Slashdot Mirror


U.S. Satellite Programs in Jeopardy of Collapse

smooth wombat writes "A committee of the National Academy of Sciences, headed by Richard Anthens, has warned that 'the vitality of Earth science and application programs has been placed at substantial risk by a rapidly shrinking budget.' The list of Earth-observing satellite programs affected is a long one and includes satellite programs which observe nearly every aspect of Earth's climate. A delay in launching a replacement satellite or the disabling of a current satellite without a replacement could mean that data necessary to monitor or predict an upcoming event would be severely restricted. For its part NASA says that tight budgets force it to cut funding for all but the most vital programs. 'We simply cannot afford all of the missions that our scientific constituencies would like us to sponsor,' NASA administrator Michael Griffin told members of Congress when he testified before the House Science Committee February 16."

42 of 328 comments (clear)

  1. Guns or butter? Bush chooses guns. by nysus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    $400 billion for the Iraq war. All of it pissed away and probably actually hurt our efforts on the war on terror. By comparison, NASA's budget is only $16 billion per year.

    --

    ---Technology will liberate us if it doesn't enslave us first.

  2. Oh dear... by ChowRiit · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The first thing I thought when I read the title was that, yet again, people were cancelling missions because they had no "obvious benefit" or some such nonsense, completely missing the point that science for science's sake has often lead to many of the greatest breakthroughs in science history.

    However, I realised that they're not just cancelling missions that are trying to learn more generally, they're cancelling missions that have immediate and obvious benefits: weather monitoring to try and help avoid natural disasters, studying global warming and suchlike.

    What ARE the Americans playing at? This seems to me to be a very foolish course of action, these problems will not go away if we're blind to them...

    1. Re:Oh dear... by Hiro+Antagonist · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Because vaccination was discovered and promited by a businessman...oh wait, no.

      The Beethoven Corporation brought us a lot of great music...oh, wait, no.

      I'm so happy businesses created this Internet thing that we're using...crap, no, they didn't do that, either.

      I'm sorry, I'd like to provide more examples, but I think this is the stupidest thing that I have ever read.

      --

      --
      I Hit the Karma Cap, and All I Got Was This Lousy .sig.
    2. Re:Oh dear... by BeBoxer · · Score: 3, Informative

      NASA = National Aeronautics and Space Administration

      Not a word in there about science.


      That has got to be about the dumbest fscking argument I've ever seen. Do you actually think that counts for something? Here's something called a fact. Watch out. This might hurt.

      Quoted from the law which created NASA and guides it's purpose. http://www.nasa.gov/offices/ogc/about/space_act1.h tml#POLICY

      DECLARATION OF POLICY AND PURPOSE
      Sec. 102.(d) The aeronautical and space activities of the United States shall be conducted so as to contribute materially to one or more of the following objectives:

                  (1) The expansion of human knowledge of the Earth and of phenomena in the atmosphere and space;


      Sounds like science to me. Back under the bridge you little troll!

    3. Re:Oh dear... by smooth+wombat · · Score: 3, Informative
      The greatest advances in society happen in competitive marketplaces when businesses see a consumer need to be filled.

      Actually, the greatest advances in society happen as the result of war or the threat of war. Sad but true. Some recent examples:

      • rockets - it is a direct line from Germanys use of rockets in WWII to the launching of satellites and men
      • jet engines - again, a direct line from Germanys and Englands development of jet engines to todays modern versions
      • nuclear technology - development by the U.S. on nuclear weapons and the use thereof for both military and civilian use. The University of Chicago still has the worlds first working nuclear reactor under its bleachers
      • radio - while Marconi and Hertz both contributed to the creation and understanding of radio signals, it was the military who realized the potential of using devices which did not require miles of wire for communication
      • the internet - started by DARPA as a way to have redundant systems of communications in the event of an attack
      • computers - the first true computers were used by the military for calculating ballistic firing tables
      • optics - better optics for military use translated into products for the consumer including modern camera lenses
      • medicine - there are a whole host of procedures which were developed as the direct result of wounds sustained by soldiers and the use in recovery from those wounds

      These are just a few examples. Certainly there are products which business has developed for consumers but many major advances come from the military doing the legwork.

