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- <text id=93TT2247>
- <title>
- Dec. 20, 1993: NASA:Space Concierge
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Dec. 20, 1993 Enough! The War Over Handguns
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ESSAY, Page 76
- NASA: Space Concierge
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Charles Krauthammer
- </p>
- <p> Perhaps now the astronomers and other "pure" scientists will
- stop whining about how manned space flight is stealing all the
- money from real science. Why? Because last week man--that
- clunky, bulky, heaving, breathing space lunk--saved Hubble.
- And Hubble, the $1.6 billion orbiting telescope, is the kind
- of robot observer that scientists like to claim is the real
- way to explore space, far better than the clumsy Spam-in-a-can
- bipeds we periodically and extravagantly hurl into orbit. Well,
- now that man has done this for the robots, it is time for the
- robots and their human advocates to shut up, for at least a
- week or two, about the waste and expense of manned space exploration.
- </p>
- <p> The Endeavour shuttle astronauts performed the most complicated
- space repair ever attempted. And doing so, they proved at last
- that man (meaning men and women, of course; please don't write)
- can do real work in space, and do it efficiently. They not only
- saved Hubble. They saved NASA, which with failures stretching
- back to Challenger has rapidly been losing public favor and
- political support. Just as it was coming to be seen as yet another
- wasteful government bureaucracy, NASA does the Hubble rescue
- and shows that man in space can be useful.
- </p>
- <p> This, of course, is the rationale for NASA's next great project,
- the space station, a place where wonderful new chemicals, cures
- and gizmos yet undreamed of are to be produced. And for those
- still justifiably skeptical about these claims, the Hubble repair
- provides yet another role for man in space: concierge. Who,
- after all, will service our huge earth-serving space infrastructure,
- the satellites that bring us Beavis and Butt-head, that allow
- weathermen to guess wildly a full seven days into the future,
- that can rattle the pocket pagers of every Rogaine salesman
- in the country? Who will service these vital underpinnings of
- Western civilization? Man, says NASA.
- </p>
- <p> It is something of a pity that appliance repair is the way to
- justify man in space these days. Thirty years ago, when all
- this was starting, the model for manned flight was not Art Carney
- in the sewer but Vasco da Gama rounding the Cape. Long ago,
- public support for space exploration had two parts. First, a
- spirit of competition. It was sport--war by other means--writ large, very large: an international race to the moon, by
- God.
- </p>
- <p> But it was more than sport. It was romance. It meant meeting
- our destiny. Today it means little more than physical displacement.
- Compare the films of the early space age with the sci-fi of
- today. Compare 2001 with Robocop, Close Encounters with The
- Terminator. Compare John Kennedy's thrilling pledge to race
- to the moon with...what? No politician talks that way anymore.
- The new frontier is not the moon. It's HMOs.
- </p>
- <p> Today no one would give Kennedy's speech, and, if given, no
- one would believe it. It is 30 years later, and we are weighed
- down by cynicism about government, worries about our economy,
- deep anxieties about a level of social breakdown we could not
- have imagined in 1961. True, in the '60s too we had our scolds
- who told us that money spent on the moon was better spent on
- this or that program here on Earth. But in a more expansive
- time, people ignored those with the souls of accountants who
- knew nothing of national adventure.
- </p>
- <p> Today those who believe that government's role is not bankrolling
- wonder but fixing bridges are in the majority. There is no constituency
- for romance.
- </p>
- <p> Perhaps this is the way of all exploration. In rosy retrospect,
- we tend to see the great 15th and 16th century Spanish and Portuguese
- explorers as seekers of destiny. They were not. Generally they
- were seekers of a quick way to the riches of Asia. They were
- after gold and silk--gathering slaves and manufacturing Christians
- along the way--not romance. Certainly not romance for its
- own sake. Perhaps we should not be too dismayed to find ourselves
- 500 years later pushing the envelope for the same reasons, mundane
- but politically viable, of commerce and convenience.
- </p>
- <p> Still, it is hard to understand how this can be. It is hard
- to understand how people can live in this age and not thrill
- to the idea of manned exploration. What, after all, will the
- 20th century be remembered for? Its music, its philosophy, its
- art pale in comparison with that of centuries past. The 20th
- century will be remembered for three things: its perfection
- of genocide, its discovery of nuclear terror, and its invention
- of flight. We will be remembered as the people who went from
- Kitty Hawk to the moon in 66 years.
- </p>
- <p> And spent the next 25 on maintenance. Yes, we need the shuttle.
- We need the space station. We need to fix satellites and measure
- ozone or whatever. But we also need to roam. It is time to return
- to the moon. And then on to Mars. Why? Might as well ask why
- Sir Richard Burton searched for the source of the Nile.
- </p>
- <p> The Hubble mission was a great success. But sometime soon, some
- spacewalking astronaut is going to crash into some billion-dollar
- mirror, and the cry will go up again: Why the clunky, bulky
- bipeds? Why not robots?
- </p>
- <p> Because robots can fix, but they cannot dream. Upon rounding
- the moon and apprehending the earth, they are not moved to recite
- Genesis. It may be politically shrewd, but it is perilous to
- sell manned exploration on grounds of efficiency alone. In the
- end, man is clunky. But he sings.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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