Pence served on the Science Committee and its subcommittee on Space and Aeronautics from 2001-2002. https://libraries.indiana.edu/mike-pence-congressional-papers
If Trump gets in again and wants a human to plant an American flag on Mars then he really has his work cut out. I would first question if any such attempt would be truly genuine, rather than some politically based initiative with a range of ulterior motives that might involve Mars and rockets (which I suspect it is, as Trump doesn’t appear to me to be a technophile Mars loving geek like Musk. And to be fair I suspect few if any of the critters in Congress are either).But giving him the benefit of the doubt and assuming he really does want an American flag planted on Mars for its own sake, then he needs to be very politically savvy and intensely rational about goals, means, costs and time frames. I will make no comment concerning Trumps abilities in these areas, but he will need to get congress onboard and the money lined up (somehow) and he needs a good highly technically competent “lieutenant” who would be capable of talking directly to someone like Elon Musk about truly practical issues of how to go about it. Any attempt based on grandstanding, arm waving and chest beating will suffer from a painful bite on the posterior by reality. Grandstanding, arm waving and chest beating are fine of course (de rigueur even these days) but should come after the practical issues have been addressed. I hope for the best but fear the worst.
Why would Congress act on what a Presidential candidate says?
The how to get to Mars would be up to other people such as the NASA Administrator, OMB, Congress, etc.
Quote from: yg1968 on 12/03/2022 11:08 pmThe how to get to Mars would be up to other people such as the NASA Administrator, OMB, Congress, etc.Sure, it would be up to "other people", but the people you mention are not going to do it.
Quote from: JohnFornaro on 12/06/2022 10:59 amQuote from: yg1968 on 12/03/2022 11:08 pmThe how to get to Mars would be up to other people such as the NASA Administrator, OMB, Congress, etc.Sure, it would be up to "other people", but the people you mention are not going to do it.They are obviously not going to take orders from a Presidential candidate, he would have to be President.
TRUMP: “Tell me: Mars, what do you see a timing for actually sending humans to Mars? Is there a schedule and when would you see that happening?”WHITSON: “Well, I think as your bill directed, it'll be approximately in the 2030s. As I mentioned, we actually are building hardware to test the new heavy launch vehicle, and this vehicle will take us further than we've ever been away from this planet.“So, unfortunately space flight takes a lot of time and money so getting there will require some international cooperation to get the — it to be a planet-wide approach in order to make it successful just because it is a very expensive endeavor. But it is so worthwhile doing.”TRUMP: “Well, we want to try and do it during my first term or, at worst, during my second term, so we'll have to speed that up a little bit, okay?”WHITSON: “We'll do our best.”
This whole thread assumes that Trump said what he said as part of a vision for the American people, versus the more likely situation that Trump said what he said to get attention.While in the office as President, Trump showed little true interest in learning about what NASA could and could not do. For instance, in 2017 Trump had this exchange with Peggy Whitson, the commander of the International Space Station, and fellow American astronaut Jack Fischer:QuoteTRUMP: “Tell me: Mars, what do you see a timing for actually sending humans to Mars? Is there a schedule and when would you see that happening?”WHITSON: “Well, I think as your bill directed, it'll be approximately in the 2030s. As I mentioned, we actually are building hardware to test the new heavy launch vehicle, and this vehicle will take us further than we've ever been away from this planet.“So, unfortunately space flight takes a lot of time and money so getting there will require some international cooperation to get the — it to be a planet-wide approach in order to make it successful just because it is a very expensive endeavor. But it is so worthwhile doing.”TRUMP: “Well, we want to try and do it during my first term or, at worst, during my second term, so we'll have to speed that up a little bit, okay?”WHITSON: “We'll do our best.”Clearly Trump was not educated on any of the issues related to what it takes to send humans to Mars. And that is something of a hallmark of Trump, in that he is famous for not being educated in the details of how the U.S. Government ran, or what it even did.Now here he is, almost two years out of office, and during that time he has shown no interest in space, much less Mars. And out of the blue he proposes "planting the American flag on Mars"?Trump is obviously not serious about WHY America should commit taxpayer money to such a venture, and that is why this was only a case of crying for attention. Grandstanding. Trumpism at its finest (if you are into that kind of thing)...
Trump is the first President in modern history to have shunned reading detailed briefings...
