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Stephen Hawking in space

Posted: Thursday, November 30, 2006 7:20 PM by Alan Boyle

British billionaire Richard Branson says he's sending over a medical officer to talk with physicist Stephen Hawking about getting him into space. That's how the founder of Virgin Galactic responded to Hawking's comment that "maybe Richard Branson will help" him achieve his long-held goal of reaching the final frontier, even though he's a quadriplegic who needs a blink-controlled computer to communicate.


Getty Images file
Stephen Hawking is
arguably the world's best-
known living physicist.

Branson and other Virgin executives indicated today that if there's any way on earth to accommodate the good doctor-with-a-disability, they'll do it. And for practice, Hawking could conceivably experience weightlessness aboard a Zero Gravity Corp. plane as early as next year.

It would be one giant leap for the world's best-known physicist - and a powerful signal of support for other people with disabilities.

Hawking, who has been coping with a degenerative nerve disease for decades and now spends most of his waking hours in a high-tech wheelchair, is famous for his theoretical work on black holes and other space curiosities. He's also a major-league space geek, going so far as to play a virtual version of himself on "Star Trek: The Next Generation." For months he's been dropping hints about going beyond mere theorizing and play acting, by flying to the edge of space on one of Branson's yet-to-be-built suborbital spaceships.

Today's public reference to Branson was the most explicit hint to date, and the rebel billionaire responded in a statement e-mailed by his office:

"Obviously we would be honoured to have Stephen fly with Virgin Galactic. We have a great medical team and we are planning to have our Chief Medical Officer sit down with Stephen, and we will do everything in our power to make his dream of going to space possible. But at the end of the day, it will be Stephen's decision, and it goes without saying we would be delighted to have him onboard."

Virgin Galactic is targeting the start of its $200,000-per-seat service for late 2008 or 2009, so there's plenty of time to make the arrangements. The company's head of astronaut relations, Stephen Attenborough, told me that Virgin has been in touch with Hawking in the past and will be following through on today's exchange.

"We're going to be making contact with Stephen in the next few days," Attenborough said.

For some time, Virgin Galactic has been working through the issues that need to be addressed in order to accommodate people with disabilities on suborbital spaceflights, Attenborough said. Because current regulations call for suborbital passengers to fly at their own risk, "there's probably no regulatory reason we couldn't fly anyone, with informed consent," he said. However, Virgin wants to make sure that its spaceflights are as safe as possible - a stance laid out in this passage from the recently published book "Kids to Space":

Q: What are Virgin Galactic's plans for taking disabled people to space?

A: According to Virgin Galactic, "We absolutely want and expect to be able to take disabled people to space. We do not need people to be super-fit, and there will be many physical conditions that will be no issue whatsoever. Unlike manned space travel to date, we will be looking to screen people in, not screen people out. However, it is incredibly important for the future of the industry that we fly people safely, so there will be restrictions that center around heart and circulatory conditions, and anything that prevents people from complying with emergency procedures … particularly being able to exit the vehicle quickly."

That last concern would be the key sticking point for Hawking's flight - and would no doubt be a subject for discussion with Virgin Galactic's medical team. One way to address that concern would be for an assistant or two to accompany him on the spaceflight. The assistants could place the physicist in his seat, ride along with him to the peak altitude in excess of 62 miles (more than 100 kilometers), guide him through the weightless portion of the flight, then settle him back in the seat for the landing.

All this assumes that Hawking could withstand the G-forces associated with the trip. Again, that's something for the medical team to judge. But if all the arrangements work out, Attenborough said having Hawking aboard SpaceShipTwo would recognize the physicist's "unique contribution" to science - and serve as a "really great demonstration" that disabilities needn't stand in the way of outer-space dreams.

"One of the key objectives has always been to make space as inclusive as possible. ... If there's one person we would love to realize the dream for, it would be Stephen," Attenborough said.

Noah McMahon, chief marketing officer for Zero Gravity Corp., said experiencing weightlessness could be a particularly liberating experience for people with disabilities. "If you're bound to a wheelchair, there's nothing more exciting than being able to float free," McMahon told me.

Zero Gravity gives customers that weightless feeling over and over again, for about a half-minute at a time, on planes that fly a series of special parabolic maneuvers. The package costs $3,750 per seat.

McMahon said Zero Gravity has already flown several of the disabled, including a blind person, and is finishing up work with the Federal Aviation Administration on procedures for accommodating paraplegics and quadriplegics. "We've just gone through all the steps we had to go through in order to make that happen," McMahon said.

