logo
NASA Staff To Mark Moon Landing Anniversary with a Protest Against Trump

NASA Staff To Mark Moon Landing Anniversary with a Protest Against Trump

Gizmodo18-07-2025
On July 20, 1969, NASA astronaut Neil Armstrong took humankind's first steps on the Moon. And now, 56 years later, a group of NASA employees are set to mark that giant leap this weekend with a protest against the Trump administration's budget cuts to the agency.
The Goddard Engineers, Scientists, and Technicians Association (GESTA), an employee association from within NASA, plan to demonstrate on Sunday, July 20, in Washington D.C. against the cuts, which they say would effectively slice NASA's science budget in half. The group also plan to protest against NASA's current leadership, arguing that the agency has already started acting on the proposed 2026 budget with staff layoffs and contract terminations.
'We are gathering on the historically appropriate Moon Day, the anniversary of the first human to set foot on the surface of the Moon, to try and save the agency that has inspired the world,' the group wrote in a statement.
NASA is facing a $6 billion cut to its overall budget for 2026 compared to this year. Critics have argued that the funding shortfall will significantly affect the agency's biggest science missions, and potentially delay it even further from its goal of landing astronauts on the Moon this decade.
Under the proposed budget, funding for NASA's planetary science would drop from $2.7 billion to $1.9 billion, endangering dozens of active and planned missions. Among them are the iconic New Horizons probe, which in 2015 became the first mission to visit Pluto, and is still returning valuable data from deep space.
The budget would also gut the funding for the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory: In this scenario, LIGO, which facilitated the first direct observation of gravitational waves, would receive $29 million instead of $48 million, and one of its two interferometers would be shut down.
The impact could be felt further afield: The European Space Agency recently revealed that three of its missions, developed in collaboration with NASA, are at risk of being canceled, including a space-based gravitational wave observatory, LISA. A contractor at NASA responsible for some of the staff working on LISA, which has been in the works for almost three decades, informed some employees that they risked termination by the end of September, Space.com reported.
The planned protest comes after NASA began implementing a reduction in force earlier this year, closing three offices and laying off staff in compliance with the Trump administration's cost-cutting efforts. The agency also terminated $420 million in contracts.
'Current NASA leadership is already acting on the President's and [Office of Management and Budget's] proposed budget by beginning to greatly reduce the number of civil servants and contractors, which will be detrimental to the mission of this agency,' the NASA employee group wrote. 'Cuts to NASA's science budget will drastically hinder NASA's ability to produce science from current and future missions.'
One small bright spot for the agency is the passage of President Donald Trump's signature tax-and-spending measure: The law allocated about $9.9 billion extra funding to NASA to support the International Space Station, the Artemis missions, and other space exploration efforts, including potential missions to Mars.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

These Pictures Of Trump's Finished White House Rose Garden Patio Are Going Viral For All Of The Wrong Reasons
These Pictures Of Trump's Finished White House Rose Garden Patio Are Going Viral For All Of The Wrong Reasons

Yahoo

time6 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

These Pictures Of Trump's Finished White House Rose Garden Patio Are Going Viral For All Of The Wrong Reasons

As you all know by now, Donald Trump has paved over the White House Rose Garden lawn. Why? Because it's being modeled after his Mar-a-Lago property in Florida, duh. The famous garden was redesigned by Jackie Kennedy in the 1960s to add that lawn, some trees, and more flowers. That layout has remained largely unchanged, like here's a picture from the 2010s: Here's Obama on it: And then, as you may remember, Melania Trump did her own remodel of it in 2020 when she took out some trees and added in that limestone path: Well, now we've got a patio. ABC News' Chief Washington Correspondent posted pictures of the "new Rose Garden:" jonkarl/Twitter: @jonkarl As you can see, the sewer drainage is mini American flags. And it's A LOT of concrete. Perfect for those DC summers! Needless to say, people aren't big fans. "'Garden.' I do not think that word means what you think it means," one person pointed out. "Who in god's name thought this was a good idea?" another person asked. And a bunch of people are wondering what the heck is up with the hatred of grass: "Why do they hate grass?" Then you have the comparisons. This person said it looked like a food court during Covid. Another person said it looked like a drained pool at a bankrupt casino. And this person said it reminded them of an "overpriced wedding venue in New Jersey." One small detail people are pointing out is the position/design of the sewer drain, "Trump put his Presidential seal right next to a sewer drain. Feels right." "The 'Stars & Stripes' drainage seems appropriate.'" And finally, you have the people hoping the next President tears it up: "We're tearing it out and putting the roses back in beginning on January 21, 2029, right?" "The next president should rip this up and put the garden back. He really has no sense of taste, and I say this as a guy whose house is a monument to my love of kitsch and mid-century American barcaloungers." Thoughts?

