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NASA's $349 Million Empty Tower

An anonymous reader writes: In a scathing indictment of NASA's bureaucracy, the Washington Post documents a $349 million project to construct a laboratory tower that was closed as soon as it was finished. From the article: "[The tower was] designed to test a new rocket engine in a chamber that mimicked the vacuum of space. ... As soon as the work was done, it shut the tower down. The project was officially 'mothballed' — closed up and left empty — without ever being used. ... The reason for the shutdown: The new tower — called the A-3 test stand — was useless. Just as expected. The rocket program it was designed for had been canceled in 2010. ... The result was that NASA spent four more years building something it didn't need. Now, the agency will spend about $700,000 a year to maintain it in disuse. ... Jerked from one mission to another, NASA lost its sense that any mission was truly urgent. It began to absorb the vices of less-glamorous bureaucracies: Officials tended to let projects run over time and budget. Its congressional overseers tended to view NASA first as a means to deliver pork back home, and second as a means to deliver Americans into space. In Mississippi, NASA built a monument to its own institutional drift."

200 comments

  1. Quoted from TFA by SpzToid · · Score: 5, Informative

    The reason for the shutdown: The new tower — called the A-3 test stand — was useless. Just as expected. The rocket program it was designed for had been canceled in 2010.

    But, at first, cautious NASA bureaucrats didn’t want to stop the construction on their own authority. And then Congress — at the urging of a senator from Mississippi — swooped in and ordered the agency to finish the tower, no matter what.

    The result was that NASA spent four more years building something it didn’t need. Now, the agency will spend about $700,000 a year to maintain it in disuse.

    --
    You can't be ahead of the curve, if you're stuck in a loop.
    1. Re:Quoted from TFA by SourceFrog · · Score: 0

      Just as expected. The rocket program it was designed for had been canceled in 2010.

      I'd like to know how it can be "just as expected" when NASA do not have a crystal ball telling them by what random amount their budget will get cut each following year .. in all likelihood, they didn't *want* to cancel that project in the first place.

      --
      My other UID is three digits.
    2. Re:Quoted from TFA by floorgoblin · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Yeah, it's hard to see why the article frames this as an indictment of NASA's bureaucracy, given the article explicitly says a senator from Mississippi explicitly forbid them from stopping construction. This is just another reflection of how money is more important than reason in Congress these days.

    3. Re:Quoted from TFA by gtall · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The U.S. Senator in question is Sen. Wicker, one of the biggest dolts in the Senate. You can hear him wax on and on and on about wasteful government spending unless.....errr...it happens to occur in his state whereupon it is magically transformed into a vital piece of American infrastructure.

    4. Re:Quoted from TFA by mrchaotica · · Score: 4, Informative

      After the rocket program had been canceled, it was expected that the tower would be useless when it was completed four years later. Lo and behold, now that it's completed it is indeed useless.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    5. Re:Quoted from TFA by Enry · · Score: 0

      Wish I had mod points.

    6. Re:Quoted from TFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No doubt it was completed due to the sunken cost fallacy. It would have been cheaper to just cancel the project, but then, a lot had been invested in it already. So they finished it, and now it keeps sucking up money.

    7. Re:Quoted from TFA by QuietLagoon · · Score: 2

      ...And then Congress — at the urging of a senator from Mississippi — swooped in and ordered the agency to finish the tower, no matter what....

      Got to deliver that pork to the voters, especially when other taxpayers are paying for it.

    8. Re:Quoted from TFA by NotDrWho · · Score: 0

      How about the fact that NASA's bureaucracy NEVER SPEAKS OUT AGAINST IT when a senator from Mississippi explicitly forbids them from stopping construction?

      --
      SJW's don't eliminate discrimination. They just expropriate it for themselves.
    9. Re:Quoted from TFA by GLMDesigns · · Score: 0

      One senator cannot "forbid" anything.

      --
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      Vote 3rd Party in 2016 and beyond
    10. Re:Quoted from TFA by jbmartin6 · · Score: 3, Funny

      But what about the children? Pretty callous of you to ignore all the jobs created by the project. Thanks to the multiplier effect, this useless tower had a huge beneficial effect on the economy, this is just basic economics.

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    11. Re:Quoted from TFA by Pope+Hagbard · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Wrong. If a bill comes up that says "NASA, you must stop spending on this project" one senator can put a hold on the bill, preventing any further action until the senator removes said hold.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    12. Re:Quoted from TFA by omnichad · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Or maybe they didn't put enough outs in the contract with the builders for termination. It's possible they were contractually obligated to finish building it because they never thought anything might be cancelled.

    13. Re:Quoted from TFA by omnichad · · Score: 1

      That's interesting. I didn't know a senator was in charge of NASA.

    14. Re:Quoted from TFA by omnichad · · Score: 1

      But the converse of that is not saying that they must continue. I would assume that means they may stop, but are not obligated to. I can't imagine that NASA doesn't have enough self-governance to not spend money.

    15. Re:Quoted from TFA by the_skywise · · Score: 4, Funny

      Lo and behold, now that it's completed it is indeed useless.

      Correct, but it was mere speculation before. Now they've PROVEN it.

      Science!

    16. Re:Quoted from TFA by UnknowingFool · · Score: 5, Informative
      And you 100% they didn't?

      Since then, it’s spent an additional $57 million to keep building it, according to a February 2013 report by the agency’s inspector general, Paul Martin. Testifying before the House space subcommittee in September, Martin highlighted the A-3 as an example of how lawmakers, looking to keep federal dollars flowing to their states, can block efforts to cut unnecessary spending. “The political context in which NASA operates often impedes its efforts to reduce infrastructure,” he said."

      This was reported by BusinessWeek almost a year ago.

      --
      Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
    17. Re:Quoted from TFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      No doubt it was completed due to the sunken cost fallacy.

      No, it was completed because (quoted from TFA) "Congress — at the urging of a senator from Mississippi — swooped in and ordered the agency to finish the tower, no matter what."

      What's worse is that NASA already had a test stand for testing engines in vacuum, built during the Apollo program in Sandusky Ohio. The question had been whether to upgrade that one to test the new engine, or build a new one, and the original cost estimate for building a new one in MIssisippi was, uh, somewhat lower than the actual cost turned out to be. So now NASA has two unused large engine-test vacuum chambers.

    18. Re:Quoted from TFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We could have built some useful high speed rail or lain some fiber to some underserved communities with that money... make work projects don't need to be useless.

    19. Re:Quoted from TFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then why not just pay the construction companies the remaining amount they would have, let the construction companies do their own thing for a few years instead of completing the thing, then not pay £700k a year to maintain a white elephant?

    20. Re:Quoted from TFA by Russ1642 · · Score: 1

      It's not that money is more important than reason, it's that there's no reasoning at all. Reason is out, and has been for years. The people with the least sense of reason on earth are in congress.

    21. Re:Quoted from TFA by Chris+Mattern · · Score: 1

      Most of the blame goes to the congressman, yes. But if NASA had promptly shut the thing down when it was evident it had no use, the congressman wouldn't have had an opening to insist that construction continue.

    22. Re:Quoted from TFA by Chris+Mattern · · Score: 1

      "Just as expected" refers to the tower being useless. They knew it would be useless because the project it had been made for was cancelled *four years earlier*.

    23. Re:Quoted from TFA by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 5, Informative

      But the converse of that is not saying that they must continue. I would assume that means they may stop, but are not obligated to. I can't imagine that NASA doesn't have enough self-governance to not spend money.

      You may not be able to imagine that, but this merely represents a failure in your imagination.

      When Congress passes a bill stating that NASA "shall" spend money on project X,this is not optional. They must spend that money.

      That was the language in the bill:
      “Wicker Three” was an amendment sponsored by Sen. Roger Wicker (R-Miss.). His amendment said NASA “shall complete construction and activation of the A-3 test stand with a completion goal of September 30, 2013.” That language was included in the bill that passed the committee, then the Senate, then the House. In October 2010, Obama signed it into law.

      --
      http://www.geoffreylandis.com
    24. Re:Quoted from TFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Stop wasting the science!
       
      Keep it safe!

    25. Re:Quoted from TFA by omnichad · · Score: 1

      The person I was responding to said that a hold was placed on the cancellation. I merely trusted them to be telling the story correctly.

    26. Re:Quoted from TFA by godefroi · · Score: 1

      No, he was merely giving that as an example of the power one senator has. In this case, it wasn't that a cancellation bill was placed on hold, it was that the amendment sponsored by Wicker was passed, directing NASA to finish it.

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    27. Re:Quoted from TFA by Lumpy · · Score: 0

      I have a solution. Nasa always get's 50% of the military budget. Nobody in Congress can make any adjustment to it without a 100% vote in both house and senate as well as President. Plus no politician direction. They have ZERO SAY in the operations. They can suggest.

      That way NASA has enough funding and the fat idiots in Washington cant tell them what to do.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    28. Re:Quoted from TFA by omnichad · · Score: 1

      Which makes my response related to the hypothetical example just like his, not the actual story. Whether it lines up with what actually happened is sort of off-topic.

    29. Re: Quoted from TFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Calloused? You're confused. Useless activity could be replaced with projects that would improve the quality of lives. Boondoggles fill politically connected pockets without doing so. This is a boondoggle.

    30. Re:Quoted from TFA by quantaman · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yeah, it's hard to see why the article frames this as an indictment of NASA's bureaucracy, given the article explicitly says a senator from Mississippi explicitly forbid them from stopping construction. This is just another reflection of how money is more important than reason in Congress these days.

      Don't worry. I'm sure congress will do the right thing and point to this wasteful spending as a reason to cut funding to NASA.

      --
      I stole this Sig
    31. Re:Quoted from TFA by mcvos · · Score: 2

      After the rocket program had been cancelled, NASA wanted to cancel this test facility too, until Congress forced them to continue working on it for no good reason.

    32. Re:Quoted from TFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      In the 1980s when I was in the rocket business, we once un-mothballed a lab complex that had stood idle since the 1960s. Its most interesting feature was a pair of gigantic waldoes, which could pick up huge, heavy objects while an operator manipulated controls from an elevated glass observation room. Incredibly cool, precisely machined hydraulic art.

      After we removed the owl-shit covered tarps, unwrapped the many layers, removed the final thick coat of grease, and flushed the old fluid with new, everything worked perfectly.

      That building had never been used before. It was half built when the government project that required it was canceled, but my employers wisely continued on the project and mothballed it as soon as it was completed.

      20 years later we used it extensively and AFAIK it is still in use. If not, they will have mothballed it again for the future.

      If NASA makes a minimal effort to keep the tower useable, it will be used in the future, and this will have been a wise investment.

    33. Re:Quoted from TFA by sconeu · · Score: 4, Informative

      And said Senator's ass-hattery was covered here in February.

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
    34. Re:Quoted from TFA by TWX · · Score: 2

      It might have actually cost more to maintain the site in an unfinished state or to tear down the construction than it would to just finish it.

      For all we know, they'll figure out a repurpose for the facility.