Again, the main concern would be moving wheelchair-using fliers between their seats and the open space used for floating. Such fliers would be required to have one or two assistants, depending on their mobility, McMahon said.

McMahon said he expects that Hawking as well as other wheelchair users would be welcome to come aboard starting early next year.

"It's good timing," McMahon told me.

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Comments

For sure, everyone should have such a chance. If a lottery was posible a lot of money could promote more advances in this field.
Stephen Hawking is one of my favourites personilities I pray that may i or my soul could meet or even see him.Best wishes for all human being.
If a congressman can hitch a ride on a space shuttle at taxpayers expense, Hawking certainly should be able to have a ride given to him.
Stephen Hawking in space. It makes more sense than anything I've heard lately. To those that bash Richard Branson for "publicity hunting", don't forget, he's the only one with a civilian space program coming anytime soon, so I think that might have one thing to do with why he is involved here. I don't think you've ever heard Dr. Hawking talk about going to space in a Russian capsule. He knows his time is now, and by god, I hope he sees his dream.
Mr Hawkings, when I was a kid all I knew was Albert Einstein, Then I heard of this man who was so far ahead of us on the brain scale and yet he was confined to a chair, then he developed a computer to allow him to share his knowledge with us. I grew up with space, the X15 and ufos and dreaming of going up. If you can go up there and some one can help you to attain your dream, by all means fly. then some day maybe I will be able to do the same
Dr. Hawking has contributed immeasurably to the field of theoretical physics and the advancement of human knowledge. He has also engaged non-physicists with his books for the lay public and made a fascinating field accessible and comprehensible for the general public. If this great courtesy can be returned by making space accessible to him, there is no greater tribute to his work.
The the poor in this world could use Mr Branson's money..
Stephan, Your book ' a brief moment...' was to help we retard, ordinary folks to understand the cosmos. I still don't understand it but, God, thanks to you I've sure enjoyed trying to. I've had a good long life, it's been exceptional...worked as an artist all my life...been an aerobatic pilot...a little athletic...been healthy... yet when I think of you and all you've accomplished, Stephan, there's a feeling of almost shame that I've had so much joy and you may have had so little. Then, trying to understand your work and imagining what you must have struggled thru to conceive and conquer such monumental intellectual challenges, I realized that there had to have been moments when you've undoubtedly known a joy that surpasses any emotions that most humans are capable of imagining. So now you may get to fly like few have ever flown and I envy you. No one deserves it more than you do and we pray that you enjoy it more than anyone before. Hope you have a good trip and write.

Is it possible to accomplish ZPE?  Zero Point Energy?

Yes or No

As long as we use the "Roman Candle Effect" to journey to space we will NEVER leave this Solar System and we will all perish.  The ONLY solution is physics and money.  Our eSpaceTickets project is the most powerful community based projects to help our children's children to aspire to reach for the stars.

I affirm to you. We will send you on an 5 day orbital space flight and will do our best to tell the world this very special message.  I have worked with a top physics for many years... I am not kidding around.

Tony Webb

Dr. Hawking must go as a distinguished scientist and he deserves it. President Bush and Rumsfelt must also go for political considerations to see what it will be like to launch "preemptive" strikes from outerspace instead of invasions by land, air or sea which risks American lives.
its a wonderful idea to take dr. hawking in space. i had translated his best book a brief history of time in marathi language, of maharashrta state in india. of course with his permission. the translated work is highly appreciated in our region
How about all of you "love&peace" geeks just lay off. Those people in Iraq and Africa are starving and dieing because of THEMSELVES. And that part about the poor and Katrina, how about they use a little common since and do it the American way: Get out of your problems yourself. Also, it's Mr. Branson's money, he can do what he wants with it, and if it means helping one of the most brilliant scientists in the world, so be it.
Mr. Hawking shall not cease from exploration
And the end of all his exploring
Will be to arrive where he started
And know the place for the first time

I would love to see Steven fly to the final frontier, as he deserves to do so. The man has helped to introduce the modern thinking of core physics to the scientific mentality of man. His life has and is devoted to modernize thoughts to further explore, expand and attempt to explain the collective thoughts that other shoes could not fill due to the centuries they lived in. What I call the singularity of generational intelligence.

For all that Mr. Hawking has done for our time, achieving his dream is nothing but owed and deserving. All that he has done for the scientific community alone deserves a flight to Space, and then some.

