I don't recalling hearing much about the media questioning the dangers of a manned space program after Apollo 1, as I think it was taken for granted at the time (I'm sure someone probably did). However between Challenger and Columbia with the retarded sensationalist 24 hr news cycle (with 2 hrs of content at best) there was certainly a lot of screeching from the media, and of course some politician will stick their nose in, especially if they're opposed to spending money on space exploration, and now we even get every idiot with a blog or youtube account posting their 2 cents as well.[/quote]Temujin wrote: Since after all funding flows through the legislature the uneducated mumbling-shuffling-soul-searchery still plays a part.
No. But during the Congressional Hearings, politicians took their pot-shots at NASA, they were just far less publicized at the time owing to lack of the 24 hour news cycle, and that there was still the "BEAT THE RUSSIANS" mentality.
No, astronauts aren't. However, they do generally have a mentality that "unless you can prove to me this will be fatal, I'll fly it." Pilot and military astronauts come from a background where death is part of the game. Either in testing an unproven aircraft, or in combat. Fear does ultimately take its toll, however its usually not personal. Many astronauts leave due to the emotional stress the job puts on their family. Shuttle Astronaut Mike Mullane's recent autobiography, "Riding Rockets" gives a pretty good look into the Astronaut mentality.In fairness, I'm not calling the crew of Challenger a bunch of adrenaline-junkie thrill-seekers.