      --
      Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
    35. Re:Quoted from TFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      ... it's also a reason to be suspicious when politicians criticize "government inefficiency." Various studies have shown that there is far less waste in public institutions (due to transparency) than in private ones. Often the inefficiencies are coming from the legislators interfering with the agency they're criticizing. The irony is that lots of these tea-party-spectrum politicians who spew mantras about less government actually govern by micromanaging institutions they know nothing about. When they fuck it up, they blame the institution rather than owning up to their mistakes.

    36. Re:Quoted from TFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then you get to go to jail for violating the law. You know, the law that congress passed compelling NASA to complete the project based on the direction of the senator.

      god, pathetic.

    37. Re:Quoted from TFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The same contract probably required the construction company to actually build the tower.

      One side can't bend a contract anymore than the other side can.

    38. Re:Quoted from TFA by nitehawk214 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      This isn't sunken cost as much as pork barrel. Someone promised a Senator from Mississippi that hey would get 300+ million dollars from NASA and by god he was going to get it regardless of how much of a waste of money it is.

      Also not surprising that this was from the South where they are against big government, but pro pork barrel.

      --
      I'm a good cook. I'm a fantastic eater. - Steven Brust
    39. Re:Quoted from TFA by sjames · · Score: 1

      Exactly! The blame goes directly to Congress as they were the ones making the bad decisions.

    40. Re:Quoted from TFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's shit like this that brought us the line-item veto

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Line-item_veto

      I do think we were correct to get rid of it back in the 90s, as it was a bit too powerful and could change the intent of bills as it was codified in that particular law.

      Today, though, we need to look at bringing it back in some form. Divided congress bring us giant omnibus bills at the last moment, filled with so much pork and riders that we can't fix them because stalling will bring shutdown and chaos. (This lays squarely at the feet of the Republicans. Yes it does. Shut the fuck up you child.)

      We're being nickled and dimed to death by our do-nothing congress and they're doing it to us intentionally, exploiting crisis to pass legislation that puts money in the pockets of private interests. The line-item veto, for all it problems, lets us chop off riders that are nothing but pork for backwoods hucksters that bribe their base pork projects.. Or, as we saw yesterday, give giant banks freedom to continue to gamble without consequence because they're guaranteed a federal bailout if they crash the economy again.

    41. Re:Quoted from TFA by LWATCDR · · Score: 2

      Exactly NASA is caught between a rock and a hard space.
      They keep having projects started then stopped. The X-33 is a great example.

      --
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    42. Re:Quoted from TFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps they can use the vacuum chambers to put congress in and suck some of the hot air out.

    43. Re:Quoted from TFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      "A democracy cannot exist as a permanent form of government. It can only exist until the majority discovers it can vote itself largess out of the public treasury. After that, the majority always votes for the candidate promising the most benefits with the result the democracy collapses because of the loose fiscal policy ensuing, always to be followed by a dictatorship, then a monarchy."

    44. Re:Quoted from TFA by jklovanc · · Score: 3, Informative

      preventing any further action until the senator removes said hold.

      Not quite

      Holds, like filibusters, can be defeated through a successful cloture motion.

    45. Re:Quoted from TFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      until Congress forced them to continue working on it for no good reason.

      Congressman Wicker of Mississippi wanted NASA to spend hundreds of millions of dollars in his district. This makes his constituents happy, and they continue to vote for him.

      What I can't understand is why using the same hundreds of millions of Federal funds to build schools or hospitals or roads would make a (Southern) Republican completely apoplectic about big government spending.

    46. Re:Quoted from TFA by budgenator · · Score: 0

      Your confusing cost with wealth redistribution. Everything they spent either went into wages, or bought goods that paid somebodies wages and generated profits that were distributed to stockholders. Being an overt Commie redistributionist is a bad thing(tm), being a covert Republicrat or Democan redistributionist is a economic stimulis package.

      --
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    47. Re:Quoted from TFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know this is intended as funny, but worth pointing out the Broken Window Fallacy here ...

    48. Re:Quoted from TFA by darkain · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Also, see dupe for other info

      http://yro.slashdot.org/story/...

    49. Re:Quoted from TFA by budgenator · · Score: 1

      Senators are in charge of a lot of things the general public is only vaguely aware of.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    50. Re:Quoted from TFA by Richy_T · · Score: 1

      And yet they so often are. I believe Einstein (apocryphally) had something to say about that.

    51. Re:Quoted from TFA by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      You're not too bright, are you? Congress has ultimate authority over NASA, and over everything in the entire government. They control funding for everything, and write laws to that effect.

      If your boss at your company tells you to do something wasteful and unethical, then you either do it or find a new job.

    52. Re:Quoted from TFA by MiniMike · · Score: 3, Funny

      Maybe the tower could be converted to office space for the Senator. But only if it still is capable of holding a vacuum.

    53. Re:Quoted from TFA by Nethemas+the+Great · · Score: 1

      NASA tried the other route as well on various projects only to have them thrust back upon them.

      --
      Two of my imaginary friends reproduced once ... with negative results.
    54. Re: Quoted from TFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Because those contracts wouldn't have gone to their big campaign contributors.

    55. Re:Quoted from TFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Speak out against the people who can defund you agency tomorrow? Are you stupid, or just young and idealistic with no experience?

    56. Re:Quoted from TFA by Coren22 · · Score: 0

      (This lays squarely at the feet of the Republicans. Yes it does. Shut the fuck up you child.)

      Of course it has nothing to do with the Democrats, lead by Obama, refusing to negotiate. It couldn't be that our political system is design with negotiation of viewpoints built in could it?

      --
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    57. Re:Quoted from TFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Those jobs you are so proud of were not magically created out of nothing. They were either taken from you (taxes) or your children (gov't borrowing). In the matter of taxes the benefit is shifted from one part of the economy to another, or in the case of borrowing shifted from some point in the future to today.

    58. Re:Quoted from TFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The proper way to handle this sort of stuff is for NASA to rename the A-3 facility the "Wicker Memorial Pork Barrel Facility" and name something that is actually needed tha "A-3 Test Stand" while the budget is in committee. Hack the process.

    59. Re:Quoted from TFA by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      Another thing that causes inefficiency is a near-zero tolerance for waste. Because the government has to get the best deal, it needs elaborate and detailed bidding procedures that slow acquisition and make sure only companies with the expensive ability to navigate the bidding system can bid. To avoid wasting money on welfare, there are controls more expensive than the waste they find.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    60. Re:Quoted from TFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And this was discussed (along with other issues) in a NASA Inspector General's report almost 2 years ago:

      http://oig.nasa.gov/audits/reports/FY13/index.html

      Read the report for February 12, 2013 (IG-13-008)

    61. Re:Quoted from TFA by CanadianMacFan · · Score: 1

      Should have saved the money and used the vacuum in his head to test the rockets instead.

    62. Re:Quoted from TFA by UnknowingFool · · Score: 3, Informative

      Yes it was. People who didn't know about are OUTRAGED! They are outraged at NASA two years later for a problem that was fully disclosed and really was not their fault.

      --
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    63. Re:Quoted from TFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sen. Wicker knew exactly what he was doing. The vacuum is not in his head, but in his soul.

    64. Re:Quoted from TFA by khallow · · Score: 1

      Yeah, it's hard to see why the article frames this as an indictment of NASA's bureaucracy, given the article explicitly says a senator from Mississippi explicitly forbid them from stopping construction.

      They could have always called his bluff, if they cared. The reality is that they were probably buying the senator's vote for other similarly useless spending by NASA.

    65. Re:Quoted from TFA by MooseMiester · · Score: 1, Insightful

      But Healthcare, oh the government can run that without corruption. And education, there's no pork barrel nudge nudge wink wink shit going on. Infrastructure with the Teamsters, why it's pure as the driven snow! And tax collecting, not a smidgen of corruption there, Obama has assured us and that's all I need! Global warming/cooling/er CHANGE the Federal government is the only solution. National Energy policy, there's no possibility of any corruption, why hardly any money is involved. Nuclear plants? Only the government should do that, they are the most qualified...

      Coming up next on Slashdot a story about how Big Government solutions are needed to save us all from ourselves. Passionate Progs will be ripping the small government folks, telling them how stupid and ignorant they are.

      The headline should read "American public continues to believe socialist fantasies despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary"

      Oh wait, that will NEVER HAPPEN.

      --
      Murphy was an optimist
    66. Re:Quoted from TFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mind if I stand outside NASA headquarters and throw rocks at their windows? Think of all the jobs created by -that- project.

    67. Re:Quoted from TFA by slashdotwannabe · · Score: 1

      Way to take one concrete, specific example of pork-barrel corruption from a single Senator and use it to indict the whole system! You aren't biased at all!

      --
      This comment is my opinion and does not represent an official position of Donald Trump or others I do not work for
    68. Re:Quoted from TFA by MooseMiester · · Score: 1

      So please give me a list of all of the cases where a big Federal Agency other than the Military has been a model of efficiency, as error free as any similarly sized public corporation, achieved cost reduction, achieved the objectives set out for it, reduced the budget on it's own in a quest for efficiency, increased employee productivity, improved service levels to it's customers....

      You can't. Because there aren't any.

      A single Medicare fraud case a few years back cost the taxpayers an amount of money equivalent to the profits of the entire Healthcare Insurance Industry - for one year! Was anything done? Nope. The $500 hammers and $10,000 Toilet Seats aren't jokes, they are the status quo. The lavish vacations at taxpayer expense for employees to attend "conferences" - these are also common place. Have you worked for, or with, or as a vendor to any Federal Agency?

      I'm not biased at all. I've seen this with my own eyes, Sir. It's not "isolated examples" at all. You're being suckered by a false portrayal of Government by people in Government who want more of your money in their pockets...

      --
      Murphy was an optimist
    69. Re:Quoted from TFA by slashdotwannabe · · Score: 1

      First, it's a false equivalency. Government is not a corporation, and cannot be run like one. Efficiency is not the first job of Government, stability is.

      Second, you say that "there aren't any" examples of efficient government programs, but I can think of one off the top of my head: Medicare is the most efficiently run HMO on the planet, with administrative costs (~2.4%) several TIMES lower than any privately run insurance company (~11-30%). I note you provided no information on your claim that "A single Medicare fraud case a few years back cost the taxpayers an amount of money equivalent to the profits of the entire Healthcare Insurance Industry", which is a ludicrous claim given that the Wellpoint alone generated nearly $3 billion in profit in FY2013. In 2011 Medicare expenditures were $565 billion, with fraud accounting for %3-10 depending on what your definition of "fraud" is.

      Third, the government does not "run healthcare". The ACA was a set of reforms to mainly insurance and secondarily to Medicare. Outside of the VA, how many hospitals does the government run? How many doctors does the government employ?

      Fourth, there are PLENTY of examples of wasteful corporations, which by and large are not any more efficient than a similarly-sized government organization. The vast majority of government organizations have an SG&A of around 10%, which is certainly competitive with private enterprise.

      --
      This comment is my opinion and does not represent an official position of Donald Trump or others I do not work for
    70. Re:Quoted from TFA by MooseMiester · · Score: 1

      In my direct experience the large group of humans called "government" .vs. a large group of humans called "corporations" operate at completely different levels of efficiency. The excuse that Government "is not a corporation and cannot be run like one" is nonsense. It's a great ivory tower view....

