Trump Aide Praises Blue Origin Team with a Twisted Compliment

Trump Aide Praises Blue Origin Team with a Twisted Compliment

A senior adviser to Trump criticized him at the all-female Blue Origin Following an instance where one member compared themselves to astronaut Alan Shepard, spaceflight continued.

Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy stated that although the women were 'brave and glamorous,' they technically fail to satisfy the criteria necessary to be classified as astronauts.

It comes after CBS Gayle King One of the team members drew parallels between herself and Shepard, who was the first American astronaut to journey into space.

He stated on X that crew members traveling to space must have shown activities during their flights that were crucial for public safety or enhanced the safety of human spaceflight.

The team that embarked on a space journey this week via Blue Origin’s automatic mission was both daring and glamorous, yet they cannot claim the title of astronauts.

'They fall short of meeting the FAA astronaut requirements.'

Among the six women who launched into space on Monday aboard Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin rocket were King and her fellow passengers, with liftoff taking place in West Texas.

Later, she mentioned that calling the 11-minute trip "a ride" was being sexist.

In the meantime, singer Katy Perry has turned into an international source of amusement due to her odd and egocentric behavior during the joyful excursion.

"I genuinely take offense that they're referring to it as just a ride," King said to TMZ.

We replicated the path taken by Alan Shepard’s mission from those times. No one referred to it as a 'ride'.

'Taking a ride seems trivial. It appears unimportant. This was indeed a genuine flight.'

King along with her network CBS has also been questioned regarding who covered the costs of the flight, amidst criticisms that it offered hundreds of millions of dollars in free publicity to Jeff Bezos and his companies.

King was accompanied by Katy Perry, Jeff Bezos' fiancée Lauren Sanchez, research scientist Amanda Nguyen, NASA scientist Aisha Bowe, and film producer Kerianne Flynn.

The The flight was celebrated as a historical milestone. As this marked the first occasion since Soviet cosmonaut Valentina Tereshkova’s mission in 1963 that an exclusively female team journeyed to space.

Footage captured within the capsule displayed the women encountering weightlessness and admiring our planet from up high.

Nevertheless, the 11-minute mission has faced criticism due to its staggering cost, concerns over its potential harm to the environment, and the outlandish and theatrical behavior exhibited by its six-member team following their return to terrestrial ground.

Even though their objectives appeared innocent, the appearance of the mission was potentially problematic. have subsequently been referred to as 'musically challenged' and 'awkward.'

Perry was captured on camera waving a daisy in front of a webcam while making an overly serious face that many viewers claimed appeared insincere.

The performance was a homage to her daughter Daisy, with her father being the actor Orlando Bloom.

Perry similarly raised the tour schedule for her impending tour, intensifying assertions that the excursion served as a promotional venture for an elite gathering of pampered stars.

As the capsule made its way back to Earth, she hummed along with the Louis Armstrong classic "What A Wonderful World."

One of the most mocked moments from Monday’s event occurred when the pop star appeared after exiting the Blue Origin capsule.

She promptly halted and raised the daisy she had been holding towards the sky prior to exiting the capsule, then dropped to her knees and kissed the earth.

Perry proceeded to speak eloquently about feeling deeply "connected to love," expressed gratitude toward a journalist who referred to her as an astronaut, and stated that their entire female voyage has consistently been about "love and belonging."

"It’s not just about performing my own music. It’s more about the shared energy within the crowd. It’s about all of us together. It’s about creating opportunities for upcoming female artists and asserting our presence and sense of belonging," she stated during a post-flight interview.

'It’s all about marveling at this incredible world around us and cherishing it. It’s all for the betterment of our planet Earth.'

Soon after, though, the public criticized Perry’s conduct as being overly dramatic and exaggerated, particularly when contrasted with NASA astronauts Sunita Williams and Butch Wilmore, who were recently marooned in space for over nine months.

A source has informed Sport.bangjo.co.id that Perry regrets making such a public spectacle of the flight.

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