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posted by janrinok on Monday January 13 2020, @10:07AM   Printer-friendly
from the let's-hear-it-for-the-girls dept.

Arthur T Knackerbracket has found the following story:

After completing more than two years of basic training, the six women and seven men were chosen from a record-breaking 18,000 applicants representing a wide variety of backgrounds and specialties, from experienced pilots to scientists, engineers and doctors.

The group includes two candidates from the Canadian Space Agency (CSA), which has participated in a joint training program with the US since 1983. "They are the best of the best: they are highly qualified and very diverse, and they represent all of America," said NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine. They include five people of color, including the first Iranian-American astronaut Jasmin Moghbeli who flew combat missions in Afghanistan and holds an engineering degree from MIT.

The group, known as the "Turtles", wore blue flight jumpsuits and took turns approaching the podium to receive their astronaut pins, as one of their classmates paid tribute to their character and shared playful and heartfelt anecdotes.

After being selected in 2017, the class completed training in spacewalking at NASA's underwater Neutral Buoyancy Lab, robotics, the systems of the International Space Station, piloting the T-38 training jet and Russian language lessons.

They are the first to graduate since NASA announced the Artemis program to return to the Moon by 2024, this time on its south pole, as the US plans to place the next man and first woman on lunar soil and set up an orbital space station.

-- submitted from IRC

Related: Eyeing Moon, NASA hosts first public astronaut graduation ceremony


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  • (Score: 4, Interesting) by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 13 2020, @10:17AM (28 children)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 13 2020, @10:17AM (#942685)

    Things like this are so less interesting when you know that NASA started off with a checklist that included "6 women" "6 minorities", etc, etc. It's forced "equality", and it's awkward and regressive.

    Wake me up when there's a nation that can take the 13 best candidates and have them look like this.

    • (Score: 2, Funny) by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 13 2020, @10:43AM (2 children)

      by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 13 2020, @10:43AM (#942687)

      Do you have any idea how much cleaning there is to do on the ISS? [sciencealert.com]

      • (Score: 1, Funny) by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 13 2020, @04:10PM (1 child)

        by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 13 2020, @04:10PM (#942769)

        Why don't they just open the windows and air the place out?

        • (Score: 2) by DannyB on Monday January 13 2020, @06:31PM

          by DannyB (5839) Subscriber Badge on Monday January 13 2020, @06:31PM (#942813) Journal

          Windows are unlikely to be openable.

          All of the vented gasses must be replaced. All ongoing replacement gasses must be lifted from Earth at significant cost. Maybe SpaceX will bring down the cost.

          Suitable air filtering might accomplish the same result. Sunlight might be more important than evacuating all of the gasses then re pressurizing.

          --
          The lower I set my standards the more accomplishments I have.
    • (Score: 5, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 13 2020, @12:32PM (5 children)

      by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 13 2020, @12:32PM (#942701)

      and until that happens, god forbid we forcefully extract diverse role-models from the best 100 candidates, because everyone knows there are immeasurable differences between place 13 and place 100.

      you're saying something that's nice on the surface.
      but in practice there's a lot of flexibility when it comes to "best astronaut".
      there's a complex evaluation system in place where you want a combination of abilities.
      enforcing diversity will not completely destroy the process, especially because this is a very public process with a very public outcome and long-reaching effects that cannot be completely accounted for.

      maybe NASA doesn't actually need the best.
      maybe "national blabla" is there to do a reasonable job while also achieving other goals that society has.

      • (Score: 1, Interesting) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 14 2020, @06:45AM (4 children)

        by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 14 2020, @06:45AM (#943011)

        Choosing to reject a man, or woman, because of the color of their skin is racism. And I do not believe that you can solve racism with racism. In fact that has been tried before, but I'll get into that in a minute. First I want to hit on the #1 vs #100 thing. Here are the bios of two candidates from NASA's most recent class:

        ---

        Candidate #1: [nasa.gov] BS in geology from Stanford. PHD in geology from UCLA. Worked as teaching assistant and postdoc in geology. Collaborated as a member of the Science Team for the Curiosity rover. Worked as a volunteer assistance coach of a college basketball team.

