed will sell it to everyone else.

      Another vector is when NASA gives grants to universities to do applied research. As I understand it, professors who come up with something useful typically spin off small companies to focus on the new thing. This helps NASA because if that company can sell it to someone else, the company can continue its research without additional funding from NASA. And Universities seem to be trying to avoid directly running this sort of thing, but they have nothing against poneying up a bit of money and some office space so some research can do it without completely leaving the university. The university gets a stake, and a place for Grad Students to do research. I don't know the details, but on the surface it seems like most everyone wins.

      In both cases it is federal tax money paying for the patents to go to someone else. This part of the system bothers the shit out of me, but that is the way it is. I'd prefer if there was a rule saying that if tax money payed for it, any US citizen or US based company can use it royalty free.

  159. Those sanctions. by khasim · · Score: 1

    Those sanctions are what prevented Saddam from building up his military again.

    Which is why Bush jr. had such an easy time conquering Iraq.

    Clinton didn't do a great job, and I believe he did launch those attacks to distract the press and public.

    But he STILL did a better job than Bush.

  160. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 2, Insightful

    actualy the washington post found that Bush would have won.

    --



    I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
  161. Agreed, these numbers are often bogus by Ars-Fartsica · · Score: 1

    Name one specific technology that is profitably engaged in modern society that absolutely would not have appeared at all if not for the moon shot....

  162. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by wmspringer · · Score: 1

    > so, now you want Bush to have vetoed DEM legislation? make up your mind pal.

    I want him to have veto'd *ANY* bad legislation, reguardless of who passed it. The democrats are quite capable of making bad decisions, just like the republicans. (Both sides, for example, voted for the PATRIOT act)

    > anytime the system works for your agenda you praise it

    My only "agenda" is to have a president who can do the job properly. That doesn't neccesarily mean a democratic president - I would have been happy with McCain. It just means someone who actually knows what he's doing.

    And if you're so sure of yourself, how come you're afraid to post with your real handle?

  163. why the White House is like College by penguin7of9 · · Score: 1

    College
    -------

    Dutied:

    -- do problem set
    -- clean room

    Procrastination:

    -- post on Slashdot
    -- get drunk
    -- pick a fun but impossible final project for the engineering class
    -- pick fight with roommate

    White House
    -----------

    Duties:

    -- balance budget and trade
    -- develop healthcare program

    Procrastination:

    -- have Condolezza put out a flaming press release
    -- get drunk
    -- announce new space program
    -- pick a fight with Saddam

    Not all that different.

  164. OMG, how is this not moderated off-topic? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is totally off-topic. Not a single mention of the parent topic.

    1. Re:OMG, how is this not moderated off-topic? by mabhatter654 · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately this ISN'T OT at all! As much as we all want to go back to space...and all it's benifits, the MONEY has to come from somewhere. Realize that Apollo was essentially paid for in CASH! [time-adjusted to be 100X NASA's current funding!] AND Without adding to the deficit. When the current govt can't even balance the day-to-day operation of the country, how are we supposed to find 5-10% additional [moonshot cost in real $$] federal money to add to the budget? A real attempt to better Apollo will easily cost at least 5% of the current overall federal budget to pull off correctly! That's a lot of cash!!! But figure we're still reaping the technology rewards of the last shot 30 years later...pretty good value for the money spent.

  165. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by bnenning · · Score: 2, Insightful
    the Florida Supreme Court happilly ignored both Bush and Gore and did what they felt would satisfy them that the law was being upheld


    The Florida SC invented election laws out of thin air that directly contradicted what was on the books. You can make a decent argument that SCOTUS shouldn't have interfered since it was a state matter, but don't hold the Florida judges up as paragons of integrity.


    Sometime soon, sooner if Bush loses, maybe 6 months later if he doesn't, the Christan/neocons are going to have to break with the normal Republicans. Sadly, I think the real Republicans are going to get the shit end of that deal.


    Yeah, there's a lot of us "South Park Republicans" who aren't happy with lots of Bush's policies, like huge spending increases, blatant pandering with steel tariffs, and corporate welfare in the energy bill. But as long as all the Democrats have to offer is "Bush is a Nazi", they're going to continue to get their asses kicked.

    --
    How to solve most of our problems: 1.Lots of nuclear plants. 2.Cure aging.
  166. it's not politicized .... by dhananjay · · Score: 1

    I think that might be algorythm actually. look at the rest of the page on that search and you'll see the recurring terms 'miserable failure' and 'bush' --- from an Atlantic Monthly article.

    --
    If English was good enough for Jesus, it's good enough for everyone else.
  167. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by wmspringer · · Score: 2, Informative

    The Denver Post (or maybe the Rocky Mountain News, I forgot which...read both of them) reported that Bush would have won a partial recount, but Gore would have won a full recount.

    Although, it was so close there was gonna be doubt either way.

  168. You don't read financial history, do you? by Ars-Fartsica · · Score: 1
    Lots of people spend beyond their means... and the US economy more than has the means to pay back any sort of debt interest and all.

    BZZZZZT! Not according to the GAO and the House subcommittee that this summer basically determined the US was bankrupt. You see, the more debt you accumulate, the more interest you must pay (do you know why?). Its a vicious cycle that ends with default....and practically every fiat currency (do you even know what that is??) has defaulted.

    Around the twenty trillion point on the debt the US will basically be on a irreversible course for default. Counting what we owe on Medicare and SS for people alive right now, we are in for FORTY TRILLION. Hence the GAO conclusion!

    Not to mention, they will never default on it.

    Quiz: how many times has the US repudiated the dollar? If you say zero, you are wrong! Read some history.

  169. Maybe Mars is the excuse for going to the Moon by Dr.+Zoidburg · · Score: 1
    I thought I read a long time ago (5 yrs?) that NASA was trying to discourage people from going to the moon saying they already discovered everything there was to discover on the moon.

    There have been, and still are, conspiracy theories about how NASA either didn't really go to the moon, or that they did go but didn't broadcast the real or full contents to the media. I guess from a military point of view I'd be inclined to believe that if I was the first organization to learn a dirty secret in a new place that's hard to get to, I too would come back and tell everyone "nothing to see here, don't waste your time".

    Maybe there really is something on the moon that NASA didn't want to reveal to the other countries, like a lot more water than they claim. Or maybe they left a mess when they were there last.

    So now that China says "we wanna see too", the U.S. is saying to themselves "we gotta go back there and clean up our 'stuff'. but if we do that everyone will wonder why we said theres nothing worth looking at on the moon. i know, lets say we have to do a mars practice run and we will use the moon as our place of practice". I mean, heaven forbid the U.S. save some money and practice here on earth....since they train the astronauts here.

    1. Re:Maybe Mars is the excuse for going to the Moon by whorfin · · Score: 1

      So now that China says "we wanna see too", the U.S. is saying to themselves "we gotta go back there and clean up our 'stuff'. but if we do that everyone will wonder why we said theres nothing worth looking at on the moon. i know, lets say we have to do a mars practice run and we will use the moon as our place of practice".

      Ok, call me a sucker, I'll bite.

      What, pray tell, do you propose that the US spent tens of billions of dollars and thousands of man-years of effort to hide on the moon oh so many decades ago, that the Chinese interest in space is now prompting us to go back and find a more secure hiding place for? I mean, it would have to be something a lot more incriminating than pictures of J. Edgar in bed with MLK plotting the assasination of JFK.

      And if it's water that they're trying to hide, then our getting back there 'first' won't be enough, unless it's a just a couple gallons, and we can pretend that we just had a beer bash and took a leak in the regolith while we were drunk to see if we could freeze a stream of piss mid-air.

      --
      Laugh while you can, monkey-boy!
    2. Re:Maybe Mars is the excuse for going to the Moon by uberdave · · Score: 1

      Or maybe they left a mess when they were there last.

      Like maybe lunar rovers, golf balls, LEM lander bases, bibles, photographs, toolbags, old experiments, people's ashes. NASA has left quite a mess up there.

  170. Re:Doom and gloom (not to mention partison politic by ncc74656 · · Score: 1, Troll
    Why would you badmouth Bush?

    You must be new around here...it seems no Slashbot's day is complete without posting something along the lines of "Bush is teh dumb." :-| I wonder how many of them showed up for yesterday's Two Minutes Hate.

    --
    20 January 2017: the End of an Error.
  171. How dumb do you look? by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 1

    Oh, the irony.

    You castigate the grandparent poster for referring to the Houston Astros rather than the Texas Rangers and come back at him with a jibe about Canada having "a baseball team (for now)", an obvious reference to the soon to be relocated (or contracted) Montreal Expos but, somehow, in your haste to prove your encyclopaedic knowledge of MLB you've forgotten the Toronto Blue Jays.

    Last time I checked, Toronto was in Canada too. Heck, just to help you remember the US Marines Corps screwed up during the Blue Jays 1992 World Series contest with Atlanta by flying the Canadian flag upside down! D'oh!

    God, you don't even know Toronto has a MLB team and that Toronto is in Canada and you're laughing at someone else because he confused the two teams in Texas. Just how dumb do you look now, buddy?

    --

    "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
  172. A Title with a Question Mark? by repetty · · Score: 1

    My policy: Never read anything titled with a question.

    I mean, why waste my time? What if? What if? Don't tease me.

    Remove the question mark and I'll freak'n read it.

    --Richard

  173. Not only is this off-topic, but it is false by unassimilatible · · Score: 3, Interesting

    In John McCain's words, Bush is spending like a drunken sailor.

    Conservatives are against runaway spending on principle, and because they figure libs won't give them any credit even if they do spend:

    Federal spending soars under Bush's watch

    According to one recent analysis, the government now spends $20,000 a year for every household in America, the most since World War II

    Notice this isn't just on defense and homeland security (you know, the common defense that the Constitution actually calls for), but also for entitlements.

    I'm still looking for AmeriCorps, the Boys and Girls Club, or job training expenditures mentioned in the Constitution.

    Anyway, Bush is spending a lot. Why bother? He's being attacked by both sides. He might as well cut cut cut.

    --
    Slashdot "libertarians": Small government for me, big government for those I disagree with. -1, I disagree with you
    1. Re:Not only is this off-topic, but it is false by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      In John McCain's words, Bush is spending like a drunken sailor.

      And the chorus sings:

      What'll we do with a drunken sailor?
      What'll we do with a drunken sailor?
      What'll we do with a drunken sailor,
      Early in the morning?

      Throw him in the brig until he's sober,
      Throw him in the brig until he's sober,
      Throw him in the brig until he's sober,
      Early in the morning!

      (chorus, &c.)

    2. Re:Not only is this off-topic, but it is false by momerath2003 · · Score: 1

      Are you proposing a mutiny? :P

      --
      I had but a simple dream, to destroy all humans.
    3. Re:Not only is this off-topic, but it is false by Stu+Charlton · · Score: 1

      "According to one recent analysis, the government now spends $20,000 a year for every household in America, the most since World War II"

      Not that I respect the Bush spending program, but figures like this are misleading. Is it nominal or real terms
      ? Plus, the U.S. is economically much bigger than 60 years ago. Government spending in terms of % of GDP is the figure that really gives an idea of spending that was relative to WW2.

      --
      -Stu
    4. Re:Not only is this off-topic, but it is false by 0123456 · · Score: 1

      "Government spending in terms of % of GDP is the figure that really gives an idea of spending that was relative to WW2."

      Only if you believe that GDP tells you anything meaningful about the real economy: sending in the B2s to bomb New York would cause a huge boost to GDP with all the money spent on bombs, healthcare for bombing victims, and rebuilding the city afterwards, but it would hardly be a sensible economic policy.

    5. Re:Not only is this off-topic, but it is false by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      sending in the B2s to bomb New York would cause a huge boost to GDP with all the money spent on bombs, healthcare for bombing victims, and rebuilding the city afterwards, but it would hardly be a sensible economic policy.

      Bombing Washington DC on the other hand...

    6. Re:Not only is this off-topic, but it is false by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you're looking for where the Constitution calls for "entitlements" like job training, you can find it under "general welfare". Funny, that, the eevil welfare state was established by the Framers.

    7. Re:Not only is this off-topic, but it is false by bludstone · · Score: 1

      Modern welfare was created as a temporary solution to a massive social problem during the great depression.

      It was so people wouldnt starve to death.

      It was SUPPOSED to be temporary, but well, poot.

      --

      no .sig
    8. Re:Not only is this off-topic, but it is false by b-baggins · · Score: 1

      Your example is the classic broken window fallacy of economics.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Broken_window_falla cy

      --
      You can tell a great deal about the character of a man by observing those who hate him.
    9. Re:Not only is this off-topic, but it is false by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who needs B2's when you can just borrow some airliners.

    10. Re:Not only is this off-topic, but it is false by Matrix272 · · Score: 1

      It was SUPPOSED to be temporary, but well, poot.

      So was Federal Withholding... aka Federal Income Tax... you know, the tax you have to pay that directly contradicts the original Constitution.

      --
      "It's better to have a gun and not need it than need a gun and not have it." ~ Christian Slater, True Romance
    11. Re:Not only is this off-topic, but it is false by 2short · · Score: 1


      I agree that figures like that can be misleading, but in answer to your question:

      "Is it nominal or real terms?"

      Both. Nominal should be no surprise, but yes, in real terms (e.g. 1945 dollars, per person as fraction of median income, as a percent of GDP); pretty much any way you slice it: We are spending more now than we have since WWII. And cutting taxes too!

  174. Re:Thank you China! (and Russia) by Cylix · · Score: 2, Funny

    The old fashioned way...

    Yeah, I was thinking about a large sling shot too. I mean, Wile E. Coyote used several of them and they worked just find. Not counting the several times he maimed himself, but I'm thinking all the bugs should be worked out.

    Think about it...

    Note, IANAALS (I am not an acme labs salesman)

    --
    "You should always go to other people's funerals; otherwise, they won't come to yours." -- Yogi Berra
  175. Bush legacy? by phorm · · Score: 1

    Seriously, is there anything Bush might leave as a (good) legacy for people to remember him by? Maybe he will re-initialize the space-race in an attempt to have something that puts his name in the annals of history in a positive way.

    I mean, the best he's done so far is make a lot of ppl less worried about terrorists... but only because they're more worried about the government.

    1. Re:Bush legacy? by mattkinabrewmindspri · · Score: 1
      I'm not any less worried about terrorists because of anything the administration is doing. This administration tries to connect terrorism to plenty of things of things which have nothing to do with terrorism.

      For a while after the World Trade Center attack, I thought a lot about terrorism, and I realized that I probably shouldn't be afraid. While terrorism definitely should not be ignored, terrorism is not the most dangerous thing in my life. I only have one life, and I don't plan to spend it in fear.

    2. Re:Bush legacy? by strike2867 · · Score: 0

      Good for you. I think everyone should watch Bowling for Columbine. The only problem would that they are already far too well programmed by the media and religion to watch it objectively.

      --

      Vote for new mod!!! Score:-2,Imbecile
    3. Re:Bush legacy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's there to objectively watch? It's one of the biggest pieces of propaganda out there - you have to wade through pretty deep opinion in order to get anything of substance out of that supposed documentary.

  176. Award for nth kneejerk anti-other wing post! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I didn't even have to wait for someone to ignore the issues entirely when presented with an opportunity to bash the "other" side.

    Congratulations on being a predictable wing nut!

    (I'm not just bashing you, OCG. Everyone is stupid. Especially this "Anonymous Coward" guy.)

  177. Of politics and space by Rathian · · Score: 1

    Good lord folks, did this story ever draw the Bush-haters out of the woodwork.

    I am no Bush apologist nor am I enthralled at all with either major party. Jesse Ventura sounds better every time I see his show.

    That said, what was done in Iraq is done. What would you have us do? Pull out? We cannot do that. We broke it, we now have to fix it. I hope for the best on that. Bush was likely wrong on his reasons, but that is pretty much a moot point now. I have yet to hear the Democrats say anything I was overly enthusiastic about...

    When did Eric Robert Rudolf show up? How long were we looking for him? That loser stayed in North Carolina most if not ALL the time and he certianly did not have an army of fanatics defending him to the death ala Bin Ladin or Saddam. Those things take time, our military is powerful, not godlike - if it was, no soldiers would die and Osama would be chunky salsa now.

    Last I heard, the economy was recovering - slowly, but it is coming back. What happend, in spite of what a lot of you were saying, was NOT the direct result of the politicians. Fact is a bunch of business owners, venture capitalists, and investors forgot what was important to make a business survive and prosper in the long term. That plus a number of accounting scandals, et al and you have what we had, an economic setback/correction - this happens.

    On to space - yes, those things cost money. I want to see us go back to the stars. It is a resource we haven't even begun to tap in terms of science, minerals, and much more. Also, consider the beneficial side effects of putting companies to work to do those things - the science of the nation is advanced. How may of today's conveniences have come about due to the space program and the innovations it brought about?

  178. Nope by MegaFur · · Score: 1

    The only way GB Jr. would really call for a return to the moon is if one of his "intelligence" advisors suspected terrorist activity originating from that location.

    Soo... there's a chance... but only if their intel stays as bad as it's been in the past.

    --
    Furry cows moo and decompress.
    1. Re:Nope by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They interrupt migration patterns. Have you ever seen an eagle have its wing chopped off by a windmill? I have.

    2. Re:Nope by willtsmith · · Score: 1

      The modern variety of larger slow rotating windmills don't kill birds.

      BTW, environmentalists can't have it both ways. Society needs energy. There are polluting and non-polluting ways to derive it. Every energy source has an impact on natural habitats and wildlife.

      Dams cause no pollution but impact the spawning of fish. There are ways to minimize that impact and thats what environmentalists should focus on. The alternative is nuclear power and thats about the worst of ALL worlds.

      --
      -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!
    3. Re:Nope by F34nor · · Score: 1

      Either way it totally unimportant because windmills just plain suck compared to Gyromills. There is no competition here. Surface winds are slow and irregular where the jet stream is VERY fast and consistent. I mean just look at a Gyromills. its 20 feet of square steel tubing and two electric motor/generators and a tether. Not a very big capital expenditure, in fact it's so elegant and simple and profoundly smart it boggles the mind but no one is doing shit about it. It makes me sick.

      Its just like the energy bill, if they just put some money into these things, and Changing the World Technologies Thermal Depolymerization process we could stop importing oil, stop putting shit in our rivers, and taking carbon from the ground and putting into the air.

      Dams? Dams suck but did you know that a array of micro turbines would generate more power without disrupting the rivers? It all about people not wanting to change because they spent so much money on building a wall of concrete that they don't want to admit that something better might have come along. Its Galileo vs. the Church.

      Nuclear? Did you read the article in Wired some time ago that they now have a process where you expose waste to a high-energy gamma ray and speed up the half-life? It even generates waste heat that can be turned into power. When you're done you just have the results of the 60/40 split.

      So in conclusion it's not how fast the rotors go, its price/dollar. Its antiquated-flat-world-no-such-thing-as-germs-desig n vs. elegant. It just happens that the most efficient, cheapest, and most easily deployed happens to be environmentally friendly too. Wow what a concept.

  179. China, America, and the Moon by DevilsEngine · · Score: 5, Insightful

    At the dawn of the 15th century, China ruled the seas. An armada of Chinese ships explored Japan, Tiawan, and the islands of the Pacific. Turning west, they reached Arabia and sailed all the way to the east coast of Africa. The ships were much larger than anything that had sailed the seas before. The largest were 400 feet long and 150 wide and carried nine masts. They were larger than anything that would be seen in the west for centuries to come. The Chinese fleets were fabulously successful. They carried loads of Chinese silk and porcelain to western ports and returned with all the riches of Africa and Arabia. Between the turn of the century and 1433, the treasure fleets sailed seven times. These expeditions established a vast trade network for China. They also included military conquests that brought a huge amount of land under Chinese control. At the conclusion of the last expedition, the Chinese Empire reached the Persian Gulf. The next expedition might had rounded the horn of Africa. China might have "discovered" and even colonized Europe. The ships held unmatched technology and were easily capable of reaching the Americas. China stood at the brink of dominating the world. But there was no next expedition. Instead, there was a change in political control. The new Ming emperors pulled back the fleets. The treasure ships were allowed to rot or deliberately burned to prevent their use. China turned inward, became insular, abandoned its distant colonies. It would be the Europeans that went on to discover the New World. And Europeans who would reach, and dominate, much of China for centuries to come. In 1969, Neil Armstrong placed his foot in a slightly gritty powder and left the first human mark on the moon. The United States had conducted a series of expeditions into space, using successively more capable craft. The rocket that delivered men to the moon was 363' long, the largest ever made. They were the most technologically advanced devices of their time. Under Democratic leadership, they had reached another world. Seven times, from 1969 to 1972, craft from the United States reached the moon. They were fabulously successful. They delivered a bounty of knowledge, a peaceful explosion of technology, and a focus for the world. America stood at the brink of endless possibilities. Another push might have established colonies, it might have lead to clean and endless energy, it might have... There was no next time.

    1. Re:China, America, and the Moon by Baldrson · · Score: 1

      If China becomes the dominant spacefaring superpower it will be because their bureaucrats had the wisdom to burn their merchant ships the first time they returned from Africa and went isolationist rather than becoming a colonial power.

      I have a very strong suspicion that the West will be unable to extracate itself from the ethnic conflicts that are so beseting it -- arising from globalist projection of power -- and that China will be able to develop its ability to project power to space unimpeded.

      China should give back Tibet to the Tibetans however this is nothing compared to what the West should give back not only to those not of European ancestry but to those of European descent who no more "Western" in its globalist colonialism than Tibetans are Chinese.

      As I've said before:

      It is increasingly obvious with the shrinking globe that the primordial human right is the right of self-determination. All other rights are null and void if that is violated simply because different people may differ profoundly on what they see as essential human rights.

      Logic such as this could have resolved the conundrum of the Confederacy by stating simply that the north had a right to invade the south for the sole purpose of giving slaves the right of self-determination -- and that the right of the Confederacy to secede was not the issue.

      Of course, as the globe shrinks there are opportunities to violate the self-determination of a lot more of the people than ever before. Hence the real test of a sovereign's committment to human rights is its committment to expanding the ecological range of Earth.

      Is China so committed? If we learn nothing from NASA at all but the following, the investment in NASA may have been worthwhile:
      Declarations of intent from bureaucracies are not trustworthy unless combined with profound competitive pressures consciously recognized by the politicians as forcing them to stop treating their technologists as a resource they can milk when convenient or desparate and then discard when sailing is smooth.
  180. Biased chart- by Phat_Tony · · Score: 1

    This chart doesn't give a realistic picture. What matters more than the total $ value of the debt/surplus is the debt/surplus as a percentage of GDP. You can find such a thing here. (warning! PDF)

    The basic point is that, yes, the budget looks bad, but not orders of magnitude worse than ever before, as it appears in the graph linked by the parent post. That's statistics lying for you. In fact, the current budget deficit is only about 2/3 as bad as it was in 1983. Although it is still getting worse now, and that was the trough in '83.

    For a rudimentary comparison to explain why this matters: if you borrow $10,000, that might be a big debt to take on if you only make $18,000 a year, but if you make $100,000 a year, it's no big deal. How much debt you should assume is relative to your income, or at least your expected income.

    --
    Can anyone tell me how to set my sig on Slashdot?
    1. Re:Biased chart- by yoshi_mon · · Score: 1

      People have been trying to sell me on this for years. But you know what, I'm not buying it.

      The GNP reflects the product as the US as a whole, not what the goverment produces. The goverment itself is responsable for printing and mantaining the money supply but does that not mean that they should simple be able to barrow on what is my work because they feel it will be in my best intrest without asking.

      While this is a republic, and many socialiast aspects of other govements have taken a hold here it does not follow that they govement should be allowed to use the GNP, a product of it's citizans work -- not it's work, as a credit rateing as to what it should be allowed to barrow on.

      And why is that? Well it's because the intrest rate and debt have been spireling out of control for years now. Imageing what our GNP would be like if we did not have to be constanly paying intrest on what our goverment was doing. What if our goverment was able to balance it's books.

      The idea of living with a constant debt may appeal to some people, but not to me. I don't mind paying my taxes, too much, because I'm hopeing they are being used for a greater good. However when I have to figure that at least part of those taxes are going to an intrest rate that I never agreed upon simply beacuse the goverment thought it was best that we give the money to Halliburton and military contracters to seddle an old score for daddy.

      We are allowed to barrow so much money based on the credit rateing that our nations GNP provides, but it does not follow that it is the correct thing to do. And, such as it is, since we decided to go in an muck up the middle east and now have to pay to fix it back up (Something I'm not entirely confidient that we can do regardless of how much money we throw away over there.) the prospect of spending more money on some idea that has been hashed over for years? This smells of political manovering of the worst sort, something this adminstation has been doing all along and the stench of it is making me sick.

      --

      Really, I know what I'm doing...Ohhhh, look at the shiny buttons!
    2. Re:Biased chart- by Phat_Tony · · Score: 1

      "The GNP reflects the product as the US as a whole, not what the goverment produces. The goverment itself is responsable for printing and mantaining the money supply but does that not mean that they should simple be able to barrow on what is my work because they feel it will be in my best intrest without asking."

      This has to do with total government expenditure. I strongly agree that the government shouldn't be able to go around spending (wasting) all this money that we, the people, are generating- but the sad fact of the matter is that they can. They can come take our money away via taxes, and they can spend all they want to, regardless of whether they have it or not. But the issue of the government's right or ability to tax and spend has no bearing on what is a realistic way to view the deficit.

      "While this is a republic, and many socialiast aspects of other govements have taken a hold here it does not follow that they govement should be allowed to use the GNP, a product of it's citizans work -- not it's work, as a credit rateing as to what it should be allowed to barrow on."

      They don't use GNP as a "credit rating" for what they're "allowed to spend." They can spend all they want to, and run deficits as high as they want, in nominal dollars or percent of GDP. They don't need a credit rating to spend. When a bill for another $100 billion in pork-barrel spending comes before congress, they don't say "gee, the debt's $7 trillion dollars, but that's only 66% of GDP, let's add on some more." They just do it. But again, what you're saying has no bearing on what is a good way to view the budget situation. Are you saying that our deficit of $7 trillion would be a problem of the same magnitude if it were assumed by a country like Angola, with a GDP of $7 billion instead of our $10 trillion? Do you really believe that the debt assumed in the Civil War, or WWII, was minor and nothing to worry about, while the current budget crisis is 1,000 times worse? These are implied by your assertion that it's the absolute magnitude of the deficit rather than the deficit relative to GDP that counts. They are not correct.

      Another way to look at this is that even with the increased spending, there would still be a budget surplus if the economy had proceeded on the course it was on from 1992 - 2000. So the whole government fiscal picture relies heavily on GDP. I don't like it anymore than you do, but GDP is the pool of money the government draws upon to pay their debts.

      "And why is that? Well it's because the intrest rate and debt have been spireling out of control for years now. Imageing what our GNP would be like if we did not have to be constanly paying intrest on what our goverment was doing. What if our goverment was able to balance it's books."

      The interest rate has been near an all-time-low for about 2 years now, so I don't think it's been "spireling [sic] out of control" at all. And GNP (or GDP) probably wouldn't be any higher simply by alleviating debt. But the point that less of our earned money would go towards paying interest on the debt is quite true. I'm all for a balanced budget. I just don't see that this has any relevance to the issue of how the deficit should be viewed: in absolute dollars, or relative to GDP.

      --
      Can anyone tell me how to set my sig on Slashdot?
  181. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by spacecowboy420 · · Score: 3, Informative

    so now you are smarter than the majority.

    According to the Stanford-Binet scale, the average IQ is between 85-110. An 85 IQ is almost retarded (it's actually 75 or less to be considered mentally handicapped) and 110 isn't that brilliant.

    So, if the average person is stupid, then half the population is dumber than that. Which means a democracy is lead by a bunch of idiots. I know I am smarter than the majority, and I'd wager you probably are too.

    I am not the originally poster, but I had to point out that he is probably smarter than average, and thus the majority.

    I know you have heard the saying "What is right isn't always popular, and what is popular isn't always right"

    Think about that the next time you decide to defend the majority. I, myself, am always suspicous of them.

    --
    ymmv
  182. In case of Slashdotting by HarryCallahan · · Score: 0
    Milky Way Days
    Returning to the new frontier.

    By Dennis E. Powell

    When President Bush delivers a speech recognizing the centenary of heavier-than-air-powered flight December 17, it is expected that he will proffer a bold vision of renewed space flight, with at its center a return to the moon, perhaps even establishment of a permanent presence there. If he does, it will mean that he has decided the United States should once again become a space-faring nation. For more than 30 years America's manned space program has limited itself to low Earth orbit; indeed, everyone under the age of 31 more than 125 million Americans was born since an American last set foot on the moon.

    The speech will come at a time when events are converging to force some important decisions about the future of American efforts in space. China has put a man in orbit, plans a launch of three Sinonauts together, and has announced its own lunar program. The space shuttle is grounded, and its smaller sibling, the "orbital space plane," may not be built. The International Space Station, behind schedule, over budget, and of limited utility, has been scaled back post-Columbia.

    The content of the speech does not appear to be in doubt; the only question is timing. While those who have formulated it have argued that it be delivered on the anniversary of the Wright Brothers' first powered flight, there exists a slight possibility that it will instead be incorporated in the State of the Union address at the end of January. This has its own, less triumphant, significance, which is in the form of a chilling coincidence. Every American who has died in a spacecraft has done so within one calendar week: The Apollo 204 fire on January 27, 1967; the Challenger disaster on January 28, 1986; and the loss of Columbia on February 1, 2003.

    If the president goes ahead with the plan to announce an ambitious new program to carry Americans beyond Earth's immediate gravitational pull, he will argue that the new lunar explorations are justified not only for what they themselves might produce but also as a means of developing the technology and skills necessary for a mission to Mars, which is expected to be mentioned, though in less-specific terms, in the address.

    Observers might note a familiar ring to the proposal. On July 20, 1989, President George H. W. Bush marked the 20th anniversary of the first Apollo moon landing with a speech at the National Air and Space Museum in Washington in which he called for a permanent American presence on the moon and, ultimately, a mission to Mars.

    That address led to the formation of a group called the "Space Exploration Initiative," headed by Vice President Quayle and NASA Administrator Richard Truly, which in the spring of 1991 released a report, "America at the Threshold." It set a long-term goal of landing Americans on Mars, with space activities in the interim leading up to that goal. First, it recommended, would be "Space Station Freedom" now the ISS followed by a return to the moon, in large measure to develop and test systems for keeping people alive on a Mars journey. The development of rocket boosters more powerful than the mighty Saturn V that lifted Apollo astronauts to the moon would be necessary, the report said, as would development of nuclear systems for providing power aboard in-transit spacecraft, and nuclear-powered rockets, to be employed outside Earth's atmosphere, where they could be used on long missions without the need to carry enormous supplies of conventional rocket propellant. None of the recommendations was carried out as envisioned at the time; the only one that got off the ground at all is the space station.

    The president's speech could breathe new life into a moribund space program whose recent history has been beset by disappointment and failure. The space shuttle proved neither as reliable or as inexpensive as its pr

  183. Hold on just a second here by iamacat · · Score: 1

    I think we all heard about social stability in Ireland. In Tom Clancy novels for example. And if you believe that, I have some beachfront Linux licenses from SCO to sell you.

    1. Re:Hold on just a second here by kevin+lyda · · Score: 1

      yes, tom clancy novels are an excellent source of info on other cultures.

      ireland is not northern ireland.

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    2. Re:Hold on just a second here by kevin+lyda · · Score: 1

      oh, and sco won't sell me a license. i've rung them up and asked for one and they won't sell me one. i did request that they post me an invoice describing what i was buying, they seemed to really balk at that.

      even sco fears mail fraud i guess.

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    3. Re:Hold on just a second here by Paul+Jakma · · Score: 1

      I think we all heard about social stability in Ireland.

      Crikey, what kind of idiot are you? You realise:

      - the troubles were confined to the 6 counties in the north of Ireland which remained part of the UK? (typicalled "Northern Ireland")

      - there has been a ceasefire in place in the north for 10 years, which by and large has stood. Since when the 2 sides have been slowly resolving their differences by political means.

      - the remaining 26 counties (typically called the "south" ie the Republic of Ireland) have been very stable since gaining independence from England - bar the minor civil war in the immediate aftermath of independence.

      I cant believe someone would comment on political stability in Ireland based on furking fictional novels not even set in Ireland by an author who has little to do with Ireland. God I wish the /. friend/foe/fan/freak user system also had a way to let me mark you as "-1 clueless"..

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  184. socialist space race by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Reminds me of when Kennedy decided to initiate a huge socialist space program to prove that capitalism was better than socialism.

  185. What a great argument! by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 1

    Last time I checked Germany and France were running record deficits too. Are those Bush's fault too?

    Great argument there, bud - "Hey, it's OK that the government is screwing our economy because Germany and France aren't in great shape either!". Nice thinking. By that rationale it's OK for the US to start chopping off the hands of thieves because it works fine in Saudi Arabia and to pass a law granting government officials permanent immunity from prosecution because Italy's done so. Yeah, right.

    The US, Germany and France might be running record deficits but Britain isn't. So it is possible to practise sound financial management of an economy. It's just not being done in the US, France and Germany right now.

    (Oh, and by the way, why not do some proper research? The reason why Germany is financially strapped is reunification - West Germany took on East Germany at the end of the Cold War and has basically been supporting, maintaining and rebuilding it ever since. Imagine the population of the US doubling overnight but the economy, budgets, etc staying the same and you'll have some idea about how hard a task Germany has faced over the last decade or so.)

    --

    "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
  186. Come on... try it, it's fun! by MochaMan · · Score: 1

    If you want free health care go live in Europe, but don't whine about the 60% income tax.

    Hey, bucko! That's 50% to you!!! Well... here in Canada, if you earn enough. But man, when you throw in the decriminalized pot, we're talking about a sweet deal! Just don't buy it from the government...

  187. The big picture by DeathPenguin · · Score: 1

    I am not a scientist, but...

    Shouldn't the focus be more on engine technology than "missions?" I mean, sure it's great publicity to send a human out to space, particularly if they're going to walk on some celestial body, but wouldn't it be cool just to figure out how to launch probes with better propulsion systems to get further than probe currently in space? And maybe give them better power sources so they can use more powerful computers?

    Humans are rather delicate objects and can't seem to adjust to large changes in velocity very well. Throw a human at a brick wall at a few hundred kilometers per hour and you'll see what I mean. Sure, a trained and well-conditioned human can withstand being shot out to space by a rocket, but for a high-power rail gun or another type of projectile cannon? I doubt it. If we really want to see what's out there, manned exploration is not the way to go until there's a feasible solution to counteract the effects of really high acceleration on the human body.

    I think it would be great just to have a large magnetic launching platform on the moon with a dedicated power source (Fission? Solar?) to make it possible to send unmanned probes out at extremely high velocities.

    Again, I'm not a scientist, so please correct me if what I'm suggesting sounds totally rediculous.

  188. Hi by mcc · · Score: 3, Informative

    This is a repost of my comment from earlier today on K5. It would have been nice if the AC had credited me, but I don't mind, because hey, this way it's at Score:5, and it's much higher up chronologically in the discussion than it would have been if I'd posted it.

    Anyway, I'm just posting this here now because I want to link to the slashdot story on H.R. 3057, which I would like to suggest you check out.

  189. I think the Moon Bush was referring to by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    is Sun Myung Moon!

  190. Bush picks the "intelligence" he wanted. by khasim · · Score: 1

    We have UN inspectors saying that they cannot find any weapons.

    We have have Iraqi exiles who would personally benefit from a US invasion.

    Which group does Bush listen to and which group does he bash?

    The US inspectors want to spend over $1 Billion looking for weapons that our "intelligence" claimed to have exact knowledge of.

    What does this have to do with Clinton? Clinton didn't invade. Bush did.

    And Bush sold his invasion on the LIE that he had "damn good" intelligence that Saddam had nukes or chemical/biological weapons.

    Bush made a CHOICE to take biased sources over un-biased UN inspectors.

    1. Re:Bush picks the "intelligence" he wanted. by jimmy_dean · · Score: 1

      The point is, Hillary Clinton supported giving Bush the Congressional go-ahead to call Sadam Hussein out because of the search for WMD. That's why Clinton is in on this thing. It wasn't just Bush who believed this. So I'm saying is don't put on Bush or the Republicans what Bill Clinton should have done a long time ago. Just from the fack that Saddam Hussein murdered millions of his own people was justification enough to remove him from power. I suppose you would have said to leave Hitler in power back in WWII if you don't think we should have taken Saddam out.

