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It's Been 43 Years Since Man First Walked on the Moon: Does Sending People Into Space Still Make Sense?

deBrice 2012/07/20 19:00:00

SLIDESHOW: Does Sending People to Space Make Sense?

The Apollo 11 Crew
1 of 6

The Apollo 11 Crew

Buzz Aldrin, Neil Armstrong and Michael Collins
  1. The Apollo 11 Crew

    The Apollo 11 Crew

    Buzz Aldrin, Neil Armstrong and Michael Collins

  2. "We choose to go to the Moon"

    "We choose to go to the Moon"

    On May 25, 1961, J.F. Kennedy announced his plan for an ambitious space program: The moon!

  3. First Moon Landing

    First Moon Landing

    On July 20th 1969, two Americans, Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin, were the first human beings to walk the moon.

  4. Mission Success

    Mission Success

    On July 24th, 1969, Houston mission control euphoria: The capsule returned to Earth, with three astronauts Michael Collins, Buzz Aldrin and Neil Armstrong. The mission was a complete success!

  5. Appolo 13: "Failure is not an option"

    Appolo 13: "Failure is not an option"

    The Appolo 13 issue with the air filter forces engineers to find a way to filter CO2 in the capsule with only what's available to the astronaut. Ultimately, they found a solution that saved those astronauts.

  6. What's Next?

    What's Next?

    More than likely, no more humans will be sent into space, at least not in the near future. We are now in the era of AI and Drone.

It's Been 43 Years Since Man First Walked on the Moon: Does Sending People Into Space Still Make Sense?
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Forty-three years ago, two Americans, Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin, were the first human beings to ever walk on the moon. But in today's space program, sending people to space isn't really a priority anymore, when drones and rovers can go farther, for a longer period of time and for a cheaper amount (one-way ticket instead of a round trip.) Do you think sending people into space still makes sense?
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Top Opinion

  • Franklin 2012/07/20 20:36:21
    Yes, there is no substitute to an astronaut.
    Franklin
    +7
    and we need to start with a one way trip for the following ..... Obama Pelosi Reid

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Opinions

  • Idiot r... winning... 2012/07/21 20:29:48
    Idiot repubs
    I just think it's funny, luggage used to not have wheels.
  • thє вlu... winning... 2012/07/22 10:39:54
  • Luna Wren 2012/07/21 16:30:58
    Yes, there is no substitute to an astronaut.
    Luna Wren
    +1
    Okay, I'm not paranoid about tech taking over the world, although its a great entertainment concept, but somethings just need to be experienced by humans. They may not be needed for taking samples and...roving, I don't know what they do on the moon, but they are necessary for other things like...THE EXPERIENCE....does no one care about the experience anymore?
  • winning... Luna Wren 2012/07/21 20:19:09
    winningsouls
    No.
  • Luna Wren winning... 2012/07/23 19:37:55
    Luna Wren
    Well then, I'm disappointed
  • brunyon 2012/07/21 16:11:39
    Yes, there is no substitute to an astronaut.
    brunyon
    +1
    Earth first make Mars our bitch!
  • winning... brunyon 2012/07/21 20:19:49
    winningsouls
    Now that was lame and just vulgar !
  • brunyon winning... 2012/07/21 20:48:06
    brunyon
    +1
    vulgar would be gesturing towards my junk and saying piss off. Lame would be your mother
  • 4gotten Israelite 2012/07/21 15:48:51
    Yes, there is no substitute to an astronaut.
    4gotten Israelite
    +2
    It's been 43 yrs. since America so called sent a man to the moon. I really don't believe it ever really happened. We could land a man on the moon in 1969, here it is the 21st century and we haven't stepped foot anywhere since then. I think this was just another lie America put on it's country.
  • winning... 4gotten... 2012/07/21 20:20:56
    winningsouls
    Do you have a problem with the U.S. ?
  • 4gotten... winning... 2012/07/21 20:44:01
    4gotten Israelite
    +1
    Yes, America lies to it's people. And I'm not one to believe everything that America say's. C'mon, we so called put a man on the moon surface in the 60's and with all the advance technology we have made since then, we haven't came close to anything like it since. I just don't believe it. I did when I was a kid because I didn't know better, now I research on my own, and realize that America lies.to much for me to take it for her word.
  • ScoutLdr 4gotten... 2012/07/22 15:13:05
    ScoutLdr
    Keep it up until 1972 if go to a Planetarium you can see the Apollo 11 landing site in the in the Sea of Tranquility.
  • Altering_Minds. 2012/07/21 15:46:45
    Yes, there is no substitute to an astronaut.
    Altering_Minds.
    We must continue to learn, to look, and find, as long as we can learn more we know there is more to learn, there IS life somewhere else, we just have to look a little farther to find it.
    continue learn learn learn life
  • CUDDLY BUT STILL CRABBY 2012/07/21 15:20:04
    Yes, there is no substitute to an astronaut.
    CUDDLY BUT STILL CRABBY
    +1
    But typical of Obama demo nixing outsourcing, he himself has dismantled NASA as we knew it.

