• inv3r510n@lemmy.world
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    5 hours ago

    Trumps goons are going to sell out key functions of government to private buyers, like nasa to space x. This reminds me of when the USSR fell and all the shadiest people bought up the national industries.

    I wonder who’s gonna buy the noaa. That’s the one I’m most concerned about.

  • pyre@lemmy.world
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    11 hours ago

    it won’t be though. spacex tech is massively reliant on NASA. if they do it they’ll hurt spacex in the long run. which means they’ll probably do it because musk is a fucking moron.

    • oo1@lemmings.world
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      7 hours ago

      Surely he’ll strip NASA, put the bits he wants up for sale, then buy them for cheap.

      Sure the best staff might leave, but he’ll probably keep enough of the organisation to get something out of it.

    • Dasus@lemmy.world
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      8 hours ago

      “… in the long run”

      These aren’t people who understand what “in the long run” means.

  • AnIndefiniteArticle@sh.itjust.works
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    19 hours ago

    We saw what happened the last time space infrastructure was privatized.

    Boeing gave all the money to the stockholders and delivered a criminally late product that ended up failing and stranding our astronauts. Boeing obviously didn’t care to test if the Teflon in those thrusters could survive repeated heatings.

    SpaceX decided to go backwards in rocket technology, from Hydrogen to Methane. Hydrogen is more efficient, and makes it easier to bury carbon responsibly. Sure, Boeing’s rockets got made fun of for being leaky, but I think that might be Boeing more than Hydrogen at fault. Dirty Methane rockets were cheap, and could be built simple as they experienced less thermal variation without cryogenic fuel.

    SpaceX undercut the competition and turned itself into a monopoly while Boeing threw their hand to the stockholders. Now SpaceX picks up the pieces of the game they upended.

    NASA was supposed to manage a thriving marketplace, full of competition. Instead it managed its way to a monopolistic structure that a single entity may try to sieze.

    Fun fact about autocratic structures like monopolies and dictatorships: they can’t grow power themselves, they can only sieze power organized by others.

    We need to build our next wave of structures in a distributed fashion such that the levers of power are not so concentrated that they may fall into the wrong hands.

    Give the power to the people. All of them.

    • crapwittyname@lemm.ee
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      8 hours ago

      Space travel is exceptional in that you need an incredible amount of cooperation to get a project into space. The supply chains are insane, the component parts highly specialized and hugely expensive, and the range of expertise and knowledge required is simultaneously focused and intense and broad and varied. If human society ever does manage to transition to a genuine people power, space flight will be, to my knowledge, the very last thing we achieve, because it takes so many people working together to get it done. The scope of these projects makes you realise how easy it must have been to build the pyramids. Two brothers can build a plane that just about works, but to get a vehicle to orbit needs a city of people working together.

      • AnIndefiniteArticle@sh.itjust.works
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        5 hours ago

        That’s all the reason it should be easier to distribute power. More people to distribute it between!

        Remember when we paid people to do those things directly?

        We, the American people, paid a lot of people each a reasonable salary to get to the moon.

        Privatized spaceflight has we, the American people, pay a single entity less total money (they can make it more efficient, of course!). This concentrates decision-making and power.

        That vehicle going in to orbit needs a city to work together. I want my taxes to pay that city and the people in it, not Boeing’s shareholders who aren’t helping put the vehicle into orbit, not Musk to build a second smaller city in Texas he is king of.

        Thank you for your points. I completely agree that we should be paying the workers on the ground who get us to space instead of the wealthy who claim to own it.

        • crapwittyname@lemm.ee
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          2 hours ago

          Yes we should, and I hope we will. I would love to be able to imagine some kind of smooth, consensual, non violent transition to a society where we keep doing the same stuff but are fairly treated, but I have difficulty with that. And I think space would be the hardest industry to revolutionise because of the above. Not saying it’s impossible and I’m definitely not saying it’s not preferable!

  • finitebanjo@lemmy.world
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    19 hours ago

    Space exploration certainly will be the final frontier, its the last thing this pathetic species will have ever worked on before blinking out of existence.

  • enbyecho@lemmy.world
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    24 hours ago

    I had a lengthy argument with someone that Musk couldn’t possibly be kissing Trump’s ass for money - he’s a billionaire after all and “has all the money he needs”. No no, Musk is doing this out of the goodness of his cold billionaire heart. Isn’t it obvious?

    Why are so many people so stupid? WHY?

    • zeppo@lemmy.world
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      5 hours ago

      Yet another page from Trump’s playbook. People insisted that Trump couldn’t be bribed because he was so rich, and that he was financing his own campaign, so he could be the only non-corrupt politician. Obviously these people are quite naive and don’t understand how wealthy Kelle tend to operate - always wanting more, more, more.

    • Zink@programming.dev
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      21 hours ago

      Ah yes, the essential personality traits to becoming the richest person: integrity, and stopping once you have all the money you need.

    • SkunkWorkz@lemmy.world
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      22 hours ago

      Elongated Muskrat is a billionaire who wants to become the first trillionaire. That’s what these people aren’t getting. It’s all just a game to him. He thinks that he lives in a simulation and everyone else is an NPC. He now wants to set a new high score.

    • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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      18 hours ago

      As we all know, the ultra-rich are famous for getting to a certain level of wealth and saying, “NO MORE! I RENOUNCE THIS CAPITALIST SOCIETY AND NOW ONLY WORK FOR THE GOOD OF HUMANITY!”

