1 00:00:03,440 --> 00:00:04,600 Speaker 1: As far as twenty five. 2 00:00:04,680 --> 00:00:12,600 Speaker 2: Injins four three two one booster, ignition, and lift off. 3 00:00:13,800 --> 00:00:16,320 Speaker 1: The crew of Artemis two, now bound for the Moon, 4 00:00:16,800 --> 00:00:19,720 Speaker 1: Humanity's next great voyage begins. 5 00:00:22,360 --> 00:00:29,080 Speaker 3: Old, ambitious, unifying all of the things, the kind of 6 00:00:29,080 --> 00:00:31,920 Speaker 3: project that America still needs. You don't see a ton 7 00:00:31,920 --> 00:00:34,520 Speaker 3: of real big goals coming out of Washington these days, 8 00:00:34,520 --> 00:00:38,360 Speaker 3: but in NASA's Artemis two emission is one getting humans around. 9 00:00:38,720 --> 00:00:41,440 Speaker 4: Going to the Moon reminds people that the. 10 00:00:41,479 --> 00:00:47,159 Speaker 3: United States still leads in innovation and exploration, and that 11 00:00:47,320 --> 00:00:51,200 Speaker 3: is something that resonates across the political spectrum. 12 00:00:51,080 --> 00:00:55,480 Speaker 4: Young and old. It's not just for space enthusiasts. 13 00:00:55,720 --> 00:00:59,520 Speaker 3: Heck, even Senator Mark Kelly was saying that this was 14 00:00:59,560 --> 00:01:02,280 Speaker 3: a good thing for the country yesterday when he was 15 00:01:02,760 --> 00:01:05,000 Speaker 3: talking about the Moon launch. 16 00:01:05,200 --> 00:01:06,560 Speaker 4: Yeah, he didn't two projects. 17 00:01:06,560 --> 00:01:09,959 Speaker 1: He didn't specifically praise Trump, obviously he's been a huge 18 00:01:09,959 --> 00:01:13,560 Speaker 1: critic of Donald Trump, but kind of indirectly praised Trump 19 00:01:13,640 --> 00:01:15,720 Speaker 1: as being part of this and crewing this. And Yeah, 20 00:01:15,720 --> 00:01:17,919 Speaker 1: it does seem like there was a sense of national unity, 21 00:01:17,959 --> 00:01:19,840 Speaker 1: and it does seem like that there was a sense that, 22 00:01:20,160 --> 00:01:22,400 Speaker 1: you know, we are the United States of American, we 23 00:01:22,480 --> 00:01:25,360 Speaker 1: can accomplish big things if we want to, and we 24 00:01:25,480 --> 00:01:28,080 Speaker 1: can go back to the Moon and hopefully build a 25 00:01:28,120 --> 00:01:30,440 Speaker 1: base on the Moon in the coming years. And there 26 00:01:30,440 --> 00:01:33,160 Speaker 1: were some Debbie downers on social media yesterday after this. 27 00:01:33,400 --> 00:01:35,600 Speaker 1: You know what, We're spending billions of dollars going to 28 00:01:35,640 --> 00:01:37,880 Speaker 1: the Moon and we could be spending that money here 29 00:01:37,920 --> 00:01:40,840 Speaker 1: to help the poor people, or fix our roads, or 30 00:01:40,880 --> 00:01:42,680 Speaker 1: you know, bring down the price of things and making 31 00:01:42,840 --> 00:01:45,480 Speaker 1: you know, because American life is so unaffordable right now. 32 00:01:45,520 --> 00:01:48,680 Speaker 1: And okay, fine, I get that, but look, we have 33 00:01:48,760 --> 00:01:52,360 Speaker 1: to do We're Americans. We have to do stuff like this. 34 00:01:52,440 --> 00:01:55,760 Speaker 1: Think about it. This country was founded by people who 35 00:01:55,800 --> 00:01:58,640 Speaker 1: took a four month boat ride across an ocean with 36 00:01:58,800 --> 00:02:02,480 Speaker 1: nothing but their family and an axe, and that's it, 37 00:02:02,840 --> 00:02:05,920 Speaker 1: and built this country. And Lewis and Clark moved westward, 38 00:02:06,120 --> 00:02:08,679 Speaker 1: and settlers followed them, and we went all the way 39 00:02:08,720 --> 00:02:11,560 Speaker 1: to California and discovered this new land and settled this 40 00:02:11,639 --> 00:02:16,040 Speaker 1: new land. This is in our DNA. We have to 41 00:02:16,160 --> 00:02:18,680 Speaker 1: do things like this. We are a nation of risk takers. 