B
Buster Bluth
Guest
After having been in construction fot awhile now I'm amazed that NASA pulled this off given all of the unknowns. If it would have been contracted out here's what the possible scenario (one I've seen on plenty of projects) might have been given all of the unknowns. Contractor A submits low ball bid and wins award. 2 years in they go bankrupt. Contractor B comes in with a low bid and change orders pile up. Contractor B goes bankrupt or sues. Contractor C sends lander to Mars and it blows up.
Anyhow, I'm sure NASA does subcontract out quite a bit as does the military. The point I was making is that the magical market is pretty bad at spending money on research just for the sake of research (not necessarily producing anything tangible at times). That's why so much of it is done vis a vis universities with public money. That is however, the kind of stuff that leads to new technological leaps forward and has created a shitzue ton of jobs.
Anyhow, isn't setting the permitters for or developing policies where market and or states can get it done just a verbose way of saying regulation?
Good luck with the GIS stuff. It's pretty cool when you get to suitability modeling if you haven't done that yet.
But NASA's bureaucracy does exist and is inefficient, and a professor I had two years ago spoke about it in detail. NASA could run like the National Science Foundation (which as you may know handles 1/5 of college science funding)--an independent federal agency free of much of the politics.
But NASA is such a tiny, tiny part of government and I personally don't mind NASA one bit. It's not going to bother me if it stays the same way.
And I don't have any issue with funding for science and technology in our universities nor have I ever said that I have. That's one area where I disagree with Ron Paul. BUT, I think you're stance on the market is also laughable, capitalism has crushed the price equilibrium of everything product and service, and sooooo many corporations push D&R further and further. I think whatever works, works, and I don't have a side in private or public-private partnerships.