President-elect Donald Trump on Wednesday nominated Jared Isaacman to be NASA Administrator.
“Jared will drive NASA’s mission of discovery and inspiration, paving the way for groundbreaking achievements in Space science, technology, and exploration,” Trump wrote in a post on social media.
Yea, but he going to be really enthusiastic while he is shoveling money to both musk and perhaps himself. And he believes the moon landings are real.
It could have been a moon landing denier or even a flat earther.
There is a non zero chance he may actually be good for the space program in general? In the meantime the bar is lowered enough that this may be the best in a bad lot, even if this nomination redefines the term “industry capture”
How about running scientific payloads and testing new EVA suits? The Polaris Dawn missions are absolutely not joyrides like we’ve seen other billionaires do.
"The Fédération Aéronautique Internationale (FAI) Sporting Code for astronautics recognizes only flights that exceed the Kármán line, at an altitude of 100 kilometers (62 mi). In the United States, professional, military, and commercial astronauts who travel above an altitude of 80 kilometres (50 mi) are awarded astronaut wings."
There is a non zero chance he may actually be good for the space program in general?
He does nothing but criticize NASA long-term plans as they stand and is fine with the privatization of space?
I'm gonna go out on a limb and say that non-zero chance is something like 0.0000001% chance. Sure, it's not zero, but it still ain't a real fucking good chance.
He does nothing but criticize NASA long-term plans as they stand and is fine with the privatization of space?
I haven't seen Isaacman's specific criticisms you're talking about, but NASA does have some crappy long-term plans because they've been driving by politicians looking to land pork in their districts. NASA's SLS moon rocket (a Boeing product) is wildly expensive for what it does. Lockheed's moon crew capsule has been in development for over 20 years, currently has a deal-breaking problem they won't disclose (related to heat shield) and has cost us north of $26.6 billion without carrying a humans yet to space.
If Isaacman is it for NASA, at least he's a spaceflight advocate. He's also been to space, so he'll be a strong advocate for Astronaut safety (another area NASA has had historical difficulty).
I'm not saying is the best pick for the job. I'm saying that at least they put someone who has an interest in NASA succeeding instead of someone that doesn't give a shit about spaceflight and just wants political power.