For those who feel the compassion to discourage such great events, shame on you. I understand the stated catastrophic events on Earth, such as the unfortunate things of hunger, diesease, war and so on. Remember this, without the contributions of people like Mr. Hawking, finding the solutions to such problems would be far more difficult to achieve.

Human compassion is the core of this blog. Something that Space in its own, created for us long ago in a Godly explosive way...

Have A Blast Mr. Hawking!

I can't think of anybody more deserving than Steven Hawking going into space!  The knowledge that he has given to us earthbound people can not be measured because most of us can't imagine how valuable his work has been.

Considering his physical problems are so fragile I really don't think he will survive the flight but zero gravity would allow him more mobility than here on earth.  To refuse this genius what is probably a dream of a life time would be cruel and we owe him so much.  I sincerley hope Steven gets the chance to go into space.  Imagine, as a scientist, what he would find to inspire new directions to be explored!

I'm disheartened by the people who say we should ditch space exploration and resolve our current Earthly issues of war, poverty, disease, etc. We absolutely MUST move to inhabit other worlds as soon as is humanly possible, else a rock a few kilometers in size resolve those aforementioned issues for us. ;-)
If it were up to me, Hawkings would have been one of the very first people I'd have picked. I have admired, and once in awhile managed to understand some of his thinking. I find it irrating that folks are saying the money could be better spent elsewhere. I disagree, because we often spend money on one thing and find it makes improvements in other lives. I'm disabled, and I'd like my heart to fly with him.
[...] Those who push the envelope, make things better for everbody...go, hawking. Those who complain about progress and chances...get little in return [...]
The greatest task of the 21st century is to unite the scientists and the poets in a way that the common person can understand. Dr. Hawking has done so much to expand our visions of theoretical physics, and I admire you, Richard, for considering giving Stephen a gift of awe and wonder in return.
All power to SpaceShipTwo and you Sir Richard. Stephen Hawking would have to be the most deserving of us all to be given the oportunity to touch the edge of the cosmos. His book 'A brief History...' has inspired so many to understand our place in the universe that I think the very least he deserves is to be able to look out there without the fog of our atmosphere clouding his eyes. As for the starving millions that need our help I reckon that if the money spent on that endeavor was spent as wisely as any money spent on sending Stephen aloft much much more would be achieved, and many more lives saved.

yaknow whats more of a waste of money then going into space? millions spent on television advertizements for newer more expensive things that no one actually needs. billions spent on maintaining a nuclear arsenal that can lay waste to the planet 50 times over. really, isnt the ablity to destroy the planet 3 or 4 times enough?

at least there is a genuine sense of awe involved with sending this man to space. seriously, some of you people need to get some perspective.

If it can be done, it must be done.
Let us remember that it was Dr. Hawking who initiated the proposal to Mr. Branson. It is improper to criticize Branson for potentially using this event as a publicity stunt. I suspect that Hawking himself is not only aware of the benefit that this event would have for Branson but is also counting on it. We need people like Stephen Hawking and Richard Branson to accomplish what the rest of us can only dream about. It is not for us to leash the gifted among us because we wish to have them do something else for us, rather we need to challenge the gifted among us to dream and achieve. One day space travel will be available for the masses, but first there must be those willing to take these small steps toward reaching that objective. As far as the starving children of the world, it is not for the lack of food, there is plenty; it is not for the lack of money, it is available; rather, it is the politicians of the world who are the obstacles to eliminating world hunger. It is the people of greed who care nothing for others that stand in the way of food reaching those who are hungry that allow entire populations to starve to death. Genetic engineering holds the key to growing crops in less-than-ideal environments so that the people of third world countries can be self sufficient, but there are those who oppose genetically modified foods because "it isn't natural". Stem cell research holds the promise of correcting a host of diseases, but this research is stimatized because it violates the moral opinion of a few outspoken people. I favor Dr. Hawking's dream to journey to the edge of our world. We have always been a species that wonders and ventures toward the unknown. It is not a matter of whether death or injury is possible, it is a matter taking life to its fullest potential. Let us not cease this quest but rather embrace it.

Don't elevate him or make him out to be anything but
a man. If he's to go into space then so be it. His
writings aren't to make him special. Simply to try and
communicate to the rest of us some of the wonder all
around us. We could and can understand if we take the
time to. I'm a physicist and owe my thanks to men like
him and Dr. Einstein and so many others who's names
have been lost to the sands of time. But it is up to
us as individuals to take the knowledge available and
try to make sense of it and grow and possibly work to
contribute to the vast pool of knowledge. He deserves
to go as a reward for his efforts on our behalf. But
he is still only a human being and like the rest of
the world he's dealing with the hand he's been dealt.

