Sunday, May 31, 2020

Back into Space On Our Own

It took nearly nine years.

In July of 2011 I blogged this:

"The United States space program ended today.

Today has left a large hole in my heart.  And perhaps one in our country's heart.

I was a child of the Space Race.  In October of 1957, Sputnik 1 was launched.  Ever hear of it? Or the Soviet Union?  Well...

The Soviet Union was a "union" of Russia and a number of other nearby countries.  Their government was "communist", committed to the destruction of the capitalist system - and our country.  Or, so we were told.  Those were scary times.  When I was a toddler, being called a Communist could be enough to cause someone to lose their job.  There were special congressional hearings.  Blacklists.

The Soviets had "The Bomb".   We and they fought what was called the "Cold War".  If they won and took us over, all would be lost.  The Soviets were totally evil- that is what I was taught, as a schoolchild growing up in the 1950's and early 60's.

When the Soviets launched the first satellite in October of 1957, our country was thrown into a panic.  We needed to get our children educated in the sciences, and quickly, so we could get into space with our satellite before the Communists took space over.   This drive accelerated even more quickly when the Soviets put the first man into space in 1961.

We as a country committed ourselves to reach the moon in a speech given by President Kennedy in May of 1961. 

50 years ago, we decided to go to the moon.  We would beat the Soviets there.  We knew they were trying to get there, too.

Competition is the heart of the capitalist system.

I saw some of the various launches in school.  Others, on our black and white TV at home.  First, we blasted one man into sub-orbit.  Then, one man into orbit.  Then, into many orbits.

Then, the Soviets took a walk in space. So we had to also.

To make a long story short, we made it to the moon first.  Several more missions got to the moon and then in the 1970's we totally changed direction.  We decided to have a program with partially disposable space crafts.  We haven't been to the moon since that decision and, in fact, no one else has been, either.

In the middle of all this, the Soviet Union ceased to exist.  Probably a lot of the urgency disappeared with the Soviets.  We no longer had an enemy to compete with.

And then we realized it was way too expensive for the government to keep up the space program.  Private industry would have to take over, and that is part of the reason for what happened today.  The entire story is complicated, and this is a very shallow telling of the tale.

Today, several generations know of the space program mainly for Tang, and freeze dried ice cream.  But, in reality, it enriched our lives in so many ways we can't even imagine - everything from MRI technology to cell phones (have you ever seen the first Star Trek series?) to - well, there is an entire NASA Spinoff website that explains this.

Think about this.  We won the space race, right?  And now -we won't have a way to get into space on our own, for now.  We will have to depend on....

The Russians.

Now, that's irony."

It continued that way, year after year, us depending on the Russians.  Until yesterday's launch.  And today's docking.   This time, the manned flight was a partnership between NASA and a commercial aerospace company founded in 2002, Space Exploration Technologies Corp, better known as SpaceX.  In the midst of a pandemic, they launched.  It wasn't the first pandemic launch, either, as there was another (Russian) launch to the International Space Station (ISS) in April.

Perhaps, our space program can get on track again, even as we battle nature (and ourselves) back at home.

We can only hope.

6 comments:

  1. We are back...and there’s hope for 5he future

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  2. We are living in strange times. Glad that the rocket made it. Glad to have a launch on American soil. But I wonder if we haven't lost our way when it comes to why we're doing this. The point of it all. We wanted to explore. Where did that go?

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  3. Have you seen the screenshot of the post going around Facebook that says something like "Two astronauts left the planet on SpaceX. Good call, Astronauts." Made me LOL, but they had a point. I hate that I missed the launch!

    Kim

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  4. While I am not a fan of Elon Musk, I have to admire the technologies he mustered to pull this off. Kudos!

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  5. I was sad when US space program ended their flights - I do have hopes for the future

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