      --
      We will bankrupt ourselves in the vain search for absolute security. -- Dwight D. Eisenhower
  3. What else did you expect? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    >>The list of Earth-observing satellite programs affected is a long one and includes satellite programs which observe nearly every aspect of Earth's climate

    Don't worry about that pesky climate change thing. Pay no attention to the man behind the curtain!

  4. Re:Guns or butter? Bush chooses guns. by rolfwind · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Not only the $400B, we have to keep paying into the future - soldier's benefits aren't cheap plus the soldiers wounded are a long-term (rightfully so) expense as well and veteran's benefits make up a significant portion of the yearly budget and is not part of the military budget itself.

    All of that, so we could show the world how awesome our toys are. Oh, and spreading democracy throughout the world.

  5. More questions by WinkyN · · Score: 4, Insightful
    From TFA:

    "The agency's proposed 2007 budget request contains $2.2 billion for satellites that observe the Earth and sun, compared to $6.2 billion for operating the space shuttle and International Space Station and $4 billion for developing future missions to the moon and Mars.

    "We simply cannot afford all of the missions that our scientific constituencies would like us to sponsor," NASA administrator Michael Griffin told members of Congress when he testified before the House Science Committee February 16."


    So, we might be losing the ability to track dangerous weather systems, monitor volcanic activity and study the effect of humanity on the planet due to the demands of "scientific constituencies"? What exactly is a "scientific constituency"? The reporter/editor should have clarified this.

    Or is this more of a situation where the sexy projects (travel to the Moon and Mars) are taking precedence over real science? And why doesn't that surprise me?
    1. Re:More questions by gclef · · Score: 3, Informative

      NASA's scientific consitituency is the scientists that make up NASA's grant applicants. Basically, it's the group of folks who are qualified & likely to win NASA research grants. It's an obvious statement that NASA doesn't have the funding to run *all* of the programs that people want to run, so his statement is a massive understatement of the problem.

      The problem has been that NASA is not only declining to fund new satellite programs, they're also cutting funding for existing ones, and going back on promises to fund projects already underway. (Some commentary from Nature on the subject is at http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v439/n7078/fu ll/439768a.html ...unfortunately you need to subscribe to read it. The short version is that more than one sattelite program has learned from a press releasese that their funding was being cut...sometimes years after they'd started building based on earlier funding, and just weeks after being promised this wouldn't happen.)

  6. Re:A pretty golddigger is still a golddigger. by JanneM · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'm not sure I could find where in the U.S. Constitution Congress is allotted the money or power to launch golf carts for a billion dollars.

    Without even being American, I'm pretty sure that if you restrict the government to only the things expressly allowed in your constitution, you'd end up with being fifteen acres of the poorest hippies ever to own a printing press. You _are_ aware, are you not, that things like highways, fire brigades, the CDC or indeed a standing army are not covered by that constitution of yours?

    --
    Trust the Computer. The Computer is your friend.
  7. Well, of course! by Omnifarious · · Score: 4, Insightful

    All those pesky earth-science satelites keep on reporting that the globe is heating up and stuff. Why would we want to hear that? That doesn't fit with our politics at all!

  8. Military vs. Scientific Satellites by digitaldc · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The funding will come, unfortunately it is all how you classify it.
    A scientific satellite to help observe global warming? NOT in this administration! They don't even want to acknowledge that global warming is happening, let alone help observe it.

    If this upsets you, I suggest you vote for a President that actually cares about Science.

    --
    He who knows best knows how little he knows. - Thomas Jefferson
  9. Glad we have our priorities straight by cdrudge · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Cost of war in Iraq: 245.727 billion
    NASA's 2006 Budget: 16.656 billion

    Glad to see my government has no problems blowing 14 years worth of operating expenses on something that by all appearances will never have a positive outcome, while letting vital programs for all of earth collapse.

  10. Re:Guns or butter? Bush chooses guns. by Ravenscall · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That will not be a problem because Bush keeps cutting Veteran's benefits, to the tune of over $14 Billion since he took office.

    Support our troops indeed.