Crew Dragon delivers 4 fresh crew members to International Space Station
Crew Dragon delivers 4 fresh crew members to International Space Station

CBS News

time8 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Crew Dragon delivers 4 fresh crew members to International Space Station

A SpaceX Crew Dragon capsule homed in on the International Space Station early Saturday and glided in for a problem-free docking, delivering two NASA astronauts — a Russian cosmonaut and a Japanese flier — to the outpost after a 16-hour rendezvous. Catching up from behind and below, the Crew 11 Dragon Endeavour looped up ahead of the lab complex, then to a point directly above the outpost before slowly moving straight in for a linkup at the space-facing port of the forward Harmony module at 2:27 a.m. ET as the two spacecraft orbited 264 miles above the south Pacific Ocean. Hooks and latches then engaged, pulling the Crew Dragon's nose firmly into the docking mechanism, which locked the craft in place. Umbilicals automatically connected and flight controllers began a series of leak checks to verify an airtight structural seal. "Endeavour, welcome to the International Space Station," called NASA astronaut Jonny Kim from inside the ISS. "Zena, Mike, Kimi and Oleg, we have cold drinks, hot food and hugs waiting. See you soon." "Hello space station, Crew 11 is here!" Endeavour pilot Mike Fincke, a three-flight veteran, enthusiastically replied. "And we are super excited to join Expedition 73. We will do our best to also be good stewards of our beautiful ISS during our stay. The ISS has been inhabited and crewed for almost 25 years. We look forward to celebrating with you." Nearly three hours later, after doffing their spacesuits and configuring their capsule for docked operations, Fincke, Crew 11 commander Zena Cardman, making her first flight, Japanese veteran Kimiya Yui and rookie cosmonaut Oleg Platonov floated through the forward hatch to be welcomed aboard by the space station's seven-member crew. "We are so happy to see your smiling faces," said ISS commander Takuya Onishi. "Zena, Oleg, congratulations on your first spaceflight. We are looking forward to hearing your impressions and your feelings about that. Mike and Kimiya, welcome back. Your experience will be an invaluable asset for Expedition 73." Cardman was bumped from a Crew Dragon flight last year to help NASA bring two Starliner astronauts back to Earth after problems prevented them from coming home on their own spacecraft. She was clearly thrilled to finally be aboard the space station. "This has been the absolute journey of a lifetime," she said with a broad smile. "We are so incredibly grateful to be here. Thank you so much for this warm welcome. It was such an unbelievably beautiful sight to see the space station come into our view for the first time, especially with these wonderful crewmates." With the arrival of Crew 11, four of the station's crew members — Crew 10 commander Anne McClain, pilot Nichole Ayers, Onishi and cosmonaut Kirill Peskov — will be clear to undock and return to Earth next Wednesday to close out a 145-day mission. The other three — Kim and Soyuz MS-27/73S crewmates Sergey Ryzhikov and Alexey Zubritsky — will remain aboard with Cardman and company to continue Expedition 73. Until now, long-duration crews, U.S. and Russian, have typically spent around six months in orbit. But starting with the Soyuz MS-27/73S mission, the Russians have switched to eight-month stays. NASA may follow suit with Crew 11. The Trump administration's proposed budget for fiscal 2026 would reduce NASA funding by nearly 25% while directing the agency to scale back work aboard the ISS in favor of more aggressive planning for eventual crewed missions to Mars. NASA managers are now considering lengthening crew stays and possibly reducing Dragon crews from four to three. A reduced crew would need fewer resupply missions, saving additional money. No final decisions have been made. But NASA is assessing the possibility of extending Crew 11's stay in space from six to eight months, depending on the actual funding outlook. "I can't wait to be in space, and two extra months would be a gift," Cardman said before launch. "Yes, we're baselined for six months right now, with the ability to extend that pending further analysis. For me, it would be an absolute privilege to stay for even longer."

