Planetary Radio: Space Exploration, Astronomy and Science - An extinction-level event for NASA science
Episode Date: March 12, 2025NASA's science missions have transformed our understanding of the Universe, from breathtaking images of deep space to robotic explorers on Mars. But now, a reported 50% cut to NASA's science budget th...reatens to shut down missions, halt discoveries, and devastate the future of space exploration. This week, Casey Dreier and Jack Kiraly from The Planetary Society's space policy team break down the fight ahead, explain why these cuts would be catastrophic, and explain how you can take action before they become part of the official presidential budget request. Then, Science Editor Asa Stahl joins us to discuss the power of grassroots advocacy and Planetary Society members' impact in defending space science over the past 45 years. Plus, Bruce Betts returns for What's Up with a celebration of Lunar PlanetVac and a look ahead to this week's lunar eclipse. Discover more at: https://www.planetary.org/planetary-radio/2025-extinction-level-event-for-nasa-scienceSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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NASA's science budget is facing an extinction-level event, this week on Planetary Radio.
I'm Sarah Al-Ahmed of the Planetary Society, with more of the human adventure across our
solar system and beyond.
NASA's science missions have given us breathtaking images of the cosmos, robotic explorers on Mars, spacecraft venturing to the farthest reaches of our solar system,
and groundbreaking discoveries that help us unravel the mysteries of our universe.
But now, many of these missions, and the future of U.S. space science, are at risk.
A proposed 50% cut to NASA's science budget has been called an extinction-level event
by our chief of space policy, Casey Dreier.
And the Planetary Society is once more stepping up to protect space exploration.
This week, I speak with Casey Dreier and Jack Corelli from the Planetary Society's space
policy team about the budget battle ahead, why these cuts would be devastating, and how
you can take action before they become a part of the
official U.S. presidential budget request. Then, science editor Asa Stahl joins us to explore the
power of grassroots advocacy and the amazing things planetary society members have accomplished
through collective action. And as always, we'll check in with Bruce Betts for What's Up,
with a small celebration of Lunar Planet Vac and a look forward to this week's upcoming lunar eclipse. If you love planetary radio and want to stay
informed about the latest space discoveries, make sure you hit that subscribe button on your
favorite podcasting platform. By subscribing, you'll never miss an episode filled with new
and awe-inspiring ways to know the cosmos and our place within it.
Last week, Ars Technica reported on a proposed 25% cut to NASA's overall budget,
with a significant portion of that coming from the Science Mission Directorate, or SMD,
potentially slashing its funding by as much as 50%.
SMD oversees NASA's space and Earth science programs,
including missions that explore our solar system, deep space, astrophysics,
heliophysics and Earth's climate.
But even before that article came out, our space policy team had already gotten wind
of what was coming.
These proposed cuts are being driven by the Office of Management and Budget in the United
States, or OMD, which is responsible for setting funding priorities for the presidential budget
request.
The final budget is still being shaped, which means that there is time to influence these
decisions before they become official.
This is exactly the kind of moment the Planetary Society was built for.
To break down this situation and explain how we can take action, I'm joined by Casey Dreyer,
our chief of space policy, and Jack Corelli, our director of government relations.
Hey, Jack and Casey. our Director of Government Relations.
Hey, Jack and Casey. Hi, Sarah. Hi, Sarah. Once more. I think Jack's tone captured our
really our current mood. Yeah, this recent news about the proposed budget cuts for NASA is truly dire. So, so to start, can you give us an overview of what these proposed budget cuts are for NASA is truly dire. So to start, can you give us an overview of what these proposed
budget cuts are for NASA and specifically for the Science Mission Directorate?
So I want to just be really clear with how we frame them in case we, and it's easy to kind of
slip in and out of how we're talking about. There's a formal proposal that will come out in a few
months or even a few weeks from now, which is the president's budget request.
That is the actual White House saying to Congress,
we propose this for the US government,
and then please give us the money for our priorities.
What we have learned though, just today publicly,
is that the White House apparently is intending
within that proposal, so this is reported,
to ask for a 25% cut next year, 2026, for
NASA's overall top line. And of that 25% cut, 50% cut to NASA's all science division, right,
to help pay for that cut. 50% in one year to NASA's entire science portfolio is, I mean, it's hard to express how bad that
is because it is just historically nothing has ever come close to that amount of money
disappearing that quickly from these types of projects. So we can go into it in the deal,
but essentially what we're looking at is reports of a one year cutting NASA science activities
in half.
How did we learn about this?
Eric Berger from Ars Technica reported it
the day that we are recording this,
first week in March, 2025.
And it's coming from multiple sources
and we have our own sources within government as well
that have confirmed this to us.
So at this point, you know, it's not finalized, right?
I think that's the other important part.
This is where the thinking is.
It seems likely, but there is still time for that
to be revised before this, again,
official proposal is released.
And there are some precedents for large cuts
to NASA in the past.
Things like the moments after the Apollo program,
but you are describing this as an extinction level event
for NASA.
What programs and missions do you think are most at risk?
Well, when Apollo, we were stopping something, right?
We were no longer going to the moon.
And so we, you know, NASA shed a lot of things,
but actually during that period, NASA science went up.
It was a shift from mega missions, mega projects,
and human spaceflight to more to the spatial era,
but then also to make up for that,
investing in higher return, longer, bigger impact science missions.
This is a novel approach, right?
That there's no fundamental external motive driving this beyond,
I'd say more of an ideological desire to just spend less
of certain types of government activities.
The potential impact, so I mean, we can do the math.
So this is going to be my speculation.
And again, I'll just emphasize that.
But we can do the math.
If you were the NASA administrator or NASA,
head of NASA science, and you said,
okay, you're losing half your budget, what do you do?
You can run through that scenario.
The things that you will want to defend the most are going to be the missions in their
prime phase, right?
So something like Europa Clipper, which just flew by Mars and will not get to its destination
of Europa for another three to four years, right?
You don't wanna cancel that one
because it hasn't even had a chance to do its mission yet.
And we just spent $5 billion, right,
to build and launch it.
Missions like James Webb Space Telescope, right,
in the middle of their prime mission.
You probably wanna defend as much as you can,
any projects that are in their final stages of completion
at NASA, right, being assembled to be launched within the next year or so.
That might be like the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope,
NISAR, the joint mission with India for an Earth Observation mission,
and a handful of others.
If you delay or cut those, you actually hugely intensely increase their cost
because you
are at their peak complexity right now.
