How does NASA’s repurposing affect the search for life (of any kind, assuming reasonable expectations) on other planets? Here, Mark Baisley is CEO of Slipglass, a defense-intelligence contractor specializing in information security, comments on “whither NASA?”,

Once the Space Shuttle Atlantis returns from its final mission next month, the U.S. will put on hold its manned space flight program. It will be at least five years before the Orion “crew vehicle” and its intended launch vehicle, the Space Launch System, are ready to return astronauts to space.While unmanned launches will continue, many aerospace professionals are lamenting the absence of an American program for transporting humans into space. But I see a positive here. The commercial interests for a human presence in space will create the kind of market need that can only be met by the kind of extraordinary innovation that Americans are famous for. I predict that the baton will naturally be passed from the government-operated NASA to private firms who will find resourceful ways to meet the demand.

- “NASA Innovation is Gov Exception that Proves Rule,” Townhall, 6/5/2011

He adds,

These investments may be too risky or too colossal for private industry to initiate. And answering some of the big questions, like how the universe began, will have no monetary return.

Thoughts?

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