    Media silence on that. Surprised?
  • Idiot r... CUDDLY ... 2012/07/21 16:39:08
    Idiot repubs
    +3
    These decisions were made in 2002 by bush you liar.
  • Idiot r... Idiot r... 2012/07/21 16:43:04
    Idiot repubs
    +1
    But the question now being asked on Capitol Hill is whether Bush will ask for enough money to keep the vision on track when the administration rolls out its 2007 budget Feb. 6, or whether he will shortchange the shuttle program or cripple the new exploration initiative or both. Bush has said he intends to freeze discretionary spending unrelated to national security for the next five years.

    Shortchanging the space budget, lawmakers said, should not be an option. "This is a period of transformation," said Rep. Ken Calvert (R-Calif.), chairman of the House Science subcommittee on space and aeronautics. "We are at the dawn of a new space age, and we have to do it right."

    Industry and congressional sources said the administration has abandoned an early OMB proposal to slash the number of planned shuttle flights by more than half, but hemmed in by other budget priorities, especially the war in Iraq, it still appears unwilling to fund a full slate of 19 flights.

    The sources said the administration may also let the planned deployment of the next generation spaceship slip to 2014. This was the original date proposed by Bush, but Griffin said last year he expects to fly the new "crew exploration vehicle" by 2012. That would cut to two years the "gap" that will open after the shuttle is retired in 2010, leaving the United States with no human spaceflight capacity.
  • CUDDLY ... Idiot r... 2012/07/22 03:19:54
    CUDDLY BUT STILL CRABBY
    Rubbish. Obama is the one who decided to kill the Space Shuttle program and outsource all technology and research to other places. NASA was told by Obama that they should be responsible for "Muslim Outreach" whatever that is.

  • Idiot r... CUDDLY ... 2012/07/22 05:20:12
    Idiot repubs
    LIAR

    The sources said the administration may also let the planned deployment of the next generation spaceship slip to 2014. This was the original date proposed by Bush, but Griffin said last year he expects to fly the new "crew exploration vehicle" by 2012. That would cut to two years the "gap" that will open after the shuttle is retired in 2010, leaving the United States with no human spaceflight capacity.
  • CUDDLY ... Idiot r... 2012/07/22 05:25:12
    CUDDLY BUT STILL CRABBY
    We have to rely on the Russians to take our astronauts to the International Space Station now. You don't see anything wrong with that?
  • Idiot r... CUDDLY ... 2012/07/22 05:25:57 (edited)
    Idiot repubs
    Thank you George Bush.
  • CUDDLY ... Idiot r... 2012/07/22 05:26:35
    CUDDLY BUT STILL CRABBY
    And Phuck Obama.
  • Idiot r... CUDDLY ... 2012/07/22 05:27:24
    Idiot repubs
    See you are wrong and start cursing, sorry you lose
  • CUDDLY ... Idiot r... 2012/07/22 05:34:37
    CUDDLY BUT STILL CRABBY
    Whatever.
  • intolerantrwj 2012/07/21 15:04:57
    Yes, there is no substitute to an astronaut.
    intolerantrwj
    +2
    .... absolutely ..... could I give you my ' Short List ' of folks to Send into Space ?
  • Angel* 2012/07/21 14:26:48
    Yes, there is no substitute to an astronaut.
    Angel*
    If other eyes from other countries are going to be up in space we should also.
    But, with all the moon energy found in the just the dust on the moon worth billions with
    a big B, and companies and the wealthy from around the world already putting up the
    Cash to plan, build and mind it, I think we'll see action on the moon in the next few years. I hope we don't drag our feet to the table like we tend to do. When Canada found all the sand oil by the time we decided to buy into it China had already had made contracts on more then 60% of it with other countries buying up almost all the rest, we can in last again and managed a whooping 10%.
  • irish -liberty or death! 2012/07/21 13:58:38
    Yes, there is no substitute to an astronaut.
    irish -liberty or death!
    how else will they learn of the effects of space on humans?
  • Azazyel's Dragon 2012/07/21 13:50:27
    Yes, there is no substitute to an astronaut.
    Azazyel's Dragon
    You can't substitute a human being with a robot...at least not yet. With reducing resources on our planet space seems to be the only future we have. And I believe that if humans work together on this planet and truly put their minds to it, then living in space is forseeable in the next 100 years.
  • Michaelene 2012/07/21 13:23:39
    Yes, there is no substitute to an astronaut.
    Michaelene
    +4
    There are thousands of rocket scientists, engineers and astronauts unemployed due to the cuts to NASA and the change in it's direction to culture program.
    Our nation has received so much from the NASA program, from soilless gardening, to microwaves, inventions that would have never been discovered without it.

