salaam Duke.
I am in agreement with you regarding the hypocrisy of the media in regards to terrorism. "Terrorism" is not a meaningful definition, since the word is supposed to mean "their" political violence, not "ours". When "we" bomb them, it's justified warfare for a just cause, when "they" bomb us, it's a heinous crime. The problem is that there is no way "terror" can be properly defined to mean what western politicians and media want to imply it means. Murder is murder.
As for the moon landing, I don't think its off topic. The thread should perhaps be renamed "9/11 and other conspiracies".
QuoteHow is it that man walked on the Moon in the sixties but can barely get into space now. That's backwards technology.
The explanation for why space flight has regressed is that the Americans threw huge amounts of money and resources at the problem in the sixties, politically motivated by rivalry with the Soviets for supremacy in space flight. Once the Americans felt the space race was won, it was no longer politically motivated to fund NASA in such an extravagant manner.
After the Apollo program, NASA set a new course with the space shuttle. This turned out to be a huge and costly mistake, in my opinion. Saturn-Apollo was a highly conventional design with a vertical rocket stack and a light, relatively simple ballistic capsule on top. While it was a huge and very expensive rocket, it was perfectly suited for the task at hand, i.e. landing men on the moon.
The shuttle design, by comparison, was based on the notion that recycling and re-using spacecraft components (both the orbiter and the solid rocket boosters) would decrease cost dramatically and make manned space flight cheap. The shuttle is unable to go higher (faster, really) than low earth orbit (LEO), primarily because the orbiter is hugely more heavy than the Apollo capsules were. That's the fundamental problem of the space shuttle. It's large, heavy and terribly complicated. The whole idea of re-using the main liquid engines, the heat shield, the boosters, and the using of large wings to glide back to earth like and airplane (rather than using parachutes like Apollo) led to a compromised design, an unsafe and terribly complicated spacecraft that is limited to certain types of missions in LEO. It also drained NASA's budget to the point that they have been unable to do any other type of manned space flight, for example more moon exploration or an expedition to Mars.
Arguably there has been huge advances made in space flight since the Apollo program, but the progress has been in unmanned missions. NASA and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) have flown probes that have given scientist much more interesting data than the moon landings ever did. Voyager, Cassini and other probes have visited all the outer planets and many of their moon. Viking and the rovers have taught us many things about Mars. There's projects like Stardust, a probe that flew through the tail of a comet and brought particle samples back to earth for analysis. There's Hubble, and other space telescopes, from which we have learned lots about the universe. Asteroids have been visited, poked and prodded, all done by robots. Rockets have gotten smaller and cheaper since Apollo, which might be seen as technological regression. On the other hand events in space flight since the 60's has proven that machines can do more science cheaper that humans can.