Saturday, January 30, 2010

Houston, We Have a Problem

I generally avoid political subjects like the plague (excuse the cliche'--maybe I should have said Romulan flu?), unless they hit very close to home.  The recent announcement of proposed cuts to our space program have left me wondering if the only way we humans will ever reach the stars is through our imaginations. This sinking feeling I have of an era lost and all our advances forgotten was summed up quite well here.

And here.

Where is our space program headed?  Did my current work in progress, Outer Planets, just move from the category of Near Future Romance to Science Fantasy? Can we even hope for manned exploration of our own solar neighborhood in the next century?

The decisions happening today regarding space exploration (and the funding cuts that are impacting it) do--or should--matter to us as writers. We view the 2001 and 2010 movies now with a wistful smirk. We are nowhere near as advanced as we thought we'd be when these forward-thinking motion pictures were first released.  A low budget little TV show called Star Trek inspired an entire generation to pursue careers in science and astrophysicists in the 60's so they could reach for the stars and make that fictional futuristic dream more of a reality.  Now, funding obstacles have pushed our goals back further and further, until we've reached the point those goals now seem beyond any possible reality we might actually achieve in the foreseeable future.

Can private industry pick up the gauntlet and take us forward, as has been suggested as the "solution?" It's a huge gamble, when projects such as Spaceport America are threatened by funding crises in the states where they are being developed. Although private industry may be able to afford to build the crafts, can they also afford to construct and maintain the actual spaceports themselves? Will major corporations--those with the massive funding necessary--see this as a solid investment or quick enough return on their capital outlay?  And will their focus not be on advancing our exploration of space and scientific discovery to improve health, medicine, food production (to name only a few benefits that have arisen from our space program), or will it be on commercial gain via high tech, high ticket amusement rides of near Earth orbit or the space station?

Comments by Apollo 17 astronaut Harrison Schmitt on Friday in a speech in Ocala, Florida:
“If it is a commercial effort only to visit the space station, then it is the beginning of the end of human space exploration,” he said. “Ultimately, you abandon the moon to China, you abandon the space station to Russia, and you abandon liberty to the ages."

It seems the "fiction" in science fiction romance is becoming the key operative word, as we face a very uncertain future for space exploration...or perhaps, for our future, period.   

4 comments:

  1. It's always a matter of money, isn't it, Laurie. Did I ever tell you I interviewed Neil Armstrong for my school magazine? Not in person of course - a little far from Derbyshire to America but he was kind enough to answer my questions. I must look out the magazine and see what he said about space travel!! I think it's in the attic ....

    ReplyDelete
  2. Really great post, Laurie. You raise some very interesting and important questions.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Can't tell you how sad I've been to watch the dismantling of NASA and the space program as it's been happening over the last few years. This latest is only the final coup de grace in recognition of the internal disarray and external apathy that have prevented any true advance of space exploration in years. The fight between manned and unmanned priorities, the inability to find a cheap alternative to the shuttle, lack of public interest and a corresponding lack of presidential leadership and the economic boom and bust have all combined to kill our outward reach. I fear by the time we really need a place to go, we won't have a way to get there. Oh, and the private sector? Forget it. Unless they discover platinum just laying around on the moon, they won't be interested enough. Exploration has always been paid for by governments--in hopes of exploiting the resources of virgin lands. Looks like scientific knowledge wasn't enough profit for them, either.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Barbara, no! You have to find me that interview. I'd love to read it.

    Thanks Sharon.

    And yes, Donna, we do seem to have lost our focus and our will to further space exploration. It seems NASA has gone into retrograde, such as losing our ability to reach the moon.

    I find it odd that space can be such a hit in entertainment, but when it comes to the real adventure, people are often hohum.

    ReplyDelete

Thank you for chiming in! We love to see your comments. (All comments are moderated so spam can be terminated!)