Category Archives: Political Commentary

Welcome Back, Carter

Will Collier says it’s looking like 1979 all over again:

The fantasy that “moderates” within the mullah regime can be coaxed into a “grand bargain” has taken in better men than Barack Obama, but Obama doesn’t even have the excuse of not being aware of that prior history. The level of self-loathing an American has to possess to believe that the Khomeinists are a brutal, terror-supporting regime entirely because the US hasn’t been nice enough to them is pretty staggering.

Khoemeini and his heirs were and are brutal fanatics. Period, dot. They have subjugated and terrorized their own people and done their level best to kill ours for thirty years because that’s what they are and that’s what they do. The devil didn’t make them do it. There’s nothing you or I or Jimmy Carter or George W. Bush or Barack Obama ever could have said that would have changed them. The idea that we’d burn some kind of bridge with Ahmadinejad and the ayatollahs behind him is laughable–those guys are never going to be anything other than hostile to us, and Obama ought to be realistic enough to understand as much.

Unfortunately, Obama spent far too much time marinating in Leftoid academia, and invested too much of his political persona in the self-aggrandizing mantra, “Everybody hates us because of Bush” to be able to comprehend the significance of what’s going on in Iran right now. It’s not about us…

…I’ve meet a lot of Eastern Europeans who have pictures of Ronald Reagan on their mantles. They never forgot the way he stood up for them, in public, against the commissars. Iran’s population is going to run off the mullahs one of these years, hopefully this year. When that happens, what do you want them to remember, that we were supporting them, or worrying about what their oppressors would think about it?

I hope that they remember that a lot of us did support them, even if the dictator coddler in the White House doesn’t.

[Update mid morning]

The ongoing saga of the “liberal” reactionaries:

I’m confused. Back when I identified as a liberal, democracy promotion was very much what we stood for. We would have done anything to get rid of the likes of Pinochet and Somoza. When Pinochet was up against it in Chile, every liberal I knew was jumping for joy, cheering on Salvador Allende. Why not the Iranian demonstrators against Ahmadinejad and the mullahs who, in many ways, are worse even than Pinochet? The Chilean dictator didn’t oppress women and gays to anywhere near the extent of the Islamists. He also wasn’t building a nuclear weapon and denying the Holocaust. Is everything standing on its head? What’s going on here? Left is right. Right is left. Liberal is… reactionary?

You’d almost think he has no real interest in either freedom or democracy.

The Problem With Ahmedinejad

He’s a right winger. But he’s not as bad as Sarah Palin, because at least he likes to spread the wealth around, like the president.

It’s astounding (or should be) that Yglesias actually gets paid for such lunacy.

[Update a couple minutes later]

This seems relevant, somehow: the left’s romance with Islamism.

[Another quick update]

Obama and the media misinterpret the Middle Eastern elections:

Thomas Friedman at the New York Times quoted Paul Salem, the starry-eyed analyst at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. “People in this region have become so jaded,” Salem explained. “And then here came this man [Obama], who came to them with respect, speaking these deep values about their identity and dignity … and this person indicated that this little prison that people are living in here was not the whole world. That change was possible.”

These misperceptions about Lebanon recall an old Arab proverb: “When shooting an arrow of truth, dip its point in honey.” Leg-tingling about the president aside, Hezbollah lost the election in Lebanon for several reasons; chief not among them was Obama’s amoral speechifying in Egypt.

But the leg tingling continues.

[Wednesday morning update]

More thoughts from Lileks:

Note how “cultural conservative” becomes conceptually elongated, so “right-wingers” who may, for example, not wish to redefine marriage become bunkmates with someone who denies the existence of homosexuals, and whose regime hangs them from lampposts. Well, we know the right-wingers here would, if they could, right? It’s only the possibility of bad PR that keeps Dick Cheney from setting his daughter on fire. As for demagogic nationalism, one suspects that Yglesias finds demagogy in anyone who talks about love of country and the great things America has done without landing with both feet on a big wet BUT, and then goes on read the syllabus from a Howard Zinn course.

I didn’t love America any less in the Clinton years than I did in the Bush years, or vice versa; I don’t conflate my opinions about transitory leaders with my opinion about the nation’s role in history and its exceptional, if occasionally improvised, conflicted, and compromised struggle to do the right thing. I mean, go back in history and find another one of us. (Note: small ethnically coherent Nordic states that can’t project power six feet over the border really don’t count.) But unqualified love of country unnerves some people, as though the lack of qualifications means you don’t recognize qualifying factors. Me, I think they’re obvious; we’re made of humans, after all, and every house we build has beams of crooked timber. But I don’t recall a lot of FDR speeches laying out a litany of American sins in order to bolster the case for why America should fight Hitler, despite all those troubling similarities. After all, we lynched Jews, too, ergo we must face our own demons as well as those abroad. And so on.