    --
    You say you want a revolution....
  11. Talk about speaking from both sides of one's mouth by GReaToaK_2000 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Hmmmm... Let me see... There's this...
    "the desire to explore and understand is part of our character," President Bush Wednesday unveiled an ambitious plan to return Americans to the moon by 2020 and use the mission as a steppingstone for future manned trips to Mars and beyond.
    AND
    President Bush's Jan. 14 speech painted broad brushstrokes of his plan to put humans back on the Moon and send them to Mars.

    Oh but that was back in 2004, right, trying to get more "techies" to vote for him...

    And NOW, as most of us have always know is TRUE color...

    Disgruntled members of a congressional oversight committee objected Wednesday to a White House budget plan that threatens to cripple NASA's unmanned space programs and Earth and aeronautics research, President Bush's plan instead emphasizes sending American explorers back to the moon by 2018.

    Budget cuts for 2002

    Elsewhere there is talk of a 1% increase in NASA's budget for 2k7 but this is NOTHING compared to the slash to the budget that Bush dealt NASA when he first took office because he "needed" that money for the military we would later use to attach the middle east...

    Hmmmm... Nice Logic! Instead of looking FORWARD back then... and looking into alternative fuels, the future, and Space ... We (he) was in it for his Oil buddies. Now that he is a LAME DUCK president he can virtually spout off about whatever...

    But that's ok, it's obvious at this point that most Americans have a short attention span and don't really delve deeply. At least the "red" ones.

  12. No, the reasoning is clear by hey! · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What ARE the Americans playing at? This seems to me to be a very foolish course of action, these problems will not go away if we're blind to them...

    Well, the reasoning is pretty clear, if you accept one premise: anything the private sector might the government ought not do. By this way of reasoning, government weather monitoring, morally speaking, tantamount to theft of potential profits from private parties.

    I'd posit, I hope in an impartial way, that acceptance of this precept is the greatest difference between the conservative and liberal theories of governance.

    An alternative precept is this: the government should do any activity where, on the whole, the public benefits more from government participation than government non-participation. This is a liberal viewpoint. To represent the conservative viewpoint fairly, conservatives don't say this is false, but it is true only in a tautological sense. They believe that in any case where the private sector participates to some degree in an activity, public sector participation a priori impledes the progress of the public good. This means it is never the case that government activity in spheres the private sector is interested in does the public good, people of a conservative bent can hold both premises consistently.

    Of course, these are caricatures of liberal and conservative thinking. Most thoughtful people don't reason exclusively from first principles to specific situations, but make allowances for exceptional circumstances.

    In any case, while one might violently disagree with government policies of the left or right, the stupidity if it exists doesn't necessarily lie in the process of reasoning, but the first principles from which that reasoning proceeds.

    --
    Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    1. Re:No, the reasoning is clear by hey! · · Score: 3, Interesting

      So now I'll have to subscribe to some monopoly to get a tornado warning?

      I guess it's better to let the private sector take on vital services like this. I'm going to start a wellfare company, a police business, and a judicial corporation. Maybe I could get some pointers from the petrolium, pharmaceutical, and insurance industries about how to be fair, too...


      Well, privatizing every one of these things has some precedent, don't they? So it's not impossible to imagine, at least for some people, that these activities be done entirely by the private sector.

      (1) Tornado warnings: there are private weather companies. In fact I'd say that tornado warnings if anything a stronger case for privatization than, say hurricane warnings, as the damage area for tornoadoes is localized, although the risk area is large.

      (2) Welfare. At one point time this was the province of private charity, and some would like to be again.

      (3) Police. It's called a private security firm. Think also gated communities.

      (4) Judicial. It's called mediation. It's not a 100% replacement of course.

      This may seem far out, but I've certainly met highly intelligent people who strongly believe that government withdrawal from these areas would be a good thing.

      Now, as a liberal my philosophy is that the government should engage broadly in these areas, leaving scope for private enterprise to address market segment needs. So, the government should warn people of tornadoes. But if certain enterprises need greater lead time or higher geographic precision than the public as a whole nees, that's a business opportunity. Likewise, let the state provide care for pregnant drug addicted teens, and the private sector provide care for pregnant drug addicted teens from wealthy families. Let the public sector provide police, but private firms provide 7x24 on-premises monitoring.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
  13. Re:Guns or butter? Bush chooses guns. by GoofyBoy · · Score: 5, Informative

    These NASA cuts are just the tip of what coming up.

