The ridiculous amount of money spent on discoveries like this don't help anyone. In no way does society progress. In no way are any problems solved. It's a complete waste of time for what amounts to nothing more than a hobby.
Damn scientists, always wasting time and money on pointless BS. Why just look at how much time was wasted on pure science, like the discovery of the electron, and quantifying its properties. What a waste.
don't forget to leave him behind on Earth when we abandon this heap. Unless we don't, which means the species is doomed to extinction, absofuckinglutely guaranteed. Hopefully we can get the species off this rock before that happens.
Screw that, send him off in the B-Ark.
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I understand that science of tomorrow is built on science of today, and there are expenditures involved. But NASA spends more money than anyone with little return. They were ahead of their time, we aren't anywhere near ready for space.
Many useful inventions today are built on the "useless" science of yesterday.
Like I said, the electron was once an utterly pointless pursuit. A particle with a mass of something like 1*10^-31 kg? (probably off by a few orders of magnitude)
Such a tiny particle, what
possible use could that have?
Science is advanced in order to help society. NASA spends billions of dollars launching junk into space just to find water on the moon or another planet, which helps nobody and in no way advances science. How about we spend the same amount of money developing a means to get clean water to countries right here on earth that don't have it? Why waste our time trying to locate intelligent life in space at the cost of ignoring the life here on earth? NASA isn't about science or advancement.
Complain about truly frivolous expenditures.
You know, like cigarette sales (one year of that could fund NASA for 4-5 years), or the money we willingly spend on movies, or the money we spend on greeting cards, or the money we spend on cable TV.
NASA is a place where scientists can advance our understanding of the Universe for its own sake, and in the process push our technology to its limits.
And if you lack the foresight and wisdom to see the benefits of
learning about nature, from a source that
isn't several thousand years old, well, I'm just glad you aren't writing our policy and setting budgets concerning the scientific community. Otherwise, we'd likely be reading by firelight again, courtesy of a "witch" being burned in the town square.
Even if there is water on the moon wouldn't life there be impossible due to the constant danger of meteorites?
Digging underground would provide some shelter, at least from the micrometeorites.
As for larger ones, that's why we need rovers with pulse laser arrays. Ishikawa Komuro Laboratory in Japan already has the necessary
high-speed tracking cameras.
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