NASA decline and antigravity space fleet

Depiction of Constellation lauch vehicle (Ares 1) leaving Earth. Photo NASA
President
Obama has yet to name an administrator for NASA. It is not
unprecedented for a new President to delay. President Bush waited until
November of his first year in office before naming Sean O’Keefe as the
new administrator. The delay in naming a replacement to Michael Griffin
means important decisions about future NASA operations are being made
by acting administrator, Christopher Scolese. Major decisions have been
taken to lay off personnel when the Space Shuttle is retired in 2010
despite a Congressional request to consider ways to extend the Shuttle
service life. Also, NASA managers last month decided to trim the crew
capsule of the Constellation Project – the Space Shuttle’s replacement
– from six to four. The Constellation aims to take astronauts to the
moon and mars, and service the International Space Station. Obama’s
delay in announcing a new administrator reflects the widespread view
that he gives NASA a low priority. This is reflected in the steady
decline in NASA’s budget in real terms since the end of the Apollo
missions in the early 1970s. NASA’s decline is inevitable. If
whistleblower reports are accurate, then NASA is little more than a
cover for a highly classified antigravity space fleet that regularly
takes hundreds of military astronauts into space. The alleged name of
this secret project is ‘Solar Warden’.
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