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Topic: R.I.P. Columbia and Crew
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K
VoivodFan
Member # 6
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posted February 01, 2003 23:08
It is a sad day indeed. All this happened right above my head. (I am here in Irving, Texas.)People as far away as Arkansas heard the boom from the explosion. I have witnessed one other Shuttle Re-Entry (at Night.) You can hear it as it passes overhead from horizon to horizon. Like a fireball in the sky...the crackling sound. Everything was smooth and steady then as it lit up the night sky over Dallas. This time...it was different. Erratic...and then a loud boom. I still am freaked out about it. This has been a bad day. My heart goes out to the Family's
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Tangento
VoivodFan
Member # 117
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posted February 02, 2003 11:32
quote: Originally posted by Marginal: btw , those who'll say : '' But they died trying to further humanities horizons '' . Well , fuck you . What they were trying to do is just something to help richer peoples to live better and longer . Fuck poverty eh !?
Here is the bottom line, the way I see it:
The space program in general and the space shuttle in particular, are symbols of some of man's greatest achievments. The people involved in these missions are a special breed and are, for the most part quality individuals with special skills and a unique vision. When a catastrophic failure occurs in association with such ambitious and high-profile endeavors, it is quite dramatic and unsettling. Especially to those of us who were little kids who watched in awe as they first landed on the moon. The way I see it, there is nothing wrong with taking a few seconds of your precious life and mourning the loss of the scientists, technicians and researchers - with no strings attached to the rest of the world's woes and injustices. They really do deserve to be set apart, if only for a moment.
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