It’s interesting how he mentions Ahmadinejad’s demogogy, his “language of class resentment, painting his more pragmatic and reformist opponents as decadent elites out of touch with ordinary people,” and his populist use of oil revenues, and Sarah Palin comes to mind instead of Chavez – who, after all, called Ahamdi to tender a warm congrats. I swear, it’s the heels. They just make some men feel so small. In any case, when she gives a speech at the UN and later describes how she felt herself enveloped in a godly glow, give me a call.

It’s interesting that when it comes to fascism and communism, leftists can see only the difference, but when it comes to “conservatives,” they can see only similarities (and often imagined similarities).

[Bumped]

[Update a few minutes later]

Yglesias has a tingle up his leg: “Ahmadinejad has a pretty sweet hipster style.”

A Conversation With Senator Coburn

A man after my heart:

While many have been critical of the stimulus because the it hasn’t been spent quickly enough to have the intended economic effect, Coburn urges caution. “The key point I would make is that speed isn’t near as important as accuracy,” Coburn said regarding preventing future stimulus waste. “I think we’ve had way too much speed and not enough accuracy in terms of where we’re spending the money. I understand the rush to get it out to stem the tide of the recession, but this is a five-year bill anyway.”

Finally, Coburn is adamant that the feedback from taxpayers is such that federal spending priorities need to be watched closely. “The mood in the country is ‘You’re spending money on things you don’t need. Stop it. You’re overstepping the bounds of the federal government. Stop it. You’re borrowing our children into the poorhouse. Stop it,'” he said.

Yes. Stop it.

Including health-care deform.

And it would sure be nice to get a conversation going about the proper role of the federal government.

A Reason To Have Voted For McCain

He says scrap the health-care bill. While his idea of taking away employer deductibility and giving individuals a tax credit wasn’t an ideal solution, it would be a hell of a lot better than what Obama wants to do. A key element of any useful reform is to level the tax playing field between individual and employer-provided plans, and get more people to shop for themselves, instead of making it part of an employment package.

The Agenda

The agenda for tomorrow’s first meeting of the Augustine commission has been posted. Clark Lindsey has it over at Space Transport News. I found this interesting:

3:30 pm – Alternative Architectures
DIRECT
Shuttle Side-mount Options

I understand that they have limited time for this first meeting, but I hope those aren’t the only alternatives they consider.

[Update a few minutes later]

The “alternate architectures” described above are alternate launch architectures. They need to broaden their thinking to alternate exploration architectures.

Rich Gov, Poor Gov

Why Barack Obama can’t fix the economy:

Last night, as I reread Robert Kiyosaki’s 1997 Bestseller Rich Dad Poor Dad, I realized why Barack Obama will be unable to do what is necessary to fix America’s economy. It’s not just that he believes in government intervention in business, although that’s a big part of it. But what makes it even worse is that President Obama is Poor Dad.

Read all.

The Mysteries Deepen

There’s a lot to chew on in this Av Week article about costs of EELV versus Ares I:

A NASA-funded study found that a human-rated Delta IV heavy rocket could be a cheaper route to the International Space Station than NASA’s Ares I crew launch vehicle.

But the human-rated United Launch Alliance rocket would be less expensive only if the Ares V heavy-lift moon rocket development is deferred, the Aerospace Corp. study reports. And the Delta IV alternative could add two years or more to the “gap” in U.S. human access to orbit if it starts this year, according to the unreleased study obtained by Aviation Week.

I understand that Ares I was supposed to be a “down payment” on Ares V, and that if Ares I isn’t developed, but Ares V is on schedule, then Ares V has to absorb the development costs of those Ares I components that would have been book kept under it, thus increasing Ares V development costs. So it sort of makes sense that it will cost more overall if the money that would have gone into Ares I instead goes into “human rating” Delta IV, while much of the Ares I development costs would have to be paid in addition, with no Ares I for the money. I understand the theory. I think it’s bogus, of course, but it’s hard to know without (as usual) seeing the study assumptions.