You're assembling all the pieces together and you're so close to being done and you've
already spent all the money.
Those are the two things.
Everything else basically then is on the table and has to be because you lose, again, if
you, you can just kind of put this in your own frame, right?
If you, if your boss walked in, you know, on today on Friday and something and said,
oh, hey, on Monday, your salary is getting cut in half.
Right?
Okay.
You're like, oh, how I, how am I going to live?
Because you have budgeted yourself with this expectation of at least generally within some
range of what your salary is going to be.
So okay, what do you need to survive? How
do you get, how do you get past this? So, I mean, once you have hit your very basic
fundamentals, these top two things, missions in their prime phase and in the end of their
development, everything else is uncertain. So what does that mean? Hubble Space Telescope,
New Horizons beyond Pluto, Voyager in deep, deep space, Mars Perseverance, Mars Curiosity,
our active rovers on Mars, everything even is
behaving perfectly well. If it's returning good science, if there is no actual reason to cancel
it, you may have to cancel them. Active missions getting turned off in the midst of their capabilities.
And, you know, these aren't replaceable. We don't have a shelf, you know, the US government doesn't
have a shelf of Mars rovers that we can go and just pluck one off and launch it again. That takes a decade to build some of these things. In addition,
you have the entire US science community that their research funding, funding for students,
for graduate students, for undergraduate students to participate in science missions to become
in science missions to become future PhDs, that funding source is all from NASA science.
And that's another thing that they could turn off very quickly
because, and they would, they would have to ramp that down
a significant amount.
So you would be talking about mass sudden potential layoffs
in academia, pushing students out of school
because they can no longer have their graduate
school covered by their research abilities or their grants from their advisors. And just this
broader retreat. You just do way, way, way less, right? Because there's what you ultimately pay
for with most science missions is people because there's no economic economies of scale with
science missions, right? Everyone is precisely designed to answer a specific question.
There are not, you know, a slew of these waiting to go.
These are all, you know, once you turn one of those off,
it's just done.
And I'll just add, there's no commercial alternative
to NASA science.
There's no, you can't go on Indeed
and suddenly find a bunch of, you know,
private sector planetary scientists.
This is activities that the government undertakes because it is a core function of government with
commercial partners. Commercial actors are great partners of NASA and have made certain elements
of this cheaper, but there is no private sector Mars rover sitting on
a shelf somewhere that you can replace perseverance or curiosity with.
There's no Pluto flyby mission that is just waiting in the wings at some commercial company.
These are partnerships between governments, between government and private sector, government
and research institutions.
Government is a key part of that.
Yeah.
I want to build onto that because that's such an important part here.
We have gone in the last 20 years through this astonishing rise of commercial capability in space,
particularly in the United States, but globally.
And that's amazing. I mean, that's actually incredible.
And this isn't pitting one against each other.
As Jack was saying, commercial opportunities are, they're a tool for science.
But science as an activity is an incorrect application
of requesting the private sector to do that.
Particularly things like space science, exploratory science.
Going to Europa and saying, is there life there?
You will not get money from investors to do that.
Because there isn't, right?
It almost makes it's like crazy to even say it that way
that you would even think about that.
But there's just no, you know, you can sell things
to government who would want to buy it,
but there's no endogenous expression
of scientific curiosity from the private sector
because it just, it won't make you money.
And that's the, this is where I think we have to say what are the unique
capabilities and why do we have a public sector space program like NASA to begin
with because it will do things that the private sector and the markets cannot or
will not do. That isn't to say those aren't also serving valuable things but
at the end of the day you, we have amazing new launch capability.
We have amazing satellite and communications capabilities
because of commercial partners.
But this incredible rockets,
someone has to build the thing
that they launched right into space.
And the science missions,
those are made by us.
An expression in a sense of the national commitment,
a societal commitment to curiosity,
to ambition, to working together to seek out answers to things. And that is a really noble
and inspiring and exciting thing that we do and truly unique. And to, you know, there's no back
filling this as to just emphasize what Jack is saying, there's no one waiting in the wings to
fill this gap. You know, I think the closest thing that maybe we've seen is Rocket Lab talking
about their mission to Venus. And that's a really cool project that they're doing, but
it's an exception that proves the rule, right? I just had Peter Beck on the space policy
edition the other month. And he said, like, look, this makes us no money. We are doing this because we personally think
it's really neat, but any other priority
will take precedence over finishing this project.
This is a nights and weekend project
is a hobby project basically,
which is cool again that they're still doing it,
but it's a completely different approach
than what we're talking about ascending,
breakthrough exploratory science
that pushes boundaries of human knowledge that is just not going to be replaced.
And so NASA in the United States is the place to do this,
a unique capability.
And if we give NASA less resources to work with,
we will just do less and we will walk away.
We will abandon this incredible capability
that we have spent the last 65 years building out of nothing to be able to do this.
We've grown up in a world or in a cosmos.
We've grown up taking this for granted that we can and will go to other destinations that we can peer back to the earliest parts of the universe because we know we want to know about them,
and it enriches us to learn it,
and it also gives us something back
to say that we know the cosmos that we live in better.
That is an intensely valuable thing that we're able to do.
And so to walk away from this,
you know, in a way that we believe is cavalier,
and maybe not fully understanding the benefits
that we get from this, I just think would just be a terrible loss a terrible loss it would
a loss that we would have to take decades to rebuild and this is literally
one of the moments that I think the Planetary Society was founded for Carl
Sagan and Bruce Murray and Lou Friedman they created this organization
specifically because they thought that they had to justify
this kind of science.
And I know we don't have to explain
to the people listening to the show
why this is so important.
They listen to us regularly because they know
what's important.
But I do think that there is an issue
with the broader understanding in the United States
about the value that this gives us,
not just
for scientific understanding and for personal betterment and our understanding of our place
in the universe, but there's a deep financial risk that comes with this as well.
There are many industries that are built on top of NASA and the things that we learn,
and many of the technologies that we use every day are actually the result of NASA science.
So even if we take a more pragmatic look at this
and step away from just the beautiful science
that we know is valuable,
there is so much here that can hurt us
if we take this money out of NASA.
Yeah, I mean, you look at economic impact analysis at NASA,
some that was recently done as soon as last year, showed that NASA has a three
to one return on the taxpayers investment. So for every dollar that we spend on NASA,
we get $3 back in the economy. That amounts to $75 billion. It's billion with a B in the US
economy in a single year on over 300,000 jobs.
