China has successfully flown its first �taikonaut.� According to Glenn Reynolds, China�s space program represents a new outward focus that�s an improvement over, say, preparing for WWIII or invading Taiwan. I�m more inclined to think that it�s an attempt by the Communist leadership to show the relevance of the Party in response to the growing influence of businessmen. As Americans should know well, nothing justifies billions of dollars of government waste and useless bureaucratic jobs like a space program.
While China is rushing ahead with its space program, NASA�s fleet of 1980�s era space shuttles is still grounded with little hope for change due to an entrenched bureaucracy that cares more about their jobs than innovation. Our best hope in space is a private initiative run by amateurs � currently waiting for FAA approval to launch their flight-tested space vehicle. What�s the federal government�s response to this dilemma? To ban model rocketry of course. Clueless politicians claim the rockets fuels are a �high explosive� that private citizens cannot be trusted with. Did you ever notice how, unlike real high explosives, the rockets don�t just blow up on take off? Anyone inspired by the awesome movie October Sky should keep their dreams to themselves these days: not only is the rocket fuel illegal, but launching a model rocket requires FAA approval.