No. Not nitpicking. Fact.
What we consider "space" starts at about 62 miles. Low Earth Orbit's lower threshold is around 100 miles because if you get below that, you're [highlight]burning up in the atmosphere[/highlight] if you attempt to maintain an orbital velocity of 17,500 mph.
There's a reason that the ISS is at it's altitude.
Well gosh
Squiggy, how many people who
are not NASA employees nor Star Trek fans care in the slightest about these distinctions?
How many people even are following the final shuttle flight?
Alan Shepard was the first American in space.
John Glenn was the first American in orbit.
There's a reason they don't share the same titles.
These distinctions are important to
you, a handful of Trek/Sci fi fans and about likely less than 5% of the population.
Arguing about this is beyond silly. The bottom line is that the Russians can launch people into space much more cheaply than the US can and will be doing so for the foreseeable future.
NASA really has zero concrete plans for the future - and from that I can tell from causal and anecdotal evidence in speaking with people - no one gives a shit that they don't.