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How NASA Became Massively Dysfunctional

By Karl Grossman, CounterPunch. Posted December 26, 2008.


"At the highest levels of the agency, there seems to be a belief that you can mandate reality ..."
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The National Aeronautics and Space Administration has been celebrating its 50th anniversary by doing what it does best: public relations puffery.

In recent weeks, the agency issued a slick, 215-page publication attributing success after success "benefiting society" to itself. Spinoff: 50 Years of NASA-Derived Technologies (1958-2008) blows the NASA horn for purportedly making enormous contributions to: highway safety, "improved" radial tires, land-mine removal, memory foam, enriched baby food, portable cordless vacuums, artificial limbs, aircraft anti-icing systems, and on and on. About all NASA doesn’t take credit for is curing the common cold.

But in fact, despite the usual NASA spin, the agency 50 years after its formation is in a huge mess -- as is the U.S. space program it administers.

On the most recent NASA mission, last month’s shuttle trip to the International Space Station, a tool bag containing $100,000 in equipment floated away during a space walk. (Why did a NASA tool bag cost $100,000? The grease guns and scrapers were "specialized hardware that had to be fabricated," said a NASA PR person.) "Lost in Space" was a common headline for the loss.

That sums up NASA now.

The shuttle is about to be "retired" -- and for good reason. "In light of the knowledge gained since the loss of Columbia, we believe we have about 1 chance in 80 of losing a crew on any single shuttle launch," NASA Administrator Michael D. Griffin said in a column he wrote for Space News published Oct. 20.

"If we were to conduct 10 additional launches prior to retiring the shuttle, we would incur a risk of about 1 chance in 8 that another shuttle crew would be lost at some point in the sequence," said Griffin. "These are sobering odds, one reason the Columbia Accident Investigation Board recommended replacing the shuttle as soon as possible."

The Bush administration and NASA have planned an end to the shuttle program in 2010 and, in 2015, having manned space flights resume with what NASA calls its Constellation program. This consists of a rocket called the Ares I Crew Launch Vehicle and a capsule to sit on top of it called the Orion Crew Exploration Vehicle, in which astronauts would ride.

Between 2010 and 2015, at the earliest, the only way U.S. astronauts would be able to go up into space is as paying passengers on Russian rockets going to and from the International Space Station (a $10 billion project that has now ballooned in cost to $100 billion, most of that U.S. tax money).

And as for money, "Over $7 billion in contracts has already been awarded -- and nearly $230 billion is estimated to be ultimately spent over the next two decades" on the Constellation program, the Government Accountability Office said in an April report. But whether the Ares I rocket and Orion capsule will fly in 2015, or at all, as currently designed, remains to be seen.

"Computer modeling is showing that thrust oscillation within the first stage of the Ares I could cause excessive vibration throughout the Ares I and Orion," said the GAO report. This "could create a risk of hardware failure and loss of vehicle control." In other words, there might be violent shaking at liftoff that could doom the spacecraft. Also, said the GAO, the Ares I rocket might not have enough power to reach orbit. In addition, the GAO said NASA acknowledges that "at this time, existing test facilities are insufficient to adequately test the Ares I and Orion systems."

GAO said of the Ares I and Orion getting off the ground in 2015: "There are considerable unknowns as to whether NASA’s plans for these vehicles can be executed within schedule goals."

Compounding this is news reported in October by the Orlando Sentinel -- based on reviews of NASA documents and internal studies and interviews with more than a dozen engineers, technicians and NASA officials involved in the project -- that NASA is concerned that Ares I could crash into the launch tower during liftoff because of "liftoff drift." The Sentinel said the ignition of the rocket’s solid-fuel engine is seen as making it "jump" sideways on the launch pad.

"Bit by bit, the new rocket ship that is supposed to blast America into the second Space Age and return astronauts to the moon appears to be coming undone," began the Sentinel article. It quoted a NASA contractor as saying, "I get the impression that things are quickly going from bad to worse to unrecoverable."


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Karl Grossman is professor of journalism at the State University of New York/College at Old Westbury and author of books involving NASA, including The Wrong Stuff: The Space Program’s Nuclear Threat to Our Planet and writer and narrator of television programs among them "Nukes In Space: The Nuclearization and Weaponization of the Heavens" (www.envirovideo.com)

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Pentagon is responsible for 14 Shutle deaths (and other points)
Posted by: bonzi on Dec 26, 2008 2:49 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am not advancing any conspiracy theory here. Shuttle design was heavily influenced by military. They mandated large "cross range" capability (in effect, they wanted it capable to land anywhere, from any orbit) and heavier payload than originally envisioned. The result was a vehicle that spends more than 15 minutes in hot plasma during reentry, requiring fragile ceramic and CRC thermal protection system.

