Should NASA Send Manned Missions To Mars?

Superior Essays
Since the beginning of time, humans have been mesmerized by discovery. The inclination to explore is in every person, whether they realize it or not. Though no one has unearthed all the secrets of Earth, countless scientists, astronauts, and engineers yearn for the opportunity to watch an American citizen take their first steps on Mars. "NASA aims to extend human presence deeper into the solar system and to the surface of Mars," states a well-educated member of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration ("NASA's Journey to Mars: Pioneering Next Steps in Space Exploration" [4]). However, would colonizing The Red Planet be a threat to America's economy and to the lives of brave astronauts? With no prior experience on Mars, there is no possible way to predict what could and couldn't happen on a planet that's 249 million miles away. Both arguments as to whether or not NASA should send manned missions to Mars are equally influential, but which idea will be executed in the end?
First Support for Manned Missions
Earth has been inhabited by humans for over six
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Due to the countless essentials NASA would need to send people to Mars, the demand for engineers would be extremely strong. Manned missions to Mars would stimulate the engineering industry because there would be multiple job openings to generate and design. "Consider this: manned mission to Mars just might single-handedly salvage what's left of the engineering profession here in the U.S., where interest in anything involving second-order differential equations has been on the wane since the mid-1980s," states Karen Augustin, Chief Executive of Design News (Auguston [1]). Comparatively to foreign countries, engineering professions have not been needed as much as they used to, but if America decides to launch again, the country's numberwill

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