In the wake of the Inspiration4 private orbital mission’s success, SpaceX CEO Elon Musk offered a snarky reply when asked why President Joe Biden was ignoring the feat, when even his competitors had celebrated the achievement.
While it lasted only three days, the space flight was widely touted as the world's first and progressive in many ways, so one might think the achievement deserved at least a nod from the White House. But one of Musk’s followers noted that the “president of the United States has refused to even acknowledge the four newest American astronauts who helped raise hundreds of millions of dollars for St. Jude... What’s your theory on why that is?”
“He’s still sleeping,” Musk replied, apparently half-jokingly alluding to Donald Trump’s ‘Sleepy Joe’ moniker for Biden.
Besides its entire crew being non-professionals, the mission’s medical officer, Hayley Arceneaux, 29, has become the youngest American astronaut to date and the first cancer survivor with a prosthetic limb to go to space.
Also on rt.com SpaceX’s all-civilian Inspiration4 mission splashes down off FloridaGeology professor and science communicator, Sian Proctor, 51, made history as the first-ever black female spacecraft pilot.
In addition, American billionaire Jared Isaacman, who privately funded the launch and served as the mission commander, has managed to raise nearly $150 million for children's cancer research as part of a charity campaign.
Inspiration4 followed two high-profile private space flights in July by Amazon tycoon Jeff Bezos and Virgin magnate Richard Branson. Some critics argued that Musk should not take it personally, because Biden never congratulated Branson and Bezos either. However, neither of the billionaires actually orbited the Earth during their flights, thus Inspiration4 remains the first fully private mission to carry humans into orbital space, a domain that was once the sole preserve of the world’s superpowers.
As the Resilience module was making its first orbits after successful launch on Wednesday, Bezos himself noted his rival’s achievement and praised the mission as “another step towards a future where space is accessible to all of us.”
NASA administrator Bill Nelson also congratulated Musk’s team, saying that they “helped demonstrate that low-Earth orbit is open for business.”
Even Boeing, which is still struggling with its Starliner Project after it lost the American race back to space to SpaceX’s Crew Dragon, set any possible grievances aside and celebrated the flight, saying “may your journey… continue to inspire and benefit St. Jude's incredible work in research for treatments and cures for childhood cancer.”
Also on rt.com In defence of Elon Musk, the woke-riling space billionaire launching the first all-civilian space flightThink your friends would be interested? Share this story!