      --
      -> Sometimes, you just gotta break free from the shackles of proprietary code.
  191. Equal stupidity and lack of social sophistication by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 0, Offtopic


    From the parent post: "... (this is starting to look more and more like Vietnam, thought I am too young to know that for certain)..."

    In the Vietnam War, the U.S. government killed approximately 2,000,000 Vietnamese directly, and many more indirectly. None of those Vietnamese threatened the U.S. directly. Even if they had wanted to threaten the U.S., the average income of Vietnamese then was less than $100 per year. So they couldn't have afforded an airline ticket even if they did want to go to the U.S. to threaten someone.

    Not to be outdone by the Vietnam War in stupidity and lack of social sophistication, the U.S. government's war in Iraq is, for many Arabs and Muslims, equivalent to picking a fight with 330 million Arabs and 1.1 billion Muslims.

    So, while the second U.S. Government-Iraq War is equally as illogical as the U.S. Government-Vietnam War, it is not yet equally as immoral.

    Is the rest of the world just there for the U.S. government to use to act out the inner conflict and anger of its members? If you don't think so, this man seems to be more mentally healthy than George Bush: Howard Dean.

  192. How it will be funded by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If Bush is proposing this, we can all look forward to another round of tax cuts to fund it.

  193. I didn't have a point I was ranting by Charcharodon · · Score: 1
    Why should we help society, if it is not willing to help itself?

    Which is better? Creating advancements that lead to the expansion of the economy and new inroads to human achievement or spending money on people whose greatest goal in life is to live off the govenment dole? If the government wants to spend on a health issue that would have the greatest impact on the quality of life for people in society it would be on mandatory birth control for those on welfare. Those are the people I assume everyone is agonizing over, when they want to "help society" There is little excuse in this day and age why anyone cannot get an education and move up out of that condition if they really wanted too. The hard reality of it is most people don't care and never will.

    I say abandon them ...

    Oh by the way, no point, I'm still ranting

    1. Re:I didn't have a point I was ranting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why should we help society, if it is not willing to help itself?

      Uh, "we" are part of society. What you've just said is "Why should society help society, if it is not willing to help itself?" It is a complete non-sequitor. Nice work.

    2. Re:I didn't have a point I was ranting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not really. Many people today use the word "society" to refer to all humans on earth. Most likely the poster is referring to his society, ie the US, not having to help their society (ie africa)

      There is also the problem in the US of multiculturalism, where you have several societies co-existing and competing for power and influence. He could be referring to this.

  194. Please don't be stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's not Google's fault, directly at least. They're not sitting around manipulating results like this and it's not the first time these sorts of results have happened ("the root of all evil" used to go to Microsoft, and there've been other quirky results, some are still even functioning).

    It happened because sites with good pagerank must have referred to him and/or linked to him as a miserable failure. It's all just part of pagerank, so get off your damn stupid high horse and utilize your brain.

  195. better use for the money by io333 · · Score: 1

    I'd rather see all those billions (trillions?) in cash go to paying physicists to hang out in the lab all day and dream up a new engine -- and test it -- and perfect it. Ion power maybe. That could at least take a probe to a near star. Or how about playing with the double event horizon of a spinning black hole? Math that is decades old now shows that if you have a little rotating black hole (and huge brass ones to fly close to it) you can move across time, space and dimensions. Supposedly some folks at CERN (or someplace, I can remember) are making black holes to order now. The reason we aren't exploring our universe (and at this rate NEVER will) is because our current propulsion systems SUCK. Everything that can be done practically and reliably with a chemical rocket has been done. Moon? Been there done that. Mars, same, just without people. So what. Who cares!

    I'd like to check out the rest of our galaxy.

    1. Re:better use for the money by Zarf · · Score: 1

      The reason we aren't exploring our universe (and at this rate NEVER will) is because our current propulsion systems SUCK. Everything that can be done practically and reliably with a chemical rocket has been done.

      Technically Chemical propulsion rockets BLOW.

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      [signature]
    2. Re:better use for the money by io333 · · Score: 1

      OK. That's pretty funny!

  196. Good job, winner! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And, I say this as an expatriate Canadian, so you can't accuse me of being an ignorant American...

    No, in that case you're just an ignorant moron. I won't call you an ignorant Canadian, because you obviously gave up that title for a reason (see first sentence). Have fun in your new home, you'll probably fit in better there.

    And given (a) your American spelling and (b) the fact that every Canadian knows we have two major league baseball teams, I seriously doubt your claim to being one.

  197. First things first by clem.dickey · · Score: 0, Troll

    Shortly after the first moon landing (1969), then-Vice President Spiro Agnew announced that the United States would put a man on Mars by the year 2000. Lets take care of that first, before we attend to the present Command-in-Thief's fancy.

  198. You ain't the sharpest tool in the shed, are you? by khasim · · Score: 1

    Why can't we cut education?

    Because we don't have enough money to pay teachers as it is.

    Yes, the Social Security taxes are not saved for future generations. But that doesn't mean we should cut benefits.

    Hey, you're entitled to your opinion on whether Oregon is spending their education money incorrectly. A big budget with big expenses is NOT an indication to money is not being spent wisely.

    You might THINK that we don't need those manufacturing jobs. But if we don't PRODUCE something, we don't have anything to SELL.

    We cannot survive by selling insurance to each other.

    The deficit is over $500 Billion AND CLIMBING.

    That is just THIS YEAR.

    That means that we will have ANOTHER $1 TRILLION added to our national debt by the end of next year.

    This is a BIG problem. It means that MORE MONEY will have to be paid in INTEREST on that debt.

    There is a difference between losing money in the stock market and having those funds looted.

    Why don't you check into Bush's recommendations for the SEC?

    C'mon, be honest, you like Bush because you don't understand basic economics.

  199. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by strike2867 · · Score: 0

    Majority, you do remember Gore had the majority. By something like 537,000 people. Keep talking majority, and get the electoral college destroyed in congress. Hell I would stand by you all the way.

    --

    Vote for new mod!!! Score:-2,Imbecile
  200. I know it's not really related. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But seriously, can we really leave out Neil Bush. Yeah, he's in the news now, but let's not forget he "lost" 2 billion dollars in the Savings & Loan scandal too.

    I wish someone would give me 2 billion to lose. Of course, I'm not an over-achiver like Neil, the first 2 billion would likely take me a lifetime to fuck up. Hell I might not even be able to get it all lost, I might have to leave some of that job left to my great-grand kids.

  201. Oh yeah forgot... by Charcharodon · · Score: 1
    You don't understand much about economics do you?

    The space program of the 60's to the present has DIRECTLY contribiuted to, let's see advancements in advanced metals, plastics, medicine, aerospace, communications, computers, and chemistry. Yeah we managed to spend more money on all of that back in the 60's and never made any of that money back....Yeah rrrright..oh wait a minute what exactly are we the world leaders in these days? Advanced metals, plastics, medicine, aerospace, communications, computers, and chemistry...it would have been better spent on some poor trash that would have made the grand contribution of 5 more people who would have grown up to be poor trash, half of which would have ended up in prison....yes argueably a much better investment than a space program

    you my friend are an idiot.

    1. Re:Oh yeah forgot... by Sneftel · · Score: 1

      You're still not getting it. Those advances would all have been possible, even WITHOUT going to space. All we had to do was spend money on technological advances. And if we'd set terrestrial goals instead, we would have accomplished more of use.

      To sum up: Advancements in technology: GOOOD. Advancements in technology targeted to help society: BETTER.

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      The opinions stated herein do not necessarily represent those of anybody at all. Deal with it.
    2. Re:Oh yeah forgot... by stanmann · · Score: 1

      You aren't getting it, these things were "impossible" and people don't throw money at the impossible unless there is an impossible goal..

      --
      Food not Bombs is a nice platitude but it breaks down when you notice that the Bombees are usually well fed
    3. Re:Oh yeah forgot... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      [...]have made the grand contribution of 5 more people who would have grown up to be poor trash, half of which would have ended up in prison...

      Must be that Supply-side math...

      Anyhoo, cutting education and health services never helped any form of "poor trash".

    4. Re:Oh yeah forgot... by Sneftel · · Score: 1

      You actually believe scientists are just "out of ideas"? That they need a moon-landing to brainstorm new stuff?

      Innovation, by definition, is throwing money at the impossible. How about an impossible goal like 100 MPG cars?

      --
      The opinions stated herein do not necessarily represent those of anybody at all. Deal with it.
    5. Re:Oh yeah forgot... by stanmann · · Score: 1

      Such cars exist... however... they create more pollution not less... because they simply move the power generation from many locations to one location... and reduce the efficiency, because every time you translate energy(coal to electric, electric to battery, battery to power) you create entropy... so a gasoline powered car getting 30 MPG is more efficient(big picture) than a hybrid getting 100mpg...

      --
      Food not Bombs is a nice platitude but it breaks down when you notice that the Bombees are usually well fed
    6. Re:Oh yeah forgot... by Sneftel · · Score: 1

      Gosh, such masterful handwaving. And yet you're still an idiot.

      Here's the law of conservation of energy: you get out as much energy, in one way or another, as you put in.

      Let's suppose that a conventional gas-guzzling SUV puts in G units of energy, in the form of combusting 1/30 of a gallon of gas (it's going one mile). Since it starts and ends its trip at rest (we're assuming it travels on a flat plane), ALL energy is technically "lost" to friction.

      Now let's suppose we have a theoretical 100MPG car. Obviously, it only burns 1/100 of a gallon of gasoline to go the same mile. All of its energy is also "lost" to friction, but that's less energy. At the end of the day, the more efficient car has burned LESS gas.

      Considerations of "translating energy" can come into play when you start thinking about battery-powered cars, and other types of cars not directly powered by gasoline. But that's not what we're talking about. So go away.

      --
      The opinions stated herein do not necessarily represent those of anybody at all. Deal with it.
  202. Washington Math by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Strange how Washington math works.

    The 2002 budget for LIHEAP was $1,700,000,000. The 2003 budget was $1,700,000,000. Bush has asked that the 2004 budget be... $1,700,000,000. There has been NO cut in the program, during a time with very little inflation. To normal people, spending the same amount of money on something 3 years in a row isn't a cut.

    But, in Washington, any time you allocate less money to an agency than it requested, you have CUT FUNDING. LIHEAP wants $3,400,000,000 for 2004; the headline of your comment SHOULD read, "BUSH CUTS LIHEAP BUDGET IN HALF!"

    Let's say I make $40,000 this year. Next year, I want to make $100,000. Should I call it a 60% pay cut if I only get $40,000 again?

    1. Re:Washington Math by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The untapped realm of "Lesbian Trapped in a Man's Body" has yet to be maximized. Use the liberal book distribution system; sell it to schools. Guest speaking pays alot, university studies, talk shows, you must get the picture...

      There's very few ways to generate that old fashioned pity for profit the liberals are so famous for. Everything thing pretty much has been done and thanks to the social engineering people are desensitized to most of it.

      Liberals=Greedy republicans will to do anything for a fast buck.

  203. Unfortunately ... by Mostly+a+lurker · · Score: 1
    It is more likely that he wants to base some WMD's there than to check if anyone else has any. Or, perhaps he needs somewhere to test the US' next generation of weapons (such as the mininukes) conveniently bypassing existing (earth based) nuclear test ban treaties.

    (Off topic) Has anyone seen anywhere the accepted criteria for nations allowed to have WMD's versus those who should be threatened with serious consequences for their possession? Is China these days allowed WMD's? Are any nations with caucasian leaders disqualified? Do any nations with black leaders qualify? Note: I am white and not a left wing fringe radical.

    1. Re:Unfortunately ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      More guns mean more accidents. It's propability.

      Peace through a threat of mutual anniliation and suicide bombers just seems like a bad idea.

    2. Re:Unfortunately ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's quite simple: the USA can do what it likes (hence the vast stockpiles of chemical and biological weapons, as well as the world's largest nuclear arsenal); countries which have had nukes for many years (Britain, France) are allowed to keep them; allies of the USA (Israel, Pakistan) are allowed to develop them; but anyone else who can afford it (North Korea, probably Iran) is EVIL.

      Note: I am a left-wing fringe radical. And proud of it.

  204. Re:Equal stupidity and lack of social sophisticati by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    this man seems to be more mentally healthy than George Bush: Howard Dean

    That doesn't mean much; I could say the same about everyone I know

  205. What's worse? by Inoshiro · · Score: 1

    In that link, replace Clinton with Bush, Kosovo with Afganhistan, Serbian with Taliban, and suddenly it's totally current. Everything else fits the same mold. History repeating itself?

    --
    --
    Internet Explorer (n): Another bug -- that is, a feature that can't be turned off -- in Windows.
    1. Re:What's worse? by Sneftel · · Score: 1

      Indeed. It'd be eerie, if the same damn thing hadn't been happening to countries with large standing armies since the dawn of civilization.

      --
      The opinions stated herein do not necessarily represent those of anybody at all. Deal with it.
    2. Re:What's worse? by LordLucless · · Score: 1

      Yeah, except that you'd then have Bush saying words like "domicile". I'm sorry, but nobody's gullible enough to believe he could pronounce that right on his first try.

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
  206. Hmm.... by Monkey+Liar · · Score: 1

    Something very odd about this. Something tells me G.Dubya's not a reader of Stephen Baxter in any case.

    --
    He who fights with Monkeys must take it upon himself not to become a Monkey.
  207. In unrelated news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...Oil reserves discovered slightly below lunar surface.

  208. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yeah, there's a lot of us "South Park Republicans" who aren't happy with lots of Bush's policies, like huge spending increases, blatant pandering with steel tariffs, and corporate welfare in the energy bill. But as long as all the Democrats have to offer is "Bush is a Nazi", they're going to continue to get their asses kicked.

    Ever see that episode of the Sopranos, where the gambling addict owes money to the mob and can't pay? So they take over his business and run it into the ground, borrowing money they have no intention of repaying, so they can recoup the loss and leave him in the hole. That's what this is like. The deficit has reached a record level and they keep charging more and more extravagant purchases. They even started a war as a corporate welfare project. We have the mob answering the phone.

    Yeah, there's a lot of us "South Park Republicans" who aren't happy with lots of Bush's policies, like huge spending increases, blatant pandering with steel tariffs, and corporate welfare in the energy bill. But as long as all the Democrats have to offer is "Bush is a Nazi", they're going to continue to get their asses kicked.

    I don't even care if Bush is a Nazi. Did the Nazis overspend this much? He is running this country into the hole and nobody cares! We have been in uncharted territory for a long time. The deficit has never been this high. How are we ever going to pay for all this shit? Doesn't anybody care about the future anymore? Do you need some sort of song and dance to convince you that the country can't survive four more years of looting on this scale?

  209. Yet another intellectual argument by chrisbord · · Score: 0

    Yet another intellectual argument by a hate filled Dean supporter.

  210. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i post AC to escapte persecution from slashdot editors. plus if something is insightful, i dont need my named on it the record stands.

    so now you know better than everyone McCain would be better. BEcause you have fantasies about this alter-reality and you are here to tell the world he is IN FACT better than bush. You own fantasies told you so, so they must be right.

    Did you write your rep about how bad you though the patriot act was. did you know its typcical for congress to pass sweeping laws if they are "sunset" legislation. who has challenged the constitutionality of anything patriot act does? im sure the 9th district would be happy to find anythingyou dont like un-constitutional - but no one has challenged it yet. hrm. must not be being abused. hrm.

  211. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If the liberals get back in I give my IP to china.

  212. MOD PARENT UP (OEM) by headGasket · · Score: 1

    OEM

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    6E8C 8721 B3D9 5269 5A9B 1122 00C3 C03D 99A7 1CFC
  213. Great... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    another beautiful, visionary speech followed up by jack squat. This man has vision to spare, but no ability to back up his words with funding or personnel. For example: $15B to fight AIDS in Africa - great concept, but less than 1/3 of the promised money was actually spent. Same with "No Child Left Behind". Another example: He promised that we would rebuild Afghanistan - beautiful words, but the NATO forces there have just THREE helicopters backing up their mission. This new space vision, as much as I'm passionate about this (and mark my words, he will sound passionate too!), will be a non-starter. Okay, I'm feeling sad now.

  214. PLEASE MOD PARENT INTERESTING OEM by headGasket · · Score: 1

    I doubt many people know the neocons agenda

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    6E8C 8721 B3D9 5269 5A9B 1122 00C3 C03D 99A7 1CFC
  215. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    doesnt matter. the electoral college system is used today and neither democrat nor republicans have proposed legislation to abolish it.

    i think that the DEMS would have fought tooth and nail if they had won the electoral election but lost the popular vote to keep the big seat.

    anyway, the florida recount is in November 2004. lets see, Gore isnt even in the race. And the rest of the pack are fairly light. while i think bush is a bit light on the great leader department, he has a fairly diverse and intelligent cabinet and i dont think any the serious dem candidates could come up with "a better team." probably a similar one, more likely inferior.

  216. Not to mention by KalvinB · · Score: 1

    "The only reason we aren't conquered by some more unified people is because we have nuclear weapons"

    Have a t-shirt

    front side: "I Took on the Government and All I Got Was This Lousy T-Shirt"
    backside: "Property of Guantanimo Bay"

    The reason we're not going to be attacked any time soon (even though reasons abound in many people's minds) is because the people who want us gone are people who refuse to use violence.

    I can just imagine all the anti-war people starting a war against the US.

    Clinton threw money at problems and failed to solve anything. Us giving the Taliban money prior to 9/11 was residue from Clinton. Bush's administration finally put that idiotic plan to rest.

    Since diplomacy and money have failed now we're trying the tried and true method of control called an ass kicking.

    All the democrates have done so far is bitch about what a terrible job Bush is doing. Unless they can come up with a brilliant idea to solve these problems they claim exist (especially in Iraq) I'll be voting for Bush.

    I can deal with Bush for four more years if it means Iraq doesn't have to deal with another Saddam any time soon. I'd rather give Bush 4 more years to finish up his plan than bring in some new guy with no plan and no clue what to do.

    Ben

    1. Re:Not to mention by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have a few good ideas to solve these problems.

      Disengage completely from the Middle East (yes, completely; screw Israel, Eygpt, Saudi Arabia, and the rest of those Medieval tribes).

      Test the MOAB over Tikrit just before we leave.

      Adopt new sources of fuel. We are still using fossil fuels in the 21st Century - WTF is wrong with us?.

      Ban all public displays of religion and get rid of organized religion.

    2. Re:Not to mention by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude, blaiming the Taliban on Clinton is missing 20 years of Afghan history. Blame the Taliban first and foremost on the Russians who invaded Afghanistan. Then blame it on the U.S. and other western countries who paid warlords to resist the Russians. Then, blame it on the world for abandoning Afghanistan after Russia withdrew.

      It's all so gaddamned complex, that to blame it one person, be it Bush or Clinton, is to oversimplify.

    3. Re:Not to mention by kruczkowski · · Score: 1

      That's a nice shirt.

      But your forgeting one important thing. You are thinking of an attack as a all out war - WWII style. While you may be true as to your statment.

      But one thing you have to remeber that any attack - be it a shoe bomb, to a nuclear bomb is an attack. The reason becouse any of these small attacks send the stock market down.

      --
      hmm... for fun I enjoy launching DDoS attacks against 127.87.42.5
  217. Re:Thank you China! (and Russia) by Performer+Guy · · Score: 1

    Well if this is the case that's a good reason to try and improve American technology, that would be the whole frikin point of an announcement like this, definitely NOT to outsorce booster development to another country.

    The USA has spent most of it's energies and funds on the shuttle and the space station and wasted a lot of effort on Shuttle replacement.

    Both are romantic ideas but they're a complete frikin waste of literally billions of dollars. There are better faster cheaper safer ways of executing a space program but you need objectives, because the truth is there's really not a whole lot of practical stuff to do up there. Multi-billion dollar science labs of questionable value don't excite the public imagination and getting in bed with Russia to build it when you have to pay them & their bankrupt space program to do it was doubly stupid.

    It was the latest disasterous lemon sold to congress by the bozos running NASA in a succession of disasterous lemons, the Space shuttle being the biggest disaster inflicted on US Space development.

  218. Bush saw HoneyMooners episode.. by tekrat · · Score: 1

    And he thinks we can get there without spending Billions. All we need is Ralph to send Alice "to the moon!"

    Remember that we are dealing with a hideously stupid president. He probably thinks that TV shows are real. He probably thinks we have warp drive. He knows we have nuke-ular weapons of mass destruction.. Or was that mass delusion?...

    --
    If telephones are outlawed, then only outlaws will have telephones.
  219. Honestly.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm a Democrat, and I honestly cannot believe the reaction here. Instead of trying to talk about science of a project, the feasibility, the technical aspects, most posters call it "pork" and "political." Why is it so difficult to accept a good initiative when it comes? Money for such a program is the best news I've heard in years! I'm afraid this forum has become far too politicized for a real pragmatic discussion on technology and the future.

    Matt

  220. About time lets use nanotech to do it by thenarftwit · · Score: 1

    It's about time. lets use nanotechnology to get there faster, cheaper and better. It would also be good for those nasty times when solar flares could make life miserable on the moons surface and you need to get all your biologics put back together from all that radiation damage.

    1. Re:About time lets use nanotech to do it by Zarf · · Score: 1

      It would also be good for those nasty times when solar flares could make life miserable on the moons surface and you need to get all your biologics put back together from all that radiation damage.

      It's a good thing you can do so much with nanotech, otherwise we might have real problems... like reality.

      --
      [signature]
  221. Good... by superswede · · Score: 1

    Why don't we tell him and a couple of his friends that there's a lot of bad guys up there and that they can have the honor get up there first, ehe?

  222. Obvious Desire by kogs · · Score: 1

    It is not a surprising desire at all for a mooncalf.

  223. Go ahead, mods: (-1, Offtopic) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    WARNING, SLASHDOT NOW TIES AC COMMENTS WITH USER

    Yeah, it's done that for quite some time. It's so that even if you post AC, you still can't post and moderate on the same story.

    This is true. I used to be a bit more freestyle and witty AC and be a nice guy logged in [basically a karma whore]. After a short while, I could no longer moderate.

    Who cares? It's not as if you're going to get enough points that one day you log on to Slashdot and find a big "YOU WIN!" instead of the front page. What the hell were you going to do with your five points, anyway? Completely overthrow the "Slashbot group-think"? Change everybody's minds so that they suddenly agree with all of your opinions?

    I didn't want to be the one to tell you this, but Slashdot is biased. The points system goes from (5, Agreed with the Majority) to (-1, Disagreed with the Majority). It would be like this with or without the intervention of the editors. Even if you had them, your five points wouldn't stop all the other moderators who disagree with you from cancelling any effect you might have had.

    If you *EVER* mod up something an editor secretly marked annoying you NEVER moderate again, ever - ever even if your karma is capped.

    Have you heard of meta moderation? It's in the FAQ. If you frequently mod up posts that the majority of meta moderators believe shouldn't have gotten that point, then you lose your moderation priviledges. No editor needs to do anything for this to happen.

    Again, Slashdot is spying on its users to make the people who find certain things funny uneligible to moderate.

    How many users does Slashdot have? How many posts are made in a day? Do you really think that the editors have nothing better to do with their time than to pursue petty censorship agendas? Even if this was so, do you really think that they have enough time to go picking through every post for more users to add to blacklists?

    FACT: This is in Slashcode CVS

    So is this:

    Revision 1.7.2.5 / (download) - annotate - [select for diffs] , Thu Feb 8 13:12:32 2001 UTC (2 years, 9 months ago) by pudge
    Branch: bender
    CVS Tags: v1_1_3_0
    Changes since 1.7.2.4: +18 -7 lines
    Diff to previous 1.7.2.4 to branchpoint 1.7

    Persecute Anonymous Coward at IP xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx, downmod all his comments, make sure he never moderates again, cast aspersions on his ancestry, tease his hamster... all that secret mafia conspiracy shit that we do so well. He called us "Slashbots", for Christ's sake!

    It's a fact!

    So AC is a scam here. Hitler-Malda screws AC posts in the ass.

    Even if Malda was persecuting you personally, making sure that you can't moderate on an Internet forum, it's still a far fucking cry from gassing millions of Jews. Maybe Malda took away your mod points. Boo fucking hoo. Hitler took away millions of people's lives. Get some fucking perspective.

    Protect yourself. Try and use proxies or a super good second browser with proxies that you never log into such as Opera (which makes it very easy to delete all private data). Thank you.

    No. I'll just keep on using Slashdot as I always do. I've posted quite a bit of disagreeable shit as AC, and strangely enough, I can still moderate. I'm sorry, but it's not the editors who are holding you down. The majority of people here on Slashdot just don't agree with you. It can't be helped. The best you can do is to go post your opinions on some other forum. I recommend Kuro5hin. It's a lot harder to get silenced there, and everyone can moderate, all the time, no matter how disagreeable their opinions are.

    I'm sorry that people don't enjoy your opinions here, and I'm sorry that I was so venomous in my response. But it's not a conspiracy, it's not a mafia, and it's certainly not Hitler. It's the tyranny of the majority that's holding you down. Fortunately, here on the Internet, it's easy to find a different majority.

  224. Re: pretend liberalism by modme2 · · Score: 0

    well we have universal health care in australia and the highest tax rate is 33%.

    it perplexes me how you can justify to yourself the importance of that extra $30 in your pocket each week to spend on crap you dont really need, while your supposedly fellow humans are dying from treatable diseases or not getting surgery that they require to survive with a reasonable quality of life.

    liberalism is impossible without universal health care, public education and housing - utilitarian social security. how can people be born with equal opportunities without access to the basics if they are needed.

  225. Google? What the Heck? by MudDude · · Score: 4, Funny

    Howdie,

    Has anyone recently tried entering "miserable failure" in Google?

    Can you tell me what happens?

    Regards,

    --
    You don't need to see my .sig. This isn't the .sig you're looking for...
    1. Re:Google? What the Heck? by iNetRunner · · Score: 1

      Heheh.. Man, thats funny! =)

      --
      Store with salt
    2. Re:Google? What the Heck? by laird · · Score: 1

      This is amazing -- how the heck did GWB's official bio on the whitehouse.gov web site get to the top of the results list? Google's search algorithms really ARE good!

    3. Re:Google? What the Heck? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I believe some anonymous player in an online game put it best when he/she stated:

      w00t! pwnzed.

    4. Re:Google? What the Heck? by usmcpanzer · · Score: 1

      Wow. If its on Google, it must be true......

  226. In the red by gad_zuki! · · Score: 1

    > A tax break is not a break after years of tax increases, it's an adjustment back to a more sane level.

    Interpret it as you like: Both cost money, plain and simple.

    >We have not stopped being "at war" for nearly the last 50 years.

    How many 87 billion+ checks were written in that course? Its one thing to be at a cold war, developing nuclear weapons that were going to be developed anyway, and another to maintain a exensive occupation. Not to mention the daily bodybags that are killing morale for a war that failed to deliver the goods: WMD, AlQaeda conspiracies, etc. At least the Russians were a threat.

    >Suddenly the lack of free health care and SS is a problem.

    That's besides the point, but funny how universal healthcare for Iraq is seen as smart policy and "socialism" here.

    >but don't whine about the 60% income tax.

    European taxes are perhaps 10% more than US taxes and that includes healthcare and higher education. We also spend more money on healthcare per capita than any other nation. The universal healthcare people have an argument, saying "move to Europe" is a frank and rude dismissal. There are real arguments against universal healthcare, but I'm afraid you don't know what they are.

    >This current conflict looks nothing like Vietnam

    Agreed, its more like Palestine, which is even worse. We can't just up and leave like we did in Vietnam, we have to work (and pay) for this until everything is stable.

    I noticed you ignored the biggest economic indicator: how much in the red we are. We can only borrow so much before we look and become discredited in front of international lenders. This means that if you want a moon mission you'll have to get, as you call it, less "sane" taxes.

    1. Re:In the red by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Interpret it as you like: Both cost money, plain and simple."
      My money.

      If you feel that some faceless bureaucrat is better equipped to spend your money than your are, then there are plenty of options for you to pursue that option (charities etc )
      I just don't understand why are you so obsessed with how I spend my own fucking money ?
      I prefer to take my own risks and possible rewards without any sort of social net or any other governmental monstrosity hanging over my head - it is called personal responsibility and was precisely what separates US from most of the world.
      Other also call it freedom. Freedom to become filthy rich, freedom to fuck up my life in any way I want ...

      Why do you want to take it away from me ?

      "European taxes are perhaps 10% more than US taxes and that includes healthcare and higher education."

      And your average Swede earns less than the lowest earning group in US - and that's before taxes.

  227. Wrong Bushspeak by NeuroManson · · Score: 1

    It's "Nukular", the F is silent, Lois.

    --
    Just because you can mod me down, doesn't mean you're right. Shoes for industry!
  228. create a shadow govt. on the dark side of the moon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    he's been wanting to do this for a long time. When his presidency (if you can call it that) is over he wants to be a shadow president for 8 more terms, on the moon. He's brilliant.

  229. Re:I nominate Bush to be on first flight to the mo by strike2867 · · Score: 0

    The sun would be better.

    --

    Vote for new mod!!! Score:-2,Imbecile
  230. Re:I couldn't agree more - Return Bush to the Moon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bush really does belong back on the moon.

  231. Re:Equal stupidity and lack of social sophisticati by strike2867 · · Score: 0

    True, but we need to unite behind one person to get Bush out of office.

    --

    Vote for new mod!!! Score:-2,Imbecile
  232. Re:Thank you China! (and Russia) by turgid · · Score: 1
    The cheapest way with current technology might well be to use Russian rockets. 'Course that puts a big ding in the presidential pride, right? A bit like the way the last series of American rockets using Russian engines only worse.

    This national pride thing strikes me as odd. It is archaic and a form of racism ("us" vs. "them"). We do not complain when a european car uses a Japanese engine, or a British government computer is built and programmed by Americans (well, maybe we do but that's another story) so why should we get all hot and bothered about space ships? Why should we not stand on the shoulders of giants and use what is already there? Imagine if each time a new car was developed, the whole thing was done from scratch,: each and every component, not just each system.

    Personally, I'd be a lot happier if it was an international effort. That way when the US Government gets cold feet again, or is unable to meet its end of the bargain again, the mission will continue and mankind as a whole gets something out of it.I agree entirely.

  233. Re:You ain't the sharpest tool in the shed, are yo by pjl5602 · · Score: 1, Interesting
    Because we don't have enough money to pay teachers as it is.

    Facts, please? Now, just think. The state education budget is $5 billion in Oregon. In an ideal world, we could take all of that money and give it to teachers. However, in the real world, there is overhead. So, let's assume that 50% of the money goes to administrative overhead. That leaves $2.5 billion for teachers. Assuming I haven't added a zero and an average salary of $60000 (which is high) that would pay for 41,666 teachers. Again, assuming a classroom size of 20 (which in CA is the law for 3rd grade and under if you want certain state funds) that would educate 833,320 children. I don't know ratio school-aged children are in the population, but let's assume 30%. That means we can support a population of 2,499,960 citizens (Oregon has a population of around 3.5 million. That's just with the state money funding education which is FAR less than the county money funding education via property taxes. You say "There isn't enough money in education". I say, "Bullshit!"; In California the average cost per student is around $7000 per year. You mean to tell me that it can't be done for less providing a damn good education? Please...; Just read this if you really want to get pissed off.

    The deficit is over $500 Billion AND CLIMBING.

    No, the defecit is almost $7 trillion. The budget defecit for 2003 is around $500 billion. I don't disagree that it's way too high. Where do you propose making cuts? I'll start with the federal Department of Education. States can fund their own education (and they do -- the federal money is a drop in the bucket (a little over $50 billion spread across 50 states.)) That saves $53 billion right there. The rest can easily be found in cuts in social programs which is 59% of all federal expenditure (granted Social Security is a huge part of that.) But why is the federal government doing welfare (personal and corporate)? Do you think it can be at all efficient at it. It should be a state/county issue so that monies could be spent more effectively. And those welfare programs should have a sunset date. BTW, the "War on Poverty" that was launched by LBJ, when is that war going to end? There was a 10% poverty rate in the US at that time and guess what, it's about 10% now. So can we declare that war as over and benefit from the "peace dividend" by giving back the monies that would have been spent on that "war" as more tax cuts? Or, hell, pay down the debt with it. I'd prefer the former, but would support that latter. I'd also like a constitutional balanced budget amendment but I don't think it will ever happen...

    There is a difference between losing money in the stock market and having those funds looted.

    Absolutely. I think all of the bastards that purposely over-valued their companies and hosed investors should live a life with just two pennies to rub together while being Bubba's prison bitch.

    C'mon, be honest, you like Bush because you don't understand basic economics.

    I don't particularly care for Bush. He's spending way too much money and growing the federal government at way too high a rate for my tastes. But there isn't a viable alternative out there that is going to do better and can win. BTW, I do understand basic economics. I also understand "government economics" where a 3% cut is only 7% growth vs. the 10% growth that was baselined in. I also know what I would do if I were king for a day (as I'm sure you do too.) But the reality of the situation is that congress sees no need to not spend money like it's going out of style (regardless of the party in control, but I do suspect that the current Republican spending binge is in large part to take away all of the Democrat issues -- education, healthcare, etc.)

    BTW, you migh

  234. Answers in the CAIB Report by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 1


    This leads me to worry that if NASA is deciding what we do next, it will be the same sort of lip service-- just going to the moon for the sake of going to the moon, and not exploring what revolutionary or groundbreaking things that we could do in the process.

    On the other hand, this looks like it would involve an increase in NASA's budget. I've heard it charged the problem with NASA's lack of ambition of late is not the leadership, but just that they don't have enough money to do anything more than the bare minimum.


    Readers might want to take a look at the CAIB Report. Most of it is directly about the Columbia Accident - obviously. But the report itself covers a lot of territory. That includes gems about NASA's culture. And funding.

    Of special interest would be Chapter 5: From Challenger to Columbia. There is a rather telling diagram (Figure 5.3-1 - pg. 102) graphing NASA's budget over the years. There's also a very interesting bit about "earmarking" - Congressional pork-barreling that ties up what little funding NASA gets.

    Again - I can't recommend the CAIB Report enough. It offers a very insightful view of NASA. It is chillingly accurate. Anybody who has worked for NASA will find echos of their experience outlined in that report - whether their work directly involved the Manned Space Flight program or not. And any questions about NASA's history or future may very well be answered by this very frank document.
  235. check your spelling by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The article also includes talk of nuclear engines

    I'm sure you meant "nucular engines"

  236. Re:Thank you China! (and Russia) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As far a "the old Saturn 5 team being disbanded", NASA keeps everything and I am sure that the few remaining staff would jump at the chance to get the program running again.

    Except that (unless it's an myth) they managed to loose most of the plans to the Saturn 5.

    And a myth is a female moth.

  237. who? by toby · · Score: 1

    "it will mean he has decided" - who has decided? Who is supposed to decide these things? He's making an awful lot of decisions on his own lately.

    --
    you had me at #!
  238. Well, that's the Clangers up the creek... by Channard · · Score: 2, Funny
    Presumably they and the Soup Dragon will end up living on reservations soon, while the colonists take over and build cheese-mines to tap its natural resources.

    What do you mean, 'not real?'. Next you'll be telling me the Button Moon landing was faked.

    1. Re:Well, that's the Clangers up the creek... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "A long way away in a far corner of the sky, you can see, on a clear night, a faint blue-coloured star. It is really a planet but it is such a small and unimportant one that it doesn't have a name. For one family, however, it is a very important place. It is home."

      Doesn't sound like the Moon to me...

  239. I had a SimCity game like this once by shigelojoe · · Score: 1

    The people were constantly whining about rising unemployment, so I just caused a microwave power plant "accident" to keep 'em in line. I mean, it's just a game, it's not like anything like *that* would ever happen in real life...

    Oh shit.

  240. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 partisan alarm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    note to self:
    liberals will censor insightful things in order to allow thier highbrow armchair thoughts to seem unchallenged.

  241. Look, it's not a question of physics! by fireboy1919 · · Score: 4, Funny

    And the more accurate usage is not :
    "President Bush to Call for Return TO the moon";
    its:
    "President Bush to Call for Return OF the moon";

    Whoever took the moon had better give it back, soon.

    We NEED the moon. We need it for the children. This is a war - a war on terror. A war against whoever took the moon.

