Date: June 28, 2006 10:53:59 PM PDT
Subject: Fwd: NASA Black-Budget Research
The Associated Press reported in 2000 that NASA "made a half-billion
dollar "bookkeeping error" in its 1999 financial report.
A congressman is demanding an explanation from the agency.
'I'm deeply disappointed that the agency that could send a man to the moon
now can't even balance its books to the nearest half-billion,' Rep. F. James
Sensenbrenner Jr., chairman of the House Science Committee, said....
The error was overlooked by both NASA's financial office and the Arthur
Andersen independent accounting firm.
Date: June 25, 2006 11:38:10 AM PDT
To: undisclosed-recipients:;
Subject: [Fw: Dan Goldin, NASA's Creature from the Black Vault, Part Two]
Daniel Goldin: NASA's Creature from the Black Vault, Part Two:
Orwell in Space
By Alex Constantine
The leap from TRW in Redondo Beach to Cleveland's N.A.S.A. Glenn Research Center wasn't easy for Dan Goldin. "I came out of the black (budget) world,'' he explained in 1999. "I never dealt with the public like I did (at N.A.S.A.). Whenever I had meetings, it was in private rooms, in special buildings.''[1] But he came out of the "black" closet (and closed the door rather firmly behind). N.A.S.A.'s website notes that Goldin began his career in Cleveland back in 1962, and worked on electric propulsion systems for "human interplanetary travel" back when the facility was known as the Lewis Center.[2]
TRW tested its high-powered electronic propulsion system at Edwards Air Force Base on March 15, 1999. An Air Force release explained that the experimental drive "was based on high-powered electric propulsion provided by a 26 kilowatt ammonia fueled arcjet." This was was "an effort by the Air Force Research Laboratory’s Propulsion Directorate to demonstrate its use in space, and evaluate performance and interactions with other experiments and spacecraft systems. The prime contractor for the experiment was TRW. "They incorporated the electric propulsion expertise of their subcontractor, Primex Aerospace Company of Redmond, WA. The experimental propulsion system is part of the payload of a DoD space test program scientific satellite called Advanced Research and Global Observation Satellite, or ARGOS, built by Boeing."[3]
ARGOS weighed three tons. It was billed as the most advanced "R&D satellite" ever launched by the U.S. Air Force. It ran ion propulsion, space dust and high-temperature semiconductor experiments, was outfitted with ionospheric instruments and the Naval Research Lab’s hard x-ray detectors for binary star timing observations. Loaded for bear.
It was, however, a long-delayed project -- ARGOS finally made it into orbit on the ELEVENTH LAUNCH ATTEMPT.[4] And the Buck Rogers arcjet propulsion system wasn't used for interplanetary travel. It wasn't even really intended primarily for scientific research and development, as advertised. "ARGOS," SpaceWarn Bulletin, published by N.A.S.A.'s National Space Science Data Center, stated flatly, "is an American military spacecraft."[5]
There is a trove of state secrets tucked away in Dan Goldin's hippocampus and that's where they stay, as the Jewish Journal's Mark Arnold found in a 2001 interview:
JJ. "What about Israel. Have you been involved there?"
DG: "I’ve been very engaged with the development of the technology program in Israel. I feel very good about the relationships I’ve made there. I've met with all the leaders at one time or another: Sharon, Barak, Netanyahu, Ezer Weizman. I had relationships with Israel before I went to N.A.S.A. and strengthened them there."
JJ: "You helped with their space program and their astronaut program, didn’t you?"
DG: "I’d rather not talk about that...."
He gave the world Orwellian advancements:
"N.A.S.A. develops 'mind-reading' system"
"A computer program which can read silently spoken words by analysing nerve signals in our mouths and throats, has been developed by NASA ..."[6]
The organization's research manager Herb Schlickenmaier explained to the press that the mind-reading machines weren't ready for widespread use. He just want Northwest Airlines to test them. "There are baby steps for us to walk through before we can make any pronouncements," he said.[7] Thus, it is that the phrases "biometric access" and "neural control" have entered the Homeland Security section of the American lexicon.[8]
Scientists behind the black curtain, in their own "private rooms" and "special buildings," were busy with the "alternative" bio-engineering experiments that enthralled Goldin.
And, mysteriously, scientists involved in classified N.A.S.A. projects around the world were dropping like flies...
There was a collective sigh of relief when Goldin left the space agency. Todd Halvorson, Cape Canaveral Bureau Chief for Florida Today, wrote in November
2001, "N.A.S.A. Administrator Daniel Goldin has dominated the U.S. civil space program for nearly a decade, ruling the nation's space agency with an iron fist." He was "a figure both revered and reviled within U.S. aerospace circles....
"For Goldin, life after N.A.S.A. will start with the non-profit Council on Competitiveness, a think tank created in 1986 to foster technological innovation and
workforce development while benchmarking the performance of the U.S. economy against those of other nations."[9]
Dan Goldin didn't exactly put his best foot forward handling his own share of the economy, however. The Associated Press reported in 2000 that N.A.S.A. "made a
$590 million bookkeeping error in its 1999 financial report and a congressman is demanding an explanation from the agency. 'I'm deeply disappointed that the
agency that could send a man to the moon now can't even balance its books to the nearest half-billion,' Rep. F. James Sensenbrenner Jr., chairman of the House
Science Committee, said in a statement Thursday.... The error was overlooked by both N.A.S.A.'s financial office and the Arthur Andersen independent accounting
firm."
Sensenbrenner said, "significant management problems continue to bedevil N.A.S.A."[10]
[TO BE CONTINUED]
-------------
NOTES:
1) Brett Davis, "NASA chief is credited with reviving Cold War agency," Newhouse News Service, November 14, 1999.
2) "Daniel Saul Goldin," N.A.S.A. Administrator, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, April 1, 1992~November 17, 2001
3) U.S. Air Force press release, "NEW SPACE PROPULSION SYSTEM FIRED," March 17, 1999
4) ARGOS (Advanced Research and Global Observation Satellite),
5) SPACEWARN Bulletin Number 544, March 1, 1999.
6) Maggie McKee, "NASA develops 'mind-reading' system," NewScientist.com, March 22, 2004.
Also see:
Schlickenmaier is the director of programs and policy integration for N.A.S.A.'s Headquarters Office of Aerospace Technology. "He is responsible for
establishing program policy for the Aerospace Technology Enterprise consisting of program formulation, program coordination and integration, as well as assessing the progress of programs against plans across the Aerospace Technology Enterprise. He is also responsible for establishing policy and standards with the Aeronautics Technology, Innovative Technology Transfer Partnerships, Mission and Science Measurement, and Space Launch Initiative Themes and their associated programs. In 1996, Mr. Schlickenmaier was selected to serve on the White House Commission on Aviation Safety and Security, and was responsible for aviation safety and advanced air traffic technology activities on the Commission staff."
8) William J. Lawson, Ph.D., Ruby Ann M. Lawson, ”Biometrics I.D. Issued to 4 Million Military,” Washington Post Online, October 29, 2001.
9) Todd Halvorson, "Dan Goldin Faces Life After NASA," Florida Today, November 16, 2001.
10) Anon., "Oops! Congressman Says NASA Made $590 Million Bookkeeping Error," AP, July 6, 2000.
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