    Americans have spent way too much money;
    http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=10000103&si d=amz.HoNLRL_0&refer=us

    --
    The surprise isn't how often we make bad choices; the surprise is how seldom they defeat us.
  14. Re:Talk about speaking from both sides of one's mo by Sunburnt · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The hilarity of Dubya talking about Mars landings and moon bases, all while mismanaging the federal budget and slashing science programs, was a welcome distraction at the time. I remember thinking, "This guy believes that humans are biologically separate from the animal kingdom, and that at least two-thirds of his constituents are going to Hell after they die, and now he's on the side of science?"

    I just wish this expectation of failure made acceptance of the President's failures easier to deal with. Perhaps soon we can put a government in power that works to make America competitive in the science and information-dominated industries of the 21st century, rather than a government that pays lip service to this concept.

    --
    Tags != Comments, and -1 (Troll) != -1 (I Would Respond Angrily To This Poster So They Must Be Trolling)
  15. Bush increased NASA funding overall. by kulakovich · · Score: 4, Informative


    I should really write this out as a form letter and paste it in pre-emptively to each NASA thread about budget, since it always turns into Bush-bashing.

    The Bush administration has increased funding every year for the past several years. The President of the US does not control how NASA's budget works. Sure he has made a push toward manned space flight being revamped, but why would you complain about re-vamping an outmoded inefficient system?

    It is the head of NASA who makes the budget the way it is. There is never enough money to do what you want to these days, no matter who is in charge of the country or what party they belong to. Michael Griffin has a hard job, and what he is saying is true, we need more science money. I am not disagreeing. But this notion that Bush has cut funding is folly, and shows up in every thread.

    Guns and butter indeed.

    kulakovich

    1. Re:Bush increased NASA funding overall. by forgotten_my_nick · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Not calling you a liar but can you back up your assertions with some sources? The reason I ask is another 5 point poster has already posted details and appear to be completly opposite to what you are saying.

  16. Re:A pretty golddigger is still a golddigger. by CronoCloud · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Why should someone in California pay for a highway in Illinois? Why should someone in Miami pay for a fire in Denver?

    Because the one thing you rugged rocky mountain individualists, Randroids, and libertarians in love with your own wallets don't understand is that we aren't just Californians or Illinoisans. We are not a Confederacy, no matter how much the Dixiecrats running the country want that to be.

    We are Americans, E Pluribus Unum. Helping Californians helps me. If I help pay to fix earthquake damage in California, they help pay to fix tornado damage here. That way neither of our economies is overly strained. And that benefits us all.

  17. Re:Guns or butter? Bush chooses guns. by ElephanTS · · Score: 4, Informative

    Yes, you're right of course. I read somewhere yesterday (but now can't find the link) that when you factor in the cost of looking after veterans and all the additional costs, the war comes to about $1trillion - $2.2trillion over the long term.

    --
    spoonerize "magic trackpad"
  18. Re:A pretty golddigger is still a golddigger. by Red+Flayer · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "Asking me to pick up the tab for your toys, against my will, is really not acceptible anymore to me."

    So move elsewhere. Or work to get someone else elected.

    I never drive, I only use the trains. I therefore think that all funding for highways should be cut. I mean, private industry will pick up the slack, right? Anyone who drives can choose to send a few bucks to their favorite highway maintenance organization, right?

    "A great majority of the citizens of the State are so far in debt that there is no likelihood of escaping it in their lifetimes, so the citizens push the debt off to the next two generations."

    Personal debt has more to do with people not spending within their means, and being ecouraged to enter into bondage with the credit companies. It doesn't tie in so well with government debt, you are conflating the NASA budget with Social Security, etc.

    "I don't see any public interest achievements in NASA, and I definitely don't see why NASA or the U.S. government needs to be handling any scientific research"

    Then open your eyes. Or read more history of science. One of NASA's roles is to create new markets -- for example, without NASA, there wouldn't be a market for commerical satellites.

    "It is time to just end the program entirely and leave it up to a competitive marketplace. There are enough billionaires with money to spend, let them finance these toys strictly for ego"

    What competitive marketplace? There is no market yet. Government has always acted to open new markets, which is what NASA is all about.

