Trump hosts crew of historic Artemis mission: ‘I would have had no trouble making it’
The Guardian World ·

Donald Trump hosted the crew of the historic Artemis II lunar flyby mission at the White House on Wednesday. The four astronauts – commander Reid Wiseman, pilot Victor Glover and mission specialists …
Donald Trump hosted the crew of the historic Artemis II lunar flyby mission at the White House on Wednesday. The four astronauts – commander Reid Wiseman, pilot Victor Glover and mission specialists Christina Koch and Jeremy Hansen – joined the president in the Oval Office for a celebratory meeting and press conference. “We’re very proud of these people. They have unbelievable courage, unbelievable a lot of other things too,” Trump said at the start of the conference, immediately segueing into praise for himself. “To get in there, you have to be very smart, have to do a lot of things physically good. So I would have had no trouble making it, I’m physically very, very good. Maybe a little bit of a problem. We’ll have to try it.” The crew broke Apollo 13’s distance record for the farthest distance traveled from Earth during their mission earlier this month. They reached 252,756 miles (406,771km), surpassing the 1970 record of 248,655 miles. The mission ended off the coast of San Diego on 10 April as the Orion capsule, dubbed Integrity, made a textbook splashdown in the Pacific Ocean after its 10-day lunar odyssey. Trump previously congratulated Nasa on the successful mission, writing on Truth Social how proud he was of the “great and very talented” crew while making no mention of his desire to impose severe cuts to the agency. Earlier this month, Trump announced his intention to slash Nasa’s budget by 23%, including a 46% cut for space science initiatives. …
Original source: The Guardian World
Mentioned
United States Supreme Court · White House · Donald Trump · NASA · San Diego · Republicans · Truth Social · Reid Wiseman · Pacific Ocean · Jeremy Hansen · Christina Koch · Voting Rights Act