Potemkin Launch Pads

Submitted by Hardscrabble Farmer

Part of the beauty of Trump ordering NASA to get a woman on the move was the woman part- sheer political genius. Every major film about space exploration over the past ten years has featured women as the captains, the inventors, the alien experts, the physicists and the engineers. Anybody who gets in the way of the upcoming You Go (to da Moon!) Girl narrative is asking for a career ending take down. That may be why Colonel Walrus stepped aside last week knowing that A) we never went to the Moon and B) you can’t go back where you never went even if you have a chick in the pilot’s seat.

And so the gaslighting of America begins in earnest. Expect five years of dissembling and blowing smoke to emerge from whatever office houses the PR arm of St. NASA.

“The development of the rocket that is supposed to launch the Artemis astronauts, like most major exploration efforts in NASA history, is over budget and years behind schedule.”

Aren’t they always?

But wait, there’s more…

“Will people be celebrating down here, or will a few lucky representatives mark the occasion on the moon? It’s not an impossible future; after all, they’ve been there before. But it is by no means guaranteed.”

Indeed.

Via The Atlantic

The Fraught Effort to Return to the Moon

Buzz Aldrin moves equipment on the moon.

The agency has been celebrating the memory of Apollo 11 for months. It has published a steady stream of archival photos and footage of the astronauts suiting up, blasting off, and posing on the lunar surface with the American flag, a pop of color against an expanse of gray. It refurbished the room at the Johnson Space Center where Mission Control monitored the journey so that now it looks the way it did in 1969, down to the coffee cups, clipboards, and packs of cigarettes. NASA headquarters even asked every communications officer at the agency to be “mindful of posting evergreen materials during the next few weeks that could get better attention once we’re past that spotlight event,” a spokesperson told me. Apollo 11 is NASA’s most famous mission, and the moon landing is one of the most defining moments in human history. It’s been moon time, all the time.

But behind the celebrations, the atmosphere was less harmonious. As NASA commemorated one mission to the moon, the future of the next one seemed precarious.

The Trump administration wants to return Americans to the moon, a place they haven’t been since 1972, in five years—during President Donald Trump’s second term, if he is reelected. Right now, the agency doesn’t have the money to make it happen. In May, the White House asked Congress for an extra $1.6 billion in NASA’s next budget to start funding this effort, which would cost $20 billion to $30 billion and, unlike the Apollo program, rely heavily on technology bought from private companies. Astronauts would land near the south pole this time, where they could theoretically make use of water frozen in the surface. And the crew would include, for the first time, a woman. A mission to Mars—the focal objective of the Obama administration—will come later, after astronauts show they can safely live and work on the moon.

As Congress figures out funding for the next year, NASA officials have spent the past several months talking up the new mission—named Artemis, after Apollo’s sister in Greek mythology. As with the Apollo-anniversary coverage, everyone seemed to be on message. Until, that is, the person who ordered the mission strayed.

“For all of the money we are spending, NASA should NOT be talking about going to the Moon – We did that 50 years ago,” President Trump tweeted in June. “They should be focused on the much bigger things we are doing, including Mars (of which the Moon is a part).”

The tweet stunned the NASA community. Trump has been enamored of the Mars-mission idea since he took office, and once asked a NASA official whether the agency could put people on the red planet by the end of his first term. But that conversation unfolded in private and was only revealed in a tell-all book by a former White House official. In contrast, there was no denying the blustery Mars tweet, nor the blatant contradictions in its message.

“I called him after that,” Jim Bridenstine, the NASA administrator, told me of the president. “And I was very clear, ‘I want to be sure we’re in alignment.’ And he was very clear with me: ‘I know you’ve got to go to the moon to go to Mars, but you need to talk about Mars.’”

Mars is the “generational achievement that will inspire all of America,” Bridenstine said Trump told him. In his tweet, Trump seemed to acknowledge that the moon matters when it comes to making it to Mars—“of which the moon is a part.” But Mars, it seems, is a better sell.

Then, last week, another shocking moment: Bridenstine announced he was demoting NASA’s head of human exploration. William Gerstenmaier has worked at NASA since 1977, guiding the agency through spaceflight triumphs and tragedies, and shifting gears every time a new president comes along with different ideas for the nation’s space priorities. The morning of the announcement, Gerstenmaier was on Capitol Hill, testifying before members of Congress about the 2024 plan.

Although the decision came from Bridenstine, Gerstenmaier appears to be a victim of the White House’s impatience with NASA’s progress on the moon mission. The development of the rocket that is supposed to launch the Artemis astronauts, like most major exploration efforts in NASA history, is over budget and years behind schedule. Vice President Mike Pence, who gives the big space-policy speeches on behalf of Trump, is “livid,” according to The Washington Post. “If NASA is not currently capable of landing American astronauts on the moon in five years,” Pence said earlier this year, “we need to change the organization, not the mission.”

