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  #41   Report Post  
Old October 10th 05, 11:15 AM
K4YZ
 
Posts: n/a
Default


wrote:
Mike Coslo wrote:


After all that. I would wager my life that there will still be poor,
there will still be starving people, there will still be
inequality, and
the world will not be any better a place than it is today.


Sounds pretty fatalistic to me.

I say things can be made a lot better, if the will is there to do it.


Oh?

The United Nations tried in Somalia.

They were more interested in guerrila warfare. Seems they couldn't
find the resources to feed themselves, yet when the resources were
brought to them, they resorted to murder and feudalistic warfare.

Take the whole energy issue. Suppose there *were* a serious, longterm,
well-funded national program to improve our energy situation. Attack on
all fronts - conservation, recycling, new sources, greater efficiency,
etc. Do you really think such a program couldn't help improve the lives
of almost all Americans?

Back to NASA...The technologies in my chosen profession
alone that
have benefitted from the Space Program are phenominal. I think if we
pulled the rug out from under it any time soon, the "trickle down"
effect in lost of impetus in technology development would be rapid and
deep felt.

Can you guarantee that those advances would not have
happened if the
money had been spent on research in the fields
directly affected? IOW,
why not simply go after a problem directly?

In industrialized society's history, major technological

advancements have MOSTLY followed (1) war, (2) captialist investment for profit (3) government subsidy to do research in that field (usually the impetus of, again, war).

There are certainly exceptions to the rule, radio being one of them.
"Radio" was not developed by governmental subsidy, nor was it the
product of an 18th century "Motorola" but was the "product" of private
inventors.

BINGO!

The same was mostly true of computers. Oh yes, the first real computer,
ENIAC, was built for the Army to compute artillery aiming tables. But
it was built on the work of earlier machines like the Atasinoff-Berry
Computer. And only one ENIAC was ever built. Its successors came from
private industry, for commercial purposes.


No, I can't guarantee that those advances would not have
occured...but WHEN would they have occured?


Nobody knows.


Right - who knows.


Nobody. Technological advance isn't always predictable.


True...there's no linear scale to it. But it's been in a positive
trend with STEEP improvements following warfare.

One interesting historic game is to look at what was predicted for the
future back 10, 20, 30 years. It's hilarious how many predictions never
came true, and how many things that are common today were not foreseen.


And how much of it COULD have been done if only the money were
applied to them?

As much as I believe that the Space program was a
peaceful spur to
technology, in the end, I don't care.

I like adventure, I like science, and I like exploring. People *will"
go into space, people *will* go to Mars. Will it be us, or will we be
known as the Portuguese of space exploration?

IOW, you're in it for the Buck Rogers factor.


Huh?

Recall that the "great nations of Europe in the 16th century" all went
exploring for *commercial* and *political* reasons. For the bucks, not
Buck Rogers.


And did science NOT benefit, Jim?

Did I not say that direct commercial investment was a prime source
of scientific advancement?

Certainly NOT in the time
frame that they have.


Why not?

The fact is that we've avoided making serious longterm plans to solve
some basic technological problems in the USA. That avoidance has cost
us dearly, and will cost us more, until we
tackle the problems head-on rather than expecting some silver bullet to
do it for us.


Paying big bucks for the Buck Rogers factor, while ignoring the serious
earth-bound issues like energy supply, trade deficit and vulnerability
to weather disruption isn't smart...(SNIP)


OK...

That's the very argument that was bantied around at the end of the
Apollo project.

So the Space Program got back-burner'd except for robotic
explorations, the ISS and and the Shuttle.

Global warming is as bad if not worse than it ever was in the
70's. However spaceborne assets such as the Shuttle, ISS and MIR have
been used to document and archive these events as never before
possible.

Poverty is as bad if not worse as it was in the 70's. Most of
Africa is a wasteland. AIDS shot across the continent like a
cannon-shot.

The 50's, 60's and into the 70's were periods of great scientific
expansion and awareness of not only ourselves, but our "communities" of
the world.

Today our kids can't even find Africa on a map.

It's exactly like the guy who buys
season tickets and a new bigscreen plasma TV/home theatre to watch the
games using a credit card. While he ignores his rundown, collapsing
house, sick children and insecure job situation.


Amazing how we arrive at the same point via different paths.
(Wanna buy an AK-47...?!?!)

73

Steve, K4YZ

  #42   Report Post  
Old October 10th 05, 05:45 PM
 
Posts: n/a
Default

K4YZ wrote:
wrote:
Mike Coslo wrote:


After all that. I would wager my life that there will still be poor,
there will still be starving people, there will still be
inequality, and
the world will not be any better a place than it is today.


