The role of private enterprises in sending Humans to space.
Has NASA, the monolithic space agency, failed in it's quest to put man
out into the cosmos. Will profit coupled with mans need to explore be
the driving engine which sends man into the cosmos. Think about what has
moved technology forward within the American society over the past 100
years or so. Was Orville and Wilbur Wright employed by the government.
Of course not. Most of their research and development for the invention
of the airplane took place within a small bike shop in western Dayton,
Ohio, the birth place of aviation. Thomas Edison, who is accredited with
1,093 patents earning him the nickname "The Wizard of Menlo Park" used
his own money to build the Menlo Park research labs in New Jersey. In
1889 Thomas Edison established the Edison General Electric Company.
Thomas Edison is considered the most prolific inventor of our time and
his inventions were created within the realm of private enterprise. Did
the seed for the invention of the personal computer germinate within a
government lab. The invention of the personal computer came from an
assortment of various inventions and from the tinkering of Steve Jobs
and Steve Wozniak in Job's garage in an area now called Silicon Valley.
Their tinkering led to the development of Apple Computers. The story of
Bill Gates and the development of the Microsoft family of operating
systems took place within private enterprise. The Windows family of
operating systems is the most widely used on earth and has been a major
player in bringing information technology to the developed world.
Examples of major technological advancement within the realm of private
enterprise are numerous. Most major technological advancements within
society have occurred outside the purview of government intervention.
Governments were intended to govern the people. The governments role is
to preserve the environment of freedom and democracy so that
intellectual curiosity can flourish within this environment. The
governments role is also to provide funding, and should not be in the
nuts and bolts operation of putting man into space. The ingenuity of man
within the realm of private enterprise has resulted in most of the
technological advancements we enjoy today.
The cosmos will be explored by man operating from the base of private
enterprise and the technology needed to explore the cosmos will be
developed within that enterprise. Why is this so. NASA is an agency
driven by fear of tragedy. More mishaps will decrease the probability of
sufficient government funding. This cycle of fear, mishaps, and the
hope for continual funding is one that seems to have no end. But mishaps
are part of the business of putting explorers into space. What can
better withstand the expected mishaps. A government agency or private
enterprise. If a private enterprise fails, it's competitor can step in
to fill the gap and the engine of private enterprise can continue to
push man into space. NASA is not a private enterprise competing within
the world market place.
NASA is not what it used to be during the Apollo days. Given it's
current mind set and culture, it will be difficult within this framework
to send man out into the cosmos as true explorers. They have given the
nuts and bolts of putting man into space to private contractors. But
these NASA contractors have the same NASA mind set because they are
under the dominion of NASA. There is a fear of mishaps within
contractors without true competition within the market place. NASA
awards contracts to the lowest bidder. Does the lowest bidder provide
the highest level of safety. Once a company is awarded a contract, they
remain a NASA contractor for many years and simply become an extension
of NASA. Therefore NASA becomes a autocratic agency with it's arms
extending outward to many companies. NASA's manned space flight program
can do no more then low earth orbit. Year after year of low earth orbit
does not excite the American people. Astronauts today are no longer
household names. An American president here and there will give a speech
saying we are going to Mars. Even President Bush's January 14, 2004
speech seems to have already been forgotten by the American public.
When we went to the moon this was the start of an exploration. A goal
was set on May 25, 1961 by President John F. Kennedy, during a speech
before a Joint Session of Congress, to reach the moon before the end of
the decade. NASA kicked into high gear and achieved one of the greatest
accomplishments in the history of mankind. We took the first step into
space and then just stopped. Since then all of the manned space missions
have never gone beyond low earth orbit, and the American public becomes
bored easily. To gain the American interest and support of the Apollo
days, we must send true explorers out into space. NASA wants to take
such small, time consuming incremental steps that by the time comes when
the really exciting work begins, the American support and interest may
be eroded to the point where NASA may no longer have the financial means
by which to accomplish such an endeavor. Hence, the need for private
enterprise to accomplish such an endeavor. If we are going to go into
the cosmos, then lets do it and stop the futile activity.
