OK, now that it is clear that your previous hopping that SpaceX did it all alone was not based on reality, let's talk about numbers:
The same article provides other numbers. Let's assume that they are real.
First, it is clear that the article is evidently and quite blatantly biased against NASA and for SpaceX-like alternatives. Why do I claim that? Because the way the article presents the numbers:
They point out that SpaceX *CLAIMS* that they can transport a human for 20 Million per seat. OK, let's assume that they will be able to prove that (they only claim and are yet to PROVE that).
Now the article compares that with NASA's own numbers that an STS mission costs today 450 Million. OK, let's analyze that number and NORMALIZE the comparison: 450 Million divided by 7 (the number of seats), gives us roughly 62 Million per seat. So it means that SpaceX claims that it can bring an Astronaut to LEO for three time less than NASA (not +20 times as the article hopes that superficial readers will understand). Now let's continue analizing: SpaceX talks about cost "per seat" while NASA's numbers talk about "per mission" which is different. Basically NASA's numbers cover the entire mission, not only the transportation part, which the article tries to compare.
So basically I assume that SpaceX will be cheaper by about 30-50% per seat than the STS, which is still impressive, but not as devastating as the irresponsible journalist tries to imply (while glorifying the fact that SpaceX will be getting 6 Billion dolar in funding from the current Administration in 2011).
HOWEVER that is also irrelevant (together with a cost for building a Shuttle)because the article compares the SpaceX cost per seat with the STS program which is already finished (so no point in building a new Shuttle anyway, so why is that 1.7Billion even there?). What about comparing the SpaceX claim with what Constellation would have costed - and not the entire program, only the Ares part, dealing with LEO?
I assume that there would still be in the SpaceX favour but not as dramatically as the NASA bashers and the mainstream (largely clueless) media tries to imply, which leaves everything to only one argument: POLITICS!
I am sure that if this would have happened during the previous Administration, the mainstream media would argue that part of the gov funding goes to SpaceX because the previous Administration supposedly favored blood-sucking Capitalists over tens of thousands of laid-off families, but in this case, they actually glorify the layoff, while distorting facts and forcing them fit their ulterior political motives.
Now let it be clear: I think that NASA does need a certain streamlining, but what's been done to it is far from re-organization - it is rather a serious castration which hurts the future of the American manned Space Exploration.
Last, it is totally irrelevant if any of you think that America does not "deserve" a national Space Exploration program at all, and push for and "internationalization" of Space Exploration.
I also don't care to analyze why any of you might really want to see the US less of a Space Exploration leader that has been for so long, or claim that NASA's achievements belong to a specific person coming from a specific country. Don't forget that America has been, and will be a country of immigrants, so everybody deserves credit!
What is important ultimately is what the American people want for America, and not what somebody living in a foreign country wants for America to be. If the mid-term elections are a sign, it seems that the American people - especially in Florida which has traditionally been a bastion of the Democrats - do not really like what the Administration has been doing (especially to Space Exploration, but not only) during its first two years.
/Admin