Imagine If Russia Won the Space Race
Hello, tovarisch
(comrade).Welcome to the U.S.S.S. Where we drink vodka for breakfast. Where we
cuddle our pet bears in our backyards. Where, instead of taking a morning
shower, we jump in a frozen lake. Brrrr, icy. Is anyone going to tell me how on
Earth we got here?
Remember those wild
1950s? Russia, formerly known as Soviet Union, launched a satellite into space for
the first time, followed by the launch of their first astro-dog, Laika. Great
start by the Russians. But lost some points there for not bringing Laika back
home safely. The U.S. began to catch up with its own satellite, Explorer 1.They
threw in the Apollo program, and a big Moon speech for good measure. It's all
or nothing. The U.S.S.R. sent the first man into space. Impressive. The U.S.
team sent their first man into space. Nice. The first woman, a Russian, went to
space. Beat that, NASA. Unbelievable, they're about to set foot on the Moon. Here
goes one small step for man, one giant leap for...Russia?
You heard me. I'm about
to give you a history lesson. A hypothetical history lesson, in which Neil
Armstrong wasn't the first astronaut to walk on the Moon. It wouldn't have been
too bad if the U.S.S.R. had won the space race, right? How much would things
really change? In the spirit of the Cold War, the nation that won the space
race would control the Earth. And in this alternate timeline, it was Russia who
had the control button. By the time Neil Armstrong stepped on the Moon, NASA's
funds had started to dry up. People just didn't see why they should be paying for
some far-fetched space exploration.
Unlike the democratic
United States, socialist Soviet Russia wouldn't have stopped there. They'd have
had all the funds and the work force not only to come back to the Moon multiple
times, but also to establish a lunar base on it. Sure, they'd have had to boost
their computing power, even if that meant stealing some of the American
technology.
For the United States, the
Soviets landing on the Moon would have been quite shocking. And from there, it
all could go in two ways. The Americans would have had to catch up, and they'd
have had to do it fast. And where would you go when the Moon was already housing
communist Russians? To Mars, or course. The next big defining moment of the
space race would have been landing on Mars. It would most likely be an unmanned
probe at first, maybe a satellite sent into the orbit of Mars.
The Russians would have
been rushing to get the first manned craft to the Martian surface. And the
Americans would have had to try hard to beat their communist adversary. By the
end of the 1980s, humanity might have put the first astronauts on the red
planet. But who would have been the first to plant a flag on its cold surface?
Whoever that would have
been, that country would claim the title of leading outer space explorer. But
it wouldn't have meant that, in the case of Russia taking the lead, that the
U.S. would have become a socialist state. Or that the whole world would end up
speaking Russian. It probably didn't hurt to have a Russian-English phrasebook,
just in case.
There are only so many
places you can send humans to explore relatively safely. The majority of outer
space would be studied through unmanned probes. The tight space race would have
resulted in all technology developing at a much faster rate. And by the 2020s,
we would be taking vacations on the Moon, and on Mars. That is, if things had
taken a different turn after the first Moon landing. Alternatively, after the Russians
had beaten the U.S.to landing on the lunar surface, the U.S. could have
admitted their loss and stepped back. If the Americans hadn't become the first
in space, why bother paying to be the second?
And as the Russians lost their primary challenger, they could have lost interest in space travel altogether. And in that case, the alternative history wouldn't be much different than what it is today. But while these two titans were caught upin their contentious relationship, they could have missed whatsome other countries were up to. But that's a story for another IMAGINATION.
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