Let's have a little delight. Sometimes things still work.
Glover and his crewmates — NASA astronauts Reid Wiseman and Christina Koch and Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen — were the first people to launch aboard NASA’s Space Launch System rocket and Orion capsule. Tensions were especially high during their final descent because the spacecraft had a known design flaw in its heat shield; NASA is still investigating the details of the shield’s performance.“I could tell we were in a fireball,” Glover said, describing the plasma outside the spacecraft during atmospheric re-entry. He admitted his first thought was, “Is it supposed to be that big?”
When the hatch opened after they splashed down, Koch said, “I was completely overcome.”
“I just screamed. I was so happy,” she said. “It was just pure elation and just a visceral, emotional reaction to not only being home, but people there coming to us and bringing us out — just unspeakable joy.” NBC News
The time of demented Don has robbed us of much simple pleasure in the realization of what human beings can do when we work together. Artemis reminded us of all of that potential.
Jay Kuo described this well:
... Americans watching Artemis II carry four astronauts around the Moon feel something they didn’t expect: the deep satisfaction of watching something difficult done well. The same could be said for the compelling educational success story unfolding in the Deep South, driven by disciplined and evidence-based methods rather than ideology. And it could be said about a 34-year-old democratic socialist mayor of New York City, who is governing by filling potholes while securing child care funding, elevating it all into a political philosophy.
This hunger for competence is something newer and more demanding than just nostalgia. It’s a refusal to accept that this is as good as it gets. It’s also a rejection of the pre-Trump order that failed too many for too long. There is a growing recognition that government can actually work, that planning and expertise and execution are not elitist but democratic, and that when systems fail, ordinary people suffer most.What we owe ourselves, and each other, is an insistence on holding leaders to a standard of competence. This standard can and must replace the current, destructive emphasis on performative loyalty, disruption, entertainment and optics.
It’s the standard that demands showing up, doing the work, and delivering real results — with the bonhomie and camaraderie of a shared mission, while trusting that the experts have prepared well so we don’t burn up when we plunge back down to Earth.
I admit to not being a devoted NASA fan. I watched the first moon landing in 1969 with small-minded horror; damned if the first thing astronauts did when they got there was discard some no longer needed equipment. That is, we humans thoughtlessly littered a pristine environment.
But I've since come to appreciate our capacity to work in groups, most especially to organize ourselves in support of humane values. At our better moments, together, we can do the work and create great things.











