As a space-policy analyst, whenever I hear about a “Sputnik moment” from a politician, I shudder, because I can be almost certain that it will have nothing whatsoever to do with Sputnik, let alone space policy. It is almost guaranteed to be a foolish and false analogy, just like “If we can land a man on the moon, why can’t we etc.”
Sputnik, like Apollo, was a unique event in American and perhaps even human history. It was the heart of the Cold War. We were in an existential battle with an enemy (the Soviet Union) over the capability to bombard each other with nuclear weapons. Both adversaries were developing rockets, with help from captured Germans from the recent world war. We got the cream of the crop, because Von Braun had decided that he had better prospects to pursue his dreams of planetary exploration by humans with America’s ideals, and had consciously escaped to the West with his hand-picked team. (He was ever the pragmatist with his ambitions, including his looking the other way at Dora and other Nazi work/death camps that supported his rocket program during the war.)
But of course, the president’s speech had nothing to do with that. It was about … other things that have nothing to do with Sputnik, in either analogy or reality.
Sputnik was about pure, raw technological skill, in an area where we felt vulnerable at the time. It had nothing to do with what made America exceptional.
Look, if the president wants to talk about space, then I’m all in favor of it — though really, given his political proclivities, I’m glad he doesn’t. Let’s just not talk about what a “Sputnik moment” it is.
Is it possible that we are misinterpreting the meaning this "Sputnik moment" comment? I mean, for many people from diverse backgrounds, Sputnik was a moment of tremendous pride (TIC).
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseThe president has completely bastardized the "Sputnik" response with uninspiring infrastructure upgrades including rail.
Considering the "Sputnik" response was initiated by JFK, you would think the Kennedy women would react unkindly?
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseSputnik crashed and burned about 3 months after launch. Poor metaphor, to say the least.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseHe has no shame, and no vision. Considering he's the first president to attempt to completely neuter NASA, his reference to Sputnik is rather insulting.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseWho else's talk is so completely at odds with his actions than this President? Even with the meter calibrated for politicians, this was beyond the pale.
The guy who killed the current manned space program uses our 1960s-era manned space program to rationalize all the other spending he wants to do. Hey, just read the teleprompter, get that cadence groove going, sprinkle it with "innovation" and "investment" and hope nobody with any sense notices the disconnect between your words and your actions.
Pathetic and yet the same mastery all rolled into an hour of ear candy.
"You're talking a lot but you're not saying anything." - David Byrne, Talking Heads
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseIf our astronaut-in-chief can start a high profile "Czars In Space" program, the deeper into space the better, he will have concretized both his space fantasy and his less regulation fantasy.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseI thought a "Sputnik moment" was when the country realizes it is facing a serious challenge, like, say, 9/11. The weirdness in using it is the solutions President Obama seems to think constitutes rising to that challenge. High-speed rail? It's a spending problem Mr. President, and "investing" with borrowed money is a risky way to get out of debt. It requires a very good ROI.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseFolks,
Obama's budget proposal did not try to neuter NASA. It simply cancelled a behind-schedule and over-budget program that Bush43 didn't bother to manage to actually deliver on his good 2004 policy.
Giving the private sector a bigger role in space is a good thing, even if Obama is doing it becuase he doesn't care enough about space to spend Eurosocialist-levels of money on it.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseIt will be interesting to see the Obama's space budget in the coming weeks. His National Space Policy has brought about the need for international cooperation. Of course budget cuts are going to be necessary, and I'm wondering if there will be even more of a push for government payloads on commercial spacecrafts.
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