I had a toy rocket when I was a kid. It was made of plastic. The word NASA was printed on it. It was a Saturn V rocket, king daddy of all rockets. The same one that took men to the moon. My GI Joe doll could ride it like a horsey.
My friend Bradley had a shuttle-stack rocket, with winged orbiter and two solid rocket boosters. You want to talk power.
All the boys wanted to play with that thing. We would fight over who got to play with it.
“It’s my turn, Randy. Give it here, you big hog. You’ve had it forever, it’s not even yours.”
“I’m telling Mom. What did you call me? No I’m not. Say that again and you’ll have a fat lip.”
“What did you call me? Nuh, uh. YOU’RE a stupid turd monger. Oh yeah? I know you are but what am I? MOM!”
I recently had a conversation with some young people about space. They were teenagers. They were uninterested.
I asked whether they knew we’d
been to the moon. One of them shrugged and said the moon landing was a hoax. I smiled. Then, I asked whether they knew what the International Space Station was, and how it was designed in 1984, and how it’s been in orbit for 27 years, and how it’s been visited by almost 300 astronauts.
The teen just smiled vacantly and said, “The international what?” Then they went back to texting each other dirty pictures on their phones.
But there was a time in our culture when space exploration was treated very differently. I come from old men who worked on Roadmasters and Impalas beneath shade trees in the backyard. Men who loved machines. Men who thought rockets were the glory of all manmade achievement. Men who used the words “John Glenn” with the same tone they used when speaking of the Gentle Nazarene.
That’s…