      I'll look up the Medicare claim for you when I have a chance, the fraud level in Medicare is enormous - as it is with most programs run the the Feds.

      The ACA was a giant payoff to the insurance companies with quid pro quo to the DNC that has blown up in their faces. Any other view is naive my friend...

      And sure, there are good corporations and bad corporations. And sure you can cherry pick any singular example, but it's cherry picking....

      --
      Murphy was an optimist
    71. Re:Quoted from TFA by slashdotwannabe · · Score: 1

      The excuse that Government "is not a corporation and cannot be run like one" is nonsense. It's a great ivory tower view....

      Perhaps you'd care to back up that opinion with a fact or two explaining why two radically different types of organizations should be run in exactly the same manner? Note that I did not state that government cannot be efficient, but that efficiency is not the top mission of a government agency.

      I'll look up the Medicare claim for you when I have a chance, the fraud level in Medicare is enormous - as it is with most programs run the the Feds.

      I hear that bank robbers go after banks because that's where all the money is...

      The ACA was a giant payoff to the insurance companies

      Yes it was. It was also all that was politically achievable in one piece of legislation. Don't believe me? Ask Hillary Clinton what happened to her husband's attempt to take on both the insurance industry AND the healthcare industry all at the same time. Realpolitik is a bitch. I would much prefer we went with some form of single-payer as every other first-world nation on the planet has done (incidentally, at nearly 18% of GDP, the US spends twice as much on healthcare as other nations and gets half the results).

      with quid pro quo to the DNC that has blown up in their faces.

      So this "pro quo" you speak of is going to be delivered exactly when? I didn't notice Aetna or Cigna littering the DNC with contributions this last election cycle...

      Any other view is naive my friend...

      How about the view that the ACA saved my best friend's life? That it made it possible for her to purchase insurance which detected her cancer and is providing for treatment she never would've gotten otherwise?

      How about the view that the number of uninsured Americans has dropped significantly for the first time since Nixon was President?

      How about the view that insurance premium increases have been checked for the first time in my adult life, where they previously had been growing annually at more than double -- sometimes triple -- inflation? You might recall the litany of stories in 2013 of how we would see crazy increases in premium costs? None of those crazy increases actually happened.

      How about the view that budget impact was better than the CBO forecast?

      Which of these views is "naïve"? All in all, that's not too shabby for what was admittedly a giant insurance company blowjob. I can't wait to see how much better it gets when we get around to reforming the other half. Maybe we'll exorcise the Profit Demon from our healthcare system once and for all and remove the perverse incentives it creates that keep people sick rather than cure them.

      --
      This comment is my opinion and does not represent an official position of Donald Trump or others I do not work for
    72. Re:Quoted from TFA by MooseMiester · · Score: 1

      My my my I am impressed. It's a nice one sided pitch for one the bigger shams ever perpetrated on (in the words of Gruber) an ignorant public.

      Our group plan went up 30% last year when we were cancelled. This year it went up 20%. Premiums will continue to rise at alarming levels because there are new hands in the till. The lie that premiums didn't go up is an astounding lie that the OFA started right after six million plans were cancelled. As soon as you told that I knew exactly who I am talking to. Your link from Kaiser says the uninsured has dropped by .2%. That's only significant if you are making political hay. The promise was that ALL THE UNINSURED WOULD BE COVERED, remember? That, too, was a lie.

      We were all told the ACA would actually reduce the deficit, it will add 1 trillion dollars - about the cost of the Iraq war.

      Apparently you don't understand how politics work. You give the insurance companies a blowjob, you get something in return. Maybe they buy you a new yacht, or pay for your convention hotel, or donate to your super pac. Both parties believe they own each other. A giant lie is told, ALWAYS laced with a big emotional heart strings tugging argument (your post is full of them oh sniff sniff boo hoo), and a portrait of the opposition as evil, uncaring, ignorant, racist. The PR trolls go out on the Internet and post glorious lies to thousands of comment boards that are offset the by the opposition who usually just quotes facts - which makes them racists of coruse.

      Having been involved in the Healthcare and Insurance industry since the mid 80's from the software side I can assure you that in my experience 90% of whats wrong with Healthcare was caused directly by the Federal Government fucking with it. But keep those emotionally charged arguments coming, and that Marxist rhetoric where profit is a demon, there are still a few people who believe that nonsense and none of them are going to argue with you... Please, go move to a country that has single payer, please, please please please I hear Cuba is open...

      --
      Murphy was an optimist
    73. Re:Quoted from TFA by slashdotwannabe · · Score: 1

      Our group plan went up 30% last year when we were cancelled. This year it went up 20%

      Anecdotal fallacy

      The promise was that ALL THE UNINSURED WOULD BE COVERED, remember?

      No; in four years of covering the ACA as a reporter, I never heard this claim once. Cite please?

      We were all told the ACA would actually reduce the deficit, it will add 1 trillion dollars - about the cost of the Iraq war.

      According to the CBO, it is on track to do exactly that. But you would've known that if you had bothered to read the cites from my last post.

      Apparently you don't understand how politics work. You give the insurance companies a blowjob, you get something in return.

      Apparently you do not understand how debate works. I have provided several pieces of evidence alongside my assertions ("Citations"). It is now up to you to either concede or rebut them. Not to ignore them and raise a fresh round of complaints.

      A giant lie is told, ALWAYS laced with a big emotional heart strings tugging argument (your post is full of them oh sniff sniff boo hoo)

      My post has ONE of them -- my personal experience with the fact that the ACA saved my friend's life. The remainder is citations -- every one of which you have conveniently ignored.

      Having been involved in the Healthcare and Insurance industry since the mid 80's from the software side I can assure you that in my experience 90% of whats wrong with Healthcare was caused directly by the Federal Government fucking with it.

      And you haven't shown yourself to be biased at all! Why, everything you've stated thus far has been either axiomatic or backed up by citation. Wait...

      But keep those emotionally charged arguments coming, and that Marxist rhetoric where profit is a demon, there are still a few people who believe that nonsense and none of them are going to argue with you...

      Of course you would never stoop to using emotionally charged words *cough* "Marxist"! Certainly none of those people who are getting double the results at half the cost would argue! You know, all those people in all those Marxist countries like Germany, Switzerland, France, England, Australia and Canada! Because as everyone knows, they're ALL just clamoring to change their systems to be exactly like ours...

      --
      This comment is my opinion and does not represent an official position of Donald Trump or others I do not work for
    74. Re:Quoted from TFA by MooseMiester · · Score: 1

      Our group plan went up 30% last year when we were cancelled. This year it went up 20%

      I own the company. Are you calling me a liar?

      --
      Murphy was an optimist
    75. Re:Quoted from TFA by slashdotwannabe · · Score: 1

      I own the company. Are you calling me a liar?

      Heavens no. If I were calling you a liar, I would have said "I think you are lying". What I said was that your personal sample size of ONE represents an anecdotal fallacy.

      --
      This comment is my opinion and does not represent an official position of Donald Trump or others I do not work for
    76. Re:Quoted from TFA by MooseMiester · · Score: 1

      If you were the guy who had to tell the employees their health care costs were going up... Or the guy who took a cut in pay to help cover the cost increase for the employees.. perhaps you'd understand how offensive that remark is.

      As a small business owner, I talk to lots of other small business owners, and I do not know a single one who has had an experience any different from mine. Our insurance - which was awesome - was cancelled. The new Obama Care compliant insurance costs us more, costs our employees more, is not better coverage, has higher deductibles, and generally just pissed absolutely everybody off. Who do you think the employees complain too? Me.

      First we, the public, were told "The Average Family of Four would see a reduction in $2,500 per year". This was a lie. Everybody knew it was a lie, you can't cover MORE people for less. Now the story is "The rate of increase has been slowed". This is also a lie. It's the same made up bullshit statistic as "jobs created or saved". As the employer mandate has not kicked in, and there are little to no statistics being released about overall QHP plan premiums that include subsidies, or percentages of insured above and below the FPL there is simply no way to know this. Most likely, premiums are going way up, but a carefully crafted lie has been released. Why? Because that's how every single aspect of this law has been handled. They re-invented the term enrolled for crissakes!! Who does that? Really? Can we ever trust someone who does things like that?

      You want to argue liberal talking points, that's fine and dandy. My opinion is from someone who is actually living with this crap. And no, I'm not going to scour the web for "opposing view points" and have a "debate" over them, why should I bother? Anyone actually in the trenches with this thing knows what a pig in a poke it is.

      Had the Administration told the truth.... Had they held open hearings... They had a GOLDEN opportunity to do something really good for people. But no. Greed took over. Arrogance took over. And then when it went to shit, they were too arrogant, too full of themselves, too convinced that everyone else was stupid, and ignorant. So they made a bad situation far, far worse. And then, they rewrote the law by executive fiat - how many times? And no, you can't blame everybody else for this failure. Funny thing, these new Democrats, nothing is ever their fault. I can say that, I am an ex-Democrat myself, OK?

      Anyone who argues what a grand and glorious thing the ACA is - they are either a paid OFA troll, or a die hard ideologue, so totally brainwashed they are hopeless and not worth the time of day. When you spoke a small piece of the truth - that the insurance industry is the one that got the best deal - I had hope.... I really did... Because they went in to negotiate with the insurance folks, and just like every time before and after they talked a big talk, and gave away the whole store and got NOTHING in return. Nothing. And you watch, the Insurance companies will come back and win - again. Their profits have been increased at the cost of increasing the national debt. What a GREAT DEAL!!

      What's going to happen next, with the Republicans in Congress, assuming they actually grow a spine, is going to make everything much, much worse for everybody. And had the Democrats not been such toxic, hateful, insulting little trolls none of this had to happen. None of it.

      Am I bitter about this. Yes..... Because I want to provide the best possible health care for my employees. I don't want to be rammed into a one size fits all Federally Mandated you have no choices group insurance plan.

      --
      Murphy was an optimist
    77. Re:Quoted from TFA by slashdotwannabe · · Score: 1

      If you were the guy who had to tell the employees their health care costs were going up... Or the guy who took a cut in pay to help cover the cost increase for the employees.. perhaps you'd understand how offensive that remark is.

      Perhaps. But it remains an anecdotal fallacy to take your personal experience and even the experiences of your peers and form an opinion of the entire medical system based on it. I'm sorry you find logic to be so offensive.

      You want to argue liberal talking points, that's fine and dandy.

      Actually I want to -- and have been -- arguing facts. I would appreciate it if you would do the same and cease your silly diversions (i.e. "marxism", "liberal talking points") that show you to be nothing more than an ideologue who is unable to rationally examine facts.

      Had the Administration told the truth.... Had they held open hearings... They had a GOLDEN opportunity to do something really good for people.

      They did. For nearly two years, in countless Town Hall meetings and Congressional hearings. And you know what? They DID do something really good for people. Certainly it was not the best possible outcome, but we've already been over that, haven't we? Perfect is not the enemy of better.

      Funny thing, these new Democrats, nothing is ever their fault. I can say that, I am an ex-Democrat myself, OK?

