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« Leftist Groups Decry NASA Demonization | Main | If It Doesn't Work, Do More Of It »

Still Missing The Point

Over in the comments section of this post by Dan over at Happy Fun Pundit, Porphyrogenitus writes:

I do think that there will be a viable private space industry eventually. But the costs will have to go down first.

This is one of the many bits of conventional wisdom about space that is wrong, and continues to hold us back. It confuses cause and effect, and betrays a misunderstanding of why the cost of launch is high.

For many fundamental, institutional reasons, costs will never go down as long as the government is in charge. Low cost will only result from the entry of private enterprise.

This kind of thinking assumes that launch costs are high because we don't have the right "technology." This is a mistaken belief. They're high because the market is too small, and there's no competition. There's only one solution for that, and it's not development of another launch system by NASA.

Posted by Rand Simberg at February 05, 2003 10:48 AM
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Dan is also probably waiting for someone to show up at his door saying, "I'm from the government, and I'm here to help."

Posted by Steve at February 5, 2003 11:08 AM

In their own way, people who make statements like that are like those say we have to keep inspecting Iraq forever until something turns up. Or like those that say that we can't permit genitically modified food to be marketed until we are absolutely sure its absolutely safe for everyone.

(Then again, they are often the same people, aren't they? Wonder why that is...)

Posted by Raoul Ortega at February 5, 2003 01:50 PM

The precautionary principle has permeated the populace.

Posted by Kevin McGehee at February 6, 2003 04:53 AM


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