{"id":40888,"date":"2019-01-05T17:00:00","date_gmt":"2019-01-06T02:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/opinion\/opinion-nasas-mission-is-four-billion-miles-off-course\/"},"modified":"2019-01-05T17:00:00","modified_gmt":"2019-01-06T02:00:00","slug":"opinion-nasas-mission-is-four-billion-miles-off-course","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/home\/opinion-nasas-mission-is-four-billion-miles-off-course\/","title":{"rendered":"Opinion: NASA’s mission is four billion miles off course"},"content":{"rendered":"
For some scientists, NASA delivered an amazing story to kick off the new year. A photograph taken four billion miles from Earth<\/a> was received at the New Horizons mission control station where Alice Bowman, the operation manager, boldly claimed the expedition “will help us understand the origins of our solar system.”<\/p>\n Why bother though? Because if he were alive today, even a dedicated astronomer like Galileo would realize that distant object won’t help us with the more immediate problem identified by other NASA scientists — climate change.<\/p>\n New Horizons fulfills the first part of NASA’s mission statement: “We reach for new heights and reveal the unknown.” But images of Ultima Thule — described by one project scientist as a “pixelated blob” — will do nothing for the second part, which is “for the benefit of humankind.”<\/p>\n The expedition isn’t nearly as exciting as the moon landing 50 years ago. It took 10 years for it to reach Pluto, its primary destination. Another three to get to Ultima Thule. And 20 months just for the data it collects to arrive back on Earth.<\/p>\n [Warmer temperatures could cost Alaska up to $700 million] <\/a><\/ins><\/p>\n From launch to splashdown, Apollo 11 took a little more than a week. And some of us got to watch Neil Armstrong take his “giant leap for mankind” live on TV.<\/p>\n We went back a few times, but in the end, Americans show more concern about life on the planet. Like the Vietnam War, nuclear arms race, air and water quality, and paying taxes.<\/p>\n Now, NASA is no longer the pride of the nation. And one party and the current occupant of the White House think its climate change research is bad science.<\/p>\n But the science in deep space is still fine. It doesn’t make government any bigger. It doesn’t slow economic growth, result in new taxes or new regulations. Simply put, that part of NASA’s program doesn’t challenge the Republican Party’s political ideology.<\/p>\n