      Did they kick you out for your inability to create a rational argument?

      Anyone who argues what a grand and glorious thing the ACA is - they are either a paid OFA troll, or a die hard ideologue

      Nobody has argued that the ACA is a grand and glorious thing. Perhaps you might dial down the level of hyperbole a bit?

      Their profits have been increased at the cost of increasing the national debt. What a GREAT DEAL!!

      Actually, the deficit (and therefore the debt) would be higher without the ACA, so sayeth the CBO. But please, don't let actual facts get in the way of a good rant.

      What's going to happen next, with the Republicans in Congress, assuming they actually grow a spine, is going to make everything much, much worse for everybody

      That's an awful big assumption! They would also need to grow a brain and cure the psychosis that seems to have infected them. They would also have to win the Presidency and maintain their control of Congress. Tell me, what kind of odds do you give Mr. Santorum or Mr. Perry at winning the next Presidential election?

      And had the Democrats not been such toxic, hateful, insulting little trolls none of this had to happen. None of it.

      Gosh, and you have been a perfect exemplar of the calm, rational discussion one can expect from the modern Conservative!

      Am I bitter about this. Yes.....

      Really? I couldn't tell.

      I don't want to be rammed into a one size fits all Federally Mandated you have no choices group insurance plan.

      Huh. I wonder what part of the country you live in? Because where *I* live, I was able to choose from dozens of different plans from eight different insurers and NONE of them were the Federal government.

      --
      This comment is my opinion and does not represent an official position of Donald Trump or others I do not work for
    78. Re:Quoted from TFA by MooseMiester · · Score: 1
      I can always tell when I am making points with liberals because they become very insulting and call me all kinds of names, that almost always become gruberisms "I am so much smarter than you. You are an ignorant hayseed, unable to think rationally".

      Because where *I* live, I was able to choose from dozens of different plans from eight different insurers and NONE of them were the Federal government.

      Post ACA there are two kinds of Health Insurance in America, QHP plans, and PHSP plans. QHP plans, a.k.a. ObamaCare, come in four flavors, known as bronze, silver, gold, and platinum. No matter what the carriers rebrand these as, they are all the same, exact four plans. So to take your method of communication, your statement is indicative of your immense and astounding ignorance, these four plan designations, including DRG/ICD-9 provider payment caps, formularies, co-pays, and deductibles are all MANDATED by the Federal Government. To be honest, I don't think you're immensely and astoundingly ignorant, I think you're repeating a set of talking points that appeals to your emotions, and that you can't accept that these talking points are made by propagandists. You're not stupid, just naive and gullible.

      Do you know what "managed care" actually is? Do you understand that managed care is rationed care? Do you understand manipulating the cost curve by cutting provider payments and refactoring formularies is the only way this thing can stay afloat, and that this is the exact, same thing they are doing to Medicare, and that they really are "starving grandma" and lowering the quality of care for absolutely everyone while at the same time pumping taxpayer money into insurance companies? That a crime of astounding proportions is being committed right now, today... against the very people the proponents of the legislation claim to care about?

      Do you understand how egregious of a lie it is to make claims about payments being lowered without releasing the statistics about the covered plan enrollees distribution above and below FPL -- which would enable subsidy payments to be deducted, which would show the TRUE cost, something they are DESPERATELY trying to cover up? IF THERE'S NOTHING TO HIDE THEN RELEASE ALL THE NUMBERS. Instead we get the astounding lie "We really don't know...." It's as insane as not being able to type "Select Count(*) From SignUp_Table" something they said they couldn't do for what, eight months?

      Your CBO insistence, yet another carefully crafted lie, Sir. The CBO has not rated ObamaCare's effect on the deficit since 2012. It's another one of those arguments from the liberal little red book of Internet talking points...

      Hillary Care, and ObamaCare, were mostly negotiated behind closed doors, with a few town halls for show. That's why Mz. Pelosi said we have to pass the bill to find out what's in it. As Gruber so eloquently stated, had the people been told the truth about it, it never would have passed.

      In liberal land, facts are what liberals say they are. Let's try a simple test. Without using Google, do you know the Insurance Industry standard definition for "Enrolled"? Can you explain how the term enrolled was completely redefined by HHS, the Obama Administration, and the Democratic Party in order to create a new set of "facts" that fit the perception of the politics they were trying to sell? And that they continue to tell this lie, to this day? If the numbers look so good, why lie about it?

      --
      Murphy was an optimist
    79. Re:Quoted from TFA by slashdotwannabe · · Score: 1

      I can always tell when I am making points with liberals because they become very insulting and call me all kinds of names, that almost always become gruberisms "I am so much smarter than you. You are an ignorant hayseed, unable to think rationally"

      And I can always tell when I am debating an intellectually dishonest Twue Believer because they never respond to your complete destruction of their talking-point arguments, but move the goalposts onto a new set of bullshit.

      First, I would have to be a liberal first for you to "make points". I am an Independent and have been my entire adult life. I despise ideologies, including yours. Give me facts and I will make up my own mind. Second, for the record, I am a "she", not a "he". Why is it a Twue Believer always assumes that anyone who eviscerates their non-arguments must be a liberal? Why do you feel the need to resort to constructing straw men? I did not say I am smarter than you, nor call you an ignorant hayseed. I simply stated you are unable to construct a rational argument, and you have just proven it once more with this diversion.

      Post ACA there are two kinds of Health Insurance in America, QHP plans, and PHSP plans. QHP plans, a.k.a. ObamaCare, come in four flavors, known as bronze, silver, gold, and platinum.

      Well, not quite. While it is true that insurance plans that are carried on exchanges must be standardized, companies are still free to offer non-standard plans through their own sales channels. This "standardization" is a good thing; otherwise it is impossible to make meaningful comparisons between plans.

      Do you know what "managed care" actually is? Do you understand that managed care is rationed care?

      Rationed in what manner? If you were to say that the actuarial have used their magic models to figure out what they must charge to be profitable when delivering a set of services, then you are correct. But then every company on the planet "rations", don't they? If you mean to say that I will be unable to get some needed medical attention because Granny Smith just got the last bottle of Tylenol, you would be incorrect.

      Do you understand how egregious of a lie it is to make claims about payments being lowered without releasing the statistics about the covered plan enrollees distribution above and below FPL -- which would enable subsidy payments to be deducted, which would show the TRUE cost, something they are DESPERATELY trying to cover up?

      This might have been an interesting assertion, but you failed to provide any citations, so for all I know it's just some bullshit some random dude on the internet made up. That said, nobody has made the claim that payments have been lowered, and if you have purchased a candy bar anytime in the last 20 year you will understand that sometimes providers change what's in the package to be able to change the price they charge for it. That isn't a "lie", that's "Sales & Marketing".

      Instead we get the astounding lie "We really don't know...." It's as insane as not being able to type "Select Count(*) From SignUp_Table" something they said they couldn't do for what, eight months?

      If you really think their schema is that simple as to be able to pull a verified number with a simple count(*) statement, I hope you never actually design a database for more than an address book. First of all, HealthCare.gov does not use a SQL database; they use a custom NoSql solution by MarkLogic. Second, they track enrollees from 51 different states (including Washington D.C.), each with a different schema. Third, as you have already noted, definitions of things have been changing, which just might complicate your little count(*) DML statement, and fourth, "enrolled" means something completely different to you than it does to the AR dep

      --
      This comment is my opinion and does not represent an official position of Donald Trump or others I do not work for
    80. Re:Quoted from TFA by MooseMiester · · Score: 1

      Post ACA there are two kinds of Health Insurance in America, QHP plans, and PHSP plans. QHP plans, a.k.a. ObamaCare, come in four flavors, known as bronze, silver, gold, and platinum.

      Well, not quite. While it is true that insurance plans that are carried on exchanges must be standardized, companies are still free to offer non-standard plans through their own sales channels. This "standardization" is a good thing; otherwise it is impossible to make meaningful comparisons between plans.

      You don't know the difference between QHP and PHSP, do you? You do understand my company writes software for insurance companies, don't you?

      Do you understand how egregious of a lie it is to make claims about payments being lowered without releasing the statistics about the covered plan enrollees distribution above and below FPL -- which would enable subsidy payments to be deducted, which would show the TRUE cost, something they are DESPERATELY trying to cover up?

      This might have been an interesting assertion, but you failed to provide any citations, so for all I know it's just some bullshit some random dude on the internet made up. That said, nobody has made the claim that payments have been lowered, and if you have purchased a candy bar anytime in the last 20 year you will understand that sometimes providers change what's in the package to be able to change the price they charge for it. That isn't a "lie", that's "Sales & Marketing".

      You said that premiums have gone down. So let me explain this to you, really slowly... Because this is how lies are told and spread by people such as yourself.

      A QHP plan administered through a HIX is the insurance industry term for the four flavors of Obamacare. QHP is an acryonym for "Qualified Health Plan" - meaning that the applicant qualifies for a subsidy depending on the delta between his income and FPL. Do you know what FPL is? It's the Federal Poverty Level. So, smarty pants intellectual, if the premium for the bronze plan is $384.00 a month, and the subsidy for Joe applicant is $200 a month, what is his premium? It's $384 a month. Because that is the amount guaranteed to the insurance company by HHS. But if you redefine the definition of the word "premium" to "what the applicant actually paid" then and only then can you make the claim that "premiums went down"

      HHS has not released payment data about enrollees with respect to income. Gee I wonder why? Could it be because they lied about premiums going down? Gee, could be.

      HHS also admitted that they failed to verify the income of enrollees - leaving that to the IRS. So how many enrollees lied about their income? Given that the plan calculators created by the exchanges allowed people to see exactly what income got what premium... probably quite a few. So the reality is that without the actual numbers from HHS, that show the distribution on policy holders relative to FPL, ANY CLAIM ABOUT PREMIUMS BEING LOWERED IS BASED ON VAPOR, thin air, they are lies.

      So let me explain the enrolled lie. In the insurance industry, a prospect is a person who's indicated interest (e.g. visited your website). An applicant is a person who has applied for coverage. An enrollee is a person who's payment has cleared, and if he shows up at a provider he will be able to get care. From Day 1 HHS redefined the meaning of enrolled to say "Someone who signed up". And released scant, if any statistics of people who have actually paid, claiming "they don't know". In fact, in the early days, they made wild claims about enrollments without even having a system in place to process payments! Now once people start lying, in my experience they don't wake up one day and suddenly start telling the truth.

      So last year they cancelled some six million policies, and enrolled 8 million. The 2 million new enrollees were mostly low income people who were pushed into Medicare - but HHS counted them as Obama

      --
      Murphy was an optimist
    81. Re:Quoted from TFA by MooseMiester · · Score: 1

      This "standardization" is a good thing; otherwise it is impossible to make meaningful comparisons between plans.

      By this logic, if all the automakers of the world offered just 4 cars the world would be a much better place. If there were only four house plans, it would be so great! And really, there should only be four sizes of clothes, and if they don't fit you, too bad.

      Really, you're a funny guy. You clearly have no clue how rigid ICD-9 standards are, so I'm not even going to try and explain what "Utilization and Review" is inside a hospital...

