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Russia crisis could sink the International Space Station /NASA

nirvarq

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
Backing out of the international partnership could be catastrophic for NASA.

ISS depends on Russian technology for transport and maintenance flights by SOYUZ probes. Now the partnership is over. As you can see the situation is reaching the limits. According to the agency’s director, Dmitry Rogozin, Roscosmos will halt shipping RD-181 rocket engines to the US and maintaining the 24 engines that are currently owned by the country.
“In this situation, we can no longer provide the US with the best rocket engines in the world. *Let them fly on something else – their brooms*,” he stated live on Russian television. /roflmao.....



1646347826169.png




1646347059982.png


By BRYAN BENDER
03/02/2022 05:00 AM EST
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine could jettison NASA’s plan to extend the operating life of the International Space Station — and could even spell its more imminent demise.
Russian space agency Roscosmos said Tuesday that it has authority to operate for only two more years and “the issue of extending the agreement in the current conditions causes our skepticism.”
Backing out of the partnership could be catastrophic for NASA and its other international partners, which are heavily dependent on Moscow for key sections of the orbiting laboratory and to carry out resupply, power generation and even boost the station’s altitude to prevent it from crashing to Earth.


Current and former NASA and administration officials and experts said the remaining space station partners — including the European, Japanese and Canadian space agencies — could keep the ISS going without Russia. But it might not be worth the cost and effort.
“We’d have to invest a bunch of additional money to make that happen,” said Brian Weeden, a space researcher at the Secure World Foundation. “The ISS was never intended to be broken apart.”
Publicly, NASA is sounding hopeful that the cooperation, which dates back more than two decades, can withstand the latest blow in the relationship with Moscow.
NASA Administrator Bill Nelson said at a meeting of the NASA Advisory Council Tuesday that the U.S. is “committed to the seven astronauts and cosmonauts on board the International Space Station.”
The crew consists of four Americans, two Russians and a German from the European Space Agency.
The International Space Station is pictured.
RUSSIA-UKRAINE CONFLICT

As Ukraine crisis deepens, U.S. and Russia maintain fragile peace in space

BY BRYAN BENDER
Meanwhile, two NASA astronauts are wrapping up training with Roscosmos, three Russian cosmonauts are training with NASA, and up to five NASA astronauts are scheduled to begin training in Russia this month.
Russia’s only female cosmonaut is also set to travel to the space station this year aboard SpaceX’s Dragon, the first commercial space capsule to ferry astronauts.


Meanwhile in low-earth orbit, NASA astronaut Mark Vande Hei is scheduled to return from the space station on March 30 aboard a Russian Soyuz capsule, breaking the American record for the longest duration spaceflight mission, at 355 days.
“NASA continues working relations with all of our international partners,” Nelson said Tuesday.
The question is how long that can last.
The Biden administration announced in December that it wants to extend the station until 2030 when a series of private space stations should come online. But it also acknowledged that it needed to get buy-in from its international partners.
NASA pledged “to work with our international partners in Europe, Japan, Canada, and Russia to enable continuation of the groundbreaking research being conducted in this unique orbiting laboratory through the rest of this decade.”
In recent days, however, Dmitry Rogozin, the head of Roscosmos, has threatened to sever the partnership. “Do you want to destroy our cooperation on the ISS?” he asked.
He also warned that without Russian space systems, the orbiting habitat could literally come crashing down. “If you block cooperation with us, who will save the ISS from an uncontrolled deorbit?”
On Tuesday, Rogozin warned that Roscosmos would “reconsider its priorities” and focus on “independence in matters of space instrumentation.”
Following Rogozin’s initial broadside, NASA said it “continues working with all our international partners, including the State Space Corporation Roscosmos, for the ongoing safe operations of the International Space Station.”

It also insisted in a statement that new economic sanctions imposed on Russia for its assault on Ukraine “will continue to allow U.S.-Russia civil space cooperation” and that “no changes are planned to the agency’s support for ongoing in orbit and ground station operations.”
Many of the functions carried out by the ISS partners are intertwined.

The U.S. and its other partners could manage without Russia but it might prove so complicated and costly that it’s not worth doing, according to multiple experts on space station operations.
For example, one major operation that Russia performs is the periodic “re-boosting” of the station’s altitude. That is traditionally carried out by Russia’s Progress, an expendable cargo vehicle.
NASA is also counting on Russia to guide the station safely back to Earth when it is retired in the coming years, reporting in a new ISS Transition Plan that three Progress spacecraft are slated to accomplish the job.

