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posted Monday July 20, 2009 08:30am EDT

On July 20th, 1969...by Rudy Rucker

Rudy Rucker

On Moon Landing Day, I was already giddy, as my wife and I were expecting our first baby the next month. We listened to the landing on TV, amazed at the onward rush of history. As the news settled in, we went outside and looked up at the actual moon, nearly half full. It was exhilarating to think of there being people up there, and to think that close-up images of the moon were on our TV. It gave me a curious sense of being in two places at once.

The next day, as is well known, Neil Armstrong got his first line slightly wrong, that is, he said, “That's one small step for (a) man, one giant leap for mankind, ” without saying the “a.” That bothered me, adding to my sense of disappointment with the astronauts’ uninspired and inarticulate remarks. It’s worth remembering that the moon landing came at the tail end of the war in Viet Nam, and many people my age had strongly negative feelings about the military. Ultimately, all twelve of the Apollo moon-walkers were employed by the military or by NASA—which seriously dampened the vibe.

I still wish NASA would send up some civilian writers as astronauts. I myself might be too old by now, but I’m sure that, say, Charlie Stross would be willing to go...


Rudy Rucker is an American science fiction author, mathematician, teacher, and computer scientist.  He is perhaps best known for his Ware tetralogy, and frequently writes about scientific or mathematical ideas.

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categories: ...and Related Subjects
tags: moon landing day, stories and memories

2 comments
Dustin Wax
1.  dwax
VIEW ALL BY · Monday July 20, 2009 01:45pm EDT
The awesomeness of the space program as a whole has been tempered by its militarism, I think. I wasn't born when we landed on the moon -- I came along a year later, so my space odyssey started with the shuttle program, which seemed to promise humanity's exploration to the stars and rapidly became just another way to get spy satellites into orbit. The Hubble telescope was exciting as one of the few deviations from that pattern -- for once in the long doldrums since the moon landings, we turned or eyes away from ourselves and truly into the rest of the universe.

All that aside, though, my real question is this: Why is Rudy Rucker trying to get rid of Charles Stross? "To the moon, Charlie!"
Rudy Rucker
2.  rudyrucker
VIEW ALL BY · Monday July 20, 2009 11:20pm EDT
Well, I didn't mean it to sound like I want to GET RID OF Charlie Stross. I just randomly thought of him as a younger (than me) writer who might do a good job of describing a trip to the Moon---and I had this feeling he'd enjoy the journey, which is kind of borne out by his post about having wanted to be an astronaut.

It's not too late, Charlie---for either of us! I'll meet you down at the track at 6 a.m. tomorrow so we can shape up for our trip to the Moon!

---Rudy
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