      I suppose you can always hide behind I am making all of this up... Or please, go ask someone who is actually in the business...

      --
      Murphy was an optimist
  2. To be fair by SourceFrog · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's simply not realistically possible to always perfectly plan multiple complex multi-year projects, when every your budget gets cut a little further, and you never know -- it's a roll of the dice -- if or how much it's going to get cut by -- then there is the secondary knock-on effect that of the small budget that remains*, the managers need to very carefully decide where to constantly try shift things around to try keep remaining projects going. The rocket program canceled in 2010 was probably canceled due to budget cuts. NASA's budget has consistently been cut, what, every year for the past 15 years? You can't entirely blame NASA - nobody can plan properly under those circumstances. Nobody, not you, or me, could end up not wasting any of it as a result of the constant shunting around.

    Also, *all* large organizations have at least some expenditure that in hindsight was wasted. Hindsight is always 20/20. Look at the R&D allocations for any large organization, public or private, and you'll always find plenty of projects that went nowhere - whether it's an IT company or a mining operation or a shipyard or energy utility etc.

    * NASA budget is less than 0.5% of the total federal budget. We're really going to nitpick over this while literally trillions get regularly poured into completely wasteful military destruction? We're being played and manipulated by articles like this - look carefully who *benefits* from articles like this that attempt to portray the real bad guys (spending-wise) as those who take less than 0.5% of the budget.

    --
    My other UID is three digits.
    1. Re:To be fair by olsmeister · · Score: 1

      NASA's budget was increased for 2015. http://spaceflightnow.com/2014...

    2. Re:To be fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Initially, I was going beat you down!
      But in reading your fair points, I'm actually agreeing with you to an extent.
      I do agree that hindsight is 20/20, but I also believe that experience is the best teacher.
      The way we run things "with budgets" leads entirely to wasteful behaviour, as your budget is like a revenue stream, and worse, it has a feedback flow!! What I mean is, if you don't spend your budget, then you don't need it - and thus, next years' budget is allocated to someone else who does.... This leads to wasteful spending to "prove" you need your budget. I've seen store houses full of PC's and other goods purchased purely to absorb budgets (I was auditing a military site in the UK).

      If this mentality were reversed, and you said what you don't spend becomes your Christmas bonus, - you'll find frugal spending, and big bonuses! Sound familiar? So it is possible to do more with less.... Now let THAT be the budget, and take away the bonuses, and build homes for the homeless, and feed them. (Other good causes apply here too...)

    3. Re:To be fair by NotDrWho · · Score: 1

      It's simply not realistically possible to always perfectly plan multiple complex multi-year projects, when every your budget gets cut a little further, and you never know -- it's a roll of the dice -- if or how much it's going to get cut by -- then there is the secondary knock-on effect that of the small budget that remains*, the managers need to very carefully decide where to constantly try shift things around to try keep remaining projects going. The rocket program canceled in 2010 was probably canceled due to budget cuts. NASA's budget has consistently been cut, what, every year for the past 15 years? You can't entirely blame NASA - nobody can plan properly under those circumstances. Nobody, not you, or me, could end up not wasting any of it as a result of the constant shunting around.

      If NASA had that same attitude in the 60's, the U.S. would still be trying to put its first man in space.

      --
      SJW's don't eliminate discrimination. They just expropriate it for themselves.
    4. Re:To be fair by shess · · Score: 1

      It's simply not realistically possible to always perfectly plan multiple complex multi-year projects, when every your budget gets cut a little further, and you never know -- it's a roll of the dice -- if or how much it's going to get cut by -- then there is the secondary knock-on effect that of the small budget that remains*, the managers need to very carefully decide where to constantly try shift things around to try keep remaining projects going. The rocket program canceled in 2010 was probably canceled due to budget cuts. NASA's budget has consistently been cut, what, every year for the past 15 years? You can't entirely blame NASA - nobody can plan properly under those circumstances. Nobody, not you, or me, could end up not wasting any of it as a result of the constant shunting around.

      If NASA had that same attitude in the 60's, the U.S. would still be trying to put its first man in space.

      I think the point is that it isn't NASA's attitude which makes these things happen, it's the attitude of Congress.

    5. Re:To be fair by q4Fry · · Score: 1

      If this mentality were reversed, and you said what you don't spend becomes your Christmas bonus, - you'll find frugal spending, and big bonuses! Sound familiar? So it is possible to do more with less.... Now let THAT be the budget, and take away the bonuses, and build homes for the homeless, and feed them. (Other good causes apply here too...)

      Be careful with that "Christmas Bonus" line of thought. That can turn into "Let's do a half-assed job on the cheapest budget we can, to make the bonus bigger." It doesn't always, but it sure can.

    6. Re:To be fair by sjames · · Score: 1

      What attitude would you suggest when your budget gets jacked around every year. What attitude can fix having more expenditures towards various multi-year projects than you have money to spend? In the '60s they had full support from Congress and a growing budget.

    7. Re:To be fair by SourceFrog · · Score: 1

      Bingo. In spite of it being trendy to criticize them, NASA are actually doing some pretty impressive science in spite of their limited budgets, if anyone cares to look.

      --
      My other UID is three digits.
  3. Old as fuck news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    This is months old news at least.

  4. Pork, Republican pork, previously documented. by ankhank · · Score: 5, Informative

    This was forced on NASA as a pork barrel money grant by the Republican senators, and this isn't news.

    Senator Makes NASA Complete $350 Million Testing Tower ...
    yro.slashdot.org/.../senator-makes-nasa-complete-350-million-testing-to...
    Feb 1, 2014 - Roger F. Wicker (R-MS), who says the testing tower will help maintain the ..... The other senators will likely decide that it's easier to fund his pork ...

    1. Re:Pork, Republican pork, previously documented. by lemur337 · · Score: 1
    2. Re:Pork, Republican pork, previously documented. by Hardhead_7 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Dysfunctional congress forces NASA to build something it doesn't need. Journalist blames NASA for dysfunction. Media is full of idiots.

    3. Re:Pork, Republican pork, previously documented. by LordLimecat · · Score: 1, Insightful

      This was forced on NASA as a pork barrel money grant by the Republican senators,

      This passed through both houses of congress and the presidents branch. I read the story and saw what was attempted here in terms of blame, but the reality is that the Constellation shutdown was passed by congress, and the A-3 pork project was passed by Congress. Attempting to pin this on a single senator from Mississippi is disingenuous at best.

      You want some accountability, look up which senators voted for this and have a history of voting on pork.

    4. Re:Pork, Republican pork, previously documented. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Media is full of idiots.

      topped only, of course, by the complete morons on capitol hill... with a strong third place showing to the voters that keep those morons in office.

    5. Re:Pork, Republican pork, previously documented. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It was probably part of some massive omnibus spending bill. They can't line item veto bits and pieces of it without shutting down the entire government. It was probably added by one or a small group of legislators as pork for their district. Oink.

    6. Re:Pork, Republican pork, previously documented. by nblender · · Score: 1

      They should have two ribbon cutting ceremonies.. One in which the senator cuts the ribbon and officially opens the test stand. Then 5 minutes later, another one where he cuts the ribbon on the wrecking ball as part of his plan to save useless maintenance dollars when instead a pond can be built for Ducks

    7. Re:Pork, Republican pork, previously documented. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, Democrats would never do this... you know, when NASA has poured millions if not billions into a platform and the administration changes and forces NASA to scrap their work to move in another direction just to make a president look like a visionary? They'd never do that. Riiigggghhhhtttt...

    8. Re:Pork, Republican pork, previously documented. by LordLimecat · · Score: 0

      It was probably part of some massive omnibus spending bill.

      Is that somehow supposed to excuse the people who voted for it?

      And yet people cry bloody murder when republicans dare suggest that we cant pass a massive pork-laden budget bill for being "obstructionist". Well, this is what it looks like when things go "smoothly".

      “All those in favor?” said Sen. John D. Rockefeller IV (D-W.Va.), the committee chairman.
      Everybody said aye.
      “It does appear to the chair that the ayes have it,” Rockefeller said.

      Oh and look at that, it appears that dems were involved after all! But apparently that doesnt stop the attempts to pin the blame squarely on the right.

    9. Re:Pork, Republican pork, previously documented. by RyoShin · · Score: 1

      You know, this sounds a lot like a problem with another "independent" 4-letter government agency having financial difficulties...

  5. im sure nasa is used to this, by nimbius · · Score: 5, Insightful

    senator bob: I want to fund a NASA mission to mars. heres a budget rider for whatever they need, in my state.
    NASA: ok, thanks. we'll start on this 25 year plan. we need to test some rockets first.
    senator ted: NASA wastes tax dollars and the mars mission is a terrorist anchor baby that I dont understand. STOP working on this now and start working on a public/private partnership in my state. heres a congressional mandate. you're studying asteroid mining now because i saw a movie about it and it had my favourite actor in it.
    NASA: uh....okay. mission aborted. **shuffles papers** looks like we're going to mine...uh...something.
    Private company: thanks for giving us all the free rocket designs and code. uh, mission accomplished and because asteroid mining isnt profitable we're just going to do a defense project with it. defense sells real good.
    NASA: wait...what?
    Senator ted: good job but i cut your budget because I had a bad dream about Terrorists and now i think all government research is secretly communism.
    Senator Bob: What the hell are you guys doing with that old communist rocket monument you made in my state? i havent seen the lights on in a month. can you do a mission to the moon again? I miss stuff from the 60's that im familiar with
    NASA: uh...wat?

    --
    Good people go to bed earlier.
    1. Re:im sure nasa is used to this, by some+old+guy · · Score: 2

      +5 Sad but so.

      --
      Scruting the inscrutable for over 50 years.
  6. Re:This is why NASA needs to end. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

    > t this point, we have a thriving private industry

    Ah, the Invisible Hand. I tend to worship the Flying Spaghetti Monster, there are cults for every taste it seems.

  7. Not useless by geogob · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I hate it when people qualify infrastructure as useless. Especially infrastructure destine for research and development. Even if the foreseen use is deprecated, it doesn't mean it's useless. A test stand can always become of use, even if it's not for the originally planed engine. If they are wise about it, they could even rent the infrastructure to third parties such as Space-X.

    Stopping the construction in the middle after 100% of the costs were already incurred, and then destroying the structure for even additional costs would have been a real idiot move.

    1. Re:Not useless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      *sigh*

    2. Re:Not useless by AlabamaCajun · · Score: 1

      It's not even zombie proof. (Please see zombie proof tower for rules).

    3. Re:Not useless by geogob · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I don't know why you sigh me, but I doubt you have any idea how it is to turn your back on a already started multi-hundred million dollar contact. It's not as walking back in to the car dealer and saying "sorry, I changed my mind on the sports car... I need a mini van instead". Penalties are often so high it is cheaper to do exactly what they did (build and save for future needs) than cancel the project. And before you sigh at the concept of penalties and go all "omg tax payer money", the companies involved must invest a lot of time, money and energy to build something like this. More importantly, a company has to reject other project to bring such a major work to end. A project cancellation of this order without warranty and protection would most likely ruin even a stable and established company.

