Just as President Obama used the successful landing of Curiosity to sell the merits of a private sector space program, which really had nothing to do with the mission at hand, NASA Administrator Charles Bolden made sure to use his second paragraph to sell the jobs created by NASA, stated to be about 7,000 positions in 31 states.  This is also how we push Department of Defense programs that we do not really need but keep certain legislators in their own jobs.
Luckily, the statements contained a little bit of vision as well for those who want a space program for learning about space itself.  First, the United States intends to send humans to Mars in 2030, of course a date so comfortably in the distance that we do not really need to fund it under this administration.  A more near term goal is next year's mission involving the Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution (MAVEN) orbiter (pictured below).  According to NASA,
Scientists will use MAVEN data to determine the role that loss of 
volatile compounds—such as carbon dioxide, nitrogen dioxide, and 
water—from the Mars atmosphere to space has played through time, giving 
insight into the history of Mars' atmosphere and climate, liquid water, 
and planetary habitability.
This week's successful Mars mission makes future missions to the Red Planet more likely as it proves American know-how and garners more interest in all things Martian.  Let's cheer this week and push for even more starting next week. Mars awaits!
Here is the full statement by the Administrator:  
NASA is back on Mars – and getting ready for the next mission to the 
Red Planet! After an astounding 352 million mile journey and a harrowing
 landing that demonstrated cutting-edge technology, Curiosity, the 
largest rover ever sent to another planet, is in place and ready to 
work. This robotic laboratory will seek answers to one of humanity’s 
oldest questions as it investigates whether conditions have favored 
development of microbial life on the Red Planet. The mission is a 
critical planetary science mission -- and a precursor to sending humans 
to the Red Planet in the 2030’s, a goal set forth by President Obama. 
It’s another great leadership moment for our nation and a sign of the
 continued strength of NASA’s many programs in science, aeronautics and 
human spaceflight. It’s also important to remember that the $2.5 billion
 investment made in this project was not spent on Mars, but right here 
on Earth, supporting more than 7,000 jobs in at least 31 states.
With the retirement of the Shuttle program after its final flight in 
July 2011, some have suggested that NASA’s leadership in the exploration
 of space, including our extraordinary successes on Mars, was coming to 
an end. Nothing could be further from the truth. The Curiosity mission 
is only the latest in a long list of extraordinary NASA missions that 
established the United States as the undisputed world leader, and it 
will help guarantee that remains the case for many years to come. 
When our Orion deep space crew vehicle takes its first test flight in
 2014, it will travel farther into space than any spacecraft designed 
for humans has flown in the 40 years since our astronauts returned from 
the moon. 
In 2017, NASA’s Space Launch System (SLS), a heavy-lift rocket that 
will provide an entirely new capability for human exploration beyond low
 Earth orbit, will launch Orion. 
We also reached a critically important milestone in May when SpaceX 
became the first private company to send a spacecraft -- the Dragon 
cargo capsule -- to the International Space Station and return it with 
cargo intact. This successful mission ushered in a new era in 
spaceflight -- and signaled a new way of doing business for NASA. And 
just a few days ago, we announced the next step in the Obama 
Administration’s aggressive plan to once again launch our astronauts 
from U.S. soil on spacecraft built by American companies. 
As part of our commitment to maintain American leadership in the 
exploration of Mars beyond the Curiosity mission, NASA will launch the 
Mars Atmosphere and Volatile EvolutioN (MAVEN) orbiter next year. 
Earlier this year, I directed NASA’s science mission director, along 
with the head of human exploration, Chief Technologist, and Chief 
Scientist to develop a more integrated strategy to ensure that the next 
steps for Mars exploration will support the nation’s planetary science 
objectives as well as our human exploration goals. They are looking at 
many options, including another robotic mission to land on Mars in this 
decade. 
I am so proud of the NASA team that has made tonight’s challenging 
milestone possible. However, tomorrow we begin to plan for the next 
great challenge -- and start compiling incredible scientific data from 
Curiosity. For the past 50 years, NASA has specialized in doing the hard
 things. Thanks to the ingenuity of our teams across America and the 
world, we are poised for even greater success. 

