Such as the Apollo program with a 26 billion dollar investment which has increased the world economy by over 300 trillion dollars (and still growing), responsible for the technology that made kidney dialysis possible (research not affordable by the privet sector), created the IC chips that evolved into the microprocessor, plus volumes of other unforeseen technology spin-offs that has improved the quality of life for billions of people on this planet out of the reach of the privet sector. A small fraction of the real moneys NASA has added to the US economy is being returned to the space program - do the math Einstein.fatcitymax wrote:Of course you are right; however, building Kepler, a new Mars rover, and returning to the Moon require little fundamental research and will produce few spinoffs that couldn't be developed more efficiently by other means. Even worse, they will not likely result in any significant breakthroughs in scientific knowledge.Fundamental research isn't, and shouldn't be, limited to producing "useful, practical technology".
NASA is the R & D department for the US, I don't want to rely on other government's hand-me-down technologies to dictate my future and I don't complain about the cost of that privilege. Active investments in advancements is far more prudent than investing in your proposition of 100% reactive spending. "Few" and "Unlikely"? Instead, can you put your opinions in to quantitative values that have scientific significance?
Pontificating from a pessimistic, ignorant bias serves no one, not you or your agenda.