    President Bush has called for a return of the moon - and with good reason!

    How else are we going to govern the tides? I've done it by hand, and let me tell you, this "moon" thing they came up with is a lot better. I, for one, will be glad when it's were it belongs - back in the US, and out of the hands of terrorists.

    --
    Mod me down and I will become more powerful than you can possibly imagine!
    1. Re:Look, it's not a question of physics! by mcc · · Score: 1

      We NEED the moon. We need it for the children. This is a war - a war on terror. A war against whoever took the moon.

      I knew it was only a matter of time before the War On Terror came into direct conflict with the nefarious international crime syndicate of Carmen Sandiego.

  242. Cost Effective by murr · · Score: 1, Troll

    The only way another moon trip is worth the expense is if it's one way and Bush is a passenger.

  243. I'm for it if it gives me a job! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sure, let's go back to the moon. But then it will probably be out sourced to 3rd world countries, so I'll still be out of a job.

  244. When China says jump by Illserve · · Score: 1

    Bush says How High?

    I'd be happy with a new space race, but it's embarassing that our foreign policy is entirely dictated by what the Joneses are doing.

  245. Spend $87 billion on space instead of Arabs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bush is insane wasting so much money on Arabs who do not even appreciate it! Spend the money at home instead! Bush is crazy!

  246. Re:Thank you China! (and Russia) by TehHustler · · Score: 1

    And it's a shame it was cancelled, the Buran flight was very impressive when you consider the whole thing was unmanned and automatic. The autopilot managed to land the craft with a stupidly high crosswind. But, as is often the case with the Russian Space Program, budget cuts killed it off before it ever got off the ground again, and IIRC, Yeltsin killed it.

    --

    TheHustler
    http://www.elmarko.org/ - Useless bilge
    http://www.asylum-games.co.uk/ - Co-Founder
  247. Covering last Moon Landing Hoax by neonlight543 · · Score: 1

    Did anyone see that Fox special on how the moon landing was a hoax. If it was true than next year Japan will have a lunar satellite capable of spotting the dune buggies and other Apollo gear NASA supposedly left behind in the 70's. Maybe if they go they'll drop a few off so their secret doesn't come out.

    badastronomy.com has pretty good counter arguments to the ones presented in the show but the movies still look pretty fake. The moon has 1/6th earths gravity and those guys were hardly leaving the ground.

    What's everyone's opinion on this?

    1. Re:Covering last Moon Landing Hoax by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are a complete fucking idiot.

    2. Re:Covering last Moon Landing Hoax by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You do realize that the suits weigh about 75 lbs a piece, and that one can't exactly air jordan while in one of those suits, right? You do also realize that they weren't trying to jump as high as they possibly could with every single step they took, right? Are you that dumb?

  248. Return to the MOON? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I for one, welcome our new anus-stretching overlords.

    Oh, you meant that OTHER moon...

    I for one, welcome our new green cheese overlords.

  249. wrong order.... by SethJohnson · · Score: 1


    You know, this movie is sounding vaguely familiar. But in the first film, didn't the US go to the moon before it got involved in a long, protracted guerilla war we eventually had to abandon? I know Bush is simply casting about trying to find something to make Americans feel good about the country, but geez-- doesn't he remember what happened to the last 'moon president'?? Or perhaps he is trying to develop a program that will make his successor the next moon president (i.e. get assassinated).

    I really wish he would stop pulling stuff like this out of the blue without any build up. Right along with the missle defense scheme and drilling in the arctic refuge, it's really clear that these ideas aren't coming from groundswelling opinion polls, but rather are the product of all his meetings with industrial lobbyists.
  250. Nationalistic Sapce Flight by linuxislandsucks · · Score: 1

    Nationalistic Sapce flight is too expensive and dangerous, if we did not learn that with the recent shuttle disaster then we are blind!

    BUsh is an idiot

    --
    Don't Tread on OpenSource
  251. Where's the funds? by John+Newman · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Every president since JFK has promised new directions in the space program, but none has delivered the money. I'll believe GWB when he doubles NASA's budget (and the NSF's, for good measure). The sad thing is how little this would cost us.

    In 1965 and 1966, the height of the build-up to Apollo, we spent about one-half of one percent of GDP on NASA - about $4.5billion in a $700B economy. How big would NASA's budget be today if we still spent 0.5% of GDP on it? $70B. What is it, actually? About $12B. NSF gets only a few billion a year for basic research in the physical sciences. We could double both for the cost of about two months worth of Iraq occupation. NASA is a rounding error in the DoD's budget. Unless that changes, grand plans for space are just hot air - ain't gonna make it to orbit.

    Show me the money.

  252. Absolutely Correct by falconfighter · · Score: 1

    The US space program has been stagnating for far tloo long after Columbia. Get back on the bicycle and ride! There's only so far we can explore on Earth. Mars is a stepping stone to the outer planets, and probably to the stars.

    --
    "Give a man a fire, he's warm for a day, set a man on fire, he's warm for life."
  253. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon 4 shazam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    so you support a murderous dictator like saddam because you dont like bush but you dont support milosevic because like clinton.

    transparent.

    the dems in 1998 recommended to clinton that saddam be ousted, btw and here it comes DEMS:

    For Years Key Dems Recognized WMD Threat . . . But Now Howard Dean Has Changed Their Minds

    Dean On Dems: **All these guys running say how terrible Iraq is,* Dean told Iowa voters * *Where were they four months ago when we really needed them to stand up to the president of the United States?** (Jeff Zeleny, *Potential For War Troubles Field Of Democratic Hopefuls,* Chicago Tribune, 1/20/03)

    DEM LEADERS BECOME DEAN LITE
    RIGHT BEFORE OUR EYES

    Dean Accused Sen. John Kerry Of Being *Dean Lite.* *Speaking to the crowd minutes later, [Dean] added, *I appreciate Sen. Kerry saying we don*t want Bush lite, and we don*t. But Sen. Kerry, we don*t want Dean lite, either.** (Joel Siegel, *Sen. Kerry Throws His Weight Around Upstate,* Daily News [New York], 6/1/03)

    Dean Lite: Noun Or Adjective: *Dean is pulling the Democratic Party hard to the left - throwing red meat to liberal activists * polarizing the electorate.* (Deborah Orin, *Kerry Follows Dean*s Lead,* The New York Post, 7/17/03)

    Dean Campaign Accused Kerry Campaign Of Plagiarism. **You get the feeling they*re hiring Jayson Blair to write their speeches,* said Dean campaign manager Joe Trippi, referring to the New York Times reporter who had to quit because of plagiarism.* (Deborah Orin, *Kerry Follows Dean*s Lead,* The New York Post, 7/17/03)

    REP. DICK GEPHARDT (D-MO)
    December 16, 1998: Said Any Delay In Attacking Iraq Would Give Saddam Time To Build WMD. *[W]e believe that the President has made the correct decision to undertake military action against Iraq at this time. Any delay would have given Saddam Hussein time to reconstitute his arsenal of weapons of mass destruction and undermine international support for our efforts.* (Rep. Gephardt and Sen. Daschle, Joint Statement On Military Action Against Iraq, 12/16/98)

    October 11, 2002: Said *We Must Do Everything In Our Power.* **September 11 has made all the difference,* Gephardt said. *We must now do everything in our power to prevent further terrorist attacks and ensure that an attack with a weapon of mass destruction cannot happen.** (Craig Gilbert, *Congress OKs Force In Iraq,* Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, 10/11/02)

    * July 20, 2003: Reports Indicate Dean Thought War Was *Mistake.* *He [Dean] also has said the questions about the prewar intelligence and the continuing postwar violence have made it *more and more clear ... what a mistake this administration made in launching a preemptive war in Iraq.**(Ronald Brownstein, *Criticism Of War Seen As Risk For Democrats,* Los Angeles Times, 7/20/03)

    Two Days Later: Gephardt Said Administration Has Made Us *Less Safe.* *I*m running for president because I believe George Bush has left us less safe and less secure than we were four years ago* I*m seeking the presidency because foreign policy isn*t a John Wayne movie, where we catch the bad guys, hoist a few cold ones, and then everything fades to black ** (Representative Richard Gephardt, Remarks At The San Francisco Bar Association, 7/22/03)

    SEN. BOB GRAHAM (D-FL)
    December 16, 1998: Called For Regime Change In Iraq. *I hope that today*s strike is the beginning of a sustained effort to move from containment of Saddam Hussein*s regime to its replacement.* (Sen. Bob Graham, *Statement About The United States* Strike On Iraq,* Press Release, 12/16/98)

    June 23, 2002: Called WMD Threat And Merger With Terror Groups *Ultimate Nightmare Scenario.* *What we*re concerned about with Iraq is its intention and capabilities to develop weapons of mass destruction, and the merger of that capability with terrorist groups, that is the ultimate nightmare scenario**(Fox News* *Sunday,* 6/23/02)

    * July 10, 2003: Dean *Convinced More Than Ever* War Resoluti

  254. That dusty rock? by curne · · Score: 1

    No offence, I am all for space programs and travelling to the stars and all that, but when is mankind gonna realize that the moon is just a broken down, worn out, airless lump of dirt that just happens to have come into existence under such accidental circumstances that it was caught in orbit?

    I mean, it's nice to look at and all that, but why would anyone want to go there?

    --
    All interpreted languages are abstractions over Lisp
    1. Re:That dusty rock? by Zarf · · Score: 1

      I mean, it's nice to look at and all that, but why would anyone want to go there?

      Yeah, and Poughkeepsie isn't much better either... but they still have bus service. I say if you can get to Poughkeepsie you should beable to go to Luna.

      --
      [signature]
  255. Election by soccerisgod · · Score: 1

    Man this is so obviously an attempt to get geek/scifi fan votes I can't believe it.

    --
    If a train station is a place where a train stops, what's a workstation?
  256. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by varjag · · Score: 1

    Did the Nazis overspend this much?

    They did, mostly on military. Actually, in the late 1930's, the tolal war was the only option for them to avoid immediate economic collapse.

    --
    Lisp is the Tengwar of programming languages.
  257. Re:Going to the moon? Why? by vidarh · · Score: 1
    The problem at the moment isn't propulsion systems. It's the cost of the shuttle. Launching the shuttle cost many times of what it costs to launch a simpler craft like the Russian Soyuz.

    The shuttle is simply ridiculously inneficient, and if the US space program keeps relying on it, you WILL be surpassed by the Chinese (and the Russians too, if they had been able to afford it) simply because they'll be able to justify a lot more launches.

    And there is a fundamental difference between the ISS and a moon base: A moon base would at least have access to some material "locally", and sale of returned rock and minerals could at least offset some of the costs.

  258. Lunatic by GerardM · · Score: 0, Troll

    Can we now all agree that Mr Bush is a lunatic? I do appreciate that some serious flaming is required to achieve this goal..
    Thanks,
    Gerard

  259. Re:yai by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    stick and stones =)

  260. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by MikeXpop · · Score: 1

    Are you saying the majority is above average?

    Wouldn't that make it average then?

    Correct me if I'm wrong, but I thought the IQ scale was dynamic. 100 would always be the average intelligance. It's not?

    --
    Etiquette is etiquette. He kills his mother but he can't wear grey trousers.
  261. Open space effort anyone by PurpleWizard · · Score: 1
    Maybe it is time for a new design of space craft done as a free(freedom) project. [Ok I'm not serious but maybe I should be].

    Engineers design it in their spare time.

    People put up the CPU time to model the designs and missions.

    The community writes the control software.

    Where do we start? I suggest we work on a cheap, re-usable sub-orbital shuttle (never did know what sub-orbital meant, I suppose I should look it up).

  262. Return? LOL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The moon landing was a hoax I tell you

  263. Re:yai by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    stick and stones =)

    may break your bones, but assholes always stay with you?

  264. space terror target? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    At least a builiding on the moon would be safe from an al Quaeda terror attack!

    Theyve got the car bomb but need to get their own space program...

  265. It's War! by peterpi · · Score: 2, Funny
    Bush is expected to declare war on the moon, saying that it has been harbouring terrorists.

    For too long, the moon and Mars have been a partnership of evil in today's solar system.

  266. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 tsarkon reports by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    According to the Stanford-Binet scale, the average IQ is between 85-110. An 85 IQ is almost retarded (it's actually 75 or less to be considered mentally handicapped) and 110 isn't that brilliant.
    85-110 probably contains several standard deviations from the norm in the real distribution. That's like saying, yes, there is this pot of gold, and its 3-5 miles from here and then expecting someone to find it.

    100 was not arbitrarily picked, that was supposed to the average person's intelligence.

    So, if the average person is stupid, then half the population is dumber than that. Its funny when Carlin says it, but its not true. If the population of some country is 2 million. And 55 people have 1 arm, that means the average person has less than one arm. So if you has a distribution 140, 110, 110, 100, 100, 100, 100, 105, 105, 75 , 75, 60 the average is much lower than he median or the mode. The median in this case would be 100. The modal value would be 100 - the most by number in the distribution would have this. On a large population size, you would see that the further you go from the largest distribution under the curve (this is not the average) the less likely these data points are do exist. The way of quantifying the next order of less-likelihood is a deviation from the center. How many deviations is the stratification of this curve. I would guess 85 is probably 1-2 deviations from the center. The numerical average [mean] of that number set I gave is 98 and change. Notice its lower than the modal value.

    Which means a democracy is lead by a bunch of idiots. I know I am smarter than the majority, and I'd wager you probably are too. If you're so damn smart, and they are so damn dumb, don't fucking complain. Sell them shit. Rip them off. Scam them. Markup cheap things. Sell cigarettes and beer. A fool and his money shall soon part. You know, if Mister Brilliant Super Star that you are complains that the US is filled with "idiots" who "vote wrong" you would think he would be able to make major bucks!

    I know you have heard the saying "What is right isn't always popular, and what is popular isn't always right" This is a republic. The US and most advanced forms of government avoid voter referendums and administer society in an abstract manner. Consider the electoral college one of those abstractions (that directly reflects the number of Federal Senators (2)+ Number of Congressman (at least 1) per state.

    Think about that the next time you decide to defend the majority. I, myself, am always suspicous[SIC suspicious ] of them.
    You seem to think that smart people like you should only be allowed to vote. Typically genuinely intelligent people are never as presumptuous as this. Part of being smart and getting smarter is that you learn, the higher up the ladder you climb, the more rungs you become aware of. (The curve of ultimate knowledge / omniscience is effectively asymptotic.)

  267. Dec 17th NOT Likely by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's very unlikely that December 17th will be the day President Bush delivers this speech. Remember that NASA has two rovers on route to Mars and scheduled to touch down in January. These missions could end in miserable failures. What would happen to Bush's triumphant December announcement if subsequently in January, NASA bungles another couple missions? It would immediately deligitimize Bush's call for renewed space exploration and be an all in all political disaster.

    The State of the Union is a much more likely time to announce the new initiative. By that time, the two NASA missions to Mars will hopefully be a rousing success captivating the American audience like the Pathfinder mission did on July 4, 1997. Riding this wave of public fascination, Bush can announce his bold new goals for American can-do space exploration. Granted, the symbolism of making the announcement on the Wright anniversary would be lost, but it's much more politically advantageous.

    (Either way, expect this legislation to die in Congress. Sorry to be a pessimist.)

  268. Re:yai by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    uhhh that was clever...SIIIKE!

  269. Wag the dog - the sequel by KayakFun · · Score: 1

    Why bother going to the moon or mars, when you cannot even keep your own country, or the earth, a nice place to live? Everybody knows prolonged lack of gravity during the trip to mars will cripple you, let alone the cosmic radiation (if it's bad for frequent flyers, how bad will it be for people really outside the protection of the orbit). The only reason to do this is to cover up the problems inside the USA, so people do not see the damage to the value of the dollar (alltime low against the Euro). After all, if a country spends all its money on senseless wars and space programs, what is the benefit for them? A few jobs? Start making the earth a nice place to live, and spend that money on peace and an environmentally friendly economy. If you want hightech, build a fast train network (like the french TGV) that get people out of airplanes. Not bad for a first post to /. don't you think?

  270. Economy / not a vote-winner... by Denyer · · Score: 1

    ...I can't see the American public being entirely enamoured with a President who asks them to reach into their pockets again for no guaranteed return.

    --
    Ph-nglui mglw'nafh Gates M'dna wgah'nagl fhtagn.
  271. Re:I couldn't agree more tsarkon reviled. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    he did no such thing. the guy is an idiot. you ar e a bleating sheeple from his peanut gallery. feel big, me tooing an idiot that never addresses things with facts and talks in riddles, anectdotes and half truths.

    sad person are you he who cant make up his own mind. if i may sa so in yoda talk.

  272. Does he say anything about ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... how this is going to be financed, after the $87bn war budget?

  273. Re:I couldn't agree more tsarkon reports by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So mobocracy is what you want running the world?

    How primitive.

    See what it does to the /. "moderation" system, lets a vocal minority run amok. (Slashdot moderations are anything but moderate, in fact they are viscously bias.)

    This thread is disgusting to read with twisted logic from you people. It is laughable you all like to deprecate the very system that keeps you relatively wealthy over the people you claim to have empathy for. Come Armageddon, you will all fold like the paper tigers you are and come home cryin to mommy.

    I don't see any of you pricks signed up for the peace corps on the way to Lahore Pakistan.

  274. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I didnt know blind partisanship, the complete oversimplification of reality and total lack of critical thinking made for a good post.

    And you views are insular and politically motivated. I have traveled considerably and find that most of the US bashing and US hating is more or less a bubbling up of something that was already there, but the funny thing is, everyone will sit down at the table with the US and do business. I dont any creedence to people who denouce me and then take money from me. Sounds like a displacement complex or something where they take thier own inadequacies, racist tendies or what have you, twist them and project them on something abstract like the US and make ignorant blanket statements, basically like the one you just made.

    Pathetic.

  275. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i would contend that politics and the state of the economy have something to do with one another, but not to the degree that people fantasize about. its amusing to watch people pontificate about poltics and the economy yet they arent involved in buying and selling securities or futures, nor do they own a company. its like a population full of Robert Cringeley clones filling the air with noise.

    I would imagine that you would make a more idiotic president than bush. you think its a man, its an institution, and its not nearly as simplistic as you think it is. vote in 04 and quit your whining.

  276. Yes, a much better place. by Gordonjcp · · Score: 1

    If the US had *stayed the fuck out* of World War 2 from 1939, instead of selling oil and machinery to the Germans right up until 1943, then yes, the world would have been a better place.

    1. Re:Yes, a much better place. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      oh, this is rich. this is classic. i love this.

      you little prick asshole, you dont know shit about anything you god damn fuck.

      you fucking commie asshole, you deserve to see what a vet sees, you motherfucker. sht like this makes me sick. you wouldnt say this shit to a fucking vet that had to look down the barell of a nip or a kraut. you fucking spineless asshole.

      you are pathetic and stupid, you have probably the most assholic and stupid comment i have EVER seen.

      congrats you self deprecating unsuccessful know nothing zero charisma asshole.

      CONGRATS.

  277. How we supposed to pay for this? by Johnny+Vector · · Score: 1
    It's a nice idea, but does anyone remember how much it cost last time we did it? I'd be in favor of it, but I can't pay for it myself. NASA's budget during the Apollo program peaked at over 4% of the national GDP. Are we willing to commit that same kind of money now?

    Sure, some parts of the program would be cheaper, but containing and steering 3000-degree gases is still just as hard as it was back then. We have no hardware that even comes close to being powerful enough to reach the moon, so everything has to be designed, built, and tested from scratch.

    Where exactly are we going to come up with a few hundred billion bucks to pay for this? Apollo cost on the order of $70B, which inflates to over $350B now. Reduce that some for better CAD and cheaper control systems, and increase it for better reliability and doing something more than just sending 7 missions of less than a week duration. Assume we can do it in 10 years (compared to 8 years for Apollo), and we need $35B per year. Unevenly spread, of course, so the peak would be close to $100B for a couple years.

    Maybe we could raise that with a bake sale or something.

  278. Must Be Nice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...to be a self important intolerant racist. Liberal or conservative, anybody should be ashamed of this kind of crap.

    1. Re:Must Be Nice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      must be nice to be an oblivious self important armchair highbrow ass.

  279. ??????Not Funny by DarkSarin · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Ya know...
    It seems to me that there are certain people that would hate Bush even if he figured a way to eliminate 100% of poverty. Not that he will, but my point is that some of the posts I have been reading have the tone that "it doesn't matter what he does, I hate Bush".

    I have the unprovable itch that some of these same people who are bashing his as-yet unanounced plans for moonbase 1 would have rooted and cheered if certain other presidents had made this same decision.

    I have also seen numerous comments regarding Bushing fouling up the economy. I won't argue whether or not his plans to help the economy will work--that remains to be seen. Ask me again in 4 years, which is about how long it takes for a president's policies take to be felt (sometimes longer). If, even for a moment, you think that something Bush does today will affect the economy tommorrow, you are sadly mistaken.

    Let me make this clear: I DON'T support everything Bush does. I don't like the Patriot act, and I certainly don't care for the way he has handled Iraq (if he wants to go around removing dictators, be up front about it, and be consistent). I do think Saddam needed to be removed. Yes I am aware that the US helped him gain power, but that was not GWB's decision (altough it may have been his dad's, which is NOT the same thing at all, no matter what anyone thinks).

    I AM however, willing to let him try somthing different. So, what the hey, let's go to the moon. Just one thing. Before you blast Bush for this, think about whether or not you would have supported this idea if Clinton had been pushing it. If so, then don't rant and rave about how evil Bush is. Not that I expect everyone will be honest about this, but come on, give it a shot.

    Now, having defended Bush, even a little bit, I am ready for the flame war. I expect that I have offended a good number of you, and that's okay--I expect to. But let's make one thing clear--I am not trolling, and this is not flame bait. I want to hear honest and considered opinions.

    --
    "We don't know what we are doing, but we are doing it very carefully,..." Wherry, R.J. Personnel Psychology (1995)
    1. Re:??????Not Funny by soccerisgod · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I have the unprovable itch that some of these same people who are bashing his as-yet unanounced plans for moonbase 1 would have rooted and cheered if certain other presidents had made this same decision.

      When being confronted with a statement made by a politician, it is always helpful to ask several questions:

      • Who said it?
      • What did they say?
      • Why did they say it?
      • When did they say it?

      Who said it? Someone who is in trouble. Someone who is afraid his reelection won't go as smoothly as he'd like. Someone who's actions so far led to two wars, at least one for which the reasons supplied were - if I may say so - at least a little bit shady. Not to mention a couple of interior problems in the US.

      What was his statement? Something that can at best be called very populistic. A proposition that wakes feelings of grandeur and national pride in many people, but is far from being of any real use, military, economically or scientifically and will cost an amount of money that would suffice to put an end to world hunger.

      Why and when did he make that proposition? Left as an excercise to the reader.

      Would I approve of this if Clinton said it? Well. It surely makes a difference in as sofar as the economical and social situation was different (read: better). It's still call it a waste of money though, and that even though I am fond of space travel. But as long as our "domestic" problems aren't solved, we should not waste resources on effords like this. Just my $.02

      --
      If a train station is a place where a train stops, what's a workstation?
    2. Re:??????Not Funny by DarkSarin · · Score: 1

      Yes, but I maintain that there are certain people who would approve of this had Clinton made the statement--REGARDLESS of the economic/political landscape and conditions. Can I prove this? No, not really, but I still think that perhaps some people are a little too gung-ho about bashing the president.

      Now, the question you didn't ask, and I am surprised is this: would I (user #651985) have supported this under Clinton? I like to think that I would.

      Like you, however, I do think that the economic conditions at the moment make this an unwise move, and yes, it can be seen as political only. I can't blame him.

      Actually, the situation with Bush is a lot like that of Microsoft (who I don't like). We disagree with their methods, but if we were in their position, most, if not all, would probably do the same things to maintain our power. I like to think that I would be better, but I can't prove it.

      --
      "We don't know what we are doing, but we are doing it very carefully,..." Wherry, R.J. Personnel Psychology (1995)
    3. Re:??????Not Funny by ShieldWolf · · Score: 1

      Clinton wouldn't have just rung up a $400 Billion dollar defecit, started two wars, stopped enforcing the Clean Air Act for coal burning power plants, increased the amount of mercury (!!!) that those plants can expel, given the top 1% a massive tax cut, and THEN asked for money for a moon shot.

      --
      just = (My)Opinion.toCents();
    4. Re:??????Not Funny by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bush would eliminate poverty by killing the poor. Or more likely, make 90% of the people poor so no one notices. What he's doing now is taking money from the middle class and giving it to the rich and corporations that put him there. The majority of the american people are too stupid to see that he's not a good republican, he's a bad one. The biggest problem: cutting taxes a huge amount and increase spending. Yes, increase. It's a republican congress and hasn't vetoed any spending increases. This morans are simply working to pull money from the general population and move it into the hands of the people who donate to their campaign funds.

      And, if we go to the moon again, who will benifit? Science? Pffft. The money would be better spent on a super collider, of course, that doesn't have the same propaganda/reelection value. The money will go to the companies that build it. Bids will go to the highest bidder bush's campaign fund.

      So, let see, fight a war, where most of the money is going to American corporations and bribes and corruption in the country is the norm. Cut taxes, giving most of it to the richest people in the country. Go to the moon, lets show those chineese who's boss. Take advantage of 9/11 and pass some crazy laws, to be enforced in the near term by religeous crazy nut who couldn't win against a dead guy.

      The next election is an intelligence or corruption test. If you vote bush, you're either a greedy rich bastard who cares not at all for the future of this country, or dumb ass who's easily swayed by someone who "seems like one of us" because he talks like he has an iq of no higher than 105 -- and I'm being generous on that estimate.

      Oh, btw, I'm a registered republican.

    5. Re:??????Not Funny by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly. That's one of the reasons why he is the worst president the United States has ever seen.

    6. Re:??????Not Funny by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you are saying Clinton is one of the worst presidents in history because he:

      Balanced the Budget
      Fostered Goodwill around the world
      Protected the environment
      Reduced the national debt

      Three years ago we were talking about paying off the national debt in 10 years. Instead Bush has increased by a Trillion (!!!) dollars. This will need to be paid of sometime, via taxes btw. The US now owes 7 Trillion dollars. Bush has erased all the surpluses amassed under Clinton in less than 3 years. That is impressive.

      Bush is the worst president in the history of the U.S. by any yardstick imaginable.

  280. Paying the rent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Given that a large part of moon real estate has been sold (http://www.moonshop.com/), will Bush be paying rent to put up a base there?

  281. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you kept it clean. this is your personal experience and i have a lot of respect for you saying this. im actually shocked this got any upmods at all here.

    the politcal spingdoctors can make a demon out of a funny, charismatic man who clearly isnt a troglodyte as some suggest.

    thanks for your personal insight. out of all the trash ive read in this thread, this is the best.

  282. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 FUD and LIES by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    the VICHY FRENCH were the puppet government of the NAZIS and the leaders of Vichy France were EXECUTED for WAR CRIMES. Jesus CHRIST.

    On 14th June 1940, the German Army occupied Paris. Paul Reynaud, the French prime minister, now realized that the German Western Offensive could not be halted and suggested that the government should move to territories it owned in North Africa. This was opposed by his vice-premier, Henri-Philippe Petain, and the supreme commander of the armed forces, General Maxime Weygand. They insisted that the government should remain in France and seek an armistice.

    Outvoted, Reynaud resigned and President Albert Lebrun, appointed Petain as France's new premier. He immediately began negotiations with Adolf Hitler and on 22nd June signed an armistice with Germany. The terms of the agreement divided France into occupied and unoccupied zones, with a rigid demarcation line between the two. The Germans would directly control three-fifths of the country, an area that included northern and western France and the entire Atlantic coast. The remaining section of the country would be administered by the French government at Vichy under Marshal Henri-Philippe Petain.

    Other provisions of the armistice included the surrender of all Jews living in France to the Germans. The French Army was disbanded except for a force of 100,000 men to maintain domestic order. The 1.5 million French soldiers captured by the Germans were to remain prisoners of war. The French government also agreed to stop members of its armed forces from leaving the country and instructed its citizens not to fight against the Germans. Finally, France had to pay the occupation costs of the German troops.

    Over the next four years Henri-Philippe Petain led the right-wing government of Vichy France. The famous revolutionary principles of "Liberty, Equality, Fraternity" were replaced by "Work, Family, Fatherland". Prominent figures in the Vichy government included Pierre Laval, Jean-Francois Darlan and Joseph Darnand.

    The Vichy government kept troops in Syria during the Second World War. Its position on the Eastern Mediterranean coast made it strategically important for both Britain and Nazi Germany. The Allies also feared that Henri-Philippe Petain would allow the Luftwaffe to establish air bases in the country.

    On 8th June 1941 the British Army and Free French forces entered Syria from Iraq and Palestine. After facing tough resistance from the Vichy forces the Allies captured Damascus on 17th June. The armistice was signed on 12th July and pro-British regimes were maintained in Syria for the rest of the war.

    In January 1943 Darnand became head of Milice the secret police in Vichy. Darnand was given the Waffen SS rank of Sturmbannfuehrer and took a personal oath of loyalty to Adolf Hitler.

    Joseph Darnand expanded the Milice and by 1944 it had over 35,000 members. The organization played an important role in investigating the French Resistance. Like the Gestapo, the miliciens were willing to use torture to gain information.

    After the D-day landings took place the Maquis and other resistance groups emerged to help in the liberation of their country. Henri-Philippe Petain and his ministers fled to Germany where they established an exiled government at Sigmaringen.

    In 1945 the leaders of the Vichy government were arrested and some, including Pierre Laval and Joseph Darnand, were executed for war crimes.

  283. it'll be $44 TRILLION by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    White House Shelved 44 Trillion Deficit Report?
    By Peronet Despeignes of the Financial Times
    May 30, 2003, 10:21
    Thursday 29 May 2003

    Study commissioned by O'Neill sees $44 trillion in red ink

    The Bush administration has shelved a report commissioned by the Treasury that shows the U.S. currently faces a future of chronic federal budget deficits totaling at least $44 trillion in current U.S. dollars.

    The study, the most comprehensive assessment of how the U.S. government is at risk of being overwhelmed by the "baby boom" generation's future healthcare and retirement costs, was commissioned by then-Treasury secretary Paul O'Neill.

    But the Bush administration chose to keep the findings out of the annual budget report for fiscal year 2004, published in February, as the White House campaigned for a tax-cut package that critics claim will expand future deficits.

    The study asserts that sharp tax increases, massive spending cuts or a painful mix of both are unavoidable if the U.S. is to meet benefit promises to future generations. It estimates that closing the gap would require the equivalent of an immediate and permanent 66 percent across-the-board income tax increase.

    The study was being circulated as an independent working paper among Washington think-tanks as President George W. Bush on Wednesday signed into law a 10-year, $350 billion tax-cut package he welcomed as a victory for hard-working Americans and the economy.

    The analysis was spearheaded by Kent Smetters, then-Treasury deputy assistant secretary for economic policy, and Jagdessh Gokhale, then a consultant to the Treasury. Mr. Gokhale, now an economist for the Cleveland Federal Reserve, said: "When we were conducting the study, my impression was that it was slated to appear [in the Budget]. At some point, the momentum builds and you think everything is a go, and then the decision came down that we weren't part of the prospective budget."

    Mr. O'Neill, who was fired last December, refused to comment.

    The study's analysis of future deficits dwarfs previous estimates of the financial challenge facing Washington. It is roughly equivalent to 10 times the publicly held national debt, four years of U.S. economic output or more than 94 percent of all U.S. household assets. Alan Greenspan, Federal Reserve chairman, last week bemoaned what he called Washington's "deafening" silence about the future crunch.

    President Bush signed into law a $350 billion tax-cut package on Wednesday saying:' 'We can say loud and clear to the American people: You got more of your own money to spend so that this economy can get a good wind behind it."

    The estimates reflect the extent to which the annual deficit, the national debt and other widely reported, backward-looking data are becoming archaic and misleading as measures of the government's solvency. Mr. Smetters, now a University of Pennsylvania finance professor, said tax cuts were only a fraction of the imbalance, and that the bigger problem "is the whole [budget] language we're using."

    Laurence Kotlikoff, an expert on long-term budget accounting, alleged in a recent Boston Globe editorial that the Bush administration suppressed the research to ease passage of the tax-cut plan.

    An administration official said the study was designed as a thought-piece for internal discussion -- one among many left every year on the cutting-room floor -- and noted the budget's extensive discussion of projected, 75-year Social Security and Medicare shortfalls.

  284. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    They did, mostly on military. Actually, in the late 1930's, the tolal war was the only option for them to avoid immediate economic collapse.

    You can blame the Nazis for a lot of things, but the world-wide economic collapse after the 1929 stock market crash was not their fault. Germany was in some pretty deep depression with huge runaway inflation. I still remember the pictures of people carting around wheelbarrels full of their currency to go buy a loaf of bread. If anything, the Nazis should be applauded for single-handedly springboarding the world out of deep economic depression. But noooooo... all everyone thinks about is "They're the war-mongering jew killers".

  285. What a coincidence... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...I wish Geiorge Bush would return to the moon as well.

  286. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    hardly insightful. the vichy french (the "government of france") at the time in question was a puppet government of the Nazis.

    If one cant see this for the pure propaganda it is, I'm amazed.

    Pssssbt. "Insightful."

  287. "I don't particularly care for Bush." by khasim · · Score: 1

    C'mon, be honest, you hate Bush because all the other "cool" liberals do.

  288. Bushsoft - Lunar Adventure by funkmotor · · Score: 1

    You have landed on the Moon. You are surrounded by dusty craters, all alike. What do you want to do? # get weapons of mass distruction I'm sorry George, I see no weapons of mass destruction here. What do you want to do? # look osama I'm sorry George, I cannot see a osama. You are surrounded by dusty craters, all alike. What do you want to do? # kill saddam George, I cannot kill saddam. What do you want to do? # GODDAMITT!!! I don't understand "GODDAMMIT!!!"

  289. a better subtitle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Instead of " hup-hup-and-haway dept." it should
    have been "Y'all go back now, ya hear? Dept."

    Bush *is* Texan, you know :)

    While I'm at it - skip the moon. Start colonizing Mars, dammit.

  290. Re:You ain't the sharpest tool in the shed, are yo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Our welfare state? America doesn't have a welfare state. Look at the European model for comparison. Funny, not many Europeans seem to hate their governments for taxes being too high. Maybe they appreciate the free education and healthcare more than you think.

  291. So Mr. Bush is leaving? by ChaoticCoyote · · Score: 1

    So Mr. Bush is going to announce that he's going to the Moon? I'm very happy for him, and us. I can only hope he'll invite Ascroft, Rumsfeld, Cheney, and others of his cabal to join him. After all, I wouldn't want him to be lonely...

    Could he should take the Democratic presidential candidates with him, too? Then, maybe, someone of quality would run for office, instead of the numbnuts who greedily crawl their way into the Oval Office, like Gollum slinking his way to the ring.

    Ahhhh, perchance to dream... if nothing else, maybe *I* can get a ride to the moon, where I can find a quiet place to work on my books.

  292. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  293. Digital Flower Children? by squarooticus · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    I must have been asleep when the supposedly rational bred with the irrational to produce geeks who hate Bush enough to oppose everything he does, despite the fact that they'd objectively like some of these things if they were implemented by a socialist.

    Seriously, ask yourselves: how many of you posting in opposition to this are really in favor of smaller government, or streamlining NASA (who says he won't take this opportunity to de-suck NASA?), or really care about the size of the budget deficit or about how high the tax rate is on the highest income bracket?

    It's not BANANAism either ("build absolutely nothing anywhere near anyone"), which explains the actions of the anti-everything crowd, the neo-Luddites: we are geeks. We obviously are not against progress, unless up is now down and Britney has become a nun.

    Now, I personally oppose the government performing research of this sort, as the private sector can do it better; but unless my mods over time are unrepresentative, the libertarians on slashdot are vastly outnumbered by the statists/socialists/communists/pinkos who are surely not opposed to massive government programs. Therefore, I posit that you should love George W. Bush, who has increased government spending faster than any president since Lyndon B. "budget-buster" Johnson. Yikes!

    Be an independent. Use your brain to analyze policies, instead of opposing everything this president does simply because it's the fashionable thing to do. Learn about the history of government, question your beliefs, and see how fixed your opinions really are.

    --
    [ home ]
  294. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by varjag · · Score: 1

    You can blame the Nazis for a lot of things, but the world-wide economic collapse after the 1929 stock market crash was not their fault.

