We love ourselves too often and need reach out much more often. It is a social responsibility and it effects the environment also.
Overton @overton_news · Jan 11 NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman explains why President Trump is one of the MOST pro-space presidents in modern history. Isaacman says Trump understands space is about more than just exploration...it’s national security, economic power, and long-term dominance. He also confirmed plans for an American moon base. ISAACMAN: “Space certainly is a national security issue. The high ground has always mattered throughout human history.” “We have a president in President Trump who knows that and appreciates it.” “President Trump created the Space Force during his first term specifically to have a dedicated team of war fighters that are capable of protecting that ultimate high ground.” “President Trump also appreciates the peaceful exploration for science and discovery in space, that’s what he created the Artemis Program during his first term, which was committing American astronauts to return to the moon.” “And now recently he established a national space policy that says; not only will we go back to the moon but we’re going to build a moon base, were going back to stay.” “We’re going to build the infrastructure on the moon to realize its scientific, economic and national security potential and do the other things.” “The president said we have to invest in nuclear power and propulsion in space to set up for future giant leaps to Mars and beyond.” “The president said we need an orbital economy in space so that space is not perpetually funded by taxpayers and the president said we need to increase the rate of world changing science and discovery; more telescopes, more rovers on Mars and beyond.”
MOTİVASYON @derinbirneffess · Mar 27 Translated from Turkish Franz Kafka (1883-1924), who never married and had no children, encountered a girl crying in a park in Berlin when he was 40 years old because she had lost her favorite doll. The girl and Kafka searched for the doll but couldn't find it. Kafka told the girl they would meet there the next day and continue searching for the doll. The next day, when they still hadn't found the doll, Kafka gave the girl a letter "written" by the doll, and in the letter it said: "Please don't cry. I've gone on a trip to see the world. I'll write to you about my adventures." And so began a story that continued until the end of Kafka's life. During their meetings, Kafka read the girl letters carefully written inside the doll, containing its adventures and conversations, and the girl found these letters utterly charming. Finally, Kafka brought back the doll that had "returned" (he had bought a new one). The girl said, "This doesn't look like my doll at all." Kafka gave her another letter from the doll, in which it "wrote": "My travels have changed me." The little girl hugged the new doll and took it home happily. A year later, Kafka died. Years later, the girl, now grown up, found a letter inside the doll. In the tiny letter signed by Kafka, the following was written: "Everything you love is likely to be lost, but in the end, love will return in another form."
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