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by greenyoda
2736 days ago
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Astronauts also have first-hand knowledge about the risks of sending people into space, and have had friends that died or almost died on space missions. So they have a much more concrete concept of the cost-benefit tradeoffs of space travel than the rest of us. |
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And that may be besides the point: It seem to me this astronaut didn't make make a cogent argument from the perspective of cost-benefit tradeoffs and risk of human lives. Instead he raised vague criticisms: "It's ridiculous" and "what's the imperative... I don't think the public is that interested"
In fact available data directly refutes this astronaut's view: at least one survey from a few years ago found widespread support (about 75%) for a manned mission [0]. As of this year interest has declined somewhat [1], but still 63% rate mars as important or higher.
[0] https://www.usnews.com/news/articles/2013/02/11/poll-america...
[1] https://www.fastcompany.com/40581121/survey-most-americans-s...