A private enterprise is not a bureaucracy. If safety issues arise from
qualified personnel within a bureaucracy, these issues may not resonate
to the proper people within the organization. A case in point, the
knowledge of a strong potential for a O-ring failure at low temperatures
between the segments for the solid rocket boosters of the space
shuttle, existed within the bureaucracy of NASA before the Space Shuttle
Challenger explosion. More specifically, this critical information in
terms of probability of O-ring compromise was expressed by engineers at
Morton Thiokol, the contractor for the development and production of the
solid rocket boosters. This information never percolated upward from
Morton Thiokol to the proper people within the NASA organization.
In private enterprise, which is non-bureaucratic by nature, a relatively
small group of people are working toward a common goal. In this
situation, safety issues which arise will be known by all members of the
organization. Safety issues will not get lost in a bureaucracy. NASA
depends on it's contractors to deliver a high level of safety. A private
enterprise depends on itself to provide a high level of safety. The
structure of a private enterprise is more suited to the endeavor of
sending out explorers into space. The government should award grants to
the most promising companies with the understanding that the sending out
of explorers into space does indeed benefit mankind.
Americans are at their best when they compete. Competition is an
integral component of American society. What was the driving force that
put us on the moon. It was the competition with the Russians. At the
present moment in time, this type of competition does not exist.
Although, it appears as if China may be a future competitor. Americans
need to compete to accomplish something. It is competition which drives
the advancement of technology. Why not let companies compete for
government funding and let the research and development occur within
these companies, and most importantly let them compete. These companies
can have the same characteristics of any company that wants to produce a
viable product. They will not be under contract from NASA and will
operate as a separate private enterprise entity. A company can make
money from space tourism and the same company can be involved in sending
explorers out into space. Government grants can be awarded based on how
strong the potential exists for space exploration. A company can be
involved in space tourism, exploration, or can provide a research and
development platform. This is the future of man's endeavor into space.
Man will be exploring the cosmos with private enterprise being the
driving engine. If one enterprise fails, one of the competing
enterprises will win out. Sure there will be some disasters and risks
will be taken because that is the nature of the business. But when
unfortunate disasters or mishaps do occur, the private enterprise engine
will not grind to a complete halt. Burt Rutan and his Scaled Composites
team have taken the first steps toward this archetypical dream of
exploring the cosmos, and they did it with a fraction of the budget that
NASA uses and with a team of 130 or so people to boot. They won the
Ansari X-Prize by sending a man into space and returning him safely to
earth and then they repeated this within two weeks. An absolutely
unbelievable accomplishment given the facilities and resources which
were available to them. This could only occur within a society where
freedom and democracy are regarded as a right to all individuals. The
United States is such a society.
Burt Rutan has said that he has never worked a day in his life. He only
plays. His passion for his work is what produces results. Burt Rutan and
his team represent the core of what makes the United States the
greatest country in the world. May be terrorist can get it through their
thick heads that freedom does work. Most importantly, Scaled Composites
has shown the world what private enterprise can accomplish. Even if
Scaled Composite's endeavors never go beyond earth orbit, they have
taken the first step within the proper mind set and culture, and this is
what will put man into the cosmos. This mind set and culture of pure
unadulterated intellectual curiosity is what really will put man into
the cosmos. Not NASA's mind set of fear.
NASA has played it's important role by lighting the torch in sending man
to the moon. We are now at a point in the history of mankind where that
torch should be passed to private enterprise. The developer of the
Ansari X-Prize I'm sure shares my thoughts. God has placed the planets
and all the stars within the universe there for a reason. It is God's
intention for us to move outward into the final frontier. We do this to
fulfill the natural curiosity that God has given to us and in the
process we better the lot of mankind. Lets go...



Comments
Post a Comment