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that none of the more sensational Judica-Cordiglia claims of secret discoveries were confirmed
Originally posted by Illustronic
Apologies to Mr. Oberg should linking his research without permission is overstepping proper etiquette or for my lack of a thorough examination to provide the most pertinent direct links. Apologies to everyone for the uncalled for emotional outburst, something I need much better control of.
Originally posted by royspeed
Firstly, thanks for everyone that has responded to this thread, the subject is intriguing.
I know that this is 'pie in the sky' thinking, but surely now the Cold War is consigned to the history books, it would benefit both the US and Russia, as well as the ESA, if all relevant facts about past missions were shared, to make the exploration of space a lot safer, as one side would no doubt learn from another's mistakes.
Originally posted by JimOberg
Originally posted by royspeed
Firstly, thanks for everyone that has responded to this thread, the subject is intriguing.
I know that this is 'pie in the sky' thinking, but surely now the Cold War is consigned to the history books, it would benefit both the US and Russia, as well as the ESA, if all relevant facts about past missions were shared, to make the exploration of space a lot safer, as one side would no doubt learn from another's mistakes.
This is EXACTLY what Khrushchev wrote in his memoirs about the harmful secrecy surrounding the death of cosmonaut-trainee Bondarenko just weeks before the Gagarin mission. Spot on, royspeed, bull's eye.
Knowledge of the fiery death of that young man. whose widow I later exchanged letters with, MIGHT have pre-warned NASA enough so they could have avoided killing three Apollo astronauts in a very similar way six years later.
Originally posted by JohnnyCanuck
There is also the aspect that those brave pioneers whose lives were sacrificed in the infancy of space flight...perhaps Man's most momentous endeavour...ought to be immortalised.