    Now it's up to us to fight against the closure of the oceanic program. I've actually met Sylvia Earle at a conference, she one of the most inspiring and brilliant people in my lifetime.
    Here's a recent interview, discussing the $3 million dollar shortfall.
    "There's great concern that because Aquarius, along with the rest of the National Underwater Research Program, has been zeroed out by Congress as of September this year, that we're going to lose this asset, this unique capability of being able to explore the ocean by being in the ocean, using the ocean as a laboratory. And, of course, having submarines that can go deeper than divers can go is another great asset that we shouldn't lose(ph) ."
    http://www.npr.org/2012/07/20...
  • Azazyel... Michaelene 2012/07/21 13:55:58
    Azazyel's Dragon
    +3
    Well said, Michaelene. The closing of the space program in my opinion, (with drastic budget cuts at NASA), insinuates the closing of our minds as a nation.
  • Idiot r... Azazyel... 2012/07/21 16:43:53
    Idiot repubs
    Thank you Bush
    But the question now being asked on Capitol Hill is whether Bush will ask for enough money to keep the vision on track when the administration rolls out its 2007 budget Feb. 6, or whether he will shortchange the shuttle program or cripple the new exploration initiative or both. Bush has said he intends to freeze discretionary spending unrelated to national security for the next five years.

    Shortchanging the space budget, lawmakers said, should not be an option. "This is a period of transformation," said Rep. Ken Calvert (R-Calif.), chairman of the House Science subcommittee on space and aeronautics. "We are at the dawn of a new space age, and we have to do it right."

    Industry and congressional sources said the administration has abandoned an early OMB proposal to slash the number of planned shuttle flights by more than half, but hemmed in by other budget priorities, especially the war in Iraq, it still appears unwilling to fund a full slate of 19 flights.

    The sources said the administration may also let the planned deployment of the next generation spaceship slip to 2014. This was the original date proposed by Bush, but Griffin said last year he expects to fly the new "crew exploration vehicle" by 2012. That would cut to two years the "gap" that will open after the shuttle is retired in 2010, leaving the United States with no human spaceflight capacity.
  • Idiot r... Michaelene 2012/07/21 16:43:31
    Idiot repubs
    Thank you George Bush

    But the question now being asked on Capitol Hill is whether Bush will ask for enough money to keep the vision on track when the administration rolls out its 2007 budget Feb. 6, or whether he will shortchange the shuttle program or cripple the new exploration initiative or both. Bush has said he intends to freeze discretionary spending unrelated to national security for the next five years.

    Shortchanging the space budget, lawmakers said, should not be an option. "This is a period of transformation," said Rep. Ken Calvert (R-Calif.), chairman of the House Science subcommittee on space and aeronautics. "We are at the dawn of a new space age, and we have to do it right."

    Industry and congressional sources said the administration has abandoned an early OMB proposal to slash the number of planned shuttle flights by more than half, but hemmed in by other budget priorities, especially the war in Iraq, it still appears unwilling to fund a full slate of 19 flights.

    The sources said the administration may also let the planned deployment of the next generation spaceship slip to 2014. This was the original date proposed by Bush, but Griffin said last year he expects to fly the new "crew exploration vehicle" by 2012. That would cut to two years the "gap" that will open after the shuttle is retired in 2010, leaving the United States with no human spaceflight capacity.
  • Michaelene Idiot r... 2012/07/23 14:26:27
    Michaelene
    Where are these sources? Don't worry, I've got some below to backup the facts.

    From what you've written It seems like Bush wanted to as you said, "freeze discretionary spending unrelated to national security for the next five years." What? Bush tried to cut spending?
    ARE YOU KIDDING ME?

    Now, how did the suggestion you attribute to GW Bush when you said "to slash the number of planned shuttle flights by more than half" turn into slashing the program completely???

    "In 2008, the center employed some 15,000 people, generating about $1.1 billion in wages and supported an additional 25,000 jobs, including contract workers as well as workers in the catering, tourism and other service-related industries.

    Already, NASA officials have announced the agency will dismiss more than 3,200 shuttle-related contract employees nationwide July 22. Thousands more jobs could be lost over the longer term.

    The job losses come at a precarious time for the U.S. economy as it struggles to add jobs and reduce the unemployment rate. The U.S. government reported Friday that nonfarm payrolls rose by just 18,000 in June, well below the 125,000 gain expected by economists surveyed by MarketWatch"
    http://articles.marketwatch.c...

