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How President Nixon Saved/Wrecked the American Space Program

MarkWhittington writes John Callahan posted an accountof a talk given by space historian John Logsdon on the Planetary Society blog in which he described how President Richard Nixon changed space policy. The talk covered the subject of an upcoming book, After Apollo: Richard Nixon and the American Space Program. Logsdon argued that Nixon had a far more lasting effect on NASA and the American space program than did President Kennedy, most famous for starting the Apollo project that landed men on the moon.

Nixon came to office just in time to preside over the Apollo 11 lunar mission. At that time, the space program was a national priority due to the Kennedy goal of landing a man on the moon by the end of the 1960s. However by the time Neil Armstrong made that first footstep, public support for large-scale space projects had diminished. Nixon, therefore, made a number of policy decisions that redound to this very day.

6 of 125 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Nixon getting credit for starting Apollo? by khallow · · Score: 3, Informative

    Read the article. They don't credit Nixon with starting Apollo. They don't even credit him with ending Apollo though he had some say in what final missions flew or didn't. What they credit him with is the basic policies and strategies NASA has followed for the last forty years as well as it's current status as yet another domestic program.

  2. Re:Long Time by OzPeter · · Score: 4, Informative

    But his support of a puppet in Iran led to a overthrow by an extremist regime that will be in power for decades more.

    That particular one goes back a bit further than Reagan by a couple of decades itself. 1953 Iranian coup d'état IMHO Putting the puppet dictator in power in the first place is the root cause of a hell of a lot of radical islamic behavior.

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  3. Re:did you really just say "redound"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    it's a word. Look it up.

  4. Re:Long Time by PopeRatzo · · Score: 4, Informative

    but it was Clinton's financial deregulation

    Stop calling it that. The bill to repeal Glass-Steagall was written by three Republicans. Clinton only got on board because he had his mind on his dork and his treasury secretary was a wall street asshole who had promised his pals that he'd look out for them in a big big way.

    The initial votes for the Gramm-Leach-Bliley act were along party lines with all but one Democrat voting No. But the banks, smelling blood in the water, smoothed all the objections over with money and the rest is the ugly history of the 21st century so far.

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  5. Inaccuracies in article by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 5, Informative
    If the article is a reflection of the book, count me out.

    Nixon was the first U.S. President to see a human space launch (Apollo 12).

    Someone forgot Project Mercury.
    President Kennedy - Jan 20 1961 to Nov 22 1963
    Freedom 7 (May 5 1961), Liberty Bell 7 (July 21, 1961), Friendship 7 (February 20, 1962), Aurora 7 (May 24, 1962), Sigman 7 (October 3, 1962), and Faith 7 (May 15, 1963). Kennedy, as president, saw ALL the manned Mercury spaceflights. Here's a pic of Kennedy watching the Shepherd launch on TV in the White House, same as millions of other people.

    And Project Gemini.
    President Johnson - Nov 22 1963 to Jan 20 1969
    Gemini 3 (23 Mar 1965) through 12 (11-15 Nov 1966), all manned. Apollo 1 (fatal fire), Apollo 7 (11 October 1968), Apollo 8 (21 December 1968) - the "around the moon mission". Here's a pic of Johnson watching the launch of Gemini 3

    And there were the other flights, Apollo 9 through 11 - the first moon landing, all observed by Nixon as president.

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  6. Re:Yeah, he also sabotaged the Vietnam peacetalks by the+gnat · · Score: 4, Informative

    He couldn't have been traitorous as president, the president himself decides who our enemies are and are not.

    Except:

    1) Reagan wasn't president at the time of the supposed deal that GP mentioned
    2) Iran was subject to an arms embargo at the time the administration sold it arms
    3) The profits from arms sales to Iran were then funneled to the Nicaraguan Contras, further violating the law

    In defense of Reagan - a phrase I never thought I'd write - there's no proof that he actually knew about (3), at least. So, a dupe, but not necessarily a traitor.