An early, but still vivid, formative memory of mine was watching the noisy, black & white video of the Apollo 11 mission. It was partly responsible for my enduring sense of awe and possibility, and probably the moment I knew I had to be a scientist or engineer.

Our world is going to hell in many ways, to be sure, but we're going to the moon again today, and I can't help but get excited about that.

We had a pretty crappy president then, too.

The space program was inseparable from the cold war that gave birth to it, but it also transcended it. It was, by design or not, about far more than rockets or space. It was about inspiration and imagination.

For a generation of a certain kind of nerdy kid, there was *nothing* cooler than space, rockets, exploration. For many of us, the feeling stuck.

That was something, even on the small screen. And one of the rare moments where I find myself wishing I was in Florida.

We’re spending an enormous amount of time, money, and effort, requiring vision and courage, to do something big where the objective isn’t to kill anyone or conquer anything, but just to perhaps learn some interesting things about the universe in which we live.

Maybe some politicians get some bragging rights.

I’m OK with that, even if I don’t care for the politicians.

@mattblaze

If it's any further consolation: I (I'm guessing the younger of the two of us) have always thought reverently on the Apollo 11 moon mission but don't know off the top of my head which president it was.

@Starfia @mattblaze This is beyond a political term.

@mattblaze

I'm just glad they didn't kill anybody yet.

@mattblaze It was a particularly nice night for a launch. It had been hazy much of the day, cloud cover didn't really break up until after 4:00 pm.

Sorry you weren't here to FL to see it but maybe you'll catch the next one.

@mattblaze I was really excited to watch it, but after the initial heave, I was underwhelmed. SpaceX launch footage has spoiled me 🥺

Still very excited about the mission