Katherine Mangu-Ward

Yesterday, The Atlantic ran an interview with physicist/celeb Neil deGrasse Tyson. Here's what he had to say about "how space exploration can make America great again":

When everyone agrees to a single solution and a single plan, there's nothing more efficient in the world than an efficient democracy.

Wrong. The space program has been a laughable mess for years now, sending elderly (and occasionally combustible) space buses back and forth to an increasingly pointless space station carrying "ant farms, recycled-urine-based finger paints, and other science fair experiments." And now NASA can't even do that.

This isn't because the democratic consensus behind the space program has fractured, or because there's not enough money. It's because no one knows what we're doing up there, so they fall back on exaggerating the job creating/social justice promoting/kid inspiring that the space program is supposed to be doing down here.

Tyson flirts with what I think is the right approach to government in space: If the feds must be involved, let them fund real pie in the sky (or blue sky? pick your sky pun) science. But then Tyson turns out to be no better than a pork-grubbing congressman who wants to keep space jobs in his district:

The problem is that many people operate on the assumption that NASA should go to Congress every year with hat in hand and justify it every year. Well, I see it as the greatest economic driver that there ever was. Economic drivers don't need justification.

More wrongness: Economic drivers don't need justification, unless they are part of our massive, out-of-control federal budget. Tyson wants to double NASA's take to 1 percent of federal expenditures. He describes it as "a penny on the dollar," which doesn't sound like he's asking for much. But 1 percent of a huge number of taxpayer dollars is, in fact, a huge number of taxpayer dollars and requires quite a lot of justification.