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Opinion: A new space for business among the stars

From Neil Armstrong to Jeff Bezos and Elon Musk, outer space is transforming as business takes the lead in an area where government once ruled

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A rocket launches into the sky with business leader Jeff Bezos on board.

Blue Origin’s New Shepard rocket launches carrying passengers Jeff Bezos, founder of Amazon and space tourism company Blue Origins, amd three others from its spaceport near Van Horn, Texas, Tuesday, July 20, 2021. Space is moving from a place for government to a new business exploration.

Tony Gutierrez, Associated Press

“The Eagle has landed.”

Astronaut Neil Armstrong transmitted that striking statement back to Earth on July 20, 1969, from the surface of the moon.

President John F. Kennedy made the dramatic pledge in 1961 to land a man on the moon before the end of that decade — and return him safely to earth, the president always carefully added.

Armstrong and fellow Apollo program astronauts Edwin “Buzz” Aldrin and Michael Collins fulfilled that pledge, a dramatic victory with profound political as well as scientific importance during the Cold War.

On the morning of June 4, 2022, the company Blue Origin transported a group of five passengers 62 miles above the earth, to the edge of space. Jeff Bezos, founder of Blue Origin and Amazon, is one of a number of business entrepreneurs pursuing ventures in space, once the exclusive province of governments.

The passengers included Katya Echazarreta, a scientist and engineer originally from Mexico. Space for Humanity, a nonprofit, selected her for the journey among many applicants. Others paid an undisclosed fee for the trip.

Space business is growing rapidly. In April 2021, NASA announced the selection of Elon Musk’s SpaceX Corporation to construct a lander to take astronauts to the moon for the first time since the last Apollo mission in 1972.

President Kennedy fostered the strong foundation of business-government partnership in space exploration through his 1962 legislation on communication satellites.

We automatically recognize JFK’s role in launching the mammoth moon project. Collectively, we almost universally ignore his leadership in creating the global satellite-based communications network that is vital to how we communicate, work and live today.

President Dwight Eisenhower initiated the satellite communications effort. Predictably, he emphasized established communications corporations. This reflected his fundamental faith in business executives, along with Republican Party preferences, philosophical and practical.

The Kennedy administration largely continued that course. The new proposed Comsat (Communications Satellite) Corporation was privately chartered, not a government agency.

Intense controversy followed, with angry protests within the president’s Democratic Party about handouts and welfare for big business. Reflecting party dynamics of that time, conservative but populist Southern legislators plus Western Democrats were among the most outraged.

Nonetheless, Congress overwhelmingly approved legislation creating Comsat. This in turn facilitated rapidly growing collaboration among major communications corporations and a vast array of other firms in creating the pervasive global satellite systems of today.

As one example, in 1973 a consortium of major commercial banks agreed to transfer funds electronically, opening the door to today’s enormous fast-moving global banking system. The initial SWIFT (Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication) system, initiated in 1973, has operated since 1977. Over the decades, satellite along with land-based systems have become integral to vast voice and data communications of all kinds.

Musk and associates pursue a revolution in transportation. Bezos and associates build stratospheric levels of e-commerce. They personify our nation’s historic entrepreneurial daring.

Beyond personalities, sustained space exploration reflects our history of business-government partnerships. Give JFK credit for appreciating that by launching us into space, long term.

On Earth, Naleah Boys, while a high school student in Janesville Wisconsin, has published a book with illustrations on NASA history. She hopes to become an engineer for the agency.

The International Space Station involves Russia and the United States, plus Canada, Europe and Japan. Outer space impacts earth in varied ways.

Learn more: Walter McDougall, “The Heavens and the Earth — A Political History of the Space Age.”

Arthur I. Cyr is a Clausen distinguished professor at Carthage College and author of “After the Cold War.” Contact acyr@carthage.edu.