Milka EricVasiljevic
20.1K posts

Milka EricVasiljevic
@milka_eric
svi koji cute su saucesnici


Потврђујемо све што је Урош рекао 👇




Valjevo trenutno. Hapšenje gradjana nakon protesta. Video: valjevski zbor



Christina Koch didn’t arrive at the edge of the Moon by accident—she built her way there, piece by piece, long before anyone was watching. She grew up in North Carolina with a fascination for how things work, a curiosity that pushed her toward engineering and science when those paths still quietly filtered women out. She earned a degree in electrical engineering and physics, then went further—working in some of the most extreme environments on Earth. Antarctica. Remote research stations. Places where isolation, endurance, and precision weren’t optional—they were survival. Long before space, she was already proving she could handle it. When she joined NASA, she wasn’t stepping into a spotlight—she was stepping into years of training, discipline, and technical mastery. And in 2019, she did something no woman had ever done before: she stayed in space for 328 days. Nearly a full year aboard the International Space Station. That mission wasn’t symbolic—it was demanding, relentless, and deeply physical. She conducted experiments, maintained systems, and stepped outside the station six times for spacewalks. One of those spacewalks became historic—the first all-woman spacewalk, alongside astronaut Jessica Meir. It wasn’t planned as a headline. It was a mission that needed to be done. But it quietly marked a shift. Women weren’t just part of space exploration—they were leading it, executing it, defining it. And then came Artemis II. Christina Koch was named as a mission specialist on the first crewed lunar mission in over 50 years—a flight that will carry humans around the Moon and back. No landing, no footprints this time—but something just as powerful. She will become the first woman to travel that far from Earth, circling the Moon itself. That matters more than it sounds. Because for decades, women were excluded from early astronaut programs entirely. They had the intelligence, the discipline, the capability—but not the access. The image of space exploration was built without them. Christina Koch’s presence on Artemis II doesn’t just add a woman to that story—it changes the shape of it. She represents a generation that didn’t wait for permission. That trained, worked, endured, and stepped forward anyway. From the frozen isolation of Antarctica to nearly a year in orbit… to the vast distance between Earth and the Moon—her path isn’t just about achievement. It’s about expansion. Of possibility. Of representation. Of what the future looks like. For the first time, when humanity circles the Moon again, a woman will be there. Not watching history. Making it. © Women In World History #archaeohistories

Dragi Prijatelji znani i neznani, želim Vam sretan praznik, da ga provedete u veselju i blagostanju u krugu Vaših najmilijih i da ako Bog da, sledeće sve naše praznike proslavljamo zajedno u oslobođenoj Srbiji, DUNPovci su Vam čestitali još sinoć - mnogo su mi brzi i efikasni. Meni Bajram, prvi ujutru čestitaju moji rukometaši Dejo, Slaviša, Peđa, Đorđe... ja se trudim da uzvratim isto i za mene od tog iskrenog bratstva nema ničeg boljeg a takav je inače naš suživot u Pazaru preko 500 godina.