    Please read the post before you reply. Where did I say anything about stock market, or 1920's for that matter?

    In late 30's, Nazi militarty expendentures were way out of proportion creating huge internal debt, and it was recognized by the reichsbank manager, who warned Hitler on this issue. By 1939, it began to show up for an average Fritz, in form of controlled distribution of some goods.

    --
    Lisp is the Tengwar of programming languages.
  295. Republicans love to spend, too... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Federal spending per household is most since WWII

    The Heritage Foundation and other conservative groups expressed concerns yesterday about the spending habits of a Republican Congress that had promised fiscal restraint. The foundation said this Congress's spending increases went well beyond outlays for defense and homeland security: Subtracting those, spending still went up 11 percent over the past two years.

  296. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by Ktulu_03 · · Score: 1

    "They're the war-mongering jew killers"

    Well, when you kill 6 million of them for no apparent reason other than "you don't like them", you sorta get (deservingly) a reputation like that.

  297. Redundant and Off Topic by johnopolis · · Score: 3, Insightful

    OK, we get it. You hate George Bush. When I click on "Read More..." I had hoped to see discussion about returning to the moon. However, 90% of the posts are off topic (arguably) and redundant (definitely) about politics. The topic was not about the effect on the national budget of going to the moon, or the job Bush is doing in office. How about a compromise where you post on-topic and just end with something like BTWIRRRHGWBFMOVSR (BTW I really really really hate GWB for my own very specific reasons). Or go start your own Demdot ~Politics for Nerds. Democrats that matter. Have a nice day.

  298. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by big-giant-head · · Score: 1, Troll

    'Which was dumb of him, since we later found out that a statewide recount would have given Gore the election. Not that it mattered, since the supreme court stepped into something that was none of their business and handed Bush the election..'

    Don't know what time-space continuium you live in, but a couple liberal Fla. newspapers paid for a recount of all COUNTABLE BALLOTS ( note this different than democrats who considered any ballot with conflicting votes cast to be obviously in favor of GORE) showed that Bush still would've won by a thousand or so votes.

    I don't really care for Bush or GOP, I view both parties as badly flawed, but the truth is the truth. For whatever it's worth Bush's tax cuts seem to be fueling the economy and I have a job now because of that, I don't know that Gore would've done any better.

    --

    So Long and Thanks for all the Fish.
  299. Pork - The Other White Meat by thelizman · · Score: 1

    Newsflash genius, both SDI and the NAP resulted in technologies which now make life cheaper for consumers. You can thank SDI for improved CD-ROM drives, for one thing.

    Fuggin reagan bashing luddites.

    1. Re:Pork - The Other White Meat by tarawa · · Score: 1

      SDI was actually a bluff, but it's not like we didn't do any research on it. He is correct that we knew we couldn't do it with existing technology, and it is also accurate that that the Soviets believed we could.

      Was SDI a flop though, nope, it helped end the Cold War and it resulted in many technological advances. In other words, it's was money well spent. ;)

  300. Another Bush and we're finished. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny
    The last Bush said we would put man on Mars. This one says we should put man on the Moon. Will a president Jenna Bush urge the country to put man on Greenland?

  301. Re:Going to the moon? Why? by fbg111 · · Score: 1

    Interesting, but just what kind of minerals are on the moon? I was under the (perhaps mistaken) impression that the moon is mainly a lot of rock with few valuable natural resources.

    --
    Flying is easy, just throw yourself at the ground and miss. -Douglas Adams
  302. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by xdroop · · Score: 1
    So, if the average person is stupid, then half the population is dumber than that. Which means a democracy is lead by a bunch of idiots. I know I am smarter than the majority, and I'd wager you probably are too.

    When questioned, 85% think they are smarter than average. They can't all be right.

    --
    you should read everything on the internet as if it had "but I'm probably talking out of my ass" appended to it.
  303. That's no moon... by presearch · · Score: 1

    It's just speculation at this point if he'll be announcing it...

    If he does, they'll call it the "Space Technology Revitalization Act" and bush will get his Kennedy-esque photo-op for the election.
    Large amounts of money will be lavished on aerospace campaign contributers.
    NASA assets will be given away to these companies to plunder.
    Massive layoffs will ensue from these companies, while large bonuses will be given to the top execs.

    And we'll never even get off the ground.

    We will announce however, that great progress is being made, but we're still unable to find the Moon.

    That's no Moon, it's a campaign ploy!

  304. An idiotic plan by an idiot. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Going to the moon the first time was a ridiculous waste or money. Something like a trillion dollars in today's money. And what did we get from it? a warm fuzzy feeling by beating the Soviets and some moon rocks. Now Bush wants to throw away countless billions more to go there again? Yeah, that makes a lot of sense. It's just another way for Bush to shovel billions of dollars in taxpayer money to favored companies. Let's invest a trillion in developing solar power or perhaps rebuilding the crumbling parts of the US. This is a complete waste of money and effort.

  305. I agree by cpn2000 · · Score: 2, Funny

    President Bush To Call For Return To Moon

    I agree, he should really return to the moon ... and stay there for gods sake.

    --
    All you touch and all you see is all your life will ever be ... Dark side of the moon
  306. Russian rocket engines by amightywind · · Score: 2, Informative

    The cheapest way with current technology might well be to use Russian rockets. 'Course that puts a big ding in the presidential pride, right? A bit like the way the last series of American rockets using Russian engines only worse.

    The successful Atlas V rocket uses a Russian design RD-180 engine. The Russian's have accelled at developing high efficiency Kerosene/Oxygen lower stage engines. Lockheed Martin was smart enough to realise this when they developed the Atlas III/V series. But the key to success of American rockets which, sets them apart from Russia and Europe, is the use of LH2 in the upper stages. The Pratt and Whitney RL-10 engine, the J2, Rocketdyne SSME and RS-68 are all spectacularly successful designs.

    Personally, I'd be a lot happier if it was an international effort. That way when the US Government gets cold feet again, or is unable to meet its end of the bargain again, the mission will continue and mankind as a whole gets something out of it.

    One has only to look at the International Space Station as an example to see how an "international effort" might work. The U.S. should go it alone and send back TV pictures for the rest of the world.

    --
    an ill wind that blows no good
  307. Re:I couldn't disagree more by JJ · · Score: 1

    The modern computer industry owes its existence to the space program. Nobody else needed a small computer. This alone has immeasureably improved the lives of a large portion of the population of the planet.

    --
    So long and thanks for all the fish . . . !!!
  308. Decisions, decisions... by mjh · · Score: 3, Funny
    The /. conundrum:
    • Hate Bush
    • Love space travel
    What to do? What to do?
    --
    Key to financial independence: Spend less than you earn. Save and invest the difference. Do it for a long time.
  309. The best way to the moon by dpilot · · Score: 1

    Which brings up a pet thought of mine...

    What about a 'transfer station' in a highly elliptical orbit around both Earth and Moon? Agreed that a rendezvous with the transfer station would be every bit as energetic as getting to the Moon, but it could be done with something minimal like a Soyuz capsule, in terms of crew space. Once docked, the crew space of the transfer station could be much more spacious, maybe even with some equipment for science. Consumables would have been carried aboard the rendezvous capsule, with the crew. Upon return from the Moon, the lower mass capsule could again be used to get to more Earthly speeds.

    Of course the same orbital mismatch would occur at the Moon, perhaps solved in a similar fashion. The transfer station would keep some sort of reusable LEM docked, except when being used on the Moon. That LEM would have the additional requirement of reaching lunar escape velocity in order to rendezvous with the transfer station.

    Take the idea a little further - space stations in orbit around both Earth and Moon, and a transfer station orbiting both. Get from Earth to the Earth station, go from there to the transfer station, from transfer station to the Moon station, from there to the Moon. The essence is to get things down to minimal, efficient, single-purpose vehicles, and accelerate as little mass as possible at any given step.

    --
    The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
  310. Re:"The commies can't do it before we do!" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    The Commies can't do it before we did. They're already 34 years behind.

    And to Bush being the most hated U.S. president ever, you must mean outside the U.S. Well, those folks don't vote. And Oderint dum metuant.

    ~~~

  311. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 FUD and LIES by Uncle+Joe+Steel · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Puppets or not, Morocco and Algeria were defended by French forces not German. You can google for Operation Torch or read a description on the DTIC site: Joint Power Projection: Operation Torch

  312. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by tommy_teardrop · · Score: 1

    Yeh! Flush it down the toilet!

    Woo-Ho!

    --
    -- IANAL, BIPOOTV
  313. Re:Award for first kneejerk liberal anti-Bush post by paganizer · · Score: 2, Funny

    Hey! us right wing nuts bash Bush also!

    --
    Why, yes, I AM a Pagan Libertarian.
  314. I invoke Godwin's Law by s20451 · · Score: 0

    But as long as all the Democrats have to offer is "Bush is a Nazi"

    I invoke Godwin's Law. You have lost the thread. Thank you and have a nice day.

    --
    Toronto-area transit rider? Rate your ride.
  315. Moon base = Missile base by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Right. I'm thinking he's more likely to put missiles on the moon. Besides, doesn't the US have to go to the moon to prove it was there the first time? ;)

  316. Ya know.... by S1mon_Jester · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I could have...and think I did make damn near this same speech about Clinton.

    Yes, some people hate Bush. Some people hate Clinton. That's okay, get over it.

    The idea of going to the moon again and eventually going to Mars and beyond is an idea of value, regardless of who says it.

  317. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 1

    I always point to the fact that Gore did not win his home state. if he had, Florida would not have mattered and Gore would have won the election.

    not even McGovern lost his home state.

    --



    I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
  318. Oooh dear, someone's thrown their toys by Gordonjcp · · Score: 1

    Who taught Baby such bad words?

  319. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 FUD and LIES by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    im aware. but occupied france and its puppet govermnet means any entities operating under that government's command were third reich and nazi affiliated and legitimate targets.

  320. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    hear! hear!

  321. Re:Is the moon anything like Texas? by the_consumer · · Score: 1
    If not, they both have one thing in common.

    Yeah, the desire to pull a huge asshole (Bush) apart.

    --
    "If you're thinking what I'm thinking, you're right." -
  322. David Letterman: George Bush, being stupid by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 1, Troll


    It's not hate-filled to say that George Bush does not seem intelligent. Watch David Letterman. (For those of you not in the U.S., he is a talk show host who is on TV every weekday night.) Letterman has been regularly showing video clips, taken from that day's news, of our President, George Bush, doing something stupid.

    For example, in one David Letterman clip George Bush read a speech and when he was finished gave a cough and a jerky movement that David Letterman characterized as, "That was boring. Now I'm out of here."

    I'm tired of having a president that other foreign leaders characterize as an "idiot". That reference is just one example.

    There is a part of the Republican party composed of people who will do anything to sell the U.S. government to those, mostly their friends, who have money. They are truly not a political party; they can rightly be characterized as criminals. George Bush is their figurehead. For example, look at this CNN article, "Vice President Cheney has a financial interest in Halliburton." Quoting David Letterman, "When you write the check for your part of the $83 billion to rebuild Iraq, remember that there are two Ls in Halliburton."

    According to someone I know who was in Vice President Dick Cheney's social circle while he was at Halliburton, Cheney was (is) an alcoholic with a history of boozing and womanizing. This was not different from George Bush, of course.

    I'm not the only person who is looking for an alternative to President Bush. I think that maybe Howard Dean is the best alternative.

    Also, note that this post is on-topic. We are talking about the politics of the U.S. government spending billions of money it doesn't have to send people to the moon. Others have characterized this as intended to be a distraction from the serious problems the present U.S. government administration has caused.

    1. Re:David Letterman: George Bush, being stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm willing to bet if the major news networks followed you around every day with a camera. David Letterman could make you "not seem intelligent".

    2. Re:David Letterman: George Bush, being stupid by cayenne8 · · Score: 0, Offtopic
      As I understand it...it is a matter of public record that Cheney has divested of all interest in Halliburton. I don't actually think he profits in any way directly at this time from them, no matter what contracts they get.

      As for Dean...well, I think he has a really good base of the far left thinkers in the US at this time. However, I think that most of the US is more moderate...neither far left nor far right...

      I can't say that I'm happy with everything Bush has done. I like the tax cuts...I don't believe in a govt. run wealth redistribution system. However, I don't like the way he has also increased spending and promoting more big government. And don't like the intrusiveness of Ashcroft and his bunch.

      However, I feel that if Dean gets the Dem. nomination, he will, at least if the election were held today...lose by a landslide. I don't think his message can relate to the majority of people in the US. And...he has trouble speaking 'off the cuff'. If he gets off script, he gets into trouble. The debacle on Meet the Press really opened my eyes to this. He just doesn't seem well versed in many things. I mean, GWB isn't that great of a speaker, but, I think he'd beat Dean in a debate...especially if in a format where scripted answers wouldn't be the only way to answer.

      Bush still has over 50% approval rate...of course things change in a year...but, right now, I'm watching for the Dem's to put up a valid candidate...and through all the speeches and debates I see, I don't see any of them doing anything but bash Bush. I'm looking for their plans, goals, and programs and ways they want to implement their ideas. But, all I hear is Bush sucks. I'm more interested in their vision for the next presidency. I'd like to hear them spell them out.....but, I've yet to see this. I truly wish a 3rd party candidate could be a viable choice...I want someone slightly left of Reps...and a little further right of Dems.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    3. Re:David Letterman: George Bush, being stupid by willtsmith · · Score: 1

      Also, note that this post is on-topic. We are talking about the politics of the U.S. government spending billions of money it doesn't have to send people to the moon. Others have characterized this as intended to be a distraction from the serious problems the present U.S. government administration has caused.


      One trillion for the moon????

      Bush simply needs a topper for spending $200 billion on sending men to Iraq ;-)

      --
      -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!
    4. Re:David Letterman: George Bush, being stupid by wohas · · Score: 1

      What do you mean you're tired of having a president that other foreign leaders characterize as an "idiot"? It doesn't matter a hill of beans what other foreign leaders think of our President. We finally have a man with integrity that is going to stand up for American security and American interest. I suppose that you think the UN should handle the Iraq situation. The same UN that passed countless resolutions and enforced none of them. The same UN that profited heavily from the food for oil program and made Kofi Annan a very wealthy man and gave Saddam all the money he would ever need. The same UN that at the first sign of danger to them in Iraq were going to pull out of because it was to dangerous!! Yeah! I think they should take care of our security! One more thing, about those Republicans who have all the money. Check out the US senate, nine of the top ten wealthiest senators are Democrats. George Bush was ELECTED not selected. He is your President so just get over it. And I'm glad to say He is going to be ELECTED again. So keep quoting David Letterman. Since thats obviously the most "stupid" thing you could do. GO DEAN!!!!

  323. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by That's+Unpossible! · · Score: 1
    Believe me, I am not defending the spending of Congress, I believe the federal government should be vastly reduced in size, not growing by leaps and bounds. However, the statement below that you made is quite ignorant.

    They even started a war as a corporate welfare project.

    I will quote Neal Boortz who lays into this lame argument quite nicely:

    HALLIBURTON .. THE REAL STORY

    I am so completely sick and tired of hearing these Bush-hating, left-wing, Saddam-appeasing neo-socialists rant and rave about Halliburton that I could ..... well ... I could just spit. What morons. These are people who hate capitalism, hate the profit motive, and believe that every evil visited on the world is done so in the name of corporate greed. Losers all.

    To listen to these irrational cretins you would think that this entire war in Iraq was being fought for one purpose, to enrich Halliburton. It would be not at all surprising if some of these anti-capitalist geeks believed that Bush arranged for those airplanes to fly into the World Trade Towers for that one purpose .. enriching Halliburton.

    Try this experiment. The next time you hear some liberal parrot squawk about Halliburton just ask them one simple question. "Well, pal --- since you're such an expert on Halliburton, why don't you tell me just what it is that Halliburton does? Name one product or one service that Halliburton provides."

    Don't hold your breath waiting for cogent answer.

    Part of the perceived evil that is Halliburton is the fact that Dick Cheney once ran the company. As everyone knows, we should strive mightily to avoid ever placing anyone with the know-how and ability to run a multi-million dollar corporation in a position of responsibility in the political realm. Actually making a success of yourself in the private sector disqualifies you for public service, while not having any actual discernable private sector job skills is the supreme qualification for public service.

    So ... let's get to the bottom of this. Did Bush or Cheney do something underhanded or illegal in handing some rather lucrative contracts to Halliburton for infrastructure and other work in Iraq?

    We'll start with another question you can ask your bedwetting leftist friends. Ask them if they've ever heard of LOGCAP. They will tell you that they don't know what that is. You won't be at all surprised. LOGCAP is the Logistics Civil Augmentation Program created by the United States Army. It is a program that uses a competitive bidding process to award a contract to a corporation to be on call to provide whatever services the Army might need ... right then. Some brilliant thinkers in the Army came to the conclusion that it might not be such a swell idea to screw around with competitive bidding processes for logistics and other services during wartime. Imagine that.

    Halliburton won the competitive bidding process for LOGCAP in 1992. They then lost that bidding process five years later in 1997. In spite of the fact that Halliburton no longer held the LOGCAP contract, Bill Clinton went ahead and awarded a no-bid contract to Halliburton to do some work in the Balkans supporting U.S. peacekeeping actions. Odd, isn't it. The same people who are screaming about Halliburton right now had absolutely nothing .. nada .. nunca .. not one thing to say about Halliburton when it was the Clinton Administration that was handing out contracts .. with no bidding, by the way. You might also be interested in knowing that Al Gore was quite a fan of Halliburton. Gore's reinventing government panel had some very complimentary things to say about Halliburton and the services it provides to the U.S. government. Ahhh ... but what does Al Gore k

    --
    Ironically, the word ironically is often used incorrectly.
  324. This is Bush's new environmental policy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    "Well, boys, get to logging the National Forests."

    "What's next on the agenda, Mr. President?"

    "Well, now that we have done our best to destroy this planet with our avarice, I'd say it's time to get off of this rock. To the moon!"

  325. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by Tirephus · · Score: 1

    Ever see that episode of the Sopranos, where the gambling addict owes money to the mob and can't pay? So they take over his business and run it into the ground, borrowing money they have no intention of repaying, so they can recoup the loss and leave him in the hole. That's what this is like. The deficit has reached a record level and they keep charging more and more extravagant purchases. They even started a war as a corporate welfare project. We have the mob answering the phone.

    How does this address the deficiencies of the opposition? The poster has already pointed out that he doesn't care for the Bush policies, but at least has the intellectual honestly to acknowledge that his opposition party doesn't bring any alternatives to the table. All you do is switch "Bush = Hitler" with "Bush = Mob". Go educate yourself in Macroeconomics already.

    While I expect to see this degree of stupidity in Slashdot, it distrubs me that it got moderated so high.

  326. Screw the moon by stuartdenny · · Score: 1

    The moon! Forget the moon. The cheese commercial is only half joking. Why go back if there's nothing there. There's no water. There's no atmosphere. There's no cheese. Forget the moon. I say head for the asteroid belt or Mars or Alpha Centauri. We've got to get off the planet and out of the solar system before the sun explodes!

    --
    -- Stuart Denny, stuartdenny@hofo.com "Everything is everything"
  327. Um... by Cnik70 · · Score: 1

    Yeah, right, sure... Would the star trek geeks in the audience please quit smoking pot and posting these articles. Somehow I don't see a moon trip when we cannot even find the funding to replace the shuttle. And has everyone forgotten that we did this already roughly 30 years ago, and all we found were some useless rocks.

    --
    -Cnik
    1. Re:Um... by Tackhead · · Score: 1
      > Somehow I don't see a moon trip when we cannot even find the funding to replace the shuttle.

      If we scrapped the shuttle and ISS, however, we'd have plenty of funding to go to the moon, even NASA-style.

    2. Re:Um... by Cnik70 · · Score: 1

      ...but there would still be no reason to go. been there, did that, found nothing....

      --
      -Cnik
  328. Hooray! About time by bobrankle · · Score: 1

    With technology now they can run the whole craft from that sinclair Z80. I remember watching the first moon landing, I would love to see another, even being 5, I still got a thrill of being able to look up and see then man on the moon.

  329. Back to the Topic by Jerry · · Score: 4, Insightful
    This discussion has deteriorated into the Extreme Left and the Extreme Right bashing each other over comments each make about Bush.


    knock, knock.... does anyone in the class remember what this discussion topic was about?


    Going back to the Moon.


    The first Moon program, begun by JFK, was an absolute boon to the economy, returning about 7 times to the economy what was spent on the program. Most tech jobs today, and their subsidiary jobs, are a direct spin-off of the Moon program... transistors, plastics, ceramics, biology, medicine, miniturization of computers, software technology (and perhaps Slashdot itself) ... the list is too lengthy to put here... owe their current advances to gains made under the first Moon program, and space technology in general.


    If a return to the Moon has the same effect this time as it did last time the gains will create employement for a LOT of people and be a boon to the economy.


    However, there is one thing we should do first: move our energy base from Carbon to Hydrogen. A Hydrogen Project similar to the "Manhatten Project", sans the secrecy, should be initiated to complete the necessary research, if it needs completion, and begin the transfer of our power generation and transportation industries. Solar Power Tower II is a very good start. Forward thinking communities could divert resources from dead-end Windmill plans to SPT2 sites and get a better return on their investment.


    There is less than two decades of Carbon reserves remaining. We've got to get moving...

    --

    Running with Linux for over 20 years!

    1. Re:Back to the Topic by Shadowlore · · Score: 1

      If a return to the Moon has the same effect this time as it did last time the gains will create employement for a LOT of people and be a boon to the economy.

      It can't. The technology for going ot the moon is too small.

      As opposed to the earlier Flag and Footprints mission:

      * Our computing power has uhh massively increased. Watches more posess more computing capability than was used for Apollo

      * Our materials technology makes Apollo materials look like stone tools. This includes fuel.

      So another F&F mission would do noting for technical advancement. Anytime a president proposes such an event, it is an F&F mission.

      How about a base? you ask.

      Doing what?? There isn't much there that is economically interesting.

      Now Mars, it has the potential to establish a colony. It has things we humans need to live, Luna does not. In order for space to benefit us technologically this time around, we need ordinary people living there. The moon does not provide the means. Nor does a floating hunk of metal in space. Mars, however, does.

      --
      My Suburban burns less gasoline than your Prius.
    2. Re:Back to the Topic by febill · · Score: 1

      I truly believe that if we are to attain Mars or Jupiter we must first return to the moon. I also pine for the advent of a hydrogen based economy.

      I believe the proposed return to the moon will bring us even closer to that dream. Look at the tech developed for the Lunar Landings, Fuel Cells. It was these that allowed the ships to travel so far from Earth. The ships that will spend long times on the lunar surface will have to be even more efficient. That will necessitate the research that is suggested above.

      I really hope that we can as a world achieve these goals and can peacefully enter into a new age of prosperity, knowledge and adventure.

      Peace,

      febill

  330. Moon != Moron by kilimangaro · · Score: 1

    When its so easy to read between the line, we can say that these guys are sick.... All that they do is nothing but propaganda. And now, a return to the moon... how can they call it a return ? The first time was a lie...
    I say that they want us to look at the sky as they ravage some third world countries.

    Know this tale ?
    The rogue and the merchant

    The Rogue: (pointing his finger) Hey look behind you ! thats is a very weird thing...
    The Merchant: (looking behind) Huh ? I see nothing....
    The Rogue: (running away with all the merchant stuff)
    THE END

    --
    "Insanity in individuals is something rare, but in groups, parties, nations, and epochs it is the rule." - Nietzsche
  331. Re:I couldn't agree more tsarkon reviled. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A lovely response from someone who couldn't find the shift key and couldn't spell to save his life.

    When posting a counterargument, it might help to actually say something other than "He was wrong" with no supporting facts.

  332. Bush by Skull_Leader · · Score: 1

    Can we just blast his *ss to the moon? It might save money and the enviornment here on good 'ol earth. "The Moon is a Harsh Mistress."

    --



    "This technology stuff is just plum crazy!"
  333. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by SubtleNuance · · Score: 1

    "South Park Republicans"

    Then please, please vote for the Libertarians.

    Now, as my sig probably shows, Im a Green and a Social Democrat. A Liberal. From my mighty perch up here in Canada, I can tell you -- with 100% authority -- that the #1 Failure in America is Republican/Democrat collusion. They have decided that as long as the other stays relatively calm, and doesn't interfere with any of the other's sacred-cows, that they can pass the power back and forth (sorta) while giving the impression that there A) Is value in American Democracy and B) Voting Matters.

    Their two parties are so entrenched, in the the three arms of your government, right down through politics in the bureaucracy (FBI/CIA/ARMY/NAVY are all parts of partisan politics), there is a stale-mate. And really, a Stale Democracy.

    My 100% guaranteed solution? My 100% guaranteed path to a more virtuous and prosperous USA? My 100% guaranteed method of satisfying MOST Americans. Is to move to a more consensus based Democracy by REMOVING the stranglehold of the Democrats/Republicans.

    Because Neither of those parties * REALLY * stand on any of their perceived principles (witness Bush's defecit/clintons' warmongering as two recent examples).... my 100% guaranteed plan:

    Wait for it

    If you normally vote Democrat: Vote Green
    If you normally vote Republican: Vote Libertarian

    Commit to this. Do not falter. Do not decide "oh, its a close race, Im going to vote strategically". Do not buy the "we have to make sure %other-guy% doesnt win -- its too close, vote %party%", DO NOT CAVE! Continue to Vote AGAINST these two parties.... if you Vote for Republicrats, dont bother, just stay home, because the rest of the USA's sheep are going to be pretty much 50-50. Democracy as entertainment, as empty ideological rhetoric clashing, BS is going to doom you.

  334. Cargo costs and the Mouse by fygment · · Score: 1

    Cargo costs will be exhorbitant no matter what theory you ascribe to.

    On the one hand, they may have to bring all that gear that they used to fake the original moon landings and plant it appropriately. Heck, with China going up and threatening to definitively blow the lid off the whole scam, there's a lot of work to be done to simulate that many supposed landings.

    Of course if they didn't fake the landings, then there will be all sorts of fencing and concession stands required to establish a park around the historic sites. Which of course means Disney will be a major investor so it won't actually cost the government as much. Parking won't be a problem though.

    --
    "Consensus" in science is _always_ a political construct.
  335. Re:Going to the moon? Why? by merky1 · · Score: 1

    Ummmm.... aren't many of the innovations that you talk about a by-product of an increased space presence? I know that the shuttle hasn't advanced general sience for a while, but the initial push to put one together did move technology along.



    Hopefully this "program" will have similiar effects.

    --
    --WooooHoooo--
  336. Wouldn't support space flight in similar economy.. by Denyer · · Score: 1

    ....be it Clinton, Bush or Barney.

    --
    Ph-nglui mglw'nafh Gates M'dna wgah'nagl fhtagn.
  337. Guns and Margarine by Anonymous+Meoward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I'm old enough to remember the Johnson administration, and the phrase "guns and butter" to describe gov't spending back then. You know: guns for the Cold War (and the hot war in Vietnam) and butter for the domestic spending.

    It seems today that "compassionate conservatism" is increasing spending, but not for the masses as in days of yore. (That Medicare reform bill that was passed a few weeks ago? The only winner was Big Pharma; it was an early Xmas present to Glaxo et. al.)

    So, average Americans get fake benefits from the outrageous spending, while we funnel money into Iraq. (Iraq won't be another Vietnam, by the way. It will be worse: the US now has its own version of the Gaza Strip, only one about the size of California.)

    Folks, this is "guns and margarine": real defense spending; tax breaks, patronage, and corporate gifts masquerading as domestic spending; and a lot of red ink that our grandchildren will never be able to mop up.

    Don't get excited about the plans for NASA. The only thing you should consider is that somebody is trying to buy you.. with your grandchildren's money.

    --
    --- The American Way of Life is not a birthright. Hell, it's not even sustainable.
  338. Put yourself in Bush's shoes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Put yourself in Bush's shoes. He's not the one in debt. And he has to decide what to do with your tax dollars.

    He can spend them on education and healthcare for some poor suckers.

    Or he can hand them over to defence, aerospace and construction businesses in which the Bushes own a big share (think Carlyle). In other words, he can pocket your money.

    Do you see why he's so keen on wars, missile defence systems, reconstruction projects in Iraq and even alleged moonshots?

  339. Re:I nominate Bush to be on first flight to the mo by paul248 · · Score: 1

    The word "loony" actually comes from "lunar," because it was once believed that people went crazy from exposure to moonlight.

  340. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by stanmann · · Score: 1

    and diverse and intelligent cabinet ("better team") is what Bush had over Gore... Bush isn't as bright as Gore, but he has "people skills" he picked a team of people smarter than he was and who he trusted to advise him accurately.. Gore picked a team who would agree with his genius, right or wrong.

    Bush also knows when to go against his team for the greater good... eg Thanksgiving in Bagdad.

    --
    Food not Bombs is a nice platitude but it breaks down when you notice that the Bombees are usually well fed
  341. Bush to call for return of troops to 'Merica by frankmanowar · · Score: 0, Troll

    jk. The moon is waaaaaay more important.

    --

    "Other bands play, but Manowar KILLS"
    1. Re:Bush to call for return of troops to 'Merica by frankmanowar · · Score: 1

      afaik, you troll someone who is off topic, posting pitcures of deranged anuses, etc. when i moderate, i try to do it with a sense of humour and keeping in mind that just because i disagree with someone's view doesn't mean they are a troll.

      --

      "Other bands play, but Manowar KILLS"
  342. Who goes first? by jpellino · · Score: 1

    Can Bush, Cheney, Limbaugh, Hannity & Roberstson be convinced to be the pioneers (like Bugs Bunny giving Yosemite Sam the bum's rush out the door) or maybe they'll be able to do that to Gore, Hillary, Colmes, Sharpton & Dean?

    Either way it'll end up a reality series on Fox.

    --
    "Win treats sysadmins better than users. Mac treats users better than sysadmins. Linux treats everyone like sysadmins."
  343. disclaimer by Bizzarobot · · Score: 1

    bottom of the page
    ALWAYS REMEMBER
    Don't believe anything you read on this web page, or, for that matter, anything you hear on The Neal Boortz Show, unless it is consistent with what you already know to be true, or unless you have taken the time to research the matter to prove it's accuracy to your satisfaction. This is known as "doing your homework.

  344. perhaps you misunderstand... by mekkab · · Score: 1

    The "Bread and Circus" line has the connotation of Subterfuge; please ignore our major problems. Look! An Elephant!

    Romans or not, the idea is to dazzle people with an almost literal free lunch and gigantic spectacle. This is a conscious decision on the part of the leaders to trade short term hapiness in exchange for a blind eye towards our long term problems.

    So I challenge you: What exactly are the benefits to going to the moon, again? I understand that the trickle down benefits of the first moon shot were an increased focus on math and science education (always a plus) and a number of lucrative academic research and industrial contracts to further the state of theoretical and commercial science, engineering, and manufacturing (hey, we got Tang and Space Ice cream out of the deal!). And being a gov't contractor, I completely see the value in the Gov't "bolstering" industry with said contracts (call it communism, call it whatever you want, I call it keeping Americans employed).

    But going to the moon again?! Why? What new things will this uncover? There are so many better (read: different) goals that would lead to new progress instead of retreading the same old ground. So in this case, I have to call Bullshit. This is a lame-ass political attempt to change focus from the PLANET.

    P.S.- the Roman empire FELL TO PIECES. That's a GREAT model to emulate! SPQR!

    --
    In the future, I would want to not be isolated from my friends in the Space Station.
    1. Re:perhaps you misunderstand... by DaveOf9thKey · · Score: 1

      P.S.- the Roman empire FELL TO PIECES.

      So will America, eventually. At some point, the system will get corrupted and fail, and it's anybody's guess what might replace it after that.

      For the record, I don't believe that this will happen in our lifetimes. The Roman Empire was centuries older and far more corrupted than America is now when it finally broke apart. This country will be around for a while. All I'm saying is that it won't last forever. Nothing ever does.

      --

      Visit me on the web at Permanent4.com.
    2. Re:perhaps you misunderstand... by benzapp · · Score: 1

      What exactly are the benefits to going to the moon, again?

      1. It is a human achievement, a great human achievement. It is the sort that makes life meaningful. It is as important as building a great monument or a great battle. It is the stuff of legends.

      2. It is the first step in finding a way off this rock so egalitarians like you can live on your own. It will be much easier to have a realistic ethic and government when we are on another planet.

      There are so many better (read: different) goals that would lead to new progress instead of retreading the same old ground.

      Yes yes, help all those poor people in third world countries. Gues what. I DON'T CARE ABOUT ANY OF THEM. I would rather sterilize all the people in third world countries so we could move in and utilize their wasted natural resources, but that won't happen any time soon. Civilization will have to leave this planet so egalitarians like you can destroy it without destroying humanity in its entirety. To me, leaving this planet is the only realistic option, with war being a less desirable path.

      P.S.- the Roman empire FELL TO PIECES. That's a GREAT model to emulate! SPQR!

      And you think any civilization will last forever? America's current government is only 214 years old, yet its culture is completely destroyed, and civil war seem imminent. Not to mention the shere decadence of the American people, they are far worse than Rome ever was.

      Also, the Roman Empire hardly fell to pieces... Its legacy lives on in the European nations, most of whom have the same borders as when they were Roman provinces (in the west at least, before the slavic invasions)

      --
      I don't read or respond to AC posts
    3. Re:perhaps you misunderstand... by mekkab · · Score: 1

      1. It is a human achievement, a great human achievement. It is the sort that makes life meaningful. It is as important as building a great monument or a great battle. It is the stuff of legends.

      First, it's already been acheived.

      Yes yes, help all those poor people in third world countries.
      No, that's not what I'm saying at all! There are better acheivements FOR US. Like the cure for male pattern baldness. Hear me out on this one- It is the desire to acheive the impossible that will spurn the best minds of our country forward, only greatness can come from the pursuit of such a great challenge!

      And you think any civilization will last forever?
      WEll, by basing our ideas on those that HAVEN'T stood the test of time, you are pretty much limiting yourself.

      Infact, your whole argument stems on not just deluding the rest of the populace, but also yourself in your dreams of glory and grandeur.

      So go to it, ace.

      --
      In the future, I would want to not be isolated from my friends in the Space Station.
  345. P.P.S. by mekkab · · Score: 1

    This was a great troll! My hats off to you!

    SPQR!

    --
    In the future, I would want to not be isolated from my friends in the Space Station.
  346. Full court press by t0ny · · Score: 2, Insightful
    As soon as I say this on Google News, I thought "oh wow, Bush is doing all the election-year politics he can!"

    First he goes to Iraq long enough for a photo op, now he is going thru NATO for military support (something his opponents have said he should have done in the first place), now we have a JFK-esque drive to space.

    One good thing about Bush: you can always count on him to distract people while he plunders the USA!

    --

    Manipulate the moderator system! Mod someone as "overrated" today.

  347. Re:I couldn't agree more tsarkon reports by 0123456 · · Score: 1

    "Come Armageddon, you will all fold like the paper tigers you are and come home cryin to mommy."

    There won't be any Armageddon unless Bush and his moronic supporters manage to create it. That's the scariest thing about the War on Arabs, it seems like a very blatant attempt to Immanentize the Eschaton.

  348. "... half of this country are democrats", false by Augusto · · Score: 1
    Approval ratings or not slightly more then half of this country are democrats.

    False

    ABCNEWS Poll Finds Country Evenly Split Between Dems, GOP

    "The year's averages -- 31 percent for each group -- mark an uneven but long-term rise among Republicans, to a new high, and the fewest Democrats in annual averages since 1981. All else being equal, the trends suggest continued Republican competitiveness in election politics, albeit far from the Democrats' onetime dominance in sub-presidential races."



    He may get re-elected but like the last time it will be by the skin of his teeth.

    True
    --

    - sigs are for wimps.
  349. Re:Thank you China! (and Russia) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Personally, I'd be a lot happier if New Zealand built their own damn space vehicles ...no wait, it would be a lot easier just to let the Americans pay for/lead the effort. Hooray for international cooperation!! :D

  350. What marginal tax rates mean by mandie · · Score: 1

    Doesn't quite work that way... 28% was your *marginal* tax rate, which is now 25%. A lot of people seem to miss that point entirely. The income tax rates you see given for various ranges of income are the marginal rates. If you make $100k and I make $50k, and we have otherwise equal dependant and deduction conditions, I pay just as much tax on my whole $50k as you do on your first $50k. It's the $50k after it that you're taxed more on (and that doesn't kick in until Dollar #70k or so)

    Using an annual income of $50k, and assuming no dependants:

    There was a new 10% bracket introduced; I'm not sure where the cut-off is, but let's be really generous and say $20k. Remember that you do get a personal exemption (I believe around $5-7k, let's use $5k).

