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Injuns makeum heap big mad over dead paleskins on the Great Moon Spirit

I'm sorry Dave, I'm afraid I can't do that
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Acrux
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Injuns makeum heap big mad over dead paleskins on the Great Moon Spirit

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The United States will soon launch its first spacecraft to attempt a soft lunar landing since the Apollo era, in a historic collaboration with the private sector—but not everyone is celebrating.

The Navajo Nation, America's largest Indigenous tribe, has raised concerns over the presence of human cremated remains on the lander vehicle, calling the mission a "desecration" of the Moon which holds a sacred place in their culture.

On January 8, Pittsburgh-based Astrobotic's Peregrine lander is set to hitch a ride on a giant United Launch Alliance Vulcan Centaur rocket making its maiden voyage under a NASA commercial partnership aimed at saving the US space agency money.

Peregrine's scientific instruments will probe for lunar surface radiation, helping NASA better prepare for crewed missions going there later this decade under the Artemis program.

But the boxy robot's manifest also includes payloads from two companies—Elysium Space and Celestis—that will contain cremated remains and DNA to stay on the Moon, inside the lander, forever.

While Elysium hasn't offered details, Celestis has 69 individual "participants" including late Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry, sci-fi author Arthur C. Clarke, and a dog named Indica-Noodle Fabiano.

Customers paid prices starting at $12,995, according to the company's website.

In a December 21 letter addressed to officials at NASA and the Department of Transportation, Navajo Nation President Buu Nygren expressed what he called "our deep concern and profound disappointment regarding a matter of utmost importance," and called for NASA to delay the launch.

"The Moon holds a sacred position in many Indigenous cultures, including ours," Nygren wrote.

"The act of depositing human remains and other materials, which could be perceived as discards in any other location, on the Moon is tantamount to desecration of this sacred space."

NASA promises meeting
Nygren added the situation was reminiscent of the Lunar Prospector mission launched in 1998 by NASA, which intentionally crashed a probe into the Moon's surface. On board were the remains of renowned geologist Eugene Shoemaker.

Then, too, the Navajo voiced objections. NASA apologized and committed to consult with Native Americans in future, according to a contemporary report in The Spokesman-Review of Spokane, Washington.

NASA's deputy associate administrator for exploration Joel Kearns said Thursday an intergovernmental team had arranged a meeting with the Navajo Nation, but added the agency had no control over its private partner's payloads.

"We take concerns expressed from the Navajo Nation very, very, seriously, and we think we're going to be continuing on this conversation," Kearns told reporters.

Celestis was less conciliatory.

"We respect all cultures' right to engage in religious practices, but no single culture or religion should exercise a veto on space missions based on religious tenets," the company said.

Denying that the mission "desecrates the Moon," it stressed the material would remain aboard the lander rather than being deposited on the surface.

Kearns said NASA's growing private partnerships could lead to "changes to how we view this" or to establishing industry standards.

It won't be the first human DNA left on the barren celestial body—that distinction belongs to the almost 100 bags of feces and urine left behind by American astronauts during the 1969-1972 Apollo lunar landings.
https://phys.org/news/2024-01-navajo-de ... n-moon.amp
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The last paragraph is my favorite.
It won't be the first human DNA left on the barren celestial body—that distinction belongs to the almost 100 bags of feces and urine left behind by American astronauts during the 1969-1972 Apollo lunar landings.
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Post by maidenhaver »

Acrux wrote: January 6th, 2024, 09:50
The last paragraph is my favorite.
It won't be the first human DNA left on the barren celestial body—that distinction belongs to the almost 100 bags of feces and urine left behind by American astronauts during the 1969-1972 Apollo lunar landings.
That's the only way India is getting to the moon.
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Post by Rand »

rusty_shackleford wrote: January 6th, 2024, 09:57
tell them to fuck off
Objectively correct.

Whiner: "My culture and traditions..."
Me, interrupting: "Aren't mine, and I don't care about them."
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Post by Gastrick »

Who do they think they are, to claim the entire moon as their sacred object? No wonder they can say "Canada belongs to us" so easily.

They wouldn't have originally known anyway that the moon isn't just a flat disk in the sky, but is a spherical body that you can land on.
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Post by Acrux »

The Navajo people lay their curse upon you, paleface!

https://www.livescience.com/space/space ... propellant
Peregrine moon lander carrying human remains doomed after 'critical loss' of propellant

Just six hours into its maiden flight, Astrobotic Technology's Peregrine moon lander has experienced a technical fault that doomed the mission.

