We weren't only talking about the lunar mission, but Space X as a whole. And there are a crap ton of customers for rockets. Hell the DoD spends more on space than NASA.TXTransplant said:
You are having it both ways. You say NASA is the customer…we agree on that point. But there are no other customers for a rocket and a lunar landing vehicle!
NASA is their customer. Not a subsidy.Quote:
I will agree that there is a bigger market for satellites and certain payloads, but even taking astronauts to the space station isn't a "market". It's a service they are providing to NASA.
Neither are leeches. Anybody who says that is an idiot. My point is that NASA itself has no business existing. Especially now. It is not only unconstitutional, it provides a serviced where the supply curve is a mile above the demand curve. Such services should never be provided until the curves cross. Especially when we have a huge spending problem and record high inflation.Quote:
I'm not saying you hold this viewpoint, but I've heard/seen plenty of people on this forum and other places say NASA and the federal government is nothing but one big subsidy for corporations like Lockheed. The criticism of that arrangement, and others like it, has long been an argument against NASA, even before SpaceX was a player.
So, it's hypocritical to say Lockheed is a government leech and not say the same about SpaceX.
I didn't say they funded all of their development privately. I said they funded falcon 1 privately. And I'm not claiming Space X did not sign contracts with NASA. My point there is that it was not a subsidy. Elon pursued contracts with NASA because that was where he felt he was most likely to get a contract. That doesn't mean if NASA didn't exist then he wouldn't have gotten the money elsewhere (like DoD which spends more on space than NASA).Quote:
During the first 10 years of operation, SpaceX operated off of $1 billion, and half that came from NASA contracts. You simply cannot say they have done all of their development from profits from Falcon 9 launches and NASA money didn't play a role. Even Elon himself has said (many times) that the company wouldn't be where it is today without NASA contracts.
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And despite all of Elon's big talk about space exploration, I personally don't believe he would be continuing to pursue any of this without NASA $. Because from the perspective of his company it IS revenue. They are getting rich(er) using taxpayer money. It's a mutually beneficial relationship at this point, and there is too much money on the table for him to not accept and leverage those contracts.
The idea that he wouldn't do any of this without NASA contracts is provably untrue. Long before the lunar contract, he was building starship with his own money. He chose methane for the Raptor engine because they could produce that on Mars. The lunar contract came way later and was simply Space X pitching their existing mars plan to NASA for the moon. By the time they were awarded it they had already conducted 9 starship hopper tests.
We shouldn't have gone to the moon in the first place. Our money printing for that along with the Vietnam war caused the inflation of the 70s. In fact, it can be argued that that lead Nixon getting us off the gold standard in 71. That has enabled access money printing to continue to this day. So the Apollo program can be (largely) blamed for enabling the inflation we endure now.Quote:
Just because an endeavor isn't "financially viable" for a private company doesn't inherently mean NASA shouldn't pursue it. We never would have gone to the moon in the first place if "financially viable" had been a criteria. We go because we can and want to establish dominance in the field. One would argue the whole reason the space program was as successful as it was is because it was never expected to make money or have any ROI in the conventional sense.
Musk has said he would not take it public if he would stop their mission to Mars.Quote:
Like it or not, the economics for a company like SpaceX, who has ideas of going public in a few years, are completely different.
That "only" reason is a HUGE reason. And government doesn't foot the bill, we do. Ether through taxes or inflation. I don't like my wealth being blown on huge wastes of money.Quote:
The only reason anyone cares about the "economics" of NASA is because of concerns about taxpayer waste. But let's face it, the government will end up footing the bill, regardless of delays and budget overages. And if you are worried about that, I already know the only real option is to dismantle NASA completely. But that's not ever going to happen as long as the SpaceXs, Lockheeds, Boeings, etc are making money from partnering with NASA. Even if NASA doesn't do the work, they are the keepers of the money to pay others to do it.
I'm saying that if Musk punts on it and NASA takes over, it is going to cost a LOT more than the Apollo mission. And that would ruin us.Quote:
And dramatic much??? We are not hyperinflating ourselves into poverty to go to Mars. As others have pointed out, we waste orders of magnitude more money on other things. NASA's budget is literally <0.5% of the total federal budget. The most it's ever been was 4.4% of the total and that was back in the mid-60s. It hasn't been over 1% since the early 90s.