Category Archives: astronomy

Media Jumping to Conclusions Before Facts are In

A Rush to Judge the Pilots

SpaceShip Two at first launch. Courtesy Scaled Composites/Virgin Galactic.

This morning comes statements of FACTS from the NTSB about the breakup of SpaceShip Two over the Mojave Desert. It appears from the FACTS that the fuel and engine were recovered intact, and were apparently not the problem that caused the breakup. The FACTS show that the feathers deployed at the wrong time (whether by design, accident, or human error remains to be seen).

Those are the FACTS.

There was nothing said about the pilots being the cause of the mishap. Nothing. Yet, the MSM and trendy commentators are rushing to judgment.

All other policy discussions about space travel for the rich, caviar for the rich, the end of space flight as we know it are not part of the FACTS. The FACTS, as all of us who do/did science and write about should remain focused on at this stage of an investigation.

Judging by the shrill and judgmental voices from such outlets as Wired, etc., and this morning’s leap to judgment by the mainstream media about who might be at “fault”, it’s never too early after someone lost their life in an aviation accident to start pointing hopelessly hip fingers of blame at various sources. It sure beats reporting the facts, doesn’t it? (She asked ironically).

Anyway, the facts are slowly coming to light, the investigation is proceeding as it should. Those who are interested in the facts and how they will relate to future aerospace designs will be interested in learning more. Everybody else will have to sustain themselves on the thin gruel of faux outrage.

The investigation is proceeding as it should. I wish the Swift Boat media would take a collective breath and let it happen before its more excitable “journalists” rush to judgment.

 

Slipping the Surly Bonds of Earth

Space Flight Tragedy, II

Today’s crash of the SpaceShip Two Enterprise craft is the second space-related tragedy in a week. I’ve already written about the Antares explosion at Wallops Island, VA, and the story on that crash is being thoroughly investigated. The story is coming out and the process is working.

The crash today over the Mojave Desert took the life of the Enterprise’s co-pilot; the pilot is in a hospital fighting for his life. We do not at this time have a lot of solid information about what caused the plane to crash, but from witness accounts and the few images I’ve seen online, it’s pretty clear something went wrong right after the plane was dropped from the White Knight Two jet-powered mother ship. The plane broke up, it appears that the pilot was able to eject to relative safety.

Our thoughts are with the families and team members involved in this mission, which was part of an ambitious scale-up to space tourism by Virgin Galactic. Their losses are incredibly painful, even as we follow their difficult steps to space.

In the immediate aftermath of the explosion and crash to Earth, I really dreaded the media firestorm. We saw a lot of really stupid media coverage after the Antares loss earlier in the week, and there was an immediate upswing in really bad click-baity stuff almost right away. Twitter had a fair amount of decent “live Tweeting” going on while the event occurred and for some while afterwards, while the mainstream media either didn’t have the story, or put up “BREAKING NEWS” squibs with a few sentences (which is fine, some of them were actually investigating before posting).

Unfortunately, some outlets just totally screwed the pooch with their reporting. And by “screw the pooch” I mean publishing unverified supposition in place of fact, and rushing to judgment.

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