The first U.S. spacecraft to attempt a soft landing on the moon in more than 50 years has experienced a "critical loss of propellant," dooming its mission

The Peregrine spacecraft, owned by the private American company Astrobotic Technology, launched from Cape Canaveral, Florida, aboard a Vulcan rocket at 2:18 a.m. EST (0718 GMT) yesterday (Jan. 8).

Yet just six hours into the flight, the private moon mission experienced technical difficulties that prevented the Peregrine spacecraft from turning its solar panels toward the sun. As Peregrine's battery dwindled, engineers found a fix that enabled them to tilt the craft and charge the panels.

But a fourth update from the team delivered dire news: The spacecraft had sprung a leak, causing it to lose the necessary rocket fuel for a moon landing.

"Unfortunately, it appears the failure within the propulsion system is causing a critical loss of propellant," Astrobotic representatives wrote in a statement. "The team is working to try and stabilize this loss, but given the situation, we have prioritized maximizing the science and data we can capture."

The fault has scuppered the first U.S. effort since 1972 — and the first-ever commercial flight to the moon — to attempt a safe landing on the lunar surface. It also means that its payload containing the remains of multiple "Star Trek" cast members and the DNA of former U.S. presidents will be lost in space.

To land on the moon, the 1.3-ton (1.2 metric tons) spacecraft would have needed to reorient its engine to fire in controlled bursts during its descent. Peregrine was set to take a looping path to its final landing spot, and was initially slated for an attempted touchdown on Feb. 23. The lander was intended to deploy five NASA payloads (costing the space agency $108 million for their delivery) and 15 other experiments on the moon.

The instruments — which include devices to measure radiation levels, surface ice and magnetic fields — were built to collect data on the moon's resources and potential risks to human habitation.

Controversially, the spacecraft is also carrying human remains, including those of science fiction writer Arthur C. Clarke; Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry; Roddenberry's wife, Majel Barrett; and Nichelle Nichols, James Doohan and DeForest Kelley, who played Nyota Uhura, Montgomery Scott and Dr. Leonard McCoy, respectively, on the classic sci-fi show. Stored alongside these remains are samples of DNA of the U.S. presidents George Washington, Dwight Eisenhower, John F. Kennedy, and Ronald Reagan.

But with only 40 hours of thruster fuel remaining on the spacecraft, Astrobotic's updated goal is to get the lander as close to the moon as possible.

"At this time, the goal is to get Peregrine as close to lunar distance as we can before it loses the ability to maintain its sun-pointing position and subsequently loses power," Astrobotic representatives said.

Astrobotic is the first of three U.S. companies to send a lander to the moon this year. Along with the companies Intuitive Machines and Firefly Aerospace, it has entered a new private-public partnership with NASA that will send five more missions to our lunar companion in 2024.
The partnership sees NASA acting as a "customer," taking a back seat to the companies on spacecraft design and mission planning — an arrangement that the space agency says will cut costs, boost development speed and encourage innovation. As such, NASA has said it can tolerate some failures, yet the loss of the mission is still significant.
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Post by Wretch »

Acrux wrote: January 10th, 2024, 17:49
The fault has scuppered the first U.S. effort since 1972 — and the first-ever commercial flight to the moon — to attempt a safe landing on the lunar surface. It also means that its payload containing the remains of multiple "Star Trek" cast members and the DNA of former U.S. presidents will be lost in space.
The failed technocrat funeral ritual is so much funnier than the whiny injuns.
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Red7
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Post by Red7 »

amazing how goyim brain cant connect dots for shit and figure out non black program spacecraft not allowed anywhere near moon by hostile aliens nesting in it


fun fact, what u see is not even moon. they project image to cover all the surface activity
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Acrux
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Post by Acrux »

Some good news (and likely the last update):

The ashes of Arthur C. Clarke and Star Trek creator Gene Rodenberry just burned up on re-entry to Earth's atmosphere!

https://www.pcgamer.com/the-ashes-of-ar ... socialflow

(I have no idea why PCGamer has the scoop on this.)
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Post by MadRussian »

Maybe they should make their own injun rocket and send the ashes of their best poobahs to fight the White mans on the moon.
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