The American Cygnus cargo spacecraft, built by Northrop Grumman, is in orbit and being tested to see if it can re-boost the station. But there’s one complicating factor: Cygnus is launched on the Antares rocket, which is partially built in Ukraine.
NASA is also planning that the Boeing Starliner spacecraft can perform the mission. But it is at least two years behind schedule and has yet to make its first successful flight to the station.
Rogozin also took a swipe at the Starliner in his recent comments, asserting that “Soon Boeing, having screwed up twice with its new manned spacecraft, the Starliner, will hold its breath for a third flight test.”
The SpaceX Dragon, which has been ferrying astronauts to the station since 2020, does not have the proper thrusters to accomplish the task, though it could be modified to raise the station’s altitude.

Japan is also building a cargo vehicle known as the HTV-X. But it has yet to be tested.
Still, all those options “would be a significant change to how things are done,” Weeden said.

Meanwhile, the Russian module attached to the station is considered crucial to keeping the ISS going, including as a primary power source.
“Roscosmos’ Multipurpose Laboratory Module (MLM), added in July 2021, is a considerable enhancement that increases utilization on the Russian Segment for the next decade,” NASA said in its recently updated ISS Transition Plan.


One big question if Russia quits the station — in 2024 or even sooner — is whether it would also take its sections with it.
“Will the Russians want to take some of their modules with them when they separate? Do they work with us to separate?” said a former government official who asked not to be named because he has clients with a stake in the outcome.

He noted that such a maneuver would likely require the help of a robotic arm built by the Canadian Space Agency.
“Do [the Russians] ghost us? We are in unknown territory.”
The best strategy if Russia backs out, the former official said, may be to speed up plans to replace the station with privately funded habitats.
“Maybe we just have to accelerate transition plans.”


https://www.politico.com/news/2022/03/02/russia-crisis-international-space-station-00013000
 
Last edited:

syed putra

Alfrescian
Loyal
As you can see, there was cooperation going on after russian withdrawal from eastern europe.
Germany buying russian lng is another.
Automakers investing in plants in russia too, like toyota and Renault.
So why did NATO keep on expanding into eastern europe? Knowing russian protest to those moves,
 

nirvarq

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
As you can see, there was cooperation going on after russian withdrawal from eastern europe.
Germany buying russian lng is another.
Automakers investing in plants in russia too, like toyota and Renault.
So why did NATO keep on expanding into eastern europe? Knowing russian protest to those moves,

Simple answer is they are all puppets it's the cabal/elites that is pulling the strings. Chaos is the name of Earth's currency.

Even more simpler still is we're all here to learn sufferings, compassions & forgiveness hence be grateful lol...........

*All are lessons & xp, perfect as it is in totality is it not ? lol............... Hence Earth will always be in Chaos it's a newbie school...... :P <3
 
Last edited:

tanwahtiu

Alfrescian
Loyal
Buy China rocket engines... or brooms made in China too..

Russia has the eastern front can move their nukes near the fence of Alaska and Canada... Western America Califronia...

Same as NATO put missiles next to Russia fence in Ukraine land.... earth is flat...

No happy endings for both..
 
Last edited:

syed putra

Alfrescian
Loyal
Buy China rocket engines... or brooms made in China too..

Russia has the eastern front can move their nukes near the fence of Alaska and Canada... Western America Califronia...

Same as NATO put missiles next to Russia fence in Ukraine land.... earth is flat...

No happy endings for both..
You cannot do that! You will scare all the beach bums and surfers.
 

pvtpublic

Alfrescian
Loyal
Simple answer is they are all puppets it's the cabal/elites that is pulling the strings. Chaos is the name of Earth's currency.

Even more simpler still is we're all here to learn sufferings, compassions & forgiveness hence be grateful lol...........

*All are lessons & xp, perfect as it is in totality is it not ? lol............... Hence Earth will always be in Chaos it's a newbie school...... :P <3
as long as they don't tell me when to shit and how many squares to wipe with, it's all good.

you are referring to Entropy. the fact that things are chaotic is no big secret dude.
 