        Candidate #2 [nasa.gov]: BS In Aeronautics and Astronauts from MIT, Doctorate in Electrical Engineering and CS from Berkeley. Worked as a professor at MIT where he taught courses on Dynamics and Flight Vehicle Engineering. His group produced the open-source GPKit tool for geometric programming which is being used to design NAVY UAVs. Previously worked for Boeing in product development and was a member of Yosemite Search and Rescue.

        ---

        The diversity hire's only strength is having collaborated with the Rover team and that was also probably a diversity hire given there are no doubt plenty of #2's who'd love to have such opportunities, but can't because they were born with the wrong skin color. This is not #1 vs #100. This is somebody in the top versus somebody who is not in the top. Obviously #1 is above average, yet you are setting a standard of 'above average' vs 'probably one of the most intellectually successful individuals on Earth'. All because of skin color. This is not smart.

        As mentioned we have tried this in the past. There were practically no Jews in America until the late 19th century. Most were dirt poor and few even spoke English. They were, and arguably still are, widely discriminated against. Harvard admittance used to be simply based on an extremely challenging test. If you did well, boom - you were admitted. The 'problem' they came upon in the early 20th century is that in spite of the social obstacles they faced, 'too many' Jews were doing well on it. And so, in a view we now see as clearly regressive, they (among many other schools) adopted the NASA policy. 'We'll solve antisemitism by never admitting more than 15% Jews!' [jewishvirtuallibrary.org]

        This is now something looked back at, appropriately, with shame. You don't solve racism with racism. You solve racism by judging people not by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character. And we're dropping the ball hard there. But it's become so normalized we don't even really appreciate it anymore. Probably similar to how in the 30s in Germany racism against Jews had become so normalized it likely didn't even "feel" like racism.

        ---

        Lastly, I would also add one thing on the notion of 'inherent closeness.' It's intuitive that humans run on a pretty smooth curve of capabilities. And so no man or woman is truly head and shoulders above any other. Yet the peculiar thing is when you look at fields where we can measure ability - this turns out not to be true. There are 0 barriers to entry to chess, for instance. Yet we always see the world champion ending up somehow far far ahead of everybody else. And it's not just a consistent small advantage, but a wide margin as can be measured by performance. For instance Magnus Carlsen today is 50 points higher than the #2 player. That's a whole hell of a lot. Yet this is always true. For instance in 1972 Bobby Fischer was 125 points ahead of the #2. To put the numbers in context, a 100 point difference gives an expectation difference of about 2:1. You can also see this performance gap between #1 and #2 in other sports and activities. There is 0 reason to think this does not apply as a general rule, as counter-intuitive as it may be.

        • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 14 2020, @08:36AM (3 children)

          by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 14 2020, @08:36AM (#943027)

          systems where there can be a single winner are bad systems.
          for astronaut candidates I assume there are a bunch of standardized tests that you can pass or fail.
          the important bit is to pass.
          obviously if you start allocating points to every little detail you'll be able to differentiate between the candidates and some will be better than others.
          and if the point is to win a contest, it is entirely possible that one of them will be good enough to always win, even though technically the point difference is small.

          for chess the points come from winning games.
          so you don't have to be twice as good to win twice as many games.
          you just need to be a little bit better to skew the statistics.

          dumb example: two men fight to the death to win a woman (yes, in the "woman is property" sense). it doesn't matter whether the winner wins without a scratch, or if he is himself almost dead after the fight and barely recovers. if you are to divide the number of kids of the winner to the number of kids of the loser you get infinity in both cases (assuming that there are no fertility problems with anyone).

          if the task is "go to the woods, make a cabin, sustain yourself for a couple of years", then there will be a whole bunch of people able to do it (although many would not succeed). there is no "best", there are just many people who can pass the test.