    --
    "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
  19. Re:Guns or butter? Bush chooses guns. by elrous0 · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Not to mention the costs of the wide variety of perks that we're having to hand out to other countries to either gain their support for the war or to win back their trust. I shudder to think what kind of "incentives" we must be giving to countries like Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, etc. to keep their support. Hell, look what the UAE support is already costing us.

    The least successful war in U.S. history is probably going to be the costliest too.

    -Eric

    --
    SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
  20. It is waste, not politics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The Iraq war and even budget cuts have nothing to do with this. These satellite programs aren't getting cancelled because the budgets are being cut, they are getting cancelled because they have long since exceeded their budgets and then some.

    The US satellite industry has self-destructed. At one time, not very long ago, if anyone in the world wanted to launch a satellite, they went to the US. Now, they go to the Europeans. Why? US companies didn't want to bother with little commercial satellites. They wanted contracts in the $billions. Even if these big government projects fail and get cancelled, they are still more profitable than the commercial contracts.

    Increasing funding won't do a thing except waste more money. We need to stop measuring our performance by how much money we spend! How about measuring by how effective we are?

    Eventually, of course, the government will wise up and stop bankrolling these billion dollar boondoggles. They will just buy data from the European and Asian satellites. But, of course, that won't happen until at least next quarter, so party on!

  21. Re:Guns or butter? Bush chooses guns. by God'sDuck · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Has anyone raised the point that the current NASA director may actually have some very smart advisors? Six months ago NASA was doing the worst possible thing (economically) but the best for short-term job-security: kowtowing to Congress and saying "Oh yes great leaders we will do more with less." Now, someone had the bright idea, and the balls, to stick it to Congress, and announce cancellation after cancellation -- which doesn't mean the programs will actually *be* cancelled. This could all be a massive game of chicken, in which NASA releases press release after press release hitting constituency after constituency until 51% of congress has people set to be directly harmed by the cuts (lost jobs, lost revenue from satellite services, etc), and actually hands over the cash to save the programs. The director will piss off his bosses and may lose his job, but he'll save his organization.

  22. Eh? by Elemenope · · Score: 5, Insightful
    The least successful war in U.S. history is probably going to be the costliest too.

    Least successful war? I nominate three others...

    Vietnam, which we LOST. Many more allied casualties than this war, war aims not achieved, one million Vietnamese dead.

    Korea, which was a DRAW. Also many more casualies than this war, war aims not achieved, barely held on to S. Korea, lots of Koreans dead.

    The War of 1812, which we LOST. Washington DC sacked and burned to the ground. More American casualties than this war, and signifiant homeground damage due to British invasion. Oh yeah, and it made Andrew Jackson the indian-killing moron a war hero.

    I might also mention the American Civil War, but at least a few good things came out of that one. Also some bad things, like one out of three American males dead. But hey, who's counting?

    If you calculate the cost of these wars in constant dollars, some of them, particularly Korea if you include reconstruction (which I assume people are including in the Iraq cost), approaches the current cost of the Iraq War. It is likely that before the end, the Iraq War and reconstruction will end up costing more than Korea, but not by much.

    Now, I think that the Iraq War is an expensive and miserable failure, same as the next guy, but hyperbole really weakens the case, don't you think?

    --
    All the techniques ever used to make men moral have been themselves thoroughly immoral... (Nietzsche)
    1. Re:Eh? by elrous0 · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Korea and the War of 1812 were basically draws that resulted in a stalemate.

      The Civil War is a special circumstance.

      And yes, Vietnam was certainly an embarrassing loss. But it didn't leave the U.S. international reputation in complete tatters. Nor did it pose a grave threat to the U.S. status as world superpower

      This Iraq War is going to be a loss too. But it will also likely mark the beginning of the end of U.S. status as world superpower. And it has absolutely devastated our foreign relations standing, as well as encouraging the nuclear ambitions of countries like Iran and North Korea (who fear that they might be the next preemptive war on King George's list).

      And it's financial costs are just BEGINNING to be tallied. Combined the hit to U.S. foreign relations, and the rise of Chinese/Indian economic power, it could very well lead the U.S. to eventual insolvency and "debtor nation" status.

