Questioning the wisdom of spending money to go to the moon vs feeding starving children in Zambia, while legitimate, is also a false dichotomy. If the Congress had not funded the space program, the money would not instantly have been allocated to foreign aid.
I believe the person whose letter to the Zambian nun was posted, made a similar statement. Whether it's a false dichotomy or not depends, in my opinion, on whether we're asking what ought to be done ideally, or what ought to be done within the constraints of the political environment. And of course, in the US and other developed countries, nothing turns a person with "share the wealth" socialistic tendencies into a "you're on your own" capitalist faster than asking whether they think their wealth should be shared with people in other countries; just look at how they feel about Chinese workers competing against them and stealing "their" jobs. Taking political constraints into account, starving Zambian children are most likely going to get even less than NASA.
But I see comparisons of the NASA budget to other sums (including in this very thread) all the time, even if realistically reduction/cancellation of the other expenditure is not automatically going to get transferred to the NASA budget. If the answer to "Why shouldn't we cancel the space programme and spend the money on starving African children?" is "no point in even asking the question, because realistically, we would never do that", then I'm not sure why comments about how much Iraq war cost relative to the NASA budget ought to be treated any differently. And I see that one all the time.
Slightly OT, but: the Iraq war was great in this regard. It gives ammunition to everyone who wants to spend money on anything at all. "My idea may be really really stupid, but if the government can afford the Iraq war, it can afford my idea!"
It either would have been mostly allocated to other domestic purposes or left in the hands of those who earned it.
This of course is true; I believe the person who wrote that letter that was referenced earlier made a similar argument.
So if I were to write the letter today, it would say, "The people in my country do not care in the slightest how many children are dropping like flies in yours. If we cancel our space exploration plans, it is certainly possible the money will be spent on social welfare programmes instead; however, the recipients of such welfare will be people in our country, who are much richer than people in yours. Don't be deceived by any rhetoric about 'helping the poor' and the like in our newspapers and other outlets for political discourse; when people here talk about 'helping the poor', they're sure as hell not talking about helping you. So you are on your own; your country will have to develop economically and lift its people out of poverty on its own. But, if it does, and workers in your country start to compete effectively against workers in our, be prepared for protectionist measures designed to prevent the relatively poorer workers in your country from 'stealing' jobs from the relatively richer workers in our country. Such protectionist measured, designed to help the rich at the expense of the poor, will be accompanied by much pious rhetoric about 'helping the poor'.
In short, you won't get any money, because nobody here cares how many of you die. See to your own welfare."
Brutal, but honest, and the last sentence is probably the only path out for them.
While the money could have helped feed, educate and otherwise alleviate the suffering of many children, it would not have bought an end to the desperate poverty in Zambia alone, much less the rest Africa.
Sure, but I'm not sure how that's an argument for or against anything. Space exploration isn't going to solve all the scientific/technical/engineering problems out there any time soon either.
Poverty is a complex issue and is not caused by an absence of money in the world.
I think poverty is more or less defined as an absence of money held by the people who are poor.
Sub-Saharan Africa seems almost immune to the globalization that has brought so many people out of poverty during the past 100 years. In fact globalization seems to be counter productive to Africa.
I don't think I'd go as far as that. Africa hasn't done anywhere near as well as Asia, and some of the countries are actually worse off than at the end of the colonial era. But I don't think the situation is completely hopeless. Maybe I'm clutching at straws, but I see some signs of progress there.
The last two US presidents did probably about the only realistic thing they could to help poor Africans, which was to open up for trade. And I have to give them some credit for that, since GWB did it despite his party's indifference towards helping the poor, and Clinton did it despite his party's open hostility towards helping the poor.
So we should keep asking the question, but also answering it in a rational way.
I'm not sure where the irrationality in asking the question here is, unless it is the false dichotomy to which you alluded at the beginning, and I would argue that there is no such false dichotomy unless realistic politic constraints imposed. And realistic political constraints probably exclude a significantly increased space exploration budget as well. I don't see anyone here saying, "we shouldn't talk about what the benefits of increased space exploration would be, because we won't get the budget". So I'm not sure why someone with an alternative priority shouldn't talk about their presumed benefits (and it would be hard to do so with less rationality than some of the pro-space exploration arguments I see here and at Bad Astronomy), even if it's not likely that they would get the money they want.
a) How much do you plan to donate to NASA (or other space exploration agencies) next year?
b) How much do you plan to donate to feed starving children in Zambia or other such places next year?
c) How much do you plan to spend on cable television next year?
a) None
b) We give a few hundred dollars to Doctors Without Borders every year and make other donations to groups that work with the local homeless.
c) None, we cut the cable earlier this year.
OK, that's one poll answer.