    4. Re:Not useless by geogob · · Score: 1

      [citation needed]

      I'm pretty sure, although I have no scientific facts to show for this assertion, that throwing zombies in vacuum and then starting a rocket engine over their head will solve the problem.

    5. Re:Not useless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Stopping the construction in the middle after 100% of the costs were already incurred, and then destroying the structure for even additional costs would have been a real idiot move.

      Yeah, I'll agree with geogob here. The article is slanted to say that completing the test facility is useless and a waste of money, but, as with all projects, it's a trade-off, and a judgement call. Although the particular mission it was designed for was cancelled, in Congress cancellation should always be considered provisional-- who knows whether a change in administration, or even a change in direction by the same administration, might not bring back the project? And, alternately, the cancellation of one particular project doesn't mean that some other engine development won't need a test stand. Completing it will mean that it will be ready if a future project needs it.

      So, the calculation is, which is the better plan? Scrap the project, which means you'll have to start up again from scratch if a new project does need such a facility? Or complete the project and mothball it, accepting that the money to complete the project will have been wasted if it turns out a new project doesn't come along, or doesn't need the facility?

      Not clear. There are arguments for both.

  8. Go MS! by plopez · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Another red state represented by fiscal conservatives!

    --
    putting the 'B' in LGBTQ+
    1. Re:Go MS! by prisoner-of-enigma · · Score: 1

      Remind me again who's been in charge of charge of the House, the Senate, and the White House for most of Obama's tenure? Sure, a Republican was pushing for this pork. But it passed a Senate and a White House both controlled by Democrats, either of which could have easily stopped it. Neither did. In fact, depending upon the timeline (which I'm too busy to fully look up at the moment), it's possible the Democrats were in control of the House as well at the time this was going on. I can't recall exactly when the Republicans took over the House.

      The truth here is the entire system is contemptible. Both Republicans and Democrats bear equal responsibility for this debacle. And to suggest there aren't billions and billions of dollars of pork barrel projects championed by Democrats is disingenuous at best.

      --
      In the end they will lay their freedom at our feet and say to us, Make us your slaves, but feed us. - Fyodor Dostoyevsky
    2. Re:Go MS! by plopez · · Score: 1

      2 out of 8 makes most?

      --
      putting the 'B' in LGBTQ+
  9. Contralual capture? by plopez · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I wonder if "contractual capture" had something to do with it. What I mean is, much like the F-35, there was some sort of "poison pill" in the contract that made it impossible to cancel the contract without paying a hefty penalty. Much like firing a CEO these days, where they make more money by getting fired.

    --
    putting the 'B' in LGBTQ+
    1. Re:Contralual capture? by Jason+Levine · · Score: 1

      Part of it might have been that. Part of it might have been that it could have been more expensive to tear down and scrap what was built than to complete it and hope you could put it to some use. A big part, however, was the Republican senators from Mississippi who insisted that it be completed because it's such an important rocket testing center. (Read: This pork flows to our area and so it is important. The pork that flows elsewhere is the evil stuff that needs to be cut.)

      In other words, Congress/the President make NASA cancel a rocket program for going over-budget. NASA says "Ok, then we'll stop building this testing facility that was related to this program." Congress says "No, you need to complete and maintain that" so NASA does so. Then NASA is lambasted for doing this because it reeks of wasteful spending. NASA isn't the one wasting money here. (Not saying they are perfect, of course, but this instance the blame doesn't rest on their shoulders.)

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    2. Re:Contralual capture? by tbannist · · Score: 3, Insightful

      In this case the "poison pill" was Republican Senator Roger Wicker from Mississippi who attached an ammendment to NASA's funding bill requiring them to finish constructing the tower.

      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
  10. Mission accomplished by itzly · · Score: 1

    Pork barrel money has found its way to the intended recipients. That's all that matters.

  11. Re:This is why NASA needs to end. by some+old+guy · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Since when was Ayn Rand a rocket scientist?

    --
    Scruting the inscrutable for over 50 years.
  12. $700k a year? by GroeFaZ · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Stop bombing the Middle East for a few hours, or stop the global mass surveillance for a few minutes, and you're set for the year. But hey, at least you have your priorities straigth.

    --
    The grass is always greener on the other side of the light cone.
    1. Re:$700k a year? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      Stop spending money supporting illegal immigrants for a few seconds, stop subsidizing rich people's solar panels for a few days, stop subsidizing rich people's luxury electric cars altogether, and you're set for the year. But hey, at least you have your priorities right.

    2. Re:$700k a year? by deadweight · · Score: 1

      The last two posts are not mutually exclusive. Do ALL of that and be set for TWO years :)

  13. Makes sense if you understand NASA's real mission by NotDrWho · · Score: 1

    This only doesn't make sense if you don't understand that NASA's *REAL* job is to funnel money to politically-connected contractors and produce a lot of PR bullshit. Anything science-related or any actual accomplishments in space are just a byproduct.

    --
    SJW's don't eliminate discrimination. They just expropriate it for themselves.
  14. Nothing new by Virtucon · · Score: 4, Insightful

    After Challenger, the House Ways and Means Committee basically forced the ASRM onto NASA even though they didn't need it. Billions were spent on the Yellow Creek facility because of one congressman, Jamie Whitten, and it's now abandoned. Pork-barrel politics has been around since well, politics but that doesn't mean we have to like it or put up with the system that enables it.

    --
    Harrison's Postulate - "For every action there is an equal and opposite criticism"
    1. Re:Nothing new by pr100 · · Score: 1

      What you "like" is entirely up to you; but, in practice, we *do* have to put up with it, for the foreseeable future at least.

  15. Who cares by pipingguy · · Score: 2

    it's only other people's money.

  16. Re:Thanks middle class! by NotDrWho · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Little in return?? Why just look at all the generous aerospace contractor donations this project generated for Thad Cochran and Roger Wicker. You call THAT a FAILURE??

    --
    SJW's don't eliminate discrimination. They just expropriate it for themselves.
  17. Re:This is why by Jason+Levine · · Score: 4, Insightful

    NASA isn't the only agency to be forced to spend their money on horrible projects. The military has many instances of getting things they don't want because Senator X wants pork for his district or trying to close down an unneeded facility only to be informed that Representative Y is forcing it to stay open because that facility means jobs which means votes for Representative Y.

    --
    My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
  18. Re:Makes sense if you understand NASA's real missi by tbannist · · Score: 1

    Actually, with James Inhofe in charge of the Senate committe on commerce sceince and transportation, it might be the case that anything science-related or any actual accomplishments in space is a defect of the intended process of funnelling vital money to the people who fund senatorial re-election campaigns.

    --
    Fanatically anti-fanatical
  19. Re:This is why by tbannist · · Score: 3, Interesting

    How can NASA spend their budget effeciently when congressional representatives decide what they are allowed and required to work on? In this case a Republican Senator (Roger Wicker from Mississippi) amended the funding bill to require them to finish building it.

    --
    Fanatically anti-fanatical
  20. It's because it's by David Fahrenthold by langelgjm · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I guessed that before even opening the article. He has a habit of writing misleading Washington Post pieces about government waste. Don't get me wrong, there is a lot of government waste, but blame does not fall squarely on NASA. I complained about a piece he wrote last year:

    David Fahrenthold's April 24, 2013 article "Feds spend at least $890,000 on fees for empty accounts" incorrectly states that the Pentagon spent $435 on a hammer. That claim has been repeatedly debunked for a number of years. The hammer was $15, and the the $420 represented R&D costs for a project spread evenly across all items. See, e.g.: http://www.govexec.com/federal-news/1998/12/the-myth-of-the-600-hammer/5271/

    To which he responded:

    Hello, Dave Fahrenthold here from the Washington Post. I wrote the story that dealt with the cost of “zero balance” accounts, and so I was forwarded the correction request you sent earlier. First, thank you for reading, and reading the story so closely. At this point, I don’t see the need for a correction to the story. Here’s why: the story says that the Pentagon “paid” $435 for a hammer. I had written it that way consciously, since I’d seen the findings you referenced in that govexec story: the hammer’s cost to the Pentagon included $420 worth of overhead (which had been distributed evenly among all the items for which the Pentagon was charged in that same order). The cost of the hammer, at least on the Pentagon’s books, was $435. To me, it’s still correct to say that’s what the Pentagon “paid,” no matter how that cost had been calculated. I’d welcome your thoughts, however. I’m grateful again for the feedback. DF

    Nice enough, but to me this shows that he very well knew the full story but chose to present it in a purposefully misleading way. Given that there is so much real waste, I don't understand the need to latch on to myths like this.

    --
    "Anyone who [rips a CD] is probably engaging in copyright infringement." - David O. Carson
    1. Re:It's because it's by David Fahrenthold by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Accurate content presented in a non-misleading way tends to be boring for most audiences. And "most audiences" is what professional writers must serve in order to remain professional writers.

    2. Re: It's because it's by David Fahrenthold by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I see. You believe that politically inflamatory and misleading news items are ok because they might otherwise be boring. Well I believe that witholding the calculation that determines the cost allocated to an item and using the subterfuge to conclude that the program is 'wasteful' is deceitful. Rupert Murdoch may call it news, but I call it bullshit.

      News is useful. Publishing bullshit only promotes a disconnection from reality. And accepting bullshit as a basis for news leaves readers in the dark. It promotes ignorance. That sucks.

    3. Re:It's because it's by David Fahrenthold by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      but blame does not fall squarely on NASA ... Given that there is so much real waste, I don't understand the need to latch on to myths like this.

      Your criticisms about precision are valid. There are multiple levels of meaning, though, and for some audiences "is NASA a good mechanism for humans to explore space?" is well answered by less-precise stories like this one.

      This story illustrates one example - one Mississippi Senator uses NASA as his personal coke-n-whores vehicle. "Should we be funding public agencies to explore space?" is a valid question and this gives one anecdote about how such good intentions are perverted and abused. Elon Musk doesn't build $400M towers he's not going to use to get coke-n-whores (isn't a Model S good enough for that?)

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    4. Re: It's because it's by David Fahrenthold by roc97007 · · Score: 0

      > I see. You believe that politically inflamatory and misleading news items are ok because they might otherwise be boring.

      I understand your frustration, but that's not really what he said. He said that if you want to be a professional writer, you must write to your audience, or look for some other line of work. As far as I can see, that is an accurate statement. Writing meant for the great unwashed public (news in particular) appears to be written to inflame, not illuminate. It's not his fault that this is so.

      News outlets could decide to give the real facts rather than what will make people fearful or send them out demonstrating, but unless every news source does it at the same time, the source that remains purile and hyperbolic and downright fake will continue to have a commercial advantage. This has been so ever since news became a profit center.

      --
      Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
  21. Ascension? by RevWaldo · · Score: 1

    So that's where they put it!

    .

  22. 40PSI? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since when has atmospheric pressure been 40 psi!??! Have we moved to a different planet? I don't trust an article that can't do this basic level of fact checking.

  23. Wait, what? by Cinnamon+Beige · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'd not be complaining about the pork of merely finishing the tower: if it was designed in a non-wasteful manner it ought to not matter that the program it was designed for was shut down--it ought to be usable for testing any rocket needing to operate in roughly the same environment. Thus, if it isn't, it was pork regardless, while if is properly designed then we have something to use later which will also hopefully cut down on time (and opportunities for budget cuts to strike) for future programs.

