In search of life on other blah blah blah

There was a time, not so long ago, that the launch of yet another rocket would have been interesting - even exciting - to me. This one is going to take a look about to see if there might be other planets out there that could maybe possibly support life. If it finds some, then we'll build yet another telescope to go look closer at them.

*yawn*

The pricetag - $600 million - doesn't seem justified by the benefits. If we were to find one of these remote planets, then we'd know that perhaps there's a planet somewhere that might possibly support life. Given the scope of the galaxy, and the millions of stars out there, I think we already know that. Which doesn't mean that they *do* support life. So we wouldn't know any more than we know now. And we wouldn't be able to get there anyways.

I'm increasingly skeptical of the role of NASA. I still don't have my flying car. I still don't have my vacation home on the moon. The closest I've gotten is shaking Mark's hand. Yet we continue to pump billions of dollars into the space program, which now lags far behind private enterprise in terms of innovation.

It's time to stop this, and spend that money where it can do more good.


5 Responses to In search of life on other blah blah blah

  1. 50820 James 2009-03-09 09:13:48

    Have a look at this handy chart to see where your tax dollars are actually going.

    http://www.wallstats.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/WallStatsDATlarge.jpg

    Or perhaps cut back on a war or two before axing science might be a good idea...

  2. 50821 rbowen 2009-03-09 09:24:45

    I am *CERTAINLY* not suggesting that we ax science. I'm suggesting we invest in science that can improve the quality of life of actual people, rather than peering out into space after theoretical people that we never actually be able to reach.

  3. 50830 phydeaux 2009-03-09 13:20:53

    At least it made a pretty picture :-) http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap090309.html

  4. 50891 Moose 2009-03-12 15:14:54

    Without the space program (NASA) we would not have digital watches (or at least would have had them later rather than sooner). There are lots of benefits humanity gets as a result of the space program other than the hope of finding E.T.

  5. 50894 rbowen 2009-03-12 16:22:03

    Yeah, I used to buy the "digital watches, Tang and velcro" argument. I simply don't buy it any more. I think that private enterprise has found far more useful stuff than the space program has over the last 40 years. It's just become a monumental waste of money.

    I don't wear a digital watch, and I don't like Tang.

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