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Should NASA Be Funded

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The National Aeronautics and Space Administration, or more commonly known as NASA, has been a pioneer in space exploration for years. Since John F. Kennedy pushed for America to go to the moon, the world has been following up and trying to go even farther. As a country built on exploration, NASA should continue to be funded. By funding NASA there would be more job opportunities opened up, research found, and inventions made. Funding NASA would provide job opportunities for the hundreds of companies that work alongside NASA. Every year NASA contracts companies both large and small to help advance research along. These contractors include Boeing, Dell Inc., Johns Hopkins University, and many more (Top-100 NASA). By funding NASA’s goal to explore …show more content…

This goal has not and will not change anytime soon. NASA should continue to be funded since they allow for many great things that we even use every day. Should they be continued to be funded, it’s no doubt that they will continue to reach those new heights. If they are able to keep their budget, they will without a doubt continue to grow with job opportunities, research, and inventions that will shape Earth and allow for America to continue to push forward with technology.

Works Cited
Amadeo, Kimberly. “Here's the $250 Billion in Hidden Military Spending.” The Balance, 10 Aug. 2017, www.thebalance.com/u-s-military-budget-components-challenges-growth-3306320.
“Top-100 NASA Contractors 2013.” AeroWeb, 2013, www.fi-aeroweb.com/Top-100-NASA-Contractors-2013.html.
“International Space Station.” NASA, www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/research/experiments/experiments_hardware.html#Human_Research.
“NASA FY 2017 Budget Request.” NASA.gov. PDF.
Kiger, Patrick J., and Marianne Spoon. “Top 10 NASA Inventions.” HowStuffWorks Science, HowStuffWorks, 17 Jan. 2011, science.howstuffworks.com/innovation/inventions/top-5-nasa-inventions10.htm.
Loff, Sarah. “About NASA.” NASA, NASA, 28 Jan. 2015, www.nasa.gov/about/index.html.
Gushanas, Timothy. “Fireworks in Space: NASA's Twins Study Explores Gene Expression.” NASA, 24 Oct. 2017,

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