          I've talked to people who hire other people.
          good candidates are good in different ways, and it's often the case that you cannot differentiate based on just objective criteria.
          especially if part of their future job is not well defined, as is the case with scientific research.
          yes, you can tell they will do different things, and they will act differently when faced with the same task.
          but there is no easy way to tell how these differences will lead to "better" or "worse" results.

          what is your measure of outcome? here are some examples:
          number of facebook likes ten years from now.
          funding received by NASA next year.
          number of satellites that the astronaut will fix in orbit.

          think about these questions.
          there's no easy answer, especially because it depends on what other people will be doing.

          the way I see affirmative action in this context is the following: as a society, the US decided it's important to have members of different communities present in as many roles as possible.
          the belief is that the implicit increase of communication channels between the different communities will lead to "good".
          where "good" means a combination of things, among which: less tension between the different communities, more opportunities for more people, greater pool of candidates for different critical positions, increased overall integration of the different communities.

          I don't know whether this is a good solution to the racism problems that the US has.
          I may even have the wrong understanding of what affirmative action is and how it is implemented.
          but as a scientist myself, my gut feeling is that he approach I outline would help in my domain, as well as for astronauts.
          there are (or there should be) protocols in place to prevent incompetence from taking over.
          but there's a big difference between "not the best" and "incompetent", especially since there is no objective "best".

          regarding your "no more than 15%jews".
          that is racist.
          if they had said "no less than 85% white, because 85% of the population is white", I'm not sure I would have argued against it.
          I don't have time to look at the link now, sorry.

          • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 14 2020, @03:59PM

            by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 14 2020, @03:59PM (#943113)

            This comes down to two different and mutually exclusive meanings for equality. There is equality of opportunity and there is equality of result. I am completely and absolutely in favor of the former, but equally strongly opposed to the latter. For affirmative action this was one of the key issues. Quoting Senator Hubert Humphrey (who was a major player in the passing of the LBJ's civil rights act): "...there is nothing in [section of the Civil Rights Act related to employment] that will give power to the Commission to require hiring, firing, and promotion to meet a racial 'quota.' ... Title VII is designed to encourage the hiring on basis of ability and qualifications, not race or religion." Affirmative Action was supposed to be about judging people not by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character. It's only in recent times we've gone down this really messed up path.

            Ending racism is simple, and you tend to hear the same thing from many self made blacks. Here [youtube.com] is Morgan Freeman's take on black history month. He states it is "absurd" for reasons similar to why Neil DeGrasse Tyson also refuses [blackenterprise.com] to partake in black history month. Why? When you invite him to talk during Black History Month you're just doing that because he's black. But what does the color of his skin have to do with what he is? With being an astrophysicist and great scientific communicator? Nothing. It's belittling and denigrating. People didn't want to hear what Carl Sagan had to say because he was a first gen child of Russian emigres, they wanted to hear what he had to say because he was a phenomenal communicator. To end racism just treat blacks like people - no less and no more. Same thing for other identities. I'm only focusing on black here for historical reasons.

            ---

            Let's go in a different direction for a minute though. Let's ignore the rightness or wrongness of this all and simply ask, does fighting racism with racism even work? Well first we have to ascertain the goal. And I think that goal would probably be to improve race relations by making normally underrepresented or non-represented groups feel more included and to avoid another 'whitey on the moon'. [youtube.com] The next question we need to ask is when did this begin? That's harder to measure but social media has no doubt played a major role in it. And one of the primary warcries there has been 'why so white.' So let's evaluate!

            Here [google.com] is a Google trends for the aforementioned phrase. Other similar phrases seem to show similar time frames. Sometime in late 2011 it peaked and stayed there. Here [gallup.com] is a graph of race relations from Gallup. They start to plummet at just about the same time. One would say this paradoxical, but I think it's to be expected. These actions, again, treat blacks like they're idiots. Do NASA think blacks aren't going to know this is literally 'token black girl'? Do they not think everybody is going to realize they're picking people based on skin color and not merit? Who exactly is this making happy besides the twits on Twitter? This isn't going to do anything except inflame racial tensions.

            Again this is why racism is never acceptable. Something we always tend to forget is that literally every single generation makes up their excuses for why their racism is not really racism.

          • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 14 2020, @04:59PM (1 child)

            by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 14 2020, @04:59PM (#943134)

            Also as one tangent on the chess thing. You don't need to be just a little better to skew the statistics. The ELO is a probabilistic predictor based on relative performance. Here [fide.com] is a list of the top 100 chess players in the world. What you'll find is extremely peculiar, yet repeats constantly in chess in other fields. The #1 player in the world is better than the #2 player in the world by a much larger margin than any other two players in the top 100.

            #1 > #2 by 50 points
            #2 > #3 by 17 points
            #3 > #4 by 28 points

            Literally every other player is separated by the next closest player by single digit differences. This is not some quirk in the rating system - it's a quirk in humans. For some reason the best don't tend to be a little bit better than the second best, but way way better. It's dangerous to underestimate how much damage we are inflicting on ourselves by moving away from what was already a meritocracy in shambles to an openly discriminatory system.

            • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 14 2020, @07:13PM

              by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 14 2020, @07:13PM (#943212)

              ok. my comment on chess and "best" wasn't that good.
              let me try something else:
              please check record sprinters/swimmers etc and compare times. this is very different from comparing number of medals of elite athletes.
              check record height jumps (value of height). again very different from number of medals.

              what I was trying to say is that in practical situations you don't need the person with the highest number of medals, you just need someone who is very good.

    • (Score: 3, Touché) by Username on Monday January 13 2020, @01:03PM (8 children)

      by Username (4557) on Monday January 13 2020, @01:03PM (#942704)

      Yeah, I'm not sure what color or sex organs has to do with being an astronaut. Isn't flying a spacecraft cool enough on its own? Why bother specifying this shit? Maybe we need a 'no girls in space' rule.

      • (Score: 4, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 13 2020, @01:38PM (7 children)

        by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 13 2020, @01:38PM (#942711)

        The current real best candidates would probably be from the US Nuclear Submariners...

        Able to:
        0) Spend long periods of time stuck in a cramped space with no way of getting out early, all while remaining useful.
        1) Accept a higher risk of death from accidents that you may have zero control over.
        2) Learn to understand and operate complicated systems.
        3) Follow all sorts of rules, written and unwritten.
        4) Hold your pee/poo for hours.

        https://foxtrotalpha.jalopnik.com/confessions-of-a-u-s-navy-submarine-officer-1715113243 [jalopnik.com]
        https://edition.cnn.com/2016/05/06/politics/life-on-uss-missouri-nuclear-submarine/index.html [cnn.com]
        https://science.howstuffworks.com/nuclear-submarine7.htm [howstuffworks.com]

        • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 13 2020, @01:47PM (2 children)

          by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 13 2020, @01:47PM (#942715)

          And there's a height limit, so they'll weigh less.

          There's a weird rule that astronauts are supposed to be pilots, but I'm not sure there's any reason for it, except for the Space Shuttle, which is definitely not relevant any more.

          • (Score: 2) by Immerman on Monday January 13 2020, @05:02PM (1 child)

            by Immerman (3985) on Monday January 13 2020, @05:02PM (#942787)

            Hey man, you never know when there'll be an accident on the ISS and the only person left conscious will have to fly the thing back to Earth! /sarcasm.

            • (Score: 2) by DannyB on Monday January 13 2020, @06:34PM

              by DannyB (5839) Subscriber Badge on Monday January 13 2020, @06:34PM (#942816) Journal

              Maybe not fly the ISS back to Earth, but some escape vehicle. But then, aren't those vehicles more like flying an iPad than an aircraft?

              --
              The lower I set my standards the more accomplishments I have.
        • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 13 2020, @03:06PM

          by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 13 2020, @03:06PM (#942743)

          Then all you need is a good nurse.
          Who doesn't have to be female, BTW.

        • (Score: 3, Interesting) by dry on Monday January 13 2020, @09:29PM (1 child)

          by dry (223) on Monday January 13 2020, @09:29PM (#942867) Journal

          Test pilots are more likely to be used to things like varying weight (G forces), being able to react while the ground is rapidly approaching and being good at reacting while spinning around, think Neil Armstrong in that Gemini that was spinning out of control as well as being much more used to being in the sky then submariners.

          • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 14 2020, @07:46AM

            by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 14 2020, @07:46AM (#943018)

            And beyond this, manual piloting is still very much a thing.

            For instance Boeing's argument for why their recent catastrophic launch failure wasn't a catastrophic launch failure is because if there were astronauts on board then they would have overriden everything and started driving it manually. And there's probably some truth to that. And in a situation like that the best candidate, by far, is a fighter pilot because that is as close as you can get to getting an intuitive understanding and feel for what it's like to try to navigate something in space traveling thousands of miles per hour and is suddenly way off course.

            Like you allude to stress control is also a big one. I imagine being thousands of miles above Earth knowing you have nobody to rely on besides yourself in the ~2-5 other astronauts on the station could be stressful to many people. For other people, it wouldn't bother them in the slightest. And, again, I imagine fighter/test pilots fall just about 100% into the latter category.

        • (Score: 1) by webnut77 on Tuesday January 14 2020, @03:25AM

          by webnut77 (5994) on Tuesday January 14 2020, @03:25AM (#942970)

          4) Hold your pee/poo for hours.

          So that's why the astronauts don't offer each other a 'high five'.

    • (Score: 3, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 13 2020, @01:41PM (1 child)

      by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 13 2020, @01:41PM (#942713)

      Does anyone actually know that the female or minority candidates were less qualified? One minority female candidate is a combat pilot with a degree from MIT, which seems like a well qualified astronaut to me. Maybe the others are all just stuffed spacesuits? Or maybe the 13 best candidates actually did look like this.

      • (Score: 0, Flamebait) by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 13 2020, @03:21PM

        by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 13 2020, @03:21PM (#942747)

        Incel boy doesn't even know if there is a quota.

    • (Score: 0, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 13 2020, @03:05PM (3 children)

      by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 13 2020, @03:05PM (#942742)

      Yeah, it's so much more interesting when you start out with preconceived notions that all astronauts should be white males for no logical reasons whatsoever.

      Wake me up when discriminatory idiots like you have all been bred out of the human race.

      Aside from that, nice troll.

      • (Score: 0, Interesting) by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 13 2020, @06:12PM (2 children)

        by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 13 2020, @06:12PM (#942809)

        Logically, the place ought to look like the CalTech campus. That is 43% Asian, but only 1% black.

        For 13 candidates, there should be 5 or 6 Asians. The 1% rounds down to zero, so there should be no blacks. That leaves 7 or 8 whites.

        • (Score: 2) by PartTimeZombie on Monday January 13 2020, @10:12PM (1 child)

          by PartTimeZombie (4827) on Monday January 13 2020, @10:12PM (#942877)

          Logically, the place ought to look like the CalTech campus.

          Why should it? That is not logical.

          • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 14 2020, @07:58AM

            by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 14 2020, @07:58AM (#943020)

            The job of an astronaut is to run and maintain experiments that are pushing the scientific edge. Because of this high end 'hard' science education is pretty much the baseline for an astronaut. Some allowance can be made for piloting, medical, and other tertiary skills that can prove vital, but there tends to be a decent overlap between the latter and the former. Though the more overlap there, the even less diverse the applicant pool tends to become. And so it's quite logical to expect a correlation in 'true' demographics vs what you would see given an average sample of those who have the typical qualifications.

            This [nasa.gov] page has a listing of the astronauts alongside their qualifications. Click on their name to go to a page that has a more extensive bio. You will find the qualifications mentioned exist, with remarkable success, for those who got in on merit. But for the diversity hires don't even meet the qualifications and go an entirely different route. That's not to say they're fools or below average by any means. They are not. They're all well above average, yet they are clearly being held to a radically softer standard than those getting in on merit.

