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Space Vs. Poverty Debate In India

MarkWhittington writes "Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh was obliged recently to defend his country's space program, which involves the spending of billions of rupees when India still has a large number of people living in abject poverty. The debate raging in India parallels a similar one that has simmered in the United States for decades."

315 comments

  1. But the moon is full of cheese by James+McGuigan · · Score: 2

    Bring home the moon cheese and there will be enough for everybody!

    1. Re:But the moon is full of cheese by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But it's moo-moo cheese, therefore sacrosanct.

    2. Re:But the moon is full of cheese by Jeng · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, but even though the moon is made of cheese it would cost 100x as much to harvest the cheese from the moon vs producing cheese here on Earth.

      --
      Don't know something? Look it up. Still don't know? Then ask.
    3. Re:But the moon is full of cheese by ILongForDarkness · · Score: 0, Troll

      Am I the only one that finds it funny that in a country with a bunch of cows people are afraid to eat them? I suspect is was originally just a matter of not having enough pasture land back in the day the made someone say they are holy so you can't raise and kill them. But if they are there ... mmm steak.

      Maybe now that the US is largely out of the space business India has a chance but did anyone in India really think they had a chance of doing ground breaking space work? Most of these "me too" countries just repeat the space race from 50 years ago: hey look we got a guy in space, we've orbited, we've shot something at the moon etc. A country that can't figure out that a call centre needs to be staffed by people that speak english well enough to be understood can't really expect much for cutting edge space work IMHO. (only somewhat joking)

    4. Re:But the moon is full of cheese by Jeng · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The experience gained from government sponsored space exploration allows the government to tackle large problems in a coordinated way.

      Basically it's a good team building exercise.

      Now as to your comment about Indians not being smart enough to staff a call center with people who speak the language of those whom they will support. A reminder, they are the ones getting paid for this, not the ones paying for it, from their end it's working out quite well.

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    5. Re:But the moon is full of cheese by History's+Coming+To · · Score: 5, Insightful

      They eat plenty of water buffalo, although a lack of big walking steak isn't their main problem. Raising cattle takes a lot of water and land, and any well-irrigated land will produce far more vegetable matter. If a field is big enough to raise one buffalo then it's big enough to feed a family year-round, so you have a choice of daal bhat (rice & lentil soup) for a year or steak for six months and then starving. In addition, if you have a buffalo then you use it as a tractor, it'll produce more food alive than it will by slaughtering it. The question is akin to asking why so few people in the US fly their own plane when there's thousands rusting in the desert.

      Most people in India will eat meat maybe once a week, a little chicken with the daily daal bhat. Even if they all decided that cows were fair game, they'd be back to square one in a few months, with less fertilizer.

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      Please consider this account deleted, I just can't be bothered with the spam anymore.
    6. Re:But the moon is full of cheese by TFAFalcon · · Score: 1

      Whose fault is it that call centers are staffed by people that can't speak english? Is India at fault, or the company that hired them and didn't want to spend enough to actually hire educated people?

      As for just copying the US, where else do you expect them to start? Should their first mission be to send people to Mars? Every country needs to get some practical experience with space flight before they can start doing new things. After they've done that, you can expect them to start doing new things - and probably much more cheaply then the US, since they won't be quite so obsessed with the safety of their X-nauts.

    7. Re:But the moon is full of cheese by Jeng · · Score: 1

      and probably much more cheaply then the US, since they won't be quite so obsessed with the safety of their X-nauts

      Having expendable astronauts isn't going to make space based activities cheaper. Loosing half a billion dollars worth of equipment on the launch pad (and the launch pad itself) is fucking expensive.

      --
      Don't know something? Look it up. Still don't know? Then ask.
    8. Re:But the moon is full of cheese by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Am I the only one that finds it funny that in a country with a bunch of cows people are afraid to eat them? I suspect is was originally just a matter of not having enough pasture land back in the day the made someone say they are holy so you can't raise and kill them. But if they are there ... mmm steak.

      Maybe now that the US is largely out of the space business India has a chance but did anyone in India really think they had a chance of doing ground breaking space work? Most of these "me too" countries just repeat the space race from 50 years ago: hey look we got a guy in space, we've orbited, we've shot something at the moon etc. A country that can't figure out that a call centre needs to be staffed by people that speak english well enough to be understood can't really expect much for cutting edge space work IMHO. (only somewhat joking)

      To rebut the somewhat-serious part: they know full well that call centers are staffed ranging from perfect English-speakers (those having better elocution than a majority of the callers) all the way to the barely intelligible (those who typically only have a firm grasp on pronouncing "kindly do the needful"). It's YOUR executive staff that decides if they want to spend $1000 a year per agent, or $10,000 a year per agent. When they choose the $1,000 option, you get to talk to exactly what $1,000 USD per year will employ in India.

    9. Re:But the moon is full of cheese by ILongForDarkness · · Score: 1

      I'm saying it isn't a choice between feeding your people or doing scientific research, in the case of Iran, India etc it is the choice between feeding your people or spending the next 30 years getting caught up before you can do anything note worthy. It isn't a matter of this years foodbank budget going to this years attempt at discovery, it is this years and the next 30 going to maybe one day doing something useful ... maybe.

    10. Re:But the moon is full of cheese by ILongForDarkness · · Score: 1

      My thinking though is the call centre operators should be shamed right out of business. Like the handymen that you hear of using window calking instead of taping and mudding drywall and such. If you can't do the job you shouldn't be in business. (either the company or the individual either way). I particularly love it when the $1000 option is being very polite but not listening/understanding you or understanding you but playing dumb so they can try to push a sale. "Would you like a new cellphone kind sir?", "No thanks", "Oh, I see yes sir. That is great what color would you like?"

    11. Re:But the moon is full of cheese by Outta_the_way_peck! · · Score: 1

      or the company that hired them and didn't want to spend enough to actually hire educated people?

      You think people in US call centers are "educated"?

    12. Re:But the moon is full of cheese by TFAFalcon · · Score: 1

      No, but they don't have to be, since english is not a foreign language to them (or is at least the dominant (for now) language of the country they live in).

    13. Re:But the moon is full of cheese by J05H · · Score: 1

      "now that the US is largely out of the space business"

      Curiosity, ISS ops and SpaceX would like a word with you.

      --
      gigantino.tv - Heavy but weighs nothing.
    14. Re:But the moon is full of cheese by TFAFalcon · · Score: 0

      But the equipment isn't going to cost half a billion. It will cost a fraction of that, since the safety margins will be smaller. They will probably be able to launch 10 missions for each US mission, and not care if one or two blow up.

    15. Re:But the moon is full of cheese by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are assuming, wrongly, that the cows are only eating on the same ground that could otherwise be used for agriculture, or fed from feeds grown on those same lands instead of grown for direct human consumption.

    16. Re:But the moon is full of cheese by Jeng · · Score: 1

      Go ask the Chinese how much cheaper they can launch vs the US.

      There might be a difference of a fraction of a penny, not a fraction of the entire cost.

      --
      Don't know something? Look it up. Still don't know? Then ask.
    17. Re:But the moon is full of cheese by History's+Coming+To · · Score: 1

      I was talking about buffalo, the cows are a moo(t) point. The cows tend to feed on whatever they can find, you probably wouldn't want to eat one even if you didn't have a cultural issue with it.

      --
      Please consider this account deleted, I just can't be bothered with the spam anymore.
    18. Re:But the moon is full of cheese by Jeng · · Score: 1

      When I worked for Telenetworks in Austin it was almost entirely staffed by college dropouts.

      Probably the best workers for the job.

      --
      Don't know something? Look it up. Still don't know? Then ask.
    19. Re:But the moon is full of cheese by bjourne · · Score: 1

      After they've done that, you can expect them to start doing new things - and probably much more cheaply then the US, since they won't be quite so obsessed with the safety of their X-nauts.

      And why the hell wouldn't they be just as obsessed? Are Indian astronauts worth less than American ones? You seem prejudiced.

    20. Re:But the moon is full of cheese by parkinglot777 · · Score: 1

      It seems that you aren't familiar with the culture of the third world countries. If you take your possession things (either live or not) outside your property (or land), you better have a very good guard or you could easily lose some if not all of them. Even if you have them inside your property, the thievery rate is much higher than compared to the first world countries.

      Now, if you do not feed the water buffaloes within your own property (land), where would you let them go wild eating? If you provide food for them, it would worth more to use them to work instead of sell or eat its meat when it is fully grown.

    21. Re:But the moon is full of cheese by TFAFalcon · · Score: 1

      It's not that they're less valuable. It's that the American public is extremely sensitive to celebrities getting killed and the US keeps making it's astronauts celebrities. The US doesn't care much if hundreds of people die as long as they don't have to see it on TV every day which becomes a problem when the press decides that a couple of astronauts dying is worthy of extensive coverage, while hundreds of people getting shot is just background noise.

    22. Re:But the moon is full of cheese by Eponymous+Hero · · Score: 1

      the head deity of the hindu trinity is brahma, represented by a bull. pretty sure it wasn't related to pasture availability.

      it's all astrology. zodiac signs are equated with deities of a given age. jesus was pisces. brahma was taurus. at the end of each age, there are wars between the believers of the old deity and the new. moses was striking down the brahma-taurus-golden calf god in favor of aries -- the god of war in the age of empire building. jesus was striking down the age of aries with his whole turn-the-other-cheek mantra. religions make a lot more sense when you think of them as astrological metaphors for sun worship. each of the 12 zodiac signs that revolve around the sun in the center are various "personalities" of that sun. that's why the calf was golden, aries was god of fire, jesus was called "son (sun) of god" and so forth.

      --
      insensitive clod overlords obligatory xkcd car analogy russian reversals whoosh pedant fanbois ftfy in 3...2...1..PROFIT
    23. Re:But the moon is full of cheese by ILongForDarkness · · Score: 1

      Check http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Space_Station, how many launches to ISS from NASA rockets? 0. How many (at least of the 9 that have links explaining what they have) are US? 1 spaceX resupply and 1 US astronaut (launched of course by someone else's rocket). Payloads were all from other countries as far as I noticed.

    24. Re:But the moon is full of cheese by mug+funky · · Score: 1

      nah. all good. it's actually made of Paneer.

    25. Re:But the moon is full of cheese by mug+funky · · Score: 1

      you misplace your anger.

      you should be pissed at those in your country that would sacrifice good service and local jobs to save a buck. it's insulting to their customers (ie you).

    26. Re:But the moon is full of cheese by mug+funky · · Score: 1

      the cultural pot calling the cultural kettle black?

      i wonder how far your "third world" talk will get you in India.

      if we're to play the "but there's places there that are clearly third world" game, i could have a fun afternoon with you and a map of your country (and mine).

    27. Re:But the moon is full of cheese by mug+funky · · Score: 1

      so no other country could have sufficient pride in it's national achievements to be horrified if they go wrong?

    28. Re:But the moon is full of cheese by TFAFalcon · · Score: 1

      Why should people be so horrified when things go wrong? I can see why they should be disappointed, but they should mostly just figure out what went wrong and fix it for the next try.
      Space is a new frontier, and people have always died when new frontiers were being explored. And there are so many more people alive now then ever before. But at the same time the deaths of people exploring these new frontiers are somehow seen as MORE horrific then the deaths of thousands that die for other reasons, even from such causes as car crashes.
      Just think about it. If the shuttle crew died in a bus crash to the launch site it wouldn't much of a newspaper story. But if the shuttle, which is essentially a big bomb explodes then you get weeks of discussions about what went wrong.

    29. Re:But the moon is full of cheese by parkinglot777 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, and at least you need to have spent sometimes in your life growing up in the poverty of your country to see how poor people are thinking.

    30. Re:But the moon is full of cheese by hobarrera · · Score: 1

      The experience gained from government sponsored anti-poverty plans would also allow the government to tackle large problems in a coordinated way.

  2. Thoughts... by PortHaven · · Score: 4, Insightful

    1) Humanity eliminates all poverty, is subsequently wiped out by asteroid....CONGRATULATIONS!!!

    2) Poverty, one aspect is that it's strongly tied to a lack of space. If we develop the means to expand our habitable environments. Poverty can be greatly reduced. We see this, with the discovery and colonization of America's, which in fact improved Europe by allowing many of the impoverished to migrate and become land owners.

    1. Re:Thoughts... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      2) Poverty, one aspect is that it's strongly tied to a lack of space. If we develop the means to expand our habitable environments. Poverty can be greatly reduced. We see this, with the discovery and colonization of America's, which in fact improved Europe by allowing many of the impoverished to migrate and become land owners.

      So India should put all its poor people on the moon?

    2. Re:Thoughts... by Zero__Kelvin · · Score: 0

      "Poverty, one aspect is that it's strongly tied to a lack of space."

      They obviously haven't looked between your ears.

      --
      Guns don't kill people; Physics kills people! - John Lithgow as Dick Solomon on Third Rock From The Sun
    3. Re:Thoughts... by CRCulver · · Score: 4, Insightful

      2) Poverty, one aspect is that it's strongly tied to a lack of space. If we develop the means to expand our habitable environments. Poverty can be greatly reduced.

      The old argument "We need to explore space to have more room!" is doesn't hold water. In his trilogy beginning with Red Mars , Kim Stanley Robinson makes the point that with the current world population, even with multiple space elevators you couldn't move more people off the planet than are being born on it at any given time.

      And if you had some way of lowering the population so drastically that you could move some significant amount of people away, you wouldn't need to anyway.

    4. Re:Thoughts... by ZiakII · · Score: 4, Insightful

      XKCD has an interesting write up on the topic, I found it fairly interesting.and recommend that people give it a read.

    5. Re:Thoughts... by Zorpheus · · Score: 2

      I would say the conclusion of that writeup is that it is possible to send everyone into space, if we would put all efforts in this.

    6. Re:Thoughts... by Jeng · · Score: 1

      One thing that will need to be developed if we are to have a future off this planet is a self contained living pod that you can set down anywhere and you'll be able to live there.

      It will be easier to build these for Earth first, and they are needed here on Earth first. Once that technology is widespread then it will be modified for other planets and that is what will allow us to get permanently off this rock.

      --
      Don't know something? Look it up. Still don't know? Then ask.
    7. Re:Thoughts... by ILongForDarkness · · Score: 1

      I don't think it matters how much space we have it is just a matter of time. As long as people think it is their god given right to have greater than replacement level children we'll gradually fill any space we have. That isn't even accounting for the fact that there is probably a billion+ people stuck living in apartments because that is all they can afford near a city where they can find work. If we have more land everything might just become the suburbs and people will use a huge amount more space and resources.

