Thursday, 2 July 2009

If you believe… they put a man on the moon

Sorry for the REM reference

Today, as the Guardian's special section reminds me, is the fortieth anniversary of the moon landings. How do you feel about it? Ten years ago, I had nothing but awe for such an amazing achievement - and I still feel that way for the most part. However, in between, I've done a lot of reading. I've learned how the space programme was motivated solely by a need to dominate the Soviets, about how it was manned by pretty unrepentant Nazi rocket scientists drawing on the skills developed in the 1940s, about how it cost a massive chunk of the US GNP, and how its scientific benefits have been massively overexaggerated by NASA spinners.

The Soviets took a pragmatic approach: near earth orbits are great for science, there's nothing on the moon. So did the Europeans for that matter - manned space flight is like getting a taxi down to the shops. We might make Mars but that's as far as it goes, so let's put our energy into satellites, telescopes and probes.

And yet - the romance lingers, perhaps even intensified by the failure of our space race. Once the cold war ended, it turned out that the motivation (and money) dissipated. Instead, we're in the post-space age. Will our grandchildren remember that men walked on the moon? Will they have the energy to care, inbetween long treks for water and trying to eke out a subsistence living on a ruined earth? Perhaps the dominant mode will be anger, at the waste of multiple billions on a giant penis when millions of people starved.

Perhaps, though, the dominant mood will be melancholy. J. G. Ballard's Hello America and Myths of the Near Future depict a California and Florida of abandoned space centres, emptied pools, men and women spiritually hollowed out by the loss of technological purpose.

5 comments:

Zoot Horn said...

Is today the anniversary? I thought it was later in the month when they actually stepped onto the surface - in fact the early hours BST of the 21st. Rolling Stone Brian Jones was pulled out of his swimming pool lifeless 40 years ago tonight though (and Honky Tonk Woman was, I think, no.1 in the charts when Neil Armstrong did his stepping). The space race shouldn't have been a bloody race, and that I suppose is the tragedy, but I still marvel at the first moon landing just because I remember it and everything at that time seemed on the cusp of some massive change for the better. I know, now, that wasn't even a fraction of half of the story, but there's something about that photo of the earth hanging above the lunar horizon that sums that moment up for me. Damn expensive photo mind...

James said...

It took them 95 hours to get to the Moon -- take your pick. I edited a feature about it today, that's the only reason I know this smart-ass fact. Also: there's no trade to be had with space, hence no motivation. Our exclusive interview with Buzz Aldrin has the great man claim returning to the Moon would be a waste of time: we should concentrate on the moons of Mars...

Lou said...

Though I hadn't even started school yet, I remember the occasion. Sure some of the reasons for getting there weren't as white as the driven snow but who cares, for pure romance the story is unbeatable.

The Plashing Vole said...

I'd like to read that article James.

I'm torn between the sheer romance of that photo of earthrise, the improbability of actually doing such an amazing thing, and its utter pointlessness. One of the things that amazes me is that such a romantic idea was supported by every arm of a very pragmatic state: financial, military, cultural.

Last night's Newsnight played footage of the landings with some Hendrix over the top, which struck me as being quite profound: the vague, hippy dreams of the counterculture were being fulfilled by a hard-edged industrial-military complex. Despite their official motivation (get one over on the Soviets), there must have been a subconscious romantic impulse informing a whole nation: culture and counterculture united for one special moment.

I hate being a grumpy old curmudgeon. I read a huge amount of SF, not only Ballard's 'dream turned sour' stuff, and do understand the pull of space, but the older I get the more I think it was an obscene distraction: all that money, research, technical skill could and should have been invested in clean tech, health care (especially given that the US still operates a 2nd world system) and education. The idea of humanity abandoning a ruined world and proceeding to spoil others without a second thought fills me with horror. Let's fix this place: then we can take our place with the grown-up civilisations out there!

Zoot Horn said...

On August 8th 1969 LIFE magazine produced a special moon landing issue. On August 9th, the Manson Family started slaughtering jet-set hipsters in the Hollywood hills, and British troops were sent into Northern Ireland to patrol the Catholic parts of Belfast. The following weekend was Woodstock.

History eh? What a nightmare.