His is only a first step if he gets it to show us that
there is far more to our world than constant war and
strife and suffering. If he goes it won't be to do
research, but to simply go. To those who don't want
to see him get a chance, well, it's sour grapes that
they didn't have the opportunity themselves. If you
do as much to advance society and knowledge of our
place and destiny then you too should have the chance
to go yourselves. How much time do you think he has
left? He has already passed the limits thought to be
possible for an ALS sufferer. And in the process he
has continued to contribute to the world a view of
a vast and wonderful universe. But he is only standing
(wheeling) on the shoulders of those who have gone
before him. And he is passing on to us the shoulders
to stand on so that we can see further still. Give him
a break. I only hope that a star or even a starship
will be named for him so that after he's gone on to
that great journey people won't take it for granted
that we were always going to get there anyway. He and
many many others have dedicated their lives to show
us that the world doesn't stop at the end of our
perceptions and fingertips. And if Branson wants to
foot the bill then shut the hell up. If he were to
make the same offer to you would you agonize over the
implications to the world or would you just go for the
sake of going?

And who knows. Maybe any alien cultures out there that
might be watching are simply waiting to meet someone
who in their eyes has passed kindergarten and is in
a position to learn the real secrets of our ever
smaller universe. That would be cool. But if he is
prevented from going simply because someone thinks
that the money should go elsewhere and not because
of his health then shame on you. How can we dream of
going where no one has gone before if we reserve that
gift only for the dull conservative (no offense) types
that are cranked out of our Navy and Air Force schools
to fight, fly and die (willingly) to protect us from
each other and not having much time for an imagination
or an alternative view. He's just the kind of person
we need to send up there. Someone with open eyes who
isn't beholden to a secrecy agreement or a government
or something of that nature that prevents him from
coming back and really letting us know if it's worth
all of the effort. If someone should get the chance to
go it should be someone like him. And what he can tell
us when he returns. And he will return. He's too much
of a stubborn bastard to let anyone put limits on him
that he didn't put there himself. Good luck Stephen.
I wish it was me. but then again I haven't earned it
yet. You have. And Mr. Branson, do everything you can
to make it so. The benefits far outweigh the negatives
that could happen. Even if it kills him. You should
make plans to space him if the worst happens. I think
the idea of Stephen Hawking floating in orbit for as
long as it can last would be a fitting tribute to a
life spent trying to understand our complex universe.

Tony Titus

Can you imagine for a moment what would be like for
him to be completely free of that cyber prison and to fly (float) without restraint? I'm pretty sure he is thinking about it all the time. If I were him I would
die happy after that. We take for granted our freedom
of movement in our world. Can we deny him a little
taste of that freedom? Especially since it won't be
costing us one thin dime for him to do it. Someone
will be going no matter what anyone does to try to
stop it. Let it be him. Who knows what insights he
will have? Personally I don't give a damn what he
brings back to us. I and many many other people would
give up a lot more including our lives just for a
chance to do so. He deserves a shot. And not for a
moment would I turn down the opportunity. This would
cement his place in history as much as his book
"A brief history of time" cemented his place in the
minds of we dreamers who are looking beyond this poor
planet to a future of mankind in space. If we could
expand into our own solar system the earth might just
have time to heal from the disease we have become.

And maybe we'll survive to look back on the time when
a man confined to his body and wheelchair was able to touch the stars. And take us along for the ride.

Tony Titus

It is always amusing to read the comments of people who say how could so much money be spent going to space when there are people suffering here on earth. Throughout human history there has been human suffering and there all ways will be. We would still be living in caves if mankind did not explore. To Stephan Hawking I say go for it if that is your dream.  
Dear Dr. Hawking,
It is not wise to risk your great-value to an experimental first a few flights out to space. Mr Branson is obviously looking for publicity. IMO It is only worth risking when it had been tried tested and fully mastered, hopefully in 5-10 years. Please be patient.
I hope that Stephen Hawking gets to go into space.  He is living proof that the disabled should not be measured by what they cannot do.  They should rather be admired for what they can do.  What a waste it would have been for the rest of the world if Dr. Hawking had given up and become another cripple in a wheelchair.  His example is causing many people to redefine what they believe is possible for those of us who are physically challenged.
    I would like to speak to all who think that this could be a waste.  Imagine an orbital, solar powered, medical laboratory, with an endless amount of solar energy to utilize.  Where the cold of space can naturally refrigerate superconductive materials; allowing for the most efficient machines ever built.  Imagine facilities of varying gravitational fields used to advance medical fields from magnetic field therapy, to genetic manipulation therapy.  Where the most sophisticated supercomputers can work tirelessly to decipher and decode the frequencies of the human brain; for use in devices that can utilize those frequencies for treatments such as: regeneration of various tissues, telling malformed or stunted organs to grow, or even instructing the body to rewrite its own DNA.  Now, if you can imagine such a facility, imagine Mr. Hawking’s journey as the first step toward providing the ability for a patient to reach that facility. 
    Mr. Hawking, I admire you visions, and your fortitude.  Fly to your dreams, and may you return with new ones more powerful than you could have ever imagined.
Sir Richard:
Super idea!
Thanks
A Hawking fan

