Last astronaut to walk on the moon explained why no one has been back in 50 years

For Jim Bridenstine, the truth was never about missing technology, but missing courage. Political risk, not rocket science, stalled humanity at low Earth orbit. Programs dragged on, budgets ballooned, and the will to plant new flags on alien soil dissolved in committee rooms and election cycles. We could have stood on Martian dust by now, he argued, if not for fear of failure on the evening news.

Artemis II is the first real attempt to break that paralysis. Four astronauts circle the Moon carrying far more than instruments: a widowed commander with a notebook for thoughts his daughters may one day read, a record‑breaking pioneer clutching handwritten messages from home, a Canadian rookie with moon‑shaped pendants for his family, and a trailblazing pilot flying as the first Black person bound for lunar orbit. If politics once kept us grounded, their quiet, personal courage may be what finally pulls humanity back into the dark, waiting dust of the Moon.

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