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posted by martyb on Monday September 04 2017, @10:54AM   Printer-friendly
from the up-in-the-air dept.

President Trump has nominated Representative Jim Bridenstine as NASA's next administrator, to replace the acting administrator Robert M. Lightfoot:

Representative Jim Bridenstine, Republican of Oklahoma, will be nominated by President Trump to serve as NASA's next administrator, the White House said on Friday night.

Mr. Bridenstine, a strong advocate for drawing private companies like SpaceX and Blue Origin more deeply into NASA's exploration of space, had been rumored to be the leading candidate for the job, but months passed without an announcement. If confirmed by the Senate, Mr. Bridenstine, 42, would be the first elected official to hold that job.

[...] Although NASA has little presence in Oklahoma, Mr. Bridenstine, a former Navy Reserve pilot who is now in his third term in the House [of] Representatives, has long had an interest in space. Before being elected to Congress in 2012, he was executive director of the Tulsa Air and Space Museum and Planetarium from 2008 to 2010.

[...] Mr. Bridenstine has supported a return to the moon, a departure from the Obama administration's focus on sending astronauts to Mars in coming decades.

Florida's Senators Marco Rubio and Bill Nelson blasted the choice. Nelson said that "The head of NASA ought to be a space professional, not a politician."

NASA statement. NASA Watch analysis.


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  • (Score: 4, Insightful) by JoeMerchant on Monday September 04 2017, @01:18PM (10 children)

    by JoeMerchant (3937) on Monday September 04 2017, @01:18PM (#563437)

    O.K. - you're not wrong, but... the new guy actually has equal, perhaps better, chance of getting funding for NASA to actually do something great. Now, maybe those great things NASA will be doing are BS, wasteful, and an affront to "good science" - but wouldn't it be nice for NASA to actually do some great things again, instead of slowly dwindling into irrelevance - able to be ignored by politicians and large segments of the population when they inform us of things like climate change?

    Or, it could be a hatchet job, intended to sink NASA into obscurity faster.

    More likely, it's a random act that could go either way - or, possibly an intentional act in one direction or the other that has a roughly equal chance of backfiring on the intention.

    Whatever it is, it's different than what's been tried in the past, and that has a better chance of changing NASA's course than maintaining the status quo, and I, for one, do not approve of the course that NASA has followed for the past 30+ years.

    (The previous statement is in no way intended to endorse the current political administration, their policies, or the perception they are spreading around the world about the American people in general. It is, however, intended to point out that change - no matter the source, can be a good thing, and is often better than continuing to pursue failed strategies because they are still perceived as the "best possible course." When the "best possible course" has consistently led you to bad outcomes, maybe it is time to try something different?)

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  • (Score: 1, Troll) by VLM on Monday September 04 2017, @02:03PM (1 child)

    by VLM (445) on Monday September 04 2017, @02:03PM (#563457)

    When the "best possible course" has consistently led you to bad outcomes, maybe it is time to try something different?

    Try applying that to politics especially in direct contrast to

    in no way intended to endorse the current political administration, their policies, or the perception they are spreading around the world about the American people in general

    Essentially your first quote is the intellectual death of the left and the neocons and the globalists, which is why they have nothing left but Stalinist style repression and intimidation.

    • (Score: 2, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Monday September 04 2017, @04:42PM

      by Anonymous Coward on Monday September 04 2017, @04:42PM (#563484)

      He said "something different" not "anything different". The actual left has little to no representation in congress; what you call the left is probably just neoliberalism with a veneer of identity politics.

  • (Score: 2) by Thexalon on Monday September 04 2017, @06:42PM (7 children)

    by Thexalon (636) on Monday September 04 2017, @06:42PM (#563521)

    the new guy actually has equal, perhaps better, chance of getting funding for NASA to actually do something great.

    I'd agree to "equal". Certainly not "better". The simple reason is that NASA has a snowballs chance in Hell of doing something great when doing something great takes a decades-long effort and each president who comes in wants to redirect the mission so that they'll go down in history as the guy who set the mission that got people to Mars or something. Add to that legislators who see NASA more as a pork feeding trough than a goal in and of itself, and it's completely surprising that very little if anything gets accomplished in the manned missions outside of LEO.

    One of the reasons the Apollo missions actually happened was that neither Lyndon Johnson nor Richard Nixon didn't screw it up by saying "Whoops, never mind what JFK said, we're actually going to do something else."

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    • (Score: 2) by isostatic on Monday September 04 2017, @11:21PM

      by isostatic (365) on Monday September 04 2017, @11:21PM (#563599) Journal

      I wonder if they would have been so continuating if JFK hadn't been killed - was Apollo seen as a Kennedy legacy at the time? Johnson couldn't have overrode it, and Nixon even if he could would go down as an unorganised president - his name and signature on the moon long after the US and the rest of earth turned into a smoking crator.

    • (Score: 2) by JoeMerchant on Tuesday September 05 2017, @02:52AM (1 child)

      by JoeMerchant (3937) on Tuesday September 05 2017, @02:52AM (#563638)

      Well, September 12, 1962 to July 20, 1969 is a bit less than a decade. W might blame BHO for not following through on his vision, but that's a bit disingenuous when W himself wasn't able to provide any more backup for return to manned deep spaceflight than Trump has demonstrated for getting his wall built.

      I assume by "equal" you mean 0 = 0, I think we're better than that - not anywhere near what Stephen Hawking and I want, but better. I think what got Apollo done was Sputnik and the continued threat of Russian nukes raining down from ICBMs - we needed to demonstrate launch reliability and payload capability, and we did, in spades, and that backed up the MAD doctrine for the next 20 years.

      Oh, I heard we're invading Afghanistan, again. Doesn't anybody pay attention to history? Afghanistan, more than any one other thing, is how the USSR lost the cold war. If we're struggling so with our economy, do we need to go in there and stabilize the Afghan political/economic situation so we can get their minerals on the world market, or are we just stupid? 10% of Gulf War II's funding would have put men on Mars and returned them safely to earth, I'm sure when the final bill comes in for this Afghanistan adventure, it will be enough that it could have accelerated Constellation's timetable by years and also established a lunar settlement.

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    • (Score: 2) by dry on Tuesday September 05 2017, @04:58AM (2 children)

      by dry (223) on Tuesday September 05 2017, @04:58AM (#563657) Journal

      Actually Nixon did screw Apollo in favour of the shuttle, just took a year or so. Remember, Nixon got inaugurated shortly after Apollo 8 visited the Moon, it was hard to cancel it quickly but Apollo 18 and 19 never flew along with the other planned skylab missions.

      • (Score: 2, Informative) by khallow on Tuesday September 05 2017, @08:53AM (1 child)

        by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday September 05 2017, @08:53AM (#563697) Journal
        While Nixon ended Apollo, it would have been hard to continue the program anyway due to US Congress cutting back as early as 1967. As to the Shuttle, it appears to me to be a consolation prize to NASA rather than the thing that caused Nixon to cancel Apollo.
        • (Score: 2) by dry on Tuesday September 05 2017, @03:12PM

          by dry (223) on Tuesday September 05 2017, @03:12PM (#563773) Journal

          Good points.

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday September 05 2017, @07:19PM

      by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday September 05 2017, @07:19PM (#563878)

      This whole 'space takes decades to do anything' is simply not true.

      In 1962 when JFK gave his space speech, we had barely put a man in orbit. Granted that is an achievement, but it's millenia away from putting a man on the moon. At least ostensibly. We landed on the moon 7 years later. Or even go back a little bit more. The first time we put anything into space was 1958 - Explorer 1. So we went from having done nothing in space to landing on the moon 11 years later. Or zoom forward to modern times. SpaceX was founded just 15 years ago. They've managed to completely revolutionize space, and have announced plans to send a man around the moon next year, all in 15 years with a budget of shoestrings and duct tape.

      Give an organization a goal, sufficient funding, and sufficient manpower - and there is less than no reason that we could not be on the moon before Trump leaves office. The issue has nothing to do with the complexity or length of space, but rather the other part of what you said "legislators who see NASA more as a pork feeding trough than a goal in and of itself". I don't know why Bolden failed, but I don't think it's unreasonable to expect than a man of personal merit and achievement was unable to discover how to deal with the manipulation and deceit that pervades our government today. And because of that I do think it's entirely possible a man who is going to be vastly more familiar with 'the game' might manage to achieve things that Bolden was unable to do so.