Bridenstine insists that, despite the sudden personnel shake-up, everything is fine at NASA. “We love the work [Gerstenmaier’s] done, and we’re grateful for his service to NASA and to the country,” Bridenstine told The Verge after the announcement. “But I think we’re at a time when we need new leadership.”

Bridenstine attributes the rush to the unpredictable tides of electoral politics; the next president could slash the 2024 moon plan, just as President Barack Obama canceled President George W. Bush’s moon plan in favor of Mars—a plan that didn’t make it very far, either. NASA has already seen several shifts under this administration alone. The goal was to return to the moon from the start, but the deadline jumped from 2028 to 2024 this spring. Mars seemed almost an afterthought at first, a next step for humankind that seems so inevitable that the details can be worked out later; now it’s a pressing imperative that the president wants to make sure the public hears plenty about.

Bridenstine is already carrying out Trump’s latest request. Yesterday, during a press conference about the Apollo anniversary, the administrator teased the release of a new Mars plan. “We are working right now, in fact, to put together a comprehensive plan on how we would conduct a Mars mission using the technologies that we will be proving at the moon,” Bridenstine said. “Remember, the moon is the proving ground. Mars is the destination.”

Bridenstine even mentioned a long-held target date for human exploration of Mars, despite the fact that a NASA-commissioned report recently concluded it isn’t possible, even without budget constraints. “I am not willing to rule out 2033 at all,” he said. The faster NASA gets to the moon, Bridenstine said, the faster it gets to Mars.

The Trump administration faces a public skeptical of both destinations. According to a recent poll, 78 percent of respondents have a favorable view of NASA, and a majority say the government is spending too little when they’re told that the agency’s annual funding accounts for half a percent of the national budget. But just 42 percent think NASA should go to the moon in 2024, another recent poll found. A similar proportion of people think neither Mars nor the moon should be a priority. Even the two living Apollo 11 astronauts, Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins, think the United States should head to Mars instead of the moon.

It is difficult, even foolhardy, to predict whether NASA astronauts will be on the moon for the next big Apollo commemoration. In the decades since the historic mission, the agency has pressed deeper into the solar system and sprinkled spacecraft on and around other worlds. By the 65th anniversary, if everything goes according to plan, there will be a little drone hopping around on a moon of Saturn, looking for signs of life—not the fossilized type, but the kind that swims or squirms today. And what of the world next door? Will people be celebrating down here, or will a few lucky representatives mark the occasion on the moon? It’s not an impossible future; after all, they’ve been there before. But it is by no means guaranteed.

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21 Comments
Stucky
Stucky
July 17, 2019 8:07 pm

“Part of the beauty of Trump ordering NASA to get a woman on the move was the woman part- sheer political genius. “

Political genius would be ordering AOC (and/or her Squad) to go ….

(A one way ticket would be even greater political genius.)

AC
AC
  Stucky
July 17, 2019 8:44 pm

1. Build a bunch of fake space craft.

2. Tell the feminists and non-whites they can’t use them.

3. Stand clear as the feminists and non-whites pack themselves inside.

4. Weld the doors shut and go home.

Yardstick
Yardstick
July 17, 2019 8:16 pm

Hope NASA remembers to install tampon dispensers on their Go-Gyrl rocketships.

Texas Todd
Texas Todd
July 17, 2019 8:45 pm

We didn’t go 50 years ago under piece of shit Nixon and we won’t see a successful moon mission for at least 50 more. If you believe we actually went there 50 years ago you are…. incorrect.

Anonymous
Anonymous
July 17, 2019 9:18 pm

NASA and they know it BFD ! Our nation is bankrupt regardless of all the economic fluff & stuff and NASA is an expense we need to toss under the bus for now . Going to the moon and Mars , first make whole all American citizens who have been severely injured over the last 40 to 50 years by the greatest transference of wealth in the history of the world from the many to the connected few !
Financial futures of families were trashed by government and industry , pension plans bankrupted , interest rates that made middle class savers look like idiots while bailouts were set up for those jury rigging the system with debt upon debt . So now you want to go to the moon & Mars . FYI No.2 machine shop was the only place in the world that could make the heat shields to protect Apollo crews so they survived re-entry and the men and their retirement and the machines they used for the Apollo Project with pride and skill second to none in the world were thrown under the bus with a big to fucking bad pal !
Their wives get $85 bucks a month survivors benefit and you want american working people to support another space mission ? Fat Chance !

Yardstick
Yardstick
  Anonymous
July 17, 2019 11:16 pm

‘spose bil ‘n hil had caviar this evening?

bigfoot
bigfoot
July 17, 2019 10:01 pm

I just wish NASA would institute a policy of employing black and brown women exclusively. Lesbians would get higher wages as reparations for past injustices. America could finally demonstrate without a doubt that it values progress over white supremacy. What a lovely thing it would be. Plus the world’s women of color could enjoy the prospect of the first flight all the more for the historical precedent. All the men could kneel and have their afros blow in the wind as the ship launches.

cz
cz
July 17, 2019 10:10 pm

nobody’s going to the moon, and most certainly not mars.
a clue to this is the inscription on von braun’s headstone, Psalm 19:1.
if anyone’s interested in a fun space side topic, look into the background/beliefs of jack parsons of Jet Propulsion Laboratories.