And that's outside of the 17,000 civil servants that
work directly for NASA.
These are people that are supporting that mission
or supporting the industries that support that mission.
And so this touches not just Florida and Alabama and Texas
like in the days of Apollo, it might have been the extent of.
This touches all 50 states
and involves international partners, right? You know, we're no longer the only ones in space,
right? We are in a reality in which there are multiple spacefaring nations and spacefaring
international organizations, things like the European Space Agency, who are making great
strides and setting really ambitious goals.
Meanwhile, a cut of 50% to our science program
and a 25% cut overall is what amount
to the US surrendering future leadership in space.
Yeah, I mean, we talk about, I think, yeah,
there's partners like ESA,
I think it was really good to mention
that ESA's entire budget for everything they do
is roughly slightly larger than what NASA spends
on science right now.
So I mean, just NASA is just an order of magnitude larger
in terms of its ambitions and capabilities
than even our great partners in Europe and elsewhere.
So it's not, again, like there's no one else ready to fill this gap.
They will keep doing great science, but it's just at a much lower rate than what NASA has
been able to do.
And yes, this idea of the intrinsic and applied value of space and space science, it's incredibly
broad.
And as Jack was saying, this hits literally every state in the
union and multiple international partners, everyone everywhere, you know, this is widely distributed
where people are working. This funds again, students and educators and teachers and professionals,
scientists and engineers and technicians. this will reverberate.
The bigger picture again though too is what does it say?
I think about our society,
if we kind of willingly walk into ignorance
or abandon a commitment to seeking knowledge.
I'm very troubled in a sense
by these bigger philosophical implications.
I think why this hits me so hard,
science is a profound and fundamental activity
that is always relevant regardless of any immediate
political swing.
And I think we'll just keep emphasizing here
that this isn't a partisan critique that we're making, right?
We have seen, even in the last Trump administration,
was pretty good for space science.
This is one of the strengths of that activity, right?
It applies no matter what our immediate domestic issues are.
It's a fundamental self-justifying aspect
of why we go into space, through all the practical
and big picture things that we've talked about.
And it creates a foundational opportunity
to maintain this unifying bipartisan ongoing commitment to what
NASA does, right? And it doesn't fall into partisan traps of validation and interest.
Human spaceflight also, I think, has a foundational importance, but at times it can be adopted as a
purely symbolic activity through various kind of political whims that I think is also very troubling.
But science is a really important counterpoint to that.
And we need both of them, but the scientific consequences,
I think, again, just reverberate very deeply.
I was thinking, Sarah, about all the things that we know now
that we didn't know when my parents were born,
right before the space age.
And in a sense, being born while we have extant programs,
we kind of take that for granted, right?
But like when my parents were born,
we had no pictures of Jupiter close up.
We had no idea what Pluto looked like.
We didn't know that the universe was accelerating.
We had no idea that there was volcanoes on moons
in the outer solar system.
Like there's so many things we did not know.
We didn't even know what the earth looked like from space when my parents were born.
It is this that was a single person's lifetime.
We've gone from, again, nothing to just knowing so much and having the tools and the power.
We have the capability to learn so much more that
Again to walk away from this and to walk away from it. So
Dramatically, right? This isn't a slow step down to 50%. This is a one-year cut. There is no way to do that
gracefully, right and
so the the level of is it consequences and long-term consequences to our ability to do this and decimating the pipeline of skilled experts and the workforce that makes support for many reasons, both because of the
value of the science and because it touches every single state in the union. But do you think we're
going to see a lot of pushback against this from Congress, given the political tensions going on?
Well, so Congress still holds the purse strings, right? The Constitution lays out the powers of
each branch of government, and it is the power
of the presidency to propose a budget for the agencies within the executive branch.
But it is Congress, ultimately, that has to make the determination.
They're the ones that authorize the activities.
They're the ones who provide oversight of those activities and the ones that fund those
activities.
And the president's budget request
is the thing that kicks off the annual budget cycle.
And so again, going back to Casey's earlier point,
this is just a proposal that we have seen reported
and has been substantiated from sources
that we have within the government.
But it is by no means the formal budget request.
And so we're still months probably away
from this process playing out on Capitol Hill.
So that's why it's so important that we engage
with our legislators and representatives in Congress,
as well as the administration to try and push back
against this drastic cut.
We have allies on both sides of the hill, on the House and Senate, in both parties,
political parties, Democrats and Republicans, who have stood up for science in the past.
It was about a year ago as of release of this episode when we had 44 members of the House stand up, that's 10% of the
U.S. House of Representatives stand up and say, we want a strong science mission directorate.
And I don't see that abating and especially with science and NASA overall under threat through
these proposals, I could see this as a real opportunity, a real rallying cry for those
members of Congress, whether it's because they support it
for the purpose of scientific discovery,
which there are them,
those that care about the economic benefits,
and there's plenty of those as well,
and then those that care about
the national security implications
of what seeding the high ground in space,
whether that is missions to the moon, missions to Mars,
elsewhere in the solar system,
whether we want those scientific discoveries to happen because of NASA research that extends US soft power, right?
You can go anywhere in the world and see the NASA meatball logo on sweatshirts and baseball caps, and that's powerful.
And that brand is synonymous with national security.
And so, you know, whether it's for any of those reasons,
there are members of Congress that support this.
So you can go to planetary.org slash action
and write your member of Congress
and ask them to be a champion for science right now.
And this is the moment, right?
If you haven't written your member before, this is the moment.
If you haven't written your member before,
now is the time.
Because we're talking about this in one episode.
This news came out on one day, but this
is a potentially months-long effort
that's going to take place.
The budget cycle kicks off with this,
but the fiscal year ends September 30.
They need to pass appropriations by October 1st.
They haven't done that since 1997.
So we're gonna get continuing resolutions
and the debate over the future of funding for science
is going to continue for the next couple months.
So strap in and start now by engaging your members
so that we can build that bulwark
against disastrous cuts like this.
Yeah.
That's a good pivot if I can just jump in
on what Jack is saying.
And I apologize if I'm feeling and sounding dour.
I'm upset.
But this is obviously, we care about this so much,
and it's hard to see this singled out
for such a consequential action.
But we should pivot. I think Jack is bringing us to this good pivot. I'm like,ential action. But we should pivot,
and I think Jack is bringing us to this good pivot of like,
okay, what can we do about this?
And we're not gonna take this sitting down.