    Therefore, either its entire existence is pork, or we simply have a stage (and some expense) removed from future engine design projects...and it's only wasteful if we don't plan to ever need to test such ever again.

    So, really, it is either end-to-end pork or infrastructure we hopefully want regardless.

    1. Re:Wait, what? by virtual_mps · · Score: 1

      You'd have a cogent argument if NASA didn't already have more than one vacuum rocket test stand. They built this one because it was too hard/expensive to modify the others for the new engine. What are the chances that won't happen again? Nope, it's pure pork. Note that the entire Stennis facility was built to test saturn rocket engines far from anything that might break due to the sonic shock. If NASA was in this to preserve infrastructure, *that* is the feature they would have kept. Instead, Stennis now hosts computer facilities for a number of civilian agencies--because the jobs program was more important than being able to test really big rocket engines at the rocket engine test facility.

    2. Re:Wait, what? by Cinnamon+Beige · · Score: 1

      Actually, I gave two options: It could either be reused for future new engines, or it was pure pork from the very start.

      That said, the Stennis facility is still in use as a test stand, according to a quick check of the internet, with even some civilian rocket engine testing hosted on-site, likely for a fee. In fact, it's got a number of test stands, and at least some are still in use as such, suggesting that part of the reasons against modifying already-built stands could have been that any suitable candidates were either in full use currently or would need to be restored to their previous configuration later because, well, we weren't done with it's current configuration yet. It's also open to the public, which probably makes it quite unsuitable for some types of engine testing...

      Not to suggest anything, of course. Maybe it really is going to sit there unused, instead of quietly (for some values of quietly) testing rocket engines.

    3. Re:Wait, what? by virtual_mps · · Score: 1

      Only small engines can be tested currently at stennis (luckily? that's all we have in the inventory). Firing off an F-1 would break a lot of things.

      As far is always having been pork, NASA OIG criticized the decision made to build a new stand rather than modifying either of *two* underutilized facilities: http://oig.nasa.gov/audits/rep... The bottom line is that the decision was made without public discussion with all of the stakeholders and was always at high risk of being late and over budget due to the lousy decision making at NASA. (Don't blame all of this on Congress.) Interestingly, the initial cost estimate for A-3 was $390M, but Stennis talked that down to $173M to make it more attractive.

      So no, there's very little chance that this will turn out to be great in the end, or that we won't end up paying for modifications to A-3 which would be similar to the modifications needed to use one of the existing facilities for a future engine (except that those could have been modified without an intervening $350M capital expediture). And it's very likely that when the time comes, it will look better on paper to build a new stand than to reuse A-3.

      So yes, always pork.

  24. Sounds like Scientology's Super Power Building. by BitwizeGHC · · Score: 1

    When NASA is as accountable as a mind control cult, you know shit's really hit the fan.

    --
    N4st0r, trixx0r h0bb1tz0rz! Th3y st0l3 0ur pr3c10uzz!
  25. Then How'd We Get Obamacare by glennrrr · · Score: 2

    Why didn't the Republicans think to put a hold on Obamacare then?

    1. Re:Then How'd We Get Obamacare by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why didn't the Republicans think to put a hold on Obamacare then?

      Because the Republicans were a minority party in the Senate. They don't drive the bus.

      Until January.

  26. Re: $349 million can get us ... by Orange+Crush · · Score: 3, Funny

    Or they could've just given about $120 to every man woman and child in the state of Mississippi.

  27. Re: $349 million can get us ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why Mississippi? What about the rest of the country?

  28. Call it a sports stadium by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Call it a sports stadium and call it a success. NASA isn't the only one that wastes tax payers money. Minneapolis is building a $1 billion stadium for 10 football games a year. $349 million is amateur hour.

    1. Re:Call it a sports stadium by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Call it a sports stadium and call it a success. NASA isn't the only one that wastes tax payers money. Minneapolis is building a $1 billion stadium for 10 football games a year. $349 million is amateur hour.

      More like 8 games and 2 scrimmages, but over a 25 year life that's 200 games, so "only" $5M a game. Of course, there's always a chance the Vikings will have a home playoff game within the next 25 years...

  29. It's the same problem no matter who you blame. by stealth.c · · Score: 1

    Whether you want to blame NASA bureaucrats for covering their asses or Congresscritters for their warped priorities, this failure can be explained the same way. Government and its agencies are total strangers to the economic incentives of profit and loss. The only profits and losses they directly experience are the rise and fall of their bureaucratic clout. As a result, success and failure are defined on completely different terms versus a private endeavor. For an operation like SpaceX, success is getting the customer into space with the greatest practical efficiency. For NASA, success is whatever curries favor with the people in Congress deciding next year's budget. Congressmen don't care about what goes into space or how. They care that federal money gets back to their clients at home. The bickering in this thread over whether to blame NASA leadership or Congress misses the larger point: Both are culpable because of the incentives they operate under. This is just the economics of nationalized space exploration taking its inevitable course.

  30. Blaming NASA for corrupt politicians is futile by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    NASA doesn't want to waste its budget any more than other organizations; it's just that its costly projects tend to be lucrative contracts that get awarded to politicians' favorite companies.

    If some asshole senator wants to funnel billions of dollars that could have gone to actual space research and exploration into his home state for some useless construction, NASA basically can't do shit about it.

  31. Not all Government has "spend it or lose it" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I work in the Government, in a research environment, and if we can't use all our budget effectively we release the money back to our management to reallocate.

    It gets reallocated where it'll do the most good.

    Next year, if we can make the case that we are where the money will do the most good, WE get reallocated funds.

    All that's required is management whose heads are not up their rear ends, a workforce who trusts management to find good use for the funds, and that you be able to justify your requirement for funding to meet the mission goals.

    Management also has to realize that programs rarely execute as expected and be mentally and fiscally flexible. We are fortunate to have such management.

  32. What they left out by Arancaytar · · Score: 4, Insightful

    NASA didn't decide to build that; a Republican senator from Mississippi forced through the budget amendment even though it was pointless. Apparently stimulating the economy down there with some completely useless waste of resources is more important than actual space research.

    Blaming NASA for it is just adding insult to injury - what an asshole reporter.

    1. Re:What they left out by Nethemas+the+Great · · Score: 1

      Or repairing/rebuilding Katrina wrecked infrastructure.

      --
      Two of my imaginary friends reproduced once ... with negative results.
  33. Re:Thanks middle class! by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 0

    Which is why you want to be very poor or very rich. If you're in between those two extremes, you're paying for everyone else in taxes. My father had an old union bumper sticker that sums this up: "Work harder! Millions are dependent on YOU!"

  34. Yeah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i agree. Tell welfare states ie taker states ie red states ie republican states ie ignorant states to go fuck themselves.
    The liberal makers are tired of the conservative takers

  35. Stop bitching .... by PPH · · Score: 1

    .... about wasted money. Is there anything else we can do with it?

    --
    Have gnu, will travel.
    1. Re:Stop bitching .... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I have family and several friends who work on the NASA Stennis test site. The A3 test stand might be mothballed for now, but there is talk of SpaceX using the stand for some testing of new designs so the stand might just get used. The reason that NASA even built it at Stennis is that is where the rocket testing is done. The Sandusky site might have worked during the 1960's but it would get shut down due to noise complaints. The Stennis site is smack dab in the middle of nowhere and they can make all the noise they want. Plus how much money would it take to update/modernize the existing Sandusky site? That is a big concern for NASA. First if you modernize it and use it noise complaints come in, then you have to shut it down and move to a new location and start all over again. This does not compute to the bean counters.

      I also voted for Roger Wicker when he first ran for office several years ago, he was the better politician of all the choices. Thad Chochran is also one of the two most senior senators in the senate right now, so GOOD LUCK dethroning someone like that. He has a very large war chest and a lot of political ammo to use against just about any serious challenger.

    2. Re:Stop bitching .... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Something along the lines of vacuum distillation.

      Moonshine (Hey, its got 'moon' in it).

  36. Space a poor investment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Space can be a poor investment. What do we gain from human space exploration? I see a little bit in testing science projects in weightlessness. But beyond that, what good is it wasting billions to try and send humans to a planet which we already know is not able to sustain human life without a lot of help. Such as space suits, a way to produce water, and a lack of fossil fuels or materials to even build with any reasonable costs a living environment for humans. Yes, by all means explore all you want with unmanned craft, and study space all you want. But the effort to waste billions on space when the Earth here needs so much attention is simply trying to fulfill some childhood dreams of being Capt. Kirk when in fact its more noble to try and save the planet we actually live on. Space is very useful, for communications, Earth studies from space and other experiments that benefit man. Going to distant planets with no hint of supporting life is simply playing spaceman which was fun as a kid. But too expensive for man kind.

  37. Old News... by sconeu · · Score: 2
    --
    General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
  38. PORK barrel and more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Gee, No wonder the facility where the tower was build is called the "STENNIS TEST FACILTIY" Stennis, senator, it is all politics from the get go. Drop in the pork barrel and was a gift to the contractors in MIssissippi.

  39. Re:Thanks middle class! by robot256 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "Work harder! Millionaires are dependent on YOU!"

    FTFY.

  40. Re: Thanks middle class! by Jahoda · · Score: 0

    Look at you, little guy! You made a big boy post allllll on your own. The irony is you posting this from your parents' basement. LOL.

  41. Re: $349 million can get us ... by DocSavage64109 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Cause then it'd be like $1 and nobody would care.

  42. There's only one answer... by Jawnn · · Score: 2

    ...to bloated and ineffective government bureaucracies, the private sector. Everyone knows that the private sector is more efficient than any government operation, right? And corruption surrounding fat government contracts granted to political cronies is hardly ever a problem, right?

  43. Maybe Elon Musk will lease it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A vacuum test chamber for the BFR upper stage, mayhaps?

  44. Can we please just kill NASA already? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    NASA does not do anything except spend money and blow shit up because they smother their technical talent with mountains of bureaucracy that can never be successfully navigated.

    Just kill it. It's useless. It's time to turn space over to the people and let them deal with it privately.

  45. big deal by DonnyBoy · · Score: 2

    Kiddie stuff, we have some cancelled gas plants up here in Ontario, Canada that have that beat that all to hell... never did a thing except create an eye sore and cost a billion to cancel the contracts.

  46. They violated the 1st rule in government spending by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why build one tower when you can have two at twice the price?

  47. Re:This is why NASA needs to end. by Pope · · Score: 1

    Don't poke the Shruggalos, they never learn.

    --
    It doesn't mean much now, it's built for the future.
  48. Blame where it's due by turb · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ... and the makers of the rules under which NASA operates? Congress. ... and the ones that set which projects NASA may or may not pursue? Congress.

    Seems pretty obvious to me, it's not an engineering problem.

  49. Re:This is why NASA needs to end. by Nethemas+the+Great · · Score: 1

    Elon's company is doing a bang up job, but SpaceX is still a ways off from replacing NASA.