      -Eric

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    2. Re:Eh? by Elemenope · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Korea and the War of 1812 were basically draws that resulted in a stalemate.

      Stalemates of very different sorts; the War of 1812 was far more embarrassing, certainly, and fought on home soil. Whenever your capital gets sacked, that's a bad sign.

      The Civil War is a special circumstance.

      I agree. That's why I didn't include it amongst my 'three nominees' but stated it as a fairly instructive special case immediately following.

      And yes, Vietnam was certainly an embarrassing loss. But it didn't leave the U.S. international reputation in complete tatters. Nor did it pose a grave threat to the U.S. status as world superpower

      No so. The USSR got a ton of political mileage out of our embarrassing loss, gaining political credit particularly in the Middle East as a result of the defeat. The whole mess also emboldedned the Third World to a great degree, thereby enhancing the political position of China (and certainly one of the primary motivators for Nixon later normalizing relations with them, as well as the obvious one of obening agricultural markets). The situation didn't equalize until the USSR did an equivalently stupid thing in Afghanistan, which ironically more or less directly led to the current conflict.

      This Iraq War is going to be a loss too. But it will also likely mark the beginning of the end of U.S. status as world superpower. And it has absolutely devastated our foreign relations standing, as well as encouraging the nuclear ambitions of countries like Iran and North Korea (who fear that they might be the next preemptive war on King George's list).

      I agree that the US is starting what will likely be an excruciatingly long decline, but I think the reasons will have more to do with economics than with our military misadventures.

      And it's financial costs are just BEGINNING to be tallied. Combined the hit to U.S. foreign relations, and the rise of Chinese/Indian economic power, it could very well lead the U.S. to eventual insolvency and "debtor nation" status.

      We are already a 'debtor nation' (we haven't been a creditor nation for a while now), with our current account deficits becoming progressively worse and our nation debt becoming unsustainable through financing. But I agree, the diplomatic costs of this war will be incalculably severe.

      --
      All the techniques ever used to make men moral have been themselves thoroughly immoral... (Nietzsche)
  23. Re:Guns or butter? Bush chooses guns. by pubjames · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Wow.

    What I don't understand is why there isn't more alarm in the USA about this situation. From my studies of economics I have come to understand that we don't really understand economics - for every economist that says the debt in the USA is a big problem, you can find another that will say it's not a problem at all. Conclusion - we don't know. However, as a biologist I do understand that graphs like this one generally indicate that a big change is about to happen:

    http://www.brillig.com/debt_clock/history.gif

  24. Oh, please. by sean.peters · · Score: 5, Informative
    Meanwhile in many sections of Iraq, people have their first clean water...

    From Wikipedia: "Although the water supply has reached prewar levels in some provinces, ageing and poorly maintained equipment combined with looting and vandalism leaves the drinking water system substandard."

    their first reliable electricity...

    From the GAO: "However, electrical service in the country as a whole has not shown a marked improvement over the immediate postwar levels of May 2003 and has worsened in some governorates." Not only is electrical service worse than during Saddam's rule, it's even worse than after much of their electrical capacity was destroyed DURING the war.

    their first real sewer system, ever...

    From Wikipedia (same link as before): "Untreated waste is polluting the Euphrates River, and many treatment plants require repair. More than 45 pipelines have exploded"

    Hundreds of schools, dozens of hospitals exist where no service was available for at least 20 years

    Right. And they're built to inferior standards, and you can't go to them in any case without risking death. I don't need to provide a link, you can see the story every day on CNN.

    So, by a conservative estimate, the regime was killing civilians at an average rate of at least 16,000 a year between 1979 and March 2003."

    From Iraqi Body Count: estimates range from 28 - 32K deaths just from coalition military activity since the start of the war. Other estimates, some of which include deaths from lawlessness and terrorist activity, are much higher, ranging up to a quarter of a million.

    Way to distort the facts. Maybe you should try getting your news from somewhere other than the Weekly Standard.

    Sean

  25. Re:Guns or butter? Bush chooses guns. by JerkBoB · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Meanwhile in many sections of Iraq, people have their first clean water, their first reliable electricity, their first real sewer system, ever. Hundreds of schools, dozens of hospitals exist where no service was available for at least 20 years.