Sounds pretty fatalistic to me.

I say things can be made a lot better, if the will is there to do it.


Oh?

The United Nations tried in Somalia.


And they failed. You're saying that one failure proves there's
no point in trying to change anything when it comes to poverty,
inequality, or making the world a better place.

They were more interested in guerrila warfare. Seems they couldn't
find the resources to feed themselves, yet when the resources were
brought to them, they resorted to murder and feudalistic warfare.


Sure. They valued warfare higher. Doesn't mean everyone does.

Take the whole energy issue. Suppose there *were* a serious, longterm,
well-funded national program to improve our energy situation. Attack on
all fronts - conservation, recycling, new sources, greater efficiency,
etc. Do you really think such a program couldn't help improve the lives
of almost all Americans?


Hmmm?

Back to NASA...The technologies in my chosen profession
alone that
have benefitted from the Space Program are phenominal. I think if we
pulled the rug out from under it any time soon, the "trickle down"
effect in lost of impetus in technology development would be rapid and
deep felt.

Can you guarantee that those advances would not have
happened if the
money had been spent on research in the fields
directly affected? IOW,
why not simply go after a problem directly?

In industrialized society's history, major technological

advancements have MOSTLY followed (1) war, (2) captialist investment for profit (3) government subsidy to do research in that field (usually the impetus of, again, war).

There are certainly exceptions to the rule, radio being one of them.
"Radio" was not developed by governmental subsidy, nor was it the
product of an 18th century "Motorola" but was the "product" of private
inventors.

BINGO!

The same was mostly true of computers. Oh yes, the first real computer,
ENIAC, was built for the Army to compute artillery aiming tables. But
it was built on the work of earlier machines like the Atasinoff-Berry
Computer. And only one ENIAC was ever built. Its successors came from
private industry, for commercial purposes.


No, I can't guarantee that those advances would not have
occured...but WHEN would they have occured?


Nobody knows.

Right - who knows.


Nobody. Technological advance isn't always predictable.


True...there's no linear scale to it. But it's been in a positive
trend with STEEP improvements following warfare.


Not because of warfare, but because the resources were dedicated to
solving the problems.

One interesting historic game is to look at what was predicted for the
future back 10, 20, 30 years. It's hilarious how many predictions never
came true, and how many things that are common today were not foreseen.


And how much of it COULD have been done if only the money were
applied to them?


Some could, others were simply not practical. Point is, nobody seems to
be very good at predicting the future of technologies. Even the
"experts"
and "professionals" get it wrong most of the time. But people don't
remember
what an awful track record they have...

As much as I believe that the Space program was a
peaceful spur to
technology, in the end, I don't care.

I like adventure, I like science, and I like exploring. People *will"
go into space, people *will* go to Mars. Will it be us, or will we be
known as the Portuguese of space exploration?

IOW, you're in it for the Buck Rogers factor.


Huh?


Don't you remember "Buck Rogers"? Old sci-fi character.

The reference means Mike is more interested in the excitement than the
hard
science or the technological benefits.

Recall that the "great nations of Europe in the 16th century" all went
exploring for *commercial* and *political* reasons. For the bucks, not
Buck Rogers.


And did science NOT benefit, Jim?


Not really.

And the point is they did *not* go exploring for "science" or "because
it's there"
but for reasons like making money.

Did I not say that direct commercial investment was a prime source
of scientific advancement?


Certainly NOT in the time
frame that they have.


Why not?

The fact is that we've avoided making serious longterm plans to solve
some basic technological problems in the USA. That avoidance has cost
us dearly, and will cost us more, until we
tackle the problems head-on rather than expecting some silver bullet to
do it for us.


Paying big bucks for the Buck Rogers factor, while ignoring the serious
earth-bound issues like energy supply, trade deficit and vulnerability
to weather disruption isn't smart...(SNIP)


OK...

That's the very argument that was bantied around at the end of the
Apollo project.


Were they wrong or right?

So the Space Program got back-burner'd except for robotic
explorations, the ISS and and the Shuttle.


Also Skylab, Apollo-Soyuz, Viking, Galileo, Cassini, the Mars
missions..

Hardly "back-burner". How much was NASA's budget in those years? How
much is it now?

And how much would it have cost to continue lunar missions?

Global warming is as bad if not worse than it ever was in the
70's.


Think about *why*. It's not because of NASA.

It's because, after a few years of gasoline shortages, fossil fuels
became
cheap and plentiful in the early 1980s. And the problems were largely
ignored.