    8. Re:Thoughts... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      just build huge spacecraft, and ship all the extra people out into space for 'exploration'. i'm sure china could build a ship a week. who care if they never get anywhere, or the ships break down. at least there will be less people on the planet.

    9. Re:Thoughts... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're a complete loon, you know that?

      No, not "complete". 2) makes a reasonable point regarding European emigration to America. Regarding 1) such an asteroid is plausible, just not very probable, so our current slow progress into space may be reasonable. Ending poverty, well, that might be less plausible. Of course the conditions experienced by the impoverished could become humane. Clean water, decent food, decent housing, basic healthcare, basic education, etc.

      Also, here's a clue: calling a lunar enthusiast a "loon" or "loonie" is not considered an insult by the enthusiast.

    10. Re:Thoughts... by TheLink · · Score: 2

      I think putting poor politicians on the moon would improve things a lot more ;).

      In the USA you could have one of those reality TV type shows that you all are so fond of - "Vote Them Off The Planet!". With one-way and two-way options. And even if it's all for laughs and not for real - the interviews with/calls to the winners and "winners" would be worth the cost of a vote. Might get enough to send people for real -it's about USD20-30 million per go (for various reasons you'd still let the one-ways come back if they choose to go).

      I'm sure in India you could get more than a few rupees.

      --
    11. Re:Thoughts... by JDG1980 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Poverty, one aspect is that it's strongly tied to a lack of space.

      What? No, it isn't. Sure, there are densely packed slums in the Third World, but most of the world's greatest cities have high population densities. People seem to deal with that just fine. A lot of people want to live in midtown Manhattan. And for those who don't, that's fine – we have no shortage of room right here on Earth. We can't find many people who want to live in Wyoming or South Dakota, and you think people want to live on the moon?

      And if you're worried about there being too many people in general, then prosperity is the solution, not the problem. Social science has known for a long time that people in prosperous societies tend to have smaller families. This isn't a recent thing, either; the pattern dates back at least to ancient Rome.

      If we develop the means to expand our habitable environments. Poverty can be greatly reduced. We see this, with the discovery and colonization of America's, which in fact improved Europe by allowing many of the impoverished to migrate and become land owners.

      Space-nuts always reach for that analogy, but it's so flawed that it is amazing anyone ever falls for it. It was obvious from the start that North and South America were clearly inhabitable – they were inhabited already by people. Millions of people, in fact, until imported Eurasian diseases killed about 90% of them. For the analogy to work, the Americas would have had to be an environment far more inhospitable than anywhere on earth, even the Antarctic – even there, you've got oxygen and you've got (frozen) water. If European settlers had instantly suffocated when they landed on the shores of Hispaniola or Jamestown, they probably wouldn't have tried to establish colonies there. Again, we don't have large-scale human habitations in Antarctica or on the sea floor, even though those would both be far, far easier than trying to make a silk purse out of the sow's ear of outer space.

    12. Re:Thoughts... by bware · · Score: 1

      1) Humanity eliminates all poverty, is subsequently wiped out by asteroid....CONGRATULATIONS!!!

      1a) Humanity puts a colony on the [Moon, Mars], Earth is subsequently wiped out by asteroid, humanity is wiped out anyway when the ships from the Earth stop bringing necessary supplies.

    13. Re:Thoughts... by PortHaven · · Score: 2

      Thank you, but I am far more interested in reach Mars than the Moon.

      But let's be honest, what are the likelihood that we will 100% eliminate poverty, not very good. In fact, the asteroid impact may be a more likely occurrence.

      Please note, that doesn't mean we DON'T endeavor to eliminate poverty, and to at least reduce it. I think a better argument is to quit spending a trillion dollars on war than several billion on space.

    14. Re:Thoughts... by PortHaven · · Score: 1

      No, but if India were to build a colony on the moon, I'd wager quite a few impoverished Indians would take the gamble of the odds of perhaps owning land and having a better life. Granted, the moon is not very good example, not being very habitable. But given an earth-like world (assuming we find a means of quicker travel to such), yes, I think many Indians would flock to that chance..

    15. Re:Thoughts... by PortHaven · · Score: 1

      Why not, "Chopped, Election Series"...that's right, where the losing politicians serves the winner (on the dinner plate).

      Crap, now the above poster is right, I am a loon.

    16. Re:Thoughts... by PortHaven · · Score: 1

      Really, ask ANY poor impoverished person. Would you like a few dozen acres of land.

      Most will gladly accept it...

    17. Re:Thoughts... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1) Humanity eliminates all poverty, is subsequently wiped out by asteroid....CONGRATULATIONS!!!

      The argument that space travel is necessary to avoid human extinction is common but doesn't seem very compelling.

      Philosophical questions about the value of avoiding extinction aside:
      What sort of cataclysm would cause conditions on Earth to be less hospitable than anywhere else within several light years?
      Is there any evidence of that sort of thing happening to Earth within the past couple of billion years?

    18. Re:Thoughts... by PortHaven · · Score: 2

      Why set it down anywhere?

      A much more likely long term strategy would be to land on the moon, construct a nuclear powered manufacturing zone. This region would essentially become the major manufacturing area. All those nasty high-falluting polluting factories poisoning our land and water to build our iPhones would instead destroy the natural environment of the moon. Yes, all those poor lunanimals would go extinct. All the moon rivers would become polluted...but earth would remain pretty.

      Then from there, you construct environs that remain in space. Think large flat discs that grow wheat, corn, and other vegetable matter. They float aimed at the sun (heck, they could rotate to provide the plants a night time and to charge solar panels to run the units). These would be the new space homesteaders.

    19. Re:Thoughts... by PortHaven · · Score: 0

      We could always build down...we humans use an extremely small part of the earth as a whole. We're more like mold growing on the surface of a fruit. We have yet to really infect and grow into the fruit of the earth. :-P

      PS - As I like to add to people who make comments typical of yours. You have a god given right to reduce that population by one. And perhaps alleviate the problem some.

    20. Re:Thoughts... by Zero__Kelvin · · Score: 1

      Which is totally beside the point, since there is already plenty of land available here on earth that those people can't have because they are poor. If they can't afford an acre of land on Earth the cost of a flight to the moon and some real estate there is clearly prohibitive.

      --
      Guns don't kill people; Physics kills people! - John Lithgow as Dick Solomon on Third Rock From The Sun
    21. Re:Thoughts... by TechMouse · · Score: 1

      Isn't the point more that as the population grows we need more land for agriculture?

    22. Re:Thoughts... by PortHaven · · Score: 1

      "but most of the world's greatest cities have high population densities"

      a) Those high densities are pretty much supported by the low-density farm regions

      b) Even those high density areas, the populations tend to have space. Perhaps a mere apartment, not as much as other places, but it's a place. And they can live reasonably well because of the supports that come from the low-density spaces mentioned above, and from the social structure. (ie: you don't need a kitchen if you can make enough money to eat out every night).

      c) Without space, life pretty much sucks in those high density areas too. Just happens to be a bit easier to get hand outs, or eat someone else's wasted food.

      --

      "We can't find many people who want to live in Wyoming or South Dakota, and you think people want to live on the moon?"

      Can't find many jobs in Wyoming or South Dakota, that would allow someone to be able to own their own space.

      If people were given a double-wide or modular home and allowed to North Dakota, plant a stick and own the 50 acre square. A lot would go.

      The problem is that one can't find the means to pay for the "space".

      --

      Mind you, everyone posting seems to be focused on the moon. And I would agree with most of the criticisms. Outside of being a good industrial zone environment, the Moon does not offer much.

      But we're finding new planets. And it is only a matter of decades (or less) before we likely find a habitale world.

      That is when it will become a much more intriguing question. Because I bet you nations like China and India, upon said discovery, will put far more effort toward finding a way to reach said worlds.

    23. Re:Thoughts... by PortHaven · · Score: 1

      At this time, yes....

      But you know what, the cost of sailing to the new world wasn't super-cheap either. The way many did it was to agree to a working contract. Or to pool together, send some family over, who would then finance the journey of others.

      Such requires industry, and it's why I very easily see the Moon becoming an industrialized manufacturing zone and environmental pollution standards made increasingly stricter here on Earth. Do I see this in this century, no... maye the next, maybe in 500 years.

      But would it be better to have our iPhones and other industrially manufactured, polluting products made in a place with no natural envionment to be harmed. And to have Earth cease being polluted by our industry.

      Just saying...

    24. Re:Thoughts... by Zero__Kelvin · · Score: 1

      "Just saying..."

      Yes. That was your mistake.

      --
      Guns don't kill people; Physics kills people! - John Lithgow as Dick Solomon on Third Rock From The Sun
    25. Re:Thoughts... by oh_my_080980980 · · Score: 1

      Why not both? The only aspect of space exploration that is galling is manned space exploration. The belief that manned space exploration is necessary. It's not and it's well proven that manned space exploration provides little scientific value. It's great P.R. but not good science. Any scientist will tell you we learn more from probes and satellites than from men walking in space. We have learned so much from the Voyager program. And it doesn't cost nearly as much as it does to launch man into space and contains no risk.

    26. Re:Thoughts... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They would still be trying to run things which they weren't connected to and had no physical proximity.

    27. Re:Thoughts... by Shadow99_1 · · Score: 1

      The idea behind manned missions includes the thought that a human could be on site or at least nearer and be able to modify the work being done. Deep solar system exploration for instance where we would theoretically have a ship with limited manufacturing and retooling abilities would be far more helpful at doing science then a probe sent out 12 years ago that takes days to send a batch of info back to us. This problem increases as we go further out from the Earth.

      Also things like ISS and space missions taught us tons about recycling of atmosphere and waste materials. Not to mention research on hydroponics that had to be done with experience on hand in the environment in question. Being there makes tons of sense in certain areas.

      --
      we are all invisible unless we choose otherwise
    28. Re:Thoughts... by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      Again, we don't have large-scale human habitations in Antarctica or on the sea floor, even though those would both be far, far easier than trying to make a silk purse out of the sow's ear of outer space.

      Well, there is the view...

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    29. Re:Thoughts... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, you know, we are all putting effort into keeping people from starving and eliminating poverty, aren't we?

    30. Re:Thoughts... by dryeo · · Score: 1

      Stealing someones land is usually cheaper then a trip to the Moon.

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    31. Re:Thoughts... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >And if you're worried about there being too many people in general, then prosperity is the solution, not the problem.

      Apparently, you live on a different Earth than I do, one where natural resources are not finite. Prosperity just burns those resources faster.

      (Not that I'm sympathetic to the space nutjobs either.)

    32. Re:Thoughts... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Too expensive to be practical, even with space elevators or electrical launch systems.

    33. Re:Thoughts... by khallow · · Score: 2

      And as I recall, if one could maintain launch frequency and passenger count comparable to the busiest few airports combined, then it would indeed be possible to depopulate the Earth.

    34. Re:Thoughts... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We do have some way of lowering our population drastically.

      This guy Cain invented it, Nimrod perfected it, and that perfection has been amplified through each subsequent generation until the present date. Nowadays, we have entire industries dedicated to such a solution, both in the public and private sectors. Much like McDonald's, however, despite its overwhelming popularity, people view it in a negative light.

    35. Re:Thoughts... by khallow · · Score: 1

      Apparently, you live on a different Earth than I do, one where natural resources are not finite. Prosperity just burns those resources faster.

      Apparently you live on a different Earth than the rest of us. I don't recall consuming any whale oil despite my culture being more prosperous than 19th century Europe.

    36. Re:Thoughts... by PortHaven · · Score: 1

      Only if you have the guns...

    37. Re:Thoughts... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Poverty can be greatly reduced. We see this, with the discovery and colonization of America's, which in fact improved Europe by allowing many of the impoverished to migrate and become land owners."

      Yes, it DID improve Europe and, from the European point of view, it also improved the Americas, once the native peoples had been disposed of. Poverty can be reduced ONLY AT SOMEONE ELSE'S EXPENSE. Either the wealthy share or there will be poverty. Since the wealthy uniformly refuse to share with the undeserving poor - if the poor were deserving, then they wouldn't be poor; they'd have sophisticated weaponry that would enable them simply to take what they wanted, as the Europeans took from the natives of the Americas - preferring to trash their money on arms and space programs, there will always be poverty. Of course, one way to expand the habitable space is to break up the astounding amount of land held by the wealthy and redistribute it to the poor. But it's more fun to dream about traveling to other galaxies, despite the fact that the nearest star in *this* galaxy is more than 400 light-years away. Either people will have to live more than 400 years or there will have to be found a way to surpass the shit out of the 186,000-mile-per-second speed of light, if there's going to be any hope of living anywhere except on the earth. Medicine and quantum physics together are much cheaper than "space" programs.

  3. but once they nuke pakistan by gl4ss · · Score: 1

    but once they nuke pakistan from orbit they'll have enough wealth to spread to everyone!

    that's how nuking works, right?

    --
    world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    1. Re:but once they nuke pakistan by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 2

      but once they nuke pakistan from orbit they'll have enough wealth to spread to everyone!

      The ultimate broken window. Nukes for Jobs!

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
  4. Reasonable Goals Already Accomplished by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The reasonable firsts have already been done. First satellite, first man, first woman, first moon landing. Mankind has won. It is time to reap the rewards of this era of not racing to space, and instead engage in domestic investment. This goes for any nation, including (and especially) India.

    1. Re:Reasonable Goals Already Accomplished by littlebigbot · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The point of going to space was not simply to say, "we've done it." but all the advances it caused us to make, and to be able to better explore the universe, we need to start somewhere.
      And we're still reaping the rewards of having raced to space.

    2. Re:Reasonable Goals Already Accomplished by bman49er · · Score: 1

      This.

  5. Not just space, but research in general... by captainpanic · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You cannot eat research.

    Those early men who tried to make fire by rubbing some sticks together in vain were obviously wasting their time. They could have better spent that time chasing a mammoth, and humanity would have been far better off.

    1. Re:Not just space, but research in general... by udachny · · Score: 1

      So you think somebody the specific early men that were sitting there, rubbing some sticks together were forced into that program by the leader of their tribe?

      You there, instead of going hunting and gathering, so you can have something to eat and some new skins for protection against the elements and instead of looking for clean water, you are going to be sitting there, rubbing sticks together.

