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n2doc Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-02-10 11:55 AM
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Space showdown sidetracked
Alan Boyle writes: The showdown over America's space policy will have to wait until September at the earliest: House Democrats had considered rushing through passage of a $19 billion NASA authorization bill today, before the start of Congress' August recess. But the leadership decided instead to keep the bill in limbo, in part because Democratic members from California protested.

One factor might have been the strong opposition to the House version of the bill that came from advocates of space commercialization. The House bill would have made deep cuts in the Obama administration's request for $6 billion over five years to support the development of private-sector spaceships capable of bringing crew to the International Space Station.

However, that's only one factor. Revisions in the measure, sparked by the Congressional Budget Office's criticism of a proposed loan guarantee program for launch companies, complicated efforts to suspend House rules and fast-track the bill to a vote by the full House.

What's more, two unions - the American Federation of Government Workers and the International Federation of Professional and Technical Engineers - came out with a jointly written letter that sharply criticized the House bill for its "many serious shortfalls." They urged lawmakers not to try pushing it through. Meanwhile, on the other side of the debate, the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers sent a letter strongly supportive of the House bill. The Machinist union's website also referred to an independent report that raised questions about the Obama administration's space commercialization initiative.

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http://cosmiclog.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2010/07/30/4786870-space-showdown-sidetracked
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nykym Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-02-10 12:11 PM
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1. One thing troubles me,
"Obama administration's request for $6 billion over five years to support the development of private-sector spaceships capable of bringing crew to the International Space Station".

Here we have yet another privatization scheme, and we all know what corporations like best, a nice fat bottom line. would we be wise to let the private sector ferry our astronauts to the space station? I realize they make the components for NASA but it is NASA that puts these things together and tests them. It just makes me feel uneasy.
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Recursion Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-02-10 12:15 PM
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2. It's been a nerd dream for years
Regular commercial flights to space. Affordable space tourism is the next step. The idea (keep in mind this plan has been in the works since the 70s) is that NASA has done the basic research of getting into low orbit: now that they've done that, the private sector can do it which will free up NASA to think about bigger trips (in theory we're still aiming for Mars in 2030).
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