Belated Thoughts on Apollo
Jul. 28th, 2010 12:10 amLast week was the 41st anniversary of the Apollo 11 flight, widely viewed as the "defining moment" of my generation.
Really, though, the defining moment of my generation was not when Humanity reached out to stride upon the Moon.
It was when we turned away.
Really, though, the defining moment of my generation was not when Humanity reached out to stride upon the Moon.
It was when we turned away.
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Date: 2010-07-28 08:37 am (UTC)The devolution of man. when we were satisfied with what we could scavenge.
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Date: 2010-07-28 09:31 am (UTC)We are watching our hopes for the future and science fiction stories slip away to become alternative histories.
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Date: 2010-07-28 12:09 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-07-28 02:28 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-07-28 03:10 pm (UTC)In my years the most exciting shift was probably the shuttle program, but even that plan was something like 20 years old by the time it actually rolled onto the launch pad for the first time.
The planets seem as distant as ever, though we've gotten better at peeping at them from afar.
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Date: 2010-07-28 03:36 pm (UTC)Without the cold war and the drive for ICBMs and the military benefits provided by the research NASA was carrying out, we'd never have had the funding to do so.
It's evident even now; there's perhaps even more awareness of the scientific value of this sort of activity, but look at NASA's budget for manned spaceflight development, and then look at what we're spending in Iraq and Afghanistan.
It pains me that soon we'll be unable to get our own astronauts to the ISS and will basically be bumming rides from the Russians whilst paying vastly non-trivial amounts of 'gas money' for the privilege. When I was a child in the 80s I remember the icicle in my heart when STS-51-L failed in such a traumatically spectacular fashion.
I was the kid who read obsessively through this and then later, The Mars One Crew Manual. I regret, now, that I'll never witness a Shuttle launch in person, and that it's unlikely we'll see an American manned mission to Luna or to Mars in my lifetime; perhaps the Chinese or the Indians will get there and keep exploration moving forward and outward.
Some part of me wants the simple reassurance that we'll get to a point where if the worst happens and Earth itself becomes uninhabitable, maybe there'll still be humanity out there somewhere.
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Date: 2010-07-28 09:16 pm (UTC)Meanwhile, today it seems we can't even muster the will to see the Ares series of launch vehicles through.
Sigh.
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Date: 2010-07-29 12:41 am (UTC)And now we have the option of the US retaining vital leadership, or at least contributing to the success of the ESA, Russian, and Japanese spacefaring efforts, and we're too busy funding wars, and collapsing inwards. We could have made the future. Instead we've about handed it over to China. I would far, far rather the future be dominated by Russians and Indians than by the PRC.
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Date: 2010-07-29 08:30 am (UTC)Sadly, you're right. It was the turning away that has taken the stars from us.