“...NASA’s first female launch director...”
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As usual, whenever I see something like this,
I wonder who is keeping the record book.
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They got this big rocket and all they’re launching into space is three dummies?
I hope it’s Elizabeth Warren and Schumer and Pelosi.

NASA’s Most Powerful Rocket in Final Testing Before Launch
(The most powerful rocket ever built, even bigger than the Saturn V)
Who wants to bet this bunch of EOE wokeflakes who replaced the Right Stuff pocket-protected crew cut chain smokers will screw the pooch how?
1.Upon launch (boom)
2.In transit for totally trusting programs, or
3.Somehow worse than imagining.
Like the Department of Indoctrination, it’s time to let this go to private enterprise. Now let’s get cracking on my equatorial nanotech space elevator so we can stop this astronaut obliterating altogether.
Spacex's Starship Super Heavy is a MEGAZILLAROCKET (400 ft tall)
SLS launch set for Monday at 8:30am (PST)
Starship launch SHOULD be happening in a month or two, HOPEFULLY!
We might as well take the 40-70 billion dollars that are being spent on traveling to a barren moon and use it on our own deserts...
We might get some kind of return from that...
This is the latest news release as of about 30 min. ago...
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The Artemis I Mission Management Team has given the “go” to proceed toward tanking operations.
Weather conditions remain 80% favorable at the beginning of the two-hour launch window which opens at 8:33 a.m. EDT Aug. 29, with chances for rain showers increasing toward the later part of the window.
Artemis I launch director Charlie Blackwell-Thompson is scheduled to give the “go” to officially begin propellant loading operations just before midnight.
During tanking operations, teams will fuel the Space Launch System (SLS) rocket with liquid oxygen (LOX) and liquid hydrogen (LH2), beginning with the rocket’s core stage and then the interim cryogenic propulsion stage.
Tanking begins with chilling down the LOX lines for the core stage. The process for the chill down, or cooling, uses the propellant lines to load the rocket’s core stage LOX in preparation for tanking. The LOX tank holds 196,000 gallons of liquid oxygen, cooled to minus 297 degrees Fahrenheit. In sequential fashion, LOX and LH2 will flow into the rocket’s core stage tank and be topped off and replenished as some of the cryogenic propellant boils off.
The process involves slowly filling the core stage with propellant to thermally condition the tank until temperature and pressure are stable before beginning fast fill operations, which is when the tank is filled at a quicker pump speed. As the super cold liquid oxygen fills the core stage tank, some venting may be visible. The team also will conduct leak checks to ensure propellant loading is proceeding as expected.
At midnight, NASA TV coverage begins with commentary of tanking operations to load propellant into the SLS rocket. Full coverage begins at 6:30 a.m. in English and at 7:30, coverage in Spanish begins.
Well I think it failed.
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/astrobotic-moon-lander-anomaly-after-launch/
I have my doubts about getting there 50 yearts ago.