    Your previous total:
    First $5k * 0% = $0
    Next $25k * 15% = $3750
    Final $20k * 28% = $5600

    2002 Total: $9350
    Net tax rate: $9350/$50k = 18.7% (excludes Soc. Sec. and Medicare, which are non-trivial for those of us pulling down less than $100k)

    Your new total:
    First $5k * 0% = $0
    Next $15k * 10% = $1500
    Next $10k * 15% = $1500
    Final $20k * 25% = $5000

    2003 Total: $8000
    Net tax rate: $8k/$50k = 16%

    If you're getting that $50k in semimonthly installments, your difference per paycheck would be about $56. Given that I didn't see that big a difference, the personal deduction I used was a serious underestimate and/or I extended the 10% bracket too high.

    Note: the new 25% bracket ends around $60-70k for the single earner.

    You can look up the specific numbers at www.irs.gov, if you're so inclined.

    However, that I'm theoretically saving $1350 per year in federal income taxes doesn't make me feel that much better when my state has a yawning budget gap that's going to get filled somehow, and my state tax rates are NOT progressive; they're absolutely flat.

    If I were making $25k (I have friends making about this who are first year teachers in a poor school district and journalists with smallish papers), my situation would be:

    Old:
    $5k * 0% = $0
    $20k * 15% = $3000
    Total = $3000

    New:
    $5k * 0% = $0
    $20k * 10% = $2000
    $5k * 15% = $750
    Total = $2750

    Savings = $250, which is less than $300, and this person is certainly not unusually poor.

    Since I think I underestimated the personal deduction and overestimated where the 10% bracket ends, someone making $30k or more might only be saving $300.

    And given that pretty much all the states have painful budget gaps and relatively flat tax structures, I'm going to get hit almost as hard per dollar as my friends making twice what I do, but I've gotten about half per dollar in federal tax savings.

    And that is why some of us didn't think this was such a great idea... well, that and the whole business of ginormous budget deficits this year and for several to come.

    --
    Grüß Gott aus Bayern!
  351. Just hope it is prize or incentive based..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Just hope it is prize or incentive based, not another multi-billion dollar political/NASA debacle.

    There's already an alternate space program underway that is more likely to provide affordable long term viable space capability, rather than yet another "disposable with no remaining infrastructure left after the fact" multi-billion dollar political/NASA one-shot space spectacular (Apollo, Shuttle, ISS).

    See:
    www.xprize.org
    www.scaled.com
    www.armadi lloaerospace.com
    etc

    Of course, the politicians and big aerospace corporations are going to have absolutely no interest in anything so affordable and viable.

  352. yay! tax cuts! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I love how the Pubs are heroes just for saying "hey, we cut your taxes!".
    It dosen't matter that they barely affect the little people.
    Wow, they saved us so much money.
    and then they spent exponentially more of our money on this war and its cleanup. good job voting for the Pubs, kids!

  353. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, if the average person is stupid, then half the population is dumber than that. Which means a democracy is lead by a bunch of idiots.

    You forget that voters self-select. Smarter people are more likely to vote. In other words, the IQ distribution of voters will be different from the IQ distribution of the populace. Another mistake you make is to equate the intelligence of a group with the people they elect. Stupid/unwise people may elect someone smarter/wiser than themselves and vice versa. This depends on the politicians that one can choose from as well.

    The conclusion: The representatives' majority opinion might certainly be different from the voters' majority opinion and you can't really say that stupid voters will elect stupid politicians.

    I know you have heard the saying "What is right isn't always popular, and what is popular isn't always right." Think about that the next time you decide to defend the majority. I, myself, am always suspicous of them.

    I really don't have to think about that, because it doesn't enlighten me at all. It requires little wisdom/intelligence to understand that the majority opinion can never be trusted. A look at history reveals many majority opinions that have changed by 180 degrees over time. A good example is slavery.

    PS. You know that IQ != wisdom, do you?

  354. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by RealErmine · · Score: 1

    Do you need some sort of song and dance to convince you that the country can't survive four more years of looting on this scale?

    Actually, that would probably be pretty funny.

    --
    Dewey, you fool! Your decimal system has played right into my hands!
  355. There is already an Al Queda Base there... by tassii · · Score: 1

    That's why were going..

    --
    "I drank what?" - Socrates
  356. Money?? by lh0628 · · Score: 0

    Just think where the money's going to come from?

  357. Re:I couldn't agree more tsarkon reports by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Heh - you're in the minority and your views are primitive, so naturally you blame the moderation system for somehow oppressing you. So that's why you regressives are so angry all the time - you're finally the minority, you sense your time running things is running out, and you're shit-scared.

    Sorry, the moderation system is fair. You're just wrong. Deal with it.

  358. I object! by mekkab · · Score: 1

    America will surive world war III, IV, the onslaught of Alien invaders, Asteroids larger than the moon, the second civil war, and The Thing That Should Not Be!! God Bless America!

    ;)

    Actually, your post reminded me of a Stereolab song: "I thought IBM was born with the world, the US flag would float forever, the cold opponent did pack away, the capital will have to follow..."

    --
    In the future, I would want to not be isolated from my friends in the Space Station.
  359. Lunacy! by danharan · · Score: 1

    Anyone that knows anything about the solar system knows the Moon has been given a bad rap, being a rather tempering influence on Mars and Venus, which have historically been at odds.

    What's worse, if the president is ignorant about this, or if his advisors do not advise him properly, the disequilibrium may allow Saturn to put its plans in motion against Mercury!

    As above, so below: an ignorant leader, listening to martial influence will always lead to ruin.

    </Nostradamus channelling>

    --
    Information: "I want to be anthropomorphized"
  360. Re:Thank you China! (and Russia) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    International organisations such as The Artemis Society know a lot more about this kind of thing than you realise. I work for TransOrbital, so I know what I'm on about

    I Hope you aren't "on about" anything doing with the english language. I guess working as a janitor at TransOrbital does qualify you to post in this thread though.

  361. President Bush's Proposal Will Go Nowhere by Alan_DBA · · Score: 2, Insightful

    No doubt, a renewed space program - such as the one envisioned in this article - would be a big boon for my hometown. (Huntsville, Alabama is home to the Marshall Space Flight Center, a major NASA center primarily responsible for the development of propulsion systems and launch vehicles.) However, I really doubt if any of this will happen. President Bush may propose, but the Congress will (quickly) dispose ...

    The primary reason? As mentioned in the article, personal relationships between members of Congress and high-level NASA officials are abysmal. There is a feeling (a strong belief) in Congress that NASA has lied to the Congress. There is deep mistrust and suspicion, and these feelings are longstanding. (A lot of this came out during the investigation of the space shuttle Columbia accident.) Also, NASA doesn't have a PAC and is not generally known for contributing to political parties. (Most of the time, when NASA goes up to Capitol Hill, it's with their hand out.) For politicians, (most politicians), the unspoken question is: "OK NASA, what's in this for me?"

    As an example of what I'm talking about, consider the following. Going back to the moon (and beyond) will cost a LOT of money - at least in the tens (if not the hundreds) of BILLIONs of dollars. How would Donna's Congressman, Representative Howard Koble, explain a vote for that kind of expenditure to his constituents? I suspect his answer would be "I voted against it." (If there were a major NASA center, or a major NASA contractor, in Donna's district; Representative Koble might vote differently. All politics is local ...)

    For the majority of elected public officials, there is no political payoff in supporting the space program. The 1960's (and the race to the moon) was a fluke based totally on geopolitical considerations. My prediction is that this proposal will go nowhere.

  362. Man in the moon by jdevons · · Score: 1

    He just wants to see if there really is a man in the moon...

    --
    I do everything the voices in my head tell me to...
  363. This is as fake as the turkey he held into cameras by B0mbtruck · · Score: 1

    ... at Bagdad airport just minutes before he ran back home.

    Of course leave it up to the president to pick the one fake piece of food off of the table.

  364. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Doesn't anybody care about the future anymore? Do you need some sort of song and dance to convince you that the country can't survive four more years of looting on this scale?

    Well, Clintin sure didn't care about the future, and he did a little more than a song and dance which got him re-elected.

  365. It would be MUCH cheaper this time. by nerdwarrior · · Score: 2, Funny
    Think about it. We could outsource all the engineering and programming to India. Then, we could ship all the high-tech manufacturing to China. Oh, and while we're at it, Russian cosmonauts work for just hundreds a month, so we wouldn't need to waste our money on overpaid American astronauts. We could even outsource mission control to a call center in India. ("Is the power to the moon base on?" "Have you tried rebooting the moon base?") Imagine the savings!


    With all these cost-cutting measures available, we could have an American moonbase for a quarter the price!

  366. Good one, George. by Bertie · · Score: 1

    Make 'em all look up and point at the sky and hopefully they won't notice they're standing in a river of shite.

    America: "Blah blah economy blah blah lies blah blah phoney enemies etc etc"

    Dubya: "Look! Up in the sky! A bit shiny rocket!"

    America "Oooooooooh, isn't it pretty?"

  367. Beat, horse, dead. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    Afghanistan was bombed because they were harbouring the bulk of the organization that orchestrated the attack. In other words Doh! to you.

    As for Iraq, it is a completely different matter since this country has never ever threatened the US.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
    1. Re:Beat, horse, dead. by davesag · · Score: 1
      Afghanistan was bombed because they were harbouring the bulk of the organization that orchestrated the attack. In other words Doh! to you

      Oh really. And I suppose you can back that up with proof. Or are you just repeating what the TV told you. I mean the Bushies were so right about iRaq's WMD after all.

      I'd like to think we'd convict criminals in a court of law before levelling their neigbour's country.

      As for Iraq, it is a completely different matter since this country has never ever threatened the US.

      But North Korea has on numerous occasions, and I don't see the US storming Pyongyang any time soon. Not enough oil there perhaps... nah, that couldn't be it.

      --
      I used to have a better sig than this, but I got tired of it
  368. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    However, the statement below that you made is quite ignorant.

    "They even started a war as a corporate welfare project."


    Boortz's commentary does not disprove the statement. War means work, some company was going to get hired to do the work. Seems like you can't see the forest for the trees.

  369. Why believe it? by supabeast! · · Score: 1

    Does anyone else think that this could just be more hype from the Bush administration? Another program that won't get any support a few months after it is announced? Because that's what I'm hearing. It's like "No Child Left Behind," Bush stands up, talks a lot, distracts people from his horrible leadership, passes a few bills, and then won't fund it later.

    Maybe this is more like the reconstruction of Afghanistan-you remember, that country that where we bombed the hell out of infrastructure until the government collapsed, and then, after he promised to help them rebuild, Bush all but abandoned the Afghani people so that he could focus on starting a war in Iraq?

    And don't forget the war in Iraq, where reconstruction efforts are stuck in a quagmire of political games and beauracracy because Bush still hasn't put together any credible strategy for rebuilding the country and ending the US occupation.

    Worst of all, how the hell are we going to pay for this? Public schools are going broke, class sizes are exploding, and our educational system is going down the toilet. Public college tuition is skyrocketing. States and munincipalities are suffering huge budget shortfalls, and can't afford to pay for disaster-preparation programs required after 9/11, because the feds refuse to fund them!

    This is just more lies and hype from one of the worst leaders this nation has ever had-and anyone who gets excited about it needs to stop and think about all of the horrible problems this nation is facing before we start charging off toward the moon again.

  370. Not missles....a giant "Laser". by thepuma · · Score: 1

    right, MiniMe?

    --

    Free your ecomony and enact the FairTax

  371. Re:I couldn't agree more tsarkon reports by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I hope you still have this attitude after the Dems have their ass handed to them in the 2004 election. But I'm sure by then it will be changed to "big business practices mind control over the poor masses". Deal with it.

  372. With the same money we're already burning. by kippy · · Score: 1

    You're kidding right? NASA already gets allocated huge budget. The problem is that they just waste it on bloat. Properly directed, the current budget will be plenty for lots of stuff. Remember that during the good old Apollo days that the NASA budget was only 10% more in today's dollars and we got lots more done then than we have over the past 30 years.

    It's all about direction.

    I still think we should push for Mars first but that's another story.

    1. Re:With the same money we're already burning. by jafuser · · Score: 1

      How about some real numbers?

      I think you mistyped "500%" as "10%".

      However, I'd much rather have seen $80B spent on space development than on Bush's Iraq fiasco.

      --
      Please consider making an automatic monthly recurring donation to the EFF
    2. Re:With the same money we're already burning. by kippy · · Score: 1

      I think we're using different scales of comparison. The link you provide is going by percentage of GDP. The figure I heard I think goes by just taking the amount and adjusting it for inflation over the years.

      I would be so bold as to say that since the GDP is higher today, we wouldn't have so spend the same percentage of the GDP to get the same amount of budget for NASA.

  373. Clinton, BUsh.... by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    Clinton was a statesman with uncontrolable libido.

    Bush is Bush.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  374. Where have I heard this before? by Minwee · · Score: 1

    Oh, yeah. That other President Bush announced in 1989 that the USA was going to Mars.

    *looks around*

    I don't see anybody on Mars. Do you?

  375. could this be... by null-sRc · · Score: 1

    the first decision bush makes that doesn't involve attacking another country?

    nah! he prolly thinks the martians are after us.

    --
    -judging another only defines yourself
  376. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by khasim · · Score: 1

    Halliburton is in the energy business. They do things like build oil rigs and such.

    You do realize that you're quoting someone who wastes 4 paragraphs telling you how dumb people he doesn't like are, don't you?

    "Did Bush or Cheney do something underhanded or illegal in handing some rather lucrative contracts to Halliburton for infrastructure and other work in Iraq?"

    Yes. They did.

    "We'll start with another question you can ask your bedwetting leftist friends."

    He's continuing to insult people he doesn't even know.

    "In spite of the fact that Halliburton no longer held the LOGCAP contract, Bill Clinton went ahead and awarded a no-bid contract to Halliburton to do some work in the Balkans supporting U.S. peacekeeping actions."

    So?

    Is the point here that Bill Clinton is Jesus or something?

    You are aware that Bill Clinton lied about sex with Monica, aren't you?

    But if he says Halliburton is okay, then they're OKAY.

    "You might also be interested in knowing that Al Gore was quite a fan of Halliburton."

    So he thinks that Gore is Jesus, also?

    "This means that at the time of the Iraq War Halliburton had the bid for providing logistical and other services to the U.S. government."

    Yes, that is correct.

    But that does not mean what you think it does.

    There is nothing ruling out a competitive bid process. And it would seem to be more sensible to have a company in that region doing the work.

    "To the left this is all the proof you needed to show that this whole war was about oil and enriching Bush pals."

    No, the war was about the nukes that Saddam was building with that yellow cake from Niger.

    Oops. Sorry, that was shown to be faked, and our government knew it was faked when Bush said it.

    The war was really about those huge stockpiles of chemical and biological weapons that Saddam had.

    Oops. It seems that Saddam was telling the truth when he said he didn't have any. It also looks like the UN inspectors were not idiots the way the Right kept saying they were.

    What we REALLY went to war with Iraq for was to STOP TERRORISM.

    Except that now Bush admits that there weren't any links between Iraq and anti-US terrorism. And now we're seeing a whole lot of terrorist attacks on US troops and Iraqis that support the US. So terrorism has INCREASED. That's quite the achievement.

    No, the REALLY REAL reason we went to war was to liberate the Iraqi people.

    Except we're now talking about cutting our losses and leaving before they have established a democratic government. Not to mention that any DEMOCRATIC vote will probably result in a RELIGIOUS leader and a move toward Iranian-style theocracy.

    Some people will never admit that the US was trying to control the Iraqi oil fields. No matter how many lies are revealed.

    "Then ask them if Bush went to Iraq to enrich Halliburton."

    No. Bush declared war to gain control of the oil fields.

    Halliburton was the company chosen to provide the means of exploiting that oil.

    Getting money for Halliburton was just a nice way for Bush to show his appreciation for his friends.

  377. Re:Thank you China! (and Russia) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    fuck you communist

  378. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by Glock27 · · Score: 1
    Ever see that episode of the Sopranos, where the gambling addict owes money to the mob and can't pay? So they take over his business and run it into the ground, borrowing money they have no intention of repaying, so they can recoup the loss and leave him in the hole. That's what this is like. The deficit has reached a record level and they keep charging more and more extravagant purchases. They even started a war as a corporate welfare project. We have the mob answering the phone.

    Given the fact that the economy could possibly have slid into deflation, deficit spending is not the evil you make it out to be.

    Even many fiscal hawks admit that we can afford current spending levels given the GDP, and when the tax cuts are successful at reviving the economy, the resulting prosperity will more than pay for the current spending strategy.

    It worked for Reagan, after all....

    --
    Galileo: "The Earth revolves around the Sun!"
    Score: -1 100% Flamebait
  379. sure by benedict · · Score: 1

    I'm all for sending Bush back to the moon. Where do I sign?

    --
    Ben "You have your mind on computers, it seems."
  380. From Zurbin's book by kippy · · Score: 3, Informative

    to give credit where's it's do, I'm linking to this.

    The above post is taken largely from Bob Zubrin's excelent book Entering Space.

  381. Debt and Spend Republicans ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Fiscal responsibility isn't in the Republican partys vocabulary. Why balence the federal budget? We're only going to be around another 60yrs will we croak.

    1. Re:Debt and Spend Republicans ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just about everyone in the current administration is a man over 50 who has a history of alcoholism.

      Life expectancy for that bracket is less than 10 years!

      60 years my ass.

  382. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by Slack3r78 · · Score: 1

    Really, that's not the shocker it's made out to be by most people. Tennessee is a rather conservative state, and Gore didn't fit the profile the people of the state wanted. It'd be like a bunch of liberals voting Jerry Fallwell into office just because he's from their home state (extreme example, but same basic thinking).

  383. BZZZT. Nice troll though. Take a science course. by Ars-Fartsica · · Score: 1
    Spend about an hour thinking about humans living in space. Consider the following topics:

    Distance to get to anywhere useful.

    Time to get there at 80% of the speed of light.

    Cosmic rays.

    Effect of weightlessness on human bones and tissue.

    If you need help, find a high school student.

  384. Space Elevator Before going to Moon again by cashew76 · · Score: 1

    eoc

  385. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by That's+Unpossible! · · Score: 1

    Haha... funny reply. However, lacking in logic.

    No, Boortz doesn't think Clinton/Gore are great, quite the opposite. His point was those guys chose Halliburton when they didn't even need to, they chose the company that had previously LOST the *competitive bidding process* with LOGCAP. You don't hear the left complaining about that. Why not? Don't you think Halliburton had lobbyists then just like they do now? They were chosen OVER the company that won the LOGCAP contract at the time. Interesting.

    Then this administration went with the company the ARMY recommended, Halliburton, who won the competitive bidding process and holds the LOGCAP agreement with the government.

    But that does not mean what you think it does.

    There is nothing ruling out a competitive bid process.


    Can you not read? There WAS a competitive bidding process, and Halliburton won it! They do this on a regular basis, not when a war is in progress or being planned. One reason is to avoid the bias of the current administration.

    And it would seem to be more sensible to have a company in that region doing the work.

    Why is this "more sensible?" It would seem more sensible for America to pay an American company that has won the LOGCAP, which is what happened.

    Bush declared war to gain control of the oil fields.

    Man, he failed miserably then since the oil fields there still belong to Iraq. However, once the U.S (Halliburton) fixes the oil pipelines so that the oil can be sold, the money will actually go to help the people of Iraq instead of into Saddam Hussein's coffers.

    Do you honestly think the Iraqi's that currently are waiting for us to finish up and leave, are actually going to allow the U.S. to "control" the oil fields of Iraq?

    We don't need to control them, even if we could. Iraq will sell us oil at a reasonable price because we liberated them from a cruel dictator and rebuilt the parts of the oil field that were destroyed by Saddam's army and the guerrillas.

    --
    Ironically, the word ironically is often used incorrectly.
  386. private enterprise != the answer for everything by Scudsucker · · Score: 1

    Just as government isn't the answer for everything because it doesn't have to care about efficiency, business isn't the answer to everything be cause its first and last priority is making money. The problem with space exploration is that safety requirements are astronomically higher than anything else that only governments can do it. If its "left up to private enterprise", its a question of when, not if, corners will be cut and we'll have a Challenger or Columbia disaster on a regular basis rather than once every 20 years.

    1. Re:private enterprise != the answer for everything by ivaradi · · Score: 1

      Just as government isn't the answer for everything because it doesn't have to care about efficiency, business isn't the answer to everything be cause its first and last priority is making money.

      This is the very reason business cares much more about safety than a government. If a government spacecraft blows up, it is "national tragedy", rather than incompetence and/or irresponsibility. And it has the nice side effect of turning people's attention away from more important problems for a few weeks at least. Of course there is an "investigation" following the incident, but by the time the scapegoat is found, no one really cares about the issue. And if any restitution is paid, it is paid from the loot (I mean taxes).

      However, if a private spacecraft blows up with say 50 passengers on board, it could mean immediate bankruptcy for the firm (especially if restitution must be paid, which any responsible space passenger should insist on before venturing to travel), but at least a loss of good reputation forever.

      The amount of the effort needed to achieve a certain level of safety always depends on the level of the technology. Once upon a time travelling by car or flying an airplane was very unsafe by today's standards. However, the industry realized that in order to convince people to buy cars or airplane tickets, they have to make them as safe as possible.

      Of course both industries are heavily regulated nowadays. But I think it has more to do with the mania of government meddling with everything than with actual neccessity. And unfortunately most people now assume that government ensures their safety, so they would be incautious when deciding about travelling into the space. And this could indeed result in a relatively high number of incidents. But in my opinion the best solution would be if people took responsibility for themselves instead of delegating this task to the government.

  387. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by Slack3r78 · · Score: 1

    The lovely thing about the PATRIOT Act is the fact that if you're put in a position where it's being abused against you, you're in zero position to challenge it in court. Which is exactly why it's a dangerous piece of legislation.

    I happen to agree with the GP that McCain likely would've made a good president precisely because he had his own value set and would've been willing to veto legislation that he felt was bad from either side, not just green light it because it came from his side of the aisle.

    Either way, you might find people will take you more seriously if you actually log in. There are mods on both sides of the spectrum, and the idea of you being 'persecuted' on slashdot for speaking your mind is a joke. At worst, you lose some karma, big deal. Better that than act like an asshat hiding behind the AC moniker.

  388. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by That's+Unpossible! · · Score: 1

    Boortz's commentary does not disprove the statement.

    That is true, however it disproves what that statement implies ... which is what all liberals complain about: that Halliburton is in bed with the white house and that is why they got the contract, and that is why Bush invaded Iraq.

    --
    Ironically, the word ironically is often used incorrectly.
  389. Idiot alert by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Tang existed before it was adopted for use by NASA. In other words, NASA did not develop Tang; the NASA tie-in was pure marketing.

    And tv cameras were well on their way to miniaturization before NASA even existed.

  390. I FIGURED IT OUT by TrippTDF · · Score: 1

    Bush is just trying to get the Slashdot vote! He knows that us nerds will be all a twitter with the release of Return of the King that day! He's going to try to win us all over. I also know for a fact that he's going to give the moon speech while dressed like Gandolf.

  391. Correction by John+Miles · · Score: 1

    Parent should be modded down; I've been made aware (very effectively, too) that this was a PageRank exploit. Not Google's fault, move along, nothing to see. Sorry for the alarmism.

    --
    Dahlmann tightly grips the knife, which he may have no idea how to use, and steps out into the plain.
  392. The U.S. Constitution... by freeBill · · Score: 1

    ...specifies that the president shall submit a budget to the Congress and that the Congress shall appropriate the funds (with all such legislation originating in the House of Representatives). It also specifies that the president has a veto which can be overridden by a supermajority in both houses of Congress. So it is very clear that this is a shared responsibility.

    At various times in U.S. history, this balance of powers has played out in different ways: Sometimes a strong president has pretty much dictated the budget to the Congress; sometimes an assertive Congress has micromanaged everything; and sometimes there has been a constant battle over who would decide what.

    During the years after Andrew Johnson's impeachment, very aggressive Republican Congresses pretty much decided everything and told presidents they'd like it. That changed with Teddy Roosevelt, when a strong personality turned the White House into his own "bully pulpit." Woodrow Wilson's executive branch also had a lot of influence. And the second President Roosevelt's power was largely unchecked by the Congress (although the courts did provide some checks on his power). After congressional leaders were embarrassed by their first attempt to rewrite a Reagan budget, the Democratic Congresses of the 1980s had little influence over the budget. Clinton usually got his way, but he had to fight for it every inch of the way.

    Given this backdrop, it is difficult to say what the status of Bush's budget proposals have been. They have been passed, largely intact. But it's hard to say whether Congress has been cowed or is just going along because he's submitting budgets they like. It's even possible he's been cowed into submitting budgets he knows they'll like.

    Whatever the case, it's clearly fair to say "Bush cut this program" or "Bush cut that program" when he submitted a budget proposal which included cuts which Congress enacted and he later signed into law. It is also fair to say "Bush tried to cut..." or "Bush cut such-and-such a program from his budget proposal" even if the money was later re-instated by Congress. It has been fairly common practice by this White House to make a promise, work hard to get the legislation passed, and then submit a budget which includes no funds for implementation.

    Pointing out this proclivity is nothing more than honesty. And making snide comments about such honesty is a particularly insidious form of dishonesty.

    There has been another historical trend which seems to be gaining popularity in the last 30 years: Dishonest politicians (and I am not saying Bush is one of them) have gotten into the habit of quoting small portions of part of the U.S. Constitution which delegate some part of the budgetary process to someone else (or to some other body) and pretending they don't have any responsibility for some particular budgetary problem (even though another part of the Constitution may well assign just such a responsibility to them).

    The gullible fanboys of these dishonest politicians then pick up the meme, saying things like "And I thought congress held the purse" in discussions where any truth which may be contained in the statement has no relevance to the topic.

    --
    Eternal vigilance only works if you look in every direction.
    1. Re:The U.S. Constitution... by Adam_Weishaupt · · Score: 1

      After congressional leaders were embarrassed by their first attempt to rewrite a Reagan budget, the Democratic Congresses of the 1980s had little influence over the budget.

      It is a common myth about the Reagan administration that the federal deficit was the fault of the Democratic controled Congress. As you said, in reality they had very little influence over it and for the most part each budget passed by the Congress was only 1% or 2% larger than what Reagan asked for. Reagan himself has sole responisbilty for the massive deficit of the 80's.

      --
      "You don't need a weatherman/ To know which way the wind blows" -Bob Dylan: Subterranean Homesick Blues
  393. Bad Omen for Space Exploration by Shadowlore · · Score: 1

    OK, this is bad. Really Bad(tm).

    First, let's deal with some realities.

    Mars is cheaper.
    WHAT?
    No seriously, Mars is cheaper. It takes less Delta V, and has far more economic opportunities than the moon does.

    No, you can not use the moon as a bounce point for getting to deeper exploration.

    First a moon base will not be self sufficient in our life times. That means a lot of money being poured into a black hole (pun intended). It is also cheaper to lunch a direct big booster rocket than to stage to Earth orbit. Even w/o the costs and uncertainties surrounding the whole space station thing.

    Second, no you can not use it as a testbed for a Mars mission. The two environments are so vastly different that the equipment is not comparable. The moon has zero atmosphere, large extremes in temerature, and dust that somehow manages to find it's way into vacuum tubes.

    Mars has none of those. Mars has an atmosphere that helps protect the pioneers from the cosmic rays (which are much less than we are led to believe, but still present).

    Further, Mars has resources that alter the economics and safety in dramatic ways.

    For example, for lunar trips, tou have to take *ALL* your resources with you. Enough to get there, stay there, and get back. You will expend large amounts of fuel to slow down to enter orbit and land.

    A Mars trip on the other hand, is different. First, you can send an advance craft to manufacture oxygen, water, and fuel for the return trip in situ. By the time your people head out, you can have a return craft, fully fueled, with enough oxygen and water to last for a couple years. The means to do this is mostly solid state, and can be built in your garage. It is a proven technology that is inexpensive to make.

    The moon does not offer that.

    Further, a direct mission to Mars has an advantage in that it can use a technique called aerobraking. This means you use the atmosphere of Mars to slow the craft down, as opposed to buring fuel to do it.

    The combination of a resource filled atmosphere and permafrost allows pioneers to build houses, making bricks from the land. The less you have to take and can make in situ, the less costly and more long term the whole #! is. It also means it is likely to be more stable (bricks are a proven technology, btw ;) ) and can be repaired w/o needing more supplies from Earth, several months away.

    Indeed, plastics, ceramics, and glass can all be manufactured in situ quite inexpensively and simply on Mars. No so with the moon. Aluminim, steel, copper, and silicon are also not complicated givent he resources available.

    The martian soil is quite good for plants, the moon's is not. This means that a greenhouse can be built to provide fresh greens (and oxygen) for those pioneers on Mars. That means less cost in support. Water is heavy, and plants contain a lot of water. Thus, not needing to ship them is a damned good thing. Morale is improved dramatically by the presence of plants, so another plus is to be had.

    The moon offers none of these advantages and comes with a more difficult set of technology to develop and deploy.

    Space stations should only come into play for earth-related observation and study, not as jumping points for interplanetary exploration. At least not until we have them a Mars base. It takes more to go to orbit and then launch then it does to launch directly.

    Much of this can be discovered reading, among other things, Zubrin's Mars Direct plan. Go to Mars Society webpage to find out more.

    In particular, the book "Why Mars" details the plan in amazing simplicity and common sense. (BTW, no click-through or affiliate stuff; just a direct link to the book )

    The moon push, especially when done by NASA, is a bad trip that should be avoided. For the amount NASA is spending (or wanting to) on th

    --
    My Suburban burns less gasoline than your Prius.
    1. Re:Bad Omen for Space Exploration by Smidge204 · · Score: 1

      No seriously, Mars is cheaper. It takes less Delta V, and has far more economic opportunities than the moon does.

      Assuming manned missions, a moon base would be cheaper and much more realistic in the now. The engine of a Mars-bound craft might be smaller, but the craft has to be much more expensive to keep a human crew survive several months in space (including food, water, air, sanity, comfort, etc) as well as be much more robust to survive a planetary landing in condition good enough to get off again (or at least part of the craft suitable for landing)

      In either scenario, you will have to bring a shit load of tools and materials with you, even if you plan to use local resources -- assuming it's even feasible to build from the local materials, which it probably isn't until you have a working colony. (Chicken and egg?)

      Considering it takes about 10 days to get to the moon and back, compared to about 400 days to Mars. That's a lot of extra surviving right off the bat. (I'd feel better knowing help way 5 days away instead of 3 months, too.)

      No, you can not use the moon as a bounce point for getting to deeper exploration.

      Because.... ?

      First a moon base will not be self sufficient in our life times.

      You're not going to terraform Mars in our lifetime either, and you're certainly not going to build a Mars colony faster than a Lunar colony. Farther away, more gravity = more structural materials, Still has to be resistant to extreme temperatures (no inflatable dome!), and still problems with supplies like food. With a moon mission it's more feasible to send supplies every few days. To do that on Mars, you'd either have to have a constant convoy of hundreds of ships floating around the solar system, send a year's worth of supplies at a time, or build a source of food locally (which means bringing more shit with you to begin with). In either case, you're not just going to show up with a garden hoe and live a happy life.

      The moon has zero atmosphere, large extremes in temperature, and dust that somehow manages to find it's way into vacuum tubes.

      No atmosphere and extreme temperatures I agree with. I have never heard anything about dust inside vacuum tubes, nor have I been able to find any. I'd appreciate some references.

      I have seen stories about dust getting tract in from the crew, and such dust floating around causing breathing problems and clogged filters.

      On Mars, not only is there still tons of dust, there's wind to blow it around!

      Further, Mars has resources that alter the economics and safety in dramatic ways.

      That is a vacuous statement which you did not support anywhere in your post. Dead wood.

      For example, for lunar trips, tou have to take *ALL* your resources with you. Enough to get there, stay there, and get back. You will expend large amounts of fuel to slow down to enter orbit and land.

      Ditto with Mars, as explained above. It is true that you could send a craft there to make air and water in advance (And methane fuel, though how useful that is for getting off the planet is still arguable). But that kind of equipment falls under the "more crap to take with you" category above. And you would still need to build permanent sources for food. You could do that on the moon much easier.

      In both cases, hydroponics wold be the ideal solution - plants recycle water, produce oxygen, remove carbon dioxide, and provide food. So there's no advantage over building such a facility one place or the other.

      Further, a direct mission to Mars has an advantage in that it can use a technique called aerobraking. This means you use the atmosphere of Mars to slow the craft down, as opposed to buring fuel to do it.

      For a human-safe landing, you would probably still need rockets. Aerobraking and parachutes can only do so much, and there's no ocean to land in. The moon has only a fraction of the gravity and so you'd need only a fraction

  394. To everyone who responded to this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I meant it as a joke :) Nice to see that a 0 rated comment has provoked so much discussion, though.

  395. what would be the incentive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >I wonder if we can cut the banks our of the loop and have a nonprofit organizations facilitate taxpayer borrowing from the government.

    Sure, we could. However all businesses have a RIGHT to PROFIT even if it means higher costs for the citizen. Higher meaning the inefficencies of government-granted private monopolies can sometimes be worse than completely-regulated/public utilities.

    Take the Enron abuses, for example, or the fact that the Federal government gleefully buys software from Microsoft at costs greater than it would be to contract the job out to bidders (or do it themselves using taxpayer financed universities!)

    So we would save a boatload of money with a nonprofit bank.

    Guess how much money MBNA Bank contributed to the Bush campaign? $20 million. Guess how much more the banks would give if it were what they considered a life-or-death battle?

    As bad as it is, look for it to get worse. There's a HUUUGE bubble of baby boomers who are quite-well-aware they are the majority, and that they can print money in the name of their children.

    Tip: don't work - invest, and get ready to bail the hell off this sinking ship. Canada will be quite attractive in 20 years (not to mention a bit warmer).

    1. Re:what would be the incentive by Psiolent · · Score: 1

      Maybe you just misspoke, but I'll call you on it anyways:

      However all businesses have a RIGHT to PROFIT even if it means higher costs for the citizen.

      So if I start up my own business and I don't profit, who do I sue, since my RIGHT to PROFIT is obviously being trampled by someone?

  396. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    "That's the kind of woolly-headed liberal thinking that leads to being eaten." - Principal Snyder

    Principal Skinner, moron.

  397. Afghanistan. by khasim · · Score: 1

    We pulled troops out of Afghanistan and we aren't spending enough to setup a stable democracy.

    So the Afghan farmers are planting drugs.

    The local warlords get a nice cut of these profits and a chunk goes to various terrorist organizations.

    These terrorists use that money to buy weapons and such for people in Iraq who want to kill US troops.

    What goes around comes around.

    In 2001, the terrorists managed one BIG attack on US citizens.

    In 2003, the terrorists have managed THOUSANDS of small attacks on US troops. Sometimes they kill, many times they just cripple.

    The world is LESS SAFE today than it was on 11 Sept 2001.

    The US has MORE DEBT today than on 11 Sept 2001.

    This just sucks all over the place.

  398. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Forest for the trees dood. Who cares what a "liberals" thinks? Why bother tilting at windmills?

  399. Financing by willtsmith · · Score: 1

    No doubt he will pay for it with more tax cuts for the wealthy.

    Pre-emptive note to supply siders: I understand the nature of your voodoo self serving theories. I just know they're a bunch of bullshit.

    --
    -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!
  400. Space... the final frontier of taxes by TheDurkinBoy · · Score: 1

    I'd rather have my tax money back so I can spend it as I see fit (on my poor mother). After all, I earned it thru my work. I didn't know it was government's role to explore space. I thought that would be a good thing left to the market. Oh, you say it's too expensive to be left to the market! Exactly. It's too expensive for anyone to really be interested in, unless you have a gun to hold-up tax payers for billions in funding. Bush is proving worse than Al Gore. Gore just wanted a trillion in healthcare funding. Bush wants a couple trillion in healthcare, war, space, etc... Please, at least question the sanity of this B.S. space exploration funded by taxpayers. Maybe we can just build some expensive monuments instead. Signed--a Libertarian

  401. Re:Going to the moon? Why? by demachina · · Score: 1

    You are not likely to get much support for nuclear fusion, as in cheap, environmentally friendly, nearly infinite energy from this administration or any other. It would risk putting some very powerful corporations out of business, as in big oil and big coal. Maybe the Bush administration could arrange for them to get a monopoly on the new fusion power plants so they could continue making money uninterrupted but I dont think they would want to risk the corporate upheaval that would follow a break through in fusion. Obviously the economic benefits would be huge but most politicians and executives lack the kind of vision necessary to see that.