    • (Score: 2) by krishnoid on Monday January 13 2020, @05:13PM

      by krishnoid (1156) on Monday January 13 2020, @05:13PM (#942790)

      Diversity of the astronauts' backgrounds has been a concern for NASA for quite a while, actually [youtube.com].

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 13 2020, @05:15PM

      by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 13 2020, @05:15PM (#942791)

      Things like this are so less interesting when you know that NASA started off with a checklist that included "6 women" "6 minorities", etc, etc. It's forced "equality", and it's awkward and regressive.

      Wake me up when there's a nation that can take the 13 best candidates and have them look like this.

      Citation please or STFU.

    • (Score: 3, Insightful) by DeathMonkey on Monday January 13 2020, @07:01PM (1 child)

      by DeathMonkey (1380) on Monday January 13 2020, @07:01PM (#942827) Journal

      [CITATION NEEDED]

      • (Score: 1, Interesting) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 14 2020, @07:29AM

        by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 14 2020, @07:29AM (#943015)

        The astronauts are all listed here [nasa.gov]. Click on any candidate's name to get to a further page that has a complete bio. Feel free to compare. It's night and day in numerous cases. This is not to say that the diversity hires are not well above average - they are. But they're far below the standards of those who got in on merit. So we are setting two radically different standards for people based on skin color. This is racism, and we're going to look back at this time in history as no less shameful than any other period of racism. Because we seem to forget that every single era thinks their racism was justified - it's not.

        I offered one comparison and argument for why this is not a good idea elsewhere in this thread. Since you tend to downmod everything you disagree with, I'll let you find it on your own since I find you rarely, if ever, engage in good faith and are extremely immature with your modding of posts. I only respond here because at one time I was like you. I don't know if it was time, experience, or knowledge that changed me. In any case something did. So there's hope, yet. ;-)

  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 13 2020, @02:03PM (5 children)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 13 2020, @02:03PM (#942721)

    They can all watch from the ground while SpaceX lands on the Moon and Mars ahead of them.

    • (Score: 2, Insightful) by nitehawk214 on Monday January 13 2020, @03:25PM (4 children)

      by nitehawk214 (1304) on Monday January 13 2020, @03:25PM (#942749)

      Who do you think will be in those SpaceX capsules?

      It will be NASA astronauts [spacex.com].

      --
      "Don't you ever miss the days when you used to be nostalgic?" -Loiosh
      • (Score: 2, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 13 2020, @04:18PM (3 children)

        by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 13 2020, @04:18PM (#942772)

        Talking about Starship, not Crew Dragon. Crew Dragon only goes to the ISS. Starship goes everywhere. Since NASA isn't funding Starship - mostly they are complaining about it - there's no reason it has to be crewed by NASA astronauts. And it probably won't be.

        • (Score: 2) by Freeman on Monday January 13 2020, @04:45PM (1 child)

          by Freeman (732) on Monday January 13 2020, @04:45PM (#942781) Journal

          I agree with nitehawk, it would take a lot of specialized training, etc. to train your own Astronauts. It would be so much easier and frugal to use NASA Astronauts for the flights where you actually need a human.

          --
          Joshua 1:9 "Be strong and of a good courage; be not afraid, neither be thou dismayed: for the Lord thy God is with thee"
          • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 14 2020, @07:17AM

            by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 14 2020, @07:17AM (#943013)

            Why do you think? I don't see where the huge cost or specialization is supposed to be. Primary things would seem to be gforce training, navigation sims, stress tests, underwater practice, and vacuum chamber practice. After that it's a matter of household things like what to do in a gas leak, etc. Nothing especially fancy. But I'd add two things beyond this:

            1) It makes sense to appeal to NASA since they're the only ones with any experience in this field, but I think this 'sense' is one of the things that's been starting to see our entire system stagnate if not decline. What I mean there is that this same sense around 2000 would have told you that Boeing would also be the ultimate authority on all things space since they'd been doing it for decades and ostensibly had all the best and brightest working for or advising them? Yet somehow it turns out that a programmer with 0 experience in space, but some nice ideas and a bit of smarts was able to soundly beat them? It really shouldn't be that surprising. Boeing today is not the Boeing of 50 years ago. And similarly NASA today is not the NASA of 50 years ago. But even 50 years ago when NASA was the premier organization, they were still mostly just winging it - much like SpaceX will have to because...

