

SPACE IS WHERE SPIRITS SOAR
by Bruce K. Gagnon
What is our vision for the heavens? On a beautiful starry night
do you look up to the moon and the stars and feel the connection to the
ages? Can you imagine military bases on the moon and constellations of space-based
lasers orbiting our planet? Can you envision the new military space plane,
the successor to the shuttle, dropping off new space-based weapons systems
and then returning to earth?
We are at a defining moment in history as the US leads the rest of the world
into this new space age that ripples with technological advances and challenges
the peace and environmental movements to update our thinking and our organizing.
In 1989, I organized a demonstration at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.
The keynote speaker that day was an Apollo astronaut, Edgar Mitchell, the
sixth man to walk on the moon. Mitchell spoke out against Star Wars and
told us that if we allow the Pentagon to put weapons into space, and to
even test them against old satellites, that we will create so much space
junk that we will not be able to get a rocket off this planet. Mitchell
said that we would be entombed on the earth.
Currently there are 110,000 pieces of "space junk" larger than
a half-inch orbiting the earth at 18,000 m.p.h. They are tracked on radar
screens inside Cheyenne Mountain in Colorado. Recently, the International
Space Station (ISS), which will cost taxpayers well over $1 billion once
completed, had to be moved to a higher orbit because space junk was moving
dangerously near to it. On its last mission prior to its fatal launch demise,
the shuttle Challenger had its windshield cracked by a tiny speck of paint
that hit it while orbiting earth.
We once viewed the oceans, lakes, and rivers as vast and limitless. It was
official policy to pour raw sewage and industrial pollution into these bodies
because no one imagined that any harm could come from doing so. Dilution
was the solution to pollution.
Today, some view space the same way. The heavens are vast and limitless,
and it is assumed it won't matter what we throw up there in the name of
national security. NASA, DoE, and the Pentagon do not worry about the consequences
of plans to dramatically increase deployments of nuclear materials into
space to power space probes and space-based weapons.
The ballistic missile defense system is sold to the American people as a
way to protect us from attack by "rogue" states, or as they are
now called, "states of concern." National missile defense (NMD)
is the $60 billion program to protect the continental US from "attack."
North Korea, one so-called possible enemy, has suspended its missile-testing
program and is now negotiating reunification with South Korea. China, another
state of "concern," has only 20 nuclear missiles capable of hitting
the US, while we have 3,500 to "hit back." Chinese officials have
been asking over and over again for the US to join them in signing a global
ban on weapons in space. The US refuses to discuss such a ban, saying that
there is "no problem."
Then there is the program called theatre missile defense (TMD) that would
forward deploy these systems into the Middle East and Asia to "protect"
US interests and outposts. TMD would place weapons on ground launchers,
ships, and airborne lasers so that the US could hit "offending"
ballistic missiles in their boost phase, right after launch.
The US Space Command, with its logo "Master of Space," is also
working hard to develop the space-based laser (SBL) program, the "follow-on"
technology to missile defense. Its expressed intention is to use this program
to protect corporate "interests and investments" around the globe
as the gap widens between the "haves" and the "have-nots."
The Space Command will become the military instrument by which corporations
maintain their global control.
The $30 billion SBL program will soon begin construction of a test facility
at Cape Canaveral in Florida, Redstone Army Arsenal in Huntsville, Alabama,
or at the Stennis Missile Testing Center in Mississippi. The SBL, the real
Reagan-era Star Wars program, would deploy a constellation of 20-30 lasers
orbiting the earth with the job of knocking out "competitors'"
satellites and hitting targets on earth. These lasers could very possibly
be powered by nuclear reactors. Imagine what would happen if they tumbled
back to earth?
We are now standing on the edge of history, poised to move the bad seed
of war, greed, and environmental degradation into the heavens. We have sown
this bad seed ever so widely on our fragile planet leaving behind such human
suffering and environmental waste that it makes me angry to think about
now moving the war system into space.
I am often asked if I am opposed to the space program altogether. Actually,
I am not. But I believe we should approach space exploration with a sense
of awe and mystery. We should approach this final frontier with a reverence
for what the heavens will reveal to us, rather than with the arrogance of
exploitation.
I often tell the story about my son, who when he was young wanted to stay
out on the street after dark playing with his friends. I told him that he
was too young, too immature, and that when he showed more maturity we would
renegotiate the deal. This is the way I see the space program. NASA and
the Pentagon are showing that they do not have the good judgment or the
maturity to be given the responsibility to move off this planet.
I see earth's citizens as the parents. It is the parents' job to protect
the children, or in this case, the planet from those who do not demonstrate
a proper respect for life on this earth and the heavens beyond. Like all
good parents who would stop their children from hurting themselves, it is
our job to stop the aerospace industry, which views space as a new market
for war and enormous profit.
The time has come for a new consciousness about space. Space is not a junkyard
or bombing range or playground for the high-tech boys with their new expensive
toys. It is a place of wonder and life. It is the place where our spirit
soars and our dreams live and grow.
The United Nations recognized this when they created the 1967 Outer Space
Treaty that says no weapons of "mass destruction" can be put into
the heavens. The treaty says that the heavenly bodies are the province of
all humankind. We must call for the strengthening of this treaty, not its
nullification!
The Global Network Against Weapons and Nuclear Power in Space has been working
since 1992 to create a new consciousness about space. When we look up at
that beautiful moon on a clear night, we must remember that everyone on
the entire planet has the same experience--it is a unifying symbol for all
the people. We cannot allow the Pentagon to think that they can put military
bases on the moon or weapons into orbit around earth.
I believe that space must be protected just like any other wilderness. We
must create a global movement that says we shall not move the bad seed of
war into the heavens. We must not pollute space any longer with nuclear
reactors and nuclear generators, and we must stop all planning for US space
weapons and military bases on the moon.
For once, we have a chance to stop something truly horrific before it actually
happens. We can prevent an arms race before it begins if we act now. If
we pause long enough to give the Pentagon and the aerospace industries the
opportunity, they surely will move the arms race into the heavens and rob
our children and their children of the resources that they need to create
a sustainable life on our earth.
We must call out to the public to help us keep space for peace. We must
demand that the politicians rescind plans for "missile defense"
and the space-based laser. We must say that space will be protected as a
wilderness.
Our relations who sat around their council fires for centuries before us
marveled at the wonders of the night sky. We must honor them by preventing
the arms race from moving into the heavens. We must keep space for peace.