    • Naz@sh.itjust.works
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      24 hours ago

      I had similar arguments and the synopsis is that people can’t admit being wrong because it makes them look weak. It’s a toxic masculinity and ego thing.

      You basically double down on the bet and ride the boat right into hell over the waterfall.

      Dead, but you never had to admit the other person was right about the waterfall!

      • DrSteveBrule@mander.xyz
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        23 hours ago

        That’s how kids were taught to think when I was in school. Did you get something wrong on your first try? You’re a failure! Take your F and move on, you’re not allowed to try again unless you fail your entire grade level. 12 years of my school system taught many people to have that ego you mentioned, myself included. I graduated high school 10 years ago and still struggle accepting my failures. I have to remind myself that in real life I can actually learn from my mistakes. Unfortunately many people never have that realization.

        • captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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          23 hours ago

          Ok I definitely got a different vibe from failing tests. I routinely would have to deal with that stuff again so it was a “you failed, we aren’t going to revisit it but you need to not make the same mistake again

    • frayedpickles@lemmy.cafe
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      23 hours ago

      They have a sense of “enough” and the concept of a thousand millions for someone who barely had a thousand hundreds or even just a thousand is so far out of their realm of understanding that they think “enough” must be a concept for capitalists too

      Also dumb as rocks.

    • Tamo240@programming.dev
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      24 hours ago

      Good things have happened to Elon, therefore he must be a good person, otherwise my worldview is destroyed and there is no point being good.

  • JaggedRobotPubes@lemmy.world
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    23 hours ago

    Some other country is gonna have the new nasa, and the united states is going to fall even further behind. It’ll just be a brain drain and most of it isn’t going to go to space-x.

      • ThePyroPython@lemmy.world
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        20 hours ago

        If you’re a fundamental researcher, engineer, etc. come to the UK. We’ve got SO many job openings for those roles and would love to bring in talent to fill those roles because the local gammon isn’t up to the job.

        • tetris11@lemmy.world
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          8 hours ago

          Max pay is around 50k. Its better than most, for sure, but academics get treated way better in US or Germany

          • ThePyroPython@lemmy.world
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            9 hours ago

            How much is your health insurance & car repayments cutting into your pay? What are your legal minimum days off? How many maternity/paternity days off is your employer legally required to give you? What are your employee rights? How walkable is your current city or do you require a car to literally go anywhere? It’s a trade-off.

            • Warl0k3@lemmy.world
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              6 hours ago

              While you raise good points that should be kept in mind for anyone considering this, in my case (a very specific and incredibly in-demand type of data management) my last position was a great deal better than any offering for the same job in the UK, even including all the public benefits you guys get.

              I left that job for personal health reasons (and I got a full year of unemployment from it). I’m lucky, I’m very aware of that. Most people don’t have it anywhere near as good as I did. But for my field, even factoring in all those benefits from the public sector you get in the UK, I was doing way better here than I could have been in the UK (ex: I was making 4x the maximum wage for my field in the UK (tops out at £45,000)). Also my state has a requirement for 4 months of [ma/pa/xa]ternity leave, which isn’t great but is still a huge improvement. And I get 5 weeks leave. And I was union. And and and 'murica blahblah I’ll spare you.

              For all the many many problems America has, this is one of the few areas where the UK is somehow even worse than us. Your wages for skilled technical positions are absolutely criminal for the value you produce for employers, and for such a sometimes progressive country it’s mindboggling to me that you haven’t made a bigger issue of it. It’s a huge contributor to the brain drain so many EU countries are experiencing (even Germany, who is much better about this than the UK, is feeling this) - the US is a backwards country slowly imploding into fascism, but who’s country isn’t? At least you can come over here and make bank in the little time before everything burns down around them, instead of having a somewhat comfortable lower-middleclass life in some subdiv row house.

              (This me being defensive I confess: my city is one of the most walkable in the world. I think the “americans can only drive anywhere” thing gets a little bit blown out of proportion because people don’t understand the magnitude of the rural/urban divide in the US.)

            • tetris11@lemmy.world
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              8 hours ago

              Paternity: time your pregnancy to coincide with the start of an X year contract, or they simply won’t renew it.

    • deaf_fish@lemm.ee
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      19 hours ago

      Humanity: Let’s make a bunch of stories about how space capitalism has some really bad outcomes.

      Also Humanity: That sound great! let’s do that!

  • TankovayaDiviziya@lemmy.world
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    22 hours ago

    People poke fun of Musk as being a idiot. But he had us Kaiser Soze’d by pretending to be dumb so that he could implement his self-serving ideas.

  • danc4498@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    He efficiently using the government to make himself richer. What more did anybody expect?

  • 93maddie94@lemm.ee
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    24 hours ago

    NASA has already sent out emails to their teams and contractors about what implications this can have on their departments. Shit’s bad.

  • dustyData@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Remember when on Interstellar there’s this whole prologue about the collapse of the US, the dismantling of NASA and the family getting on an argument with the school because the official stance now is that the moon landing never happened and mankind never went to space (despite there being still people alive who went there)?

    So, anyway, life imitates art …

  • CM400@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    NASA, like the post office, is such a public benefit that we should be funding it well.

    • Laurel Raven@lemmy.zip
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      4 hours ago

      I don’t think people understand how much value we get from NASA… Like, $7 for every dollar spent, or more, in economic benefit and technological advancements. So many solutions they have to come up with to make space flight possible are incredibly useful here on Earth too

      Value that we won’t get if we’re paying a private company to do it