The Eagle has Landed
By Daniel Greenfield
SultanKnish.Blogspot.com
Forty-four years ago, a nation that we now know
was racist, didn't care about the environment and
drank too much soda, landed on the moon.
Half-a-billion television viewers watched it
happen live. They saw men walk on the surface of
another world. They saw that human beings could
break free of their world and take a first step into
the rest of the universe.
And that was that.
Neil Armstrong died about the time that Obama
finished gutting NASA. He lived long enough to write
a saddened letter about the decline of American
space exploration under Obama that everyone in the
media did their best not to pay attention to. The
letter was also signed by Eugene Cernan, the last
man to walk on the moon.
Cernan is 79. Of the dozen men who walked on the
moon, only four are dead, a testament to their
quality of their vigor.
No one who was born after 1935 has walked on the
moon. That period is swiftly becoming a historical
relic. A thing that men did who lived long ago. A
great work of other times like the building of dams
and fleets, the winning of wars and the expansion of
frontiers.
Those are things that the men of back then did.
Those are not things that we do anymore.
The youngest man to have walked on the moon,
Harrison Schmitt, is 78. He was only 37 when he
walked on the moon. Soon he will be one with the
last of the Civil War soldiers and the last of the
WW1 soldiers and then the last of the WW2 soldiers.
We like to believe that walking on the moon is still
something we could do if we really wanted to. But
like building all the big things, we just choose not
to do it. We have more important things to worry
about like social justice and figuring out the
implications of the latest 1,000 page bill.
Forget exploring space. We explore the breadth of
our own bureaucracy. We are the Schliemanns of
Trojan horse government. We are the Neil Armstrongs
of government landing on the paper moons of bills
and acts by whose pale light we lead our pallid
lives.
In those long lost days, we did great things. The
bureaucrats took their cut and the contractors
chiseled and the lobbyists lobbied and the whole
great vulture pack of government swarmed and
screeched and still somehow, with a billion monkeys
on our back, we moved forward, because we still had
great goals. Now our goal is government. There is no
longer a moon. Only a paper moon.
The whole mess of bureaucrats, contractors,
lobbyists, policy experts, consultants, congressmen,
aides, crooks, creeps, thieves and agents is no
longer a necessary evil that we put up with in order
to accomplish great things. It is the great thing
that we accomplish. There are no more moon landings,
no more dams or tallest buildings in the world. The
massive towering edifice of our own government is
now our moon landing, our Hoover Dam, our Empire
State Building.
Like so many decrepit civilizations before us, the
massive rotting edifice of our government has become
our great work. Keeping it going, keeping it from
falling apart, wiping its bottom, finding the money
to prevent its latest imminent failure, fighting
over the last folder while the barbarians shout
"Allah Akbar" and put all the paper to the torch
because the Koran makes it redundant, that is what
we do now.
We no more go a-roving so late into the night. Not
when our own night has come. And it is late indeed.
It is not that we have no more Neil Armstrongs or
Eugene Cernans or any of the other clean cut men who
look back at us from those old photographs, cool and
confident, knowing that they are the messengers that
a civilization at its golden apex has picked to
represent it at its peak moment. It is that we no
longer want them.
The nostalgia is there, but it's every bit as
transparent as a Mad Men costume party. It's all
very well to ape the clothes and the styles, the
fonts and the rest of the window dressing, but it's
the core spirit that we have no use for.
Apollo 11 is nice and well, but we have other
priorities now. We don't focus on actual
achievements, but on social remedies, never
realizing that our social remedies were achieved as
spinoffs of achievements and that social problems
can only be solved as part of the upward ascent of a
civilization. There's no percentage in thinking that
way. Not when there are a lot more jobs for
servicing social dysfunction than there are going
into space.
The core element of the space program was
competence. It's the same competence that allows us
to still land jet planes every day, even if the rate
of improvement in the technology slowed down long
ago, or perform open heart surgery. But the number
of professions in which competent counts has been
decreasing over the years. And so has competence as
a quality.
We have replaced confidence with attitude. And the
difference between them is the same as the
difference between a civilization and the savages
outside. Confidence comes from competence. Attitude
comes from rituals of pride uninformed by
achievements.
Attitude is what actors, musicians and the endless
swathe of reality television cretins project. And as
a society, we value attitude more than competence
because not everyone can have competence, but
everyone can have attitude. Not everyone can walk on
the moon, but everyone can work for the government.
We could go to the moon again, but why bother, as
NASA's chief, whose mission, as handed down to him
by Barack Obama, was not space exploration, but the
enhancement of Muslim self-esteem, told critics. And
he's right. Why bother? Back then, in those ancient
days when men who are now in their eighties flew, we
went to the moon as part of a larger plan and
statement about our place in the universe.
We were going to go the moon and then to the planets
beyond. We could find new frontiers, plant our
flags, build colonies, jump from world to world,
star to star, and turn our civilization into
something more than another archeological dig. Maybe
it was all just a crazy dream, but looking at the
eyes of the men who did it and who died and die
seeing it undone, there is that sense that they
believed that it could be done.
Going to the moon was a crazy idea of course. Going
beyond it would have been even crazier. Instead we
settled down to the important things, like race
relations, the importance of listening to music,
breaking up the family, importing huge numbers of
people with little use for our way of life and all
the other stupid suicidal things that dying
civilizations do to pass the time.
The eagle landed in a mud puddle in D.C. The last
men who walked on the moon will probably be dead
within a decade.
We'll tell our kids about it and they'll shake their
heads because what's the big deal anyway? Everyone
flies around in spaceships in all the movies. Why
bother doing it in real life? They don't bother
doing anything in real life. And then they'll go off
to another class that will teach them how much
carbon waste the space program added and how many
super-hurricanes it caused and how much better off
we are now that we no longer have cars, plastic bags
or air conditioning.
We could have gone to the stars, but we took another
road instead. Maybe we can still turn back to a time
when we could do great things before it's too late.