India To Launch First Manned Space Mission By 2022 (hindustantimes.com)
India will launch its first manned space mission by 2022, the country's Prime Minister Narendra Modi said on Wednesday, which could make it the fourth nation to do so after the United States, Russia and China. From a report: Modi congratulated Indian scientists for excelling in their research and are at the forefront of innovation. "Our scientists have made us proud. They launched over 100 satellites... They successfully completed the Mars mission." ISRO, India's space agency, successfully launched 104 satellites on 15 February 2017, of which three were Indian while the rest were foreign commercial satellites. The Mars Orbiter Mission (MOM), also called Mangalyaan, India's first interplanetary mission was launched on November 5, 2013 by the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO). It has been orbiting Mars since September 24, 2014.
Well...
Universal Healthcare is not strictly a Federal issue, what with the whole Constitution thing specifying that anything not specifically allowed to the Feds is a State matter. On the other hand, FDR pretty much threw that Constitutional issue out the window back in the 1930's, and got the Supremes of the day to go along with it by threatening to just add more Justices till he had the required majority. So I could go either way on it.
Water in Flint Michigan? Nope, not a Federal issue. You can't even use the Interstate Commerce clause to cover that, since it's purely a local matter. So talk to the government of Michigan if you want that dealt with.
All that aside, the Constitution does seem to give the Federal government the Power to do military things. Like this Space Force (warning: I've ignored all the news about the Space Force, but it looks like the sort of interservice rivalry that led to the Key West Accords).
So, while Universal Healthcare might be more important than the Space Force, the Space Force is something that can pass Constitutional muster easier than Universal Healthcare.
And what any of this has to do with India wanting to put men in space, I can't imagine.
As to India putting men in space, I am thinking that four years is too short a timeline, unless they're trying for something comparable to Mercury or Vostok. Which would be a waste of time and money. Stretch the timeline to ten years, and they can probably get their own space program going in a respectable sort of way....
"I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"