You shouldn't identity yourself based on groups. You are an individual, wholly unique and not meant to be bound by the opinions of others merely for belonging.

Joined April 2022
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Success is not forged on a streak of luck, but on the back of dogged determination to learn, grow, try, repeat.
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Capitalist Waterfowl retweeted
Australia banned X for children but not BlueSky. Britain is banning X for children but not BlueSky. This proves one thing. It's not about protecting children. It's about censorship and controlling the narrative.
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Capitalist Waterfowl retweeted
Rocket shockwaves, crossing in front of the Sun. Amazing detail as a Falcon leaves Earth from Florida. Cool to clearly see the rocket exhaust turbulence and shape, and even sunspots. From the Mach cone half-angle equation sin(μ) = 1/M, it looks like the @SpaceX Falcon is already going about Mach 2.5 (2.5 times the speed of sound). But check my math :) photo by @John_Winkopp spacecoastpictures.com/main.…
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If you can trace someone's wealth to respectable activities and bringing things to the market then it doesn't matter how high it is I have no problem with it. When that wealth cannot be explained in any morally upright way but can be explained with literal crime, different story
I have many more issues with Ilhan Omar being worth $30 million than Elon being worth a trillion.
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This is something I need to put plainly SpaceX is literally a source of hope for so many of us. ESPECIALLY people who were involved with the space flight community before they began to succeed. Government... destroyed the light in so many engineers.
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The public knows the problems with Constellation... few know how much the problems were directly caused by Congress. Moving goal posts, funding to design but not test, architecture demands that were unreasonable! Then to just rug pull the whole thing. The entire 100 year plan.
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For all who were broken in the wake of that.... who gave up on human habitation beyond orbit in our lifetimes and frankly on anything more than a token presence in orbit; SpaceX is the hope we almost didn't dare to feel. Humanity is reaching out. Becoming more. Not maybe, now!
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Sadly true. The media barely talks about Gwynne because "Elon bad man now" She IS an incredible success story and should be touted as a role model. But then our society also pushes sports stars as role models instead of scientists and engineers in general so.......
If she wasn’t working for Elon Gwynne Shotwell would be hailed as an incredible success story and the most powerful woman in aerospace. Instead it’s radio silence from the media
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Capitalist Waterfowl retweeted
We've raised over $30k for cancer research from this photo showing the colors from the back side of the moon. Insane!! Thank you so much for helping me use my platform for good! Prints still available linked in my bio- I've already sold out of some sizes!
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Capitalist Waterfowl retweeted
Currently doing one of my deepest exposures yet and couldn't resist sharing a sneak peek. This is part of a supernova shockwave as it rips through interstellar space. I haven't even touched the saturation slider- this area is so dynamic it naturally has strong color separation
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It's important to remember even for those others. Both retail and private stock holders. That's not liquid wealth, thats market assets. That's wealth tied up in DOING stuff. Profits going to employee salaries. Creating new things. Changing the world.
Updated valuations of Elon Musk's companies based on publicly available info: • SpaceX: $2.1 trillion • Tesla: $1.5 trillion • Neuralink: $9 billion • The Boring Company: $7 billion $3.62 trillion combined. Elon has now created $2.5 trillion in wealth for others.
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This is the mark of how insane the change is. Prior to SpaceX it WAS about 25 satellites a year. Now SpaceX alone launches more than that about every 2.5 days.
"There are only 25 satellites launched a year, every year, and that's not going to change." Ryhmes with the current defense ecosystem.
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I can't wait to see it finished. Honestly, the cranes are the first thing you see of Starbase as you head down Hwy 4 and.... it left me crying. It's such a visceral physical thing to see the future being built. Here's to hope, fragile and precious.
The final level of the Starbase Gigabay has begun today. 6/12/26
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Okay... managed to get my $SPCX position up to something ..... less meager without utterly ruining my cost basis. Now to play the proper volatility game and wait for prices BELOW the IPO start point (if they ever come) to go from tolerable to good.
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painfully accurate. Every time you discuss such things with them they seem to think the government just has wealth and can move it. The idea that wealth must originate somewhere and that neither the government nor any other entity just magically has it, seems to escape them.
Thomas Sowell on socialists’ attitude toward wealth.
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Never Surrender
Never give up
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well my IPO trade executed.... at 10% of my ask *sigh* guess its time to be watching the $SPCX ticket like a hawk for a good time to buy the other 90% of the position I intend to hold
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The end times are upon us?
I am sitting next to a pool on a terrace in northern Spain. Twenty minutes ago, I ordered a plate of six croquettes (assorted flavours). Next to me is a woman who, naturally, didn’t want any. You probably think you know where this is going, but no. I ate them all, in peace. No incursions, no comedically wobbling fork appearing in my peripheral vision. All mine. Men: it is too early for complacency, and this is obviously not a bowl of chips. But we may have achieved the end of the beginning.