42 00:02:18,960 --> 00:02:22,280 Speaker 1: We are a nation of entrepreneurs, which is certainly risk taking. 43 00:02:22,320 --> 00:02:25,559 Speaker 1: I mean, there's not an accident that the most successful 44 00:02:25,639 --> 00:02:28,720 Speaker 1: and valuable companies in the world. All of them come 45 00:02:28,800 --> 00:02:32,359 Speaker 1: from the United States. We are risk takers, we are explorers. 46 00:02:32,639 --> 00:02:36,119 Speaker 1: This is in our DNA we have to do. Think 47 00:02:36,120 --> 00:02:38,400 Speaker 1: about that. Think about the type of people that came over, 48 00:02:38,480 --> 00:02:40,720 Speaker 1: you know, hundreds of years ago, came over the Atlantic 49 00:02:40,720 --> 00:02:43,880 Speaker 1: Ocean with nothing in their hands and built this country. 50 00:02:44,320 --> 00:02:47,240 Speaker 1: That's sort of to have that sort of mindset and 51 00:02:47,320 --> 00:02:50,080 Speaker 1: to take that sort of risk and see not be 52 00:02:50,160 --> 00:02:52,040 Speaker 1: the type of person that says, oh, what could go wrong? 53 00:02:52,120 --> 00:02:54,679 Speaker 1: What could go wrong? But instead say what could go right? 54 00:02:54,800 --> 00:02:57,799 Speaker 1: What could be our life if we explore and do this. 55 00:02:58,240 --> 00:03:01,160 Speaker 1: We are all descendants from those people that is in 56 00:03:01,320 --> 00:03:04,760 Speaker 1: our DNA today, and we have to do things like this. 57 00:03:04,840 --> 00:03:05,880 Speaker 1: It is part of who we are. 58 00:03:06,000 --> 00:03:08,560 Speaker 3: And they did it with a twenty percent cut in 59 00:03:08,600 --> 00:03:13,640 Speaker 3: the NASA budget. Decades of engineering testing investment. Now my 60 00:03:13,800 --> 00:03:17,320 Speaker 3: heart did skip a beat when the TV picture glitched. 61 00:03:17,600 --> 00:03:19,839 Speaker 4: I don't know if you were watching it on the television. 62 00:03:20,520 --> 00:03:24,639 Speaker 3: SpaceX does a much better job of these rocket launches 63 00:03:24,680 --> 00:03:28,000 Speaker 3: than NASA seem to do, And as a gen X 64 00:03:28,080 --> 00:03:33,120 Speaker 3: I couldn't remove myself from the thoughts of Challenger because 65 00:03:33,120 --> 00:03:36,160 Speaker 3: it was the same blue sky, and you know, I 66 00:03:36,200 --> 00:03:39,480 Speaker 3: was just oh, gosh, and then who they made it 67 00:03:39,520 --> 00:03:45,160 Speaker 3: there a historic mission inspiring Americans, and that's you're right, 68 00:03:45,240 --> 00:03:46,040 Speaker 3: it's what we do. 69 00:03:46,440 --> 00:03:48,440 Speaker 4: We strive for greatness. 70 00:03:48,520 --> 00:03:51,360 Speaker 3: And this is something that touches the heart of young people, 71 00:03:51,800 --> 00:03:55,720 Speaker 3: old people. All of us see the impossible right in 72 00:03:55,760 --> 00:04:02,240 Speaker 3: front of our eyes, becoming impossible, becoming possible, and it 73 00:04:02,360 --> 00:04:06,320 Speaker 3: changes like your brain, you know, it changes your heart, 74 00:04:06,480 --> 00:04:07,600 Speaker 3: It changes. 75 00:04:07,240 --> 00:04:09,520 Speaker 4: The way you view things. 76 00:04:09,600 --> 00:04:13,840 Speaker 3: And you're right when you say exploration and going beyond 77 00:04:14,440 --> 00:04:16,440 Speaker 3: that is what we do as Americans. 