    That's great. Why should I have to pay for it? Why should my friends and relatives have to go die for it? I don't give a flying fuck about the Iraqi people, frankly. There are kids here in the US who aren't getting a decent education or nourishment. I have relatives who can't afford good health care, in the most wealthy society on the planet.

    Where are all the islamic countries and their aid? Why is it the job of the US to police the world and free the oppressed people (as long as there is some supposed long-term strategic value to doing so)? Look at what's happening in Sudan. Why aren't we sending in the troops? Oh, right... No strategic interests in that part of the world.

    People like you make me crazy. Either you're insulting my intelligence by trying to divert my attention with emotional rhetoric, or you're just stupid. I wish the Bush Administration would just have the balls (hear that Rummy?) to just fucking say what they're doing, and why. "We believe that having a friendly country in the middle east will be in our long-term interests. So we took out an unfriendly despot in a country that wasn't particularly liked by its neighbors (a bunch of slightly more friendly despots). But we didn't do the homework on what would happen, and now we're kinda stuck. Oops! Live and learn!"

    No, they have to pull out this stupid "Think of the happy Iraqi children!" bullshit.

    Bah.

    --
    A host is a host from coast to coast...
    Unless it's down, or slow, or fails to POST!
  26. The Red Planet by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Griffin used to help run the Star Wars "missile defense" boondoggle. That was a program outlawed by Congress in the 1980s, but whose administrators still found $BILLIONS each year to keep going. A program producing little useful science, and no useful defense products. It's only value was pumping corporate welfare into defense contractors and "trickle down" bribes into the politicians who love them.

    But when running NASA, even Griffin can't find money to keep America's most beloved, productive, and strategic science agency alive.

    Meanwhile, Bush's support for proliferating nuclear weapons to all the hot wars in Asia is great marketing for the useless Star Wars "missile defense shield".

    --

    --
    make install -not war

  27. Re:Guns or butter? Bush chooses guns. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    That is expected. The closest that this admin has to war experience (excluding when powell and his people worked there), is cheney's shooting of a friend who had a gun in hand.

  28. it's all about STARVE THE BEAST by Thud457 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ... starting with those pesky sciencetitians that keep pointing out the flaws in our ideologically-driven policies.

    --

    the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

    1. Re:it's all about STARVE THE BEAST by hey! · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Indeed. And I think you can detect a pattern here, of disasterous overconfidence, of overlooking the possible unintended consequencde.

      Only a fool could think they can feed the beast until it grows to unsustainable size, then it will let itself starve. Moreto the point that the people who live off the beast's waste (and I'm not talking welfare queeens here) are going to let themselves starve in consequence, when all they need to is release the beast glut itself opportunistically. What does it matter to them, as long as the beast feeds on somebody else?

      The beast, after all, is only a tool of men, and men look after their own advantage.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
  29. Re:Guns or butter? Bush chooses guns. by meringuoid · · Score: 3, Funny
    http://www.brillig.com/debt_clock/history.gif

    Hey, that chart was levelling off. A classic S-shaped curve, exponential growth hitting limits and slowing to a new equilibrium. I'd guess that in mid-2000 things were looking pretty good. Then in 2001 it's up again, and every year since then it's gone up, and up, and up some more.

    What the hell went wrong in late 2000, guys? What changed?

    --
    Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
  30. Re:Guns or butter? Bush chooses guns. by JerkBoB · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Because your government chose to bomb and invade Irak, killing tens of thousands of people, reducing the country's infrastructures to a state which is worse than during Saddam reign ?

    Frankly, I don't think that Americans are in any position to complain.


    Where in the fuck did you get the idea that I was happy about that? I am mad as hell that we went there to begin with, dummy. It's not my government. I didn't vote for them. I held my nose and voted for the other guys. So did most of the people in my state and my part of the country.

    The Iraqi people don't want us there, no matter how many right-wing cheerleaders post pictures of smiling children. If they did, they'd police themselves and settle the fuck down. After the shrine was blown up the other week, there were Iraqi police running around killing Sunnis. There are Shiite death squads (mostly police and army) who've been operating pretty much out in the open for at least a year.

    This is not a civilized place, and the people are not ready for democracy. They don't want it. We can't force it on them. We fucked up. We've wasted money and lives. If the islamic world cared about anything besides hating the West, they'd step in and help Iraq help itself.