Which administration refuses to sign the Kyoto agreement?

However spaceborne assets such as the Shuttle, ISS and MIR have
been used to document and archive these events as never before
possible.


I think most of that data collection is done by unmanned weather and
geological observation satellites.

Poverty is as bad if not worse as it was in the 70's.


Think about *why*.

Most of
Africa is a wasteland. AIDS shot across the continent like a
cannon-shot.


Think about *why*.

The 50's, 60's and into the 70's were periods of great scientific
expansion and awareness of not only ourselves, but our "communities" of
the world.


Sure - for a bunch of reasons, not just space programs. But science is
useless
unless the knowledge is put to work.

Today our kids can't even find Africa on a map.


Depends which kids you ask. I know plenty of elementary-school kids who
can.

It's exactly like the guy who buys
season tickets and a new bigscreen plasma TV/home theatre to watch the
games using a credit card. While he ignores his rundown, collapsing
house, sick children and insecure job situation.


Amazing how we arrive at the same point via different paths.
(Wanna buy an AK-47...?!?!)


The question is *why* that guy wants/needs an AK-47 rather than, say, a
better plow or clean water.

Is it because he's an aggressor?
Is it because he's been attacked so many times that he needs it to
defend himself?
Is it some other reason?

Consider this, Steve: The reason "we" succeeded in going to the moon
was that a clear goal
was defined, nearly-unlimited resources allocated, and limitations on
success were kept to a minimum.
If it took a three-man crew, they sent three men - not two and not
four. That one of them would go all the way to the moon and back yet
never set foot on it did not change the plans. That they built an
enormous and expensive
rocket, and only got a small capsule back, did not change the plans
either. They simply did what was needed to meet the goal and nothing
more nor less.

Similar methods can be used to solve some (but not all) earth-bound
problems. But too often, "we" are unwilling to do what's needed here at
home to make it happen. Problems which are not as tough as Apollo (such
as modern surface transportation) are considered "too hard" to solve.

There's another factor at work, too: short attention span. The moon
missions were essentially a crash program - the Rooskies were beating
us in space "firsts", and JFK needed something that looked good to
counter his critics about the Bay of Pigs and the Cuban missile crisis.
So NASA got a blank check, contractors got cost-plus contracts and
things went night and day for almost a decade. But when it was done,
there wasn't a long-term plan for after-the-moon.

Americans seem to do well in crises but not so well at careful
long-term changes and planning.

73 de Jim, N2EY

  #43   Report Post  
Old October 10th 05, 06:11 PM
 
Posts: n/a
Default

K=D8HB wrote:
"Mike Coslo" wrote


I'm not talking about overall economics, Hans. I'm talking about the US
importing a large percentage of its oil needs.


We import a large percentage of a lot of stuff, both raw material and fin=

ished
goods. Coffee. Rubber. Titanium. Tin. Wolfram. Textiles. Clothing.=

And,
yes, even oil.


Yup. Some of that isn't a good idea.

We also export to other countries a large percentage of their needs. Food
(wheat/soy/corn/meat/dairy products). Lumber. Technology. Education.
Medicine.


And again - some of that isn't a good idea.

Example:

During the 1930s, the USA exported all sorts of things to Japan, both
raw materials and manufactured goods. Like oil and vacuum tubes,
neither
of which Japan could produce in large quantities on their own. US
industry
liked the hard currency that Japan paid with.

It was obvious early on that much of those exports were being used to
build up Japan's military, and *not* for defense of Japan. But by the
time the USA acted to stop it, Japan had become a serious adversary.

If you had to choose between fuel for some Escalade luvvin momma, and t=

he fuel
for say our military to train with, who would ya choose?


I could ask a corresponding patronizing question about any of the other g=

oods I
mentioned.

The point is that individuals here don't make that choice about oil any m=

ore
than a citizen of Japan makes that choice about lumber when they want to =

build a
new home.


Oh yes they do!

Individuals here have at least some control over how much oil they use.
They have some control in the short term (how much they drive, how they
drive, how they set their thermostats), more control in the longer term
(what car they drive, how efficient their homes are) and still more in
the very long term (alternative energy sources, alternative
technologies).

If the cost of oil goes too high, then Escalades will fall from favor
and be replaced by and Vegas and Pintos. If the price of lumber gets too=

high,
Japanese homes will be built from compressed rice straw or some other mat=

erial.

Sure. But that's not the only factor.

Has nothing to do with patriotism. Has to do with simple economics.


Long-term outlook. Sustainable technologies. Political and social
ramifications of "economic" decisions.