Many observers, including me, find ludicrous the notion that a new rocket development could be ready sooner than “human rating” (I’m going to continue to use quotes on the phrase, because it’s meaningless, or means whatever NASA wants it to mean to justify whatever they want to do on a given day) an existing, reliable, insurable vehicle that already carries payloads worth hundreds of millions of dollars.

Ordered by Richard Gilbrech, the former associate administrator for exploration, the $500,000 study evaluated six different versions of the Delta IV heavy as an alternate to the Ares I, which NASA is developing in-house based on the solid-fuel first stage space shuttle boosters, the shuttle external tank, and the J-2 engine used in the upper stages of the Saturn V.

So, they spent about two and a half man years on the study. I wonder where they got the data for it? Presumably, they got Ares I data from NASA (wonder how much that was fudged?) and went to Boeing for the Delta data, as well as Rocketdyne for the engine numbers.

The study did not address the other U.S. Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicle (EELV) – a heavy-lift version of the Atlas V – because of “no clear advantages and several disadvantages,” including the difficulty in obtaining human-rating data on its Russian RD-180 engines.

Again with the “human-rating” mysticism. There is no such thing as a “human-rated” rocket engine. To the degree that “human rating” exists at all, it is a function of integrated system design, not individual systems.

Are they saying that they don’t understand the engine reliability? Or what? Again, this is a rocket that has an excellent record, with no in-flight engine failures of which I’m aware, and certainly none of a nature that would have prevented a safe abort. And as for whether or not they are “Russian,” Aerojet could establish domestic production fairly quickly any time the Air Force (or NASA) decided that was necessary, and were willing to pay for it.

And Atlas has better upper-stage performance than Delta (though probably one of the reasons that they looked at various new Delta configurations was to address the issue of the underpowered upper stage that was a concern during OSP). But if we want to have a robust transportation system for humans as well as cargo, it would make a lot of sense to invest enough to make Orion (or whatever) capable of launching on either vehicle. And I continue to believe, until I see a credible study with assumptions that indicates otherwise, that it would be cheaper to modify both EELVs to carry a capsule than to continue to move forward with Ares.

Now here’s where the numbers start to make no sense:

For the Delta IV heavy using a modified J-2X upper stage engine, the study found no real cost savings over the Ares I. But for the version using four RL-10s, Aerospace Corp. estimated design, development, test and evaluation would come in at about $2 billion less in fiscal 2009 dollars than the Ares I projections. Life-cycle costs for 14 flights of that version of the Delta to low Earth orbit would be about $16 billion, $3 billion less than Ares I in today’s dollars, the study found.

Obviously, since the J-2X is (despite its name) essentially a new engine, it will cost more than using RL-10s. But I don’t understand what they could be doing to the Delta that would cost as much as testing and resolving vibration and other issues with what’s essentially a new SRB first-stage for the Ares. It also seems to me that the Delta upper stage is simpler, because it doesn’t have to provide roll control for the entire stack, as the Ares upper stage does. Furthermore, I wonder if they assumed the same Launch Abort System for both vehicles, when the requirements for that of Ares are much more stringent, resulting in a much heavier and more complex system?

But the most amazing thing in this paragraph is an estimate of the “life cycle costs.”

In March, the GAO had an estimate of development costs alone for Ares I of $20B. So how can the total life cycle costs of fourteen flights be less than that? LCC would include not only development costs, but the fixed costs of operating over however many years those flights occur, and the marginal cost of the hardware for fourteen ships. If we assume four flights a year, that’s three and a half years of operations, for a dedicated pad that can’t be charged off to anything else. If the fixed costs are only a billion dollars a year, that adds three and half billion to the twenty. If the hardware costs only a hundred million per flight (I’m being very generous here, I suspect it will be higher) that adds another billion and a half, so we have an LCC up to twenty-five billion now (and a cost per flight of over a billion and a half each, or more than half as much again as a Shuttle flight — what a bargain). A lower flight rate would, of course, cost even more due to the extension of fixed costs into the out years.

On the other hand, we aren’t told what the “development costs” are for the Delta mods, but I would presume that it would continue to use the same pad that it currently does, which is shared with cargo flights, so fixed costs attributable to the crewed flights would be much less (though there might be some costs assigned from VAB ops in both cases).

Bottom line is that I find it hard to believe that the “life cycle cost” numbers are anywhere as close as indicated here.

