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Ear to the Ground

Budget Space Motel or Just Hot Air?

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Posted on Jun 7, 2010
Bigelow Aerospace via Wikimedia Commons

Out in the Nevada desert, in a complex encircled by barbed wire and guards, a millionaire motelier who believes in UFOs and prayer—but not the Big Bang—is building the world’s first private space station. And it’s inflatable.

The vision is President Barack Obama’s: Let private entrepreneurs take over the space race from bloated NASA. But someone needs to build the rockets and space hotels to make it work. Robert T. Bigelow, of Bigelow Aerospace and the Budget motel chain, believes he can build the space stations, and others will be able to fly paying customers, including NASA astronauts, into orbit—all for less money than NASA and other government space agencies currently pay to transport and host spacemen and spacewomen.

Truthdig is not entirely convinced this is such a good idea. In a year of oil spills, runaway Toyotas and toxic happy meals, we’re not so sure about turning over exploration of the final frontier—and transportation of our astronauts—to private profiteers.  —PZS

The New York Times:

If this business plan unfolds as it is written — the company has two fully inflated test modules in orbit already — Bigelow will be buying 15 to 20 rocket launchings in 2017 and in each year after, providing ample business for the private companies that the Obama administration would like to finance for the transportation of astronauts into orbit — the so-called commercial crew initiative.

President Obama’s budget proposal for 2011 calls for investing $6 billion over five years for probably two or more companies to develop spacecraft capable of carrying people into space. Then, instead of operating its own systems, like the space shuttles, NASA would buy rides for its astronauts on these commercial space taxis.

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By Mike Lorrey, June 10, 2010 at 11:26 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

Oh geeze you people really are ignorant aren’t you?

FYI: The transhab inflatable space module design originated at NASA, which spun it off and sold the technology to Bigelow. He already has two prototypes that have been in orbit for several years now and work just fine.

As for your little allergy to the idea of space travel for profit, versus the socialist public market failure that is NASA, SpaceX just launched its Dragon capsule into orbit for less than 1/20th of the amount of money that NASA has spent on the Ares rocket that was just cancelled and never flew. SpaceX will be offering rides to orbit for $20 million a seat. Russia charges NASA $52 million a seat on its Soyuz rocket.

And, on yeah, Burt Rutan put a man in space for 1/100th the cost of the X-15 program that NASA spent 3.5 billion on back in the 1960’s.

I realize this conflicts with your communist manifesto, but facts are facts.

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Leefeller's avatar

By Leefeller, June 9, 2010 at 2:42 am Link to this comment

Yeah, going into space is on my list of things I want to do, as soon as I get a job, pay off my bills and once I can afford to by Tequila again.

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By samosamo, June 7, 2010 at 10:22 pm Link to this comment

****************

 

This great, another heavens gate or whatever. You know why?
Guess what it coming into the solar system right now, a comet,
‘Comet McNaught Becoming Visible to the Unaided Eye’.

http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap100607.html

Check the link.

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A Progressive Journal of News and Opinion. Editor, Robert Scheer. Publisher, Zuade Kaufman.
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