    --
    Two of my imaginary friends reproduced once ... with negative results.
  50. Not useless by BadPirate · · Score: 1

    Looks like the Congress and the Senate were able figure out a good use for a giant vacuum tower - http://imgur.com/9Sbd5By

    --
    - Holy crap, I've got MOD points! Who thought that was a good idea.
  51. Space is silent [Re:Stop bitching ....] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...The Sandusky site might have worked during the 1960's but it would get shut down due to noise complaints. The Stennis site is smack dab in the middle of nowhere and they can make all the noise they want.

    What kind of noise do you expect from testing a rocket engine in vacuum?

    1. Re:Space is silent [Re:Stop bitching ....] by virtual_mps · · Score: 1

      quite a bit, since the engine is attached to the frame rather than leviated in the vacuum.

  52. Because Congressmen retaliate. by mbkennel · · Score: 2

    I have family members who worked in NASA at high levels.

    NASA has no power compared to a powerful Congresdroid scorned.

    The consequences to NASA for publicly embarrassing Congressdroids over embarrassing pork insisted upon by such droids would be so much worse. The retaliation droids would in return destroy the primary science goals and missions of NASA.

    Stennis was mentioned, back many years ago, as a prime geographical centroid of pork though hardly the only one.

  53. Re:Thanks middle class! by liquid_schwartz · · Score: 2

    The reality is that both posts are correct. The 1% cheats the system and should be dealt with as well as welfare dead beats that drain the system. The sooner we get past arguing which is worse and instead try and be rid of both parasites the better off we'll be. The middle class is getting a raw deal from both the 1% and the non-working poor.

  54. Patience by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The only problem I see here is the cost overruns by these contractors, and the inadequacy of NASA's budget. Other than that, all the decisions seem rational and that tower may yet find a use after a few more presidents and Washington Post reporters have come and gone.

  55. Ok, then: Obama idiocy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since you wanted to go all-political, let's remember some facts:

    The A3 test stand was designed and built to test the J-2X engine which was for the upper stages of the Ares I and Ares V rockets of the Constellation program. Because the J-2X would need to air-start at very high altitudes without being hooked to ground support equipment, the A3 stand was designed to simulate that high altitude environment. There is nothing wrong with the stand. This is entirely a political debacle brought about by Mr Obama who campaigned in 2008 on the promise he would accellerate the program that was replacing the Shuttle (he made this promise in Florida in August of 2008). This gave NASA and the contractors every expectation that this stand remained a vital bit of construction with many people's plans and contracts depending on its completion. Mr Obama allowed the program to plod along, albeit with insufficient support, until 2010 when he suddenly killed the project without even negotiating with congress. Even Democrats in congress were shocked when the program was suddenly zeroed-out in the budget (and with NOTHING in its place). THAT is why memebers of congress with constituents whose jobs hung on the project reacted so severely and THAT is why the Senate in RARE bi-partisan action overrode Obama and ordered IN LAW that Obama build the Orion capsule and the SLS rocket.

    The A3 stand will NOT consume hundreds of millions per year in maintenance as has been deceptively claimed - in government agencies like NASA, all the fixed ongoing costs of each facility are divided-up and financial "blame" is attached to each pile of money spent. During the Shuttle era, mos of NASA's costs were blamed on the shuttles, which made them seem very expensive to operate. After the shuttles were grounded, however, the taxpayers save NO money... the blame of all the agency's overhead was simply re-assigned. Same thing here. Stennis Space Center is simply assigning some of its overhead to one of its test stands.

    Had the A3 stand NOT been completed, it would have stood there, partially built and open to the elements, and would have rapidly rusted to the point of needing to be torn down. As it it, the stand is there ready to be rapidly brought online should we ever again choose to elect a President who is not a short-sighted moron. Oh, and the J-2X engines which WERE the "long pole in the tent" that was a major part of the justification for killing the Constellation program now exist and have been test fired many times at sea level and are ready for altitude testing on that A3 stand - but thanks to Obama these new engines (America's best-ever and most capable air-startable LOX/LH2 engines, better than we had for Apollo, are also now mothballed.)

    1. Re:Ok, then: Obama idiocy by arglebargle_xiv · · Score: 1

      If you look at the graph they include in their article, complete with its pointless scare quotes around "hypergolic" every time it's used, the reason for mothballing almost all of the test stands is that hypergolic propellants aren't used too much any more in modern designs (less energy than cryogenics, and incredibly unpleasant and dangerous to work with), so there's less need to experiment with them in test stands. Another way of writing the article therefore could have been "Switch to safer fuels reduces need for expensive test stands", a win-win situation all round. In fact I'm sure Fox ("We Report, You Believe"), are working on that version right now...

  56. um... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No NASA == No "commercial" space flight

    Elon Musk has publicly stated that he was out of money and SpaceX was about to die when his last early Falcon rocket finally reached orbit... and then NASA swept in and offered him piles of taxpayer cash and a contract. With no NASA, there is no ISS and therefore no NASA contract to haul cargo to/from ISS and no NASA contracts to haul people to/from ISS and then SpaceX and Orbital Sciences and Boeing all lose those contracts. Boeing announced this past summer that without the NASA contract they would cancel their manned capsule. Orbital and SpaceX would be forced to focus on commercial satellite launches (NOT manned stuff and NOT anything related to exploration/colonization of space). Commercial sats do not need to leave Earth orbit, so there's no purely commercial reason to spend money on rockets for beyond Earth orbit.

    You have aimed your wrath at the wrong target; the reasons for all the waste at NASA over the past few decades (the NLS, the VSE, the SEI, the X-33 program, the X-38 program, the Constellation program, etc) are ENTIRELY political and caused by the waffling, indecision and fighting on capitol hill and in the White House. NASA is simply doing what it's boss in the White House orders it to do, and its paymasters in congress pay for it to do.

  57. Re:Thanks middle class! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It is not the 1%, but really something like 0,00001% of world population who are doing the real reaping of all others. They are the real robber barrons.

  58. Re:This is why by khallow · · Score: 1

    How can NASA spend their budget effeciently when congressional representatives decide what they are allowed and required to work on?

    What's the point of the question? If we, say, double the budget for NASA, congressional representatives will still decide what the money gets spent on. Congressional behavior can be changed just as NASA behavior can.

  59. Re:$349 million can get us ... by NIK282000 · · Score: 1

    The US army bought 10 Nimitz aircraft carriers at $4.5 billion each, how many wars have they won lately?

    --
    Dear aunt, let's set so double the killer delete select all
  60. Re: Thanks middle class! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They pay over 80% of the taxes, so welfare queens like you can get fat and die for free.

  61. This is not necessarily NASA's fault by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is a huge disconnect on the public's view on how NASA works. The main problem is congress determines NASA's funding AND agenda. So a congressman or president says, "lets go to mars and beyond and build new fancy rockets to get us there". So NASA goes to work and comes up with a plan, and redirects their funding accordingly for years (keep in mind the time and money that are being used for one project cannot be redirected once spent in another). The next president comes along and says "we are going to spend our money on something worth while like planetary sciences!" Now NASA has to switch gears, but guess what happens to all of the equipment that was used for rockets. This story was just an example, but it does happen an awful lot. At least in the future this tower can be used because it was finished, would you rather our money be spent on a project that only finished half way and then scraped? Keep in mind that NASA also has to operate on a budget that hasn't kept up with inflation or increased.

  62. Re: $349 million can get us ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If the army rather than the navy is building carriers, I'd be concerned. As it is, those carriers have served in support of the Iraq war and have safeguarded a fair bit of the world's shipping.

  63. Re:Not all Government has "spend it or lose it" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Obviously, you don't work for the same lab I do.

  64. politicians meddling by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe if politicians that know nothing of science, and only care about contracts for friends kept their fingers out. It would get somewhere.
    I'm mean really I just loved the
    "Let's scrap everything we are doing. Pull old Apollo drawings out of storage and go back to the moon."
    I'm serious look the stuff up. Everything they are doing now is based on the final Apollo designs that were scrapped because they stopped and out was all to heavy. The "new" rover, capsule, suits. You can find in all in drawings from the 60s. Now that's not totally a bad thing. But we had reusable sort of space planes. And the military had small ones now. But we scrap that for single shot stuff. Though I'm sure an Apollo capsule run by an iPhone will be much better. The shuttle had those tiles, the new capsule uses the same ablative shield Apollo did.
    Ok going back to the moon sure. But why are we going back 45 years in tech?
    Really look what they can do with a small budget when you leave them alone. Curiosity was supposed to run a few months. It's been how many years?
    They can do a hell of a lot with not much. And develop so much that we use. Or is developed for them.
    Oh and the Hubble screw up want NASAs fault. They didn't make it. It wasn't even a new design. The only two new things about it was the sensors and that it points up. All the rest like it point down. It's just a standard spy satellite.

    As for the whats the point crowd, do a search on things in everyday use developed by NASA.

  65. Accounting formalities by Miamicanes · · Score: 1

    Serious question: how much of that alleged $700k/year-to-mothball is real, hard cash NASA has to spend, vs accounting formalities like "how much would the site be worth if put to its highest and best use" (and taken as a paper loss because the site isn't being used)? Or one-time costs that were incurred for mothballing, but aren't likely to be repeated annually (like shuttering the building, building a fence around it, etc)?

    Don't discount the accounting formalities. I once worked for a company where upper management directed us to immediately dispose of about 100 non-obsolete laptops... at a disposal cost of more than $900 apiece. Why? Because they were sitting in a stack in the middle of a mostly-empty datacenter literally covering most of a square block, and some idiot in the accounting department decided that they were costing us $25,000/year to maintain for no reason besides "they're taking up 100 square feet, and we're paying $250/foot per year in rent"... in a building that was about 95% empty & leased for 20 years at the height of the dotcom boom just because "it was there". The fact that even if you take the fictional annual rent for the floorspace seriously, it took more than FIVE YEARS just to break even on the insane disposal fees. And in the meantime, we had to buy new laptops to replace the ones we were ordered to dispose of, because new people were still getting hired. Wait, it gets better. As a matter of policy, we were required to ship the laptops to the disposal center via FedEx. Priority Overnight. Individually. Almost a decade later, I *still* can't grasp how anybody could have possibly thought it was sane, let alone a *good* idea.

  66. Just Do It... by servant · · Score: 1
    You may need to take lower paying positions, or better, start a company to use both the 'liberal' and 'STEM' skills. Is it easy? No. But if it is your passion, easy doesn't need to be part of the equation. You have the thinking skills, now it the time to use them to take your life in the direction you desire.

    .

    You might not get to work at NASA, but you can work toward your passion.

    You may need some additional education, and you are taking good steps in that direction. Not gathering a lot of additional debt is also a good financial decision for now and your future.

    --
    ... "When you pry the source from my cold dead hands."
  67. Sometimes, the best plans of mice or men... by servant · · Score: 1
    Yes, it is a bad thing, but depending on the context of the decisions, using it might have been throwing another many millions down a 'now known to be unproductive' drain.

    .

    Possibly finding out WHY it was funded initially, and WHY it was 'mothballed' (I am guessing reduced funding) should combine to give you an answer.

    --
    ... "When you pry the source from my cold dead hands."