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Nationalism has nothing to do with the reality that no one has the proper hardware to mount as realistically serious venture beyond Earth. The Russians only shuttle sits is a park with kids playing on it and all they know is what we know- chemically powered rockets can shoot something into space.
We're all on the same page here. Given enough time and funding anyone could get to the moon or mars or whatnot. The thing we have to realize is that funding has to flow like water. That funding has to be massive enough that the average country can't begin to afford to conceive of a large-scale space program.
We had a concerted space program once but when the usual wishy washyness of politicians prevailed and the bored public turned away, the programs died when the $$ was turned off. We were supposed to building moon colonies after Apollo in the 1970s and the target of 1985 was set for manned Mars expeditions. Instead NASA bunted and began this redundant shuttle sillyness that has kept us in orbit for decades and learning nothing to benefit us in regard to turning outward.
It is akin to early seafaring efforts confined to coastal travel when what was needed was a fleet of global navigating vessels.
In restrospect it is almost amazing that the space program push lasted as long as it did- about a decade. We face the same problems any country does- administration changes, public pressure, national direction changes, new cultural paths, economic problems and much more.
It would be uttely amazing that any country or conglomerate could or will stay dedicated to a program as complex and expensive as colonizing the moon 18 years from now. Nothing is unachievable as long as there is a dedicated money flow.
But we still need motive power of a type that doesn't require massive amounts of fuel volume and the attendent weight to push against Earth's gravity to achive escape velocity then return in a quasi controlled near crash effort. Chemically-fuelled rockets aren't economical and what is required anyhow is a vehicle that takes off from Earth, leaves the atmosphere, travels to the moon, has fuel to make a powered landing, has fuel to take off from the moonbase, return to Earth and again, land under it's own power.
Until we have that technology it just makes no sense to slingshot some unpowered vehicles around the heavens that require costly and large-scale explosive power to launch then glide through space. More importantly, this old-fashioned way leaves no room for error and deaths will almost certainly occur.
Picture yourself in a car that fires a rocket to gain momentum. You begin your journey on the interstate at high speed, but it is a speed you can not attain again if you lose momentum for any reason for course change manuevering or braking for any reason. You can't accelerate simply because your engine is dead because the fuel is all gone.
If there is anything worth mining on the moon the real boon may come from international busness consortiums that would mine there. Of course we have to forget the naive notion that no one can own parts of the moon. Independent private enterprises for profit might be able do what rinky dink governments have been unable to do.
Until we develop a true space vehicle we have no business planning jack.
We're all on the same page here. Given enough time and funding anyone could get to the moon or mars or whatnot. The thing we have to realize is that funding has to flow like water. That funding has to be massive enough that the average country can't begin to afford to conceive of a large-scale space program.
We had a concerted space program once but when the usual wishy washyness of politicians prevailed and the bored public turned away, the programs died when the $$ was turned off. We were supposed to building moon colonies after Apollo in the 1970s and the target of 1985 was set for manned Mars expeditions. Instead NASA bunted and began this redundant shuttle sillyness that has kept us in orbit for decades and learning nothing to benefit us in regard to turning outward.
It is akin to early seafaring efforts confined to coastal travel when what was needed was a fleet of global navigating vessels.
In restrospect it is almost amazing that the space program push lasted as long as it did- about a decade. We face the same problems any country does- administration changes, public pressure, national direction changes, new cultural paths, economic problems and much more.
It would be uttely amazing that any country or conglomerate could or will stay dedicated to a program as complex and expensive as colonizing the moon 18 years from now. Nothing is unachievable as long as there is a dedicated money flow.
But we still need motive power of a type that doesn't require massive amounts of fuel volume and the attendent weight to push against Earth's gravity to achive escape velocity then return in a quasi controlled near crash effort. Chemically-fuelled rockets aren't economical and what is required anyhow is a vehicle that takes off from Earth, leaves the atmosphere, travels to the moon, has fuel to make a powered landing, has fuel to take off from the moonbase, return to Earth and again, land under it's own power.
Until we have that technology it just makes no sense to slingshot some unpowered vehicles around the heavens that require costly and large-scale explosive power to launch then glide through space. More importantly, this old-fashioned way leaves no room for error and deaths will almost certainly occur.
Picture yourself in a car that fires a rocket to gain momentum. You begin your journey on the interstate at high speed, but it is a speed you can not attain again if you lose momentum for any reason for course change manuevering or braking for any reason. You can't accelerate simply because your engine is dead because the fuel is all gone.
If there is anything worth mining on the moon the real boon may come from international busness consortiums that would mine there. Of course we have to forget the naive notion that no one can own parts of the moon. Independent private enterprises for profit might be able do what rinky dink governments have been unable to do.
Until we develop a true space vehicle we have no business planning jack.