Lots more than simple economics.

Look at the big picture.


I do.


One thing I hear from folks who have been to Europe and Japan is how
great their
transit systems are. How they make it possible for most people to live
without
a car, or with only one car per family, because it's easy, safe and
cheap to go places by transit.

Some say the US isn't like those countries in that our population is
more spread out and the whole country is bigger. Which is true in some
cases. But consider this:

- Before WW2, much of the USA was crisscrossed by electric trolley and
interurban lines. Many small towns had frequent, inexpensive, fast
trolley service, which usually interconnected with other lines. These
systems were so extensive that about 100 years ago, a traveler
documented a trip from New York City to Chicago that used trolley lines
for more than 90% of the distance.

- The Los Angeles area used to have the Pacific Electric system, which
was systematically dismantled after WW2 by a conglomerate of oil,
rubber and automakers. Now LA has the "Blue Line", which was predicted
to be a failure, because 'Los Angelenos won't get out of their cars',
yet it has been well-used since the day it opened.

- In Europe and Japan, transit isn't expected to make a profit or even
pay its own way. It is systematically subsidized by taxes on motor
fuels. Typical subsidy is about 50% of *operating* costs. For capital
costs, consider that the Paris Metro has been almost constantly
expanded since its opening over 100 years ago. =20

73 de Jim, N2EY

  #44   Report Post  
Old October 10th 05, 06:45 PM
KØHB
 
Posts: n/a
Default


wrote


We import a large percentage of a lot of stuff, both raw material and
finished goods. Coffee. Rubber. Titanium. Tin. Wolfram. Textiles.
Clothing. And, yes, even oil.


Yup. Some of that isn't a good idea.


Which part is a "not good" idea? Why?

We also export to other countries a large percentage of their needs.
Food (wheat/soy/corn/meat/dairy products). Lumber. Technology.
Education. Medicine.


And again - some of that isn't a good idea.


Whic part is a "not good" idea? Why?

.... These systems were so extensive that about 100 years
ago, a traveler documented a trip from New York City to
Chicago that used trolley lines for more than 90% of the
distance.


I can still ride a train from New York to Chicago. I'd rather fly. (I doubt
the " 90% trolley line" story is true.)

73, de Hans, K0HB



  #45   Report Post  
Old October 10th 05, 09:50 PM
KØHB
 
Posts: n/a
Default


wrote


They valued warfare higher.


As someone who has "been there, done that" I can assure you that nobody values
warfare except arms vendors.

Warfare is perceived (rightly or wrongly) as a method to OBTAIN some thing or
some result of value.

JFK needed something that looked good to
counter his critics about the Bay of Pigs and
the Cuban missile crisis.


"Been there, done that, got the medals both times". The only critics of the
results of the "Cuban missile crisis" wore poorly fitting suits and drank lots
of vodka.

Beep beep
de Hans, K0HB




  #46   Report Post  
Old October 10th 05, 11:35 PM
 
Posts: n/a
Default


K=D8HB wrote:
wrote


We import a large percentage of a lot of stuff, both raw material and
finished goods. Coffee. Rubber. Titanium. Tin. Wolfram. Textiles.
Clothing. And, yes, even oil.


Yup. Some of that isn't a good idea.


Which part is a "not good" idea? Why?


When we become too dependent on imports of things that are not easily
replaced, so that disruptions in the import process cause major
upheavals in our economy.

When the importing causes us to transfer large amounts of hard currency
to people who may then use it against us.

Example: The USA imported large amounts of oil from Iraq back in the
1980s. Which gave the dictator of that country the ability to buy lots
of weapons and build up a large military. Said dictator then used said
military to invade and devastate a neighboring country from which we
also imported large amounts of oil. A war was then fought to stop the
dictator's expansion.

Said dictator also perpetrated a long string of human rights violations
against his own people and his neighbors.

Was it a good idea for the USA to import oil from that country back in
the 1980s?

We also export to other countries a large percentage of their needs.
Food (wheat/soy/corn/meat/dairy products). Lumber. Technology.
Education. Medicine.


And again - some of that isn't a good idea.


Whic part is a "not good" idea? Why?


When the exporting causes us to empower people who may then use our
exports against us.

The example of the USA exporting raw materials and finished goods to
Japan in the 1930s is one example.

Another is how the USA supported extremists in Afghanistan during the
1980s because they opposed the existing regime, which was closely
allied to the Soviet Union. Those extremists were called "freedom
fighters" at the time. But when the Soviets left and the existing
regime fell, the "freedom fighters" established a regime that was even
more repressive (by our standards, anyway). That regime made the
country a training ground for extremists who went on to attack the USA.


