Networks Don't Blame Obama as to Why the 'Manned Space Program is Now Idle'
The Big Three networks all recognized the 50th anniversary of John Glenn's historic orbital spaceflight on their evening newscasts on Monday. Both NBC and CBS highlighted how there's "no certainty when the U.S. will launch astronauts again, [and] Glenn worries America may be losing its edge." But the networks failed to mention that President Obama put the decades-old endeavor in limbo, which led to the unemployment of thousands of technicians.
Brian Williams concluded his report on NBC Nightly News by noting how "it irks Senator Glenn that the manned space program is now idle. The Shuttle program is over, and the only ride available into space for American astronauts is the Russians, the former enemy that [he] was chasing into space 50 years ago today."
Correspondent Bill Plante ended his report on CBS Evening News on a similar note, and included a soundbite from the former Marine fighter pilot himself:
BILL PLANTE (voice-over): With the end of the Space Shuttle program, and no certainty when the U.S. will launch astronauts again, [John] Glenn worries America may be losing its edge.
JOHN GLENN, ASTRONAUT: I hope we keep this American curiosity, this quest for the new and the unknown that has led this country into leadership in the world.
PLANTE: Fifty years on from his three orbits around the globe, John Glenn is still looking to the future.
On ABC, correspondent John Donvan recounted the "big moment for America" and how Glenn "put America's confidence back on track," but didn't mention the astronaut's criticism of the current status of the U.S.'s manned space program.
In a February 14 article in the New York Times, writer John Noble Wilford gave further detail of Glenn's arguments for manned spaceflight:
Glenn said he was concerned that since the final shuttle flight last July, the United States must depend on the Russian Soyuz space vehicles for ferrying astronauts to and from the International Space Station....In a meeting with President Obama two years ago, Mr. Glenn made his case for continuing shuttle flights...for several more years, contrary to President George W. Bush's policy that a new generation of boosters and spacecraft would be developed with the savings from the cancellation of shuttle operations. "The president didn't disagree with any of my arguments," he [Glenn] recalled. "He said we just don't have the money."
In addition to this, three Apollo-era astronauts -- Neil Armstrong; Jim Lovell of Apollo 13 fame, and Gene Cernan, the last man to walk on the man and a former ABC News space contributor -- wrote a letter to the President in April 2010, criticizing his administration's decision to cancel the Bush-era Constellation program, labeling the move "devastating," and arguing that "without the skill and experience that actual spacecraft operation provides, the USA is far too likely to be on a long downhill slide to mediocrity." In addition to Armstrong, Lovell, and Cernan, veteran NBC News space correspondent Jay Barbree signed the letter.
It's curious, to say the least, that the ABC, CBS, and NBC, whose liberal leanings are well documented, would not mention these details in their reporting commemorating Glenn's Mercury spaceflight, and as they gear up to begin the coverage of the general election later this year.
- Matthew Balan's blog
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Comments
Of course not, you cant blame O'Bozo! Hes so cool!
Submitted by NJRightWinger12 on Wed, 02/22/2012 - 2:15pm.
Who to blame? Why, Pres Bush of course-he gets the blame for everything! Hes the one who said we should use NASA for "Muslim relations", or whatever the hell Barry Boy said-WTF?
Well...
Submitted by OldJarhead77 on Wed, 02/22/2012 - 4:04pm.
we could use that Muslim outreach to gather all of them to colonize the Moon...send them all there then forget them...............
Yes, send them all there!
Submitted by NJRightWinger12 on Wed, 02/22/2012 - 7:26pm.
And have Newt oversee them! And then the Moonmen would try to attack us Earthlings!
So what about....
Submitted by jon_torlin on Wed, 02/22/2012 - 2:52pm.
I thought NASA was going somewhere with this Muslim Outreach program? Where's the progress on that?
Of course, that's said with extremely heavy sarcasm.
-Jon
Are You Suggesting
Submitted by stratman on Wed, 02/22/2012 - 3:20pm.
Space be to Obama's Islamonazis as Liberia was to Lincoln's Blacks?
Pending decision: First mission to the Sun or a black hole.
To the sun!
Submitted by jon_torlin on Thu, 02/23/2012 - 12:16pm.
Let's do the sun, but they'll have to go at night time. It'll be cooler then.
-Jon
Like
Submitted by stratman on Thu, 02/23/2012 - 2:31pm.
Hehehe
Obama:
Submitted by HardRightTurn on Wed, 02/22/2012 - 3:55pm.
The buck stops at George W. Bush. His continuing successes belong to Me.
To more fully comprehend the Left, one must read “Leftism As Psychopathy” by John Ray, M.A., Ph.D. Caution, it might scare you a little bit.
http://jonjayray.tripod.com/psycho.html
It's that LSM again
Submitted by deadeyedan on Wed, 02/22/2012 - 4:06pm.
At the outset, the LSM was quite enthusiastic about space activities; it generated high ratings and would be the source of their eventual ability to more easily broadcast to wider markets owing to the communications satellite array.
But once these goals were met and enthusiasm waned the real LSM reared its ugly head and abandoned its eagerness to tout anything space-related and allowed themselves to be taken in by the tired, tunnel-vision sound bite "we need to rearrange our priorities to spend our resources down here on earth", making it seem that what they meant was more savings for the average citizen but was in reality a means of diverting funds to welfare and other socialist-themed programs.
Every time a space related story became high profile, whether it was a Mars lander or the Hubble optical problem the LSM would not fail to mention the price tag but utterly fail to compare the cost with other programs.
It was in the mid'90's that many of the dramatic breakthroughs in digital technology and medical advances (CT-scans, MRI's and the like) that Newt Gingrich recognized as a key to revitalizing the economy if taxes, especially capital gains, would be lowered to encourage industry to invest in these advances.
Notice that it's been Newt who has challenged the nation just as Jack Kennedy did just before John Glenn's historic mission; he alone seems to recognize how such a challenge would once again ignite the fire of the "can do" spirit that got us to the moon and back and the dramatic improvements in digital technology and medical breakthroughs that resulted.
LIBERALISM - government of the people by the theories and for the ideologists
I have always been enthralled
Submitted by Dan The Man 2 on Wed, 02/22/2012 - 6:19pm.
I have always been enthralled with space, but perhaps this is the time to throttle back a bit. Continue to research and test but concentrate on the space just above us and the moon. That was the original idea to start at near earth orbit and then goto a moon base.
Perhaps we can enlist private enterprise and award prizes for milestones such as the prize for the first spacecraft to launch and fly and do it again. We can use innovation and capital from private individuals and companies.
There is a better way to do things. And we need to save some money. there are things to continue such as satellite development.
"We just don't have the
Submitted by ReaganRuled on Wed, 02/22/2012 - 10:54pm.
"We just don't have the money"? It's never stopped him before! It's called "priorities," Mr. 0BowMao. And yours are ALL screwed up!
John Glenn
Submitted by Edward Cropper on Thu, 02/23/2012 - 9:37am.
A great many of us Ohioan's couldn't care less what John Glenn has to say about anything.
He betrayed Ohio voters as soon as he got to Washington as our new Senator.
He campaigned as a good old boy down to earth Buckeye. As soon as he got to Washington
he became a Kennedy lackey and phony liberal.