What are everyones thoughts on the proposal to change Constellation to a "Flexible path", i.e. not focusing on the Moon or Mars, but on the ability to visit a variety of destinations - Lunar orbit, NEOs, Venus orbit, Mars orbit (Phobos), etc? So no actual landings, but plenty of actual travel. Frees up the need to develop landers, and you gain experience in actually travelling to these far away places.
It seems to be a bit of a Marmite idea, some really love the idea of just being able to explore the inner solar system without fixating on the landing. Some think it'll kill public interest, and manned exploration as a result. Would it just be an expensive way of doing what a probe could achieve? Or a necessary step on the way to becoming a civilisation able to travel in person around the solar system?
Personally, I'd been looking forward to the new Moon landings, but they seem a distant goal, dwindling under the pressure of budget cuts and technological setbacks. I'd settle for just going *anywhere* now. Some would say going all the way to Mars without landing would be the most pointless thing imaginable. Would it? Phobos is supposedly a good possibility for ISRU, has no need for a lander to reach it (at least I'd think not), would potentially provide an outpost for future missions, and would just provide some darned spectacular photos. I have no idea whether it is a viable option, though. If it'll allow humans to visit Mars by about 2030 though, even if just orbitally (n.b. I have no idea whether that's a realistic date, pure assumption), I'm all for it. I also like the idea of being able to really gain experience in humans travelling outside earth orbit. It's only been done, what, 9 times? 40 years ago?
My overriding hope for this commission though is to just kill off Ares I/V. As hopeful for them as I was initially, both have drifted far, far away from their initial requirement to be "Shuttle Derived", and the Moon itself is probably less expensive. Ares I can't even get an extremely watered down version of the original Orion into orbit. I'm not in any way educated in the field, just a fan, so it's possible that I'm just missing something, but I can't for the life of me work out why NASA is persisting with them.
Also - Propellant depots?