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92 lines
4.5 KiB
Plaintext
92 lines
4.5 KiB
Plaintext
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The Dream Is On Life Support
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by Dave Bealer
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In May 1961 John F. Kennedy was just four months into his
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presidency. A cold war was raging, and a new race with the Soviets
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was getting into full swing. The Soviets were ahead in the race for
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space. In the face of all this Kennedy, who is best known for the
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Bay of Pigs, the Cuban Missile Crisis, and his own gory death in
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Dallas, made his greatest contribution to history. He pledged that
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the United States would work to send a man to the moon and return
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him safely to Earth by the end of the decade.
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Kennedy's pledge set in motion the most exciting and
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productive feat of science and engineering ever accomplished by
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mankind. In only 98 months his will was carried out, although he
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never lived to see it. In July 1969, with 17 months to spare, Neil
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Armstrong uttered the most famous words in history as he set foot
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on the moon, "that's one small step for man, one giant leap for
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mankind."
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The hearts and spirits of people all over the Earth
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(including a certain 11-year-old boy in Pennsylvania who was up
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*way* past his bedtime) soared as Armstrong took that first human
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step on a celestial body other than Earth. For a few hours all
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mankind was truly united, in thought if not in deed or action.
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Tranquility Base promised to be the first step in the long march
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of human space exploration, and possibly a first step towards a
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united Earth.
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Alas, the bean counters got involved and mucked up the
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whole thing. They pointed out that spending millions of dollars
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to bring back a few moon rocks wasn't very cost effective. We had
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"won" the race to the moon, what else did we need to prove? Plus
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the U.S. was still in a nuclear arms race with the Soviets, not
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to mention a shooting war in Vietnam.
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On top of the financial considerations, humans displayed
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their peculiar fascination with "firsts." Nobody remembers the
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name of the second man to sail to the New World. Nor do they
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remember the name of the second man to fly across the Atlantic.
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History will remember the names Armstong and Aldrin. Can you
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remember the names of the Apollo 12 astronauts who walked on the
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moon?
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Even quicker than it began, human fascination with space
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travel faded. Only the crisis of Apollo 13 and the Challenger
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disaster garnered headlines. In December 1972 astronaut Gene Cernan
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became the last human being to set foot on the moon. As much as I
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hope that last sentence is not the final word on the matter for
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all time, it certainly appears final for this century.
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Americans seem set against the idea of further space
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travel and research. More immediate problems of pressing social,
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political, and medical crises take all the publicity and the money.
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Nearly everyone forgets the amazing number of new technologies that
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have come from basic research for the space program. New materials,
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new processes, and new medicines have all resulted from space
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research.
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Many people might change their minds about the utility
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of the space program if they were aware of all the useful
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developments that have resulted from it, one of which may some day
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save their life, or the life of a loved one. My own father's life
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was extended several years by a cardiac pacemaker, one result of
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research for the space program. To me, at least, that justifies
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every penny spent on space research in the past 35 years.
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Those of us who were eleven (or thereabouts) when Neil
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Armstrong took that giant step into history expected to see
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interplanetary space travel, and possibly even interstellar
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travel, during our lifetimes. Many of us expected to be among
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the first to make such voyages. The future espoused by Star Trek
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seemed close enough to touch. Now it appears that greedy,
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shortsighted people, working through even more greedy and short-
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sighted politicians, have traded that glorious future for a few
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crumbs and bandaids today. We don't need nationalized health
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care. We need another Kennedy to lead us into space - to keep
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the dream alive.
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# # #
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Copyright 1994 Dave Bealer. All Rights Reserved.
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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Dave Bealer is a thirty-something mainframe systems programmer, and
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an aspiring writer. When not listening to music, Dave writes for and
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publishes his own e-mag, Random Access Humor. He can be reached at:
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dave.bealer@rah.clark.net; on the InterNet, or The Puffin's Nest,
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(410) 437-1460, at Fido: 1:261/1129.
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============================ # # # ===================================
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