What should have been chosen instead should have been a combination of simpler orbiter (say, a development of X-15, itself almost a spaceplane) and a booster system that can carry either a manned orbiter or unmanned cargo capsule (Soviet Buran system was to have that capability). Needless to say, uncontrollable and dangerous slightly improved ancient Chinese rockets (a.k.a. Morton Thiocol solid fuel motors) should have no place in man-rated vehicle.

Long-term solution to getting crews to orbit is two stage winged system using scramjet or combined-cycle air-breathing engines for most of the way up. For flights out of LEO, obviously, dedicated vehicles should be built that never enter the atmosphere.

Short term, US should rely on innovative private companies to build transfer vehicles and ISS lifeboats, and launch them on proven boosters, be they US-built or European, Russian or even Chinese.

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» RE: One old voice of experience Posted by: Edward George
NASA mishaps and culture-bad for the taxpayer
Posted by: bccmeteorites on Dec 26, 2008 5:29 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Back in July of 2003 I noticed NASA centers visited our website almost two dozen times and shortly thereafter (October of that year) issued CFR-1275, "Investigation of Research Misconduct". You might ask what interest does a space agency have in a small researcher like us who; discovered and identified the largest lunar meteorite found thus far, found and identified the first and only piece of collapsed supernova (crystalline silicates), and found and identified the first and only cometary meteorites to date? By the way we discovered the supernova debris matches the cosmic abundance profile for chemical elements across the periodic chart. [This is significant because it means that all chemical elements, are somehow manufactured in oxygen rich stars]. It soon came to our attention that NASA was behind a full court press, lining up their scientists at numerous universities to shut us down and shut down our website. It was a battle of epic proportions and they silently scrapped and tabled CFR-1275 when it became apparent that GWB would be elected for a second term thus relieving them of accountability since they now had a good friend in the White House who would shield them from responsibility in exchange for helping elect him. The most bizarre act of the White House was when GB (a President who could care less about education) came out and announced a trip to the Moon and Mars. This was important and it represented a gift to NASA and the military machine for their Republican ties. While they did hurt us significantly it was only temporary. We won. And if we win, the taxpayer wins.

http://www.bccmeteorites.com/misconduct-planetary.html

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Moon Landings Are Like Religion
Posted by: terradea42 on Dec 26, 2008 6:06 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So what is it; we lack the technology/expertise/funding we had in the 60s? Right, and pigs fly out of my nose. The moon landings were lies, all lies, made up to intimidate the Soviets, and now our lies are backfiring on us. Think about it, if we had actually rocketed to the moon 7 times 30-40 years ago, like our government (NASA) claims, we would be much more advanced in space flight than we are today. The U.S. Moon Landing myth is like religion; convince millions of people to believe it, and it becomes truth.

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» RE: Moon Landings Are Like Religion Posted by: monkeywrench
NASA
Posted by: jstepp590 on Dec 26, 2008 8:39 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yeah, just like usual, government running things coupled with lobbyists from overfed corporations mean that something important is getting screwed up.

We need to get the government out of space, but we need to get them into the business of making space viable for business before we kick them out totally. With our growing world populations we need access to space resources to keep up with living standards. In fact it is quickly becoming one of the most important issues we will face over the next 50yrs.

Anyone that doesn't think so please step up in this article and allow me to educate you. Space is important, NASA less so. As long as we keep those facts in mind we should do ok.

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"mandate reality" - Isn't that precisely the Neocon world view?
Posted by: Phred42 on Dec 26, 2008 10:18 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The problem is that Republicans have been appointing and doing the hiring as NASA.

Change THAT, Clean house, and it will get better.

At some point we will be forced to admit that the Republican, Conservative Mindset, cannot be trusted to control ANYTHING.

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Karl Grossman doesn't know what he's talking about
Posted by: mutatron on Dec 26, 2008 11:01 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There probably is something wrong with NASA higher-ups after eight years of Bush regime incompetence, but this article is written at such a low level of engineering savvy and space program knowledge, it's not worth reading.