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Capitalist Waterfowl retweeted
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So trick question Moon is it's proper name and category. Like many things we use the Latin for a language agnostic proper name though, making it Luna. the eytomology goes "hey that's THE moon" followed by "huh, that planet has a thing like the moon.... uh moon is a category"
If the other planet’s moons have its own name, what is the name of our moon?
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I'm still not a fan of the fact HLS is not going to be represented by a proper demonstrator But I can accept the logic that SpaceX as a provider has repeatedly demonstrated pressurized cabins with life support, power, and avionics. What they haven't is structural for joint TLI.
Starting with some energy, and my inability to write brief updates, I am just extremely proud of the NASA crew, our industry, and our international partners. We are getting into a rhythm here at NASA. Earlier this year, setbacks put the Artemis II rocket back in the VAB for repairs, and we determined it was necessary to add another mission, Artemis III in 2027. Since then, we have unveiled the Ignition plans to build a Moon Base and nuclear-powered spaceships, launched a highly successful mission around the Moon, brought the crew home safely, and now watched the torch pass to Artemis III. There will be no shortage of major milestones to celebrate in the months ahead as we build the Moon Base and launch the Nancy Grace Roman telescope. I am beyond proud of the team and all the momentum and excitement around the space program. I do want to take this moment to address two of the questions I have been seeing since the crew announcement. Why are there no women assigned to Artemis III? I have seen reactions ranging from disappointment to outrage. I have personally been to space twice with 50% female crews. My closest advisors and some of the smartest engineers I know are women. In our latest NASA leadership organization, nearly 50% of the Center Directors and Mission Directorate leadership are women. The last astronaut candidate class selected under this Administration was majority female because they were the best of the best, including one astronaut I previously went to space with. In a world with so much controversy, I hope this can be a moment where we celebrate the astronauts selected, respect the integrity of the process, and recognize the extraordinary depth of talent across the entire corps. The crew selection does not involve any political appointees. The Astronaut Office assigns the crew that gives the mission the best chance of meeting its objectives, taking into account many factors, including the background and expertise of the astronauts, such as test pilot experience, development work on specific programs, and availability. For example, those raising this concern may not be aware of the pipeline of crews already preparing to launch to the Space Station, or those who have been undergoing lunar-specific training that would be a better fit for a future surface mission. The Artemis III astronauts are experienced, qualified, and deserve to be celebrated for the mission they have been assigned, just as the crews that follow will be celebrated when their time comes. We have an extraordinary astronaut corps, and every mission and every crew is part of a larger campaign to get America back to the Moon and to build the future we all dreamed about as children. What are the objectives for Artemis III if both landers will not be fully ready? Coming off a highly successful lunar mission like Artemis II, it is not surprising that the bar is set high for Artemis III. I think it is important to understand how difficult and dangerous it is to land astronauts on the Moon. We have not done it in a very long time, and we want to draw from a past playbook for success. That means getting into a cadence of launching, learning, and rolling improvements into the next mission. First and foremost, it is imperative for SLS to be flying with some frequency for operational currency and, honestly, safety. Earlier this year, it was very clear across NASA leadership that an additional mission was necessary in 2027. It is also imperative to gain interoperability data from rendezvous and docking with landers in Earth orbit. We do not need those landers that are still in development to be fully capable and certified for landing on the Moon on Artemis III, but we do need to test certain systems and controllability. Not to mention, we are moving quickly into a future where we do not require a single rocket to bring everything necessary for a mission to space, and as such, gaining experience with multi-launch campaigns and on-orbit assembly is directionally correct. The Blue Origin test lander for Artemis III will incorporate many of the most important systems and subsystems that have not previously been operated by the provider, including ECLSS in a crew cabin, and other avionics. With SpaceX, they have demonstrated many of those capabilities continuously on Crew Dragon, but other controllability tests are important based on the negative-X axis acceleration that will be necessary when Starship undertakes the TLI burn to the Moon with a docked Orion. After Artemis III, we will learn a lot and roll in further improvements, be that hardware, software, or procedural updates, as both providers undertake end-to-end uncrewed demonstrations to the surface in 2028, in advance of Artemis IV, where NASA astronauts will finally complete the grand return to the Moon. As I said in my remarks yesterday, when Gene Cernan left the lunar surface on Apollo 17, he said, “We leave as we came, and, God willing, we shall return, with peace and hope for all mankind.” We are returning, and we are doing so with the fire carried forward from Apollo, the lessons learned from Artemis II, the crew of Artemis III, and all those who will follow. NASA will send the very best crews for the right missions. If the composition of our astronaut corps and our latest class of candidates says anything, it is that we have exactly the talent required to get the job done. Godspeed Artemis III, and all those who will follow.
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