78 00:04:16,520 --> 00:04:18,359 Speaker 1: Yeah, nobody in the world does it better than we do, 79 00:04:18,440 --> 00:04:21,920 Speaker 1: and that's just because it's who we are. Look, this country, 80 00:04:22,080 --> 00:04:24,040 Speaker 1: we have an incredible amount of freedoms and you are 81 00:04:24,040 --> 00:04:25,880 Speaker 1: free to be as successful as you want to be 82 00:04:25,920 --> 00:04:27,960 Speaker 1: in this country, and you are free to fail and 83 00:04:28,000 --> 00:04:31,000 Speaker 1: be a total disaster. And guess what, no one's coming 84 00:04:31,080 --> 00:04:33,480 Speaker 1: to save you either way. The government's not going to 85 00:04:33,520 --> 00:04:35,600 Speaker 1: save you. No one is coming to save you in 86 00:04:35,600 --> 00:04:38,680 Speaker 1: this country. So we are certainly a country of risk takers. 87 00:04:38,720 --> 00:04:42,159 Speaker 1: And I love that launch yesterday. I'm glad it got 88 00:04:42,200 --> 00:04:44,800 Speaker 1: tons of media coverage like it did. There were you know, 89 00:04:45,040 --> 00:04:47,440 Speaker 1: a lot of stations, even local TV station across the 90 00:04:47,440 --> 00:04:49,800 Speaker 1: country that broke into their programming and cover this. All 91 00:04:49,839 --> 00:04:53,719 Speaker 1: the cable news stations cover this. Really just showing that 92 00:04:53,760 --> 00:04:56,200 Speaker 1: we can do we can do great things if we 93 00:04:56,200 --> 00:04:56,560 Speaker 1: want to. 94 00:04:57,279 --> 00:05:02,600 Speaker 3: So let's review what the astronauts did before they launched 95 00:05:02,720 --> 00:05:05,480 Speaker 3: the Moon. They took part in a long standing tradition 96 00:05:05,680 --> 00:05:09,080 Speaker 3: of playing a game of cards, the pre flight tradition 97 00:05:09,240 --> 00:05:12,520 Speaker 3: that we have seen with our crude flights and our astronauts. 98 00:05:12,800 --> 00:05:13,800 Speaker 1: The card game Nical. 99 00:05:14,480 --> 00:05:16,320 Speaker 5: Yeah, you know, this is a fun time for the crew, 100 00:05:16,400 --> 00:05:18,719 Speaker 5: kind of relax a little bit, play a card game 101 00:05:18,720 --> 00:05:20,480 Speaker 5: with the chief. You can see Scott Tingle, there's the 102 00:05:20,880 --> 00:05:25,680 Speaker 5: dealer today. Looks like they're playing high card wins. So 103 00:05:25,839 --> 00:05:29,240 Speaker 5: Victor wan, he's out, now, Jeremy's out. You know, there 104 00:05:29,240 --> 00:05:31,000 Speaker 5: are two schools of thought on this game. Either you 105 00:05:31,000 --> 00:05:32,520 Speaker 5: want to get rid of all your bad luck or 106 00:05:32,560 --> 00:05:33,919 Speaker 5: go out on a high note. So it looks like 107 00:05:33,960 --> 00:05:35,960 Speaker 5: the crew chows we're going out on a high note. 108 00:05:36,400 --> 00:05:40,880 Speaker 3: Yeah, just something, you know, something normal, just a relax 109 00:05:41,560 --> 00:05:44,560 Speaker 3: You're going up the top of this rocket and you're 110 00:05:44,640 --> 00:05:46,479 Speaker 3: like a bullet. You're going to shoot through the sky. 111 00:05:46,680 --> 00:05:48,480 Speaker 3: So let's just bring you back down to earth for 112 00:05:48,480 --> 00:05:51,280 Speaker 3: a second. Have a little camaraderie and play a game 113 00:05:51,320 --> 00:05:51,640 Speaker 3: of cards. 