HungaryTom
One Too Many
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I am happy since this news might rattle up the US to a noble competition
Two years ago I did translate at a conference celebrating the first Hungarian astronaut going to the cosmos with a Soviet.
Afterwards I asked one scientist why did such high visibility projects (space shuttles etc.) stop in development (you see new versions only in computer designs and the currently flying 20+ yo specimens look like overhauled Taxicabs in Havanna when you see them after landing in close-up, I don't wonder why astronauts get some alcohol before they challenge their luck on those ole hardware, mind you) and the direct answer was that the Cold War ended and the Gulf Wars and the War on Terror swallowed all the funds from space industry.
After the Soviet collapse on the other hand, Russians begun to do the 'flying circus': space tourism for getting some money...
The 1990's saw only a myriad of telecom, GPS etc. satellites being shot to orbit-naturally this is exeggarated but you could never see a progress like in the glory days of the space industry.
Now that Russians have oil wealth and mineral wealth they have ambitions and plans - that's normal.
Why should be the United states different - you guys have also wealth and a much larger economy. It is never good for any development to be without competitors - I think here also of China or the EU.
Anyway the high-tech trickles down to civic industry always from military applications or space industry, OK? It is much more meaningful to curb industrial development from space industry than through arms race in wars.
Two years ago I did translate at a conference celebrating the first Hungarian astronaut going to the cosmos with a Soviet.
Afterwards I asked one scientist why did such high visibility projects (space shuttles etc.) stop in development (you see new versions only in computer designs and the currently flying 20+ yo specimens look like overhauled Taxicabs in Havanna when you see them after landing in close-up, I don't wonder why astronauts get some alcohol before they challenge their luck on those ole hardware, mind you) and the direct answer was that the Cold War ended and the Gulf Wars and the War on Terror swallowed all the funds from space industry.
After the Soviet collapse on the other hand, Russians begun to do the 'flying circus': space tourism for getting some money...
The 1990's saw only a myriad of telecom, GPS etc. satellites being shot to orbit-naturally this is exeggarated but you could never see a progress like in the glory days of the space industry.
Now that Russians have oil wealth and mineral wealth they have ambitions and plans - that's normal.
Why should be the United states different - you guys have also wealth and a much larger economy. It is never good for any development to be without competitors - I think here also of China or the EU.
Anyway the high-tech trickles down to civic industry always from military applications or space industry, OK? It is much more meaningful to curb industrial development from space industry than through arms race in wars.