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US To Launch Military Orbital Spaceplane

An anonymous reader writes "Not only is the US readying its first 100% military spaceplane for a November launch, but it's going to push NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter mission til 2009: 'The USAF and Boeing will launch the X-38B — the first military orbital space plane if you discount the secret military shuttle — on top of an Atlas V rocket in November. They want to test its flying features in space and during atmospheric reentry. And probably its anti-matter rays and nuclear bays and hyperspace engines too (but of course, they are never going to tell you that). However, there seems to be a conflict with the civilian space program which may push one of the Moon exploration missions to 2009.' Screw the moon. We have to defend ourselves against all those alien extremists from Mars!"

2 of 270 comments (clear)

  1. Summary and article are full of crap by YA_Python_dev · · Score: 5, Informative

    Isn't space meant to be like demilitarized zone or something?

    Yes, the Outer Space Treaty prohibits military bases, any kind of weapon tests and the permanent placement of WMD anywhere outside the Earth's atmosphere (nuclear ICBMs are OK as long as they stay in space only temporary on their way to their destination).

    But the article (and even more so the summary) is mostly sensationalist crap: the real news here is that they are doing a test of the small and unmanned Boeing X-37B technology demonstrator. But I guess yet another engineering step in a slow technology development program doesn't sound as much as newsworthy for people that are not in this kind of thing.

    Oh, BTW, there has never been anything like a "secret military shuttle" (you simply can't hide anything like that in space). There where a few NASA Shuttle missions in the 80s dedicated to the deployment of military satellites, but the DoD has for a very long time launched its payloads on Atlas and Delta rockets. If something is broken, it's much chepear to simply launch a new one that to mount a risky STS maintenance mission (and the Shuttle can't reach most of the orbits used by military satellites). So this has absolutely nothing to do with the planned STS retirement in 2010.

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  2. Re:Red Planet Mars anybody? by q-the-impaler · · Score: 5, Informative

    The US is insane when it comes to overkill. Half of all taxes go to the military, and our forces dwarf Russia, China, and the "axis of evil" combined.

    Wow, you pulled that out of your ass.

    2008
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Fy2008spendingbycategory.png

    21% goes to our dwindling Social Security porgram.
    16.6% goes to the DoD
    13.3% goes to Medicare
    11.2% goes to unemployment
    9% pays the interest on national debt
    7.2% goes to Medicaid
    5% went to the war on terror
    2.4% Health and Human Services
    etc.

    So to summarize: only 21.6% went to the protection of the U.S. whereas well over 60% went to social programs

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