    "Under a proposal by President Barack Obama, NASA's campaign to send astronauts to the ...










    Where are these sources? Don't worry, I've got some below to backup the facts.

    From what you've written It seems like Bush wanted to as you said, "freeze discretionary spending unrelated to national security for the next five years." What? Bush tried to cut spending?
    ARE YOU KIDDING ME?

    Now, how did the suggestion you attribute to GW Bush when you said "to slash the number of planned shuttle flights by more than half" turn into slashing the program completely???

    "In 2008, the center employed some 15,000 people, generating about $1.1 billion in wages and supported an additional 25,000 jobs, including contract workers as well as workers in the catering, tourism and other service-related industries.

    Already, NASA officials have announced the agency will dismiss more than 3,200 shuttle-related contract employees nationwide July 22. Thousands more jobs could be lost over the longer term.

    The job losses come at a precarious time for the U.S. economy as it struggles to add jobs and reduce the unemployment rate. The U.S. government reported Friday that nonfarm payrolls rose by just 18,000 in June, well below the 125,000 gain expected by economists surveyed by MarketWatch"
    http://articles.marketwatch.c...

    "Under a proposal by President Barack Obama, NASA's campaign to send astronauts to the moon would be canceled, and the spaceship NASA has been building to replace the aging space shuttle would be scrapped."
    http://www.aolnews.com/2010/0...

    Here this article points out the blame for both parties and it's direct association with the states rise to the top of the UE rolls and the TOP of the foreclosures listings too.
    How refreshing, a bipartisan blame fest!
    "Blame the Democrats. And the Republicans

    This part of Florida has been through tough times before. The thousands of space workers -- and people in related fields -- lost their jobs in the 1970s after the end of the moon landings. It happened again in the 1990s when NASA's budget shrank during the Clinton administration.

    Then came that awful morning in 2003 when the space shuttle Columbia was supposed to land at the Kennedy Space Center but never made it. Having apparently been damaged on liftoff two weeks earlier, it broke up as it re-entered the atmosphere."

    http://abcnews.go.com/Technol...
    (more)
  • Spooner 2012/07/21 12:38:43
    Yes, there is no substitute to an astronaut.
    Spooner
    +3
    Machines can evlauate known situations more precisely than humans. However the nature of exploration is evaluating the unknown, which humans can do and machines can not. The whole reason for exploration is to find something you have not anticipated which is beyond the scope of what machimes and computers can do.
  • Monkey D. Luffy 2012/07/21 12:31:08 (edited)
    No, astronauts aren't a necessity anymore.
    Monkey D. Luffy
    +1
    We have other pressing matters to deal with.. -_-

    I'm not saying we should not try to know more about the world and so on but what's the use when we can't even deal with more mundane problems?
  • byz 2012/07/21 12:23:46
    Yes, there is no substitute to an astronaut.
    byz
    Time to go back
  • Matt 2012/07/21 12:03:44
    No, astronauts aren't a necessity anymore.
    Matt
    +1
    Robotics were embraced by the auto industry because it was too expensive to risk sending humans into paint and welding booths.
  • Michaelene Matt 2012/07/21 14:30:02
    Michaelene
    +2
    http://www.nasa.gov/50th/50th...
    This story explains some of the benefits to humanity from the developments made at NASA.
  • Matt Michaelene 2012/07/21 16:31:12
    Matt
    +1
    I have been following NASA since its inception. My older brother worked for them at their Plum Brook Station, in Sandusky, OH.

    It takes about 3000 pounds of fuel to get one pound of payload into orbit. To condition the environment for humans launching safely and living in space requires too much wasted space and weight to be efficient.
  • Michaelene Matt 2012/07/23 14:36:20
    Michaelene
    +1
    Maybe NASA should have bought it's own refinery just as Delta Airlines just did in PA. I know the critics are all over their "irrational decision", the reason they don't see the big picture is because the truth has not been told.
    Why, because it directly affects our nation security and our critical infrastructure, but I don't care. I'm telling you why. There was no jet fuel for purchase for 4-8 days for the mid atlantic and north east coast in May, 2012.

    Just like you did not address the benefits I referenced above, there are no sources to back up the costs of fuel in the determination to shut down NASA during it's history.
    Perhaps you can explain it further.
  • Matt Michaelene 2012/07/23 15:36:28
    Matt
    Jet fuel is petroleum based, rocket fuel is not. Rockets could probably reduced to less than one tenth of their current sizes and costs if they did not have to accommodate humans. Their missions could also be extended indefinitely and for infinite distances.

    funny rocket fuel

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