Respuesta :
Science may well give us good things. We all know Velcro came from NASA. But why bother spending all this money exploring space and finding out there was water on Mars at some point in the last few thousand years (we have water in Earth) when these same great minds could be applied to finding better ways to power humanity’s insatiable desire for energy, to feeding the starving millions around the globe, and generally making life down here better before looking up into the heavens. It seems the authoritative powers have their heads way, way up in the clouds.
Many countries are spending billions of dollars on space exploration each year. The main purposes of the space programs are discovering the alternative liveable planet, finding water and other living creatures. Since it been many years different countries are funding a big proportion of expenditure only for space exploration in competitive reasons too. The well-recognized organization NASA is established specifically for this purpose. Whereas it has been a matter of argument from the beginning and I firmly believe the government should spend less money than using now on space projects.
Every year millions of people are dyin*g of starvation around the globe, and the world is facing the worst global warming condition at the moment. The human race is living in an environment where they have to go through different kinds of man-made and natural disasters and millions have been losing their lives because of these reasons. We must not forget that the need for humility should always come first. The earth where we are living that should get help first and should be funded to more than the governments are doing.
Obviously, we have seen the power of Goo*gle Maps and improvement in communications between countries as a boon of the satellite. Imagine now, other powerful countries have satellites to spy on us and can position weapons directly above our country.
For these reasons, it would be a good idea to be able to stave that off. If we decided to stop "wasting" money on space programs