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Karl Grossman knows what he's talking about
Posted by: PaulK on Dec 26, 2008 11:40 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
NASA is a broad side of a barn, easy to hit with shoes, tomatoes, eggs or paint. Mr. Grossman's general criticisms of NASA's groupthink loss of perspective are valid. If he didn't hit your particular target, well, it's a big barn and Grossman's editor gave him a limit on column-inches.

NASA's general planning to put a man in a can on the moon, set some kind of human endurance record on the moon, then leave, doesn't strike me as too useful. Not much new science is performed.

We also don't get much closer to lunar colonization, which at this point is only a far-off gleam, like when Lincoln's Secretary of State Seward bought Alaska. However, in the long run there's hydrogen on the moon if you look, steady power can be beamed in from lunar orbit, robotic telepresence on the moon is easy enough, and all sorts of to-orbit and from-orbit options are possible. For example, carbon-based bags can be simply dropped onto a landing zone on the moon. What else will colonists need (besides freedom)? The moon's surface is 20 times the size of Alaska's surface.

NASA suffers dearly from Byzantine compartmentalization. This dollar is guaranteed for a particular large private company, and this particular directorate is for a particular Congressional district. I have heard a bitter complaint from a NASA engineer that he wanted to help all of NASA, but his boss pointed out that because of the nature of the science he was helping the other directorates more than his own, so that's why he had to stop. Based on what I have heard, I recommend independent commissions for the removal of partiality from the agency's decisions.

Historically, the agency has gotten into some bitter fights over spending. Dissidents have complained about commitment to the Shuttle, then to the International Space Station, and now to the Moon Base. There were also bad fights in the Werner Von Braun era. Basically, if you had a new idea you screamed, you pulled rank and you called in your chips. The actual merits of the idea were secondary.

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Reality Bites
Posted by: Bekker on Dec 26, 2008 1:00 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
These types of technical problems seem to arise at NASA whenever a Republican administration is in charge of directing its agenda.

The Challenger disaster was a mix of bad technology and religious politics. Many NASA engineers believed that President Nixon’s appointment of a Mormon to head NASA was the only reason for the NASA director’s subsequent approval of the solid-fuel booster technology, since the shuttle booster design came from a subcontractor, Morton-Thiokol, a Utah-based company run and staffed by Mormons. Non-Mormon engineers and scientists at NASA who complained about the dangers of a solid-fuel propulsion system that cannot be turned off once it’s ignited were overruled and ignored, at least until the Challenger exploded.

True to their right-wing, Mormon cultural dictates, which among other things require an absolute obedience to a perceived authority, the subsequent investigation of the Challenger explosion revealed that the subservient Morton-Thiokol personnel were apparently too fearful of confronting those in power in a way that would have brought in qualified people to seriously examine or re-engineer the o-ring technology—this despite the fact that on many earlier occasions the o-rings had shown partial failures.

The current problems at NASA reflect the bane of all scientists who find themselves thwarted and at the mercy of religious anti-intellectuals and profiteers who act as if they hate science and scientists. In addition to this all-too-common problem, the current NASA director’s fear of turning design data over to the new administration may reflect an assumption that many Republican-based, politically-favored contracts may be canceled once a superior space transport technology emerges to trump the politics of stupidity. No doubt for many NASA personnel, the changes cannot happen soon enough as they count down to the inauguration of President-elect Obama.

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» Nixon killed NASA! Posted by: spacestevie
JFK and NASA Were Great - Most Of The World Loved Americans
Posted by: tony_opmoc on Dec 26, 2008 1:24 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Well except the Vietnamese. They didn't think you were very nice at all.

But Most of The World was 100% convinced that Americans Landed on The Moon in 1969.

As was I

But the Lunar Probes have so far not revealed any Evidence whatsoever of American Lunar Landers on the Moon

Meanwhile the same technology from space can count the number of pubic hairs I have whilst laying outstretched on a nice nudist beach in Brighton

Tony

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Problems With NASA
Posted by: tfsullivan on Dec 26, 2008 2:03 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Excellent post and I would like to add the following. The problem with NASA is that it has been dragging it's feet for to long. Year after year, and decade after decade, of low earth orbit would make any common American citizen bored of what NASA is doing. The only really exciting science related stuff has come from the unmanned Mars robotic rovers Spirit and Opportunity, which have been enormously successful, and relatively cheap. The problem is only scientists and technical people get excited about Spirit and Opportunity. If NASA wants to gain the backing of the American people, they need to speed up the process of human exploration of space. Back in the Apollo days, we went to the moon within a 9 year period. Today, it can take 9 years just to get a NASA program approved by Congress. At the rate that NASA is going, private enterprise will pass it in terms of getting humans back into space exploration. And if not private enterprise, then China will gladly take the role of a global leader in space exploration. For news about space visit Space News.