Jack and I were talking about,
you know, we're functionally ripping up our strategy
that we, you know, for our advocacy work
that we had a week ago, right?
Now that we have this news and we're,
this is a crisis that we are now facing.
And the Planetary Society, as you mentioned,
Sarah, was founded in another period of crisis
and particularly for planetary science, but NASA science
in general.
If these cuts go forward as planned,
it would be the lowest amount NASA spent on science
since 1985, so a 40-year low.
And that's roughly just a few years
before the Society was founded.
That was a fallow period for science.
We have lots of ways to push back. You know, the Planetary Society is in a much better position,
you know, with particularly with Jack, right, and the ground in Washington, DC, and
the groundwork that we've been laying to create a coalition of people who care about this,
bipartisan coalition of people who care about this. And to make the argument, right,
at the end of the day, we have people like you listening
to this on the podcast,
particularly if you're in the United States,
you have a voice in this.
We have Jack there every day.
I mean, Jack has been, I'm amazed he's still standing
because he's been running around DC all day,
every day this week.
And we have the ability to say, look, here's the consequences.
Here's the benefits of why we do this.
Here's why we should care about this.
And we will not let this go quietly. Right.
We cannot force it.
You know, we don't have millions of dollars to give away.
We are billions of dollars to spend on this.
But we have our passion.
We have our members. We have our supporters. And there
is no one else basically set up that way that is independent the way that we are that can
speak up the way we're going to speak up about this. So going to planetary.org slash action
is a starting point, right? This is what we're doing today. But this is going to be months,
if not years long response that the Planetary Society is going to lead.
And so if you feel like,
why should I write an email?
It's not gonna do anything anyway.
That's not true, but it's also just the starting point
for a longer focused directed effort.
And I really hope for those of you listening
that you'll come along with us on this
and support us any way you can,
whether it's financially, through your advocacy,
or even, you know, Sarah, you were talking about sharing what is this that we
do. And I think that's part of it, even just saying what we do here is unique. It gives
us access. It's a universally accessible path of science, right? You can just look at a
picture from Hubble Space Telescope and you can feel something about it in a way that
you don't, you know, looking or reading an equation
of quantum mechanics, right?
Everyone has this egalitarian access
to the outputs of space exploration and science.
And then beyond that, just getting used to saying
that this, we care about this,
and this is not something that the private sector
will replace, they're a tool to enable it.
But at the end of the day,
this is the unique responsibility
of a public space agency,
and we need to protect that precious and unique ability.
And then we will do everything we can going forward
for the next however long it takes
to say this is one of the most important and precious
and amazing things that we do as a species.
And we intend to do everything we can to support that.
Beautifully said, Casey.
I'll just say, if you are listening to this and you are not yet inspired to action, if
you think that a message to your legislators is going to go unheard, I have news for you
because I know a lot of congressional staff and these messages that they get about space
science and space exploration do make an impact. and these messages that they get about space science,
space exploration do make an impact.
I mean, I'm looking at our dashboard right now.
We're near, we've just went live
with our most recent advocacy action
and more than 2000 letters have been sent.
So you are part of a growing chorus of people
who support this and they will,
they will respond to your message.
They will put it into their system.
They will brief their boss, you know, the member of Congress about, hey, our constituents
care about this.
This is a function of government.
The U.S. is lucky to have a system that allows such easy access to the policymaking process.
And this is your part in that, right?
Civic action begins at home.
And sending this letter is you participating
in this process and building that relationship
with your members of Congress,
whether you agree or disagree with them
on any other number of issues,
this is something that's important to you
and therefore should be something important to them. And so writing them is that first step to a larger relationship and
to advancing our mission of expanding our knowledge of the cosmos.
Writing your legislator is a great, great first step. And we have seen these letter
writing campaigns be wildly successful. And in a, we're gonna go over some of that history
with our science editor, Asa Stahl.
But if you are deeply as passionate about this as we are,
please consider joining us in Washington, DC.
This is actually happening at a really strange moment for us
because every year we all go to Washington, DC together
and bring space advocates
from across the United States with us.
But that is only a couple
weeks away at this point. So if you have the ability to come with us, consider joining our
Day of Action because you're going to want to register as fast as possible if you want to join
us for that. We take care of organizing all your meetings, briefing you on the latest talking points
and budget numbers, giving you the tools to succeed in these meetings. And you'll be meeting with your legislators and their staff
to talk to them in person here in DC.
And what could be more fun than that?
Actively taking a part in your government
and telling them that this is something that's important to you.
And they're sitting there writing notes
so they can brief their boss and keep this in mind
when votes on the budget or discussions of NASA authorization come up later this year.
I think this will be live, right, Sarah, by the time that this publishes an extra special reason to come to the day of action or at least Washington, D.C. on March 24th.
Oh, yeah, this is something we've been working on.
Oh yeah, this is something we've been working on. And I'm very excited to share that we're gonna be doing
a Planetary Radio Live episode.
Casey and I are going to be up on stage together
with representatives from the Planetary Science Caucus,
other members from Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Lab,
and maybe even our CEO, Bill Nye, the science guy.
And we are so thankful
to Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg Center for allowing us that space.
We're gonna have a whole auditorium.
So if you guys wanna come to our live show,
we're gonna be posting up our Ventbrite listing for that.
And we would love to have you there.
If you wanna join 400 other fans of space
and talk about space in a beautiful auditorium
and see Sarah and me and others,
I imagine are less important, but Sarah and me, come on.
This will be a great opportunity to do that March 24th.
We will put the link to the tickets on this description
for the podcast today and on our website.
It's gonna be amazing.
Sarah, it'll be our first joint episode that we host.
It will be.
Oh, and my first big live show in Washington, DC.
And what a moment for it.
No pressure, but this is gonna be a lot of fun.
I'm really looking forward to it.
The whole endeavor rests on our shoulders.
But we have so much to simultaneously celebrate
and be concerned about, but again, I think it's just,
this is not something we need to give up on in advance.
And as to Jack's, as what Jack's saying,
and Sarah, what you're saying,
this is the starting point to do something
is way better than not doing anything.
And even I'll just add this, if you really just are not
the type of personality who wants to make a phone call
or go to DC or even write your member of Congress,
that's OK.
I get it, believe me.
There are other ways to help.
Even again, if you don't mind this being such a direct pitch,
just joining us as a member of the Planetary Society.
Remember, we are independent and don't have aerospace money or
government money. Right now, that's an incredible advantage,
right, that we are able to stay independent and speak our minds
clearly and forcefully about this, because we don't have to
risk government contracts or any sort of other financial issues.
