Non Sequitur by Wiley Miller for April 07, 2012

  1. Image002
    hsawlrae  about 12 years ago

    Then it will all burn up re-entering earth. Sounds like a good plan to me.

     •  Reply
  2. Gig5
    Gigantor  about 12 years ago

    They need giant space trash compactors like in Wall-E.

     •  Reply
  3. Forward woman
    Bender_Sastre  about 12 years ago

    I hope space trash is all organic/biodegradable, else that’s destroying the ozone quite directly.

     •  Reply
  4. Mutley2
    otforever  about 12 years ago

    What difference does it make. That’s the one thing about space, there’s too much of it.

     •  Reply
  5. Stagger lee
    Stagger Lee  about 12 years ago

    So that’s where my garbage can went.

     •  Reply
  6. Missing large
    SoItBegins~  about 12 years ago

    The problem is, the Earth now actually has a garbage belt, mostly debris from old satellites and such. And it’s liable to crash into new ones.

     •  Reply
  7. 11 06 126
    Varnes  about 12 years ago

    Those aren’t Boone’s Farm Strawberry Hill bottles are they? Dogsniff, a little help here. Did I just feel a Ripple in the Force?

     •  Reply
  8. 11 06 126
    Varnes  about 12 years ago

    JohnDiego, orange you glad he didn’t draw another banana?

     •  Reply
  9. 11 06 126
    Varnes  about 12 years ago

    Symbolic of the shuttle program itself. Scrap heap of history…But it’s about time that death trap was retired….the shuttle itself was the greatest of spacecraft. However, to save money, they went cheap on the launch system. The original plan called for a ship that could launch itself. Or at least special large rocket to launch it. But they decided it would be cheaper to strap it to a large bomb instead……..Penny wise and dollar stupid..And guess what, as of now the Russians have won the space race! WERE NUMBER TWO! WERE NUMBER TWO! China coming on strong. Everybody else may win everything, but by god we’ll pay less taxes. Of course we’ll probably have to pay financial tribute to whoever our future masters will be..but at least it won’t be taxes….We were a great civilization for a while there….Oh, well, .easy come, easy go…

     •  Reply
  10. Willin 2
    bluskies  about 12 years ago

    Waste not, want not. The cost would be astronomical and the results chancy at best. Better to deal with it here and now.

     •  Reply
  11. Missing large
    roctor  about 12 years ago

    There will no be any longer space junk. Only human originated orbital space refuse.This shall put an end to all prior labeling.

     •  Reply
  12. Img 0004
    dfowensby  about 12 years ago

    actually, the math is closer to something slightly larger than a grain of sand. one hit a cockpit window and left a 6" diameter/3" deep crater in it.

     •  Reply
  13. Missing large
    CptBob  about 12 years ago

    For some reason I keep picturing a giant space Hoover. Maybe an upright?

     •  Reply
  14. Missing large
    WillG  about 12 years ago

    Is this going to be the new NASA Mission. Hummm the smell of garbage burning in the upper atmosphere that would be so special

     •  Reply
  15. Millionchimps1
    tripwire45  about 12 years ago

    Shoot it at the sun. ;-)

     •  Reply
  16. 275566 100001320072145 812557053 n
    Cornelius Robinson Premium Member about 12 years ago

    Five of those bananae are identical; one is different

     •  Reply
  17. Robby
    V-Beast  about 12 years ago

    We won’t need no stinking space ships if we’d just hurry up and invent a teleporter. Before the russians.

     •  Reply
  18. Andy
    Sandfan  about 12 years ago
    There are around 22,000 pieces of space junk being tracked as of 2011. If you want something to worry about before you go to sleep tonight, look up “Kessler Syndrome”.
     •  Reply
  19. Missing large
    tigre1  about 12 years ago

    So far to go to do the same old…

     •  Reply
  20. Missing large
    DocZee  about 12 years ago

    Keeps getting harder to get to the top of the pile…

     •  Reply
  21. 03 head in universe
    Vonne Anton  about 12 years ago

    You do realize of course that Ace Astronaut there is not throwing out space junk…he is throwing out NASA garbage from earth! Papers, etc. come from earth, not space. This is a very expensive garbage run. Maybe it’s Wikileak endangered documents or old politicians tax returns.

     •  Reply
  22. 03 head in universe
    Vonne Anton  about 12 years ago

    Why all the uproar? In space, no one can hear you scream.

     •  Reply
  23. Missing large
    genghis.shaman  about 12 years ago

    Not an option. You’d only be able to do it a few times before the danger of the next ship (not to mention satellites) hitting the debris would be too big.

     •  Reply
  24. Alien priestsm
    EDinWAState  about 12 years ago

    Hearkens back to 19Th century garbage scows in the Hudson River… Things haven’t changed much have they?

     •  Reply
  25. Missing large
    dennislyle  about 12 years ago

    Roadrunner 75@Radish….I’ve often wondered the same thing. Why not get rid of our nuclear wastes by sending them to the ultimate nuclear event, the sun

     •  Reply
  26. Missing large
    EighthAt14  about 12 years ago

    What was the shuttle doing before?