      If you don't, I'll bash your head with this stone until either you start rubbing the sticks or the sparks from your eyes light up this wood.

      Is that your idea?

    2. Re:Not just space, but research in general... by MozeeToby · · Score: 4, Informative

      The modern world is like a game of Civ III where everyone has the Great Library. Any important piece of research discovered somewhere will be usable by everyone at practically the same time. Oh, you might have to pay a little more for it than if you had discovered it yourself, or you might be 20 years behind everyone else, but you'll reap the benefits soon enough. Not everyone on the planet needs to be a creator for the system to work, I don't see why that shouldn't be true on a national level as well.

    3. Re:Not just space, but research in general... by slashmydots · · Score: 2

      I don't think there were mammoths or people in India back then. ROFL!
      But anyway, fire was more immediately productive than space travel is. They could instantly use it to cook. Also, that wasn't how fire was invented. It's theorized that it was borrowed from forest fires and lightning strikes and stuff then after that, humans developed ways to light a fire manually.
      There is no reason for a country like India to go to space. Launching satellites is one thing but sending humans up there is pointless. They're so far behind other countries scientifically in space-based research that it's a gigantic waste of money that's being spent purely to boost up their country's ego.

    4. Re:Not just space, but research in general... by Hentes · · Score: 2

      It's unjust to paint people with different priorities as generally anti-science. There could be many research on the topics on how to achieve greater crop yields, fight diseases, improve hygiene, build up infrastructure cheaply. Research only improves life when followed by a subsequent development and deployment of the discoveries.

    5. Re:Not just space, but research in general... by SleazyRidr · · Score: 2

      Do you think the people working at NASA, or for the Indian space program are doing it because they fear have their heads bashed with stones, or whatever the modern equivalent of that is?

    6. Re:Not just space, but research in general... by udachny · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Oh, man, oh, how sad, how sad, I can't express sadness enough, there is no such HTML tag unfortunately.

      The people working for Indian space program are on government welfare, more precisely they are paid by the people whose heads will be bashed if they don't give up portion of their time, portion of their effort in life to run this program.

      How sad and pathetic your comment is... and the moderation......

    7. Re:Not just space, but research in general... by Culture20 · · Score: 2

      It's theorized that it was borrowed from forest fires and lightning strikes and stuff then after that, humans developed ways to light a fire manually.

      So rubbing sticks together was even more worthless. They already had fire, and they were wasting time trying to figure out how to make it from scratch. *shakes head*

    8. Re:Not just space, but research in general... by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

      GPP was more relevant than that. They were rubbing sticks together trying to find a better way to start fires. Not invent fire. Just like India is trying to find a better way to get to space (or get there at all) not get there for the first time.

      Either way spending money in society helps all, and provides incentives for others to become more productive.

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    9. Re:Not just space, but research in general... by SleazyRidr · · Score: 1

      Seriously dude, taxes aren't the overpowering evil you seem to think they are. We as a society have managed to use them to hold the world together for a few thousand years.

    10. Re:Not just space, but research in general... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seriously, dude, your understanding of what I am saying is so sad, just like most of the rest of this forum. It's like my comments are a spaceship and most of you are these cavemen, you see the spaceship and want to bash it with rocks.

    11. Re:Not just space, but research in general... by SleazyRidr · · Score: 2

      Perhaps I have you wrong, it is indeed possible that you have some very insightful ideas that I'm not seeing due to your comments resembling those of a 14 year old who's just read Atlas Shrugged and had his life changed. Perhaps a comment with a little more detail would help enlighten us.

    12. Re:Not just space, but research in general... by AragornSonOfArathorn · · Score: 1

      It's theorized that it was borrowed from forest fires and lightning strikes and stuff then after that, humans developed ways to light a fire manually.

      So rubbing sticks together was even more worthless. They already had fire, and they were wasting time trying to figure out how to make it from scratch. *shakes head*

      Well, they were cavemen. What did you expect?

      --
      sudo eat my shorts
    13. Re:Not just space, but research in general... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps, you can start here and then go further from there.

    14. Re:Not just space, but research in general... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the modern equivalent would be sitting in on a creationist science class.

    15. Re:Not just space, but research in general... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      So, you have the Great Library and stop all research?

      India is putting a few rupees into space research. Whooptee-doo! I say, good for them. They are also putting in a few rupees into fast neutron thorium reactors too. Why not stop that too and put those useless scientists to the hoe!

      Real Life is not Civ III. If you don't develop your scientific base, you basically end up with no scientists. You know, scientists that may just end up solving the very problems the nation supposedly has.

    16. Re:Not just space, but research in general... by Yvanhoe · · Score: 2

      You cannot eat space money either. It is worth asking where the "saved" money would be spent. I remember more than ten years ago, China was planning to send a man in space. "There will be a Chinese in space soon" was the promise. I walked in Chinatown at that time, and saw the children's drawings. Space, space, rockets.

      A space program is not much about science, but a lot about education and the dreams that fuel it.

      India can use more education. Not everyone will end up in space, science has a lot of other interesting fields, but space acts like a magnet to children so that they can get an interest to these fields.

      --
      The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
    17. Re:Not just space, but research in general... by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      The people working for Indian space program are on government welfare

      Highly doubtful.

    18. Re:Not just space, but research in general... by niado · · Score: 1

      Or he could start from here and then continue further!.

      Hint: nobody really wants that.

    19. Re:Not just space, but research in general... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't follow, as always, all government workers are welfare recipients by definition. I am saying that if you work for government, you are on welfare, you are paid from taxes of productive individuals to do various spending activities that nobody would pay you to do in the free market, and the only reason you are able to do them is because of gov't gun to your head.

    20. Re:Not just space, but research in general... by niado · · Score: 1

      all government workers are welfare recipients by definition.

      You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means.

    21. Re:Not just space, but research in general... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    22. Re:Not just space, but research in general... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It means those people are being handed over money that the free market would not give them for those services (at those prices and with those conditions at least).

      Instead the money is stolen from the productive part of the society and is redistributed. Every pay raise that any gov't worker gets is a pay cut that a private sector worker experiences. Those public school teachers in Chicago want more money, while their average salaries are already much higher than the salaries of the people who pay the taxes to pay those teachers. This is all happening while the school system is runnig a deficit.

      Just asking for more money while the school system is running deficits is like coming to your boss when the company is not making any profits but instead is making losses and asking for a pay raise. Well, the unions don't care, that's because they are not actually working for the money, they are receiving it as welfare payments. They don't want to be graded on performance (of-course, it's the society, it's the poverty, it's the whatever, can't grade teachers against EACH OTHER's performance).

      Now, who exactly the recipients are, the government workers, the corporations or other individuals it doesn't matter, it's all welfare. All government workers are welfare recipients, none of this money is paid in the free market by willing participants, it's extracted by threat of violence from actual productive workers in the market. The wealth production only happens in private sector, in public sector they steal the money and spend on government programs, and all government programs are welfare programs.

    23. Re:Not just space, but research in general... by dryeo · · Score: 1

      More likely it was a by-product of research into the drill. Primitive drills consisted of a stick and bow setup to spin the stick really fast which created heat while making a hole. The other fire starting technique, banging 2 rocks together to make a spark was likewise probably a by-product of researching how to make a sharp rock.
      As usual research leads to unexpected results.

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    24. Re:Not just space, but research in general... by Culture20 · · Score: 1

      dryeo is smart. He will make us go.

    25. Re:Not just space, but research in general... by qu33ksilver · · Score: 1

      Indian here. Just wanted to point that the prime minister knows very well that its a futile effort. Well, about the money, it is going to land in the pockets of politicians. That's how things work here, the prime minister is just puppet in the hands of others. Poverty is something on our blood, even if we become rich and live in modern cities, that's something hard to take out of our system.

    26. Re:Not just space, but research in general... by SleazyRidr · · Score: 1

      So, you're trying to tell me that you are indeed a 14 year old who's just read Atlas Shrugged. It's ok, you should have seen the stupid shit I was doing at your age. You'll grow and learn in time.

    27. Re:Not just space, but research in general... by robsku · · Score: 1

      Me: But then how would we get schools, teachers, roads, fire stations...?

      Free marked dickwad: The Free Market would take care of it?

      Me: The Free Market would take care of various stuff that nobody would pay anyone to do in The Free Market?

      FMD: ...well, there are charities... umm... gov't... gun... threat of violence...

      --
      In capitalist USA corporations control the government.
  6. Dear Prime Minister Singh... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2

    ...Tell them to fuck off.

    I'm sure you'll be able to phrase it more diplomatically, but that's the answer you need to give detractors.

    Sacking a space program is not going to solve poverty. It's not even going to help in any way.

    Keeping a space program isn't going to magically cure poverty, but your country will see a rather nice return on investment, to say nothing of the return mankind itself will be rewarded with.

    1. Re:Dear Prime Minister Singh... by Larryish · · Score: 0, Troll

      A prediction for the future, based on my experience with welfare programs in the United States of America:

      India will decide to put the money into a welfare program.

      Poor (and lazy) Indian girls make sure to get pregnant at the proper early age to ensure full benefits from the welfare program.

      Then the Indian women will spend it all on fake fingernails and ridiculous-looking weaves while their children live on "Kraft dinner" and Kool-Aid.

      They will then raise several generations of mindless, obese, unmotivated parasites who can't be bothered to get up from in front of the television long enough to kill the cockroaches that run across every surface in their government-provided housing.

      And if you ask them, they will tell you it is "all whitey's fault".

    2. Re:Dear Prime Minister Singh... by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      You are mixing up cause and effect. Poor people do not set out to get pregnant, that is how they end up poor.

      Also the majority of welfare recipients are white, so I highly doubt they are blaming whitey.

    3. Re:Dear Prime Minister Singh... by darkwing_bmf · · Score: 1

      Poor people do not set out to get pregnant

      Some do. I've talked to girls who were poor and wanted babies (and some were already pregnant). For better or worse, biology doesn't care about income level, at least for civilizations above the level of letting people starve to death.

    4. Re:Dear Prime Minister Singh... by rufty_tufty · · Score: 1

      You are mixing up cause and effect. Poor people do not set out to get pregnant, that is how they end up poor.

      My personal experience says otherwise, but anecdote is not evidence so:
      Let us assume we have a system that gives an allowance to a parent for each child they have. Society has decided that this is a good idea because we don't want children to starve/be sent to work houses. The payment is set such that it is cost of child's food & clothing + 10% (for other sundries)*

      The parent discovers that they are slightly better off than they were before having children as long as they under feed the child and get all their clothing from relatives/charity shops.
      In fact (they reason) the more children they have the better off they will be. Once your children reach about 4 years old they can look after each other for and you have a rock solid income stream.

      Now would you believe the above situation can occur?**
      Would you believe in the UK the only way to get a council house (usually a low quality house but still paid for by the local council) is to have a kid. Would you also believe that they allocate the size of house based upon the number of children you have? Therefore the more children you have the bigger/better house you get.

      Now you don't need many people to exploit a system set up like this before after two or three generations you have quite a large population that natural selection has encouraged to grow.
      And I can only speak for the UK but the situation I saw this kind of thing happening in was not only white but also a staunchly BNP area too(for the Americans the BNP is the British National Party, "England for the English", all that rubbish. Fully aware of the connotations of National party and who else used those two words...)

      * Now you could come up other changes here to the specifics of the formula, + 0% or even -10% but that is something we need to argue about separately, the point is a payment is made to parents to allow for the cost of children, and that if you don't do this then what do you allow to happen to the children of these parents? Most other solutions end up either at child labour, child starvation or crime.
      ** I don't see how it can't happen because a bureaucracy will never be able to set a payment such that no abuse of the system occurs. Once there are ways to exploit the system then evolutionary principles apply.

      --
      "The weirdest thing about a mind, is that every answer that you find, is the basis of a brand new cliche" -
    5. Re:Dear Prime Minister Singh... by cyber-vandal · · Score: 1

      Are the all the people on council house waiting lists childless adults then? What utter bollocks you speak.

    6. Re:Dear Prime Minister Singh... by rufty_tufty · · Score: 1

      No there are both child-ed and and child-less couples on the list. Child-ed get priority (funny that), there are not enough houses to go around (again who'd have thought that), so guess what happens? Those without children then either stay with their parents or end up having to buy/rent for themselves.
      I don't understand why you think this is bollocks, what about it fails your (harsh) reality filter?

      --
      "The weirdest thing about a mind, is that every answer that you find, is the basis of a brand new cliche" -
    7. Re:Dear Prime Minister Singh... by TFAFalcon · · Score: 1

      Some people DO choose to get pregnant to get support. Not all of them (or even most of them), but it does happen. So why keep supporting them even after they've had their x-th child and are obviously not looking for work?

    8. Re:Dear Prime Minister Singh... by cyber-vandal · · Score: 1

      Those with children get priority over single people living at home with their parents. What an odd idea that is. Because one person living with their parents is much more in need of a home than a family living with grandparents or in a B&B. The shortage of council houses is due to them being sold off in the 80s, nothing more, nothing less. There used to be plenty for everyone. Thanks to Thatcher now there is an acute shortage.

  7. Rupees are easy to find... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If they need rupees just smash some pots.

    1. Re:Rupees are easy to find... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it's dangerous out there... take this.

  8. Money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Money is actually something virtual, just a way to transact goods and services.

    So if the money should go to the poor instead of space research, this actually means: people spending time on space research, should actually spend time on helping the poor instead.

    Is it indeed worth it to stop all progress, to help the poor first, until everyone is exactly as rich, and only then continue advancing technology?

    1. Re:Money by h4rr4r · · Score: 0

      How is this advancing technology?
      They could buy launches and know how from many companies already doing them.

      This is just nationalist waste.

    2. Re:Money by Jeng · · Score: 1

      The technology that is necessary for us to live off the planet will have a purpose first on Earth allowing us to live in different environments than we can currently survive in.

      When you can grow tomatoes in the Sahara the people there will be much better off, that is one technology that is necessary before we move on to other rocks.

      --
      Don't know something? Look it up. Still don't know? Then ask.
    3. Re:Money by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      The harsh reality is that you are right. India is an emerging economy with the second largest labor force on the planet. If they concentrate every nickel they can beg, borrow, steal or earn into poverty, maybe, in a few decades, they might pull it off, but then they will be many decades behind the Russians, Chinese, Americans, Europeans and Brazilians, and in the long term they will suffer for it. In the short term, it is a gamble that means tens of millions remain in abject poverty. In the long term, it means being a space power, with full access to orbit, the Moon and beyond.

