HMS Conqueror wrote:
That's not what Keynes told me!
Yeah, that's true.
Like how space research brings economic and technological benefits until you actually launch a spaceship. You don't need to do that to just develop and build one.
Except for the small part of the equation where spacecraft build infrastructure and provide scientific return, instead of BLOWING UP infrastructure and killing people. When you space R&D results in launches, you get satellites, remote probes or manned missions, all of which provide economic or scientific benefits.
Dropping bombs on Afghan villages builds nothing. Quite the opposite, actually. And if you need to get into a real, total war...well, let's just say you're not going to be able to do a whole lot of science or economic activity afterwards.
Nb: not even strictly true in either case; the use is often the only way of really testing it.
Also, I didn't say that either was net beneficial economically, just that they had similar effect. They're basically the same industry!
And you keep missing the point that while space and military R&D are similar (and often use each other's technologies and industries), space CONTINUES to provide benefits when it moves out of the R&D phase, while war does not,because the very PURPOSE of military equipment is destruction and killing, which is the antithesis of economic activity.
At least nowadays, when the spoils of war are next the useless compared to costs of weaponry.
Vehrec wrote:
I mean, nobody invented Velcro, Tang, Microprocessors, or inertial guidance systems for going to the moon. Those things already existed, they just made them better or implemented them in new ways. So if there is a benefit from space-research, it's probably not going to come out of the vehicles used to get there.
Nobody invented velcro, no. But inertial guidance systems are a DIRECT RESULT of military research into navigational systems, applied and refined for aerospace. Government investment allowed contractors to gain experience and eventually roll out inertial systems into the commercial market.
Same goes for many production techniques used in, say, production of Beta Cloth, which was pretty much a space-only fabric. Radiation and EMP resistant electronics are also a direct result of military and space R&D. The same techniques used to make beta cloth led directly to an entire line of new materials used in civilian clothing every damned day. Since 1958, NASA has transferred 1600 patents, solutions and government-held technologies to the private sector.
And outside R&D...how's the weather going to be today? Is the hurricane season gonna be bad?