NASA’s “Wartime” Reasoning

Some thoughts on one-way “missions” from Ed Wright:

The settlement of Mars (and space, in general) will entail a large number of one-way missions, by definition. Settling a new territory means people setting out on one-way trips, building new homes, and creating new lives for themselves in a new land.

Space settlement will not be accomplished as a “national objective.” If NASA tries, it will fail. History provides a useful comparison. Spain set out to colonize the New World as a national objective, under the direction and control of the Spanish Crown. Great Britain took a laissez faire approach to colonization, granting charters to private groups such as the Virginia and Plymouth companies. Spain controlled the most desirable portions of the New World, with most of the resources and milder climate. Yet, it was North America, under British control, that prospered, while the centrally planned Spanish colonies remained backward.

Colonel Behnken is correct in saying that NASA cannot undertake arduous missions except in pursuit of a national objective. NASA is the product of intelligent design. Its creators, Eisenhower and Kennedy, put that into their their DNA. But not everyone has that limitation. While NASA may play a role in space settlement, it will not play the primary role.

As I write in the book:

Unfortunately, when it comes to space, Congress has been pretty much indifferent to missions, or mission success, or “getting the job done.” Its focus remains on “safety,” and in this regard, price is no object. In fact, if one really believes that the reason for Ares/Orion was safety, and the program was expected to cost several tens of billions, and it would fly (perhaps) a dozen astronauts per year, then rather than the suggested value of fifty million dollars for the life of an astronaut, NASA was implicitly pricing an astronaut’s life to be in the range of a billion dollars.

As another example, if it were really important to get someone to Mars, we’d be considering one-way trips, which cost much less, and for which there would be no shortage of volunteers. It wouldn’t have to be a suicide mission—one could take along equipment to grow food, and live off the land. But it would be very high risk, and perhaps as high or higher than the early American
settlements, such as Roanoke and Jamestown. But one never hears serious discussion of such issues, at least in the halls of Congress, which is a good indication that we are not serious about exploring, developing, or settling space, and any pretense at seriousness ends once the sole-source cost-plus contracts have been awarded to the favored contractors of the big rockets.

For these reasons, I personally think it unlikely that the federal government will be sending humans anywhere beyond LEO any time soon. But I do think that there is a reasonable prospect for
private actors to do so — Elon Musk has stated multiple times that this is the goal of SpaceX, and why he founded the company. In fact, he recently announced his plans to send 80,000 people to
Mars to establish a settlement, within a couple decades, at a cost of half a million per ticket.

And this lack of seriousness is why we so obsess about safety.

6 thoughts on “NASA’s “Wartime” Reasoning”

  1. An astronaut may have a value of a billion dollars or close to it when training, salary, and suvivor benefits are factored.

  2. First Ed needs to learn a bit more about Spanish America, as does Rand. Until the decline of Spain in the late 1700’s Spanish America was far richer and more successful than the English settlements. It was the latter which would have been viewed as backward. Why do you think the pirates, mostly English or French, raided Spanish merchant ships and not the other way around? Because the exports of Spanish America were far more valuable than the cod, tar and tobacco the English colonies were shipping out. Why do you think the Spanish Piece of Eight was a basic currency used in the English colonies up to independence? It was only after the Spanish colonies gain independence in the early 1800’s that the decline started for many of them.

    What Ed is also missing is that the motive that drives individuals on one-way trips is the belief that the destination is better than the home they leave behind. Most settlers were running from something as much as running to some place. Those going just for novelty sake, as is apparently the case for many wanting to go on one way flights to Mars, rarely end up staying after the novelty wears off. Captain Smith didn’t stay in the New World after the novelty wore off while John Fremont (“the pathfinder”) spent his later years in the Hudson Valley far from the western frontier.

    So the real question is how many of those now wanting to go to Mars for a one-way trip will, after spending a year or so living in a small habitat eating the same veggies day after day, looking at the same blasted red mountain day after day and fighting the constant dust will decide that maybe it wasn’t such a good idea after all. It will be interesting to see how fast the novelty of living on Mars wears off, IF, any of the private firms raise the money needed for such Mars ventures.

    If space settlement is to be sustainable it must be built solidly on economics, not wishing thinking or adventure seekers. That is what Ed and the others Mars advocates are missing.

    1. As usual you duck the key questions. Space settlement won’t advance until space advocates stop believing in the myths from the old TV movies and start researching and understanding the economics of settlement and understand the reality of “how the West was won”.

      1. Let’s be very quiet. If we don’t respond to the Troll, we can have fun watching his head explode when he realizes no one wants to play with him. 🙂

  3. Slightly OT but you may find this Ted Talk from Mike Rowe interesting. He speaks about workplace safety and the war on work. Key quote, “It’s not my job to get you home alive. My job is to get you home rich.”

    Space settlement wont work if everyone is a scientist or researcher.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IRVdiHu1VCc

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