Spare us all the poverty drivel - puleez.

Hawking is a deserved space traveller. He's probably been to the centre of many a black hole already - all inside that vast mind of his.

Pity Einstein and Newton are not around to join him on a real-life trip into the deep blue - courtesy of the world's foremost Virgin!

Virgin Galactic - I love it.

Mr. Hawking, you're my hero. I hope your dream comes true and if it does, know that many hearts will soar with you on that day.
This is Dr. Hawking's decision; not yours, not mine. MYOB
If by some chance I had won a ticket to space on some lottery, I would give it to Dr. Hawking, and have him describe the experience as only he could upon his return.After reading his original comment I was not surprised that Richard offered to fulfill his dream. I would do the same, given the opportunity. They are both admirable people, and any criticism in these postings is unwarranted. I wish them both the best of luck in their endeavors.
My grandmother said several times she would like go to outer space to help science ... and would not care if this is a one-way ticket. (This is not a joke) Many people have weird dreams. But I do not think this kind of stuff has anything to do with the reality.
What a wonderful moment it will be when he's up there in a world he feels so comfortable in.  I think it's great, God speed
Imran -- we've already blown literal trillions on cancer, MS, ALS, Parkinsons research,, ad nauseum, and have very little to show for it. I personally refuse to support AIDS research, since it is a preventable disease with a known carrier. Hunger and poverty are logistics problems caused solely by greed. I'd rather spend money on something like chucking people to high altitudes; at least then somebody occasionally comes back with a useful invention like Velcro(r) or a lightweight computer.
What's the big deal? In 100 years, any old spastic will be able to fly to the moon for 30 Euros with Ryan air...

Aside from the facts that this is only between Hawking and Branson, and neither of them asked for my opinion (and I suspect that applies to everyone else who has sounded off, as well):

Those who oppose the flight, go read Robert Heinlein's Waldo story (sorry, title escapes me!).

If Dr. Hawking can do this, he should.  Nothing his body has done has limited his mind, so let him have a chance to take a limit from his body for a while.

Back off and let the man be!  Go for it!

As a VG Founder who will be on one of the very early flights of VSS Enterprise I would welcome the opportunity to fly with Stephen and would be happy to assist him in participating fully in this exciting venture! Let me know if I can help!
I wish people wouldn't pull the AIDS card whenever people want to invest a lot of money in something other than the overinflated industry of pharmaceuticals. Billions have already been spent on AIDS over the last 20 years. The Result?: AIDS is still spending and no amount of money will prevent people from doing you know what. So how about we let people spend THEIR money the way THEY want and Let the man who has done so much for humanity go to space!
I love all the naysayers lambasting the use of money for the pursuit of private space travel! You guys are great! Do you guys have a house? A car? A full refridgerator? You obviously have a computer and an internet connection... It's always so easy for you to dictate what should or should not be done with OTHER people's money, isn't it? Bravo!
I think this is a great idea. To Suleiman, Imran, and John Travers, there are folks who are putting their butt on the line to go do something about the world, so why not lead by example, quit ragging on Dr. Hawking's dreams, and go chip in to help these folks; http://www.christmasindarfur.org/
DD Harriman got to go to the Moon, Stephen Hawking should get to go into outer space! Gods bless Richard Branson...Ad astra per aspera.

To those complaining about Mr Branson investing in space let me ask you, how do you think he made his billions? Yes, by being a visionary and entrepreneur. He makes a profit which allows him to do charitable things.

I respected Mr Branson a lot before this kind act. This is fantastic.  And what a splendid thing for Dr Hawking! He certainly deserves such an honor. One of the highligts of my life has been to hear Dr Hawking lecture at my University.