114 00:05:51,680 --> 00:05:53,440 Speaker 1: Yeah, and I love that. That's a tradition. And of 115 00:05:53,480 --> 00:05:56,680 Speaker 1: course after the launch yesterday, the big story about the 116 00:05:56,760 --> 00:06:00,520 Speaker 1: rocket was the fact that the toilet broke, and this 117 00:06:00,680 --> 00:06:03,640 Speaker 1: was everywhere yesterday. Well if you think about it, yeah, 118 00:06:03,640 --> 00:06:07,479 Speaker 1: this is a pretty big issue. And the Artemis crew 119 00:06:07,600 --> 00:06:10,720 Speaker 1: was able to end up fixing the broken toilet, and 120 00:06:10,800 --> 00:06:14,640 Speaker 1: of course that caused an incredible number of spectacular jokes 121 00:06:14,680 --> 00:06:17,560 Speaker 1: on social media last night. For example, fixing the toilet 122 00:06:17,680 --> 00:06:20,560 Speaker 1: might not have been NASA's number one triumph, but it 123 00:06:20,600 --> 00:06:23,839 Speaker 1: was certainly number two. The flight is off, the flight 124 00:06:23,960 --> 00:06:27,119 Speaker 1: is off to a crappy start, and this was an issue. 125 00:06:27,120 --> 00:06:30,960 Speaker 1: So six hours into the flight. It was six hours 126 00:06:30,960 --> 00:06:33,920 Speaker 1: into the flight before they could fix this malfunctioning toilet, 127 00:06:34,320 --> 00:06:37,080 Speaker 1: and one of the astronauts actually had to pee in 128 00:06:37,120 --> 00:06:39,400 Speaker 1: a bag in the midtime in the meantime, and then 129 00:06:39,440 --> 00:06:43,160 Speaker 1: you had this press conference. This was a NASA associate. 130 00:06:43,600 --> 00:06:46,679 Speaker 1: Their name is Amit Kashari, and they did a press 131 00:06:46,680 --> 00:06:51,440 Speaker 1: conference yesterday where they said the word quote Artemis two's 132 00:06:51,560 --> 00:06:55,520 Speaker 1: toilet meant that while astronauts could still poop in the toilet, 133 00:06:55,800 --> 00:06:58,440 Speaker 1: they couldn't pee in it. Oh, that is an actual quote. 134 00:06:58,440 --> 00:07:01,480 Speaker 1: So apparently this could not liquid I guess so. But 135 00:07:02,440 --> 00:07:05,839 Speaker 1: there was a lot going around with this yesterday. You know, Houston, 136 00:07:05,920 --> 00:07:08,480 Speaker 1: we have a toilet problem. You know, you hear the 137 00:07:08,800 --> 00:07:14,040 Speaker 1: ground control telemetry, go guidance, go toilet, no go. There 138 00:07:14,120 --> 00:07:17,640 Speaker 1: was a lot of great jokes around it yesterday. And 139 00:07:17,680 --> 00:07:20,880 Speaker 1: then obviously it's important. Hey, I mean I can only imagine, 140 00:07:20,920 --> 00:07:23,080 Speaker 1: you know, you go on a long car ride, stop 141 00:07:23,120 --> 00:07:26,240 Speaker 1: and go to the bathroom. This this is a ten 142 00:07:26,320 --> 00:07:29,480 Speaker 1: day long space ride. Obviously this is a problem. But 143 00:07:30,040 --> 00:07:33,160 Speaker 1: they do have contingency plans that one astronaut that had 144 00:07:33,160 --> 00:07:35,800 Speaker 1: to be before the toilet got fixed had to go 145 00:07:35,960 --> 00:07:39,760 Speaker 1: in a NASA approved bag. Of course it's NASA approved 146 00:07:39,840 --> 00:07:40,400 Speaker 1: right everything. 147 00:07:40,840 --> 00:07:41,760 Speaker 4: So you've got the. 148 00:07:41,840 --> 00:07:46,160 Speaker 3: NASA administrator confirming that the crew is safe and the 149 00:07:46,240 --> 00:07:48,200 Speaker 3: spacecraft is performing. 