Utterly baffling. I know you have a thing about mentioning planes in your posts for some reason, but you keep talking as if anyone in the American public is going over NASA's budget expenditure each year.I doubt 0.00001 percent of them do.People are only interested in cool missions.
what makes you think that the "moon" or "Mars" is a "cool" mission for the American people?
A manned mission to Mars would be the biggest TV event in the history of the planet and the proudest moment in American history, and there's people (sorry, one person) worried about a few of their tax bucks, bucks we'd get charged anyway, bucks that would end up being spent on far more random and useless nonsense.Unbelievable!
Quote from: simonbp on 03/30/2011 04:57 pmThe approximate total cost of Apollo was $185 billion in 2010 USD, between 1960 (when funding really began) and 1973, giving an average of about $14 billion a year. That's not too different from the current NASA HSF budget...The current HSF Budget is about half of NASA's total budget.
The approximate total cost of Apollo was $185 billion in 2010 USD, between 1960 (when funding really began) and 1973, giving an average of about $14 billion a year. That's not too different from the current NASA HSF budget...
Quote from: Jamie Young on 03/30/2011 08:58 pmUtterly baffling. I know you have a thing about mentioning planes in your posts for some reason, but you keep talking as if anyone in the American public is going over NASA's budget expenditure each year.I doubt 0.00001 percent of them do.People are only interested in cool missions.I don't think SkyKing is suggesting that people are carefully looking at how much NASA spends each year. All it takes is one newspaper headline to communicate the cost of a program.In my opinion people's aversion to expensive space exploration endeavors is illogical, but that doesn't change the fact that it exists. Imagine the headline, "Obama announces 200 billion dollar plan to land humans on Mars" Do you seriously think that the majority of the American people would read that and not question why we are spending so much money on something that has no immediate benefits to the average person, simply because it's a 'cool mission'? It doesn't matter if it's spread out over ten years and the yearly budget is only a tiny fraction of all our spending; people will see that number and shout "waste!" in the blink of an eye.The fact that SkyKing (and myself for that matter) accepts this fact does not mean that he thinks space is boring, or that a mars mission is bad idea. He is just being realistic about the level of public support such a program would experience. In my opinion people who deny this are ignoring the hard truth because it hurts their personal dreams of space exploration. The fact of the matter is that in this current political environment any government spending is criticzed, even if it has real tangible benefits for the taxpayer; how do you think would people react to spending a massive amount of money on something simply because it's a 'cool mission' and 'we haven't done it yet'?
Quote from: yg1968 on 03/30/2011 05:31 pmQuote from: simonbp on 03/30/2011 04:57 pmThe approximate total cost of Apollo was $185 billion in 2010 USD, between 1960 (when funding really began) and 1973, giving an average of about $14 billion a year. That's not too different from the current NASA HSF budget...The current HSF Budget is about half of NASA's total budget. So for FY2010, Space Operations is $6,180.6 million and Exploration is $3,779.8 million. Add that to 50% of Cross-Agency Support (=$1771.7 million) and you get a total of $11.7 billion, or 83% of Apollo's average funding level.But, you know, handwaving is always better than real numbers...
I highly recommend the testimony provided by Mr. Jim Maser.He understands. Most in business usually do.http://science.house.gov/sites/republicans.science.house.gov/files/documents/hearings/Maser%20testimony%20for%20March%2030%2C%202011%20Hearing%20NASA%20Exploration%20%28S%26A%29.pdf
Quote from: robertross on 03/31/2011 12:28 amI highly recommend the testimony provided by Mr. Jim Maser.He understands. Most in business usually do.http://science.house.gov/sites/republicans.science.house.gov/files/documents/hearings/Maser%20testimony%20for%20March%2030%2C%202011%20Hearing%20NASA%20Exploration%20%28S%26A%29.pdfHey may understand the business, but has main argument boils down to saving the workforce, and indirectly the Shuttle/CxP contractors. While that is clearly important (especially from his perspective) - the primary objective should be to reduce the gap in both policy direction and HSF capability. The workforce should be secondary to that.