Blue Origin

BudmanTX

Well-Known Member
but that's what it's for..you know at the very minimum NASA has a machine that will do that for you without ever leaving the ground:wall:

there was a person supposed to go and paid $28M for the seat and cancelled..'had a meeting he couldn't get out of':lol:. so that kid from The Netherlands got to go.
actually NASA does...it's a 747 that goes up and down in the sky.......and you feel weightlessness

who was it that was gonna pay or did pay that $28.....i heard it was an investor of Amazon
 

Dr.Amber Trichome

Well-Known Member
Those corn balls up there! Wally was trying to dry hump Jeff and the 18 year old was spreading his ass and farting into the camera. What a site. Now Jeff is like all hot for Wally and wants to fly to the moon with her. She is in damn good shape for 82 years old, maybe too much for Jeff to handle. He doesn’t deserve her because he is such a fucking Asshole. Then After the flight he gives away 2 million dollars to a couple nice guys to help the underprivileged . At first I thought that was nice but then after thinking about it I realized what a cheap bastard Jeff is. One million to him is like a dollar to me, maybe even a penny! He should have given them both at least 20 million .
 

CatHedral

Well-Known Member
To OP:

Ok i gotta know.

How is Blue Origin arrogant?
Related question: how is it offensive?

I am not here to praise Bezos, nor to bury him. I do want to know your take on the issues though.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
To OP:

Ok i gotta know.

How is Blue Origin arrogant?
Related question: how is it offensive?

I am not here to praise Bezos, nor to bury him. I do want to know your take on the issues though.
It would be if it was just a hedonistic thrill ride, even though it was. Blue origin is part of a process of development and a larger vison that might ultimately benefit mankind. Like Musk, he is in the business of making space affordable and practical and this rocket was part of the research and development program. Musk has demonstrated he can access space for a small fraction of the cost of most competitors by using unique technology, cheap materials and reusable rockets that are quickly welded together from stainless steel sections, and a very aggressive test program.

Nothing wrong with realizing ones childhood dreams as long as they are wholesome and don't harm others. To be in this business ya have to be a childhood astronaut wannabe, inspired by NASA and Apollo. Yeah they are egotistical and even narcistic to a degree, the envelope is often pushed by such people and that is what's happening here.
 

xtsho

Well-Known Member
I watched the launch live. I thought it was awesome. Especially when the reusable rocket landed. I can't find fault with anything regarding Blue Origin. Who cares what Bezos spends his money on. It's his.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
FAA Changes Astronaut Definition, Disqualifying Jeff Bezos and Richard Branson - autoevolution

FAA Changes Astronaut Definition, Disqualifying Jeff Bezos and Richard Branson

July was the month of billionaires launching themselves to the edge of space on their own ships and calling it “work” to the benefit of the entire human race. Be that as it may, but these billionaires are still not astronauts in the eyes of the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA).


Ironically, on July 9, Blue Origin pointed out the differences between its New Shepard rocket and the Virgin Galactic spaceplane Unity 22, and how not a single member of the crew of the former had “an asterisk next to their name” and the astronaut title, like the crew from latter did. The difference was in the fact that New Shepard would fly above the Kármán line, reaching an altitude of 62 miles (100 km). Branson, by comparison, only reached 50 miles (80 km), so he didn’t really go to space.

According to the FAA, Bezos doesn’t get bragging rights as an astronaut just because he flew higher, so he’d better put that asterisk back. In the first revision since it established the Commercial Astronaut Wings program in 2004, the FAA has narrowed down the definition of “astronaut” so as to rule out future billionaires whose idea of space exploration amounts to joyrides in suborbital space.

One of the conditions for someone to get their astronaut wings from the FAA is that they travel 50 miles (80 km) above Earth, and both Bezos and Branson have met it. But the FAA is now saying that would-be astronauts must also have “demonstrated activities during flight that were essential to public safety, or contributed to human space flight safety,” and neither meets this requirement. The change went into effect on July 20, the very day when Bezos made the inaugural 11-minute flight on the reusable rocket New Shepard.

Both Bezos and Branson have talked a great deal about how their space launches are for the benefit of mankind and might even, in some yet-to-be-explained way, help us solve all of our pressing problems here on Earth. Realistically speaking, if that is the case, it won’t become apparent for many years to come, when space travel becomes norm. For the time being, both missions were just experimental launches and very expensive joyrides.

As such, the FAA will not be awarding Bezos or Branson their astronaut wings anytime soon. It’s a good thing then that their companies designed their own, which they started wearing right after touchdown. That said, they could apply for an honorary set of wings from the FAA, but as of the moment of writing, no application on their behalf has been submitted.
 

schuylaar

Well-Known Member
Jeff is a D Bag, a thief too. If they admitted to 62 million so we can assume it was much more.

Wayfair did that to me so I told their drivers that I prepaid a tip and put it in 'comments' on their handheld while thanking them for having such nice delivery people 'I hope you give them the tip I prepaid'.

next time i'm handing them cash.
 
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