Friday, July 8, 2011

Liftoff


Today was the last scheduled US Space Shuttle launch. I wasn’t one of those kids who dreamt of becoming an astronaut, but I certainly developed the passion years later thanks to a few great books and people. Initially it was Michio Kaku, a celebrated physicist and futurist who described the universe in a way that I'd never heard before. Immediately catching my interest, I began losing myself for hours in his documentaries, lectures and videos. This opened doors to the likes of Carl Sagan, Richard Feynman and Steven Hawking. All of which who helped me discover what’s truly important to humanity. The laws governing our universe quickly became gospel to me, along with bits of wisdom that filtered through all that information I was absorbing.


Unfortunately the science community today is more grumpy than sentimental, since there’s no immediate successor to the Space Shuttle. Neil deGrasses Tyson, a popular astrophysicist, even says “Apollo in 1969. Shuttle in 1981. Nothing in 2011. Our space program would look awesome to anyone living backwards through time.” Humour aside, he makes a good point. What was once our crowning achievement in the space race has become a symbol that our drive for adventure and progress have dried up. Looking into this further, I discovered some startling facts about the Space Program. The most uncomfortable being that the entire budget of NASA equals the current two-year budget of the US military. Not only is that fact disgusting, it runs contrary to the message Sagan relayed over a decade ago.

All that aside I've never lost respect for just how ambitious this whole thing was. And despite reflecting on some of my adventures, like navigating the streets of India in a rickshaw and driving through the British countryside, I've never touched a star. For our crew entering orbit, here’s to a safe journey. Godspeed.