The Gingrich Who Stole The News Cycle
Because I was on the road Wednesday night, I missed the first few hours of reaction to Newt Gingrich's speech in Florida, when he said he wants to have a permanent station on the Moon "by the end of my second term". It wasn't until Thursday morning that I opened up my web browser and saw that every blog, every news site, everyone, was talking about it. I must have had dozens of tweets and emails telling me about it and asking my opinion.
In Discover Magazine's Crux blog I wrote a dissection of his speech and why he's so vastly and profoundly wrong: The Newt-onian Mechanics of Building a Permanent Moon Base. You'll get all the details there of why I think Gingrich's plan is the worst possible way to go about trying to go to the Moon: in a hurry, with the wrong source of funding, and maybe because there's a threat from those dirty communists.
Donât get me wrong: I want a Moon base. Iâve written about that many times here on the blog, and for my Geek-A-Week card I asked Len Peralta to draw me as Commander Koenig from "Space:1999", for criminy's sake. I stand second to no one in advocating exploring space, and our own satellite in particular. But it has to be done right, and Gingrich's plan would be the worst way to do it.
I was actually pretty stunned that people in Florida would support this idea. Obviously, they would have a vested interest in hearing big ideas about space exploration, but with just a little thought it's clear that while Gingrich's idea may be big, it's only because it's been stretched out way larger than it can handle. Its density is zero.
On the surface, it seems like Gingrich is a friend of space and science, but don't be fooled: he's just as likely to pander to the antiscience base as any other candidate, and his history shows he will attack science when he gets the chance. So while you might be inclined to like the idea of a candidate talking about promoting space exploration under any circumstances, have a care. Because once you get beneath that surface, you might find there's nothing there. Image credit: Gage Skidmore, caption added by me.
Related posts:
- The Newt-onian Mechanics of Building a Permanent Moon Base
- Erasing false balance: the right is more antiscience than the left
- The increasingly antiscience Republican candidates
- Help restore science to its rightful place