What that also means, though, is that we depend on our members
to enable us to do this.
So the more members we have, the more donations we have,
the more resources we have to do this unique work
on behalf of things like space science and exploration.
So there are ways to help even just by being a member
helps us do this better.
And now is a wonderful time to join,
if for no other reason than this helps us push back
on these types of threats.
I know there's a lot on all of our shoulders,
particularly both of you,
but I'm really grateful that our members are behind us.
And I know there are people all over the world
whose lives have been changed
by everything that's been discovered
in planetary science and our exploration of the universe. And in those moments when I'm
feeling super stressed out about this, because frankly, this is a really hard situation,
I think about everybody out there who has been inspired by that, whose lives have been
made better by this science. And I know they're all with us together. So whenever I start despairing,
I just remember we're all in this together.
And now is not the moment to panic.
Now is the moment for action.
And we can actually potentially change the situation
and save NASA.
Change the world.
Well said, Sarah.
Thank you.
Absolutely could not agree more.
Well, let's do this, you guys.
We've got a lot to go forward and to work on together,
but now is our time to shine.
And this is the reason why our organization exists.
And I want everyone out there to know
that even though this is a scary situation,
you have all of us out here working every single day
to try to save the science that we love.
And we can't do it without you. And we are so grateful for you being behind us.
Thank you, Sarah.
Thank you.
Thank you. Good luck, you guys.
See you in DC.
We'll be right back after this short break.
I'm Jack Corelli, Director of Government Relations for the Planetary Society.
I'm thrilled to announce that registration is now open for the Planetary Society's flagship
advocacy event, The Day of Action.
Each year, we empower Planetary Society members from across the United States to directly
champion planetary exploration, planetary defense, and the search for life beyond Earth.
Attendees meet face-to-face with legislators and their staff in Washington, D.C. to make
the case for space exploration and show them why it matters.
Research shows that in-person constituent meetings are the most effective way to influence
our elected officials, and we need your voice.
If you believe in our mission to explore the cosmos, this is your chance to take action.
You'll receive comprehensive advocacy training from our expert space policy team, both online
and in person.
We'll handle the logistics of scheduling your meetings with your representatives, and
you'll also gain access to exclusive events and social gatherings with fellow space advocates.
This year's Day of Action
takes place on Monday, March 24th, 2025. Don't miss your opportunity to help shape the future
of space exploration. Register now at planetary.org slash day of action.
This is a really tough situation, but we do have a little bit of good news.
Since we recorded this just a few days ago, our Action Center has been used to send over
11,100 messages to U.S. legislators speaking out against these devastating cuts to NASA's
science budget.
That's fantastic news, but we still need more voices if we're going to make an impact.
If you're outside of the United States, you can help too.
If you share our forum with space fans in the United States or interact with our posts on social media, it really helps.
Every like, share, and comment helps spread the message so we can rally even more support to save NASA science.
We also learned on Monday that NASA will be closing the Office of Technology, Policy, and Strategy, the Office of the Chief Scientist, and the Diversity, Equity, Inclusion,
and Accessibility, or DEIA, branch of the Office of Diversity and Equal Opportunity.
The employees in those offices are going to be laid off.
This isn't the first time the Planetary Society has stepped up to defend space exploration
in a difficult time.
And it won't be the last.
In moments like these, public action is what makes the difference.
The power of an engaged community has saved missions before,
and it's exactly what we need now.
To discuss how collective action
has influenced space exploration and driven real change,
I'm joined by Dr. Asa Stahl, our science editor,
author of our recent article,
How the Planetary Society's Grassroots Movement
is Advancing the Exploration of Space.
Hey, Asa.
Hey, how's it going?
I mean, not great considering the news, but...
No, but also, I'm really glad that we have set aside the time
to talk about your new article.
And I swear, I didn't plan this on purpose.
This is just an article that
you wrote to help us try to celebrate the 45th anniversary of the Planetary Society and try to
highlight some of the things we've done over the existence of this organization. And somehow this
conversation just happened to land in a week when NASA's budget is once more on the line in a very
real fashion. So I wanted to ask you, grassroots activism
is at the heart of what we do here at the Planetary Society.
What makes that approach so powerful
and why does it work to influence space policy?
It's a really good question to be thinking about right now.
I think the word that's probably on all of our minds
this week is independence.
That we are in such a unique position as a
member-driven organization, that we don't take federal money, that we don't depend on it,
that the government can't lean on us, and so we can always remain independent of that.
Even journalists right now are having this problem, and all of the scientists I know,
all the people at NASA you know, are struggling right now. Regardless of what government agency you're working for,
you're concerned, your job is on the line,
you may have even gotten fired in the past couple months,
but we don't have that problem.
Our resources are unchanged by this.
If anything, they'll grow as people see what's going on
and want to support our mission.
I think grassroots means democratic.
And when we have that independence,
we can maintain that solid democratic
channel where what people really care about, they can then get behind through us.
Yeah.
Researching this article, I think was, it was kind of like what people
call it like eye bleach, you know, it was like a, it was a really nice cleansing.
I recommend anyone who hasn't read it, um, who's listening right now.
Go look it up because you want just like a little bit of good news who's listening right now, go look it up.
Because if you want just like a little bit of good news in your life right now, it's good news.
You'll see that we have saved space missions before. And when we are starting to buckle down
to maybe save all of the space missions right now, and it can feel like an impossible task
to look back and see what we've done and that we have
succeeded before is really meaningful.
And it's because we've had this grassroots approach.
We've got a long history of doing this kind of work, but things have really ramped up
since we invented the Day of Action, which first started in 2019.
And during that time, our members have had over about a thousand meetings with members
of Congress and sent literally
hundreds of thousands of letters to them.
And that is what we have been using in order to enact this real world change.
How does that kind of effort really translate into making space missions possible or saving
space missions when they're in trouble?
I think there's a lot of different ways that it happens.
One is just giving Congress people the tools
to make arguments that they may have wanted to make anyways.
Another is just making them aware of resources
that they have in their districts
that would be lost otherwise.
You know, what NASA centers are there, what grants,
what federal money is going through space exploration
into their constituencies, what jobs, what federal money is going through space exploration into their constituencies,
what jobs are at stake. But then also things like giving people who are working for these missions,
who don't really know how government appropriations work or who the decision makers are,
getting them connected with the levers of power and the people who are making these decisions
in DC, like Jack Kearley, our man on the ground in DC,
like he did with Darby Dyer, who, as I recall,
you interviewed after this victory.
