years chanting lock her up about hillary clinton because of some deleted emails or quote unquote wiping a surveyor, they re now out there defending a man who clearly did not take the national security of the united states to heart. i will be up to doj whether that reaches the level of indictment. but this is disgusting, in my mind. and a reaction to president biden s promise to cancel some student debt for low, middle income borrowers and to critics who say it doesn t go far enough. there are a lot of people hurting announce cider right now, people are getting crushed with inflation, crushed with gas prices, food prices and all the rest. i think a targeted approach right now really does send the wrong message, there s a lot of people out there making 30, 40 grand a year that didn t go to college. they need help as well. the criticism is correct, but the answer is not to deny help two people who cannot deal with these horrendous student debts. the answer is that, maybe j
somebody s been working on this for 20 years. one of the scientific engineers. let s talk about cost. this has to be pretty expensive. it. is i m gonna show you the cost compared to some other programs. u.s. dollars around the time. we have the apollo mission, of course, we know that first put him on the moon. the space shuttle, that get 134 flights added to that. so artemis compared, it does not seem that high. but actually the inspector general says that 93 million are going to burn through that pretty quickly. at some point they will need more allocation for congress. absolutely. whether we can hear about china and announcing an exploration themselves, in the space race. it is russia who is now going to be working with china for their space station. china, these are all their lofty goals here, alex. they want to become, really, a global space power here. and we also know that our own nasa administrator wanted to watch which one is doing. for example, there is a rover
agent of the potential damage resulting from donald trump s handling of the documents stored at mar-a-lago. now the intelligence community is pledging to get right to the bottom of it. and illiterate team by nbc news, the director of national intelligence errol haines, former chairs of the intelligence committee says that her office will lead an interview a well-of and documents at mar-a-lago. assessing the potential risks of national security. right now let s bring in nasa, former special agent the counterintelligence division of the fbi. also a senior lecturer at the yale jackson school of global affairs. and harry lippman, a former deputy assistant attorney general former u.s. attorney and host of the talking heads podcast. welcome to. both asha, you first. here what is your reaction to the decision by the intel community to first of all even conduct the damage assessment? why would be important? i m not surprised at all.
early as 2025. msnbc s lindsey reiser is joining me here in the studio. it is huge, it is a first time nasa has gone back in 50 years, tell us more about this. mission you mentioned some of the lofty goals, nasa is also trying to build a lunar camp up on the moon in the south pole, and also build an orbiting base camp around the moon. let s go ahead and start with ryan. let s take a look at the rendering about this launch is going to look like. it raised nearly 6 million pounds in stands 32 stories tall. those boosters, each one generates more thrust than 14 commercial jumbo airliners. the sentience consume enough propellant to drain a sorting pool in a mere minutes. an hour to half after the launch the ryan capsule is on a lunar trajectory, and ryan is going to go into distant retrograde around the moon, traveling nearly 1000 times farther than the distance between the international space station and earth. the return is a big task, is a
to see battleground tracker on today, showing that republicans are likely to pick up six fewer seats and they got just a month ago. still enough for, majority the but the momentum for the moment is on the democrat side. peter, baker thank you so much. can we talk to you about the disruptor. let s keep that look. at thank. you meanwhile, countdown to blast. of nasa poised to launch the most powerful rocket ever on a journey like no other. that is next. that is next today, we re expecting as many as half 1 million spectators descend on the space coast. they re in. florida for this huge rocket launch. the biggest ever for nasa. 8.8 million pounds of thrust, that is more powerful than the southern five rockets that live to the apollo astronauts up to the moon. now, nasa is going back to the moon, the moon base, and then mars. nd the mars