Capn Mike
Capn Mike
  cz
July 17, 2019 10:35 pm

Wow. Thanks for the tip. I think it’s the air in L.A.

ordo ab chao
ordo ab chao
  cz
July 18, 2019 6:42 am

CZ- ‘is one who can see’….

“Jack Parsons, founder of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) and the father of rocket science, was an enigma of a man to say the least. Parsons lived a double life, one of science by day and dark magic by night, although he believed the two were one and the same. He conjured spirits and ancient deities, and he delved into sex magic. He believed he had no limits and could manifest energies just as real as the once-believed-impossible science he helped create.”

https://www.ranker.com/list/facts-about-jpl-rocket-scientist-jack-parsons/lyra-radford

annuit coeptis novus ordo seclorum- there is more to this ole’ world than what meets the eye

“He conjured spirits and ancient deities, and he delved into sex magic”……..Babalon working project. I sure don’t know, but the author in the video below accurately predicted that Pope Benedict would step down, to the month, a year before it happened, and the Jesuit Marxist Bergoglio was installed.

grace country pastor
grace country pastor
  ordo ab chao
July 18, 2019 8:24 am

Ever wonder why “they” named the fake moon missions Apollo?

Revelation 9:11 KJB… “And they had a king over them, which is the angel of the bottomless pit, whose name in the Hebrew tongue is Abaddon, but in the Greek tongue hath his name Apollyon.”

And in modern English… Apollo.

THE ARK-HIVE PROJECT
THE ARK-HIVE PROJECT
July 17, 2019 10:18 pm

Theory of Relatively. Ants can only go so far.

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
July 17, 2019 10:53 pm

“There’s a sucker born every minute.” – P.T. Barnum

“It’s easier to fool people than to convince them that they have been fooled.” – Mark Twain

“You can fool all the people some of the time, and some of the people all the time, but you cannot fool all the people all the time.” – Abraham Lincoln

“The first principle is that you must not fool yourself – and you are the easiest person to fool. – Richard Feynman

“There are two ways to be fooled. One is to believe what isn’t true; the other is to refuse to believe what is true.”
– Søren Kierkegaard

“There’s an old saying in Tennessee — I know it’s in Texas, probably in Tennessee — that says, fool me once, shame on, shame on you. Fool me, you can’t get fooled again.” —President George W. Bush

sarin rap
sarin rap
July 18, 2019 1:04 am

day 909
() no arrests in attempted coup against trump.
() no wall.
() 100 million haven’t been sent back.
() $20 billion to $30 billion for a moon rim shot.
() q is still a retarded, syphilitic tranny.

overthecliff
overthecliff
  sarin rap
July 18, 2019 11:48 am

Your comment cuts through the bull shit.

Grog
Grog
July 18, 2019 4:50 am

Better hurry…
AOC says we’ve only got 12 years.

comment image

bob
bob
July 18, 2019 9:32 am

“Return to the moon”. Yeah, ok. Let’s all “return to the moon”. Hollywood did it once, they can do it again. With CGI it oughta be a cinch. Probably be way more lifelike also.

RT
RT
July 18, 2019 9:36 am

If I were the president I would announce to NASA and the world, “ I set forth a challenge, that within 10 years, we will have in place a tested and deployed system to divert dangerous asteroids of all types from impacting the earth. Until we achieve these results, I am putting on hold all resources aimed at sending men to Mars or the moon. These resources are much more important to be directed toward protecting the earth. Once we have a tested and deployed system in place, then we can proceed with our current program.”

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
  RT
July 18, 2019 10:28 am

Personally I would announce that we are going to stop stealing everyone’s money to support whatever space fantasies are floating around and that if anyone wants to support a program of any kind, they can work with the private sector to set up voluntary funding mechanisms to pay for it. That would be the MORAL thing to do.

Scott halloween
Scott halloween
July 18, 2019 10:37 am

The mission to mars is gonna be off the hook, special effects have Improved so much since the 60’s

Anonymous
Anonymous
July 18, 2019 11:14 am

Nasa has zero creds, they blew their reputation with the 2 space shuttle disasters, and they also destroyed the notion of a hero astronaut, when that crazy astro chick drove across the country in a diaper to try an murder the wife of her astro-lover.

Nasa can not recover this loss of reputation, therefore they can not get the funding required to do anything.

we were not designed to escape this planet.

PS, you know you are at the peak of a financial bubble, when they are trying to sell these ideas to the public, the last thing we need are plans to go to mars or the moon, no one needs to go there, it serves no useful purpose, it is a distraction, part of the bread and circus – clown world we live in.