      The fact is that history is full of sad tales of great nations left behind. China was probably the wealthiest most powerful nation on Earth in the 14th and 15th centuries. Blessed with some of the most fertile territory on Earth, a high population, a long tradition of civil government that had even managed to survive invasions and civil war, it could have become a major mercantile power, and by the time the Europeans reached East Asia in force, they would have been faced with a potent power standing in their way. Instead of leaping ahead, it withdraw, and let the Western Powers walk all over it. Even the upstart Japanese, once they figured out where the world was headed, leaped ahead of them to become probably the fastest agrarian to industrialized state in just over half a century, soon enough to be able to sit at the table with the big boys during the Unequal Treaties and even kick the crap out of the Russians.

      I think countries like India and Brazil ponder the Japanese model of industrialization, and realize therein lies the formula to, in a few decades, to sit at the table with the big boys. Does it mean that many will live in poverty in the meantime. Sadly yes. Resources, no matter what monetary and economic scoring system you choose, are finite. But clearly they realize, as the Chinese have, that they are decades behind the major space powers, and there will come a time, maybe a century, maybe longer, when being able to access resources in space is going to be monumentally important, and they have a choice to either be one of the "Space Powers" or end up being client states.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    4. Re:Money by MightyMartian · · Score: 2

      Because if you buy it off of foreign companies, you are ultimately beholden to foreign governments.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    5. Re:Money by TFAFalcon · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure we can already grow tomatoes in the Sahara (hydroponics). The problem is that it's not cost effective. It's cheaper to grow them elsewhere, then ship them to the Sahara.

  9. The Oregon Trail! by Quiet_Desperation · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yes, because driving West in a wagon with a gimpy wheel and grandma strapped to the roof to some new homestead next to a river and zap apple trees is perfectly comparable to development of the Moon- an airless, irradiated wasteland a quarter million miles up slope on a large gravity well.

    Ah well, at least they won't die of dysentery.

    1. Re:The Oregon Trail! by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 2

      Ah well, at least they won't die of dysentery.

      I wonder if anybody has the mortality rate of Western settlers to compare with astronauts.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    2. Re:The Oregon Trail! by tnk1 · · Score: 1

      I think he was talking more about colonization of space in general, an important stepping stone which might be some sort of moon colonization or at least further efforts in that direction.

      As for whether that will help India's poor any time soon, that's definitely an open question.

    3. Re:The Oregon Trail! by h4rr4r · · Score: 0

      How would the moon help with that?

      It is not even outside the earths gravity well. So not like you get a cheap launch to the next location.

      Sounds like more space-nutter talk.

    4. Re:The Oregon Trail! by MyLongNickName · · Score: 2

      It is not even outside the earths gravity well.

      How exactly do you define a gravity well? I've heard the term gravity well used, but as far as I know there is no "outside of the well", simply the amount of energy needed to escape earth's gravity. If there another way of using this phrase that I am unfamiliar with?

      --
      See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
    5. Re:The Oregon Trail! by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      Good point. I more meant to imply that the moon a satellite of the earth and as such launches from there still have to overcome the gravity of the earth vs say a launch from mars which would not be impacted measurably by the gravity of the earth.

    6. Re:The Oregon Trail! by Culture20 · · Score: 2

      I don't know, I crashed more lunar landers than I killed pioneer families, but there's no log of how many astronauts were in the landers. Of course, I sold a lot of lemonade in the 'burbs too, and no one died there.

    7. Re:The Oregon Trail! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      The mortality rate for astronauts is 7.736%. It is estimated that approximately 53,000 people travelled the Oregon trail between 1840 and 1860. Of those about 10% died along the way. So by those numbers being an astronaut is safer. However, that's not a very good comparison.

      No astronaut has actually "settled" space since it has always been a relatively short-term stay. Valeri Polyakov only stayed in space 437 days and 18 hours. Most pioneers went out and stayed out and it would have been difficult to go out and come back in a single year. In addition, there were a number of epidemics that added to the problem (cholera, typhoid, dysentery, tuberculosis, scarlet fever, malaria, yellow fever). These epidemics were not exclusive to the western expansion so should they be included? Many of these diseases actually killed more people than were being born. Often it was these diseases that drove people westward just as the American Civil War did since it was easier for some to rebuild in the West than in the devastated cities of the East (particularly in the South where Sherman's campaign raged). Popular myth holds that gunfights and Indian attacks decimated many pioneers, but that is truly myth. People were more likely to die from disease or accidents than from violence. The most common place to meet violence was along the Snake River plain in Idaho, but these were still relatively few and deaths were very few. Also, the people who went West were not all top-notch physical specimens like astronauts and were comparatively very poorly funded.

      A better comparison might be to look at the Lewis & Clark expedition which left with 33 people and all, but one survived - 3% mortality rate. Apparently it's less dangerous going someplace where you don't have to worry about explosive decompression and running out of oxygen. I would also speculate that if you're going to get dysentery it's a whole lot less pleasant in an enclosed weightless environment... :-(

    8. Re:The Oregon Trail! by egladil · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The "gravity of the earth" at the surface of the moon is much less than the gravity of mars at the surface of mars.

      Remember, gravitational pull is proportional to the inverse square of the distance between the objects:

      F=G*(m1+m2) / r^2

    9. Re:The Oregon Trail! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A couple points:

      #1. Zap apple jam is quite tasty, even though the process of making them is elaborate. I suspect that if India harnessed the power of Zap Apples, they could better feed the poor.

      #2. Did you know that the nation of Equestria spends no money on moon missions? Princess Celestia can send things to the moon at zero cost. Other nations should open dialogue with her to discuss her methods.

    10. Re:The Oregon Trail! by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      and zap apple trees

      Apparently some of them can survive on the moon just fine.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    11. Re:The Oregon Trail! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      God damnit. A brony.

    12. Re:The Oregon Trail! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At the moon's orbit, moon+earth gravity is less than mars gravity.

    13. Re:The Oregon Trail! by Quiet_Desperation · · Score: 1

      You mean "Celestia damn it!" which I would pay good money to actually see said on the show.

    14. Re:The Oregon Trail! by Chris+Mattern · · Score: 1

      the moon a satellite of the earth and as such launches from there still have to overcome the gravity of the earth

      But very little of it. The inverse square law is quite powerful. Escape velocity from Earth's gravity at Earth's surface is 11.2 km/s, while escape velocity from Earth's gravity at the moon's orbit is only 1.4 km/s. At the Moon's orbit, you're 90% of the way out. Breaking free of the Moon's gravity at its surface and the Earth's gravity at the moon's orbit *combined* is easier than breaking free of Mars's gravity at Mars's surface. (Escape velocity from Moon at Moon's surface, 2.4 km/s, escape velocity from Mars at Mars's surface, 5.0 km/s) It's easier to get to elsewhere in the Solar System from the Moon than it is from Mars.

    15. Re:The Oregon Trail! by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      Anything on the Moon had to get there from Earth. It would have been cheaper to use a direct course.

    16. Re:The Oregon Trail! by IndustrialComplex · · Score: 2

      Mars would be more difficult and expensive to launch from than the moon.

      Time:
      We can support a moon base much easier than a Mars base. Some emergency occurs on the Moon base, and in theory you could have something loaded onto a cargo rocket and there within the week. If an emergency occurs on Mars, it would take 6 months to get there.

      People:
      On the moon, we could suppliment the staff there with food, supplies, and even bring them back home. On Mars, due to the radiation of the trip out, it's pretty much expected to be a one-way trip (for humans). The logistics train would be much more expensive.

      And finally Gravity:
      The moon has less mass than Mars, thus launching from it would be less expensive. Launching back TO the Earth would be metaphorical peanuts.

      Launching to elsewhere is actually easier from our Moon including Earth and from a moon-sized object excluding Earth. Why? Consider the Pioneer and Voyager missions. Their initial launch was relatively slow, but we actually used the gravity wells of planets much larger than Earth to our advantage. By utilizing the Earth as a potential energy source, we could actually slingshot things launched from the moon in a rather efficient manner. Basically we would launch rockets from the moon in the direction of the Earth and use the acceleration due to gravity to speed up the rocket to escape velocity. The rocket launched from the moon would only need enough fuel to boost the gravity assist to escape velocity and not have to perform the entire escape velocity push itself.

      --
      Out of modpoints but really liked a post? 1BDkF6TtmmeZ3yqXbz9yhdYVqRYnwFoXDj
    17. Re:The Oregon Trail! by PortHaven · · Score: 2

      That is until you build from the moon.

    18. Re:The Oregon Trail! by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      At least Mars has some of the stuff you might need. The moon seems pretty limited as far as food, water and air go.

    19. Re:The Oregon Trail! by oh_my_080980980 · · Score: 1

      LMOL

    20. Re:The Oregon Trail! by oh_my_080980980 · · Score: 1

      Dear god look it up. The moon is not a better launching site, it's not a direct launch to Mars. It's not cost effective because you have to carry fuel in addition to your own to send a rocket to mars from the moon. People have looked at this and said the logistics are not better launching from the moon versus the earth.

    21. Re:The Oregon Trail! by oh_my_080980980 · · Score: 1

      Fuel baby. Where's the freaking fuel coming from?

    22. Re:The Oregon Trail! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, because driving West in a wagon with a gimpy wheel and grandma strapped to the roof to some new homestead next to a river and zap apple trees is perfectly comparable to development of the Moon

      That trend you bucked there, your family sees it, and appreciates this day.

      - an airless, irradiated wasteland a quarter million miles up slope on a large gravity well.

      By the way, do you like bananas?

    23. Re:The Oregon Trail! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Every year millions of people die here on Earth. How many people die each year on the moon? Facts speak for themselves; the moon is way safer so colonize now!

    24. Re:The Oregon Trail! by TubeSteak · · Score: 1

      How exactly do you define a gravity well?

      Mathematically.

      I've heard the term gravity well used, but as far as I know there is no "outside of the well"

      The effects of gravity die off exponentially the farther away you are from the source.
      So technically, we're experiencing the gravitational pull from objects on the other side of the universe,
      but practically speaking, their gravitational effect is as close to zero as to be unmeasurable.

      It's also a bit relative.
      The smaller the object, the bigger the effective gravity well.
      The bigger the object, the smaller the effective gravity well.

      If you want to be pedantic about it, the limit of any gravity well is roughly 13.7 billion light years which is the age of the universe.

      TLDNR: A gravity well ends at the point where its effects are not going to screw with your calculations anymore.

      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    25. Re:The Oregon Trail! by Missing.Matter · · Score: 1

      Space elevator.

    26. Re:The Oregon Trail! by Chris+Burke · · Score: 2

      The effects of gravity die off exponentially the farther away you are from the source.

      Polynomially.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    27. Re:The Oregon Trail! by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      I think they meant stepping stone in the technological progression sense -- establishing a permanent colony on our satellite would be an evolutionary step towards colonies on other worlds.

      As far as a literal usage of the stepping-stone metaphor, LEO is the best stepping stone. By far the most difficult part of any journey to any part of the solar system is leaving earth's atmosphere. In terms of delta-v, LEO is halfway to Mars. In terms of requirements for the launch vehicle, the steep gravity well and atmosphere limit the choice of technologies, while once in space many highly efficient methods of propulsion become feasible.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    28. Re:The Oregon Trail! by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      Now, imagine all these expeditions and settlers having to pay outlandish fees to every petty bureaucrat and general within 2000 miles of them... and you have India.. And you'll find the biggest cause of poverty no matter what country you're in.

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    29. Re:The Oregon Trail! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course, I sold a lot of lemonade in the 'burbs too, and no one died there.

      That game was highly unrealistic.

  10. Oblig. They don't shoot the money into space... by doug141 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    they hire workers with it.

    1. Re:Oblig. They don't shoot the money into space... by gestalt_n_pepper · · Score: 1

      Given the Fed's recent tendencies, I'm for shooting bundles of it into space.

      --
      Please do not read this sig. Thank you.
    2. Re:Oblig. They don't shoot the money into space... by slashmydots · · Score: 2

      they hire workers with it.

      There's a typo in that. You meant to say they hire workers (scientists) from other countries with it.

    3. Re:Oblig. They don't shoot the money into space... by Osgeld · · Score: 1

      thus making my argument that space programs are scientist welfare, a little stronger

    4. Re:Oblig. They don't shoot the money into space... by Convector · · Score: 1

      By law, NASA funds can only be spent at US institutions. The recipient may be a foreign citizen, but must be an employee of a US institution. I would assume ESA, JAXA, ISRO and others have similar policies for their respective countries.

  11. Become great to eliminate poverty? by MasaMuneCyrus · · Score: 2

    Does a country have to eliminate poverty to become great? Or does greatness help to eliminate poverty? Or is there a balance of the two?

    Ultimately, that's probably the question I'd be asking if I was the Indian prime minister.

    1. Re:Become great to eliminate poverty? by Errol+backfiring · · Score: 1

      Yes. No (Well, OK. Sometimes). Yes (but the equilibrium is situated near the "no poverty" point). Any other questions?

      --
      Nae king! Nae laird! Nae yurrupiean pressedent! We willna be fooled again!
    2. Re:Become great to eliminate poverty? by Hentes · · Score: 1

      The Soviet Union had an amazing space program yet many Russians still live in poverty.

    3. Re:Become great to eliminate poverty? by dunkelfalke · · Score: 1

      You are using the wrong adverb. Not "still", but "again". Soviet people weren't rich, but by the time the space program was working, this kind of poverty did not exist anymore.

      --
      "It's such a fine line between stupid and clever" -- David St. Hubbins, Spinal Tap
    4. Re:Become great to eliminate poverty? by tnk1 · · Score: 1

      I think the key thing to understand here is that poverty is likely to always exist in situations where resources are limited. And sometimes, that poverty has less to do with what you have, and more to do with what you do with it.

      At this point, the question is, does throwing a billion dollars at the poverty issue actually help, or is it like throwing water on a grease fire? Is the problem the lack of funds or what is being done with the funds that are already being allocated?

      If you put more money into feeding more people, then more people are going to have more children. You will then need to feed more children or they will live in poverty. If you, instead, throw the money at birth control, you will have fewer people, but those people will not necessarily become educated people. And even if you have more educated people, you need something for educated people to do, as they will likely either not be doing farm work, or they will not be able to do manual labor because of replacement by technology or cheaper labor.

