When were we ever "the Wild West of space exploration"?
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Back when we launched rockets with humans on board and there was a high chance they wouldn’t return. Mercury, Gemini, Apollo, early shuttle. At least that what I refer to it as. Probably not a wide used term.
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You mean back in the olden days, when it was important to get Americans into space?
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Imagine if we had the same safety standards that early air travel had today. Millions of people will die each year. I believe getting someone to LEO should be as close to risk free as possible.
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Replying to @SethKurk @SafeNotAnOption and
This assertion betrays a complete lack of economic common sense. Everything in life involves trade-offs. Cars could have lower risk if they cost $900,000 each and had a max speed of 20 mph. In no aspect of human life do we aim for absolute safety. LEO should be no different.
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Replying to @MorlockP @SafeNotAnOption and
I know that. By risk free I mean a similar amount of risk that take when getting on an airplane or getting in our cars.
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Replying to @SethKurk @SafeNotAnOption and
Why? If we can put a person into LEO for $10 million with a 0.1% risk rate, or into LEO for the entire GDP of the US with a risk of 0.001%, why is the latter preferable ?
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Replying to @MorlockP @SafeNotAnOption and
I think you believe I’m an for 0% risk rate which I’m not. That’s a stupidly impossible number to try to reach. I’m saying we shouldn’t lower our standards just because it might speeds things up. That’s how we loose astronauts. Examples are Apollo 1 and Challenger.
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We are going to lose astronauts, or we are not going to space. What is the right number, if not zero?
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Replying to @SafeNotAnOption @MorlockP and
There is no number. But there is also no price on human life either.
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this is incoherentpic.twitter.com/B5IGjiyecv
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