LordElrond

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
As you can see, there was cooperation going on after russian withdrawal from eastern europe.
Germany buying russian lng is another.
Automakers investing in plants in russia too, like toyota and Renault.
So why did NATO keep on expanding into eastern europe? Knowing russian protest to those moves,
2 key tenets of American Foreign Policies:
1) America will interfere in any country it wants including bombing, killing, murder, assasination if its interests are threatened
2) America will not hesitate to stir shit if any friendship between 2 sovereign nations pose a threat to its interests
 

A Singaporean

Alfrescian
Loyal
Backing out of the international partnership could be catastrophic for NASA.

ISS depends on Russian technology for transport and maintenance flights by SOYUZ probes. Now the partnership is over. As you can see the situation is reaching the limits. According to the agency’s director, Dmitry Rogozin, Roscosmos will halt shipping RD-181 rocket engines to the US and maintaining the 24 engines that are currently owned by the country.
“In this situation, we can no longer provide the US with the best rocket engines in the world. *Let them fly on something else – their brooms*,” he stated live on Russian television. /roflmao.....



View attachment 136191



View attachment 136190

By BRYAN BENDER
03/02/2022 05:00 AM EST
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine could jettison NASA’s plan to extend the operating life of the International Space Station — and could even spell its more imminent demise.
Russian space agency Roscosmos said Tuesday that it has authority to operate for only two more years and “the issue of extending the agreement in the current conditions causes our skepticism.”
Backing out of the partnership could be catastrophic for NASA and its other international partners, which are heavily dependent on Moscow for key sections of the orbiting laboratory and to carry out resupply, power generation and even boost the station’s altitude to prevent it from crashing to Earth.


Current and former NASA and administration officials and experts said the remaining space station partners — including the European, Japanese and Canadian space agencies — could keep the ISS going without Russia. But it might not be worth the cost and effort.
“We’d have to invest a bunch of additional money to make that happen,” said Brian Weeden, a space researcher at the Secure World Foundation. “The ISS was never intended to be broken apart.”
Publicly, NASA is sounding hopeful that the cooperation, which dates back more than two decades, can withstand the latest blow in the relationship with Moscow.
NASA Administrator Bill Nelson said at a meeting of the NASA Advisory Council Tuesday that the U.S. is “committed to the seven astronauts and cosmonauts on board the International Space Station.”
The crew consists of four Americans, two Russians and a German from the European Space Agency.
The International Space Station is pictured.
RUSSIA-UKRAINE CONFLICT

As Ukraine crisis deepens, U.S. and Russia maintain fragile peace in space

BY BRYAN BENDER
Meanwhile, two NASA astronauts are wrapping up training with Roscosmos, three Russian cosmonauts are training with NASA, and up to five NASA astronauts are scheduled to begin training in Russia this month.
Russia’s only female cosmonaut is also set to travel to the space station this year aboard SpaceX’s Dragon, the first commercial space capsule to ferry astronauts.


Meanwhile in low-earth orbit, NASA astronaut Mark Vande Hei is scheduled to return from the space station on March 30 aboard a Russian Soyuz capsule, breaking the American record for the longest duration spaceflight mission, at 355 days.
“NASA continues working relations with all of our international partners,” Nelson said Tuesday.
The question is how long that can last.
The Biden administration announced in December that it wants to extend the station until 2030 when a series of private space stations should come online. But it also acknowledged that it needed to get buy-in from its international partners.
NASA pledged “to work with our international partners in Europe, Japan, Canada, and Russia to enable continuation of the groundbreaking research being conducted in this unique orbiting laboratory through the rest of this decade.”
In recent days, however, Dmitry Rogozin, the head of Roscosmos, has threatened to sever the partnership. “Do you want to destroy our cooperation on the ISS?” he asked.
He also warned that without Russian space systems, the orbiting habitat could literally come crashing down. “If you block cooperation with us, who will save the ISS from an uncontrolled deorbit?”
On Tuesday, Rogozin warned that Roscosmos would “reconsider its priorities” and focus on “independence in matters of space instrumentation.”
Following Rogozin’s initial broadside, NASA said it “continues working with all our international partners, including the State Space Corporation Roscosmos, for the ongoing safe operations of the International Space Station.”

