Trigger warning: this is #nostalgia about a lost #sanfrancisco , #california - lost like ancient Lemuria, or fabled Atlantis, or the very real Alexandria... Or maybe Fukushima... Or I guess, inhospitable and ungracious and arrogant Sodom.. https://t.co/3patgCCp8T
From Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE; to *drumroll*... NICE. NICE? What's the, 'N,' stand for in the new acronym? Do we want to know? Can we afford not to?
Un. Fucking. Hinged.
POLL: ICE has been abused by the Fake News Media at levels never seen before. They are Great Patriots who work hard, and do a fantastic job in a very hostile environment. Much of this hostility is caused by the Dumocrats and the Fake News. The concept I have had for quite some time — A strong feeling that the name of these Patriots, “ICE,” should be changed to, “NICE,” in that it will totally discombobulate Crooked, Dishonest, and Unpatriotic Reporters and Journalists. For them to say, “We went to a NICE Facility today,” as opposed to “ICE” or, “NICE Agents have deported a Violent Drug Dealer,” they won’t be able to handle it, they will go totally crazy! All it means is adding an “N” (“National”) to “ICE (“Immigration and Customs Enforcement”) — A much more prestigious name. Everyone loves it, but I have been told by the legendary Tom Homan that the Agents do not love it as much as the other population. Who thinks that we should add an “N” to change the name of “ICE” to “NICE?”
Thank you for your attention to this matter! President DJT
...Self acceptance in part because of my dad, who raised me right, as best he could. He himself was butthurt so to speak his whole life, just because in high school he had to endure such abuse and bullying from the white kids, with their Tonto this moke signals; that, wampum...)
https://t.co/hNWnQGBlya
🎼🎵🎶'The other kids/They made fun of me...'🎶🎵
(You know, Bill, my dad, a buddy to Joan Baez, a man who shook hands once with Janice Joplin in San Fran back in the day - well, dad could not abide 'Half Breed.' I listened without him. I have radical...
Expedition 74 explored using augmented and virtual reality tools to advance crew health on Wednesday. Meanwhile, spacewalk preps are underway after a @SpaceX Dragon returned to Earth. More... https://t.co/kFNeFL1MTD
https://t.co/QQfDUIEVUZ
Hi! Melissa? Melissa Wright, graduate of Maxwell High, in Maxwell, California? Um, Melissa, it's me, Will Way. Melissa, we, you and I need to talk - listen up, please!
'A homosexual??' Gasped Mr Roper, and to her credit, his wife, Mrs Roper, in her sunflower print mumu and set hair rejoindered, 'Oh, come now, Mr Roper! It's the 1970s' 🏳️🌈 Happy Pride, errybody! 🏳️🌈 xoxo 💋, #willway#cops#makeitmakesense https://t.co/VchKRvqGPf
Airmen have long helped push the boundaries of flight.
Air Force test pilot Col. Bob "Farmer" Hines is continuing that tradition as the alternate crew member for @NASAArtemis III.
https://t.co/yudmRQrTgt
Voyager 1 and the Epic Journey Through the Oort Cloud Even though Voyager 1 has already entered interstellar space, it’s still deep inside our Solar System in the grandest https://t.co/YIDuNUmSWK will take roughly 300 years for humanity’s farthest spacecraft to reach the inner edge of the Oort Cloud — the vast, spherical shell of icy comets and frozen debris that marks the true outer boundary of our Solar System.Once there, crossing the entire Oort Cloud will take another ~30,000 years.That means Voyager 1 will spend tens of thousands of years silently drifting through this enormous region — a cosmic wilderness stretching up to 100,000 AU (nearly 2 light-years) from the Sun, filled with trillions of icy https://t.co/jPDvNrVMBY the time it finally emerges on the other side, it will have been traveling for over 30,000 years since leaving the planets behind… and it will still be only barely beginning its true journey into the wider Milky Way.A humbling reminder of just how vast our Solar System really is — and how small we are in the grand timeline of space exploration. Voyager’s voyage is only getting started.
🧑🚀🌖 La Dream Team pour Artemis IV ?
Cette photo emblématique réunit 4 astronautes de la NASA issues de la promotion 2013. De gauche à droite :
🔹Nicole Aunapu Mann : Pilote d’essai, colonel des Marines, première femme amérindienne dans l’espace (commandante de Crew-5).
🔹 Jessica Meir : biologiste marine et physiologiste, a réalisé la première sortie extravéhiculaire 100 % féminine avec Christina Koch.
🔹 Anne McClain : pilote militaire, colonelle de l’US Army et pilote d’essai expérimentée.
🔹 Christina Koch : Ingénieure électrique, détentrice du record de durée en vol spatial pour une femme (328 jours), déjà sélectionnée pour Artemis II.
Devant le module d’entraînement et le scaphandre EMU, elles incarnent la compétence, la détermination et le leadership au féminin que beaucoup rêveraient de voir réunis lors du retour de l’humanité sur la Lune ! 😍✨
✈️ ANOTHER MILESTONE UNLOCKED: NASA’s X-59 reaches speed, altitude for future quiet supersonic flight testing!
NASA's X-59 experimental aircraft achieved a major milestone June 12, reaching Mach 1.4 (about 924 mph) and an altitude of 55,000 feet – its fastest and highest flight so far, and the conditions required for future mission-critical tests.
These flights are focused on performance, the quiet flights are coming soon. After acoustic validation, NASA’s Quesst mission will fly the aircraft over several U.S. communities 🏘️ to collect data on public perception of the quieter sonic thump the aircraft will make at supersonic speeds. 🔊 ✈️
Learn more: https://t.co/5qhgOsSpBW
#NASA #X59 #Quesst
🚀 The Artemis III mission crew has been announced. It is as follows:
👨🚀 Randy Bresnik (NASA) — Commander
👨🚀 Luca Parmitano (ESA) — Pilot
👨🚀 Andre Douglas (NASA) — Mission Specialist
👨🚀 Frank Rubio (NASA) — Mission Specialist
Briefly, the plan is as follows. First, a prototype lunar lander, Blue Moon, will be launched into low Earth orbit. It will spend several weeks in space awaiting the arrival of the Orion spacecraft carrying four astronauts. It will be launched into orbit using a scaled-down SLS rocket: the mockup will take the place of the ICPS upper stage.
Orion will then dock with Blue Moon and remain there for two days. During this time, the astronauts will conduct necessary tests, including a short-term stay aboard the lunar module.
Orion will then undock from Blue Moon and await the launch of the Starship HLS. A second docking is then planned. The ships will remain docked for 24 hours (nothing is said about the transfer to Starship). Once completed, Orion will undock and splash down in the Pacific Ocean.