            2) SpaceX's goals, but short and long term, don't involve sending professional astronauts - but regular people. One of the first to-be astronauts for SpaceX's inaugural flight around the moon has already been announced. It's Yusaku Maezawa [wikipedia.org] - a Japanese billionaire entrepreneur. Okay, a billionaire entrepreneur is not a regular person, but you know what I mean. In any case when we start sending folks to Mars there will be genuinely normal people. In spite of all of the technical and complex work that will be being done, there will also need to be people cleaning toilets. Will be interesting to see how we handle this since indentured servitude makes the most sense (e.g. - free trip + work for 5 years to repay your debt), but that has a bit of a dodgy history now.

        • (Score: 3, Interesting) by Immerman on Monday January 13 2020, @05:16PM

          by Immerman (3985) on Monday January 13 2020, @05:16PM (#942792)

          Heck, is Crew Dragon even crewed by astronauts? I mean, it *could* be, it has the control panels, but it's designed to be operated autonomously/remotely. The "crew" in Crew Dragon are ISS crew, they're really just passengers while in the capsule.

  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 13 2020, @02:09PM (2 children)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 13 2020, @02:09PM (#942726)

    srsly, i am desperatly waiting for the day that news like this doesn't clog up news space anymore.

  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 13 2020, @02:09PM (1 child)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 13 2020, @02:09PM (#942727)

    Real diversity = AMD
    Fake Diversity = Intel

    Which is this?

    • (Score: 2) by Freeman on Monday January 13 2020, @04:49PM

      by Freeman (732) on Monday January 13 2020, @04:49PM (#942782) Journal

      I'm hoping, this is real diversity, but at so close to a 50/50 split, it's hard to know. My guess is, it's some of both. Since, there are very few Astronaut positions available. You can afford to be choosy and still get great candidates from both sexes regardless of # of women in sciences vs # of men in sciences. As I assume, most/all of the NASA Astronauts are into the hard sciences.

      --
      Joshua 1:9 "Be strong and of a good courage; be not afraid, neither be thou dismayed: for the Lord thy God is with thee"
  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 13 2020, @04:52PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 13 2020, @04:52PM (#942783)

    Looks like a young enthusiastic group.

    No doubt, class balancing for PC was part of the selection criteria, but I suspect NASA is perfectly capable of picking an extraordinary group with this additional constraint.
    Hopefully,the group will do well and be pathfinders for a 'right stuff' V2.0

    The interesting question is what will they get to do?

    Aside from ISS missions with the Russians, I'd hope the first thing is a manned flight with Space-X.
    I'd say with Boeing, but with a second manned option available, there is no national need to rush things there, so they should be able to complete their unmanned testing first.

    The interesting question there is on who's nickel?
    Seems like that should depend on the outcome of the investigation.
    Why wasn't the problem caught in testing before the launch?
    Boeing engineers supposedly know how to make good stuff. If this was short circuited by Wall Street, then that would seem to answer the funding question.
    OTOH, if a transparent review shows no reasonable way to prevent it...

  • (Score: 2, Flamebait) by Fnord666 on Monday January 13 2020, @05:08PM (4 children)

    by Fnord666 (652) on Monday January 13 2020, @05:08PM (#942788) Homepage
    At least Jonny Kim is easy to pick out in the group.
    His SEAL trident is on the left breast of his uniform. What were you thinking?
    • (Score: 3, Insightful) by Immerman on Monday January 13 2020, @05:20PM (3 children)

      by Immerman (3985) on Monday January 13 2020, @05:20PM (#942793)

      So, what? We're supposed to think that wasn't a a racist joke because the punchline is that there's non-racial identifier in addition to the racist identifier you clearly intentionally implied?

      • (Score: -1, Flamebait) by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 13 2020, @05:32PM

        by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 13 2020, @05:32PM (#942794)

        The US keeps letting H1B-infected immigrants into the country. I hope this guy doesn't bring it to the space shuttle.

