Davenport, Christian. "NASA Prepares for Giant Leap into Privatized Space Travel." Standard-Examiner. Ogden Publishing Corporation, 22 Aug. 2014. Web. 29 Sept. 2016. http://www.standard.net/Business/2014/08/22/NASA-prepares-for-giant-leap-into-privatized-space-travel This website provides information on how they should privatize space travel. It tells us that recently, Americans have been hitchhiking to the ISS on Russian spaceships. Going to ISS itself cost $70mil. The head of NASA said it was “unacceptable”, but they found out that they can use privatization from US Soil. They would possibly now go into other places in space other than ISS. However, it will be costly and get the government involved, but that would lower funds on NASA. Michael Lopez-Alegria is head president of the Commercial Spaceflight Foundation (CSF).
Deutsche Welle. "SpaceX's Dragon Spacecraft Splashes down after Trip to ISS | Sci-Tech | DW.COM | 11.02.2015." DW.COM. Deutsche Welle, 9 Feb. 2015. Web. 29 Sept. 2016. http://www.dw.com/en/spacexs-dragon-spacecraft-splashes-down-after-trip-to-iss/a-18250140 It looks like there is already another way to space travel. It talks …show more content…
The California-based organization SpaceX is set to dispatch its Dragon case toward the station on Nov. 30 on its second and last orbital practice run, NASA authorities reported a week ago. Also, in the event that all goes well, the firm could dispatch another Dragon container on its first operational freight conveying mission three or after four months.SpaceX plans to upgrade the Dragon by installing seats and a launch-abort system. Orbital is developing an entirely different vehicle, a space plane called Prometheus. But they're not the only ones. A private orbital space race is taking shape, as a handful of other firms —including Sierra Nevada Corp., Blue Origin, Excalibur Almaz and Boeing — are working on their own crew-carrying