      In India, it is clear that they are motivated to create a space program and the money they are spending is being put more or less efficiently, into the goal of building a space program. That is something educated people can do. While they may well be pulling scientists and experts from other countries, India is not exactly unable to provide educated people already.

      Certainly, much of the space program, despite its long term necessity, is definitely a short term luxury. To get around that, patriotism is used to provide encouragement where short term thinking will not. This is one case where taking the focus away from what you are missing, to what you can do together if you try is useful, I think.

      Space is definitely a goal with need for significant capital investment, but considering the amount of resources in space, in the long term, it might be the only real solution to the problem of poverty. Simply trying to divvy up a limited (and shrinking) pool of resources is not going to end poverty. So in the end, I think it is good to consider aid for the poor, but it is not like India does not already have programs to assist with poverty. Sometimes you have to invest in a better future or your future will remain looking much like your present.

    5. Re:Become great to eliminate poverty? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They should just take a lesson from China, both countries have similar population sizes, large landmasses and useful resources.

      One of these countries is exporting cold hard goods, doing hard physical work to do so, and acting as the world's manufacturer producing tangible objects people want. This has led to a massive boom for the country, launching it up the list of world economies to become second in the world.

      The other tried to outdo the west in terms of services, things like call centres, software, it spread a lot of FUD about how it's schooling system allowed it to have as much talent as the west, and how it's call centre staff were all graduates, when in reality said call centre staff were about as capable as a rock and it's software engineers about as useful as a random text generator. This particular nation is still lingering around 10th place in the economic league tables, having half the economic power of nations like Germany despite having 15 times the population, and nearly 1/3rd of Japan despite having 10 times the population and a much greater land mass.

      Honestly, if India wants to pull itself out of poverty it needs to just resort to good old fashioned hard work. Trying to outdo the west at it's own game and playing around with space programmes are of little use. Many companies in the West have long begun to realise that Indian call centres and software outsourcing are probably the fastest way to lose customers (i.e. Dell which has basically gone from major computer manufacturer, to footnote in history since it embarked on it's great Indian outsourcing experiment) and are starting to pull away. There's no doubt India has a lot of talent - it's sheer population size is bound to make that a statistical certainty, but it didn't have the armies of Western quality graduates manning call centres that it claimed, on the contrary, said staff were often not graduates at all, and those that were often from fake universities with fake accreditations. Put simply it was a scam, and no one is going to fall for that indefinitely- particularly not when it starts losing them customers.

      So if India wants to eliminate poverty, it needs to take a leaf from China's book and start working hard, rather than try to be the world's con artist.

    6. Re:Become great to eliminate poverty? by Chris+Mattern · · Score: 1

      Of course it did. But in Soviet times, they could shoot anybody who talked about it.

    7. Re:Become great to eliminate poverty? by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      But, for all of China's effort (and China didn't just start in the last few decades being a major exporter, it was probably the world's largest export nation a couple of centuries ago), large portions of the population, perhaps as much as half, still live in somewhat dire circumstances in rural China. In fact, it is a monumental social problem for China that the benefits of the economic boom are visited upon its people in unequal fashion, and there is considerable anger in rural populations over this. China is hardly in a position where it can declare rural poverty a thing of the past, and it is ludicrous to say that India isn't increasing its industrial capacity.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    8. Re:Become great to eliminate poverty? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Actually GP is right. By late 60s or thereabouts, poverty was not a word that would meaningfully describe the condition of vast majority of its citizens. Most certainly no-one was in danger of starvation, or didn't have roof over his head.

    9. Re:Become great to eliminate poverty? by dunkelfalke · · Score: 1

      I used to be a Soviet citizen. Just FYI.

      --
      "It's such a fine line between stupid and clever" -- David St. Hubbins, Spinal Tap
    10. Re:Become great to eliminate poverty? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Different AC

      large portions of the population, perhaps as much as half, still live in somewhat dire circumstances in rural (*). In fact, it is a monumental social problem for (*) that the benefits of the economic boom are visited upon its people in unequal fashion, and there is considerable anger in rural populations over this. (*) is hardly in a position where it can declare rural poverty a thing of the past

      Douche bag, you can say that about (America) for Christ sakes.
      From information I've seen of China and America (I'm assuming you're drawing conclusions from the same basic sources), the "poor" in China seems self sustaining and/or employed, and not lacking in the basics (food, shelter, health, education, security...), while the poor in America is jobless and subsists on welfare, perpetually facing eviction, overweight with litany of health issues, most probably can't read/write Spanish, sorry English worth a damn, and lives in a country with some of the highest crime rates in the world.
      Guess why America is in debt to the tune of at least $50k for every man woman, and child (some content this amount is sanitized by the powers that be and way under estimates).
      While China is 180 degrees opposite and flushed with cash.

      Most people seems to agree with my assessment of the data, in that this space v. poverty question doesn't arise with the Chinese space program; because they actually have the money to afford it (that's not going into supporting their "poor" in the form of welfare etc).

    11. Re:Become great to eliminate poverty? by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      So your defense is that "many (unnamed) people agree with me." And you call me a douche bag. China's fortunes are tied to the United States' fortunes, and you are some some sort of halfwit if you think many Americans live at the subsistence levels found in parts of rural China.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    12. Re:Become great to eliminate poverty? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't mean to be rude but do you have a permanent dildo stuck up your ass, or you are actually trying to look stupid?

      So your defense is that "many (unnamed) people agree with me." And you call me a douche bag.

      And you got "named" people agreeing with you?
      When you are trying to convince people with numbers out of thin air, don't start crying foul when you get just as solid counterpoints.
      I think the douche bag thing is pretty self evident.

      and you are some some sort of halfwit if you think many Americans live at the subsistence levels found in parts of rural China.

      Looks like you don't even respond to hard numbers.
      You are in need of even that halfwit if you think everything is hunky dory in America.

    13. Re:Become great to eliminate poverty? by robsku · · Score: 1

      Honestly, if India wants to pull itself out of poverty it needs to just resort to good old fashioned hard work. Trying to outdo the west at it's own game and playing around with space programmes are of little use. Many companies in the West have long begun to realise that Indian call centres and software outsourcing are probably the fastest way to lose customers (i.e. Dell which has basically gone from major computer manufacturer, to footnote in history since it embarked on it's great Indian outsourcing experiment) and are starting to pull away. There's no doubt India has a lot of talent - it's sheer population size is bound to make that a statistical certainty, but it didn't have the armies of Western quality graduates manning call centres that it claimed, on the contrary, said staff were often not graduates at all, and those that were often from fake universities with fake accreditations. Put simply it was a scam, and no one is going to fall for that indefinitely- particularly not when it starts losing them customers.

      So if India wants to eliminate poverty, it needs to take a leaf from China's book and start working hard, rather than try to be the world's con artist.

      For all practical purposes, it hasn't been a scam for long time - their customers know what they get, yet they still pay anyways. That means it has not worked only because of scam - if that was the case they would already be history and/or those remaining would have improved.

      Of course it is better for all parties the faster it will end/change. For India because it will speed progress, as now it gives jobs for people who would otherwise have to improve or loose on life quality and income.

      As for China - I don't think it's the best one to copy.

      --
      In capitalist USA corporations control the government.
  12. Even Jesus Said by MyLongNickName · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "The poor you will always have with you"
    http://bible.cc/matthew/26-11.htm

    We will always have poor, and we will always have the responsibility to care for those who cannot help themselves, and help those who can help themselves to begin helping themselves (you have my welfare policy in a nutshell). But, we cannot allow it to be an all consuming policy that detracts from allowing those who do earn from progressing and from mankind as a whole from advancing.

    Spave vs Poverty debate is a false dichotomy and I encourage Slashdotters to not fall into this trap.

    --
    See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
    1. Re:Even Jesus Said by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Sounds pretty lame to me. I don't think we need to pay much attention to religious justifications for economic inequality from ancient carpenters or middle eastern sheepherders.

      I've yet to hear a justification for equality.

    2. Re:Even Jesus Said by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Try another example, from religon to education, To psychology. There will always be, is it a lack of oppertunity, how to create oppertunity? Could it be the lack of a "dream" of how to get out. Remember not all are created equal. Some need the helping hand to excape the shackles of lack.

    3. Re:Even Jesus Said by MyLongNickName · · Score: 4, Funny

      Thank you for illustrating an ad hominem attack so well.

      --
      See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
    4. Re:Even Jesus Said by MyLongNickName · · Score: 1

      I tried parsing your text as best as I could. My response is that there will always be poor from the standpoint that resources are limited, and regardless of the absolute levels, there will always be inequality. As long as their is inequality there will be, at a minimum, a level of people who are below some perceived level of poverty. In short, the definition of poverty will change to ensure some people are in poverty.

      There are two broad categorizations of resource utilization: current needs/wants and investment in the future. Current needs/wants feel the most important, and investment in the future never feels as important. Our monkey brains seem to be wired poorly to allow us the proper perspective we need on the future. The intelligent of us most step outside ourselves and lead the world to where it needs to go, and not allow the baser reactions to dominate.

      --
      See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
    5. Re:Even Jesus Said by Dog-Cow · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It was not a religious statement. It was an observation of fact. There will always be people who have less than others. Those who fall below some threshold will be classified as poor.

    6. Re:Even Jesus Said by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      Why would a third hand quote from some tradesman from 2000 years ago matter in the slightest? You don't think some technological and scientific advances in the meantime might have changed the game a little? That advances in philopsophy and economic theory and ethics might make a difference?

      Now they mightn't have of course, but surely you can find a quote from someone a little more recent with at least some credentials (or better still published studies) to back up their claims?

      Sure if you are refering to relatively poor - but then the statement is meaningless anyway.

    7. Re:Even Jesus Said by MyLongNickName · · Score: 1

      A second ad hominem attack out of four replies.

      --
      See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
    8. Re:Even Jesus Said by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A message itself is not IN-correct because "gestalt_n_pepper (991155)" doesn't like religion. One of the alleged core failings of dogmatic religion is the failure to rationally and honestly seek truthfulness. This statement shows that same failing.

    9. Re:Even Jesus Said by DigiShaman · · Score: 0

      This is India we are talking about. They have a caste system that specifically forbids a poor person from being rich and the other way around as well. That is to say, you are born into a fixed position in life and that is it.

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    10. Re:Even Jesus Said by LordLimecat · · Score: 1

      I think youre taking that grossly out of context. I dont think he was saying "forget the poor, theres no reason to care about them."

    11. Re:Even Jesus Said by gestalt_n_pepper · · Score: 1

      It's stupidity I'm not fond of. Religion is a broad topic. It would be more accurate to say that I dislike theology, gurus like Jesus, Mohammed, et. al. or their fan clubs.

      --
      Please do not read this sig. Thank you.
    12. Re:Even Jesus Said by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      How would you discredit an argument appealing to mythology without someone calling it an ad hominem?

      I guess appeal to authority could be pointed out.

    13. Re:Even Jesus Said by aliquis · · Score: 1

      I dislike meditating gurus.

    14. Re:Even Jesus Said by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      well, mission accomplished then! out with the banner!

    15. Re:Even Jesus Said by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      The more you provide for the poor, the bigger the poor class becomes. It is very unfortunate, and the simple statement of this observation comes dangerously close to suggesting that if we just let the poor starve to death then everyone would be better off (which isn't true for many reasons, the least of which being the inescapable crime wave that would result).

      But whether we like them or not, the facts remain factual. Poverty is not created by an imbalance of government spending, and it will not be cured by a proper balance. The proper balance of providence is important, but in order to be a "balance," it must include spending on things that actually bring new technologies to mankind.

      People who really want to help the poor beyond what the government can afford can spend their own money doing it. If they don't want to do this, then I question the authenticity of their demands that other people's tax money must be used for this purpose.

    16. Re:Even Jesus Said by gestalt_n_pepper · · Score: 1

      As do I, but I don't dislike meditation itself, which is simply a useful form of neurohacking.

      --
      Please do not read this sig. Thank you.
    17. Re:Even Jesus Said by Culture20 · · Score: 1

      Except even in America today, where people with air conditioning, Xboxes, and cell phones are considered poor, we still have actual poor people who don't have homes. It's usually because they're mentally ill or don't want to take advantage of private and public assistance, but they are around, and they're what anyone except early hunter-gatherers would consider poor (today's actual-poor are essentially hunter-gatherers with comparatively nice clothing, environments, and equipment).

    18. Re:Even Jesus Said by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 0

      jesus helps us.... exactly HOW, again?

      oh right, he doesn't.

      he's dead.

      and not coming back.

      adults who believe in fairy tales are a sad case, indeed.

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    19. Re:Even Jesus Said by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 1

      and religion is irrelevant.

      it does not 'cure' poorness and it surely does not cure richness.

      it sits there and acts much more righteous than it actually is.

      yes, poor will always be around. because mankind is a piece of shit, quite often, and is run by the 'I got mine, fark you!' mentality.

      religion does not enter into this. why keep bringing goat herders fiction from thousands of years ago into this?

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    20. Re:Even Jesus Said by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ad hominem attacks are of course, appropriate when the original statement makes no appeal to reason, logic or facts

      You must have missed the first full paragraph then. Good job on your reading skills.

    21. Re:Even Jesus Said by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 1

      bring religion to a debate where people don't need wivestales anymore and this is what you get.

      not sure why you are surprised. this isn't a faux news forum; were think thinking it was and that your religion quotes would be welcomed here?

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    22. Re:Even Jesus Said by MyLongNickName · · Score: 1

      Did you stop reading after you saw it was a Bible quote? The next sentence says "We will always have poor, and we will always have the responsibility to care for those who cannot help themselves, and help those who can help themselves to begin helping themselves (you have my welfare policy in a nutshell). "

      --
      See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
    23. Re:Even Jesus Said by Endo13 · · Score: 1

      No, but he WAS saying that sometimes there's things that are more important than helping the poor.

      --
      There is no -1 Disagree mod. Slashdot.org/faq defines mod options. USE IT.
    24. Re:Even Jesus Said by cupantae · · Score: 1

      Don't act so smug. You don't understand what "ad hominem" means. An ad hominem attack would be attacking you instead of your argument ("to the man").

