Otago Daily Times

Priority to heal mother ship, not leave it

- Chris Trotter is a political commentato­r.

NASA’S giant rocket may have finally lifted off the launch pad by the time you read these words. Or, it could be inching its way back to the outsize shed it came from — for repairs. I hope it’s the latter. Artemis is a jealous goddess: we should leave her moon alone.

I didn’t always feel that way. There was a time, long before I started shaving, when I was a huge fan of the Apollo programme and looked forward to the day when an American astronaut would execute — as the man destined to make it said — ‘‘one giant leap for mankind’’.

Thanks to a remarkable birthday gift, I also became a great fan of the huge Saturn V rocket. My excellent scale model could even be launched. Powered by the muscles of older family members, a complicate­d vertical catapult sent the ‘‘rocket’’ soaring skyward, from whence it drifted back to earth under plastic parachutes that popped, miraculous­ly, out of the model’s hull.

The booklet which came with the toy was full of fun facts about the rocket Wernher von Braun had dreamed of building since the 1920s. I can still recall the precise height of the Saturn V — 363 ft (110.6m).

But that was then, the 1960s, when the ambitions and ingenuity of human beings were thought to be limitless.

Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberr­y’s boast to ‘‘boldly go where no man has gone before’’, like his vision of a single, peaceful, bounteous, femaleaffi­rming, racially integrated planetary society, seemed entirely feasible. The exploratio­n of space was only just beginning. ‘‘Warp factor 5, Mr Sulu.’’

It was not to be. Jack ‘‘we choose to go to the moon, and do the other things, not because they are easy, but because they are hard’’ Kennedy turned into Lyndon Johnson, who became Richard Nixon, who brought the Apollo programme to an end. The Americans had set out to beat the Russians to the moon, and they had done it. Nasa’s ambitions, and its budget, were scaled back. Man had taken one small step towards the infinite — and that was deemed to be enough.

Twenty years later, REM’s young musicians were singing ‘‘if you believed they put a man on the moon’’.

The generation­s that followed the baby boomers struggled to see the purpose of it all. So many billions of dollars spent, so many scientists and engineers working their butts off, and for what? Velcro, nonstick frying pans and a heap of junk littering the moon’s pristine surface –— forever?

They had a point.

But there is still a point — isn’t there — in trying to see that little bit further? In trying to find out what had happened to our nearest planetary neighbours. (Seems that Venus and Mars were once a lot like Earth — which is a bit of a worry!) Some point, too, in capturing the light of a universe that was still young. When the stars were flickering on like a city’s lights at sunset. There is still so much to see out there.

But looking in wonder at the birth of time is one thing, dumping yet more human junk in the lunar dust is another. Even as Gene Roddenberr­y was dreaming, his planet was steadily warming. Inexorably, the vast fossilfuel­led civilisati­on that had made the Apollo programme possible was headed for the edge.

The human species had, briefly, escaped the grip of its planet’s gravity, but only at the cost of jeopardisi­ng its longterm survival.

That wondrous photograph, snapped by the early Apollo astronauts, of Earth rising above the moon’s horizon, told humankind everything it needed to know.

This is the only mother ship you have. This is the only mother ship you need. Heal it before you think of leaving it again. But not enough of us received the message, and now: ‘‘Houston, we have a problem’’.

Not that Houston’s listening. Houston has the ‘‘Artemis programme’’, which is planning to hurl a rocket bigger than the Saturn V towards Apollo’s sister’s sacred satellite any day now. A risky exercise. If the Ancient Greeks are to be believed, the moon goddess is a dangerous deity.

The hunter, Actaeon, accompanie­d by his hounds, happened upon the naked Artemis as she was bathing.

Furious, the goddess transforme­d Actaeon into a stag and his own dogs tore him to pieces.

Sometimes it’s as well to leave heavenly bodies in peace.

TODAY is Friday, September 2, the 245th day of 2022. There are 120 days left in the year. Highlights in history on this date:

1666 — The Great Fire of London starts and in five days virtually destroys the city, including St Paul’s Cathedral.

1752 — The last day of the Julian calendar in Britain and its colonies. It was replaced by the Gregorian calendar and Parliament decided an 11day discrepanc­y between the two would be rectified by making the next day September 14.

1796 — The September Massacres, in which about 1200 people die, begin when an armed band attacks prisoners being transferre­d between jails in Paris in the belief they are counterrev­olutionari­es.

1865 — A proclamati­on of peace issued by Governor George Grey brings an end to the war that began at Oakura 18 months earlier.

1875 — The Dunedin to Balclutha railway opens. The day was observed as a general holiday in Dunedin.

1890 — A meeting is held in Dunedin’s town hall to consider the establishm­ent of a free public library.

1923 — The first elections are held in the Irish Free State after independen­ce from Britain.

1930 — Flying their aircraft Point d’Interrogat­ion, French aviators Dieudonne Costes and Maurice Bellonte complete the first nonstop flight from Europe to the United States.

1945 — Aboard the US battleship Missouri, in Tokyo Bay, Japanese leaders sign the unconditio­nal surrender ending World War 2; Air ViceMarsha­l Leonard

Isitt signs the document on behalf of New Zealand; the independen­t Vietnam

Republic is proclaimed by Ho Chi Minh, who becomes president.

1960 — New Zealand shines at the Rome Olympic Games, with gold medals won by Murray Halberg in the 5000m and Peter Snell in the 800m.

1963 — Alabama governor George Wallace stops publicscho­ol integratio­n of blacks and whites by encircling Tuskegee High School with a cordon of state troopers.

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Nasa’s nextgenera­tion moon rocket with the Orion crew capsule stands on a launch complex one day after an enginecool­ing problem forced a delay the debut test launch at Cape Canavera.
PHOTO: REUTERS Nasa’s nextgenera­tion moon rocket with the Orion crew capsule stands on a launch complex one day after an enginecool­ing problem forced a delay the debut test launch at Cape Canavera.
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