    To put it another way there is a really good reason, or a really bad reason, why fusion research spending is held down to levels that tends to discourage a breakthrough. Fusion research and Bush's Hydrogen program tends to be jobs program and coporate welfare like ISS, spend a billion now and again to keep it going but dont really try to do anything meaningful.

    --
    @de_machina
  402. FED is the national clearing house by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Federal Reserve functions as the national clearing house for checks. The pretend to do other stuff like publish research but that's not really a banking function.

    Also, you got wrong on the Fed setting interest rates. The treasury's control of the money supply and consumers and providers of loans set the interest rates. The FED just follows. The FED only sets rates on overnight loans to banks.

  403. Saturn V my ass... by nazzdeq · · Score: 1

    If we cannot build a better, more powerful and cheaper rocket today than 30 years ago, then we should drop the bomb on ourselves. We lost the plans...what kind of shit is that? Fuck the plans...make new ones...

  404. Who knows? He may very well _say_ it, but.... by smchris · · Score: 1


    talk is cheap. Hey, his dad was going to mars!

    To routinely traffic with the moon, it would be nice to have a base outside the gravity well that means business. A _real_ space station, not the decaying cans we currently have glomped together.

    To _build_ that space station, we need a reliable launch vehicle.

    What _decade_ will he be talking about "getting around to this?" Unilaterally without UN participation, I assume?

  405. Come On! We never went to the moon the first time! by LeenusT · · Score: 1

    This will be the first time for mankind going to the moon. What everyone thinks is the first time was just a movie. Couldn't you see the strings? I am glad GWB is ready to embark on this NEW adventure to the moon.

  406. Nonsense by unassimilatible · · Score: 1

    The general welfare reference is mentioned within the taxation power, not the spending power. Just because some revisionists have created spending authority which was never intended, don't pin that on the framers. The framers intended "general welfare" as running the government and satisfying the ends of the preamble (justice, domestic tranquility, common defense, and liberty). Why would the Constitution spell out specific spending powers (and every other power) but grant some broad, nebulous spending authority - within the taxation power?

    Keep in mind that the income tax was banned by amenedment until 1920...

    --
    Slashdot "libertarians": Small government for me, big government for those I disagree with. -1, I disagree with you
    1. Re:Nonsense by Suidae · · Score: 1

      How do you run a government without taxes?

      I'm all for more efficent spending of my tax dollars, but I don't think its possible right now to run this country without a federal government supported by tax money.

      I'd love to see more resources put into studying how computers can be used to make government more efficent, followed immediately by putting the findings into practice. Every time I deal with any government agency I feel like I've stepped back in time about 50 years. Seems like the IRS is the only agency that likes making it easy for me to deal with, and thats only because I have to send them money.

  407. Re:Thank you China! (and Russia) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What part of liberal global free market don't you understand you fascist bastard? I've always said, companies should compete, but there should be friendly cooperation between countries. Never mind. Sod off back to 1930s Germany you Nazi.

  408. Moron on the moon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Stupid asshole!

  409. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 1

    OK, well I don't think it was one of my better posts, but if I knew it would float up to "5, Insightful" I would have spent more time on it.

    This rate of borrowing might be sustainable until the next election, but it cannot go on forever. Do you know something about macroeconomics that makes huge structural deficits OK?

  410. Look over here! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So I guess his illegal and immoral war wasn't enough of a distraction from how horrible a president he is.

    Prez: I suck! What do I do?
    Advisors: Go to war with someone. That always works.
    - BOOM -
    Prez: It didn't work! I suck way too much!
    Advisors: Um... Go back to the moon?

  411. Distraction and grabbing more power by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you think any President does anything "in the national interest", you aren't paying attention.

    A return to the moon will keep him and his admin in the headlines, and keep Iraq, Afghanistan, FDA/drug coverage, ... and all the other disasters out.

    It will justify a larger slice of the GDP going through the FedGov.

    None of this is good.

    Lew

  412. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by hesiod · · Score: 1

    > I would have been happy with McCain

    FYI, he's the ONLY one I would have been happy about on either side.

  413. You're wrong about the romans. by Hittite+Creosote · · Score: 1
    Through unity, there is strength. From strength, comes power. With enough power, anything is possible.

    For some reason, this sort of Triumph of the Will spiel makes me a little... uncomfortable.

    The Romans were able to create an island of civilization out of the natural world. No one was forced to live there.

    Er... ever heard of slaves? Spartacus' lot decided they didn't want to live in the Roman Empire anymore, and they weren't allowed to 'just leave'.

    The Bread and Circuses line is a description of what happened when the Empire was collapsing

    Appealing to the plebs applied back in the days of the Republic, and all through the time of the empire. Free grain distribution didn't start at the end of the empire, and the Flavian Ampitheatre was built in the first century AD, a period in which you couldn't exactly describe the empire as being on the point of collapse.

    1. Re:You're wrong about the romans. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For some reason, this sort of Triumph of the Will spiel makes me a little... uncomfortable.

      Its such a great movie though.

      Little Germany, fighting off the whole world for six years... Amazing. Could the US do it? Not a chance.

  414. Moon Base by gando · · Score: 1

    Why do we have to suddenly go to the moon now?Are there Terrorists with Weapons Of Mass Destruction and Drugs or Communists up there?

    I think the pResident should stop trying to misdirect the American public from his attempts at tyranny.

    Don't get me wrong, I'm all for space exploration. One of my first, and favorite memories is of watching men land on the moon, and I have always had a love for space exploration.

    I'm just not happy that Bush and Co. seem to be trying to pull the wool over our eyes all the time.

    --
    --Fac Iustum Nec Time-- --Veritas Prevalibit--
    1. Re:Moon Base by Acidic_Diarrhea · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      Why did we have to go to the moon the first time? It certainly had less to do with a love of science than political issues. It's a little sad that since you dislike the President, you are unable to fairly evaluate any action he takes. Everything has a hidden motive to you.

      This is perplexing. When Clinton was the President, I disagreed with some of his policies but attempted to at least evalute them in a fair manner.

      You say that the President is trying to pull the wool over our eyes all the time and that is why you don't think we should go to the moon? Is that it? You mention the possibility of terrorists in space. I don't see what you're getting at. Let's suppose that Bush is trying to use a moon mission to divert attention away from the war in Iraq, or whatever other liberal theory you can come up with. Why are you so angry about this? Using smoke and mirrors is a long known political trick that's been used by many more people than Bush. Remember those missile strikes Clinton launched when Monicagate was breaking open? Pulling the wool over anyone's eyes?

      At least with a moon mission, Bush is pushing for something that will yield useful science. And you'll be a vigilent liberal and keep an eye on him and make sure the mainstream press doesn't forget what is going on in Iraq with letters to the editor and phone calls, right? I'm just amazed that people are as irrational as you. Sure, you don't agree with what's going on - deal with it but learn to deal with it in a manner that still affords you the ability to debate someone on the topic without foaming at the mouth. You're hurting your cause.

      Of course, you don't have to listen to me - I'm just a 'dumb ol' Conservative', what would I know? (Please take note of my sig.)

      --
      I hate liberals. If you are a liberal, do not reply.
    2. Re:Moon Base by Vlad_the_Inhaler · · Score: 1

      You started off making sense, but then headed abruptly south.

      Those missile strikes Clinton launched were the response to the two Al Qaida (sp?) bombings of US Embassies in Africa, bombings in which several hundred people died.

      One missile was aimed directly at Osama bin Laden - the name might ring a bell - and the other one at a pharmaceutical factory in Sudan (?) which was reportedly making chemical weapons.
      One of those missiles was an inadequate response, the other one was almost certainly a mistake but blaming Monica (with or without her gate) for them is like blaming Bush for 09.11.

      --
      Mielipiteet omiani - Opinions personal, facts suspect.
    3. Re:Moon Base by Acidic_Diarrhea · · Score: 1
      Read it again - I was not blaming Clinton nor was I saying that Clinton was wrong in doing anything. And be sure to read it within the context of the comment I was replying to. The person who I was replying to was making a statement that Bush's desire to go into space was somehow related to the war on terror or some other such nonsense. I was making the statement that oftentimes politicians have used foreign affairs as a tool to relieve pressure from internal problems - or that sometimes, since the Presidency involves more than just handling a small portion of the government, there are fortunate circumstances that develop. This includes missile strikes.

      And the whole "Osama bin Laden - that name might ring a bell" came off as very rude. Why take that tone with me?

      --
      I hate liberals. If you are a liberal, do not reply.
    4. Re:Moon Base by Vlad_the_Inhaler · · Score: 1

      That is not how I interpreted your Remember those missile strikes Clinton launched when Monicagate was breaking open? Pulling the wool over anyone's eyes? and reminding you - non too gently - what that was really about.

      As for I think the pResident should stop trying to misdirect the American public from his attempts at tyranny. no comment. Getting serious again: Reagan and Bush I both announced initiatives like this when they wanted to distract people when things were going wrong. Their initiatives were later quietly shelved. The original JFK program was announced just after Yuri Gagarin went into space and the Bay of Pigs disaster had happened. Distraction again. I wonder whether the Apollo program would have been junked if JFK had not been murdered, once he was dead it became his memorial and was sacred.

      --
      Mielipiteet omiani - Opinions personal, facts suspect.
  415. coming soon to a satellite near you.... war by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Somehow I doubt that China is going to sit back content to watch the US establish a foothold in space that would be a convenient place to launch an attack.

    Somehow the moon seems likely to become the ultimate nuclear bunker slash nuclear waste storage facility slash pre-emptive strike launching area slash country club.

    So we're going to have a new space race this time around, my vote is on China VS the United States. Only that took place 20 or so years after the end of WWII, when the world was weary of all the fighting.

    I'm all for finally moving into the frontier we've been promised since the 60's, but have reservations about the path we're taking to get there.

    I blame the "global economy".. everyone depends on each other too much nowadays to actually stand up for what they believe in for the fear of causing economic ripples for which they will be boosted out of office.

  416. Of *course* we can afford it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    The US space program produced pretty much *all* of the technologies that makes up a "modern" civilization: computers, wireless telecommunications, advanced medicines and medical practices, velcro, and advanced polymers and composite materials. Oh, and tang.

    In all, if one includes these spinoff technologies, the space program is a net profit center for the US government.

    Some people credit the recession and hyperinflation of the early '70's on Nixon cancelling the Apollo program, thus cutting the legs out from underneath the economy (much the way the bursting of the Internet bubble had a ripple effect that we are *still* feeling).

  417. It's times like this when I'm glad GW Bush won... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For once we have a real leader and the spineless, poll follower this miserable failure of a campaign hopes to elect.

  418. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You guys repeat the same argument over and over so many times that you actually start to believe your own nonsense. The war in Iraq was not about yellow cake. It was mentioned tangentially in a speech. You are conveniently forgetting the chemical and biological weapons that were the real source of concern. You know, the ones we know he had because he's used them in the past. The ones that mysteriously "didn't exist" any more, even though there was no evidence provided that said those weapons were destroyed. Are they still there? I have no idea. Maybe not. But why would they destroy them and then cover that up, knowing that they'd be called to account for them?

  419. Re:I nominate Bush to be on first flight to the mo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hm, you mean maybe like a lunatic?
    loon...? nah.

  420. Dick Gephardt Campaign by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    This google bomb may not be intentional. It appears as though the Gephardt campaign is using the slogan "George W. Bush: A Miserable Failure".

    Witness www.amiserablefailure.com, which is a Gephardt campaign page.

  421. Largely true, except about Cheney. by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 0, Redundant

    What you said is largely true, except the part about Cheney not benefiting from his involvement with Halliburton, as mentioned above in the grandparent post: "Vice President Cheney has a financial interest in Halliburton."

    You didn't mention the alcholic personalities of Bush and Cheney. The grandparent post gave links to their DUI records. Basically, Republicans are, in general, more out of touch with their feelings than Democrats. So Republicans tend not to notice alcoholic personalities:
    • Absense of deep or sophisticated thinking (If anyone has any information about George W. Bush showing evidence of sophisticated thinking, please write to me.)
    • Polarized thinking (Bush's "you are either with us or against us" is an example. Another example is his statement, "Look my job isn't to try to nuance. I think moral clarity is important... this is evil versus good.")
    • Rigid thinking
    • Lying (A June 18, 2002 article in Salon says, Losing the "trifecta" says, "It takes a brazen politician to make up a story that can be proven false and then to keep lying about it after being busted repeatedly." Also see the October 8, 2002 CounterPunch article, Bush's Leaps of Illogic Don't Answer People's Questions About War.
    • Anger ("... why is Bush so eager to engage in violence and so incapable of explaining why?" See the Sept. 24, 2002 American Politics Journal article and Addiction, Brain Damage and the President -- "Dry Drunk" Syndrome and George W. Bush )
    • Obsessive repetition (On August 7, during his "working vacation" at his Crawford, Texas, ranch, Bush used the word "home" six times in a minute of conversation with reporters: "It's nice to be home ... This is my home ... It's good to be home ... This is where you come home ... This is my home," etc. In a five-minute speech later in the month, Bush mentioned values at least seven times and "neighbor" or "neighborliness" or "neighborly" six times. In a twenty-minute speech the next day he used "character" eleven times. -- Some of the examples here are drawn from a September 6, 2001 article in The Atlantic magazine, The Bumbling Communicator. Not only was Bush repetitive, he was lying. The article says, "Bush lived in the Texas governor's mansion and vacationed in swank resorts and at Kennebunkport before the campaign began.")
    • Inability to perceive the needs of others, inability to understand someone different from oneself
    • Grandiosity, believing that one's own ideas are all-important. (Bush, and the oil and weapons people who support him, say the U.S. has the right to take military action before the adversary even has the capacity to attack.)
    • Impatience ("If we wait for threats to fully materialize," President Bush said in a speech he gave at West Point, "we will have waited too long.")
    • Incoherence. Things don't make sense in the mind of an alcoholic. An alcoholic's pattern of speech sometimes reflects his or her inner chaos.
    1. Re:Largely true, except about Cheney. by chrisbord · · Score: 0

      What you said is largely true, except the part about Cheney not benefiting from his involvement with Halliburton, as mentioned above in the grandparent post: "Vice President Cheney has a financial interest in Halliburton."

      I don't think his stock options were an issue at all until the haters started seeing massive conspiracies in everything this administration does. All congressmen own stock, so it is easy to form conspiracy theories, especially when it fits the purpose of extremists. But before you accuse the vice president of that level of corruption, shouldn't you have something better than, well, ...nothing? Anyone who knows anything about the bureauacracy and heavy oversight involved, the idea of pushing a billion dollars with a single phone call is laughable.

      You didn't mention the alcholic personalities of Bush and Cheney. The grandparent post gave links to their DUI records. Basically, Republicans are, in general, more out of touch with their feelings than Democrats. So Republicans tend not to notice alcoholic personalities:

      Well you may be right about conservatives and libertarians being less emotional and therefore more logical, but I don't see how that keeps us from noticing 'alcoholic' personalities. After all, it was the Democrats who insisted throughout Clinton's presidency that character didn't matter and that in any case he was a good guy at heart. Then, on the way out of office Clinton gave out a string of very undeserved pardons to hardened criminals including a drug kingpin, all of whom had recently contributed huge amounts of money. After all the lies liberals were still stunned! And it is conservatives who for 10 years were dismayed at the dismantling of the CIA and our military, and Clinton's determination to make a legacy for himself at Oslo by trusting a known terrorist named Yasser Arafat.

      Absense of deep or sophisticated thinking (If anyone has any information about George W. Bush showing evidence of sophisticated thinking, please write to me.)

      Have you ever read anything to come out of any conservative think-tank (Cato, Heritage Foundation, Hudson...)? Liberals like to think they are so smart, that only they should be allowed to spend your tax dollars and they alone have the good of the country in mind. The truth is liberals consist largely of the under-educated (those w/o a hight school degree vote 70% democrat) and the over-educated (university professors vote 85% democrat). A strong majority people in the 'middle,' those with a high school or 4-year college degree vote Republican. So don't mistake a lot of thinking with a lot of quality thinking, especially when the only ones who agree with your conclusions are the idiots who couldn't graduate high school.

      Polarized thinking (Bush's "you are either with us or against us" is an example. Another example is his statement, "Look my job isn't to try to nuance. I think moral clarity is important... this is evil versus good.")
      Rigid thinking.


      Here are two interesting articles:
      http://www.washtimes.com/commentary/20031025-11101 1-1361r.htm
      and http://www.opinionjournal.com/columnists/dhenninge r/?id=110004388

      Lying

      Name one lie, you lying liar. Watch me pick it apart as either outright false or simply a harmless exaggeration.

      Anger ("... why is Bush so eager to engage in violence and so incapable of explaining why?" See the Sept. 24, 2002 American Politics Journal article and Addiction, Brain Damage and the President -- "Dry Drunk" Syndrome and George W. Bush )

      The party of Dean wants to point fingers at President Bush on of all things, anger??!!! Your likely candidate (the Lord is kind) came out of nowhere through a campaign based entirely on hatred and vitriol. Presid

  422. The Money by kenjib · · Score: 1

    I bet he's going to announce a $50 billion program and then it will get $50.00 in funding, like the AIDS initiative and No Child Left Behind. He'll claim a big win in November, knowing that it will never actually happen.

  423. Space Program ???? by willtsmith · · Score: 1

    No,

    The advances in printed circuitry were a simple evolution of making things cheaper. Printing circuits via lithography is cheaper than manual intensive wiring of transistors. It's also cheaper.

    From that standpoint, we should thank television before with thank the Space Program.

    Finally, the people we owe the most homage to is the folks at the Home Brew computer club. These folks really kick-started the move towards personal computers. They built them and shared their innovations.

    --
    -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!
  424. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by LaCosaNostradamus · · Score: 0

    Doesn't anybody care about the future anymore?

    Future? What future did YOU actually have any hopes for? Was it some dipshit yuppie dream of everyone telecommuting from their beach houses?

    Myself, I can clearly see Bush winning the 2004 election. While the domestic economy continues to shed prosperity, he and his "neo-con" faction will -- to the increasing howls of desperate chickenhawks -- continue the Imperial policy of attacking certain Middle Eastern countries that the Israelis are wink-wink-nudge-nudging them to attack. Then, inevitably, a retaliatory nuclear device or three will go off in Manhattan, London and/or Tel Aviv. And that will be the end of Western Civilization, buddy. The American military will go berserk and civil war will happen at home; and the two will only amplify each other's crimes, not subdue them.

    I have long expressed my "hopes" for the future by buying tools, currying personal favor with folks I can trust, and equipping myself with small and medium armaments, including reloading capability. Around me, people are decapitalizing and disarming themselves at a record pace, so I feel pretty confident that if I survive, I can live better than most people ... as long as I am willing to obtain and retain resources through violence. (My biggest worry isn't snipers (I live in Ohio ... have you checked the news lately?) but disease, since lots of unburied bodies is a health hazard.)

    --
    [You have a stable society when some nut guns down a schoolyard and the law doesn't change.]
  425. Explain yourself. by khasim · · Score: 1

    You say it lacks logic. Where?

    You say people didn't complain about Halliburton back with Clinton.

    So, Bush would still be wrong for giving Halliburton that contract.

    "There WAS a competitive bidding process, and Halliburton won it!"

    No, there wasn't. Halliburton won the LOGCAP bid process.

    The LOGCAP bid process was NOT for re-building of Iraq.

    All that means is that Bush had the OPTION of assigning the contract for Iraq to Halliburton without going through a bidding process.

    "Why is this "more sensible?" It would seem more sensible for America to pay an American company that has won the LOGCAP, which is what happened."

    And that kind of "logic" is why we have Bush blaming the sailors for that "Mission Accomplished" banner.

    No, it would be more sensible to hire a mid-east company. A company with ties to other companies and people over there so that we can point out how THEY are the ones in control of THEIR future now.

    "Man, he failed miserably then since the oil fields there still belong to Iraq."

    Now you're starting to get the picture. He failed in finding "WMD's", he failed in catching Saddam, he failed in stopping terrorist attacks, he failed in just about everything.

    Now he's talking about cutting his losses right before the election and letting Iraq vote in democracy.

    Instead, we'll see another Iranian-style theocracy.

    "However, once the U.S (Halliburton) fixes the oil pipelines so that the oil can be sold, the money will actually go to help the people of Iraq instead of into Saddam Hussein's coffers."

    The US doesn't care who gets the money, as long as it isn't the enemy of the week. The Taliban were being catered to in Texas while Bush was in charge there.

    The way this is going, the oil money will be going to the clerics.

    "Do you honestly think the Iraqi's that currently are waiting for us to finish up and leave, are actually going to allow the U.S. to "control" the oil fields of Iraq?"

    Do you mean the ones that are shooting at our troops over there?

    The ORIGINAL plan was to have the US's puppets be elected by a grateful populace.

    That failed. Those same puppets are the ones that gave the US the bogus info on the "WMD's" that Saddam had.

    "Iraq will sell us oil at a reasonable price because we liberated them from a cruel dictator and rebuilt the parts of the oil field that were destroyed by Saddam's army and the guerrillas."

    They're still shooting at our troops. That doesn't look like gratitude to me.

    They dance around the wrecks after their guerrillas bomb our convoys. That doesn't look like gratitude to me.

    An Iraqi man can shoot a US troop in the head and then run into a crowd that will cover his trail. That doesn't sound like gratitude to me.

    You have the same blindness that Bush and company did.

    The Iraqis do NOT like us. They still blame US for those sanctions all those years.

    They blame US for the civilians killed during our invasion.

    If we had a popular vote, you'd see a theocracy like Iran has.

    Check out what the mid-east media says.

  426. The Proof by pohlman0 · · Score: 1

    http://www.moontruth.com What else do you need?

  427. Re:Come On! We never went to the moon the first ti by Retired+Replicant · · Score: 1
    If you're not a troll, you're an idiot.

    Moonhoax

  428. Demonstration by ciphertext · · Score: 1

    I agree with you that Mars is a better location than the moon for a "base" or "research station", but I still think that the creation of a moonbase should come first. Let me explain my reasons for that statment.

    The distance between the earth and the mars is far, far, greater than the distance between the earth and the moon. There is a lot more time for something to go wrong during a trip to mars, than there is for a trip to the moon. Additionally, the amount of food, fuel, and supplies would need to be greater for a ship that would ferry people to mars, than for a ship that would ferry people to the moon.

    The moon would be an excellent chance to test new technologies prior to sending them to Mars. It would be an excellent chance to iron out issues with Nuclear propulsion technologies as well as nuclear power systems for use at the base. Hardware and engineering for the creation of a base could be prototyped on the moon as well. Much more quickly and cheaply than could be done on Mars.

    The most popular proposals for a Mars base require a robotic advance probe be sent to mars that will prepare the return fuel for a manned mars mission. While we have demonstrated we can land a probe on mars, we have not demostrated that we can extract useable minerals from a body other than the earth. We definitely haven't demonstrated that we can refine minerals to a useable form on a body other than the earth. We don't process those minerals without human supervision her on earth anyways (even though the technology probably is at a level that would support no supervision).

    There are other technologies we need to demonstrate before I would feel comfortable taking a trip to mars. Make no mistake though, I am 100% for a manned mars mission. Just, not before we can demonstrate that we have the capability to undertake such a mission.

    --
    To know is to have knowledge....to understand is to be enlightened.
  429. No, you explain yourself by That's+Unpossible! · · Score: 1

    I am not going to go point by point because I don't have the time or desire to argue with someone who can't read between the lines.

    No, there wasn't [a competitive bidding process]. Halliburton won the LOGCAP bid process.

    Those two statements are contradictory. LOGCAP is a competitive bidding process for projects that the military requires be done. Halliburton is de facto choice for this work since they won the competitive bidding process.

    The LOGCAP bid process was NOT for re-building of Iraq.

    Correct, it was for anything the military needs contractors to take care of, in different fields. Rebuilding IRAQ just happens to fall into that.

    They're still shooting at our troops.

    Who is "they"? Yes, there are people in Iraq shooting at our troops. They are also blowing up diplomats from other countries and Iraqi citizens, including police officers. They are killing red cross workers. They are killing UN diplomats.

    No doubt, some of them are disgruntled Iraqi's. But many are foreign terrorists taking advantage of this opportunity. Look at the population of Iraq in total. The terrorists over there are but a tiny fraction of the population of Iraq.

    These are insurgents controlled by terrorist groups and possibly even Saddam Hussein in hiding. They are not representative of the Iraqi population.

    --
    Ironically, the word ironically is often used incorrectly.
    1. Re:No, you explain yourself by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You want to be blind - go walk with the sheppard (Dabya) the rest of us have IQ > 120.

    2. Re:No, you explain yourself by That's+Unpossible! · · Score: 1

      You want to be blind - go walk with the sheppard (Dabya)

      I don't even like Bush, I'm a libertarian. I wouldn't have fought the war the same way he did, but it'll do. I wouldn't have had U.S. interests stationed in other parts of the world in the first place, which some would say is what ultimately started this mess.

      the rest of us have IQ > 120.

      Great retort. My IQ is 140, you know 10 times your age?

      --
      Ironically, the word ironically is often used incorrectly.
  430. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon 4 shazam. by Penguinshit · · Score: 1

    Nice cut-n-paste from the front page of the RNC website. It's really good to know that you actually dug all that up yourself... (yawn; btw, that is all just an attempt to smear the Democrats by creating some illusion of fealty to Howard Dean...)

    So.. you have a couple of quotes from 1998 concerning "regime change". Did you forget who was in office at the time? Regime change in Iraq has been on the US Government's mind since 1991. The trick is exactly *how best to do it* without creating the disarray and power vacuum which exists now. Perhaps (and don't hurt yourself thinking about this) that's why Bush Sr. didn't allow Schwartzkopf to drive all the way to Baghdad back in Gulf-I... Bush Sr. was smart enough to know that without a concrete game plan in place to deal with the after-effects of toppling Saddam, the situation would become many times worse than the status-quo of containment (which had been working quite well, all Saddam press-ops aside).
    Apparently Bush Jr. isn't as smart as his daddy...

    Regarding your out-of-context snippet from Bob Graham, let's look at what then occurred...
    Graham voted against authorizing President Bush to use force against Iraq. (H.J.Res. 114, CQ Vote #237: Adopted 77-23: R 48-1; D 29-21; I 0-1, 10/11/02, Graham Voted Nay) Sen. Graham Supported President George H.W. Bush In 1991 And Clinton In 1995 In Efforts Against Saddam Hussein's Iraqi Regime, But Voted Against Support Of President George W. Bush In 2002.
    So.. actually, it appears that Graham is consistent with his message, in spite of that single sentence you offered as "proof" of his waffling.

    The rest of your post follows the same lines. I've put my karma where my mouth is.. how about you?

  431. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by willtsmith · · Score: 1

    I don't agree with Libertarians on a lot of issues. But I do have a profound amount of respect for them because they practice what they preach.

    Republicans claim to be Libertarians in nature, but they simply want liberal policies in certain areas where Democrats want them in another. Both sides are VERY strong on regulation. They simply wish to apply it to different things.

    Same goes for true advocates of strict constructionism. That is, you should read the constitution very literally and not interpret. Although I disagree with it, I respect their position.

    I do NOT respect the folks in the James Madison society. They pretend to be strict constructionist when it comes to abortion*On all other issues they will twist the constitution to their hearts content.

    * ...and "gun" control though it doesn't make sense as the amendment specifically cites militias, they are also against unlimited distribution of arms (the literal word) like missle launchers, tanks, cannons, and biowarfare agents.

    --
    -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!
  432. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > Wealth is the product of man's capacity to think.

    - not if you inhereted it, you dumbass

  433. Dumb Democrats by willtsmith · · Score: 1

    You may be the only person who believes that Ann Coulter uses FACTS.

    Personally, I love Ann Coulter. For me she is the poster child of all ultra-conservative thinking. A hysteric blonde bitch. You guys just keep putting Ann right up front.

    As far as your assesment of the Democratic party ... yes they are a train wreck. The reason is that they aren't Democrats anymore. They have become seduced by corporate money and are little different than Republicans.

    The big problem for progressives is that the Democrats have been reduced to a party advocating gay marriage and fringier social issues AND supporting free trade and job destruction. There sole remaining GOOD issue is progressive taxation policies.

    A shift in the economic spectrum is coming soon. NAFTA and WTO HAVE to go. The party that embraces it first will win over the people. If the Democratic leadership had any sense, THEY would universally call for ending NAFTA and WTO.

    --
    -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!
  434. efficiency by suitti · · Score: 2, Insightful

    We're currently doing great things in space. This month and next, a flotilla of space craft will approach Mars. These are projects that are objective driven. They cost a minor fraction of what ISS or the space shuttle cost.

    What is the mission of ISS? One answer has been that it is a necessary step in going to Mars. However, it does not solve problems of weighlessness during the trip, or address radiation shielding, or food growth or recycling.

    Much of the science or technology that can be gained from low Earth orbit is better accomplished with untended platforms. For example, crystal growth, and space telescopes require vibration free environments, in addition to microgravity.

    And ISS is expensive. The last estimate I heard was $97e9. For what?

    The Space Shuttle is a marvel, but also quite expensive. It's primary unique capability - bringing large things back from space - is mostly unusued. It's pretty heavy lift, but despite reuse, it's more expensive than disposable rockets on a per-pound to orbit, even if you ignore original construction costs.

    The main problem with the Shuttle and ISS is that they are goals unto themselves, rather than the means to some end. And, the programs are structured so that it seems to make sense to keep spending to keep the project alive.

    I don't want to hear that we're going to create a permanant station on the moon. I want to hear about what we're going to do once we're there.

    It seems to me that it should be cheaper to go to an asteroid like Eros than to the moon. Eros has little gravity, so launching from it does not require as much fuel. It still costs $10,000 a pound to get to low Earth orbit. The fuel has to get there somehow.

    --
    -- Stephen.
  435. Re:I couldn't agree more tsarkon reports by ElGanzoLoco · · Score: 1

    There won't be any Armageddon unless Bush and his moronic supporters manage to create it. That's the scariest thing about the War on Arabs, it seems like a very blatant attempt to Immanentize the Eschaton. Once I saw a really cool (and in-depth, this thing ran in five or 6 episodes IIRC) documentary about Bush Jr. and his team. Lots of ex-CIA / FBI agents were interviewed, all basically saying "Bush is under *heavy* influence of Christian extremists". Which led me to think, verbatim, "awww, shit". Some Economist (.uk) articles tended to confirm the stuff, and some very serious folks (and facts) are there to backup the theory. Now I can't possibly believe myself that the war in Iraq (for instance) was done on religious grounds (" i.e. immanentize the Eschaton") but still, this shit is damn creepy & it does scare the crap out of me! He can't be *that* stupid, or can he?

    --
    Hello! I'm a disaster waiting to happen!
  436. We're going to Mars by suitti · · Score: 1
    Does anyone recall that, on something like the 25th anniversary of the moon landings, President Bush Sr. called for a grand plan to go to Mars? Are we there yet?

    Just because the president says so, doesn't mean that we're going. JFK said so, and we went. Bush isn't JFK.

    We choose to go to the moon, not because it is easy, but because it is hard. -JFK

    I'd like to hear, We choose to go to the moon, not because it is hard, but to achieve the following goals...

    --
    -- Stephen.
  437. Re:I couldn't agree by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Islam has a 1000+ years of causing armegeddon. Ill be prepared for them to start and when they do, pick a side. Some somoene who has never lived under Islamix rule and Islamic law you are certainly a cockly little fuck.

    So, you think Bush wants to hang out in a bunker for the rest of his life. Yeah, thats it. thats his goal. Retard.

  438. Already has Alien bases by boy_afraid · · Score: 1

    What about the Alien bases that are already there?

    Look here, here, and here.

  439. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What really disturbs you is that YOUR stupidity did not get moderated even close to that.

    you cheesy backside of a donkey!

  440. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This doesn't even make any sense - you brain dead hairless pile of puke

  441. Re:I couldn't agree more tsarkon reports by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bush is one of the most moderate GOP ever to get into the whitehouse to day. No vetos on the DEM congress legislation, big spending crap like this Medicare thing and several other non-conservative things.

    If Bush goes with the bible belters the GOP will fragment, its hardly coherent. If you really think one man can derail the US of A you are *that* stupid? There is no penalty for a leader in a free wolrd being agenuine lunatic? I tihnk not.

    You people have fantasies about these people enjoying hanging out in bunkers and causing WW3. Doubt that. Islamic anti-western practices are agressive and bad for growing economies. The CHinese hate them, India hates them, Russia hates them and do nasty shit to them all the time. Clinto tried to save Islamic neck by going after MIlosevic. Then all the EU idiots and bleeding hearts and fools who eat Islamic propaganda in the "educated" circles run out to support genocidal dictators and defend Islam like its never done anything wrong when the 4 largest countries *hate* Islamic governments.

    Whats wrong with playing cat and mouse with the new USSR of the new century?

    THis conspiracy theory crap from JFK to HAARP to whatever is going on now is crackhead thinking.

  442. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    go back to the trenches you crawled out of to post this shit. because if you survive the civil, I'll come to finish your ass off.

  443. Re:Actually Democrats were there first by Valdrax · · Score: 1
    --
    If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
  444. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    holding on to it is no easy task. most trust babies burn through it. Bush the trsut baby ended up president of the us. hrm.

    so take your stupid snide remark and shove it up your ass. what do you propose to do, take wealth from the offsrping of rich people and give it to you because you have no fucking clue how t get rich on your own. in fact, if inherited people are so dumb asyou might suggest, go fucking con them.

    fuckin, fucking loser.

  445. What's this "between the lines" crap? by khasim · · Score: 1

    "I am not going to go point by point because I don't have the time or desire to argue with someone who can't read between the lines."

    Then why don't you save yourself some time and just EXPLAIN it instead of coming out with crap like "read between the lines"?

    "Those two statements are contradictory."

    No they are not. As you yourself say later.

    "Correct, it was for anything the military needs contractors to take care of, in different fields. Rebuilding IRAQ just happens to fall into that."

    But the contract does not HAVE to go to Halliburton. It COULD have been put up for a COMPETITIVE bid that included mid-eastern companies.

    And that is what SHOULD have happened.

    "Who is "they"? "

    The people shooting at our troops. Don't you watch CNN?

    "But many are foreign terrorists taking advantage of this opportunity."

    Yet Bush claims he made the world safer.

    more attacks == safer?

    Only to people like you.

    "The terrorists over there are but a tiny fraction of the population of Iraq."

    2% is a "tiny fraction". Yet that would still result in 100,000 "terrorists".

    Did you miss the items where a "terrorist" shoots a US troop and then hides in a crowd?

    That sounds like popular support to me.

    "These are insurgents controlled by terrorist groups and possibly even Saddam Hussein in hiding. They are not representative of the Iraqi population."

    Look up the phrase "Sunni Triangle". There is a LARGE portion of the population that would support Saddam or some other Baathist.

    There is also a LARGE portion that would vote for Iran-style theocracy if given the choice.

    Neither of which would be particularly US-friendly.

    Which is why we're STILL seeing between 10 - 20 attacks EACH DAY.

    Did you miss the item where two people were shot and then the crowd danced on their car, looted the bodies and smashed their skulls with bricks?

    And these are the people that will be selling the US oil because they are happy that we liberated them from Saddam?

    You have some serious blinders on.

    1. Re:What's this "between the lines" crap? by That's+Unpossible! · · Score: 1

      Then why don't you save yourself some time and just EXPLAIN it instead of coming out with crap like "read between the lines"?

      Take an English grammar class, please. That way you can learn two things: How to form paragraphs, and how to first present a point and then back it up with more information.

      For example, when I say something like "read between the lines," and then I follow that up with more information about what I mean.

      No they are not [contradictory]. As you yourself say later.

      Yes, they are. Since LOGCAP is a competitive bidding process, you can interpolate it in your sentences to read: They should have used a competitive bidding process, not a competitive bidding process [i.e. LOGCAP]. That is why it is contradictory.

