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What we actually lose when the USDA and EPA canโ€™t talk to the public

What we actually lose when the USDA and EPA canโ€™t talk to the public

"The weather app on your phone that can sometimes tell you when it's going to rain with minute-by-minute precisionโ€”or warn you about an impending tornadoโ€”is underpinned by government science (in this case by the National Weather Service). You may roll your eyes at the importance of weather data that occasionally leaves you stuck in a downpour without an umbrella, but the predictions are right more often than not, and the information is incredibly important."

The Real Story Of Apollo 17… And Why We Never Went Back To The Moon.

The Real Story Of Apollo 17… And Why We Never Went Back To The Moon.

"On December 11, 1972, Apollo 17 touched down on the Moon. This was not only our final Moon landing, but the last time we left low Earth orbit. With the successful launch of the Orion capsule, NASA is finally poised to go further again. So itโ€™s important to remember how we got to the Moon โ€” and why we stopped going."

On December 14th, 1972, Cernan became the last human to step on the Moonโ€™s surface:

07 00 00 47: โ€œBob, this is Gene, and Iโ€™m on the surface and as I take manโ€™s last steps from the surface, back home, for some time to come, but we believe not too long into the future. Iโ€™d like to Just list what I believe history will record that Americaโ€™s challenge of today has forged manโ€™s destiny of tomorrow. And, as we leave the Moon at Taurus Littrow, we leave as we come and, God willing, as we shall return, with peace and hope for all mankind. Godspeed the crew of Apollo 17.โ€

In the forty-[four] years since those words were spoken, nobody has stepped on the Moon. The levels of federal spending which NASA had received before 1966 had become untenable to a public which had become financially wary, particularly as they experienced a major oil crisis in 1973, which shifted the nationโ€™s priorities. Spending in space was something that could be done, but with far more fiscal constraints than ever before, limiting NASA to research and scientific missions in the coming years. Such programs included the development of the Skylab program in 1973, and the Space Shuttle program, as well as a number of robotic probes and satellites.

Apollo 17.

Apollo 17.

Forty-four years ago today was the last time since man kind has put his foot on the moon. While we still have the International Space Station and probes to Mars, it's been nearly a half century since mankind has been on the moon, reflecting changing priorities and the diminished interest in having man on the moon.