      • (Score: -1, Troll) by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 13 2020, @09:00PM

        by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 13 2020, @09:00PM (#942859)

        You have no clue what racism is. Typical ignorant westerner.

      • (Score: 2) by Fnord666 on Tuesday January 14 2020, @03:49PM

        by Fnord666 (652) on Tuesday January 14 2020, @03:49PM (#943109) Homepage

        So, what? We're supposed to think that wasn't a a racist joke because the punchline is that there's non-racial identifier in addition to the racist identifier you clearly intentionally implied?

        "What's in there?"
        "Only what you take with you."

        - Luke Skywalker and Yoda

  • (Score: 4, Informative) by DutchUncle on Monday January 13 2020, @06:51PM (5 children)

    by DutchUncle (5370) on Monday January 13 2020, @06:51PM (#942824)

    Women passed the tests given to Mercury astronauts, but were never considered. Science fiction accepted them - even Robert Heinlein, steadfastly old-fashioned, put women in command of warships in "Starship Trooper", even stating they had faster reflexes than men, in addition to having a much better brain-to-weight ratio. James H. Schmitz and other authors had women protagonists in action and combat situations. Why is this still news in real life?

    • (Score: 1, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 13 2020, @07:17PM (1 child)

      by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 13 2020, @07:17PM (#942831)

      Because in real life women still do not have equal rights/expectations to bare arms as men, despite the promises of the second amendment.

      • (Score: 3, Insightful) by Runaway1956 on Tuesday January 14 2020, @12:47AM

        by Runaway1956 (2926) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday January 14 2020, @12:47AM (#942923) Journal

        I see bare armed women everywhere. Guys often wear sleeves.

        Oh, wait, did you mean "bear arms"? When was the last time you saw a bear standing upright, waving his arms?

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 14 2020, @04:36PM

      by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 14 2020, @04:36PM (#943127)

      Why do we pretend that we don't know the answer to this question?

        - Go look inside in any upper division aerospace engineering classroom and report back the demographics.
        - Go look inside any upper division psychology classroom and report back on the demographics.
        - Go look at whose on a basketball scholarship and report back on the demographics.

      As much as our current education system sucks balls on a long-term macro level, on a short-term micro level it means pretty much anybody can go to any college that will accept them and study pretty much whatever they want. But things aren't changing. Norway, what many now regard as the most egalitarian country there is, saw something similar. They had a major push to try to get women into atypical roles. And they saw a small and relatively constant boost from this. Yet as soon as the push subsided, so too did that boost. For whatever reason, it turns out that different groups are drawn to different things. You can deny this reality, like any, in fiction. You, however, cannot deny it in reality.

      As an aside, men also have faster reflexes than women [tandfonline.com], are substantially more resistant to radiation [hps.org], and also more base benefits such as less complex hygiene and hormonal regulation. I definitely think women should be encouraged and involved in space - a sausage fest on Mars would be rather gay, but in general they're likely to remain minorities except when the hiring agency is a government with a list of identity checkboxes to tick off. In my opinion this is at least part of the reason that the next generation of space likely belongs to China. They're going to be focusing on task optimization while we're building our teams based around happy headlines for Twitter and yellow journalism.

    • (Score: 2) by Immerman on Tuesday January 14 2020, @04:49PM (1 child)

      by Immerman (3985) on Tuesday January 14 2020, @04:49PM (#943133)

      Heinlein old fashioned? Not where women were concerned. The man was an enthusiastic feminist long before the term was coined, and his novels are full of competent, confident, fiercely independent women outclassing the men around them.

      • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday January 15 2020, @08:55PM

        by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday January 15 2020, @08:55PM (#943781)

        Old fashioned != misogynist, it is just that those frequently go together so you're mistake is understandable.

        Heinlein was a revolutionary writer for his time, but his old fashioned style is pretty obvious. Basically someone raised in the misogynistic culture can't help but display some elements even though they do not share the sentiments.

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