Now, the last question is how it could possibly take longer to modify a Delta than to develop a new launcher. “Rocket Man” has a theory:

It was not surprising today, then, that Av Week would be handed a still unreleased report on the viability of EELVs to replace the mis-begotten Stick. Sure an EELV can do the job. And it can do the job less expensively. But guess what? It would take seven years to remake the rocket in human-rated form. Come again?

An already 8 for 9 rocket that carries multi-billion dollar satellites to orbit, has no problem getting insurance today. The design, development, and test phase has been paid for. Walk into your favorite EELV store and offer to buy several dozen and watch the prices fall.

But where to set the bar for human rating? If you are trying to get a new rocket built, and you’re paying for the study, you set the bar obnoxiously high. Only then can a real rocket fall behind in the race with a paper rocket. Without getting into the tit-for-tat arguments that the Italian Waiter’s minions are well studied for, there is only one more thing that our “risk is our middle name” astronauts would like to see over their heads at lift-off.

A reliable launch abort system.

And if a new one of those is going to take seven years to develop, shouldn’t we get someone else to take over the job from the current contractors?

(For the uninitiated, this blogger uses a lot of metaphors — Italian Waiter, for reasons unclear to me, is MSFC’s Ares manager, Steve Cook.)

Sounds right to me (and of course, as Bobby Block points out over at the Orlando Sentinel, this report is already obsolete, since it’s becoming accepted that Ares I won’t make its 2015 date anyway, which means that even if it really takes seven years to get a Delta ready to fly, it still doesn’t really increase the gap).

And this also ignores, as noted above the fact that a Delta LAS might be quite a bit less of a development risk than the one for Ares. It all depends on the requirements. And the assumptions. Something that we continue to not be allowed to see.

[Update a couple minutes later]

Oh, and as for Ares V being deferred? It’s already happening. Hopefully forever.

[Update a few minutes later]

Clark Lindsey wonders what ULA will do. I agree that now that Griffin is gone, the risk of Lockmart losing Orion out of political spite is much reduced. Boeing and ATK stand to lose the most if Ares goes down, but if there are Delta upgrades to be done, Boeing would benefit (and the jobs would be mostly in Huntsville, I’d guess).

[Update mid afternoon]

Clark Lindsey has further thoughts.

Fish, Or Fowl?

So Pete Siebold got the first type rating for White Knight Two.

OK, what does that mean? It implies to me that it’s an airplane. But it’s not going to be certified as an aircraft by AVR. So what does it mean to have a type rating for it?

I had a (semi) heated discussion with Will Whitehorn about this subject at the ISDC, over beers. I asked him how he can take passengers for weightless training in WK2 if he’s not getting certified under Part 25 (or whatever). His claim (and I’m not doubting his claim) is that George Nield has confirmed to him that all flights of WK2, with or without SS2, will be regulated by AST, and not AVR, because it’s part of a suborbital system. Thus, if AST deems that the training is necessary for passenger safety, they will be allowed to provide it on WK2, even without carrying the spacecraft itself.

Now, I could see them getting the thing an airworthiness certificate (from AVR) and then flying people in the plane as an experimental aircraft, with permission from the local FSDO, using the flight training exemption, which is what we used to do for weightless flights in the T-39 back in the early nineties. What I still don’t understand, regardless of how vehemently Will insists on it, is how AST can regulate an airplane, not engaged in suborbital flight. “Suborbital” flights were carefully defined in the legislation a few years ago (“thrust exceeding lift for significant portion of flight”), and a WK2 flight sans SS2 (i.e., it is no longer part of a suborbital system) whose thrust never exceeds its lift except briefly during take off, simply does not satisfy the criterion.

As I told Will then, expect a turf battle to crop up within the FAA once they start to actually fly passengers in the thing. I could be wrong, but can’t see AVR letting AST get away with it, and I think they’ll have the law on their side.

[Update a couple minutes later]

Another thought. Will the vehicle have an N number on the tail? If so, who will issue it?

[Update a couple minutes later]

D’oh!

I misread the post. He got a type rating for SS2. That raises different questions. Is AST now in the business of providing type ratings? Because SS2 is clearly a suborbital vehicle, and within their purview.

And is Siebold “type rated” for WK2, or is merely the “pilot”? Which was the original question. And the tail number question remains, for both vehicles. At least for SS2, since “N” designates US, how about an “NS” number, to indicate that it’s a space vehicle and to allow AST to maintain its own data base that wouldn’t interfere with AVR’s?

[Update early evening]

Double d’oh! I read it right the first time, as Ed Wright points out.