From the Competitive Enterprise Institute's OpenMarket blog:
Over at Pajamas Media today, I tell a tale of crony capitalism that makes Solyndra look like a model of government probity and wisdom:
No,
 it’s not Solyndra — it’s much worse, at least in terms of the amount of
 money proposed to be wasted on it, and in other ways as well.
Let’s
 call it “Shuttlyndra,” aka NASA’s Constellation, then called the Space 
Launch System, aka the Senate Launch System. The Solyndra scam wasn’t a 
federal contract per se — it was based on taxpayer-guaranteed loans, 
which meant that the taxpayers would never have to pay off if it had 
worked. 
Shuttlyndra isn’t just a contract, but multiple sole-source, 
no-bid, cost-plus contracts, guaranteeing that the taxpayer money will 
be spent. And because of the nature of the contracts, in which the 
contractors are reimbursed for time and materials regardless of results,
 and there is no real competition, there is an excellent chance that the
 taxpayer won’t get much for the money — at least if its predecessor 
program, Constellation, is anything to go by. 
NASA spent ten 
billion dollars on Constellation over five years, and had little to show
 for it except a very expensive and flawed suborbital test of a dummy 
first stage, and a half-built capsule with uncertain requirements. There
 is absolutely nothing to indicate that anything has changed in terms of
 management at NASA to overcome the ongoing moral hazards that created 
the waste the first time. It is really an intrinsic feature of 
traditional NASA contracting that has resulted in failure after failure 
after failure of NASA programs in their stated purpose. These failures 
are never punished because in the minds of those primarily responsible 
for funding it on the Hill, the real purpose is that the jobs continue 
to flow. 
The saddest thing, perhaps, is that, unlike the 
supposedly novel approach to solar cell production ostensibly being 
pioneered by Solyndra, it’s not even particularly high technology. The 
program is premised on the notion that we have to maintain the same 
decades-old “space infrastructure” that we’ve had since the 1970s, by 
continuing the obsolete and costly Shuttle technology into perpetuity. 
At least if Solyndra’s promises had been kept, we would have had a 
useful new technology. But all that SLS gives us is a heavy-lift vehicle
 that will fly rarely, for which no payloads have been defined or 
budgeted. 
But the biggest difference between Solyndra and 
Shuttlyndra is the scale of the waste of taxpayer funds — and 
that’signoring the billions already wasted. Shuttlyndra is planned to 
consume eighteen billion dollars in the next few years, and much more 
before it can do anything useful. Compared to that, the half billion 
wasted on Solyndra is couch-cushion change. And Shuttlyndra will be the 
negative gift to the taxpayer that keeps on giving, eating up billions 
of dollars per year that could be spent on actual useful space hardware 
for sending humans beyond earth orbit, until it’s finally canceled (if 
the porkmeisters in Congress ever allow it to happen).
As
 I note over there, the bad news is that this is bipartisan, and 
actually mostly Republican (and some of it, in addition to the pork, is a
 knee-jerk antipathy to anything that the Obama administration opposes, 
even when it’s a sound policy on both technical and fiscal grounds)....MORE
I fear that last paragraph maybe the immediate cause of more than one heart attack at Media Matters and the Center for American Progress et al.