I did.
We had with them because Jack sort of acted
as her ambassador, staying beside her in the Capitol
and helping her get her message out
to politicians who would decide whether or not that mission to Venus flew or not.
Yeah, Veritas has been a really fun mission for me because it's not launched yet, but these attempts
to try to make sure that this mission happened have all been during the time that I've been at
the Planetary Society and during the time that I've been on the show. So it's been really cool
getting to have that personal connection with Darby as she's been going through this and seeing how actually impactful all of this has been.
But that's just one mission. We've been doing this for a long time. What are some of the other
missions that our grassroots movements have actually helped save or get off the ground?
Well, you got to say you're up a clipper. Oh, yeah. And you got to say New Horizons. New Horizons,
I think we get counts as like five missions maybe that we helped save like it just kept on
Almost getting canceled or getting canceled and then we kept on bringing it back. It's like the Frankenstein of
Of space missions which is kind of fitting I feel like for a mission to Pluto
The one mission that I did research for for this article was Dawn, which yeah, we had a major
role in this, but I don't think we talk about it much, not nearly as much as New Horizons or
Europa Clipper. And then there's stuff that's further back in history too, right? Like the
fact that Carl Sagan was advocating for Cassini way before that ever happened. So you can really
dig deep back
and find out some pretty incredible things.
And it's funny that you mentioned that, you know,
Veritas was something that you were sort of there
for all the advocacy, you got to watch it happen.
So all that happened right before I joined
the Planetary Society.
So I didn't really, I knew that we had done something,
but I didn't know what.
And researching this article was for me,
this awesome way of getting to know all of what
we have done and how that's worked. And the people who have gotten involved, who have backed us this
like incredibly star-studded roster of incredible human beings have gone behind our mission. I
recommend also if anyone is listening who is a new member, who maybe hasn't been around since, I
don't know, before five years ago, this article is a new member who maybe hasn't been around since I don't know before five years ago
This article is a good summary of everything that came before that you would never we you know
We we like to talk about it. We like to try and go back to our history sometimes
But there's so much and carl sagan knew so many cool people
That yeah, there's a lot to go back through
I already knew that a lot of these people were into space,
but it wasn't until I was working at the Planetary Society
that I knew that they had been working
with the Planetary Society to accomplish their goals.
And that's a very different framing,
because I think there's so much passion,
not just among scientists and professionals in the field,
but also among everyday people and celebrities.
And I'm not sure how they would be able to advocate for space as effectively without having us here in order to help funnel
that passion into something greater.
Yeah, totally. I mean, I collected some pretty cool names here. You're talking, yeah, I mean,
John Rhys Davies is on our board, right? We've got Arthur C. Clarke, Stephen Jay Gould,
Ray Bradbury, Isaac Asimov, Paul Newman,
Johnny Carson, Steven Spielberg.
Those are mostly sci-fi authors, right?
Or people related to films.
But then there's also like the first woman
to be secretary of education in American history.
She was on our advisory council.
We have multiple senators.
We have so many astronauts that
it's actually ridiculous. I tried to like figure out a way to put it all together. And
I was like, okay, we have three Apollo astronauts, the first American woman in space, the first
Canadian space, the first Japanese government astronaut, and 27 shuttle flights worth of
experience has been on our board of directors or our advisory council.
That's crazy. That really is. But you know, it speaks to the diversity of people that this touches.
I think that's part of the power of space. Like we're not just doing this for us personally,
although we love space, or even for just the people that work within the space field.
love space, or even for just the people that work within the space field. Why do you think that this reaches such a diverse audience? Well, it's universal, right? I mean, we all have the night
sky. It's the sort of gateway to I think loving science in general. I always talk about astronomy
is like my gateway drug to science. True. But yeah, as to how it appeals to people, I mean,
I think it's just fundamentally,
it's like something at the core of what it means to be human. And it's sad how little
known it is given how much as soon as people hear about it or interact with it in any little
bit, they tend to get into it and love it. They just need that initial spark. And if
we just got more of that out there, which we try to do all the time, then, yeah, I
think it catches a wildfire pretty fast.
I always felt when I was learning about science
and trying to talk with my friends, or even
when I was going through getting my undergraduate degree,
that I felt like I didn't have as much community as I
wanted around the subject.
I was so fired up about just all the beautiful things I was learning,
but it was really hard to find that group of people who were my people who I could connect with.
I think that's another really powerful thing that we've done over the last 45 years,
is bring communities together and arrange these in-person meeting events
for everyone to get together and celebrate these things and really
feel that community that connects us across all nations.
Yeah, I wish I'd known about Planetary Society when I was in school.
I had no idea.
Same.
Because, yeah, I was looking for exactly that too.
I mean, you know, I was surrounded by nerds, which was great,
but there's a specific kind of nerd who wants to share their nerdness
and what they love about the world and learning about it with others,
and not just kind of just dig down into it,
you know, and do their research or whatever.
And so, yeah, I also learned about some pretty cool events
doing research for this article that I had no idea we did.
You know, I knew about like Planet Fest
and that we'd done a bunch of those to celebrate,
you know, the arrivals of missions at other worlds
and things like that.
I knew we've done various
anniversary celebrations like every five years, like we're having this year for the 45th,
and we had like light celebrations, but I have no idea about the Planetary Radio Lives. That's cool.
SONIA DARA-MURPHY Yeah, and this is going to be my first open to the public Planetary Radio
Live coming up at our Day of Action. I've managed to do some other live shows,
but this is the first time I get to step into this role,
and it's been really cool working with Matt Kaplan,
who did all those shows in various places around the world
to share Planetary Radio with a live audience.
So this is a new experience for me,
and I'm really excited for it.
That's awesome. You're gonna kill it.
Oh, I hope so.
It's so much fun doing these kinds of live shows
in the past, but we're going to have an auditorium
where 400 people can come and be there in person.
And that's a great starting point,
but who knows how many people we'll get to see
in the future through these shows.
So, you know, if anybody out there wants to see one of these
in your area, let us know,
because we'd love to hear how these things impact your lives
and how we
can help you share science with other people.
Yeah, absolutely.
And there's so there's the I think there's two sides to it too.
Also, right, there's the bringing science and what we do to everyone.
And then there's helping people who are working in science bring what they do to each other
or to everyone else.