It also insisted in a statement that new economic sanctions imposed on Russia for its assault on Ukraine “will continue to allow U.S.-Russia civil space cooperation” and that “no changes are planned to the agency’s support for ongoing in orbit and ground station operations.”
Many of the functions carried out by the ISS partners are intertwined.

The U.S. and its other partners could manage without Russia but it might prove so complicated and costly that it’s not worth doing, according to multiple experts on space station operations.
For example, one major operation that Russia performs is the periodic “re-boosting” of the station’s altitude. That is traditionally carried out by Russia’s Progress, an expendable cargo vehicle.
NASA is also counting on Russia to guide the station safely back to Earth when it is retired in the coming years, reporting in a new ISS Transition Plan that three Progress spacecraft are slated to accomplish the job.

The American Cygnus cargo spacecraft, built by Northrop Grumman, is in orbit and being tested to see if it can re-boost the station. But there’s one complicating factor: Cygnus is launched on the Antares rocket, which is partially built in Ukraine.
NASA is also planning that the Boeing Starliner spacecraft can perform the mission. But it is at least two years behind schedule and has yet to make its first successful flight to the station.
Rogozin also took a swipe at the Starliner in his recent comments, asserting that “Soon Boeing, having screwed up twice with its new manned spacecraft, the Starliner, will hold its breath for a third flight test.”
The SpaceX Dragon, which has been ferrying astronauts to the station since 2020, does not have the proper thrusters to accomplish the task, though it could be modified to raise the station’s altitude.

Japan is also building a cargo vehicle known as the HTV-X. But it has yet to be tested.
Still, all those options “would be a significant change to how things are done,” Weeden said.

Meanwhile, the Russian module attached to the station is considered crucial to keeping the ISS going, including as a primary power source.
“Roscosmos’ Multipurpose Laboratory Module (MLM), added in July 2021, is a considerable enhancement that increases utilization on the Russian Segment for the next decade,” NASA said in its recently updated ISS Transition Plan.


One big question if Russia quits the station — in 2024 or even sooner — is whether it would also take its sections with it.
“Will the Russians want to take some of their modules with them when they separate? Do they work with us to separate?” said a former government official who asked not to be named because he has clients with a stake in the outcome.

He noted that such a maneuver would likely require the help of a robotic arm built by the Canadian Space Agency.
“Do [the Russians] ghost us? We are in unknown territory.”
The best strategy if Russia backs out, the former official said, may be to speed up plans to replace the station with privately funded habitats.
“Maybe we just have to accelerate transition plans.”


https://www.politico.com/news/2022/03/02/russia-crisis-international-space-station-00013000
Great news.
 

Hypocrite-The

Alfrescian
Loyal
2 key tenets of American Foreign Policies:
1) America will interfere in any country it wants including bombing, killing, murder, assasination if its interests are threatened
2) America will not hesitate to stir shit if any friendship between 2 sovereign nations pose a threat to its interests
No difference to chicons.

 

nirvarq

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
as long as they don't tell me when to shit and how many squares to wipe with, it's all good.

you are referring to Entropy. the fact that things are chaotic is no big secret dude.

1646356300913.png


Entropy is a term used by primitive species to describe a thermodynamic quantity representing the unavailability of a system's thermal energy for conversion into mechanical work, often interpreted as the degree of disorder or randomness in the system.

In truth nothing is even accidental. Our science are all flawed that's why we're only able to use Nuclear fusion instead of Cold fusion.
 

Rogue Trader

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
NASA talk cock lah. With or without the war, the ISS is already past its service date and due for retirement last year.

NASA refused to let China use ISS and China went ahead to build the Tiangong themselves. Now American astronauts have to beg China for help
 

Leongsam

High Order Twit / Low SES subject
Admin
Asset
Backing out of the international partnership could be catastrophic for NASA.

ISS depends on Russian technology for transport and maintenance flights by SOYUZ probes. Now the partnership is over. As you can see the situation is reaching the limits. According to the agency’s director, Dmitry Rogozin, Roscosmos will halt shipping RD-181 rocket engines to the US and maintaining the 24 engines that are currently owned by the country.
“In this situation, we can no longer provide the US with the best rocket engines in the world. *Let them fly on something else – their brooms*,” he stated live on Russian television. /roflmao.....



