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Sally Ride Takes Her Final Flight

fructose writes "Sally Ride, America's first woman in space died today at age 61. She succumbed to pancreatic cancer according to her office in San Diego. Here's to wishing her a safe trip on her final journey."

16 of 251 comments (clear)

  1. RIP Sally by slasher999 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I still remember that historic launch. Her name was one everyone who was old enough to remember knew and never forgot from that day forward.

    1. Re:RIP Sally by Hatta · · Score: 4, Interesting

      What I didn't know until now is that she was a lesbian. Which is fair enough, if she was out back then she probably wouldn't have been considered a good role model. Good for her, she broke ground in more ways than one.

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  2. Re:true pioneer by ClickOnThis · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Sally Ride was a true pioneer and hero.

    I suspect that many if not most of the people who follow Slashdot don't believe in religious superstition. I find it truly unfortunate that someone would take advantage of her untimely passing and use it as an opportunity to preach his own religious views. And yes, I expect other supposedly "religious" people will now resort to name calling to mod me down rather than enter into discussion.

    As she literally flew, if you will, to "the heavens" during her lifetime, I see nothing wrong with suggesting metaphorically that she's doing it now for the final time. Yes, the imagery is religious. But it seems to fit the situation well.

    Goodbye, Sally.

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  3. Rest well Sally by ravenswood1000 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Rest well Sally. Sorry you passed away because of such a horrible condition. You did good maam.

  4. Re:Safe trip? by cpu6502 · · Score: 4, Informative

    People do not want to admit that death==nonexistence so they make-up imaginary "trips" to some other place (heaven, hell, Elysian Fields, space, whatever). In reality Sally Ride's personality dissolved into nothingness at the moment her brain's neurons broke connection with one another when they were deprived of oxygen.

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  5. Re:true pioneer by RearNakedChoke · · Score: 4, Insightful

    tolerance of superstition is not tolerance.

    when you are dead you are dead. there isn't any 'safe trip' about it.

    let the myth of afterlife 'die' already!

    Of course its tolerance, regardless of what you think about it. You live most of your life based, not on logic, but on personal preferences and emotional impulses that have little scientific justification. And I do too. And so the other 7 billion people on this planet.

  6. Re:Safe trip? by thereitis · · Score: 4, Insightful

    some people need to make up stories to be ok with this absurd concept. they can't deal with the fact that an 80 year process just simply loses its power, all data is destroyed and that is that. the universe does not 'care'. there is no one there to care. all your work for your lifetime is ruined, destroyed, forgotton. you and I don't matter. none of us matters.

    When a process dies, all the work it has accomplished remains. Same with a human.

    I could counter your belittling of people who use these "bedtime stories" with this: those who have no belief in the possibility of a greater being are uncomfortable with the thought of something being inexplicable - ever.

  7. Let me clear it up for you... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    It is simply pointing out a belief in Secular Frisbeeism.
    The "final flight" is when your soul goes up on the roof and gets stuck for all time.

    - May you find the shingles soft Sally! -

  8. Sally Ride was a Lesbian by adisakp · · Score: 5, Informative

    I found out reading her obituary that she had a partner of 27 years, a fact that - despite her status as an American Hero - was not publicly announced until after her death.

    1. Re:Sally Ride was a Lesbian by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      Except she wasn't (publicly) a lesbian when she rode the shuttle. She was married to Steve Hawley (another astronaut). They married in 1982, she got her seat on the shuttle in 1983. She got together again with Tam O'Shaughnessy in 1985 (they were childhood friends), and she divorced Hawley in 1987. I would suspect that the marriage to Steve Hawley was more a political move (on her part, at least) to dispel any question within NASA about her sexuality and secure her position as the first American woman in space. Had she been an admitted lesbian in 1983, I seriously doubt she would have gotten her shot to go into space. The fact that she left NASA the same year she divorced Hawley lends credence to the possibility that the revelation of her sexuality (at least, internally within the organization) ended her space career.

    2. Re:Sally Ride was a Lesbian by Swampash · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Ride's partner of 27 years, Tam O'Shaughnessy, will be denied federal benefits because the Defense of Marriage Act says that was an unrelationship, not like the real relationships that good Christian hetero real Americans have.

      U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A!

  9. Re:Safe trip? by sootman · · Score: 4, Funny

    > ... personality dissolved into nothingness at the moment
    > her brain's neurons broke connection with one another
    > when they were deprived of oxygen.

    Cool, I'm totally putting that on my tombstone.

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  10. Re:Awesome Gal. by camperslo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Condolences to her family.

    And condolences to her partner of 27 years, Dr. Tam E. O'Shaughnessy

    Sadly even hero status didn't bring the right to legal marriage during their time together

  11. Why did it take so long? by sageres · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The first woman in space was Valentina Tereshkova. She flew on June 16th, 1963. That was two years after the first man flew into the space.
    On the other hand, the first American woman (Sally Ride, RIP) flew in 1982.
    Question: Why did it take NASA almost two decades to send the woman in space?

  12. The cat food can by andyring · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Wow. I'm honestly quite surprised at what is a fairly high level of vitriol over what people choose to believe or not believe from a religious standpoint. C'mon, people. Can't we just let someone hold their religious beliefs without going out of our way to mock and deride them because you think you know better?

    Ponder your cat. It has it's own world, it lives life freely, is fairly intelligent. It can plan, make decisions, etc. And yet it is not remotely possible for that kitty to understand, when you open the cat food can, how that food got there. All kitty understands is that you open the can and the food is simply there. Kitty's mind is not able to comprehend how that cat food came to be created, how it was packaged, labeled, transported, sold, etc. Kitty's brain isn't capable of understanding it. To kitty, it's not even a known unknown, it's an unknown unknown (to use some military/war/intelligence terminology).

    Why couldn't us mere humans be the same way? Why couldn't there be a God or similar being whose entire existence completely and totally transcends ours? I realize that *could* open the face-two-mirrors-at-each-other paradox, but lets set that aside for the moment. To put it simply - just because you cannot conclusively prove that a God does not exist DOES NOT mean that God doesn't exist.

  13. Re:Safe trip? by gumpish · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I like how you gloss over the fact that science has been quite successful at ushering members of the set of inexplicable things to the set of understood phenomena.

    I for one am glad that there are rational humans who chafe at the inexplicable - that's what drives them to discovery.

    I would rather have progress than convenient, reassuring bedtime stories.