150 00:07:48,760 --> 00:07:52,480 Speaker 2: NASA astronauts Comander Read Wiseman, Private Victor Glover, mission specialist 151 00:07:52,600 --> 00:07:56,200 Speaker 2: Christina Coke, and Canadian Space Agency mission specialists Jeremy Hanson 152 00:07:56,800 --> 00:08:00,080 Speaker 2: are safe. They're secure, and they're in great spirits. We 153 00:08:00,120 --> 00:08:02,160 Speaker 2: will continue to monitor their health and the status is 154 00:08:02,200 --> 00:08:04,880 Speaker 2: they as we move into the next phase of the 155 00:08:04,960 --> 00:08:09,680 Speaker 2: Artemis two mission. So After a brief fifty four year intermission, 156 00:08:10,160 --> 00:08:14,160 Speaker 2: NASA is back in the business of sending astronauts to 157 00:08:14,200 --> 00:08:14,520 Speaker 2: the Moon. 158 00:08:15,920 --> 00:08:18,840 Speaker 1: Do you think, Brie, do you think there's a space 159 00:08:18,920 --> 00:08:23,240 Speaker 1: plunger in the toilet area? And what we thought about 160 00:08:23,280 --> 00:08:25,560 Speaker 1: it and what's the protocol for that? I mean, there's 161 00:08:25,560 --> 00:08:28,240 Speaker 1: not a lot of room there. You've got four grown 162 00:08:28,400 --> 00:08:33,200 Speaker 1: human beings and the bathroom, Like, is there like one 163 00:08:33,200 --> 00:08:33,600 Speaker 1: of those. 164 00:08:33,720 --> 00:08:40,440 Speaker 4: I'm sure they're really close. Oh yeah, is there like a. 165 00:08:37,160 --> 00:08:40,640 Speaker 1: Like a glade mister on the back of the toilet 166 00:08:40,720 --> 00:08:43,680 Speaker 1: seat or something like that? Right exactly, somebody opens the 167 00:08:43,679 --> 00:08:45,600 Speaker 1: door to the bathroom and they're like, you know, Jim 168 00:08:45,679 --> 00:08:49,040 Speaker 1: Carrey and as Ventura do not go in there? 169 00:08:50,160 --> 00:08:52,360 Speaker 4: Well, what do they eat while they're up there? 170 00:08:52,640 --> 00:08:57,760 Speaker 3: No refrigeration or resupply on the mission, so they like 171 00:08:57,800 --> 00:09:02,600 Speaker 3: to eat things like barbecue, beef, briscus, macaroni and cheese, 172 00:09:02,800 --> 00:09:07,520 Speaker 3: butternut squash, a tropical fruit salad, and couscous with nuts. 173 00:09:07,559 --> 00:09:11,880 Speaker 3: They have over ten different drink options, coffee, green tea, lemonade, 174 00:09:11,880 --> 00:09:16,120 Speaker 3: apple cider, and mango peach smoothies. They do get a 175 00:09:16,160 --> 00:09:19,479 Speaker 3: few condiments. You could never do it without the condiments. 176 00:09:19,559 --> 00:09:22,959 Speaker 4: Look like, this is the plainest, most boring food ever. 177 00:09:23,120 --> 00:09:26,160 Speaker 1: I am a huge fan of sauces and condiments. 178 00:09:26,200 --> 00:09:27,119 Speaker 4: They have five. 179 00:09:26,920 --> 00:09:31,080 Speaker 3: Different hot sauces. They also have maple syrup, peanut butter, honey, 180 00:09:31,120 --> 00:09:34,839 Speaker 3: and jam. And they also take cookies, cake pudding in 181 00:09:35,040 --> 00:09:37,600 Speaker 3: granola up for dessert. 182 00:09:38,000 --> 00:09:39,080 Speaker 4: But they get to pick. 183 00:09:39,160 --> 00:09:42,640 Speaker 3: They get to test and then pick their favorites, and 184 00:09:42,800 --> 00:09:46,880 Speaker 3: brisket and tortillas were the top two. Now they use 185 00:09:46,920 --> 00:09:50,320 Speaker 3: tortillas because they're not allowed to take bread because the 186 00:09:50,360 --> 00:09:54,160 Speaker 3: bread will make crumbs and they can have crumbs floating 187 00:09:54,200 --> 00:09:55,400 Speaker 3: around the spaceship. 188 00:09:56,320 --> 00:09:58,600 Speaker 1: The broken toilet acid was probably, like you know what, 189 00:09:58,640 --> 00:10:01,079 Speaker 1: Probably it was a bad idea to have breakfast burritos 190 00:10:01,120 --> 00:10:04,200 Speaker 1: for the astronauts this morning. Hey, do you remember being 191 00:10:04,240 --> 00:10:06,800 Speaker 1: a kid, there was a candy that you could get 192 00:10:06,800 --> 00:10:10,000 Speaker 1: that was called like space ice cream. Do you remember that? 193 00:10:10,040 --> 00:10:14,480 Speaker 1: It was essentially dehydrat or freeze dried ice cream. You 194 00:10:14,520 --> 00:10:15,120 Speaker 1: don't remember that. 195 00:10:15,160 --> 00:10:15,840 Speaker 4: I don't remember that. 196 00:10:15,960 --> 00:10:16,160 Speaker 2: Yeah. 197 00:10:16,200 --> 00:10:17,360 Speaker 1: Oh I used to buy it all the time, and 198 00:10:17,360 --> 00:10:19,080 Speaker 1: it came in like this foil wrapped piece. 