Was it a good idea for the USA to export technology, training and
weapons to Afghanistan back in the 1980s?

.... These systems were so extensive that about 100 years
ago, a traveler documented a trip from New York City to
Chicago that used trolley lines for more than 90% of the
distance.


I can still ride a train from New York to Chicago.


But you need a car for shorter trips. And that's not the point, anyway.

The point is that there was once an extensive system of trolley and
interurban lines in the USA, much of which is long gone. At its peak in
1915, there were more than 15,000 miles of such lines in the USA.

I'd rather fly. (I doubt
the " 90% trolley line" story is true.)


It's true. The trip was made in 1909 by J.S. Moulton of New York City.
It is documented in "Railway Quarterly", winter issue, 1982.

73 de Jim, N2EY

  #47   Report Post  
Old October 10th 05, 11:46 PM
 
Posts: n/a
Default

K=D8HB wrote:
wrote


They valued warfare higher.


As someone who has "been there, done that" I can assure you that nobody v=

alues
warfare except arms vendors.


Warfare is perceived (rightly or wrongly) as a method to OBTAIN some thin=

g or
some result of value.


Well said!

JFK needed something that looked good to
counter his critics about the Bay of Pigs and
the Cuban missile crisis.


"Been there, done that, got the medals both times". The only critics of =

the
results of the "Cuban missile crisis" wore poorly fitting suits and drank=

lots
of vodka.


Not the results but that the whole thing happened in the first place.

IIRC, the Soviets were ticked off about the placement of Jupiter-C
IRBMs in Turkey. Of course Turkey was and is a NATO country. Moscow's
objection to the IRBMs was that they could hit targets inside the
Soviet Union in minutes, and were virtually impossible to stop,
compared to conventional bombers. They demanded that the IRBMs be
removed, and of course NATO refused - even though the Jupiters were
becoming outdated by ICBMs and submarine-launched missiles.

So the Soviets retaliated by trying to install similar IRBMs in Cuba.
Fortunately the preparations were discovered and their plans thwarted.

But what was kept rather quiet is that some months after the Soviets
backed down from installing their missiles in Cuba, the Jupiters were
quietly removed from Turkey.

And a "hot-line" was installed between Washington and Moscow so that
things could be discussed more directly by the leaders of the two
countries, and their representatives.

73 de Jim, N2EY

  #48   Report Post  
Old October 10th 05, 11:53 PM
an old friend
 
Posts: n/a
Default


wrote:
K=D8HB wrote:
wrote


They valued warfare higher.


As someone who has "been there, done that" I can assure you that nobody=

values
warfare except arms vendors.


Warfare is perceived (rightly or wrongly) as a method to OBTAIN some th=

ing or
some result of value.


Well said!

JFK needed something that looked good to
counter his critics about the Bay of Pigs and
the Cuban missile crisis.


"Been there, done that, got the medals both times". The only critics o=

f the
results of the "Cuban missile crisis" wore poorly fitting suits and dra=

nk lots
of vodka.


Not the results but that the whole thing happened in the first place.

IIRC, the Soviets were ticked off about the placement of Jupiter-C
IRBMs in Turkey. Of course Turkey was and is a NATO country. Moscow's
objection to the IRBMs was that they could hit targets inside the
Soviet Union in minutes, and were virtually impossible to stop,
compared to conventional bombers. They demanded that the IRBMs be
removed, and of course NATO refused - even though the Jupiters were
becoming outdated by ICBMs and submarine-launched missiles.

So the Soviets retaliated by trying to install similar IRBMs in Cuba.
Fortunately the preparations were discovered and their plans thwarted.

But what was kept rather quiet is that some months after the Soviets
backed down from installing their missiles in Cuba, the Jupiters were
quietly removed from Turkey.


bull**** Jim

every movie or account of those days mentions it

and that the Jupiters were obsolete and scheduled for withdraw

and the Kendy had ordered their withdraw several time

And a "hot-line" was installed between Washington and Moscow so that
things could be discussed more directly by the leaders of the two
countries, and their representatives.
=20
73 de Jim, N2EY


  #49   Report Post  
Old October 11th 05, 12:43 AM
KØHB
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"an old friend" wrote

bull**** Jim


every movie or account of those days ...........


I don't know what they taught you as a Colonel in the Chemical Corps, but I was
there on the blockade line (didn't watch some sensational movie version) and Jim
speaks truly.

Beep beep
de Hans, K0HB



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