And for that, there's all sorts of stuff that I didn't know we did. We've sponsored so many
conferences. We have put on lots of conferences. I know that last year since I joined, we put on
the Search for Life Symposium and brought world-class experts together around that topic
so that they could learn from each other. And they did. And it was really cool to see where we're forwarding this science
in a really direct way.
Uh, but then there's, there was all sorts of stuff in our history around.
I think we co-sponsored every single planetary defense conference in history.
Everything, lots of conferences about like humans orbiting Mars or going to Mars.
We did a lot of things around like, Soviet and American
reproachment during the Cold War, where we like recruited Apollo astronauts to
come to the conference and like made it a bigger deal. And lots of stuff about
like space education. It's pretty wild.
I also love all the weird partnerships we've had. Like you wouldn't think, you
know, space plus Lego or, you know, space plus
National Park Service. But we've been able to make these connections that we can
share space with people in other ways. And I always love seeing those artifacts
around the office are cute little Lego figures and things like that.
Yeah, totally. I had no idea about Red Rover goes to Mars. It makes perfect
sense. We should do more with toy companies, right? Like astronomy is so kid friendly.
And I feel like so many toys are about space, like it's such a natural fit.
And so having something like Red Rover goes to Mars, where these kids are building little
Lego rovers and they're like tele-operating them and bringing little Lego figures around
to different places and stuff like that.
I know Planetary Radio worked with that to some extent, didn't it?
Yeah.
You're part of it.
Yeah, we did a whole set of shows for them early on.
I discovered a lot of that when I was looking through the history of the show
when I first began.
I'd listened to a lot of the more recent episodes,
but going all the way back to the beginning
and listening to the way that we spoke with those kids
and tried to share their stories, it was beautiful.
Yeah, and then those kids grow up
and they're amazing scientists and it's bananas.
Right, I had Abby Freeman on the show just last year
who was part of that program.
Yeah, incredible.
And then also Courtney Dressing,
who was part of that Search for Life symposium
we put on last year.
And she is a world-renowned astronomer.
I knew her name back when I was an undergraduate student.
And so to see that, that was part
of what built up her passion for space is so cool.
We've got so much stuff in our history that I'm sure the two
of us could talk about this for episodes.
And we're all reflecting on this together
at this moment in time, not just for our 45th anniversary,
but because we are uniquely positioned to try to help save NASA in this moment of potential crisis.
It's not a full blown crisis yet. It's not the official budget yet.
But that's why this is so opportune, because this is the moment when we can enact genuine change.
And as we've been having these conversations, because this is the moment when we can enact genuine change. And as we've been having these conversations,
because this is a difficult situation,
just this morning, a lot of our staff got together
to have a meeting, and together we were reflecting
on why space really matters to us.
And I think you said some really beautiful
and poignant things about why space matters to you
and why you think it is so important for humanity
in general and why we do this is so important for humanity in general
and why we do this job.
So would you mind sharing a little bit of what you said?
Sure, yeah. It was...
I feel like we gave a really good mix as a staff of different reasons.
Some people it was very personal and emotional.
My answer was a bit more philosophical and abstract,
but I do think that it's true that
in general there's meaning to be had in exploring and in seeking truth fundamentally.
And there is perhaps no greater way we have ever sought out the truth or explored it than
through space, through trying to understand and explore space and other worlds in the
search for life.
And this just ties into, I think, a general truth about life,
that meaning and happiness in life
comes from unfolding your potential
and spending the abilities you have
and in doing what's hard, not just what's easy.
And if you extend that philosophy to humanity as a whole,
that means exploration.
That means, you know, like that's why Kennedy's speech
of like, we go to the because it's not because it's easy
But it because it's hard like it rings true that exploration and seeking out truth is
At the core of what it means to express our humanity and without it. We we can't truly be ourselves
It would be like if we never created art again. We just can't be human and not do this thing
And it's beautiful that we've taken that thing, that exploration beyond just what's over
the next hill, beyond over what's within ourselves, but now to the worlds beyond ourselves
and to the distant reaches of the universe. I just think about all the people throughout all
of human history who would have loved to be here in this moment in time and to know what we know.
And to think about all the people in the future who will know more than us who will look back at this time and think
Wow, there's so much ahead of them, right if we want to get there
We're gonna have to work together in order to accomplish it
Yeah, I think I have an extra answer. Also. That's a little bit less philosophical and more
extra answer also that's a little bit less philosophical and more simplistic, which is,
I think it's easy to dismiss what we have to gain from space exploration when you're content with what we know already. But the more you learn about what we know already, the more you realize we
don't know anything. Like what is actually going on in the universe? What are we doing here? What
is space? What is happening
right now? You know? And we don't know. And it's beautiful and wonderful to not know,
but only to the extent that we can pursue the truth. And so it makes for a unique opportunity
that, yeah, like you say, more than ever today, historically, we have a chance to pursue.
Well, thanks for writing all this together and for sharing part of the history of the Planetary
Society, some of which the two of us have been here for
and much of which was before our time.
But who knows what articles they'll
be writing 45 years from now about the things
that our members accomplished in this time.
Yeah, I mean, I think we can already
say so much that before I go, I want to make sure
that you take the moment to tout planetary radio and its reach, because we found out
some pretty cool stuff when we were researching this article, right?
We actually did.
And this was something that I did not know.
I was looking through the metrics.
And it turns out we can officially say that planetary radio has reached every nation on Earth.
Even the ones you wouldn't expect. The island nations, the places where it's really difficult
to get information, war-torn regions, everywhere on this planet has been reached even just in the
last three years. That is absolutely spectacular. We can actually say we're a truly planetary radio.
Matthew 20.00 Incredible. actually say we're a truly planetary radio. It's incredible. It's amazing. Thanks for doing this and I'm looking forward to being with you at the 45th
Anniversary Gala and to see all the co-workers together and here's to the next 45 years of all
the things we can accomplish together.
Yeah, see you in 2070.
Oh man, we can do this. Thanks Asa.
Thank you.
With everything going on right now, it's a powerful reminder of why the Planetary Society was founded 45 years ago.
To stand up for space exploration and give the public a voice in shaping its future.
As we continue that fight, we also want to take a moment to celebrate how far we've come.
On April 5th, 2025, we're hosting a very special anniversary event aboard the historic RMS Queen
Mary in Long Beach, California, our Cosmic Shores Gala. It's going to be a beautiful night,
and I'd love for you to join me and my colleagues. Bill Nye is going to be there,
as well as our board member Robert Picardo, who you may know from Star Trek Voyager.