199 00:10:19,160 --> 00:10:20,280 Speaker 4: I feel like you were an astronim. 200 00:10:20,280 --> 00:10:22,000 Speaker 1: You did feel like you were an astronaut, and it 201 00:10:22,040 --> 00:10:24,760 Speaker 1: was dehydrated or freeze dried ice cream, and so it 202 00:10:24,840 --> 00:10:27,440 Speaker 1: was hard and crunchy, but once you broke off a 203 00:10:27,440 --> 00:10:29,199 Speaker 1: piece and put it in your mouth, it would oddly 204 00:10:29,280 --> 00:10:31,760 Speaker 1: start to get creamy and taste like ice cream. I 205 00:10:31,800 --> 00:10:33,800 Speaker 1: can't remember. I can't believe you don't remember space ice 206 00:10:33,880 --> 00:10:35,840 Speaker 1: cream in the candy section when you were a kid. 207 00:10:36,000 --> 00:10:38,080 Speaker 3: I know that you could never be an astronaut based 208 00:10:38,120 --> 00:10:42,280 Speaker 3: on the no crumbs allowed, the bread and no crumbs. 209 00:10:42,880 --> 00:10:47,240 Speaker 1: Look, we all have our certain issues, and I do 210 00:10:47,400 --> 00:10:50,440 Speaker 1: enjoy food. I love food. Some would call me a 211 00:10:50,480 --> 00:10:52,959 Speaker 1: messy eater. I would just call me normal. 212 00:10:53,200 --> 00:10:54,920 Speaker 4: Some might say that, some. 213 00:10:54,880 --> 00:10:58,640 Speaker 3: Might say that President Trump congratulated the NASA astronauts on 214 00:10:58,720 --> 00:10:59,760 Speaker 3: their launch of Artemis. 215 00:10:59,840 --> 00:11:05,000 Speaker 6: To my fellow Americans, good evening. Let me begin by 216 00:11:05,040 --> 00:11:10,120 Speaker 6: congratulating the team at NASA and our brave astronauts on 217 00:11:10,280 --> 00:11:13,920 Speaker 6: the successful launch of Artivists two. It was quite something. 218 00:11:15,040 --> 00:11:17,880 Speaker 6: It would be traveling further than any manned rocket has 219 00:11:18,000 --> 00:11:22,480 Speaker 6: ever flown, and will very substantially pass the Moon, go 220 00:11:22,520 --> 00:11:25,400 Speaker 6: around it, and come back home from a distance that 221 00:11:25,520 --> 00:11:29,000 Speaker 6: has never been done before. It's amazing. 222 00:11:30,080 --> 00:11:34,800 Speaker 3: It was amazing, and that's not hyperbole. It literally is amazing. 223 00:11:34,840 --> 00:11:38,079 Speaker 3: Think about that in the same day, which happened to 224 00:11:38,080 --> 00:11:41,040 Speaker 3: be April Fool's Day, you have the president more or 225 00:11:41,120 --> 00:11:44,840 Speaker 3: less spike in the football on Operation Epic Fury. He 226 00:11:44,880 --> 00:11:48,080 Speaker 3: tiptoed right up to that line. He didn't say exactly 227 00:11:48,160 --> 00:11:50,800 Speaker 3: it's over, we won, but he was pretty darn close. 228 00:11:51,240 --> 00:11:55,600 Speaker 3: The same day that that happened, we send humans farther 229 00:11:55,679 --> 00:11:57,280 Speaker 3: in space than ever before. 