Here’s an email from a ‘stro (who’s a regular reader, and who reports that others are as well, but has to remain anonymous for what I hope are obvious reasons), on my NRO piece:
…great article in the Nat’l Review online. Agreed with most of it, but it was almost too rational — the public and especially the folks in this Agency have an emotional attachment to the Corps that defies, in my direct experience, all rationality. One of the big advantages the emergents have is that their test pilots will be seen as test pilots, not some sort of symbol for what is great about America. Hence, they are more comfortable taking appropriate risks than this agency can be.
This is actually a very interesting topic — think some sociology student will get a Ph.D. dissertation out of it someday. It’s interesting because it’s also frustrating to us astronauts — we’re more comfortable with the risks & the results of the failures than people who don’t even know the folks involved.
Yes.
Here’s an example of the emotional attachment, from right after Columbia was lost (scroll down to the email from Houston).
I would also note (sadly) how many of my off-the-cuff predictions, including programmatic response, from the initial minutes after hearing about the loss of Columbia have held up.
[Update a little while later]
I’ll note also that NASA hasn’t learned the lesson from Columbia:
The lesson we must take from the most recent shuttle disaster is that we can no longer rely on a single vehicle for our access to the new frontier, and that we must start to build the needed orbital infrastructure in low earth orbit, and farther out, to the moon, so that, in the words of the late Congressman George Brown, “greater metropolitan earth” is no longer a wilderness in which a technical failure means death or destruction.
NASA’s problem hasn’t been too much vision, even for near-earth activities, but much too little. But it’s a job not just for NASA–to create that infrastructure, we will have to set new policies in place that harness private enterprise, just as we did with the railroads in the 19th Century. That is the policy challenge that will come out of the latest setback–to begin to tame the harsh wilderness only two hundred miles above our heads.
I need to finish (errr…..start) my essay on false lessons learned from Shuttle and station.
[Update at 3 PM EDT]
It just occurs to me that, while I don’t know if any sociology students have gotten theses out of it, Tom Wolfe managed to get a best-selling novel, as well as a movie.
[Update at 5 PM EDT]
Popular Mechanics has a blog post on probability of success of Shuttle and other space missions.
One nit (based on a quick read). They’re comparing the probability of lunar mission success to Shuttle probability of crew loss. Apples and oranges. Apollo lost no crew in space (which excludes the pad fire).