Quote from: JohnFornaro on 12/06/2022 10:59 amQuote from: yg1968 on 12/03/2022 11:08 pmThe how to get to Mars would be up to other people such as the NASA Administrator, OMB, Congress, etc.Sure, it would be up to "other people", but the people you mention are not going to do it.They are obviously not going to take orders from a Presidential candidate, he would have to be President. We saw what happened with Artemis, it's a long process to get a program such as HLS fully funded. In 2019, Vice President Pence made a speech saying that Artemis had to be accelerated to 2024. In order to accomplish this, the President proposed a FY20 supplementary budget (see the link below) of $1B for HLS (essentially for the base period) but only received $654.1M. In FY21, the President requested $3369.8M for HLS (essentially for Option A) but Congress only funded a portion of that, $928.3M. In FY22, the President requested $1,195.0M and received that amount. In FY23, the President requested $1,485.6M for HLS which includes funding for Appendix P (the House and Senate seem to be open to fully funded that, at least as of now). According to the FY23 budget request, the requested funding for HLS should gradually increase and should eventually reach $2,537.9M in FY27. Presumably, the process for a NRHO to Mars public-private partnership program would be similar to what happened for the HLS program. But in my view, NASA should focus on HLS for now. They shouldn't think of a NRHO to Mars program until the HLS program is successful. https://www.nasa.gov/sites/default/files/atoms/files/nasa_fy_2020_budget_amendment_summary.pdfhttps://www.nasa.gov/news/budget/index.html
Quote from: yg1968 on 12/06/2022 11:49 pmQuote from: JohnFornaro on 12/06/2022 10:59 amQuote from: yg1968 on 12/03/2022 11:08 pmThe how to get to Mars would be up to other people such as the NASA Administrator, OMB, Congress, etc.Sure, it would be up to "other people", but the people you mention are not going to do it.They are obviously not going to take orders from a Presidential candidate, he would have to be President. We saw what happened with Artemis, it's a long process to get a program such as HLS fully funded. In 2019, Vice President Pence made a speech saying that Artemis had to be accelerated to 2024. In order to accomplish this, the President proposed a FY20 supplementary budget (see the link below) of $1B for HLS (essentially for the base period) but only received $654.1M. In FY21, the President requested $3369.8M for HLS (essentially for Option A) but Congress only funded a portion of that, $928.3M. In FY22, the President requested $1,195.0M and received that amount. In FY23, the President requested $1,485.6M for HLS which includes funding for Appendix P (the House and Senate seem to be open to fully funded that, at least as of now). According to the FY23 budget request, the requested funding for HLS should gradually increase and should eventually reach $2,537.9M in FY27. Presumably, the process for a NRHO to Mars public-private partnership program would be similar to what happened for the HLS program. But in my view, NASA should focus on HLS for now. They shouldn't think of a NRHO to Mars program until the HLS program is successful. https://www.nasa.gov/sites/default/files/atoms/files/nasa_fy_2020_budget_amendment_summary.pdfhttps://www.nasa.gov/news/budget/index.htmlThe thing is, HLS wasn't "trump". The selection happened after trump left office.
And if the effort to go to Mars ends up being as badly managed as the effort to return to the Moon has been, then NASA will NEVER be funded enough money to get humans to surface of Mars.Pretty much nothing NASA is building for Artemis, for the Moon, will be able to be used as-is on a Mars mission. Which means that NASA is more than a decade away from going to Mars AFTER such an effort is funded. And Congress is barely funding the Artemis program enough to reach the Moon, so thinking Congress will bump up NASA's budget by $10B per year or more for a concurrent Mars mission - well, let's just say that is not something a rational person would assume today...
Quote from: Coastal Ron on 12/07/2022 03:53 amAnd if the effort to go to Mars ends up being as badly managed as the effort to return to the Moon has been, then NASA will NEVER be funded enough money to get humans to surface of Mars.Pretty much nothing NASA is building for Artemis, for the Moon, will be able to be used as-is on a Mars mission. Which means that NASA is more than a decade away from going to Mars AFTER such an effort is funded. And Congress is barely funding the Artemis program enough to reach the Moon, so thinking Congress will bump up NASA's budget by $10B per year or more for a concurrent Mars mission - well, let's just say that is not something a rational person would assume today... A lot of your post is off topic (and I won't respond to that part). Play the ball (the Moon or Mars in this case), not the man (Trump in this case) is a fairly easy concept to understand.
Trump (like many other Presidents) is a big picture guy, he doesn't want to know the details as long as it gets done. In that exchange, I disagree with what Whitson is saying, the United States doesn't need international cooperation to get humans to Mars.
If you want my opinion, it's better to lock a thread than deleting it. Perhaps, it has run its course.
Quote from: deadman1204 on 11/16/2022 09:09 pm[deleted]Your comments are overly political, even for the policy section. But the Artemis/Moon to Mars program was initiated under the Trump Administration. The Mars portion of the Moon to Mars program is essentially a rebrand of the Journey to Mars but it was there nevertheless under the Trump Administration.
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