     •  Reply
  27. Missing large
    KSfarmgirl  about 12 years ago

    Amazing what gets launched by hurricanes and tornadoes, even semi-trailers go up

     •  Reply
  28. Missing large
    Cmlbx  about 12 years ago

    I’m shocked! No “Red Dwarf” comments yet?

     •  Reply
  29. Missing large
    rmacprivate  about 12 years ago

    If they clean up all the debris, maybe we can find the golf ball that the astronaut hit on the moon. Of course if he was still up there, he could be the first person in space to have to take a provisional shot.

     •  Reply
  30. Missing large
    Kaede  about 12 years ago

    Sending nuclear waste into the sun has at least one drawback. Getting them there. Remember the Challenger? Instead of human bodies scatted over the Atlantic, it would be plutonium. One pound of plutonium could kill 2 million people by inhalation. This makes the toxicity of plutonium roughly equivalent with that of nerve gas.(from Bernard L. Cohen. “The Nuclear Energy Option, Chapter 13, Plutonium and Bombs”)

     •  Reply
  31. Missing large
    midas welby  about 12 years ago

    You seriously need to bone up on orbital mechanics.

     •  Reply
  32. Dilbert s head
    DrJKnows  about 12 years ago

    As the aliens approach our superfund cleanup belt, they’re gonna say “Hey, wait. We should rethink this”. So think of it as shields up. I have my shield up :-) See profile image.

     •  Reply
  33. Thrill
    fritzoid Premium Member about 12 years ago

    Quark was probably ahead of its time. “Star Trek” hadn’t yet penetrated deeply enough into the cultural fabric to allow a parody of it to be attractive to anything more than a niche audience, especially in the days of only three networks. If an identical show premiered today on SyFy or the Cartoon Network or something like that, it might do quite well.

    “My daughter, pollinating with a Vegeton?!?”

     •  Reply
  34. Capture
    BRI-NO-MITE!! Premium Member about 12 years ago

    I was despondent when “Quark” was cancelled. Being 14 already sucked.

     •  Reply
  35. Missing large
    ajhil  about 12 years ago

    To those of you who want to launch our nuclear waste into the sun, think again! (1) The cost merely to put a payload into low Earth orbit (that is, the altitude of the International Space Station) is around $10,000 per pound. Getting all the way out of the terrestrial gravity well would cost considerably more. (2) High level nuclear waste isn’t by the pound; it’s on the order of many tons per year worldwide. (3) The cost – not to mention the danger! of securing and transporting highly radioactive material safely from reactor sites to launch facilities would be prohibitive. (4) Launches are not 100% successful; a significant number of rockets explode on the pad or soon after. A single such accident would spread tons of lethal nuclear waste in the atmosphere, a civil and environmental catastrophe on a continental scale. There’s more, but this ought to be enough to convince you that solar disposal is out of the question.

     •  Reply
  36. Me kindergarten  2
    finnygirl Premium Member about 12 years ago

    It actually is Strawberry Hill. I don’t have the actual URL, but just for fun I typed in Boones Farm, and it actually has a fan club! It has pictures of a whole bunch of different flavors!

     •  Reply
  37. Baltimore city and inner harbor
    Dr Lou Premium Member about 12 years ago

    An exact, and potentially prescient point, made by the movie Wall-E!

     •  Reply
  38. Tor johnson
    William Bednar Premium Member about 12 years ago

    Maybe this is how life got to Earth (panspermia theory). Another, light years away, civilization dumped their garbage in space. The garbage, mostly organic, drifted in space for billions of years till it neared early (4 billion B.C.) Earth and was pulled to the surface be gravity. Bacteria, and possibly other microbes, started to grow and flourish. Many millions of years later that bacteria, evolve into multicellular life forms and, ultimately, us!

     •  Reply
  39. Missing large
    Kaede  about 12 years ago

    “Quark” had 3 episodes parodying Star Trek, several charaters (Betty I & II, Ficus Pandorata) By this time the Star Trek con scene was big. Big enough to take over a DC Sheraton for 4 days.

     •  Reply
  40. Snoopy pensive typewriter
    The Life I Draw Upon  about 12 years ago

    Our legacy to future generations.

     •  Reply
  41. Missing large
    cseverin  about 12 years ago

    @JohnnyDiego

    You’ve never heard of bananas preventing hangovers??

     •  Reply
  42. Missing large
    lsheldon  about 12 years ago

    Ever watch the space news? Just last week they had to go hide in the escape vehicles because of inbound junk.

    There is a real litter problem out there,

     •  Reply
  43. Phil b r
    pbarnrob  about 12 years ago

    At the velocities these little bits of old exploding bolt come around (several times muzzle velocity of any guns we have), both the ‘bullet’ (whatever fragment) and ‘target’ (say, a station bulkhead) are mostly vaporized, and any remaining fragment passes right through. Kinetic energy equals 1/2 mass times the velocity squared. Shuttles finally started carrying a sorta patch kit, with some sticky goo and aluminum patches to slap over the hole — assuming it was small enough. (Used to work for JPL’s resident expert on orbital debris, scary stuff for anybody going to work EVA out in the Big Dark.)

     •  Reply
Sign in to comment

More From Non Sequitur