      These replies just pointed out that quoting a mostly-fictional tradesman who lived 2,000 years ago is absolutely useless as an argument. And right they are. Going back to your original post, I would point out a few other things:
      1. Saying, "we will always have poor" is either misleading or wrong. If you take "poor" to mean "poor compared to the population" then you're right, but so what? Their lot can be improved and that would certainly be a good thing. If you take "poor" to mean "living in abject poverty" then you are wrong. Extreme poverty can be wiped out; we are just a long way away from doing it.
      2. As for the "all-consuming policy" remark, tell me one place in the world where combating poverty is "all-consuming". No points for guessing India.
      3. Then we have your trendy "false dichotomy" remark. Consider this: space travel has certain minimum costs which must be incurred. Take, for example, the cost of producing the energy to lift a given mass out of the Earth's gravitational field. This is a LOT of money - money which could otherwise be spent on, for example, improving public services. Space-or-not-space is a dichotomy.

      --
      --
    25. Re:Even Jesus Said by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

      Once the original philosopher's statement has been proven wrong then maybe it could be re-evaluated but there is 2000 years of history proving his statement. Your knee jerk reaction of anti religion unfortunately blinds you to even the true parts of the philosophy. Being an atheist I may not believe in god or that some supposed carpenter stand up philosopher from 2000 years ago was his son, but I can still identify the wisdom in the statement.

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    26. Re:Even Jesus Said by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jesus loves you.

    27. Re:Even Jesus Said by Culture20 · · Score: 1

      Why would a third hand quote from some tradesman from 2000 years ago matter in the slightest? You don't think some technological and scientific advances in the meantime might have changed the game a little? That advances in philopsophy and economic theory and ethics might make a difference?

      Nope. I just posted this to another comment, but it seems to fit even better here:

      Even in America today, where people with air conditioning, Xboxes, and cell phones are considered poor, we still have actual poor people who don't have homes. It's usually because they're mentally ill or don't want to take advantage of private and public assistance, but they are around, and they're what anyone except early hunter-gatherers would consider poor (today's actual-poor are essentially hunter-gatherers with comparatively nice clothing, environments, and equipment).

      In 33AD, the poor were those who couldn't/wouldn't even work as a farmhand; the disabled or the lazy. Today, they're those who can't/won't work or those who can't/won't work the system (even without a job, you can survive). Maybe future advances will finally fix all disabilities, but you can't cure lazy with cybernetics.

    28. Re:Even Jesus Said by MyLongNickName · · Score: 1

      "Don't act so smug. You don't understand what "ad hominem" means. "

      I do. Your response was not an ad hominem. The poster who replied to my OP was. I may not agree with your arguments, but those arguments are reasoned and not just a "I don't like Jesus" respose.

      "An ad hominem attack would be attacking you instead of your argument"

      Not true. Don't believe me, you can go to wikipedia and look at their example arguments. The original replier attacked the man not the argument.

      "3. Then we have your trendy "false dichotomy" remark. Consider this: space travel has certain minimum costs which must be incurred. Take, for example, the cost of producing the energy to lift a given mass out of the Earth's gravitational field. This is a LOT of money - money which could otherwise be spent on, for example, improving public services. Space-or-not-space is a dichotomy."

      It is a false dichotomy. Spending on the poor of India does not have to cease because of expenses on space travel. I'd argue that if you want to reduce poverty long-term, you must have a growing economy. To have a growing economy, you must spend on science and support those who will bring the country out of poverty.

      So, no, I don't see this as an either or situation.

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    29. Re:Even Jesus Said by MyLongNickName · · Score: 2

      I understand that the caste system has been forbidden by the government. This does not change the fact that the caste system is so engrained in society, but it does show India is taking some initial steps to deal with the problem.

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    30. Re:Even Jesus Said by Chris+Mattern · · Score: 1

      But that's not what the original Bible quote means. Jesus was in fact arguing that they should give *him* stuff instead of the poor, because the poor would always be there. The full story, Matthew 26, verses 6 through 13 (English Standard Version):

      6: Now when Jesus was at Bethany in the house of Simon the leper,
      7: a woman came up to him with an alabaster flask of very expensive ointment, and she poured it on his head as he reclined at table.
      8: And when the disciples saw it, they were indignant, saying, âoeWhy this waste?
      9: "For this could have been sold for a large sum and given to the poor.â
      10: But Jesus, aware of this, said to them, âoeWhy do you trouble the woman? For she has done a beautiful thing to me.
      11: "For you always have the poor with you, but you will not always have me.
      12: "In pouring this ointment on my body, she has done it to prepare me for burial.
      13: "Truly, I say to you, wherever this gospel is proclaimed in the whole world, what she has done will also be told in memory of her.â

    31. Re:Even Jesus Said by MyLongNickName · · Score: 1

      It was not meant to be a religous debate, you simply have made it one.

      The point is that Jesus, viewed as being a champion of the poor and amaterialist example didn't view helping the poor as an absolute imparative. Even he realized that sometimes resources could be used for other purposes and not be violating God's will (or sensible use of resources for the atheist and agnostics).

      I'm sorry you chose to turn this into a religous topic.

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    32. Re:Even Jesus Said by ArsonSmith · · Score: 0

      So you're saying that the Indian government is Jesus?

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    33. Re:Even Jesus Said by MyLongNickName · · Score: 1

      Thanks. As a former atheist myself, I am amazed at how folks from both viewpoints immediately turn off their brains in these matters. I've found it interesting to read about men like Thomas Jefferson who denied the deity of Jesus, but viewed his teachings as worthy of building a moral framework on. Regardless of one's viewpoints on who Jesus is, I don't know how you can argue with his viewpoint on the poor.

      --
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    34. Re:Even Jesus Said by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All those things cost a few hundred dollars. Not even a month's rent. You're out of line.

    35. Re:Even Jesus Said by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      Spave vs Poverty debate is a false dichotomy...

      Of course it is. It's designed to divert attention away from rampant corruption, without which, poverty would not be so widespread. India just happens to be notoriously corrupt, and it shows.

      ...I encourage Slashdotters to not fall into this trap.

      Too late for most :-)

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    36. Re:Even Jesus Said by MyLongNickName · · Score: 1

      Correct. This is one incident out of a (short) lifetime. You will find dozens of examples of Jesus or his disciples helping the poor. It is all about balance.

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    37. Re:Even Jesus Said by MyLongNickName · · Score: 1

      Of course it is. It's designed to divert attention away from rampant corruption, without which, poverty would not be so widespread. India just happens to be notoriously corrupt, and it shows.

      Thanks for bringing up the corruption. I've heard from a few folks who are involved with India, and I've heard numbers like 90% of the funds intended for the poor end up misapprpriated. I have no way of validating these numbers, but my cynical view of humankind leads me to believe it is true.

      --
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    38. Re:Even Jesus Said by Quila · · Score: 1

      Something that is true does not become any less true because some guy decided to make it a part of his religion.

      The poor will always be around for many reasons. One is government leaders deciding to take all the country's wealth for themselves. Another is that many people just aren't that industrious. Another is pure bad luck.

    39. Re:Even Jesus Said by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      13: "Truly, I say to you, wherever this gospel is proclaimed in the whole world, what she has done will also be told in memory of her.

      And He was absolutely right about that too.

      A couple thousand years later, even non-believers are still remembering and talking about it.

    40. Re:Even Jesus Said by DarkOx · · Score: 1

      You don't think some technological and scientific advances in the meantime might have changed the game a little? That advances in philopsophy and economic theory and ethics might make a difference?

      Sure the might make a difference and they might not. Somethings are pretty well rooting in nature and humans, as much as we hate to admit it most of the time, are a part of nature. Its worth considering that the existence of an under class might be entirely normal perhaps even necessary. Ideas don't become wrong because they are old, they become wrong when you who disagree find some that are better supported by the observable facts.

      I think its funny you cite advances in philosophy, economics, and ethics. If you stopped to think for a few seconds prior to posting you'd really all three of those are deeply root in work that began with the classical thinkers, who predated the Bible you hate so much. I am not saying everything or even anything in the Bible is correct, just that truth is what it is.

      --
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    41. Re:Even Jesus Said by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He helps the poor when he wants.

      When someone showers him in riches (in this case, expensive ointment), he's all 'fuck the poor, lay it on me' instead of 'well, I'm dying anyway, maybe instead of using a gallon of this shit on my head, you could help like... 50 poor people, since using the ointment on me is kinda wasteful, since I'll be dead in a minute.'

    42. Re:Even Jesus Said by BForrester · · Score: 1

      If you're investigating economic inequality in India, and rule out the implications of religious tradition, you're not going to find any answers.

    43. Re:Even Jesus Said by gestalt_n_pepper · · Score: 1

      Apples and oranges. A dubious quote attributed to Jesus != the caste system as an established fact.

      --
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    44. Re:Even Jesus Said by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The GGGP was not using the Bible as justification. He was merely citing his source. He didn't expect anyone to believe it because it came from the Bible, but rather, because it fits our own observations well.

      Mentioning that the quote came from the Bible seems to have poisoned the well. Some people on slashdot are so anti-christian that they would deny that water flows downhill if someone pointed out a Bible verse that claims it does.

      If anyone wants to claim that poverty is solvable, please present evidence and historical examples. Otherwise, I will present as evidence the following examples: Ancient Rome, the Ottoman Empire, the USA during its peak, and every rich country in the world today. What do they all have in common? Two relevant things: 1) they are/were the greatest (and richest) empires in the world, 2) they contain(ed) a large poor class.

      Want a logical argument? How about this:

      1) Humans tend to act in their own self interest (individuals can be altruistic, but in any large group plenty will not be altruistic).
      2) Humans must cooperate in order to achieve wealth.
      3) When cooperating, opportunities arise for one party to exploit the other (ultimately leading to impoverishment of the other).

      4) (1) + (2) = humans will frequently cooperate to achieve wealth.
      5) (4) + (3) = a significant portion of all wealth-generating cooperation will benefit one while ultimately impoverishing another.

      6) (4) + (5) = humans will always have a poor class.

      QED. No Bible needed. But incidentally this conclusion is also stated in the Bible. Deal with it.

    45. Re:Even Jesus Said by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      Because something has not been done it cannot be done?

      Just because the poor will always exist is no reason to let people starve while wasting money on this stuff.

    46. Re:Even Jesus Said by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      Ah, but a statement, whether it is from a guru or from Goebbels, can stand apart from the messenger.

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    47. Re:Even Jesus Said by Relic+of+the+Future · · Score: 2

      Jesus also said the meek will inherit the earth.... because the AWESOME are going to fly away in ROCKET SHIPS! (Although Jesus may not have explicitly said that second bit.)

      --
      Those who fail to understand communication protocols, are doomed to repeat them over port 80.
    48. Re:Even Jesus Said by tompaulco · · Score: 1

      Except even in America today, where people with air conditioning, Xboxes, and cell phones are considered poor
      Yes, and we have people who work hard to support those people, and who have no air conditioning, Xboxes or cellphones. Those people are called "Middle Class". And I am one. Well, technically I don't have an Xbox because I don't want one. Also, I have an air conditioner, but it is broken, and I can't afford to fix it. But I can still afford to pay my taxes so that other people can have what I can't.

      --
      If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
    49. Re:Even Jesus Said by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      Please point out where I claimed the argument was invalid by attacking the speaker?

    50. Re:Even Jesus Said by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      I didn't turn my brain off. I disagree with the argument.

      I actually agree that you can and should do both. I just don't think the reason is that abject poverty is inevitable and think that declaring it to be is a lazy argument.

      But of course instead of refuting my arguments you can just declare me an anti religious nutter. There's a term for that, I just can't quite remember it. Ad-hom..., Ad-homin...

    51. Re:Even Jesus Said by MyLongNickName · · Score: 1

      "Why would a third hand quote from some tradesman from 2000 years ago matter in the slightest? "

      --
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    52. Re:Even Jesus Said by MyLongNickName · · Score: 1

      "Now they mightn't have of course, but surely you can find a quote from someone a little more recent with at least some credentials "

      --
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    53. Re:Even Jesus Said by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      That's not attacking the speaker. That's attacking the appeal to authority that is the argument (by disputing that the authority it relevant).

    54. Re:Even Jesus Said by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      I can see where you are coming from. But pointing out the lack of authority of an appeal to authority isn't ad hominem.

      I didn't say "We can ignore what Jesus said because he has brown eyes". I didn't say "We can ignore what Jesus said because he said this other stupid thing". I didn't say "We can ignore what Jesus said because he was a bad person". Those would be ad hominem.

      I pointed out something relevant to the argument at hand. Firstly that the authority doesn't seem that authoritative for his time, and secondly that things have dramatically changed since them in terms of the farm productivity and so on. I gave my reasons for disputing his assessment of the situation, I didn't just declare them invalid because of unrelated beliefs, actions, or characteristics of the person. That is not ad hominem.

  13. Weird coincidence with the India Space stories... by MickyTheIdiot · · Score: 1

    It's a weird coincidence that all these stories are coming up now.

    One of the main plot points in the new Doctor Who episode (which occurred in the future) was that the Indian Space Authority was involved in making sure that a huge out of control spacecraft did not hit earth. It was obvious that the Indians were major powers in space at the time of this story... to the point that they were taking the initiative to protect the entire earth.

    Now there is a lot you can read into this story, but at least on some aspects it implies that the Indians become a major technological force in the U.S. One interpretation is that they use this to help bring massive numbers of people out of poverty.

    I don't know... it's interesting that these questions come up at the same time that a sci-fi author sees that India could be a major force in the future world's space programs.

  14. Space vs. Poverty? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Right. Because the space program's goal is to load tons of rupees into a launch vehicle and launch them into orbit. And that's not counting the rupees stuffed into the launch platform to muffle the rocket exhaust or the solid fuel boosters whose fuel consists primarily of shredded rupees.

    The money spent developing these capabilities is spent on Indians working on jobs. Developing a technological industrial base will help far more people over the long term than just dumping truckloads of rupees on the streets in Calcutta would.

    1. Re:Space vs. Poverty? by Tom+Womack · · Score: 1

      Alternatively, you've taken some smart programmers who could be working on designing better interfaces for web sites connected with the poverty-alleviation programme, and you've got them designing interfaces for the ISRO miscellaneous small item procurement internal website. You're taking people who could be working on complicated investment strategies allowing Grameen bank to do more good with its resources, and you're using their time to design low-thrust trajectories for Lunar injection. You're taking fluid-dynamicists who could be working on the feedstocks for the big dams in Kashmir, to get a few more megawatts out of the turbines with the same volume of water, and getting them to work on the manifolds for the turbines pumping high-pressure hydrazine.

