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NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman
Returning to the Moon will prepare us for the grand journey to Mars. If we get this right, we’ll see the Stars and Stripes on the Red Planet in our lifetimes.🇺🇸 Thank you @C__Herridge for having me on.
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🌋🌋 Deep₿lueCrypto 🌋🌋
@NASAAdmin @elonmusk @C__Herridge Future of humanity looks bright
🌋🌋 Deep₿lueCrypto 🌋🌋@DeepBlueCrypto

FUTURE LOOKS BRIGHT WITH SPACE EXPLORATION, MOON MISSIONS, MARS MISSIONS, SPACE ENERGY GRIDS, SPACE DATA CENTERS etc. By the mid-2040s, humanity's foothold on the Moon has transformed from tentative outposts into thriving metropolises, powered by SpaceX's Starship fleets that shuttle resources and personnel with the regularity of transatlantic flights. Vast lunar bases, sprawling across craters like Shackleton and Malapert, serve as hubs for mining helium-3 and rare earth elements, fueling fusion reactors back on Earth and enabling self-sustaining habitats with 3D-printed domes and hydroponic farms. These settlements aren't just scientific enclaves; they're economic powerhouses, where private enterprises lease land from U.S.-backed alliances to conduct zero-gravity manufacturing, producing flawless pharmaceuticals and advanced alloys impossible on Earth. As SpaceX's dominance ensures seamless logistics, the Moon becomes the gateway to the stars, with tourists gazing at Earthrise from luxury resorts while robots assemble massive solar arrays to beam unlimited energy to our planet. Venturing further, Mars emerges as the ultimate frontier by 2050, with SpaceX's reusable megaships establishing interconnected colonies that house millions in pressurized cities beneath transparent biodomes. Red Planet outposts like Olympus City leverage in-situ resource utilization to extract water from ice caps and fabricate habitats from regolith, creating a new society where AI-managed greenhouses yield bountiful harvests and underground tunnels connect research labs to industrial zones. The U.S., through strategic partnerships with SpaceX, leads in terraforming initiatives, deploying fleets of atmospheric processors to thicken the thin Martian air, fostering an ecosystem where humans adapt with genetic enhancements for lower gravity. This monopolistic grip accelerates innovation, turning Mars into a backup for civilization—data vaults preserving Earth's knowledge, experimental fusion plants providing inexhaustible power, and even off-world economies trading in digital currencies mined from asteroid belts. In the vast expanse of orbit and beyond, by 2060, space becomes the ultimate infrastructure for humanity's insatiable demands, with colossal energy farms orbiting Earth like glittering necklaces, capturing solar power unfiltered by atmosphere and wirelessly transmitting it to power entire continents. SpaceX's Starlink constellation evolves into a neural network of data centers floating in Lagrange points, where quantum computers process exabytes of information in the cold vacuum, free from earthly heat constraints and enabling real-time global AI governance. These orbital facilities, guarded by autonomous drones and serviced by robotic swarms, host everything from virtual reality worlds to genetic archives, ensuring data sovereignty for the U.S. amid geopolitical shifts. As SpaceX's unparalleled launch cadence floods the cosmos with infrastructure, space transforms from a void into a vibrant extension of human ambition, where energy is abundant, computation infinite, and the boundaries of possibility dissolve into the stars.

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Roberto De Moraes
Roberto De Moraes@rde_moraes·
@NASAAdmin @C__Herridge Correct! "If we get this right"! So, let's not forget that Moon's infrastructure starts with ground investigations for engineering purposes, not science.
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Radial Curiosity
Radial Curiosity@RadialCuriosity·
@NASAAdmin @C__Herridge @grok, if NASA has already landed on the moon in the past, then why are they preparing this much even for non-human flights? Can you tell us the truth?
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Will Cutlip
Will Cutlip@WillECutlip·
@NASAAdmin @C__Herridge Thoughts on how we maintain momentum across multiple administrations? The magnitude of this endeavor is such that we can't afford to take our eye off the ball for even a month if we want to achieve the "our lifetimes" goal.
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Sean Snyder 🍻
Sean Snyder 🍻@wolfsny66·
@NASAAdmin @C__Herridge Bull. Shit. No one is going to Mars. And no base/launching point will get built on the moon. That said, if, in fact you can make it happen, who's paying for it? Oh right. The people who can't afford every day amenities. You're just a trump stooge.
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Lavelle Smith
Lavelle Smith@KASmith1978·
@NASAAdmin @C__Herridge Hilarious that you're still pushing the "moon landing" hoax.....just be honest, we never went. It's just absurd for you to keep a straight face.
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global apocalypse
global apocalypse@marspasenger·
@NASAAdmin @C__Herridge These are pleasant, hopeful dreams. However, for many people, these endeavors are perceived as almost as commonplace as Apollo 13. I hope its fate doesn't truly resemble Apollo 13; because if such a fiasco occurs, our adventure to the Moon could end before it even begins.
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Lynn Allen (shorty)
Lynn Allen (shorty)@AllenDxBlRed·
@NASAAdmin @elonmusk @C__Herridge PS Don’t forget the live cameras at based station so we can all watch from earth! Perhaps then we will be watching Moon to Mars Live 2 4 7. I mean tune in any time 2 4 7 exciting!
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Spongerob
Spongerob@spongerob72·
@NASAAdmin @C__Herridge I love how much you are communicating on the plans. The future space economy sits with you.
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180A7THSFG
180A7THSFG@180A7THSFG·
@NASAAdmin @C__Herridge Ha! The Boeing Starliner is now how far behind schedule? It's a money pit and NASA, for sake of pride, keeps throwing money into it. Switch over to Space X and learn how to build space capsules again...
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Space C
Space C@Space3025·
@NASAAdmin @C__Herridge What is your opinion on a SSTO (Single-Stage-To-Orbit) compared to a rocket for the moon trip?
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Larry chavis
Larry chavis@LarryG_Chavis·
@NASAAdmin @elonmusk @C__Herridge Will we be able to get the people on earth to respect each other before we do that. we gotta clean America up, Trump’s gotta finish shutting down evil around the world, then we can think about fighting over another planet.
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Dale Johnston
Dale Johnston@DaleNwcc·
@NASAAdmin @elonmusk @C__Herridge Who fucking cares about mars, is an unlivable planet with toxic air and no viable resources…like water. These clowns. How about we stop bombing this planet!?
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Harley
Harley@ingenuityrover1·
@NASAAdmin @C__Herridge The stars and stripes will get to Mars eventually but it may not be the first flag planted in the ground. You might get there sooner with international cooperation and a few other national flags beside yours. Dare mighty things…together. Per ardua ad Astra.
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Olivier Vortex
Olivier Vortex@vortex_nav·
@NASAAdmin @C__Herridge The Moon is the essential stepping stone. Without commercial partners slashing launch costs, Mars stays economically out of reach. Public-private synergy is what makes this realistic. 🚀
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Rory
Rory@Rorywrite·
I see where she's coming from but I want to comment on her question. Of course we all want to see great things during our own lifetimes, but we don't strive towards the future for our own good, we do it for posterity, for the species as a whole, to take on something bigger than ourselves
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CFE1001
CFE1001@CFE1001·
@NASAAdmin @C__Herridge As Neil Armstrong said on stepping on the Moon in 1969: "That's one small step for man; one giant leap for mankind". When we step on Mars and plant our flag, let’s make it another giant leap for all humanity. Let’s not take our terrestrial differences and conflicts to the Cosmos!
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TwoBits
TwoBits@JMO4591·
@NASAAdmin @C__Herridge I am praying that NASA get's it right for the sake of the nation, the astronauts and for humanity.
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