We'll have other special guests as well, as we gather together to reflect on our legacy
and look ahead to the future of space exploration.
You can get your tickets now at planetary.org slash anniversary.
Now for a little more good news, we turn to Dr. Bruce Betts, our chief scientist for What's
Up.
PlanetVac, which is
a planetary society supported technology built by Honeybee Robotics, is now officially on the moon.
Hey Bruce! Hey Sarah, hi there, hey there, hi there, oh there, hey there. Man, it has been a weird week,
you know, we clearly have some work to get done when it comes to funding NASA, but in
a totally different subject, there have been a lot of really great moon missions that have
happened recently. And we got to talk a little bit last week about the fact that one of the
Planetary Society projects is on board. But since you're our chief scientist, I wanted
to give you a chance to share a little bit about what happened with our Lunar Planet VAC.
Lunar Planet VAC, it's on the surface of the Moon with Firefly's Blue Ghost Lander.
It has sampled the surface. It is a project we've been involved with for a very long time.
Our members supported it at two key points in its development and moving forward, one in a laboratory setting and one
in a Earth, launch it on a rocket and have it come back down. Anyway, the exciting thing
is it went from those development phases where we got them through to the next stage, and
then they were able to get NASA funding to being on the moon and picking up actual lunar regolith using its
planetary vacuum, but it actually forces air down, not air, but nitrogen, helium, whatever
they want to take with them, and it pushes the sample into the sample container, or it can be
pushed into an instrument, or it can be for sample return. But this is NASA chose it as a technology
demonstration to demonstrate it works on the moon, works on a spacecraft. It does.
We'll get more information for you in the coming days and weeks. I'm really
glad that of the missions that have gone to the moon it was on this one because
landing on the moon is really difficult.
And we've seen with many of these lunar landers, them tip sideways, including the IM-2 lander,
but Blue Ghost nailed it.
So we just happened to have our tech demo on one that can actually do the science.
So I'm very grateful.
Yes, that worked out very, very well. And congratulations to Honeybee Robotics
and their success with this. It's their, their project. And this is great.
Yeah, it's fantastic. And then other lunar news, we've got a lunar eclipse coming up on either
March 13 or 14 in the Americas, depending on where you live. Can you tell us a little about it?
Yes, if you're in the Americas, you're fortunate
because that's where you will be able to see
a total lunar eclipse as the moon enters the Earth's shadow.
And they will also be visible as it sets
in kind of Western Europe.
But it's pretty well centered this time around
on the Americas.
It depends on your time zone, actually what exact time it will be at,
but it will be at maximum eclipse at roughly 626 UT or GMT.
And so that would put it just about 1130 for us in Pacific time and about 230 for those on Eastern time,
assuming you've gone to daylight savings time.
Daylight savings time is messing up my brain
this whole week, but you know,
I'll put that on my calendar
because any excuse to go see an eclipse is always a good one,
but I'm hoping I can get my neighbors to come out.
It'll take an hour and a half from when it enters the dark part of the shadow, the umbra,
roughly an hour and a half or hour and 20 minutes to get to the maximum, another hour
and 15 to 20 minutes to get out of the shadow.
So it's unlike a total solar eclipse, there's not a quick time you have to look at it.
You've got a broad range and you've also got the
entering the shadow and leaving the shadow and depending on the Earth's atmosphere will depend
on how reddish it gets from all the the global sunsets and sunrises as the red light makes it
through the Earth's atmosphere and gets bent and makes it to the moon and then unfortunately
gets called the blood moon.
Oh man, I have so many friends that have opinions about whether or not you call it a blood moon.
It's so funny.
Yeah, I kind of do too, but I mentioned it
because it's so common in the press,
but it just seemed, I don't know,
I'm a fan of blood, keeps us alive,
but I really don't wanna mix it with my astronomy.
Truth.
Well, all right.
What's our random space fact this week?
Recently they've turned off some more Voyager instruments to the power decreases.
Let's talk about the Voyager RTGs, Radioisotopic
Thermoelectric Generators. They are plutonium-238 and there are three of them on each of the Voyager
spacecraft. At launch, they produced about 470 watts of power. When they take the heat and they
have thermocouples that change it into electricity, But over the very, very, very long pushing up against 50 years, not quite yet, in space,
the plutonium, its output goes down as half-life of like 87, 88 years.
And the thermocouples tend to degrade.
So started 470, now they're in kind
of the 210 to 220 watt range. So in order to keep some of the instruments still
working, they've gradually been shutting down other instruments over
time and the power will continue to decrease and our little friends will go
quiet at some point. But they have not yet and it is amazing.
Really though, I don't know if I'm emotionally prepared
for the days that we actually have to turn those off.
You know, Voyager 1 is pushing 24 hour light time
to one way, so far away that the radio signal takes
23 to 24 hours right now.
So you send a signal and you come back two days later
and you get a signal back, you know.
That's so long.
It's kinda wild.
It is really wild.
And man, talking with Casey about all of these budget issues,
the idea that Voyager is one of the missions
that could be on the chopping block is upsetting for me.
It's out there, it's doing fantastic work. I know that
it's far beyond its lifetime of, you know, its regular science goals, but it's out there taking
measurements on the interstellar medium. And, you know, those two spacecraft are the only ones that
we've ever had weave basically the main part of our solar system. So I want to see what happens
with those. We've got to do what we can to make sure that that funding stays in place so that we can keep Voyager and all those other missions we love functioning.
So I'm going to I'm just this is my whole mission for as long as we need it to be.
Now, it's pretty compelling when you're the only two spacecraft functioning in interstellar space, when you're the only two spacecraft in interstellar space in terms
of the electromagnetic and particle environment.
They're still under solar gravitational influence and will be for a long time, but they will
keep going and never come back.
So keep them going as long as we can.
Right.
Just in case, you know, having a little part of our human
civilization out there wandering among the stars would make me feel real happy. And no matter what
happens, they're going to be going whether or not we're continuing on the mission on our side. So
it'll be all right. Okay. There you heard it, everyone. Sarah says it'll be all right.
So I'm not panicking. I might be. It's okay. This is fine. It be all right. So I'm not panicking.
I might be. It's okay. This is fine.
It's all good. It's not. But we'll try to make it that way. And with the help of our members, we will get there.
All right. night sky and think about Voyager spacecraft so, so very far away, just partying down and
having a good time. Thank you and good night.
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