The Space Shuttle Sure Seems Like A Big Polluter To Me
I thought you had to be intelligent to be an astronaut:
Typical liberal nonsense.
If a Peruvian farmer trying to feed his family cuts down a disease-ridden patch of jungle, it's a crime against nature because it makes the Earth look less pretty to a privileged little cosmonaut who burned several years' worth of a family's fossil fuel consumption to get the view necessary to allow her to lecture us.
Wonder how much junk they'll leave in space this time?
As for Eileen Collins’s comments themselves, a moment’s thought reveals them for the platitudinous claptrap we have come to expect from people who don’t know all that much about Spaceship Earth. She has seen “widespread environmental damage,” whatever that may be. “Sometimes you can see how there is erosion.” Huh? That is one of the most fundamental and basic processes on the planet. There is uplift and there is erosion — the two big players in the geological game. What are wind and rain and freezing and thawing supposed to do besides erode? “And you can see how there is deforestation.” Again so what? And why? Why do you suppose the trees get replanted in the vast clear-cuts of the giant timber companies, but not in mankind's common tropical forests?
She keeps on going: “We would like to see. . . people take good care of the Earth and replace the resources that have been used.” What is that supposed to mean? Refill copper mines with more copper or start pumping crude oil into depleted reservoirs?
As for the comment, “We don't have much air,” well. . . what is her concern? That people are using it all up by breathing? This is grade-school environmentalism at best, not the sort of thinking we should expect from the highly qualified scientists that astronauts are supposed to be.
With the shuttle seemingly falling apart around her, Collins might spend a little time worrying about how she's going to get her crew safely back to terra firma, even if it is badly polluted. Home, sweet home — be it ever so humble.
Typical liberal nonsense.
If a Peruvian farmer trying to feed his family cuts down a disease-ridden patch of jungle, it's a crime against nature because it makes the Earth look less pretty to a privileged little cosmonaut who burned several years' worth of a family's fossil fuel consumption to get the view necessary to allow her to lecture us.
Wonder how much junk they'll leave in space this time?
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