      But the contract does not HAVE to go to Halliburton. It COULD have been put up for a COMPETITIVE bid that included mid-eastern companies.

      And that is what SHOULD have happened.


      Who is funding this rebuilding process? America. Why should our money go to mideast companies? We have already spent billions getting rid of the dictator, and cleaning house in Afghanistan. Why should we spend even more money without an American company profiting?

      Whatever company they hire does not CONTROL the oil fields, as you seem to suggest. Halliburton has a job to do. They are repairing infrastructure. This does not mean they own or control it. That is not even the argument the left has against Halliburton -- they are pissed off that Halliburton is being paid at all to do a job. Which is absurd because Halliburton is the de facto choice due to LOGCAP.

      I can't help it if you want to take American tax money and give it to a middle east company, I think that is just plain dumb, and I know many on the left would agree. (BTW, just so we're clear, I'm not on the left or right -- I'm libertarian.)

      The people shooting at our troops. Don't you watch CNN?

      Ha, so that's where you are getting your one-sided news. I watch CNN, and Fox News, and I read international newspapers, and I have a brain that lets me filter out the noise. You were trying to imply that "they" were Iraqi's, and I was making the point that a small part of the guerillas are Iraqi... namely, those controlled by Saddam loyalists.

      Yet Bush claims he made the world safer.

      more attacks == safer?

      Only to people like you.


      This is another example of your void in logic.

      Bush never claimed a war zone would be safe, did he? Only an idiot would expect it to be safe. The WORLD AT LARGE is safer because you don't have a mass murderer controlling Iraq. You don't have supporters of al Qaeda controlling Afghanistan.

      Of course there will still be terrorist attacks while there are still terrorists. Do you think these attacks would have decreased if we let Saddam continue to control Iraq? A man that gassed his own countrymen? Did you read the recent bit of news that Saddam paid N. Korea $10 million to purchase a factory capable of producing missiles that would have been able to strike a great deal more targets than they had the capability for? The deal was not completed, because N. Korea felt the situation (with the war looming) made the transfer of these assets to dangerous for them, so they kept the money.

      Did you miss the items where a "terrorist" shoots a US troop and then hides in a crowd?

      That sounds like popular support to me.


      I heard you say that, however you provided no details, no facts. Was this in Saddam's home town of Tikrit, where it is known that many Saddam loyalists still exist plentifully? You provided no details, what is to rebut?

      Did you miss the item where two people were shot and then the crowd danced on their car, looted the bodies and smashed their skulls with bricks?

      And these are the people that will be selling the US oil because they are happy that we liberated them from Saddam?

      You have some serious blinders on.

      --
      Ironically, the word ironically is often used incorrectly.
    2. Re:What's this "between the lines" crap? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't have the time to dissect all your drivel, but here's just one quick thing:

      Who is funding this rebuilding process? America. Why should our money go to mideast companies? We have already spent billions getting rid of the dictator, and cleaning house in Afghanistan. Why should we spend even more money without an American company profiting?

      We're funding the rebuilding process? No shit, Sherlock! America spent the past two decades tearing the fucking country down! . I certainly hope we fund the rebuilding!

      How would you feel if China somehow managed to blow the fuck out of the US and then had the balls to say "Oh, you should all be gratefull! We removed your government for you and have implemented this much better one!" Would you be standing there saying, "Oh yes, thank you so much, now please let all your corporations come in, rebuild what you destroyed, and we'll pay your corporations back with money from our natural resources!" --- Because that is EXACTLY what the US has done.

    3. Re:What's this "between the lines" crap? by Matrix272 · · Score: 1

      Don't hold your breath waiting for a coherent response. Your opponent is quite adept when it comes to arguing without consulting logic, or for that matter, facts. Most likely, he'll keep coming back with statements that effectively amount to "nuh uh!"

      BTW, good job quoting Boortz... I was going to, but then I saw your post. It would be very nice if he would get a search feature to search through his fabulous Nealz Nuze blog. There have been many times that I wish I could refer to articles he's posted, or facts he's summed up, but had to go back through by each day. Also, if you're interested, you can hear him on these streaming stations.

      --
      "It's better to have a gun and not need it than need a gun and not have it." ~ Christian Slater, True Romance
    4. Re:What's this "between the lines" crap? by That's+Unpossible! · · Score: 1

      Why let logic get in the way right? ;-)

      Have you tried using Google to search his site? I haven't, but I think it might work. Use site:boortz.com on the keyword search with your keywords at google.

      --
      Ironically, the word ironically is often used incorrectly.
    5. Re:What's this "between the lines" crap? by Matrix272 · · Score: 1

      I haven't tried it... but when he updated his site, there was mention of a search feature that he was going to add. Then again, he also mentioned a newsletter, but that's not starting until early next year.

      --
      "It's better to have a gun and not need it than need a gun and not have it." ~ Christian Slater, True Romance
  446. Re:Thank you China! (and Russia) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually, I know two people (relatives) who are at about retirement age, and would be happy to go back to Saturn V work, rather than the mid-60's anything-you-can-get-in-a-decimated-youth-worshipp ing-economy jobs. The Saturn V could be resurrected relatively easily, if the powers at NASA didn't have their egos tied to a broken "advanced" launch vehicle.

    It could be done. NASA can't or won't do it, or even suggest it, but it's still possible. In ten years those engineers will be well into retirement.

  447. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 1

    Michigan had a republican govoner and Legislature for 12 years, anything the republicans wanted they got.....guess what, we voted for Gore.

    the Politics of a state has very little to do with how the electorate decides to vote in a presidential election.

    --



    I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
  448. It's called a "clue", here's a free one. by khasim · · Score: 1

    "I suppose you would have said to leave Hitler in power back in WWII if you don't think we should have taken Saddam out."

    Suppose all you want.

    Hitler was invading other countries. Saddam wasn't.

    Saddam had already been kicked out of Kuwait.

    Saddam was not a threat to the US nor could the US afford the expense of nation-building when we already had Afghanistan to fix.

    "So I'm saying is don't put on Bush or the Republicans what Bill Clinton should have done a long time ago."

    But Clinton did NOT do it. You keep missing that point.

    Why are you trying to blame Clinton for something he did not do?

    Is it just because you don't have any other support for Bush?

    Too bad.

    "Just from the fack that Saddam Hussein murdered millions of his own people was justification enough to remove him from power."

    Had murdered. We didn't prevent any NEW killings.

    Meanwhile, we were ignoring certain events in Africa where the killings were HAPPENING AT THAT VERY MOMENT.

    So, you think it is better to let someone kill hundreds of thousands of people just so we can "get" someone who kill a lot of people YEARS EARLIER?

    That's some seriously messed up priorities you got there.

    I'd say, keep the sanctions on Iraq and give the UN inspectors the time and info they need while we go and help people who we still have a chance of saving.

    It would have cost us less AND we'd have a better chance of establishing another democracy.

    Instead, we'll see a theocracy in Iraq.

    1. Re:It's called a "clue", here's a free one. by jimmy_dean · · Score: 1

      "Just from the fack that Saddam Hussein murdered millions of his own people was justification enough to remove him from power."

      Had murdered. We didn't prevent any NEW killings.

      Meanwhile, we were ignoring certain events in Africa where the killings were HAPPENING AT THAT VERY MOMENT.

      So, you think it is better to let someone kill hundreds of thousands of people just so we can "get" someone who kill a lot of people YEARS EARLIER?

      That's some seriously messed up priorities you got there.


      Well lets see, I never said that I wouldn't support helping the people in Africa. But what I'm saying is, if WMD are never found (and haven't been so far), then it was justification enough to take out Saddam just from the fact that he's a murderous criminal. Murder is wrong whether you invade another country or not. He killed millions of his own people and I'm saying that's enough people to warrant taking him out. If you disagree then fine...he would still be in power today then killing more people (he didn't just do that in the past). Yes diplomacy was a good idea and in hindsight it probably would have been best to keep going...but given the circumstances Bush had to deal with - after 911 and the threat of terrorism. How did he know whether Saddam wouldn't be a threat to the US? Looking back is such a convenience...but you don't know these things until after it's already happened! I for one don't want to see anymore U.S. citizens killed. I don't want to see anyone killed for that matter including Iraqi soldiers, but we at the time of *war* (in stars because we didn't official declare it constitutionally) must unfortunately kill some soldiers...that's what war is. I'm not just trying to defend Bush but moreso trying to get YOU to see that your arguments use the convenience of hindsight like I mentioned before. Try being the President for one day and I think you'd have a whole new respect for the job. I for one would never want that job...too much pressure.

      --
      -> Sometimes, you just gotta break free from the shackles of proprietary code.
  449. credibility by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "I have the unprovable itch that some of these same people who are bashing his as-yet unanounced plans for moonbase 1 would have rooted and cheered if certain other presidents had made this same decision."

    It's a question of credibility. When we're talking about a president who has a track record of saying things that aren't true, or which are facilitating rationalizations for alternative agendas (protect the forests from forest fires by letting businesses cut down the trees), one naturally wonders what he's really up to. Does he have any intention of following through? What is the alternative agenda he's really trying to serve? What's the real truth behind the words?

  450. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I hope your Dennis Kucinich sig is a joke. because he sure is.

    As far as the 2nd amendment this is all I have to say:
    I asked, "Is the structure and meaning of this sentence the same as the sentence I first quoted you?" He said, "yes." I asked him to rephrase this sentence to make it clearer. He transformed it the same way as the first sentence: "Because a well-regulated militia is necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed."

    ENGLISH USAGE EXPERT INTERPRETS 2ND AMENDMENT

    I just had a conversation with Mr. A.C. Brocki, Editorial Coordinator for the Office of Instruction of the Los Angeles Unified School District. Mr. Brocki taught Advanced Placement English for several years at Van Nuys High School, as well as having been a senior editor for Houghton Mifflin.

    I was referred to Mr. Brocki by Sherryl Broyles of the Office of Instruction of the LA Unified School District, who described Mr. Brocki as the foremost expert in grammar in the Los Angeles Unified School District-the person she and others go to when they need a definitive answer on English grammar.

    I gave Mr. Brocki my name, told him Sherryl Broyles referred me, then asked him to parse the following sentence:

    "A well-schooled electorate, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and read Books, shall not be infringed." Mr. Brocki informed me that the sentence was over punctuated, but that the meaning could be extracted anyway.

    "A well-schooled electorate" is a nominative absolute.

    "being necessary to the security of a free State" is a participial
    phrase modifying "electorate"

    The subject (a compound subject) of the sentence is "the right of the
    people"

    "shall not be infringed" is a verb phrase, with "not" as an adverb
    modifying the verb phrase "shall be infringed"

    "to keep and read books" is an infinitive phrase modifying "right"

    I then asked him if he could rephrase the sentence to make it clearer. Mr. Brocki said, "Because a well-schooled electorate is necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and read books shall not be infringed."

    I asked: can the sentence be interpreted to restrict the right to keep and read books to a well-schooled electorate-say, registered voters with a high-school diploma?" He said, "No."

    I then identified my purpose in calling him, and read him the Second Amendment in full:

    "A well-regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed."

    I asked, "Is the structure and meaning of this sentence the same as the sentence I first quoted you?" He said, "yes." I asked him to rephrase this sentence to make it clearer. He transformed it the same way as the first sentence: "Because a well-regulated militia is necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed."

    I asked him whether the meaning could have changed in two hundred years. He said, "No."

    I asked him whether this sentence could be interpreted to restrict the right to keep and bear arms to "a well-regulated militia." He said, "no." According to Mr. Brocki, the sentence means that the people \are\ the militia, and that the people have the right which is mentioned.

    I asked him again to make sure:

    Schulman: "Can the sentence be interpreted to mean that the right can be restricted to "a well-regulated militia?"

    Brocki: "No, I can't see that."

    Schulman: "Could another, professional in English grammar or linguistics interpret the sentence to mean otherwise?"

    Brocki: "I can't see any grounds for another interpretation."

    I asked Mr. Brocki if he would be willing to stake his professional reputation on this opinion, and be quoted on this. He said, "Yes."

    At no point in the conversation did I ask Mr. Brocki his opinion on the Second Amendment, gun control, or the right to keep and bear arms.

    If you people every come to take away my second amendment, its worth dying to keep you from taking it. FREEDOM!

  451. To the Moon! by ubikkibu · · Score: 1

    I encourage "President" Bush to participate personally in this audacious venture.

    In space, no one can hear you lie.

  452. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the representatives in the college are not legally bound to cast thier votes in line with the popular vote. ive never seen any legislation to abolish this or to clarify this.

    recount 2004. this times the dems stand to lose by a wider margin that 25 electoral votes which Bush looks like he did in fact win by a small margin (most of the recount artiles Ive looked are are inconclusive or cite a small Bush lead.)

    BTW, Gore has been shown to be the hypocrite toy of the oil mafia retard that he is. DEAD and KERRY pushed him aside for christ's sake. The guy was an arrogant empty suit who grew up in the racist south with a father that legislation racist things. Dont tel me you dont know Gore is the son of alwmaker. dont tell me you dont know his KKK-Byrd like past?

  453. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 poser pussy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    thts awful big mouth talk coming from a pussy poser like yourself.

    hell gun your retarded ass down and eat long pig that evening.

  454. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 warning ELITIST by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i dont log in because imnot a karma whore. if you dont take AC seriously you arent an intellectual but prone to pre-cleaned groupthink. its your fault you think AC is inferior, and its a position that is not based in intellect.

    as to the Patriot act, cite its use and abuse, and you really, really think that any law isnt able to be challenged on the grounds of constitutionality? give me a break. if mumia the cop killer can get support, im sure Johnny the Patriot Victim could easily do it (unless he was white).

    Slashdot is so biased in a way wihch makes me wonder right now why I even bother. Its more to laugh at the crap people come up with, prodding them along so the sheer stupidity and lack of depth in the srguments the put forth are posted for all to see.

    And to calling me an asshat, fuck you mental midget. you tink you are hot shit? you're not. you did nothing to impress me, and your website sucks. loser.

  455. zerg by Lord+Omlette · · Score: 1

    There's a reasonable chance that Bush may just be trying to look good compared to Hu Jintao who (if you believe anyone other than the U.S. media) has been looking alot better than Bush has recently.

    --
    [o]_O
  456. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 demoncats in 1998 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Demoncats thought the were there for sure in 1998:

    DEMS PLAY FOLLOW
    THE LEADER
    For Years Key Dems Recognized WMD Threat . . . But Now Howard Dean Has Changed Their Minds

    Dean On Dems: "'All these guys running say how terrible Iraq is,' Dean told Iowa voters ... 'Where were they four months ago when we really needed them to stand up to the president of the United States?'" (Jeff Zeleny, "Potential For War Troubles Field Of Democratic Hopefuls," Chicago Tribune, 1/20/03)

    DEM LEADERS BECOME DEAN LITE
    RIGHT BEFORE OUR EYES

    Dean Accused Sen. John Kerry Of Being "Dean Lite." "Speaking to the crowd minutes later, [Dean] added, 'I appreciate Sen. Kerry saying we don't want Bush lite, and we don't. But Sen. Kerry, we don't want Dean lite, either.'" (Joel Siegel, "Sen. Kerry Throws His Weight Around Upstate," Daily News [New York], 6/1/03)

    Dean Lite: Noun Or Adjective: "Dean is pulling the Democratic Party hard to the left - throwing red meat to liberal activists ... polarizing the electorate." (Deborah Orin, "Kerry Follows Dean's Lead," The New York Post, 7/17/03)

    Dean Campaign Accused Kerry Campaign Of Plagiarism. '"You get the feeling they're hiring Jayson Blair to write their speeches,' said Dean campaign manager Joe Trippi, referring to the New York Times reporter who had to quit because of plagiarism." (Deborah Orin, "Kerry Follows Dean's Lead," The New York Post, 7/17/03)

    REP. DICK GEPHARDT (D-MO)
    December 16, 1998: Said Any Delay In Attacking Iraq Would Give Saddam Time To Build WMD. "[W]e believe that the President has made the correct decision to undertake military action against Iraq at this time. Any delay would have given Saddam Hussein time to reconstitute his arsenal of weapons of mass destruction and undermine international support for our efforts." (Rep. Gephardt and Sen. Daschle, Joint Statement On Military Action Against Iraq, 12/16/98)

    October 11, 2002: Said "We Must Do Everything In Our Power." "'September 11 has made all the difference,' Gephardt said. 'We must now do everything in our power to prevent further terrorist attacks and ensure that an attack with a weapon of mass destruction cannot happen.'" (Craig Gilbert, "Congress OKs Force In Iraq," Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, 10/11/02)

    * July 20, 2003: Reports Indicate Dean Thought War Was "Mistake." "He [Dean] also has said the questions about the prewar intelligence and the continuing postwar violence have made it 'more and more clear ... what a mistake this administration made in launching a preemptive war in Iraq.'"(Ronald Brownstein, "Criticism Of War Seen As Risk For Democrats," Los Angeles Times, 7/20/03)

    Two Days Later: Gephardt Said Administration Has Made Us "Less Safe." "I'm running for president because I believe George Bush has left us less safe and less secure than we were four years ago... I'm seeking the presidency because foreign policy isn't a John Wayne movie, where we catch the bad guys, hoist a few cold ones, and then everything fades to black ..." (Representative Richard Gephardt, Remarks At The San Francisco Bar Association, 7/22/03)

    SEN. BOB GRAHAM (D-FL)
    December 16, 1998: Called For Regime Change In Iraq. "I hope that today's strike is the beginning of a sustained effort to move from containment of Saddam Hussein's regime to its replacement." (Sen. Bob Graham, "Statement About The United States' Strike On Iraq," Press Release, 12/16/98)

    June 23, 2002: Called WMD Threat And Merger With Terror Groups "Ultimate Nightmare Scenario." "What we're concerned about with Iraq is its intention and capabilities to develop weapons of mass destruction, and the merger of that capability with terrorist groups, that is the ultimate nightmare scenario..."(Fox News' "Sunday," 6/23/02)

    * July 10, 2003: Dean "Convinced More Than Ever" War Resolution Was Mistake. "'I am now convinced more than ever that it was a mistake to have given this ad

  457. Re:economically interesting by maddogsparky · · Score: 1
    I for one see a huge market in the entertainment/tourism industry. Picture what atheletes could accomplish in a 1/6th g arena. Anyone could dunk a basket ball or hit a ball out of the park. Ballet dancers could do 20 foot leaps on stage. You'd be able to play lazertag or paintball like the characters in first-person shooters (i.e. drop from 30 feet without injury). Rock climbing would be a breeze even for people that are 100 lbs overweight. The low g would be a dream come true for special effects people.

    It would also be a great place for a spa or medical recouperation clinic. Lighter g would certainly place less stress on stressed-out and healing bodies and the view of the stars and moonscape is absolutely amazing.

    If you can get rich people to the moon to take part in these kinds of activities at a price they are willing to pay (say, sever hundred grand/trip)or to produce entertainment for the masses, the masses won't be far behind. After all, 5-star exclusive resorts aren't just populated be rich people; they need support staff to cater to their every whim too.

    Think about it.

    --
    science is a religion
  458. execution and timing are key by rbird76 · · Score: 1

    I don't like almost anything that President Bush has done - that probably colors my (and others) opinion of this idea. That being said, the merits of the idea are determined by more than just a speech.

    1) What is the plan for getting this done? Is the plan technically feasible?

    2) Will there be enough money to fund it? Will the money go to the right people? Will the right people have authority to make decisions on the execution?

    3) What is the long-term purpose?

    The problem with this is President Bush's execution of some of his other plans hasn't been so hot. It would have been hard to find OBL anyway, but committing Afghanistan-based troops to it probably doesn't help to find him. The war in Iraq was an effective military move (except that it strained the military significantly - while the state of unpreparedness isn't due to GWB, he planned extensive military missions knowing that state) but less effective at stabilizing Iraq. It doesn't seem that he (or his staff) had an effective plan for the aftermath of the Iraq war - while whatever good that has been achieved in Iraq has been ill-publicized, the disorder currently in force makes it difficult for that good to endure long, and the disorder doesn't seem to have been anticipated by the GWB administration. The furor over the Halliburton deals to rebuild Iraqi infrastructure also seems relevant here. Running a deficit in times of recession wouldn't be so bad, but the current deficit is rather large, and the amount of actual spending in the budget has probably been helped further by low interest rates (lowering the interest payments on the debt accrued). Neither Reagan or Bush Sr. were able to effectively take steps to decrease the size of the federal gov't, one of the reasons for lowering taxes in the first place. From the way things have gone, I don't see GWB decreasing the size of the federal gov't either - thus the "fiscally responsible" Republicans are spending money without an idea of how it will be repaid.

    Given the poor execution or thought in the plans GWB has put into play, there are some reasons to distrust this plan. I would also have mistrusted this plan under Clinton - Clinton seemed great at coming up with things but not so good at executing them. Bad execution of a plan of this sort will make it more difficult to achieve those goals later, and so it is a good idea to make sure it is done right. Since I don't trust GWB to do so, an attempt to go to the moon now (IMO) might be counterproductive.

    1. Re:execution and timing are key by DarkSarin · · Score: 1

      That's fine, at least you are admitting that you don't like the man, and don't think he's competent. That is completely legit, as long as you realize that this colors your opinion of his plans.

      I also agree with your assessment of Clinton--he talked a lot of great ideas, but didn't do much. I just wish people would realize that their previous opinions are a dangerous thing sometimes.

      --
      "We don't know what we are doing, but we are doing it very carefully,..." Wherry, R.J. Personnel Psychology (1995)
  459. Offtopic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I found this at the bottom of the page. Winning isn't everything, but losing isn't anything. Which I believe is not true (if the AP is to be believed) Here, I fixed it for you Winning isn't everything, but losing can make you the president of the US . troll mode = 1

  460. Re:David Letterman: George BushBush is a fundament by Grassroots11 · · Score: 1

    This Bush sucks at literally everything we can think of. http://www.q2112.com/what_does_this_bush_suck_at_b est_.htm

    --
    Faith: (noun): That quality which enables us to believe what we know to be untrue.
  461. Boo! Hiss! Seethe! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've always wanted another moon mission. But since it's Bush I hate the idea and am deeply angry, suspicious, resentful and yet lovably ironic about the whole venture. Oh yeah, and Ashcroft is the devil. /YOU

  462. Read Carefully: It Happenned by thelizman · · Score: 1

    It wasn't a bluff. It w as a serious research effort with lofty goals which were never achieved because their necessity disappated. Calling SDI a bluff is about as honest as calling the moon race a bluff.

    And FYI, I have an acquaintance who worked on an SDI programme in the 80's which resulted in - here it comes - the Patriot II Anti Missile System.

  463. Where will Bush get the money to pay for it? by Anomylous+Howard · · Score: 1

    I really, really, truely, honestly hate to be a party pooper, but I gotta wonder where the U.S.A. will get the money to pay for this. Pres. Bush is already bankrupting the nation by living off of credit from over seas lenders.
    When one is as far in debt as the U.S.A. is, creditors get REALLY picky when you ask for more money, even if it is to pay for something really COOL.
    I'm all for going to the moon and beyond, but only if we are willing pay for it up front.

  464. Super Collider? by Yanray · · Score: 1

    Bush thinks a Super Collider is what Clinton did with Monica...

    Now point for point to counter your raving. Fuck the National Debt, every organization has debt and assets. National debt should be adjusted to average national wage per citizen (Higher then the $26,000 we each owe) National Debt is being dragged out of the closet again after 10 years. Last time it was Perot's pet this time the Democrats are scarmongering. Republicans know better and are attempting to recover the economy after the "e-commerce" decade run by the inventor of the internet (Gores) boss (Clinton) went bust. Don't blaim poor a poor ecomony now on Bush. Manufacturing jobs are on the rise according to articles in the Wall Street Journal and the NYTimes (w0rthle$$ rag).
    The recovery is on it's way...

    Wait it out or teach an employer the true meaning of employee productivity; BUT DO NOT IDEALIZE THE "GLORY YEARS" OF THE CLINTON/GORE ECONOMIC YEARS. THEY GOT US HERE.

    Now before you stop reading Bush has screwed the U.S. on every foriegn policy issue to date (other then the Fact that he just as I type has lifted the Imported Steal Tarriffs) He had supported and encouraged the use of sanctions, has demoralized international organizations at every turn, and used poor logic / bad intelligence in his international decision making. I support our troops and the nation rebuilding in Iraq. I did not like the use of "security concerns" as a reason for war.

    Most of the money is actually going to Halliburton. Most people knew that they would inevitably get the reconstruction contract because they were the only company with the resources and the Know how to do the job, I myself have yet to pay a bribe to have anything done in the US, what makes you think US companies abroad are going to work like that. US business ethics are not that bad many other countries have worse and the Federal Trade Commission just catchs more of it... By the way you notice that the entire Enron Fiasco blew up in the first days of the Bush administrations control?? Thank goodness that the Reupblicans like fighting white collar crime, or are just more familiar with it.

    The Tax Cut is what most people want to here they are getting. The rich couldn't give a shit less they just maximize benefits from sale of stock. The masses get a small check and use it to pay down debt (or help purchase new TV). It is a pointless jesture either way, but he kept his promise to those that elected him (No bitching about the Electoral College vs. the people please; if I hear about chads of any kind again I'll puke, still find all those elederly democrats voting Buchanean funny as hell though.)

    National Spending on Science research is currently going to do the nation more good then bad. With the current budget we can innitiate a number of these large scale Science programs as the higher costs will take a number of years to affect us. This "from the tone of your post" I believe that you would agree with. However your reaction to a Moon outpost as pointless and a super collider is essentially like argueing Applied technology vs. Pure Science. Both are needed an earlier article on slashdot called (I am not going back and reformating now) Big Science has 20 Year plan ( http://science.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=03/11/1 5/0419207&mode=thread&tid=103&tid=134&tid= 99 )
    Great Idea Fully fund everything on the list!! However I believe that devoping outposts in space, on the moon, and under the ocean will put scientists/inventors/businesspeople in a position to to develope new applied technology, develope useful applications for current technology that will funnel into the commerial, industrial, and residential (remember Tang and velcro) markets. Things like material sciences, medical/biological sciences, robotic/remote manufacturing, and nuclear sciences could make huge leaps from people living and working in these formidable environments.

    As for the IQ of the current president, after the legalese of the l

    --
    --"Sorry for the inconvience." Gods Last Words to his Creation
    DNA, So Long and Thanks for all the Fish
  465. two reasons the USA never go back to the moon... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    no oil on the moon...

    no evil regimes and no possibility of claiming that someone has WMD on the moon.

  466. Sans Consistency by jdelisle · · Score: 1

    I know this isn't a political website, but all the George Bush bashing is getting a little old. For months on slashdot I read about people begging to go to the moon/mars. Now, once it is reported that the *president of the united states* is actually considering action, I see a flood of comments about how terrible G Bush is for even contemplating such a commitment. How about a little consistency here fellas? Of course, there are similar patterns with other topics, but this whole thread of comments really annoyed me.

  467. Yes, but they would also catch me being smart. by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 1


    True. However, they would also catch me doing many very intelligent things. I've never known President George Bush to do anything especially intelligent.

    1. Re:Yes, but they would also catch me being smart. by chrisbord · · Score: 1

      Name an example of 'anything especially intelligent.'

  468. Absolutely go back to the moon by HangingChad · · Score: 1

    And put Bush on the first one-way rocket headed up there! Finally, a practical use for space technology.

    --
    That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
  469. If you can't explain it, you don't understand it. by khasim · · Score: 1

    "For example, when I say something like "read between the lines," and then I follow that up with more information about what I mean."

    No, "read between the lines" means that there is a meaning there in addition to the information confered by the statement.

    "Yes, they are. Since LOGCAP is a competitive bidding process, you can interpolate it in your sentences to read: They should have used a competitive bidding process, not a competitive bidding process [i.e. LOGCAP]. That is why it is contradictory."

    Okay, once again, really slowly for you. Because Halliburton won the LOGCAP bid that does NOT mean that they HAD to be given the contract for Iraq.

    You have a problem with that fact and there is no amount of explaining that will get that through your head.

    The government was NOT in any way required to award that contract to Halliburton.

    Despite your claims to the contrary, they were not.

    You even posted a previous instance where Clinton awarded a contract to Halliburton despite Halliburton losing the LOGCAP bid.

    But then you claim that the winner of the LOGCAP bid has to get those contracts.

    You don't have any idea what you're talking about.

    "Bush never claimed a war zone would be safe, did he?"

    He said he made the world safer. Yet now we have more attacks than before. You don't understand a thing.

    "Do you think these attacks would have decreased if we let Saddam continue to control Iraq?"

    How many attacks were there on US citizens in 1999? Now we have 10 - 20 a day.

    Leaving Saddam in Iraq would have resulted in a few thousand fewer attacks, given historical data available from 1990 - 2000.

    "I heard you say that, however you provided no details, no facts."

    Damn, you read all those news sources and you need ME to provide you with references?

    http://www.azcentral.com/news/articles/1202IraqS ol dierDeaths02-ON.html

    http://charleston.net/stories/070703/ter_07iraq. sh tml

    How did you manage to miss things like that in your widespread readings?

    1. Yes.
    2. Yes, yes, yes.
    3. No.
    4. Yes.

    With your "read between the lines", you're trying to imply that the majority of Iraqis would rather have the US occupation.

    Yet the facts don't seem to support that. Rather we have reports of groups of Iraqis celebrating that US troops are being killed.

    "What is your solution to the mess of terrorism and Iraq, by the way? The war in the middle east is not perfect, but the goals are noble -- to make the world more free, to destroy terrorists, to help the people that need it the most."

    No, we went in to control the oil.

    That's why Bush had to lie about the yellow cake and nukes.

    That's why Bush had to lie about the stockpiles of chemical and biological weapons.

    That's why Bush had to imply that there was a connection between Saddam and al Queda.

    That's why Bush had to lie about the "darn good" intelligence that he had from Iraqi exiles.

    That's why our people are being killed over there, 6 months after the "Mission Accomplished" banner that Bush is now blaming on sailors.

    If the war is to make the world more free, then why aren't we spending more money and troops helping Afghanistan?

    If the war is to destroy terrorists, then why aren't we spending more money and troops helping Afghanistan (we KNOW they had al Queda there)?

    If the war is to help the people that need it the most, then why aren't we spending more money and time in Afghanistan where warloards control everything except Kabul?

    Why didn't we move into Africa when they were STILL KILLING PEOPLE?

    Those are the facts. I'm not surprise that someone like you can claim to read so much, yet miss so much reporting.

  470. Dean/McGovern by glrotate · · Score: 1

    If you don't understand that "get out of Iraq" means "giving up and letting Hussein have his way" then there there's probably a reason you think Dean's got a chance.

    1. Re:Dean/McGovern by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Double fool. You respond to things I didn't say, and you didn't even bother to provide evidence for your original claim.

      When did I say Dean had a chance? When did I even say the word "Dean"?

      Anyway, PBS's News Hour is airing speeches by the major candidates. Yesterday was the first and they featured Dean. He was pretty clear on his opposition to the war, but he said he was commited to finishing the job by replacing the US occupation force with a UN rebuilding force. I think that's entirely different than "[getting] out of Iraq" and even more different than "giving up and letting Hussein have his way".

      He also scored some points for bringing up Diebold. He's aware of the issue and is apparently asked about electronic voting fraud several times a day.

      Now, will he follow through? I can't say since I left my crystal ball in my other pants, but I think he's at least as likely to follow through with his promises as George Bush.

  471. So you don't support Bush's activities? by khasim · · Score: 1

    "Well lets see, I never said that I wouldn't support helping the people in Africa."

    So you don't support Bush because he didn't go into Africa. Is that what you're saying?

    "If you disagree then fine...he would still be in power today then killing more people (he didn't just do that in the past)."

    The US killed more Iraqis during our Invasion than Saddam had killed in the past year. Sad, but true. So, from a pure body count, the Iraqi people would have been better off with Saddam than with Bush.

    "Yes diplomacy was a good idea and in hindsight it probably would have been best to keep going...but given the circumstances Bush had to deal with - after 911 and the threat of terrorism."

    Bullshit. There were enough peace marches with enough people that there is no "hindsight" on this issue. Just like there is no "threat of terrorism" because there wasn't any evidence that Saddam was linked to al Queda.

    In fact, al Queda has a completely different viewpoint than Saddam. Saddam is very secular.

    "How did he know whether Saddam wouldn't be a threat to the US?"

    Simple, Saddam didn't have any weapons that could reach the US. The US still had a military presence in Kuwait.

    "Looking back is such a convenience...but you don't know these things until after it's already happened!"

    Again, bullshit. Bush claimed to have "darn good" intelligence that Saddam had "WMD's" but he would NOT provide that to the UN inspectors to verify. Now it looks like Bush did not have ANY information. Just fantasies.

    "I for one don't want to see anymore U.S. citizens killed."

    Then stop reading the paper because US citizens are dieing in Iraq.

    "I don't want to see anyone killed for that matter including Iraqi soldiers, but we at the time of *war* (in stars because we didn't official declare it constitutionally) must unfortunately kill some soldiers...that's what war is."

    The US invaded another country, without any IMMEDIATE threat from that country. I don't care what you WANT to see. It happened and closing your eyes will not make it go away.

    "I'm not just trying to defend Bush but moreso trying to get YOU to see that your arguments use the convenience of hindsight like I mentioned before."

    And suppose I were to provide you with an example of me saying that there would not be any "WMD's" found PRIOR to our invasion?

    What would that do to your "hindsight" arguement?

    Think about it. Because I can prove it.

    "Try being the President for one day and I think you'd have a whole new respect for the job. I for one would never want that job...too much pressure."

    Cool. I'll take your challenge. Get Bush out and I'll take over for a day.

    1. Re:So you don't support Bush's activities? by jimmy_dean · · Score: 1

      Alright, prove it. You have no debating skills anyway. I'd like to see you cover all of the holes that you've made in your replies. :)

      --
      -> Sometimes, you just gotta break free from the shackles of proprietary code.
    2. Re:So you don't support Bush's activities? by khasim · · Score: 1

      http://z.iwethey.org/forums/render/content/show?co ntentid=90758

      And there aren't any holes in my position. If there were, you'd be pointing them out and harping on them.

      You are the one that doesn't understand debate. You're all over the place with your posts. You support Bush, you don't support Bush. You would support stuff that Bush wouldn't support. Whatever.

      Mostly, I find it amusing that you use "terrorism" as a reason for Bush to invade Iraq when the White House has already issued a statement that it had no evidence that Saddam had any connections to al Queda.

      "But what I'm saying is, if WMD are never found (and haven't been so far), then it was justification enough to take out Saddam just from the fact that he's a murderous criminal."

      So, taking out one "murderous criminal" is worth over $100 Billion? Well, you're entitled to your opinion. But I don't think you'll get much support for that one. We'd have to spend over $1 TRILLION just in the mid-east with THAT kind of "logic".

      Not to mention the number of US troops that will be KILLED.

      Oh, you're one of THOSE, aren't you?

      No price is too high for your beliefs. As long as SOMEONE ELSE is paying it.

      For my part, I view his killing as an IRAQI issue. To be handled by the Iraqi people.

  472. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by shift82 · · Score: 0

    The Nazis under Hitler actually helped the German economy. It seems the only problem with his ideas were his govermental takeover, his attempt to make Europe==Deutschland and the slaughter of millions of people. Not to mention the loss of freedoms, etc. It just comes back to this one fact: money isn't everything, and we'd probably be better if we were without it. The unfortunate fact is that no one's honest enough to have a better system.

  473. Re:If you can't explain it, you don't understand i by That's+Unpossible! · · Score: 1

    You have severe reading comprehension skills, and therefore it is no fun arguing with you.

    I wasn't trying to explain what "reading between the lines" means, I was giving you an example of how to form an argument. You make a statement, and then you provide more information to back up your point. I only gave you an example because you seemed confused.

    Despite your claims to the contrary, they were not.

    Nowhere did I state they HAD to go with Halliburton. Please find out what 'de facto' means. If you had read my original message, you would notice where I pointed out that Bill Clinton did not go with the de facto choice (the current LOGCAP holder), they went instead with Halliburton, supposedly because they thought they were the right company for the particular job. No one complained about that. This was the crux of my entire argument, and Neal's.

    I'm sorry, I can't go on arguing with you because you continue to misrepresent what I said and then you attack this strawman. This is a common tactic of someone who is arguing an illogical point.

