Rocket launches were delayed. Explosions and development setbacks pushed off exciting milestones.
was directed to return American astronauts to the lunar surface within the next five years"by any means necessary." The program was dubbed Artemis, and wants astronauts to go back to the moon in 2024. Is it possible? 's $8 billion Commercial Crew program. At various points in 2019, SpaceX's Crew Dragon capsule and Boeing's Starliner both appeared to be on the home stretch with only one major test left to complete before they could launch their first crewed missions. But they encountered major setbacks.
decided to bring the vehicle back home, and it landed in the desert of New Mexico last weekend.Boeing's Starliner spacecraft makes safe landing after botched test flight It's not yet clear if
If you have been censored or lost your account, follow me and I will follow you back as long as you hate
Hmmmm
To quote Elon Musk, 'so real it looks fake.'
Just a note for everyone, the news industries are using virtual images on all newsfeeds. They are in a testing and development stage of a full virtual reality news system.
ВМФ В ПОХОДЕ
I don't trust NASA ever since that Apollo 11 hoax. No wonder, that they don't have their own spacecraft.
Don't they think that their money would be better spent fixing our planet, before it's too late instead of more space exploration?
Typically CNN..enjoys any American setback..that's why their ratings are in the toilet even after paying millions at airports to keep them on the screens! ₩
who's doing the filming? 🙄
It sounds like you want Americans to fly aboard a vehicle that is not fully tested. Is that true?
Space🇷🇺Force
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God didn't give us wings for a reason. babel world wide.