View attachment 136191



View attachment 136190

By BRYAN BENDER
03/02/2022 05:00 AM EST
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine could jettison NASA’s plan to extend the operating life of the International Space Station — and could even spell its more imminent demise.
Russian space agency Roscosmos said Tuesday that it has authority to operate for only two more years and “the issue of extending the agreement in the current conditions causes our skepticism.”
Backing out of the partnership could be catastrophic for NASA and its other international partners, which are heavily dependent on Moscow for key sections of the orbiting laboratory and to carry out resupply, power generation and even boost the station’s altitude to prevent it from crashing to Earth.


Current and former NASA and administration officials and experts said the remaining space station partners — including the European, Japanese and Canadian space agencies — could keep the ISS going without Russia. But it might not be worth the cost and effort.
“We’d have to invest a bunch of additional money to make that happen,” said Brian Weeden, a space researcher at the Secure World Foundation. “The ISS was never intended to be broken apart.”
Publicly, NASA is sounding hopeful that the cooperation, which dates back more than two decades, can withstand the latest blow in the relationship with Moscow.
NASA Administrator Bill Nelson said at a meeting of the NASA Advisory Council Tuesday that the U.S. is “committed to the seven astronauts and cosmonauts on board the International Space Station.”
The crew consists of four Americans, two Russians and a German from the European Space Agency.
The International Space Station is pictured.
RUSSIA-UKRAINE CONFLICT

As Ukraine crisis deepens, U.S. and Russia maintain fragile peace in space

BY BRYAN BENDER
Meanwhile, two NASA astronauts are wrapping up training with Roscosmos, three Russian cosmonauts are training with NASA, and up to five NASA astronauts are scheduled to begin training in Russia this month.
Russia’s only female cosmonaut is also set to travel to the space station this year aboard SpaceX’s Dragon, the first commercial space capsule to ferry astronauts.


Meanwhile in low-earth orbit, NASA astronaut Mark Vande Hei is scheduled to return from the space station on March 30 aboard a Russian Soyuz capsule, breaking the American record for the longest duration spaceflight mission, at 355 days.
“NASA continues working relations with all of our international partners,” Nelson said Tuesday.
The question is how long that can last.
The Biden administration announced in December that it wants to extend the station until 2030 when a series of private space stations should come online. But it also acknowledged that it needed to get buy-in from its international partners.
NASA pledged “to work with our international partners in Europe, Japan, Canada, and Russia to enable continuation of the groundbreaking research being conducted in this unique orbiting laboratory through the rest of this decade.”
In recent days, however, Dmitry Rogozin, the head of Roscosmos, has threatened to sever the partnership. “Do you want to destroy our cooperation on the ISS?” he asked.
He also warned that without Russian space systems, the orbiting habitat could literally come crashing down. “If you block cooperation with us, who will save the ISS from an uncontrolled deorbit?”
On Tuesday, Rogozin warned that Roscosmos would “reconsider its priorities” and focus on “independence in matters of space instrumentation.”
Following Rogozin’s initial broadside, NASA said it “continues working with all our international partners, including the State Space Corporation Roscosmos, for the ongoing safe operations of the International Space Station.”

It also insisted in a statement that new economic sanctions imposed on Russia for its assault on Ukraine “will continue to allow U.S.-Russia civil space cooperation” and that “no changes are planned to the agency’s support for ongoing in orbit and ground station operations.”
Many of the functions carried out by the ISS partners are intertwined.

The U.S. and its other partners could manage without Russia but it might prove so complicated and costly that it’s not worth doing, according to multiple experts on space station operations.
For example, one major operation that Russia performs is the periodic “re-boosting” of the station’s altitude. That is traditionally carried out by Russia’s Progress, an expendable cargo vehicle.
NASA is also counting on Russia to guide the station safely back to Earth when it is retired in the coming years, reporting in a new ISS Transition Plan that three Progress spacecraft are slated to accomplish the job.

The American Cygnus cargo spacecraft, built by Northrop Grumman, is in orbit and being tested to see if it can re-boost the station. But there’s one complicating factor: Cygnus is launched on the Antares rocket, which is partially built in Ukraine.
NASA is also planning that the Boeing Starliner spacecraft can perform the mission. But it is at least two years behind schedule and has yet to make its first successful flight to the station.
Rogozin also took a swipe at the Starliner in his recent comments, asserting that “Soon Boeing, having screwed up twice with its new manned spacecraft, the Starliner, will hold its breath for a third flight test.”
The SpaceX Dragon, which has been ferrying astronauts to the station since 2020, does not have the proper thrusters to accomplish the task, though it could be modified to raise the station’s altitude.

