<p><font color="#800080">I am all for start ups, I think it is a wounderful idea, but they have to almost completly rely on themselves for financing, which is the real killer. Give engineers money and they will conquer the cosmos.</font></p><p>Startups is all we can hope for now. NASA has been unable to come anywhere near the peak funding it enjoyed during Apollo since 1970-75 when the 50% budget cuts took full effect and reduced NASA budgets from 2-4% GDP in the 1960s to the 1-.6% GDP since that time. </p><p><font color="#800080">As for educating people, you literaly have to get the youth immersed in it, the younger the better. The professionals know the need for space research, I'm sure everyone here at SDC has written a letter to their congressional representative expressing the need for it. The average family does not really care, and its only spoken of during events where life is lost, or a school assignment. I don't know about most of you, but my grade school actually had an observatory and planterium adjacent to it. I picked up a love for the sciences and space exploration there; but few others did. I remember it so vivedly too, everyone hated the place, they never payed attention, slept during the planetarium lessons, and always complained. For current events in class, everyone brought in news article on sports or supermodels; only like three of us brought in articles pertaining to space or sciences.</font></p><p>The above states the problem quite well. It was always there, but during the 1960s, Apollo was popular because we were in a competition with the Russians. But Apollo popularity declined in just the time Apollo 11 landed on the moon the first time and 17 landed the last time. I was 13 when Apollo 11 landed, in Jr High School and considered a nerd of sorts for being interested in human spaceflight. </p><p><font color="#800080">For educating the current generations 13 to 27, you will have to make a reality television show, and you will need at the minimum three celeberaties, at least one homosexual, or two girls after one guy to provied drama.</font></p><p>How bout two guys after one girl? I used that angle among others in my graphic novel to illustrate this point. </p><p><font color="#800080">Hopefully during the mind nubmingly horrid experience joe sixpack will learn some things from the scientists/engineers/astronauts, provided they are given any camera time where idiots are not in their way. I pray that my opinions are overwhelmingly proved wrong, but with all of the truely amazing accomplishments humanity has made in space exploration I am just left agape and confused how the greater whole of the population is not behind this and pressing forward. Posted by neuvik[/QUOTE]</font></p><p>A single argument shot down what was already shaky support for Apollo. "If we can land on the moon, why can't we cure cancer"? Or solve other social problems so the logic went. Problem was, this argument surfaced at the height of societies distrust of government. This distrust was especially justified after Watergate. So how can one think the government can be trusted with money saved by cutting NASA and directing it to relevent social problems? And indeed, much of government spending in the late 1970s, all through the 1980s and much of the 1990s was wasted on such affairs as S&L scandal and deficit spending from 1969-97.</p><p>Why couldn't these social problems be cured during the last four years of Clinton surplus budgets amidst continuing NASA cuts? The reason is, the vast majority of folks could care less about human spaceflight and government could care less about actually addressing the social problems that existed in 1969 that still exist today by using saved NASA funds. And, some social problems will always be with us.</p> <div class="Discussion_UserSignature"> <p><strong>My borrowed quote for the time being:</strong></p><p><em>There are three kinds of people in life. Those who make it happen, those who watch it happen...and those who do not know what happened.</em></p> </div>