    The US military does not train peacekeepers! They're trained to bring as much death and destruction to an area as they have to in order to achieve a strategic goal. When the military gets involved, people die. I wish our fucking cowboy-in-chief understood that, or cared. Maybe if most of our government officials hadn't gotten deferments in the last big war (oh, sorry, "police action"), they'd understand that.

    For the record, lefties annoy me as much as right-wingers. They're two sides of the same (stupid) coin. People don't fucking think for themselves anymore.

    --
    A host is a host from coast to coast...
    Unless it's down, or slow, or fails to POST!
  31. What a Bunch of Monkeys! by Pooua · · Score: 3, Insightful

    No, I'm not talking about government; I'm talking about the posts on this thread. At least 2/3 of the posts on this thread should be marked Off-Topic. Look, the title article is about NASA; could someone at least talk about NASA? Instead, so many are spewing off their political and economic philosophies.

    OK, here's the deal: NASA just got a budget increase. Did anyone notice that? That's important, because it means the budget cuts are not to NASA, but to some programs. And, the reason, children, that the satellites are being starved, the number one reason for budget cuts everyone else in NASA, is not because Bush is President or the Republicans control Congress or the U.S. Vietnam War was a stalemate or the U.S. economy is deep in debt. No; the Number One drain on NASA's budget is the space shuttle program, followed closely by the space station program. As in, say bye-bye to 80% or more of whatever money NASA gets. THIS IS THE REASON BUSH IS CUTTING OUR LOSSES ON THE SHUTTLE AND SPACE STATION!! We (in the U.S.) have to get rid of those programs, or we aren't going to have a space program.

    Yes, the Earth-observing satellite programs are in bad shape. They have been for a long time. Believe it or not, they were in bad shape before Bush became President. And, unless we cut our losses on the space station and come up with an economical replacement for the space shuttle, the EOS programs are going to be in terrible shape long after Bush leaves office.

    Nothing I've said here is secret or novel. This is all common knowledge to anyone paying attention to the U.S. space program. So, how to explain the bulk of the posts to this thread?

    --
    Taking stuff apart since 1969 (TM)
  32. Re:Guns or butter? Bush chooses guns. by Phantom+Zmoove · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You know, I was watching a show about the three mile island incident the other day. It showed president Carter going to the site to do a press release to show the public that it was safe. (well, it was sorta safe) That little show really made the local people feel better. "if the president is here, then it must be okay" He was willing to take a personal risk to help ease the concerns the of the people he serves.

    How did we go from a president that served in the military, with nuclear physics experience, that was willing to take a risk to fulfill his duties to...well.

  33. Re:Guns or butter? Bush chooses guns. by MeanSolutions · · Score: 3, Interesting

    PNAC is the Project for a New American Century. They are hawks, think-tanks and move in the shadows normally, but because they have the ear of your current president, they have become bold and don't shy away from the light so much presently. Their manifesto is a cause for concern, whether you are american or not. PNAC argued for invading Iraq two years before 9/11. No wonder the sales of tin-foil hats have shot up.

    Okay, so cutting military spending by 90% immediately is not feasible. But cutting military spending so that you have a defence, not an offence, is well feasible, and will save tons of cash. Wars of conquest, as presently in Iraq, are expensive and sap the strength not only of the forces, but also of the people in the conquering nation. It also generates more enemies than is annihilated in the conquest.

    As for 'islamic terrorism', while terror can never be excused - no matter who wields it, the individual or the mightiest nation on the planet - the motives behind the actions can be understood. The individual that has lost everything, that sees all they know come under threat by a might they can never compete against, sometimes take action in a way that couch-potatoes watching SuperBowl might never comprehend. Making the ultimate sacrifice to try and gain the freedom of your peers - it was not too many generations ago that a civil war took place in USA, where people made that type sacrifice for exactly the same reasons.

    Lastly, any economy, no matter how diverse, can - and will - fall on hard times. Being heavily in debt, with most of that debt owned by a single entity, and being refused credit is a position where ones courage, attitude and honour comes under scrutiny. Time will tell how that test is passed.

    --
    Swedish, but resident in the UK since 1996.