As a child I learned a song about a bear that went over the mountain to see what he could see. What he saw was the other side of the mountain; and another mountain to cross.

As a young man I went to places that I had never seen, just for the novelty of going. Like the bear, it was the going that was irresistible; I felt I simply had to. And like the bear, I found new, unsuspected places to go and found new knowledge and understanding. Most importantly, I found that there existed unimagined connections between what I had known before going and what I found in new, magical places.

I think it was James Van Allen who wrote of the way that humans have expanded their horizons through history. First he climbed a tree to get a better view, then he walked to the top of a hill to see even more. Then he climbed a mountain to peer at unknown horizons. There came a day he filled a bag with hot air and rose to great heights, then he made an airplane. Now he has made a rocket so that he can rise high enough to see this whole planet in a single field of view. The whole thing!

Well, you can see where this is leading . . .

The point is this: in all this climbing to higher vantages we have been true to our nature. We have seen in our minds that to climb higher would allow us to see further, to see more. And as our efforts succeeded, our knowledge and understanding have indeed increased. This is a quite precise definition of science. It is what we have always done. You and I, all of us do it constantly, every day. Science is what people are most suited to do!

The greatest tragedy that could possibly happen to the human race would be to stop. I do not think that ceasing to explore is remotely possible. As long as there are children who ask, "What are the little lights in the sky," and as long as there are parents who know how to answer, there will always be new discoveries and new goals. Not just for the bear who went  over the mountain, but for all the people who hear the news when he returns.

By all means, Mr. Hawking, go. By all that we hope for, Mr. Branson, help him go. We will all be waiting, eager for any news. We will want to follow in your path. Such small steps are part of the greatest journey; one that began at the top of a tree, peering out over the mists. It is a journey that has no end. Each step is honorable and filled with limitless promise.

It's what we do. We go. We look. We find a way to bring others with us even to celestial shores. It's what we do . . .

Richard Branson
If one person was to tie him/herself arm to arm, waist to waist, leg to leg with the great physicist, why wouldn't they achieve sucess in space flight?
I will in a heart beat! Any way I could help Dr. Hawking's dream come true.  

Some of us can if only for a moment live out our
own dreams through Stephen Hawking's then it will
be worth it. And if you are for it or against it,
nothing you do or say matters. what matters is that
someone is trying to expand our horizons. For better
or worse it's what makes us human. There will be poor
always. There will be suffering. And from time to time
there is HOPE! You could pour all of Branson's money
into all of those problems and all you'd have left is
one ex-billionare and be nowhere near solving the vast
problems you'd hoped to address. We will only solve
the mess we've made out of this world by trying to be
smarter and more inventive in our search for solutions.

You can't turn your back on the fact that the only
way out of the dark future we face is to prove that
we still can dream and innovate and discover. I try
my best to help people on a personal level. Secret
food drops. Mystery money in the mail box. Things that
help just one or just a few people make it through. I
don't even try to solve the worlds problems. I just
try to give a person hope and that kind of investment
pays huge dividends. That person you've helped may go
on to be the next Hawking or at least become a kind
of person that sometime in the future will pass that
favor on to the next person. Branson, by offering to
send Hawking into space knows that he is getting a
hell of a lot more for his money than giving the same
money to an organization that will eat it up with
administration costs. His investment in Hawking's
trip will pay HUGE dividends through inspiration and
hope in a future that most people have become jaded
about ever seeing. Others will see hope for the
disabled. Others will be inspired to go for their own
dreams. And if only for one moment we will be able to
forget the sorry shape we have left this world in.

And through example maybe each of us can just a little
bit for someone else. Help them realise their dreams.
Or at help them survive to join the fight for a better
world for all of us.  I can dream, can't I?

If Richard Branson wants to send Prof. Hawking into space and Hawking agrees, then I see no problem. To those who objects because of the problems in the world, I say your money is not being spent. but Richard Branson's money! Maybe Richard Branson also knows that this world will always have problems. Recorded history has recorded problems in all ages. Maybe the objectors want every problem in the world fixed before a private individual can spend their own money.
If the each of critics and naysayers would each give just one Dollar, Dinar, Pound, Yen or Euro of their own excess, instead of spending time and energies analyzing others' charitable intentions, the world's ills would be better served.
Why not ask, "how can I help?" rather than "why don't you help?"
I think the narrow and self centered minds can be expanded and refocused if they could look into their own intentions rather than looking upon those of others with biased contempt.
Any kind and generous act to one is beneficial to all, as it nurtures kindness and generosity in others.



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