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You all should remember...
Posted by: Pirate1 on Dec 26, 2008 2:32 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Back in the days of Ronnie Rayguns, NASA was taken from being a separate government agency and made a subsidiary of the military. Before then, the military had it's own launch program out of Vandenberg in California, The NASA program launched from Cape Canaveral, Florida. NASA was for the advancement of science, the military was about building an empire with eyes and probably weapons in the sky. Since the consolidation, science missions have taken a back seat to military missions. Spy satelites were prioritized over exploratory missions, science mission funding was drastically cut while military funding ballooned malignantly. Soon after that we had the Challenger failure, the bothched (at first) Hubble Telescope optics requiring expensive subsequent launches to correct the problems, the Columbia failure and a host of very expensive delays in planetary exploration programs where the missions were ready to go but had to wait in cue in storage while the prioritized military missions flew. When the inevitable failures began to happen, hawks would blame NASA, the media would parrot all the misinformation and then funding would be further reduced. The NASA of today bears little resemblance to the agency that put men safely on the moon in an eight year run up. Now they must struggle to find the cheapest way possible to continue their programs. So redundant safety measures that were the hallmark of those early missions were eliminated due to expense... then when missions fail and lives are lost, NASA gets blamed and further defunded. This is what happens when you let economists and creationists run the country. One can only see cash flow going to something that is over their head in understanding and the other feels threatened by the real potential of science discovering things that will ultimately invalidate all the nonesense they believe about the nature of the universe. A nonesense from which they draw enormous power and advantage. I predict that all future great discoveries in space exploration will be done by European and Chinese agencies. America will evolve into a series of bible based theme parks and warlord states. We have evolved into a nation of fools. I predict Obama will be more like Ike 2 than harbor anything like real change.

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» RE: You all should remember... Posted by: texasrodeoqueen
At Least Some of The Photography Was Done in Studios On Earth
Posted by: tony_opmoc on Dec 26, 2008 3:50 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I always believed what I saw on TV as a Teenager was true

But even before then I had done photography and still do today

Whilst until a few years ago I was 100% convinced that the Moon Landings were Real

I am completely convinced that at least some of the photography (both stills and video) were not done on the Moon - but in Studios on Earth.

This doesn't prove that the Americans didn't land on the Moon.

But it is completely obvious to anyone who has any real experience of photography that some of the content was done by Professional Photographers who were actually operating the Cameras Live By Hand with the kind of Feedback from eye to hand that simply cannot be done with 2+ second delay whilst the signal travels from the Earth to Moon and Back again - to make the corrections

I won't bore you with examples but note that some of this photography seems to have been deleted from Youtube and other sources - but they are still available elsewhere

You ain't going to find the truth by someone telling you what to believe

You need to find it for yourself.

Sometimes it is an accidental discovery that contradicts something you have always believed to be true all your life.

In such circumstances I find that my mouth opens wide in astonishment and shock - like I cannot believe the evidence of my eyes and think I must be mistaken or mad.

Tony

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The quote about NASA sums up the whole Bush administration...
Posted by: Lilah on Dec 26, 2008 7:59 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"At the highest levels of the agency, there seems to be a belief that you can mandate reality, followed by a refusal to accept any information that runs counter to that mandate."

That just about sums up the whole Bush admin. Thank goodness change is coming.

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Another avoidable pseudo crisis
Posted by: Artkansas on Dec 26, 2008 8:59 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Rack another one up for BushCo.

With the Chinese, Japanese and Indians doing lunar landings, this is a terrible time for America to be sitting in the outhouse. Not like this couldn't be predicted. Once again, we are going to suffer for the arrogance.

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"mandate reality" mmm sounds just like Bush!
Posted by: texasrodeoqueen on Dec 27, 2008 8:24 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"At the highest levels of the agency, there seems to be a belief that you can mandate reality ..." (it's an alcoholic thing)

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