Tag Archives: Yuri Gagarin

Russia to continue using Kazakhstan's space center

Russian President Vladimir Putin says Moscow will continue to lease the Baikonur space complex in Kazakhstan.

Putin on Friday toured the construction site of the Vostochny launch pad in the Far East which is designed to ease Russia‘s reliance on its ex-Soviet neighbor. Officials have put the total cost of the Vostochny project at about $10 billion. Putin, however, insisted that Russia would not leave the base in Baikonur.

Amid tensions over fees payments a Russian official said in February Russia may suspend its lease for some facilities at Baikonur.

It was from Baikonur where Yuri Gagarin made the world’s first even manned flight into space 52 years ago today.

The first launch from Vostochny, near the Chinese border, is expected in 2015.

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/HoBlf-U19aI/

NASA Wants to Design a Holodeck

NASA stole the show at GDC 2013, with a surprise demonstration of a one-ton, motion-controlled rover and rather awesome vision of the future of space exploration: A “holodeck” that allows people on Earth to experience distant worlds. “Let’s bring a billion people into a holodeck and explore the waters of Europa,” NASA‘s Jeff Norris told an awestruck crowd at the presentation titled “We Are the Space Invaders.”

The presentation began with a video of Yuri Gagarin, the first man to orbit the earth in 1961, juxtaposed with a video of Spacewar!, one of the earliest video games also created in 1961.  Norris and fellow NASA presenter, Victor Luo, then demonstrated various video game-related fields that NASA has dabbled in, especially as part of the Curiosity rover mission.

Continue reading…

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at IGN Tech

Preserving Hugo Chavez

By Paul G. Kengor

Hugo Chavez SC Preserving Hugo Chavez

Editor’s note: A version of this article first appeared at American Spectator.

The gushing, almost angelic praise for Hugo Chavez by the left in America and around the world has been shocking to behold, but hardly surprising. I will not bother repeating the litany here. Rather, I’d like to focus on another surreal aspect of Chavez’s death—namely, the rush to preserve and display his body so the faithful may pilgrimage and pay homage for decades to come.

Here again, I’m sadly not surprised. The far left has never been shy about venerating its heroes. This is supremely ironic, given that many of the subjects of veneration, as well as those doing the venerating, were not merely agnostics and atheists but militantly so. Recent examples include Asian communists Mao Tse-Tung and Ho Chi Minh, but the best example remains Vladimir Lenin.

Upon his death in January 1924, Lenin’s body was embalmed and preserved in a tomb, actually a shrine, in Red Square, whereby the faithful could forever honor the Great One. Etched in the marble holding the Bolshevik godfather’s body is this inscription: “Lenin: The Savior of the World.”

For an atheist state angrily committed to a war on religion, this would seem odd. In fact, however, it is precisely what we came to expect from communist regimes. In short order after Lenin’s death, poems and songs were written in praise of the “eternal” Lenin who “is always with us.” Yuri Gagarin, the first Soviet cosmonaut, visited Lenin’s mausoleum immediately before his flight so he could meditate over Lenin’s rotting flesh and draw strength for his mission. Later, Gagarin returned to the sacred site to report to Lenin on his mission.

The “Leninization” of the Soviet state’s spiritual life quickly took flight. Throughout the USSR, “Lenin Corners” were established, modeled on the Icon Corners of the Russian Orthodox Church. These mini-shrines included icon-like paintings of Lenin along with his words and writings.

A “secular religion” was established, one that, as noted by Dmitri Volkogonov, Lenin’s biographer, demanded “unquestioning obedience” from its disciples. So certain was the Party of Lenin’s infallibility that in 1925, one year after his death, the Politburo established a special laboratory to remove, dissect, and study Lenin’s inactive brain. The purpose, said Volkogonov, was to show the world that the man’s great, infallible ideas had been hatched from an almost supernatural mind.

This nonsense (if not blasphemy) continued for decades. Just ask any former Soviet citizen who suffered through the extended nightmare. A Ukrainian citizen, Olena Doviskaya, once told me: “Everywhere you went, there were statues everywhere of Lenin. They wanted you to worship Lenin.”

Most curious about this Lenin reverence and mysticism is the fact that Lenin himself considered any worship of a divinity an outrage. Lenin blasted the notion of “god-building.” He thought the most horribly unimaginable things about religion, calling religion “abominable” and “a necrophilia.” A vicious, hateful man, Lenin might have hastily shot those responsible for deifying him.

Nonetheless, communists and certain elements of the far left have engaged in such behavior for …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism

Rescuing NASA From Terminal Public Apathy

By Larry Bell, Contributor Space quickly became the focus of urgent public attention on Oct. 4, 1957 when a tiny satellite chirped alarming evidence of Soviet technological superiority. Then, in 1961, a young cosmonaut named Yuri Gagarin lent his human face to a new extraterrestrial space era that threatened to leave the U.S. behind. America immediately upped the ante. Within an 11-year period after that, 12 of our citizens walked on the lunar surface and 6 of their crew companions orbited the body. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest