Why NASA's Moon Landing is the Wrong Model for Science in America

The moon landing in 1969 was inspiring. But today, American scientists are better off fixing what ails planet earth.

“We are attempting to develop major new systems with ten-year technology, eight-year programs, a five year plan, three-year people, and one-year dollars,” he wrote. What’s more, large, corporate contractors dominate the federal procurement process —hiking up the costs of aerospace technology for taxpayers. The consequences of this lax management can be both embarrassing and deeply wasteful: It took engineers six costly tries to get the shuttle ... Full Story »

Posted by Kaizar Campwala

See All Reviews »

Review

Glenn LaBauve
2.9
by Glenn LaBauve - Jul. 23, 2009

While seemingly sound, it ignores the byproducts that are left in the wake of exploration, which would be lost or greatly slowed if the objective is diminished.

A good beginning, but I belive we should do the things not in place of, but in addition to. Ending the wars in Asia would leave billions every month not the chump change that is NASA,

See All Reviews »

Glenn's Rating

Overall
2.9

Average
from 13 answers
Quality
2.8
Information
3.0
Insight
3.0
Style
3.0
Context
2.0
Expertise
2.0
Originality
2.0
Relevance
4.0
Responsibility
3.0
Popularity
3.5
Recommendation
3.0
Credibility
4.0
More How our ratings work »