    --
    Ironically, the word ironically is often used incorrectly.
  474. I can explain myself. by khasim · · Score: 1

    "de facto"

    From www.m-w.com

    Main Entry: de facto
    Function: adjective
    Date: circa 1689
    1 : ACTUAL; especially : being such in effect though not formally recognized
    2 : exercising power as if legally constituted

    They won a formal bidding process. The were formally recognized and legal.

    There was nothing "de facto" about it.

    "Nowhere did I state they HAD to go with Halliburton."

    Yet you kept arguing that they did have to go with Halliburton because Halliburton won the LOGCAP bid.

    I was the one pointing out that winning the LOGCAP bid did NOT mean that they had to use them. I said that in multiple posts. Don't try to get out of that now. I said that while they could LEGALLY issue the contract to Halliburton, without bids, that was not what they SHOULD have done.

    I said they SHOULD have started a bidding process that INCLUDED companies from the mid-east.

    "I'm sorry, I can't go on arguing with you because you continue to misrepresent what I said and then you attack this strawman. This is a common tactic of someone who is arguing an illogical point."

    You're just unhappy that with all the stuff you claimed to have read, I'm the one that had to provide you with links to actual events.

    Where's the strawman? I'm saying that Bush didn't finish Afghanistan before he got us into Iraq. I'm saying that he lied to get us into Iraq. I'm saying that he did everything wrong in Iraq. I'm saying that the Iraqi people are NOT happy with us and will end up with a theocracy when Bush finally cuts his losses and runs before the next election.

    I've said that I can PROVE that I said that Iraq did not have any "WMD's" PRIOR to our invasion so there's none of this "hindsight" bullshit your tried to pull.

    Not to mention that you tried to blame this on Clinton.

    Well, toddle along. I've given you enough of an education today. Maybe SOME of it will sink in.

    1. Re:I can explain myself. by That's+Unpossible! · · Score: 1

      Where's the strawman?

      The strawman is the one you create when you change what I actually said and then argue against that.

      For example, I never, ever stated that they "had" to use Halliburton. Re-read all my replies if you don't believe me. I stated the facts: Clinton used Halliburton even when they didn't have the LOGCAP, and no one complained. Bush went with Halliburton when they DID have the LOGCAP, and everyone complains.

      You create these strawmen with just about every statement I make, therefore I will stop debating with you.

      --
      Ironically, the word ironically is often used incorrectly.
  475. MOD PARENT UP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It needs to get to 4 so google will see it.
    Note:google is an AC

  476. Nope by StarKruzr · · Score: 1

    Environmentalists don't like wind farms because they kill birds.

    Try again.

    --

    +++ATH0
  477. That's great, but... by StarKruzr · · Score: 1

    "we have money to spend on education and a bunch extra............ ok, now let's go to the moon"

    This condition will never be met - CANNOT be met. We have money to spend on education?! When?! And we've had "extra" exactly once in recent history - when the budget was balanced under the Clinton administration. We will never have billions upon billions of "extra" money in the federal budget. The project will have to be allocated first and paid for later like everything else.

    The question is whether or not it can be justified politically. That's what we have to focus on rather than even thinking about paying for it up front - it's just not possible.

    --

    +++ATH0
  478. "de facto" by khasim · · Score: 1

    Much like you don't know the meaning of "de facto", you don't know the meaning of the word "strawman".

    I said that they could have put the contract up for bid.

    You said that they did and that Halliburton won the LOGCAP bid.

    I said that Halliburton won the LOGCAP, but that didn't mean that they had to use Halliburton. I said they could put the Iraq contract up for bid.

    You said they did and that Haliburton won the LOGCAP bid.

    Do you want me to post links to your posts where you said that?

    Once again, the government did NOT have to use Halliburton. The government SHOULD have put the contract up for open bids and SHOULD have included mid-east companies.

    Now is when you come back and say that it WAS up for open bid and that Halliburton won it.

    Just like you said here:

    http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=88026&thresh ol d=1&commentsort=0&tid=160&mode=thread&cid=7629 390

    "Can you not read? There WAS a competitive bidding process, and Halliburton won it! They do this on a regular basis, not when a war is in progress or being planned. One reason is to avoid the bias of the current administration."

    Well, your own words, quoted, in context, with reference link.

    Go ahead and say that you didn't say that.

  479. Yeah! Radiation-hardened crops by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let's do it!

    gewg_

  480. No, you misheard! by psyconaut · · Score: 1

    He said the US will go back to Vietnam! Not the moon! Silly rabbits...

    -psy

  481. Wouldn't you like 2 slap that self-confident smirk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    right off his silver-spoon face--a fortunate son who
    doesn't do his homework, constantly does bone-headed things, and never admits to a mistake.

    gewg_

  482. Re:Thank you China! (and Russia) by vik · · Score: 1

    Nah, I just do modelling & design for TransOrbital. The tricky language bits (such as remembering to write "English" with a capital 'E') I do for IDG and other publishing houses.

    Vik :v)

  483. Re:Thank you China! (and Russia) by vik · · Score: 1

    Ironically the Russians launched my previous satellite.

    Vik :v)

  484. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by nutznboltz · · Score: 1

    What's funny to me is that if you google for "deficit" it all comes back "attention deficit". What irony.

  485. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by wmspringer · · Score: 1

    Exactly; I may not always agree with McCain, but I respect the man and I'd trust him to try to do what's right, because he's shown a willingness to do what the right thing reguardless of the party line.

    Bush, on the other hand, I neither trust nor respect.

    (And since I'm sure someone will ask...no, I wouldn't trust Clinton either, at least not about his sex life...but then, I didn't vote for him)

    As to the AC bit: ACs have no credibility. If you're not willing to defend your views publically, why should we believe they're worth anything? There are valid reasons to post AC, but in this discussion it seems to be mainly used for anonymous flames.

  486. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 tsarkon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the fact you are biased against AC posts is a character flaw. some people dont bother to login, some people always click post AC. you judge them and say what the write is less valid. this is a comletely ignorant thing to do.

    if a logged in user you hate bring up a valid point, you can say, oh, thats coming out of HIS mouth, im ignoring it.

    the beauty of AC is that you never know who it is. scientists often peform studies with double blind, they make sure they cant cheat because they dont know which object of study is "the one."

    if you ignore AC posts on Slashdot, you are probably missing 90% of whats worth reading, because most of what gets moderated up isnt very well thought or or very funny. Its actually too easy on /. to get +5 if you take a really trivial amount of time to reverse engineer the group thinking here.

    so by proclamining half truths against a whole swath of people posting as AC seems ignorant.

    to say that anonymous people have nothing to say: well, i've read my fair share of anonymously written works and quotes and they can indeed be interesting.

    works such as the bible are anonymous. would "the fountainhead" be any less of a book if you didnt know who wrote it?

    did you know a large percentage of authors use pen names / pseudonyms? tell my why that is? is a pen name author any less valid than non-anonymous one?

  487. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 tsarkon by Slack3r78 · · Score: 1

    You've missed my point entirely.

    I have no problem with AC's. In fact, I wouldn't have read the AC post in the first place if I didn't intentionally browse at 0 threshold a lot of the time specifically so I CAN read AC posts. The problem I have is when people hide behind the AC simply because they just want to start a flame war or they're not willing to stand up for their beliefs.

    The only reason I launched a flame back is because the original AC poster (if it's not you) bitched about not logging in because he "didn't want to be persecuted," which is bullshit.

  488. So your for ... by willtsmith · · Score: 1

    Obviously, other people disagree. Perhaps even the founders. If not, why didn't they simply write ...

    "The peopele have the right to carry firearms."

    And leave it at that.

    For example ...

    Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.

    It doesn't say ...

    The speech of the people, being necessary for pursuit of political discourse, and further being a necessity to reason, shall not be abridged. The press, being a natural forum for speech, printed or spoken, shall neither be restricted. etc...

    The second amendment seems to have a curious format and it is ABSOLUETLY a matter of debate. It was so fucking obvious there would be no debate.

    My personal take is that it is intentionally ambiguous. That is, people disagreed about the nature of that amendement. The existence of citizen militias was a HUGE bone of contention leading up to the Revolution. Some others likely believed that the right to bear ANY type of weaponry should not be infringed in any way.

    We are left to reason to interpret the meaning of these phrases intertwined. Given the hideous nature of the text, a literal interpretation simply isn't possible.

    The idea that this amendment deals specifically with guns is also ludicrous. It doesn't say guns. It says arms. Armaments at the time ranged from cannon, rifle, pistol and swords.

    Arms of this day consist of shoulder fired missles, flame-throwers, land-mines, tanks, nuclear weaponry, biological agents, etc... A literal interpretation would require one to protect all the above as a protected right of a citizen.

    Finally, go back to Mr. Brocki and ask him how HE would have written the sentence. Ask him if one of his students had written a sentence like that he would have corrected it. Watch him shut down.

    The second amendment is a contrived ambiguity. The notion that these brilliant men of learning would write such a crappy sentence because of sloppines is naive.

    --
    -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!
  489. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 warning ELITIST by Slack3r78 · · Score: 1

    Ohhhhhh awesome flame man. My compliments. Laff.

  490. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You don't get it.

    We don't care because near every president before him did it (including Clinton; he simply balanced a yearly budget, not the whole damn thing and that was more opportunistic given the vast majority of that tax revenue came from excess government spending of years past which yielded techologies that finally spilled over into the private sector). The voting population then didn't care either.

    So we don't either. The likes of others like you prancing around screaming how bad this is is ludicrious, simply because you weren't screaming your heads off when it was done in the past. Doing so now, instead, you are seen as divisive and party-centric (Democratic) instead of having a fair argument. That's what happens when you stick your head in the sand and why party divisiveness nowadays is so damn vicious; you didn't speak up in general, only seemingly (and lending to the credence of disingenious and untimely argument) when party mattered.

    Plus, saying stuff like "The deficit has never been this high" is, sorry to say, stupid. My response: NO SHIT. When the deficit first hit under a Democratic president (should we be blaming "them" for catering to the needs of the population and starting us down this slippery slope of payoffs upon payoffs?), the deficit was never so high. 20 years ago, the deficit was never been so high. It nearly always, except for a correlation with a huge economic spike, never been so high.

    The nature of payoffs and the hole is that it keeps growing every 4 years, just like campaign contributions keep going, simply to stay ahead of the Joneses.

    As to the song and dance, yeah, it would be nice; wouldn't work with me. That's why we vote, unlike some folks who would pre-empt that entire system. Looting? *I* got looted when the Democrats sat on their hands during the last 2 years of Clinton's term doing shit when corporations where getting robbed. That's looting. Deficit? I don't give a damn. We don't bail out Boeing, you'll scream lost jobs. We bail out Boeing, you scream deficit contribution. No one blames unions, lazy workers, Boeing, or the other likely culprits.

    For me, it comes done to this--I'm better off now than I was 5 years ago.

  491. Re:economically interesting by CptNerd · · Score: 1


    I've said it before, unless you get the porn, er, "adult entertainment" industries interested, you won't get anywhere.

    Sex sells, like it or not.

    Next is gambling, then sports.

    The ideal moneymaker would be betting on lunar sex athletic events, of course...

    --
    By the taping of my glasses, something geeky this way passes
  492. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 warning ELITIST by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you could come of with your snide snarky airs all day long and i will be impervious to your vile wrteched insults a deprecations.

    i call on the powers that be to humble you for you show great hybris and know not your limits!

  493. Re:I couldn't agree more -- OT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've been a member of three different CUs over the years. In my experience, they are becoming more bank like. My current CU is Western Federal Credit Union. The have recently merged, Stoped paying interest on checking accounts (unless you keep a rediculous balance), and no longer credit direct deposit until they have the cash in hand.

  494. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 tsarkon by wmspringer · · Score: 1

    >is a pen name author any less valid than non-anonymous one?

    Not at all. If a pen name is used by only one person, then you can tell if that person is being internally consistant or not.

    Heck, most handles on slashdot could be considered pen names. I certainly don't read based on who posted what; I have no idea which handles go with which people.

    With AC, on the other hand, you can't tell if contradictory posts are coming from the same person or different people.

    As I said, there are valid reasons to post AC, but most of the AC posts in this thread have been just anonymous flames. And I say again, if you believe in your opinions, you should be willing to be associated with them.

  495. Billions and billions by RomulusNR · · Score: 1

    Oh good. Another thing the government can spend untold billions of dollars on instead of job-creating economic investment.

    --
    Terrorists can attack freedom, but only Congress can destroy it.
    1. Re:Billions and billions by *SpOoNdRiFt* · · Score: 1

      It wont be very expensive to refurbish the SaturnV thats sitting in mothballs. We know it works, so there is a possibility we will use it.

  496. About those sanctions... by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 1

    Food, medicine, and humanitarian supplies were never restricted by sanctions.

    I know of at least one aide worker who went into Iraq during the period when sanctions were in effect who had children's crayons, which she was taking into Iraq as a personal gift, confiscated at the border as they were deemed to be in violation of the sanctions.

    Children's crayons. Just what threat did they pose to international security? If you mix the blue and the orange can you make a nuke? Pathetic.

    --

    "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
    1. Re:About those sanctions... by cheezedawg · · Score: 1
      Forgive me if I am skeptical about your story, but I kind of doubt that happened.

      You probably won't give this much weight, but this is what the U.S. State Department has said about the sanctions (note that this document was produced in August of 2000 under the Clinton administration and well before our action this year).
      Myth: Sanctions prohibit the import of pencils, books and journals, and desks for schools.

      Fact: Basic educational supplies including pencils, books, and desks have never been prohibited by UN sanctions. They have been sent to Iraq regularly since 1991 and nearly $64 million of supplies for the education sector, including photocopiers, and printing and lab equipment, have entered Iraq under the oil-for-food program.
      --
      "The defense of freedom requires the advance of freedom" - George W Bush
    2. Re:About those sanctions... by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 1
      Way to go. Call me a liar why don't you. This was someone who I personally knew who told me this, not something that I read in a paper.

      Oh and regarding your "myth", just do a quick google: Google results for "iraq sanctions children pencils"

      Look at some of the links there, and who they're quoting. I'll just link to one article, written by a Seattle Times correspondent: The Catastrophe of Sanctions Against Iraq.

      Here's a brief quote from that article:
      So what are we to do?

      Drop all non-military sanctions. This will not be "rewarding" Saddam Hussein. By allowing people to focus on something other than sheer survival, it will enable the professional middle classes to contemplate political change. Stop delaying or denying Iraq access to books, medical journals, pencils and papers, as the U.N. Sanctions Committee, dominated by the U.S. and the U.K., has repeatedly done.
      I guess all those links are just lies and this Seattle Times writer was lying too, just like me. Yeah, right.
      --

      "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
    3. Re:About those sanctions... by cheezedawg · · Score: 1

      Call me a liar why don't you. This was someone who I personally knew who told me this, not something that I read in a paper.

      No offense, but these uncorroborated 3rd person "friend of mine" stories often stray from the truth. My skepticism is justified.

      Oh and regarding your "myth", just do a quick google: Google results for "iraq sanctions children pencils"

      Ah- the very scientific 'number of google results' method. That gives us some great information from sites like geocities and the International Action Center ("Information, Activism, and Resistance to U.S. Militarism, War, and Corporate Greed"- sounds like a pretty open minded source of information to me).

      Look at some of the links there, and who they're quoting. I'll just link to one article, written by a Seattle Times correspondent

      Actually, that was not a Seattle Times correspondent. That opinion piece was written by Denis J. Halliday, the former UN Humanitarian Coordinator in Iraq.

      Now, I don't pretend to know more about what was going on in Iraq than Mr. Halliday. All I know is what is written in the actual resolutions.

      Like in resolution 661 that established the sanctions, that says that the sanctions do not include any "supplies intended strictly for medical purposes, and, in humanitarian circumstances, foodstuffs, to any person or body in Iraq or Kuwait or to any person or body for the purposes of any business carried on in or operated from Iraq or Kuwait."

      Or in resolution 666 that created a full time agency to monitor the humanitarian situation in Iraq, paying special attention to children, pregnant women, the sick, and the elderly, and it establishes an office to provide aid to the Iraqi people if this agency finds the need.

      Or resolutions 706 and 712 that urge Saddam to provide more food and medicine to his people, and establish the Oil for Food program to help.

      I think it is clear that innocent Iraqis did suffer under the sanctions. I also think it is clear that the blame for this rests solely on Saddam. In spite of the UN's efforts, he purposely starved his people, and used the sanctions as propaganda against the United States. Unfortunately it looks like many people, including you, were not able to see through his propaganda.

      --
      "The defense of freedom requires the advance of freedom" - George W Bush
    4. Re:About those sanctions... by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 1

      "No offense"? I told you something that actually happened to a personal acquaintance, of the most decent and honest people that you're ever likely to meet, and you're calling me out for "stray[ing] from the truth"? Gee, when you put it like that why would I take offense?

      An aide worker that I know tried to take some crayons into Iraq as a gift for the children of an Iraqi hospital worker that she had befriended. Those crayons were taken away at a checkpoint because they were deemed to be in violation of UN sanctions.

      Paint it any way you want, but don't try to pretend that it didn't happen just because you didn't see it with your own two eyes. What next? Are you going to deny anything that didn't happen live on CNN? Well, that's a nice way of looking at history through rose-tinted glasses. Revisionism at its best.

      It's nice that you've bothered to look up how the sanctions were meant to work. It's sad that you fail to recognise that there's often a world of difference between what's meant to happen and what's not meant to happen. History is littered with examples, most of which had more severe consequences than a child missing out on a box of crayons.

      Propaganda? Don't talk to me about propaganda. The current administration attempted to justify this war with Iraq as an extension of the "War on Terrorism". Iraq had massive WMD stockpiles they said. These could be readied for use within 45 minutes they said. Iraq had definite links with Al Qaeda they said. All lies. There have been no WMDs found, even the Bush adminstration now admits that such claims were over-exuberant, and no evidence of any links with Al Qaeda has been presented. (Want a country with links to Al Qaeda? Try the US. Just ask the CIA.)

      The US public and the world community were lied to deliberately. You want propaganda? That's propaganda.

      --

      "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
    5. Re:About those sanctions... by cheezedawg · · Score: 1

      Gee, when you put it like that why would I take offense?

      You know, if somebody questioning an uncorroborated story (that both the United Nations and the US State Department dispute) that was told on a semi-anonymous forum is so offensive to you, all I can say is TOUGHEN UP.

      Those crayons were taken away at a checkpoint because they were deemed to be in violation of UN sanctions.

      If your story is true, and the crayons were actually confiscated, then it wasn't because of the sanctions because the sanctions didn't ban them.

      The current administration attempted to justify this war with Iraq as an extension of the "War on Terrorism".

      s/attempted/succeeded

      Iraq had massive WMD stockpiles they said.

      They did (and in all likelyhood, probably still do somewhere). Nobody, including France, Germany, and Hans Blix, really disputed that.

      These could be readied for use within 45 minutes they said.

      The threat was never a direct attack from Iraq.

      Iraq had definite links with Al Qaeda they said.

      According to this memo sent to the Senate Intelligence Committee a few weeks ago, the links are pretty definite.

      There have been no WMDs found,

      Like I said, the question was never if he actually had weapons. Iraq admitted to a nuclear and biological weapons program after a series of defections in the mid 1990's, and we have seen them publically use chemical weapons. What we don't know, however, is what happened to those weapons. Saddam was required to point to the weapons and have the UN watch him destroy them. He never did.

      The thing that people like you seem to leave out is the fact that if President Bush had been lying about the WMD's in Iraq, we probably wouldn't know about it because they would have magically found weapons after the invasion. It doesn't make any sense that Bush would lie about Iraq's weapons capabilities to justify an invasion when an invasion is the only thing that will bring the truth out. We marched into Baghdad fully expecting to find weapons there. It think the fact that no major weapons have been found yet is pretty solid proof that Bush wasn't lying. To put it another way- if we had found huge stockpiles of chemical weapons shortly after the invasion began, I bet people like you would be claiming that they were planted by the CIA or something, and you would still be claiming that we were lied to.

      no evidence of any links with Al Qaeda has been presented

      There is plenty of evidence, from Ansar Al Islam to the fact that Al Qaeda fighters were caught fighting US troops in Iraq in the first days of the invasion.

      Want a country with links to Al Qaeda? Try the US. Just ask the CIA

      I assume you are referring to our support of the Mujahideen in the 1980's in Afghanistan, but the Mujahideen is NOT Al Qaeda, and our support of them was justified.

      The US public and the world community were lied to deliberately.

      I don't believe we have been lied to.

      --
      "The defense of freedom requires the advance of freedom" - George W Bush
    6. Re:About those sanctions... by workindev · · Score: 1

      The current administration attempted to justify this war with Iraq as an extension of the "War on Terrorism". Iraq had massive WMD stockpiles they said. These could be readied for use within 45 minutes they said.

      Last week, The London Telegraph interviewed the Iraqi Colonel responsible for the 45-minute WMD claim. Guess what? He still stands by the claim. In fact, he says that they had weapons ready to fire within 30 minutes of a go-ahead by Saddam, and the only reason they were not used was because of dissention among Iraqi troops.

      Iraq had definite links with Al Qaeda they said. All lies. There have been no WMDs found, even the Bush adminstration now admits that such claims were over-exuberant, and no evidence of any links with Al Qaeda has been presented

      Terrorism != Al Qaeda

      The President declared a war on terrorism, not Al Qaeda. There didn't need to be any ties between Iraq and Al Qaeda (although many have been uncovered, which you choose to ignore). The only justification that we needed was that Iraq (and its WMD) posed a threat to our national security, and nobody has tried to deny that claim.

    7. Re:About those sanctions... by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 1

      Re-read the article that you linked to. The Iraqi officer also claims that the only reason why these biological and chemical weapons weren't used during the recent invasion was that "the majority of the Iraqi army did not want to fight for Saddam".

      OK, if that was the case then wouldn't these WMDs have been found by US/UK troops upon inspecting Iraqi troops that they had captured or killed?

      Wouldn't any of the captured Iraqi soldiers, especially those that surrendered willingly, been able to show the Coalition forces their local stockpiles?

      Wouldn't the Colonel himself, being so knowledgeable about the WMDs and their readiness potential, be able to point to a single base, garrison, stockpile or manufacturing facility?

      The truth of the matter is not a single Iraqi soldier was found in possession of WMDs. Not a single one has been able to identify where WMDs can be found. And not a single location where WMDs have been manufactured or stored has been identified or discovered. Kind of blows some major holes in what was said in that interview, doesn't it?

      And as for your "terrorism != Al Qaeda" statement, well, gosh, living in London and having walked past at least one IRA bomb minutes before it was safely detonated and having felt the consequences big and small of IRA terrorism virtually all my life, thanks for clueing me in on that one.

      (By the way, that would be the same IRA that George Bush Sr. refused to stop Americans from donating to, as it would be "against free speech". Funny how the US wasn't so gung-ho about declaring war on terrorism when it was its citizens funding the murder of British soldiers, civilians and politicians, of innocent men, women and children. I won't bother to even mention Iran-Contra or a dozen similar examples of the US exporting terrorism abroad.)

      But tell me, just how did Iraq pre-invasion pose a threat to US national security?

      Iraq has never possessed the technology to launch a direct attack on the US from its soil and what military capability it did have left after the Gulf War was severely diminished by over a decade of sanctions and regular retalitory strikes by US/UK forces for violations of their designated no-fly zone.

      The only way that Iraqi WMDs (if they still existed) could have posed a threat to the US/UK is if those countries had troops on the ground in Iraq. And even when that came to pass, not a WMD round or shell surfaced, and not a single one was found.

      So, to suggest that the invasion of Iraq took place becuase "Iraq (and its WMD) posed a threat to our national security" is laughable. Almost as laughable as your statement that "nobody has tried to deny that claim" - why do you think the majority of the world's nations were opposed to the US-led invasion?

      --

      "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
    8. Re:About those sanctions... by workindev · · Score: 1

      OK, if that was the case then wouldn't these WMDs have been found by US/UK troops upon inspecting Iraqi troops that they had captured or killed?

      This colonel also claims that the WMD is still in hands of fedayeen, and that Saddam deployed secret weapons caches throughout the country to supply resistance fighters after the war. He also said that "Only when Saddam is caught will people talk about these weapons".

      But tell me, just how did Iraq pre-invasion pose a threat to US national security?

      Do the math:
      1) Saddam has used WMD in the past
      2) Saddam has large amounts of WMD that were unaccounted for by the UN
      3) Saddam says he will use WMD against the US
      4) Terrorists say they want to use WMD against the US
      5) Terrorists have proven their ability to attack inside the US

      How is that not a threat?

      Almost as laughable as your statement that "nobody has tried to deny that claim" - why do you think the majority of the world's nations were opposed to the US-led invasion?

      Why do you think the UN Security Counsel passed 17 Chapter 7 resolutions condemning Iraq for non-compliance on WMD? The fact that the UN doesn't have the balls to enforce their own resolutions doesn't change anything.

    9. Re:About those sanctions... by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 1

      OK, so one one hand you're suggesting that an Iraqi colonel who says that the US/UK troops who spearheaded the invasion were lucky not to have been massacred by WMDs on the battlefield is a credible source but you can't show a single instance of a WMD shell or round having been discovered?

      Sorry, help me out here, if the WMDs were there, ready to be used against the invading forces then why hasn't a single one been discovered?

      Did every single one of them just become invisible? Did the Iraqi troops who supposedly had them suddenly all contract mass amnesia and forget everything about them?

      If the WMDs were hidden in "secret weapons caches throughout the country to supply resistance fighters after the war", how is it that not a single one has surfaced? After all, it is after the war now, and if the WMDs aren't going to be used now when are they ever going to be?

      What about the WMD facilities that Colin Powell highlighted to the UN? Did they all suddenly vanish? Where did they go? Are we to believe that they were on the satellite picture one minute and gone the next? Of course not, so why haven't WMDs or traces of their manufacture and/or storage been found at any of these facilities?

      Even the White House and Pentagon and now admitting that it looks more and more likely that Saddam Hussein ordered a significant amount of Iraqs stockpiles destroyed secretly. While this was technical violation of the UN resolutions set in place, let's not forget that this is what the US, etc all wanted in the first place.

      Why would Hussein destroy stockpiles secretly? Well, most experts in the field agree that doing so would allow him to maintain the illusion of having some WMDs left, which he may well have thought would act as a deterrent against Western and Middle Eastern enemies. If this is true, it looks like this may well have been a fatal miscalculation on Hussein's part but it doesn't negate the fact that this war was started under false pretences.

      --

      "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
  497. DOH! by AKAImBatman · · Score: 1

    If you could build a small generator (or "battery") that is ~20% efficient, you'd only need about 100-300 grams of SR-90 for power.

    Err... that should read ~10% efficient. We need 10-30 Watts, ergo 100-300. Damn slippery fingers.

  498. Please let the president know!! by Alphasniper · · Score: 1

    I urge EVERYONE in favor of continued moon missions to email the president (president@whitehouse.gov) and tell him that you are in favor of this. Not many people realize the power of influence that we would have if only half of the Slashdot readers were to write and tell the president that it's a great idea. Obviously the thought has been suggested to him, now we need to stand behind him and tell him that we believe in this goal.

  499. Re:Ahem.. by Lord+Bitman · · Score: 1

    We never had extra. We had projected extra.

    --
    -- 'The' Lord and Master Bitman On High, Master Of All
  500. Right on brother! by chrisbord · · Score: 0

    It is truly refreshing to have a president with a sense of right and wrong and trust in American power as a catalyst of positive change in the world.

    I so strongly urge anyone who supports American democracy and our President to get involved in their defense by signing up as a GrassFire.ORG volunteer:

    http://www.GrassFire.ORG

    GrassFire is an online organisation of hundreds of thousands of ground level volunteers committed to the defense of America against the far left in this country and abroad who would rather see President Bush removed from power than Saddam Hussein, and who would revert our defense policies to a pre-9/11 state.

    The 2004 presidential election is our chance as free people to show the terrorists with deeds we will NOT go back to sleep, we will NOT retreat in the face of an onslaught of pinpricks, they will NOT be successful in halting our offensive against them, and that our will and staying power is stronger than their own.

  501. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by 2short · · Score: 1


    "Even many fiscal hawks admit that we can afford current spending levels given the GDP"

    Only while they are so baked they completely forget the meaning of the word "afford".

    "when the tax cuts are successful at reviving the economy, the resulting prosperity will more than pay for the current spending strategy"

    Theres no particularly good evidence that the tax cuts will help revive the economy (The spending will certainly help in the short term). But to actually pay for the current spending, the economy would have to not just recover, but start growing by an order of magnitude faster than it ever has. Nobody really thinks that is going to happen.

    "It worked for Reagan, after all.... "

    No, it didn't. Every penny of Reagans debt is still with us, we haven't paid any of it back. And Bush is making Reagan look thrifty.

  502. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    just to know. ive been reading here and there and this thread.

    id never trust an asshole like you to rnu an economy. you think way too simplistically to understand that economics is about relatavism, not about absolutes. your asshole fixation on absolute values is hilarious. you act if the US is the only economy engaged in derviatives and other non-absolute metrics.

    you are a joke and scam and an armchair asshole. shut the fuck up.

  503. Re:Space Program. by JJ · · Score: 1

    Well actually, no, you are wrong.

    Television's greatest problem in the 60s wasn't circuitry size. It was heat/electrical current. Eventually, TV would have required a certain degree of the advances that the space program brought in minituarizing circuitry, but it didn't do so first.

    --
    So long and thanks for all the fish . . . !!!
  504. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by Noren · · Score: 1
    I'm not familiar with the "Madison Society" but I do take issue with your use of the word "militias"...
    * ...and "gun" control though it doesn't make sense as the amendment specifically cites militias, they are also against unlimited distribution of arms (the literal word) like missle launchers, tanks, cannons, and biowarfare agents.
    The Second Amendment cites 'the militia' which is singular, and is defined under current US Law as:
    The militia of the United States consists of all able-bodied males at least 17 years of age and, except as provided in section 313 of title 32, under 45 years of age who are, or who have made a declaration of intention to become, citizens of the United States and of female citizens of the United States who are members of the National Guard.
    The most recent Supreme Court decision on the 2nd amendment (in 1939) stated in part that:
    The signification attributed to the term Militia appears from the debates in the Convention, the history and legislation of Colonies and States, and the writings of approved commentators. These show plainly enough that the Militia comprised all males physically capable of acting in concert for the common defense. "A body of citizens enrolled for military discipline." And further, that ordinarily when called for service these men were expected to appear bearing arms supplied by themselves and of the kind in common use at the time.
  505. Why... by StarKruzr · · Score: 1

    ... is nuclear fission so horrible?

    After 3 years or so you have radioactive waste. Yes. Fine. Refine it, and take the unusable portion and dump it in a tectonic subduction zone. Problem solved.

    --

    +++ATH0
    1. Re:Why... by F34nor · · Score: 1

      No speed up the halflife and turn it into lead and radon. Do you really want 10 grams of plutonium to come out of a volcano at some point in the furture?

  506. Re:Ahem.. by StarKruzr · · Score: 1

    Point.

    --

    +++ATH0
  507. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by NickFortune · · Score: 1
    Actucally, I think you'll find that is called feedback. Many people consider feedback to be useful.

    You just encountered a fairly moderate, considered, non-US viewpoint. You don't have to agree with it, but an intelligent response would be to at least consider the points raised.

    Instead you respond with anger and insults. Is it your intention to reinforce nascent ill feeling toward America? If so, you are going the right way about it.

    America is currenly burning up decades of accumulated good will at a terrifying rate. Have you already decided that this is something you want for the nation in which you live?

    Or perhaps you're just trolling. I really rather hope it's the latter.

    --
    Don't let THEM immanentize the Eschaton!
  508. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A crock of shit coming from the biggest imperialists of ALL TIME.

    The UK. History has shown it wasnt just for money, but power.

    Our pure econmic imperialism may be hard to swallow, but at least we dont have tea anc crumpets and scones and talk about the fakirs and brown savages in the countries we just raped. "Brown Sahib."

    The effects of what the brits did STILL effects the world over. The fact is, one of your "children" outdid you and king of the hill and you are pissed, shocked. So instead of competing, you capitulate to this socialist crap. Last time you guys shone was in WW2, with us - the US. Look at your fucking languishing country. Look at is. You should be doing a LOT better considering how hard you guys fucked the 3rd world in the ass for CENTURIES. Looks like you burned up your good will and then some. To think the UK has nothing to do with the ill-will towards the western world. What a fucking laugh. YOu can now shirk off some of the blowback of the rape you perpetrated, you and the french, on us. We arent fooled. God save the Queen, indeed.

  509. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by NickFortune · · Score: 1

    [ Insert text of grandfather post here. Repeat as necessary should replies be needed to subsequent responses of this nature ]

    --
    Don't let THEM immanentize the Eschaton!
  510. Re:I couldn't agree more defcon4 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Real mature pal. Talk to the hand cause the face dont want to hear it.

    Make something of yourself and stop pissing and moaning about life. Life is already more FAIR to you than 90% of the rest of the world 's population, and you chastize the USA while living the same was as we do, in the western world, on the shoulders of BILLIONS.

    And you think you can wash your hands so easily? I think not, you flaming hypocrit.

  511. Examples of intelligent leadership. by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 1


    Clinton's speech about the Vietnam war in Vietnam. Amazingly honest. Amazingly perceptive. (Remember, the U.S. government killed more than 2,000,000 Vietnamese. None of them threatened the U.S.)

    Clinton's handling of the abortion rights issue. There is no reason for a person to get strongly involved in one side or the other; the president does not decide abortion rights law. The issue is a moral one that cannot at present be resolved; nature itself aborts 93% of conceptions.

    Clinton did stupid things, also. Obviously, the Lewinsky affair was one of them. Bombing Afghanistan and Sudan were two others.

    The issue with President Bush's intelligence is that he has never shown any ability to do analysis. Yes, there is analysis done by the 5,500 person White House staff. But I have never seen George Bush come to an unusual conclusion by thinking carefully. Clinton, however, often did.

    The thinking of both is heavily affected by alcohol. Bush is a dry alcoholic. Clinton is the child of alcoholics. Clinton's abuse of sexuality is common among ACOAs, as they call themselves, Adult Children of Alcoholics.

    But there is a big difference between Clinton and George W. Bush. Clinton is a self-made man who has a huge intellectual interest in government policy. Clinton has a demonstrated ability to analyze.

    Bush showed very little interest in anything; now that he is president, his handlers try to conceal that. Bush is the son of someone who pushed him to pretend that he was succeeding.

    Gore also is such a person. Gore has surprisingly little interest in or understanding of politics. Gore is the son of a famous politician. His father had a serious interest in government leadership, Gore the son did not.

    1. Re:Examples of intelligent leadership. by chrisbord · · Score: 1

      Hmm, I see. Making speeches that come to 'interesting' left-wing conclustions denotes intelligence. I see.

      If Bush is so dumb, why does he crush the so called 'smart' Democrats at every turn, every issue?

      Cut taxes to stimulate growth? Dems say would never work; Works beautifully, dems now must avoid issue.

      Saddam not a terrorist, not affiliated with al Qaeda, much less the first or second World Trade Center attacks? X-nay! We now have hard documentary proof all three of these linkages are correct and very solid. We have documents showing al Qaeda's Mohammed Atta (planner and leader of 9/11 attacks) was trained in an Iraqi terrorist camp by a notorious Palestinian terrorist several months before 9/11?. We even have a memo to Saddam Hussein saying "Mohammed Atta has completed the training course in ." We even now have proof the al Qaeda meeting during which the 9/11 attacks were PLANNED took place in Baghdad, and were hosted by the regime! Heck, have you also noticed that the number and frequency of Palestinian attacks have dropped dramatically since Saddam was toppled and no longer able to give $10,000 to the family of every Palestenian suicide murderer?

      So it looks like the War on Terror and Iraq are one and the same, but the 'smart' Bush-haters don't want to hear that, it would mean that Bush is in fact smarter than them, or at least has much better judgement.

      Tariq Aziz (Saddam's Information Minister in captivity) recently even stated that FRANCE and RUSSIA GUARANTEED SADDAM that they would NEVER allow the U.N. to do anything that result in Saddam being removed from power!

      So, how do you succeed diplomatically in the U.N. when two of your veto-wielding 'allies' are taking orders directly from Saddam Hussein?

      If Democrats are so smart, then how can they be so wrong about so many things?