230 00:11:58,080 --> 00:12:01,599 Speaker 1: Yeah. Look, and there's the conspiracy theories about whether or 231 00:12:01,600 --> 00:12:03,560 Speaker 1: not we landed on the Moon in the sixties have 232 00:12:03,720 --> 00:12:06,800 Speaker 1: never been stronger than they are right now. And of course, 233 00:12:06,840 --> 00:12:10,120 Speaker 1: if you're on social media, those conspiracy theories can sometimes 234 00:12:10,200 --> 00:12:13,280 Speaker 1: be really loud. I think NASA scheduling this launch on 235 00:12:13,480 --> 00:12:18,000 Speaker 1: April Fool's Day didn't help with it sit with everything. Yeah, 236 00:12:18,000 --> 00:12:20,080 Speaker 1: there were a lot of the conspiracy theorists who don't 237 00:12:20,080 --> 00:12:21,960 Speaker 1: think we landed on the Moon in the sixties were 238 00:12:22,000 --> 00:12:25,439 Speaker 1: all over that. And we're talking about oh, of course 239 00:12:25,480 --> 00:12:28,600 Speaker 1: they do it on April Fools. They're telling you this 240 00:12:28,679 --> 00:12:31,560 Speaker 1: is all fake. Yeah, no, no, let's be honest, this 241 00:12:31,640 --> 00:12:32,600 Speaker 1: is real. It happened. 242 00:12:32,640 --> 00:12:36,640 Speaker 3: The NASA administrator says that the heavens revealed God's glory 243 00:12:36,760 --> 00:12:38,800 Speaker 3: and point us to our creator. 244 00:12:39,160 --> 00:12:41,000 Speaker 2: Now I'll tell you. I mean, you know, I've been 245 00:12:41,080 --> 00:12:44,840 Speaker 2: to space twice, and I think it's very hard to 246 00:12:44,920 --> 00:12:49,160 Speaker 2: be there and not be somewhat spiritual, because you just 247 00:12:49,240 --> 00:12:53,120 Speaker 2: have an appreciation for, you know, how small we are 248 00:12:53,280 --> 00:12:55,960 Speaker 2: in the grand scheme of things, like the enormity of 249 00:12:56,040 --> 00:13:00,600 Speaker 2: what's around us, and like it had to have all 250 00:13:00,640 --> 00:13:04,760 Speaker 2: started like somewhere right We don't have, you know, an 251 00:13:04,800 --> 00:13:07,920 Speaker 2: answer for that right now. So the idea that maybe 252 00:13:07,960 --> 00:13:11,600 Speaker 2: this was all part of some extraordinary grand design is 253 00:13:12,640 --> 00:13:14,680 Speaker 2: you know, those thoughts have to go through your mind, 254 00:13:14,800 --> 00:13:18,959 Speaker 2: like it's it's just it's too interesting of a perspective 255 00:13:19,040 --> 00:13:21,520 Speaker 2: not to kind of go down that road. 256 00:13:21,559 --> 00:13:21,880 Speaker 1: I think. 257 00:13:22,000 --> 00:13:25,680 Speaker 3: So some people are saying that the Artemis two is 258 00:13:25,760 --> 00:13:29,280 Speaker 3: saving twenty twenty six the same way that Apollo eight 259 00:13:29,920 --> 00:13:31,520 Speaker 3: saved nineteen sixty eight. 260 00:13:31,920 --> 00:13:34,480 Speaker 1: Fair comparison. I mean, our country was being ripped apart 261 00:13:34,480 --> 00:13:37,920 Speaker 1: of the themes in nineteen sixty eight from political assassinations 262 00:13:38,000 --> 00:13:41,200 Speaker 1: and you know, civil rights movement and race riots. It was, 263 00:13:41,440 --> 00:13:43,400 Speaker 1: it was, it was a rough time there, and yeah, 264 00:13:43,480 --> 00:13:45,720 Speaker 1: I think that's a really good analogy to that. By 265 00:13:45,760 --> 00:13:47,280 Speaker 1: the way, I do want to say somebody in the 266 00:13:47,320 --> 00:13:48,960 Speaker 1: chat on YouTube, which by the way, you can watch 267 00:13:49,000 --> 00:13:51,280 Speaker 1: us on YouTube, just type in. WIBC said that they 268 00:13:51,320 --> 00:13:53,920 Speaker 1: remember space ice cream, so thank you. It was a thing. 269 00:13:53,960 --> 00:13:57,079 Speaker 1: And by the way, apparently it was all Neapolitan. Oh 270 00:13:57,120 --> 00:13:59,960 Speaker 1: really Yeah, so you got the chocolatella and strawberry. 271 00:14:00,360 --> 00:14:02,880 Speaker 4: Okay, you're listening to ninety three w ib C.