      The money doesn't go away, but it's no more use than if you were spending that much to train people to be chess grandmasters or marathon runners or professors of analytic number theory - experts in fields of self-referential inutility.

  15. Going to space by Z00L00K · · Score: 1

    Means that you also have technology to improve the situation on the ground - satellite monitoring is useful for planning and development.

    And you also develop technology that has spin-off use on the ground.

    --
    If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
    1. Re:Going to space by Tom+Womack · · Score: 1

      If you want satellite images, you can write a cheque to DigitalGlobe without much difficulty, and spend money on training local imagery-analysts to be good at producing the information that your planners and developers need.

      If you want your own satellite that you can task, you can write a cheque to Astrium who will build you one, and another cheque to get Starsem to launch it from Guyana.

      You don't need to develop your own rocket to get the satellite goals; and the technology involved in actually building rockets has only one spin-off use on the ground. Admittedly, nuclear deterrence is a pretty awesome spin-off use if you've got Pakistan on your western border.

  16. So far as humanity is concerned.... by freshlimesoda · · Score: 1

    there shuld be one single global space program..

    --
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  17. Silly India by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Scientific progress is only for the rich. It's like giving Intel's best i7 processor to a cambodian farm boy.

  18. birth control is cheap by PJ6 · · Score: 1

    so these goals don't seem mutually exclusive to me

    1. Re:birth control is cheap by TechMouse · · Score: 1

      I don't think population reduction is a specific goal here. Why would the Indian government want to reduce it's major competitive advantage? A huge inexpensive workforce covering a lot of manual and service industries.

    2. Re:birth control is cheap by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Birth control may be cheap, plentiful, and has the ability to avoid overcrowding, save thousands upon thousands of lives and millions in medical bills through less medical costs of STD's, and is generally all-around good. There is *literally* no downside.

      But a magical invisible beard man in the sky said it's evil, so therefore nobody uses it. Gotta fix that aspect first.

  19. in space we trust by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, "India still has a large number of people living in abject poverty", but it has a large (enough) number of people NOT living in abject poverty and who wish to move forward with their lifes making use of their wealth AND/OR skills (and by that, -hopefully- move the rest forward).

  20. Re:Weird coincidence with the India Space stories. by MickyTheIdiot · · Score: 1

    "U.S." should of been "world."

    Us USAsians are arrogant.

  21. Space is good by Novogrudok · · Score: 2

    Spending money on ambitious projects in space will make India richer in more than the monetary sense of the word. How much do you value the pride of a nation? Or the pride of individual engineers working on a space program?

    Not everything is measured in GDP. You need big ideas to unite people and to create (at least an illusion of) movement towards the better life.

    1. Re:Space is good by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 1

      space-race won't make things better for working indians.

      its all about ego and I'm not sure its a good use of funds, to be honest.

      to the world, indians have proven themselves as capable doers and thinkers. 'we get it'. you don't have to prove things to the world (and yourselves) with this expensive waste of funds.

      TAKE CARE OF YOUR OWN PEOPLE!

      first things first. seriously. your people are some of the poorest in the world. its shameful.

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
  22. Thoughts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    People are poor because they dont have money.
    If they had money, they wouldn't be poor.
    I think poor people should get money so they wouldn't be poor anymore.
    They need to pull themselves up by their bootstraps.

  23. Cop-out by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sounds like a cop-out to me. Actions speak lounder than words. When government decides to spend tax money on program A instead of program B, what else could it possiblly mean except that program A is worth more to government than program B? In other words, government stands to gain more from program A than program B.

    Again, WHAT ELSE could it possibly mean?

    1. Re:Cop-out by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It could mean that they expect program A to have results which help make program B more effective, more efficient, or less expensive in the long run.

      For example, it probably costs more to teach your kids to cook than it does to feed them. So, you spend more to teach them to cook than you do to feed them. That doesn't mean you think teaching them to cook is more important than feeding them, it means you think that if they know how to cook, they won't be dependent on others to feed them in the future.

      Not saying that's necessarily the case here, but it's certainly a possibility in general.

  24. Whitey on the Moon by kid+zeus · · Score: 1

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PtBy_ppG4hY

    Whitey on the Moon, by Gil Scott-Heron

    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 jus' upped my rent las' night.
    ('cause Whitey's on the moon)
    No hot water, no toilets, no lights.
    (but Whitey's on the moon)
    I wonder why he's uppi' me?
    ('cause Whitey's on the moon?)
    I wuz already payin' 'im fifty a week.
    (with Whitey on the moon)
    Taxes takin' my whole damn check,
    Junkies makin' me a nervous wreck,
    The price of food is goin' up,
    An' as if all that shit wuzn't enough:
    A rat done bit my sister Nell.
    (with Whitey on the moon)
    Her face an' arm began to swell.
    (but Whitey's on the moon)
    Was all that money I made las' year
    (for Whitey on the moon?)
    How come there ain't no money here?
    (Hmm! Whitey's on the moon)
    Y'know I jus' 'bout had my fill
    (of Whitey on the moon)
    I think I'll sen' these doctor bills,
    Airmail special
    (to Whitey on the moon)

  25. Red Herring??? by dpilot · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Space exploration vs poverty relief always comes up, but IMHO it's a red herring. As big as space budgets sound, at the national scale they're generally a pittance - much smaller than is already spent on poverty assistance or any of a great range of things. Heck, in the US we spend less on the space program than we spend on oil exploration subsidies to highly profitable businesses.

    Personally, I wonder if it's "convenient misdirection," holding up the space exploration budget as "potentially wasteful" in order to keep the general populace from looking in more wasteful places. In addition there doesn't tend to be a wealthy, powerful champion for the space program these days. The contractors who get rich on the space program also get rich on defense programs - one of those possibly more wasteful places - defense programs are easier to defend.

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

      Space exploration vs poverty relief always comes up, but IMHO it's a red herring. As big as space budgets sound, at the national scale they're generally a pittance - much smaller than is already spent on poverty assistance or any of a great range of things. Heck, in the US we spend less on the space program than we spend on oil exploration subsidies to highly profitable businesses.
      If India's space budget were instead spent on the poor, then each poor person could receive the equivalent of $6 USD. According to World Bank figures, an Indian can survive on $1.25 a day. So, by eliminating their space program, all of India's poor could survive for 4 days.

      --
      If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
    2. Re:Red Herring??? by dpilot · · Score: 1

      Next apply that reasoning to other segments of the Indian budget.

      Then the other argument, which I hadn't made, is that perhaps fallout from the space program could revitalize their economy, doing far more to lift the lot of the poor than 4 days of food.

      --
      The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
  26. Parallel? by TheNastyInThePasty · · Score: 1

    "The debate raging in India parallels a similar one that has simmered in the United States for decades."

    If by that you mean the debate that rich people believe that the government shouldn't be using their money for space; so they can keep it and spend it on hookers and blow... then I guess that's a parallel.

    --
    The best thing about UDP jokes is I don't care if you get them or not
  27. money isn't really all that important in this case by magarity · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Item 1: The poor in India aren't poor due to overtaxation.
    Item 2: India's government is in better shape than most in Asia but there's still a fair level of corruption.
    Item 3: If the corruption were cleaned up and civil institutions were impartial then the working poor could improve their situations in just a generation or two.
    Item 4: The amount of money spent on the space program is pretty negligible in the big scheme of things. At least it gives the country a boost in the international ranking of such things and showcases the smart people in India which can have a lot of intangible benefit.

  28. Interesting to note by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    As the U.S. have resolved the dilemma by slashing both the space program and the poor!!

    1. Re:Interesting to note by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey, at least our privately owned prison system is strong and providing lots of $8/hour jobs. With 48 states guarenteeing 90% bed occupancy, it is a system too big to fail.

      (blarf... would be nice if the US can be known for something actually cool for once.)

    2. Re:Interesting to note by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The debate raging in India parallels a similar one that has simmered in the United States for decades.

      Except, while the debate in India is "why are we spending money on a space program while we have a poverty problem?", the debate in the US is "why are we spending money on a space program while my shareholders and I don't have ALL the money? ALL OF IT."

    3. Re:Interesting to note by Khashishi · · Score: 1

      $8/hour? Do you mean $0.13/hour? That seems to be the going rate for prison labor these days.

  29. Space program = a step too soon by GeekWithAKnife · · Score: 1

    I have to agree that in the case of India; that has serious infrastructure problems, the money would be far better spent on the basics. Once India takes care of most of its' pressing matters and can provide reliable clean water, sanitation, electricity etc to the vast majority of the population, perhaps then they can reach for the stars as a bonus. If you take all the money put into the space program and invest in infrastructure, like the electrical grid/power would the average citizen not be far better off and have a better future? Let's not build towers in the air on foundations quite shaky.

    --
    A 'singular oddity' is an event that cannot be explained and only happens when you are alone.
  30. Re:Weird coincidence with the India Space stories. by tomhath · · Score: 1

    It's a weird coincidence that all these stories are coming up now.

    Not a coincidence at all. This is an election year in the US and the sitting President is trying to cut space spending and shift the money to social programs.

  31. Jobs program? by gman003 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Space programs may require a lot of high-tech work, but all high-tech work requires low-tech work. Ie. someone's got to dig the ditch to run the cables, someone's got to build the giant silos and buildings, someone's got to run the steel mill.

    Money is like energy - it is not created or destroyed, simply transferred (at least, for ordinary economic activity - there are exceptions). Their space program is funding things on Earth, not shooting barrels of money into space.

    Now, maybe it's not the most efficient way to create jobs for the poor, in the short-term, but think long-term. You cannot deny that the space program is a good thing in the long run. So when you look at it that way, it isn't a bad idea to spend some money "inefficiently" now, in order to improve things in the long run.

    1. Re:Jobs program? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Money is like energy - it is not created or destroyed, simply transferred (at least, for ordinary economic activity - there are exceptions). Their space program is funding things on Earth, not shooting barrels of money into space.

      Well, no. This is a prime example of the Broken Window Fallacy. Destroying wealth does not stimulate an economy - it simply wastes productive labor and reduces everyone's standard of living.

    2. Re:Jobs program? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Money is like energy - it is not created

      I'd like to introduce you to the US Federal Reserve, they're making (printing) money like it's going out of style.

    3. Re:Jobs program? by gman003 · · Score: 1

      That actually supports my argument.

      The Broken Window Fallacy is that destroying property *creates* economic movement, by forcing money to be spent. This is generally not true - the money would likely have been spent anyways, although it can be shown that, in some cases, "broken windows" do cause overall economic growth.

      However, it neither creates nor destroys money - it only changes where it is going. Thus it maintains my thermodynamic metaphor.

    4. Re:Jobs program? by gman003 · · Score: 1

      On paper, it creates money. However, it triggers inflation, which decreases the value of all money proportionate to how much is created in excess of true economic growth. In effect, it only transfers monetery value to whoever is doing the printing - the effect is the same as a tax.

      And in any case, I can hardly call that "ordinary economic activity".

    5. Re:Jobs program? by Osgeld · · Score: 1

      I love these job programs that focus on one short term goal, I am sure those ditch diggers will be proud of their monument when they are once again unemployed 5 years down the road

  32. Teach the poor to fish. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Give a man a fish and you feed him for a day. Teach a man to fish and you feed him for a lifetime"

    India's focus should be on jobs, and I believe a space program is a great way to make them. Giiving that money to the poor would be noble, but stupid and wasteful.

  33. The poor will always be with us by cdrguru · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Yup, this was said aroudn 2,000 years ago and while the overall standard of living of the poor has improved, there are still people considered to be living in poverty. Now poverty in rural India is a lot different than poverty in the US or EU - my understanding of poverty in rural India is that it is nearly a foraging existance, subsisting on whatever is handed out or can be found lying around. Money? Not only is there none at all, but there wouldn't really be anything to spend it on either. So it is not a lot different from poverty 2,000 years ago.

    The problem is poverty is caused by a number of things and "lack of opportunity" isn't a big one. From what I have seen, in most cases it is a matter of bad choices and uninformed choices. An abject failure to learn is also part of the scenario, in a big way.

    In the US it is easy to see people spending $20 on lottery tickets rather than food for the baby when it is pretty clear to them that food for the baby is what is really needed. The result is often begging, borrowing or stealing trying to get the $20 for food for the baby. A few weeks later, the same thing happens again. Sooner or later the friends and relatives figure out it is just a really good idea to become really scarce when their friend or relative is looking for money.

    Just making bad choices - partying instead of studying, for example, is enough to screw up people's lives in ways they can't imagine when they are young. Having made some bad choices some folks are able to pull it together and with a lot of drive, determination and ambition actually get somewhere but this is pretty rare. Mostly, the bad choices end up leading to more bad choices and not learning from them instead.

    Absolutely, there are rich people that inherited the money and had someone to rescue them every time they screwed up or made a bad choice. But these people are the exception. For the most part they are the end of the line and their children will not be leading privileged lives. There are people that happened to fall into an opportunity and have managed to not screw things up, but again this is rare. Most people with more money and resources than their neighbors simply made better choices, planned for the future and have more determination and ambition.

    What all of this means is there is no "solution" to poverty. Right now the US could rearrange things so as to give every single citizen a million dollars. Not counting what this would do to inflation and the economy as a whole, this would in effect eliminate poverty. Right? Except it is pretty much a dead certainty that within ten years there would be people who would have blown through the money and be "poor" again. Maybe as little as five years there would be significant numbers of these people. This would mean the entire exercise - and whatever side effects it would have - would be a waste of time. Which is why nobody seriously proposes doing something like this, at least not anyone with any sense of history and how these things work.

    So there is no decision between space and poverty - there isn't anything to be done for "poverty" in a real sense. Oh, I suppose slavery is a solution - you take all the poor people and make them relatively pampered slaves and don't make catching escapees a priority. I am sure this would result in anyone with much ambition escaping but those that did and didn't like it would just come back to be taken care of. It would be a solution, but I don't think it is one that the West has much stomache for. At least not yet. Keep pushing the "fight against poverty" and that is where we will end up in some form or another because it is the only real "solution".