Japan is also building a cargo vehicle known as the HTV-X. But it has yet to be tested.
Still, all those options “would be a significant change to how things are done,” Weeden said.

Meanwhile, the Russian module attached to the station is considered crucial to keeping the ISS going, including as a primary power source.
“Roscosmos’ Multipurpose Laboratory Module (MLM), added in July 2021, is a considerable enhancement that increases utilization on the Russian Segment for the next decade,” NASA said in its recently updated ISS Transition Plan.


One big question if Russia quits the station — in 2024 or even sooner — is whether it would also take its sections with it.
“Will the Russians want to take some of their modules with them when they separate? Do they work with us to separate?” said a former government official who asked not to be named because he has clients with a stake in the outcome.

He noted that such a maneuver would likely require the help of a robotic arm built by the Canadian Space Agency.
“Do [the Russians] ghost us? We are in unknown territory.”
The best strategy if Russia backs out, the former official said, may be to speed up plans to replace the station with privately funded habitats.
“Maybe we just have to accelerate transition plans.”


https://www.politico.com/news/2022/03/02/russia-crisis-international-space-station-00013000

Who gives a shit that piece of space junk is a waste of money anyway the sooner it's smashed to pieces the better.
 

Hypocrite-The

Alfrescian
Loyal
NASA talk cock lah. With or without the war, the ISS is already past its service date and due for retirement last year.

NASA refused to let China use ISS and China went ahead to build the Tiangong themselves. Now American astronauts have to beg China for help

That is actually good news indeed. This will forced the yanks to up the ante on their own rockets. N their own space vehicle development. Furthermore the yanks have already a few other vehicles that will b ready soon. Like the one developed by Elon...this Russkies thing is one step back n 3 steps forward


https://www.nasa.gov/specials/orionfirstflight/
 

Boliao

Alfrescian
Loyal
As you can see, there was cooperation going on after russian withdrawal from eastern europe.
Germany buying russian lng is another.
Automakers investing in plants in russia too, like toyota and Renault.
So why did NATO keep on expanding into eastern europe? Knowing russian protest to those moves,

Americano needs help to deal with its economy. Devastating Europe (along with China if possible) is the only way to move money back. Americano has been planning and using this tactics for years. Both China and Russia has been preparing for a fallout for years ~ from military and finance to oil and crops.

There are long term strategic reasons why China holds tight control over its currencies and finance system, build up its military, invest in farming/ crops, stockpiling food and move aggressively to new energy. Not that they had foresight but they have been conned before. All one has to do is look at history. Ever wonder why the Soviet Union fell apart without firing a bullet?

Average people learn from their own mistakes. Smart ones learn from other's. Fools will never learn and keep harping that Russia is fault and how China is evil.
 
Last edited:

winners

Alfrescian
Loyal
No doubt Russia will win in this war. However, its economy will be severely crippled for many years to come. Only a mad man will do as such, sacrificing its own people's future for the sake of a piece of land.
 

mahjongking

Alfrescian
Loyal
As you can see, there was cooperation going on after russian withdrawal from eastern europe.
Germany buying russian lng is another.
Automakers investing in plants in russia too, like toyota and Renault.
So why did NATO keep on expanding into eastern europe? Knowing russian protest to those moves,


all boils down to the fucked up politicians in washington dc
 

pvtpublic

Alfrescian
Loyal
View attachment 136197

Entropy is a term used by primitive species to describe a thermodynamic quantity representing the unavailability of a system's thermal energy for conversion into mechanical work, often interpreted as the degree of disorder or randomness in the system.

In truth nothing is even accidental. Our science are all flawed that's why we're only able to use Nuclear fusion instead of Cold fusion.

how is our science flawed? the science that powers the phone I'm typing on seems to be doing fine.
 

Rogue Trader

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
really? in which multiverse?
You think US has money to overhaul the decaying ISS? They don't even have money to maintain American bridges and roads on Earth.

And before you go "SpaceX will do it" .. Space stations, unlike tourism, require massive capital with no guaranteed immediate returns.
 
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