MIKE DAVIS: Confirmation of Emil Bove a triumph of new over old
MIKE DAVIS: Confirmation of Emil Bove a triumph of new over old

Fox News

time8 minutes ago

  • Fox News

MIKE DAVIS: Confirmation of Emil Bove a triumph of new over old

The Senate's confirmation this week of President Trump's pick, Emil Bove, to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit with a razor-thin 50–49 vote was a huge win for conservatives, despite the cheap shots from Democrats and nominal Republican senators Susan Collins and Lisa Murkowski. Bove isn't just qualified, he's exceptional. He clerked for top judges and made his name as a sharp, tough prosecutor in New York. Even the left-leaning American Bar Association gave him their highest rating: "Well Qualified." That's a big deal coming from an organization that rarely plays fair with conservative nominees. So why all the pushback? Simple. Bove stood up when it mattered. When President Trump was under constant legal attack, Bove was one of the few who fought back. He played a key role in keeping the radical left from throwing Trump in prison on bogus charges. That alone made him a target for Trump-haters across the spectrum: Democrats, Never Trumpers, and the establishment legal elite. As principal associate deputy attorney general, Bove also helped stop the politically motivated prosecution of New York City Mayor Eric Adams. And he did it by standing up to out-of-control federal prosecutors in the Southern District of New York, the ones who like to pretend they run their own "sovereign district" separate from the rest of the country. Bove told them to follow orders or leave. They left. That's leadership. Some in the conservative legal world weren't thrilled with Bove's confirmation to a lifetime term, either. The Wall Street Journal recently ran a piece worrying that Bove's confirmation might make some Republican-appointed judges refuse to retire. Here's the truth: Those judges had their chance to retire during Trump's first term and didn't. That's on them, not Bove. Others breathlessly claimed Bove's confirmation marked the end of the conservative legal movement. That's nonsense. If Kamala Harris had won wthe presidency and stacked the courts with left-wing radicals, the damage would've been catastrophic. Instead, President Trump is putting solid, constitutionalist judges on the bench, judges like Emil Bove. Of course, the opposition resorted to the same tired smear tactics they always do. So-called "whistleblowers" came forward with flimsy claims. One former DOJ lawyer, Erez Reuveni, accused Bove of telling officials to ignore court orders, then turned around and signed legal documents confirming the orders were followed. On top of that, Reuveni undercut the Trump administration's immigration cases and violated attorney-client privilege. He was fired, and rightfully so. This is who the anti-Bove crowd chose as their star witness. Two more "whistleblowers" popped up just before the final vote — classic last-minute character assassination. One had no firsthand knowledge. The other's allegations were never made public by Senate Democrats. Sound familiar? It should. It's the same playbook they used against Justice Kavanaugh. Remember the ridiculous accusations, including the one about a gang-rape boat? All lies. All desperate. All failed. The Article III Project proudly fought for Bove's confirmation. This wasn't just about one seat. This was about pushing back against the old guard — the milquetoast Republicans and the liberal machine — and ushering in a new generation of bold, fearless constitutionalists. Tuesday's vote showed the old tricks don't work anymore. The left couldn't smear their way to a win. The establishment couldn't stall this one. Trump's nominee made it through. They'll keep trying to derail the president's agenda, especially when it comes to the courts. But we'll keep fighting. Because what's at stake isn't just the next judge. It's the future of the Constitution, the rule of law, and the rights of the American people. The old guard lost. America won. And this is only the beginning. Mike Davis is the founder and president of the Article III Project.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store