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The Media Does Not Want To Talk About This Historic NASA Launch. Here’s Why.
On Christmas Eve of 1968, as American soldiers became increasingly involved in a protracted war in a faraway country, and as political assassinations were becoming a regular feature of domestic politics — stop me if any of that sounds familiar — a single broadcast was watched by more than a quarter of the world’s population. I’ll say that again. One in four people on the planet, across dozens of countries, stopped what they were doing and watched a single broadcast. That had never happened before. And it’s never happened since.
This massive audience was not tuning into a deranged, depressing political podcast. They weren’t watching a hysterical panel on CNN, or the latest true crime documentary to roll off the assembly line at Netflix, or the season finale of a network television drama that was produced to appeal to the lowest common denominator. They weren’t watching an endless stream of dreck on the internet, either, courtesy of social media algorithms designed to confuse and demoralize them.
Instead, this is what a quarter of the world’s population was watching on Christmas Eve of 1968:
Source: NASA Video/YouTube.com
That’s the most popular broadcast in world history: Astronauts quoting the book of Genesis, on board Apollo 8, as they orbited the Moon. They had gone farther from Earth — a lot farther — than any other astronaut in history. No one else had ever left the Earth’s orbit.
No one else had ever taken a photograph like this one:
Space Frontiers/Getty Images
You may have seen this picture before.
It shows Earth rising over the horizon of the Moon. It was taken by the astronaut Bill Anders. By any measure, it’s one of the most iconic photographs ever taken.
When they got back to Earth, the astronauts became Time Magazine’s “Men of the Year”. They received a ticker-tape parade. They appeared at the Super Bowl. They got a postage stamp. They addressed Congress. They were treated as heroes because they had done something that seemed impossible — something no one had achieved before. And more than that, this was an achievement that laid the groundwork for many more breakthroughs to come. It was also a clear and unambiguous sign that we had taken the lead in the Space Race over the communists. We were the superior country; therefore, we were producing superior results — results that were unprecedented. And everyone could see that.
A little over 57 years later, after many years of inactivity and dysfunction — which was largely the result of deliberate sabotage, most recently by the Obama administration — NASA is about to achieve another major milestone, something that’s never been done before. That’s the plan. On Wednesday evening at 5:24 PM Central Time, as part of the Artemis II mission, which will last 10 days, four astronauts — three Americans and one Canadian — will travel in the Orion spacecraft to the far side of the Moon, reaching roughly 4,700 miles beyond the Moon. That’s farther into deep space than any crew has gone before in the history of humanity. And when they return, they’ll enter the atmosphere at around 25,000 miles per hour, which is the record for fastest re-entry speed of a crewed vessel.
These are, objectively speaking, historic achievements. It’s historic that NASA is even attempting this. The overwhelming majority of people alive today have never seen a crewed mission to the Moon. The famous clock at the Kennedy Space Center hasn’t counted down to a mission like this — a mission where an astronaut has left low Earth orbit — since 1972. On top of that, just like Apollo 8, the Artemis II mission is part of a new Space Race with a communist power. This time, it’s China that’s trying to beat us to the Moon. They want to get there by 2030. And they’re not just looking for bragging rights. They could try to claim ownership of it — which would drastically alter the balance of power on Earth, if not the solar system.
Despite these stakes, though, you probably haven’t heard much, if anything, about Artemis II. There’s a reporter who goes by the name “Ellie in Space” who just walked around the streets of Boulder Colorado, to see if anyone was aware of this. And while some people had a vague understanding of the mission, for the most part, these are the kinds of responses she received.
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