    1. Re:The poor will always be with us by cfulton · · Score: 4, Informative

      You are so full of s*$t it comes out of your fingers when you type. I have lived in India and you cannot compare the poor (rich by Indian standards) in America with the poor in India. As you point out in America you can make yourself better off. Even if not everyone does, it is possible through hard work to get out of poverty in America. This is simply not true in India. Social systems that have existed for thousands of years continue to keep the vast majority of Indians poor. If you are born to the wrong caste in the wrong part of the country then no matter how smart or hard working you are you will not rise above. God help you if you are an orphan or single woman. Those parts of society are simply beggars with no other prospects. Please keep your work hard and make good ideas limited to places where that is in fact true.

      --
      No sigs in BETA. Beta SUCKS.
    2. Re:The poor will always be with us by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 1

      So people are poor because they are lazy? The nineteenth century called, it wants its attitudes back.

    3. Re:The poor will always be with us by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Life is much easier when you have a safety net built by those before you.

      It's amusing that you think you have to be exceptionally driven/motivated in order to increase wealth after being born into wealth.

      I also find it amusing that so many proponents of a meritocracy downplay how much moderate mediocrity is rewarded realistically in such a system ...
      You need only look at middle management in Corporate America for plenty of examples.

      Circumstance dictates a lot in life. Hardwork should be encouraged, but regardless those who have need to keep circumstance in perspective.

    4. Re:The poor will always be with us by Tom+Womack · · Score: 1

      If I remember rightly, India has a reasonable number of large cities; what is it that stops people with irredeemably awful prospects in Bihar from getting on a train and becoming people with irredeemably awful but less walled-in prospects in Delhi?

      People with irredeemably awful prospects in Gansu have been getting on a train and turning into people with quite decent prospects in Shenzhen by the dozens of millions for the last twenty years.

    5. Re:The poor will always be with us by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you read through his post again, he is actually commenting once on India's poverty and once on the US/EU poverty. It is poorly transitioned but just read the first paragraph and you can see where he is referring to India. After that paragraph he transitions (very unclearly) to talk about first-world "poverty"

    6. Re:The poor will always be with us by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So youre saying that India's primitive uncivilised culture just needs to be changed and all shall be well? Youre probably right.

    7. Re:The poor will always be with us by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So what you are saying is that rather than educating themselves in how to send rockets into space, Indians should bring their ideals into the 21st century.
      I thought that is what they are doing. The more technology and media progresses in a country, surely the quicker that old ideas like he caste system should die out.

  34. The Space Program is Not the Culprit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In the US, if the US had spent trillions of dollars on its people, instead of on wars, there would be no poverty in the US at all.

    1. Re:The Space Program is Not the Culprit by MadKeithV · · Score: 1

      In the US, if the US had spent trillions of dollars on its people, instead of on wars, there would be no poverty in the US at all.

      Some might argue there would be no US at all ;-)

  35. The same old whine by 0xdeadbeef · · Score: 1

    A rat done bit my sister Neelu
    With goras on the moon

    1. Re:The same old whine by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 2

      Glossary: Gora = the color white in Hindi, here it stands for white people.

      --
      sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
  36. Bolloks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If all off humanity would spend their time on solving the poverty problem instead of say luxury, fashion, entertainment, &tc all of poverty would be over in no time.

  37. Not a new dilema by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The USA has had this same argument and has yet to resolve it. Yes, you could feed many by not spending money on space exploration. You could also feed many by taxing the rich at an appropriate rate.

    The problem in the USA is that we no longer have the money we used to. We stopped investing in the USA. We squandered all of our on wars, sports stadiums and other idiotic public programs. We started to believe that we ran the world. If India, with its developing economy, feels it's in a position to explore space, good for them. I hope they learn from the mistakes that the USA made (see AC comment, "As the U.S. have resolved the dilemma by slashing both the space program and the poor!!").

    You can't deny that the USA definitely benefited from the space program, even the poor benefited. The best answer to poverty is a good job. Space programs do provide good jobs for people who pay taxes (i.e., the real job creators). Other programs create jobs as well. Pick your project. Personally, I think it's good that India is at least trying something like this.

  38. Re:Weird coincidence with the India Space stories. by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 1

    social programs (uhm, like ROADS and BRIDGES and INFRASTRUCTURE) has been ignored - totally - by the repubs the last several terms.

    halliburton has been making a pretty penny; but our infra is rotting away.

    I'd LOVE to see investment back in our own country. we once used to think that was needed and a Good Idea(tm). wonder why we stopped wanting to invest in ourselves.

    oh right, greed and the 'got mine, fark you!' mentality. the old codgers who run things aren't going to be alive decades from now, and they simply don't CARE about our well being.

    its overdue and I hope we do dial back on frivilous things and take care of the basic 'meat and potatoes' that has been ignored for too long.

    --

    --
    "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
  39. Re:money isn't really all that important in this c by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >> there's still a fair level of corruption.

    That's the understatement of the day.

  40. They don't get it by virgnarus · · Score: 1

    The space program is an effort to combat poverty, by providing opportunities to get those poor, homeless PhD-carrying souls into a proper workplace!

  41. Compassion for the poor... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If your compassion for the poor makes you want to open your own wallet to help them, you're a saint.
    If your compassion for the poor makes you want to open someone else's wallet to help them, you're a thief.

    That is all.

    1. Re:Compassion for the poor... by PortHaven · · Score: 0

      Well, last week I bought $100 worth of gift cards from McDonald's to give to those homeless I see standing on street corners. I don't like giving money as it so often goes toward drugs/alcohol. I figured, this would allow me to be charitable, while increasing the likelihood that my hard earned cash I am giving to help them actually goes to food.

      $5 card = 4 meals (1 McChicken + glass of water)

      ***

      Ironically, all of those lambasting me as a loon for supporting space exploration and likely deriding me as just not caring about the poor have probably done far less to help the poor.

    2. Re:Compassion for the poor... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wonder how many of those people you give the cards to will just be upset that you didn't give them cash and try to sell or trade the cards for drugs/alcohol/cigarettes.

    3. Re:Compassion for the poor... by TuringCheck · · Score: 1

      I wonder how many of those people you give the cards to will just be upset that you didn't give them cash and try to sell or trade the cards for drugs/alcohol/cigarettes.

      ... all of them?

    4. Re:Compassion for the poor... by PortHaven · · Score: 1

      Seriously, I love how this gets a zero. And yes, some might try to do just that. But you know, it's a tad harder. And how much are they going to get for a $5 gift card? $1-$2 bucks. Most won't believe it even has any charge on it. So they'll probably figure they might as well go to the McDs up the road.

      But there you have it....proof that most of you on Slashdot suck. Sorry.

      So because I've taken the initiative to help my fellow man out of my own pocket, I am worthy of a zero. Can I say this, to all those who lowered the ranking.

      Kiss my ASS!!!!!

  42. Re:Weird coincidence with the India Space stories. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "U.S." should of been "world."

    Us USAsians are arrogant.

    "should of" should have been should've.

    Us USAsians are so alliterative.

  43. Love the understatment. by cfulton · · Score: 1

    "still has a large number of people living in abject poverty."
    70% of the population live on less than $2.00 a day. That makes 850,000,000 or so living in abject poverty. I think that qualifies as a "large number".

    --
    No sigs in BETA. Beta SUCKS.
    1. Re:Love the understatment. by aneroid · · Score: 1

      There's also the recent "reduction" of the poverty line to Rs. 28... $0.50 a day. So the new claim would be that only 30% live below the poverty line.

      I'm no economist but I think India has far greater earth- and sea-based concerns that could do with some govt spending.

      OTOH...if it's done for under US$100 million, then it could just be a great big advertisement to do more outsourced launches...or whatever the PC-term for that is these days...as a major revenue source in the future.

  44. I find this a disingenuous debate by joelsanda · · Score: 1

    These debates have always bothered me. Does a nation/society/culture/state/collective do nothing with its resources if there are some with less than others? Seriously ... this debate seems a red herring because it can never be concluded.

    • - Don't build that table because the Johnson's down the road don't have enough wood for the winter
    • - Don't spend resources researching reconstructive surgery when there are people on the organ transplant list

    My sig paints a picture of my general mindset around 'progress' - I kind of find space exploration a silly idea but what the hell does it matter what I think? It's not like I set national budgets or anything like that. Nevertheless, can't we ask that question of every resource expenditure of ourselves and others? What business did I have buying my kid an XBox 360 when I don't have 100% of his expected college expenses saved?

    --
    The Luddites were ahead of their time.
  45. Re:Weird coincidence with the India Space stories. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ROADS and BRIDGES and INFRASTRUCTURE

    Translation: Construction unions gave Obama lots of money. Oh, and Cheney is retired; you can get over him now.

  46. You cannot elevate everyone from a poor status. by codepunk · · Score: 1

    I specifically know two families both very good friends of mine. These two families both live well below the poverty line. However that will never change as they really have zero ambition to change that fact. As odd as it sounds they are perfectly happy making next to nothing. Both families have nothing but opportunity to do something about it yet refuse.

    --


    Got Code?
  47. Screw the poor!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Go live among the stars. America is fucked because it spent $15,000,000,000,000.00 on the fucking poor!!! Don't make the same mistake!!!

  48. A rat done bit my sister Nell by metrometro · · Score: 1
  49. Jobs by wisnoskij · · Score: 1

    Doing things with money, like having a space program makes jobs, and if done right can be a big boost to many people in India. What else do you what them to do with the money, give it to poor people? I think we all know that will not produce any long term good.

    --
    Troll is not a replacement for I disagree.
  50. Rupees? by RyoShin · · Score: 1

    Well, there's an easy solution: Go around cutting grass and smashing pots until you have enough rupees.

    (You may have to buy a bigger wallet at some point, though.)
    (Also be careful to not accidentally hit chickens while doing this.)

  51. Dr. Ernst Stuhlinger letter to Nun on Space Expl.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not sure how authentic the letter is..
    http://www.lettersofnote.com/2012/08/why-explore-space.html

    In 1970, a Zambia-based nun named Sister Mary Jucunda wrote to Dr. Ernst Stuhlinger, then-associate director of science at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center, in response to his ongoing research into a piloted mission to Mars. Specifically, she asked how he could suggest spending billions of dollars on such a project at a time when so many children were starving on Earth. .....

  52. need more Smithore by Thud457 · · Score: 1

    40 space-acres and a M.U.L.E.?!! That's racist!

    --

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

  53. Last Sentence, Bad Premise by obscuro · · Score: 1

    "The debate raging in India parallels a similar one that has simmered in the United States for decades."

    The debate in the US hasn't been going on "for decades." It's been going on for about one decade give or take a few years. It matters that it hasn't been going on "for decades" because it's essentially a result of scavenging science budgets for warfare and debt service and of the decline of US commitment to science as the global warming debate has soured Republican lawmakers on science in general.

    --
    Every rule has more than one consequence.
    1. Re:Last Sentence, Bad Premise by Crypto+Cavedweller · · Score: 0

      It's also a comparison of apples & oranges, since the U.S. actually *does* provide drinkable water and electricity to most of its citizens. India doesn't even have the basics of an industrial society down, so it's an entirely different question of whether they should be spending money on the advanced components.

  54. nasa budget by spongman · · Score: 1

    as a percentage of total fed budget:

    9.52% - Welfare
    17.4% - Healthcare

    0.48% - NASA

    keep on simmering...

  55. One small step for Ganesh ... by Crypto+Cavedweller · · Score: 0

    Maybe on the moon they can find that fresh water that half the country doesn't have access to, or 24x7 electricity.

  56. ask hollywood by KingBenny · · Score: 1

    http://www.canucklehead.ca/look/avatarded.html they'll tell you hunger in the world is to blame on piracy probably (great movie tho, but nice point i thought)

    --
    Free speech was meant to be free for all... how can anyone grow up in a nanny state ?
  57. Quote from Dr. Sarabhai by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "There are some who question the relevance of space activities in a developing nation. To us, there is no ambiguity of purpose. We do not have the fantasy of competing with the economically advanced nations in the exploration of the moon or the planets or manned space-flight."

    "But we are convinced that if we are to play a meaningful role nationally, and in the community of nations, we must be second to none in the application of advanced technologies to the real problems of man and society." - Dr. Vikram Sarabhai, source wikipedia(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vikram_Sarabhai)

    Who is Dr.Vikram Sarabhai? International Space Hall of Fame @The New Mexico Museum of Space History ( http://www.nmspacemuseum.org/halloffame/detail.php?id=120)

  58. If we should end poverty first... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    we also shouldn't have developed integrated circuits, computers, or especially the internet. You can't use the argument that these help us eliminate poverty, because poverty has increased, even in the good ole U S of A, since these things were invented.

  59. Ok by Greyfox · · Score: 1
    We got a billion people. We can either spend 5 billion rupees on our space program, or give everyone 4 rupees. Administrative cost of distributing rupees will cost 1 rupee per person.

    Mmm wait, how about this! Put 5 billion rupees in a prize pool and set up a reality show where contestants fight to the death until only one is left standing, and that guy gets the 5 billion rupees!

    No, wait, that's a horrible idea. Don't do that...

    --

    I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

  60. umm... by ClioCJS · · Score: 1

    Fire allowed us to eat more and eat better. So that research, you COULD eat. Go back to the drawing board, you really had a good thing going until your specific meataphor :D

    --
    -Clio
    Karma: Bad (mostly from not giving a fuck)
    Blog: http://clintjcl.wordpress.com
  61. India has plenty of food by Nyder · · Score: 1

    if they'd start eating the cows.

    --
    Be seeing you...
  62. correlation etc by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Poverty results from the system that governs the money flow.
    Government spending on some poverty programs may influence those numbers a little. But doesn't do much more,
    if the politicians really want to tackle the poverty problem, they don't need to spend much government money on it they just need to change the system.
    The system that benefits them greatly and to make poverty go away, would have to be changed so that it no longer benefits them greatly.

    Spending money on a space program is one of the better goals for government funding, and here the government funding does have a far greater affect.

  63. The US has millions of people in poverty... by pr100 · · Score: 1

    ... and spends trillions on defence, space programmes etc.

    But, presumably that's good America poverty, and inherently better than bad Indian poverty :/

  64. Immoral by Sqreater · · Score: 1

    Public money is for public use, not space jaunts. Besides, space "colonies" are just plain murder.

    --
    E Proelio Veritas.
  65. Stockholm syndrome by NewYork · · Score: 1

    Indian democracy is suffering from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stockholm_syndrome