Bill,

You put it very well. I've couldn't have said it better myself. ;)

Marc Sims
Data Technician I
Administrative Technology Services
Prince George's Community College
301 Largo Rd. Largo, MD. 20774
Largo, MD 20774-2199
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] Thursday, August 11, 2005 >>>
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Helen Gordon" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, August 09, 2005 10:31 AM
Subject: Re: OT: Discovery is home

> I need to know what they did. A space walk to remove a piece of foam from
> the undercarriage? Oh well.... maybe it was worth the $100,000,000.00 they 
> spent for the shot.
>

Aside from anything else, consider that there are some 300,000,000 people in 
the US; that works out to about 33-cents each for this little safari. When I 
compare that to some of the other wondrous projects my tax dollars go for, it 
just seems like a helluva good deal to me.

Additionally, when one considers multiple aspects of space 
exploration/utilization, a better appreciation can be had in regard to what has 
been realized in less than 50 years. (Yes, it is STILL less than 50 years since 
the first man-made object was lofted into space in the autumn of 1957!) 
Virtually all major expansions of the human race have been accompanied by fits 
and starts, 2 steps forward and 1 step back, trying one thing and if it doesn't 
work, try something else, etc. Exploration is, essentially by definition, 
"going where no man has gone before," and there is, again by definition, no 
roadmap of how to get there. I could write reams on this subject, but it has 
already been done by many with more talent in that direction than I have.

As to the benefits of the "space program" in general, I may have a parochial 
view, since I (as well as almost everyone else in the US and much of the world, 
whether they know it or not) reap those benefits many times per day. As I type 
this, I am living in (to me) much desired relative solitude, at the end of the 
proverbial "15 miles of bad road," but my internet connection is pretty darn 
speedy, and makes use of a geosynchronous satellite located over the equator at 
95 West longitude.  I enjoy some 200 channels of digital quality TV and music, 
and have essentially real-time high quality video and audio feeds of events 
from around the world.

You don't need satellite since you have cable? How do you think your cable 
provider gets his programming? Every hear of the Global Positioning System 
(GPS)? That is possible because, you guessed it, we have multiple satellites in 
orbit providing the signals needed to tell you how to get to the nearest 
McDonalds... Use your credit card for purchases at Wal*Mart, your local gas 
station, or a multitude of other retail outlets? Odds are pretty good that the 
authorization was handled via satellite.

I will not further belabor this, but will say that, in my opinion, if all man's 
presence in space were suddenly removed, civilization as we now know it would 
by totally disrupted. A pretty well spent 33-cents! </soapbox>

"Ad astra!"

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