ULA blows hot and cold. If you have been over at Phil Plait's forum, you know that ULA is the king of crony capitalism. They went after ARES Constellation and wanted to supplant it with a depot system that ULAs own man--the designer for the DTAL lander--Josh Hopkins--said would cost more than HLV development, and confirmed by the AV week citation I posted at
bautforum which questioned the cost-savings of the EELV-only depot architecture..
Which is one side of the story. There was a large group with an opposing opinion that the propellant depots would end up being cheaper than the Ares/Constellation architecture, especially once it became clear that Ares/Constellation was already dead in the water. Still, nobody at NASA really took it seriously until AFTER SpaceX hit the scene, by which time the push for the Senate Launch System had begin in earnest. Propellant Depots were arguably a poor alternative to the Ares/Constellation (I'm not convinced either way) but it stacks up nicely compared to SLS.
First the arguement was that we didn't need in-house arsenal method, and ULA made the claim that private space firms--meaning them--were capable of taking things over
And they were full of shit, and everyone knew it, which is why they're still not considered a frontrunner in commercial space
despite their longer track record in the industry (and why man-rating the EELVs was never even
considered as an alternative to Ares/Constellation; nobody at NASA really believes they'll be able to do it). Even Boeing's CST-100 design was primarily just thinly veiled attempt to suck up some of that CCDev cash. In a way, it still is; Boeing keeps on insisting that they can't develop it without NASA funding, and then they go ahead and develop it anyway...
Venture Capitalists run from aerospace with huge up front costs...
Crony Capitalists
don't, which was kind of my point. They actually enjoy the high up-front costs, primarily because they know that the people who get paid for those costs ultimately work for them anyway. It would be like if the guy who owns a car company goes to the mayor and tells him it would be awesome for the city if they converted all the police cars to run on hydrogen fuel cells. The guy who does the convincing just happens to manufacture those fuel cells, and it's just a coincidence that the mayor's brother owns a factory that produces hydrogen.
There seems to be a level of contempt for rocket engineers which needs to be addressed.
Not for rocket
engineers, exactly. There's growing contempt, especially in the newspace community, for the "conventional wisdom" crowd -- of which Griffin was a member -- who believe that ACCEPTING the cowardice of venture capitalists is a bad idea, primarily because crony capitalists (e.g. ULA and the Senate Launch System) will fill the void and nothing useful will ever get done. The idea isn't so much to depend on the courage of aerospace entrepreneurs, but to mitigate some of the risk that would cause them to run away in the first place. The best way to do THAT is to offset some of those huge upfront costs with some government subsidies, which AFAIK is something that DIDN'T happen with the Light Jet fiasco.