is expensive. you know you heard this before, we have so many problem on this planet, why do we check out other planets? what do you say to that? you have to explore. we as a human species have a burning, yearning desire to find out what is going on, it is importance, i think, this is my opinion. i think a lot share, a desire to find out what is out there, ha is on mars, what is it made of, what happened billions of years ago, only way we can do that is go there research and find out the story. brian: i know they talk about trying to get water out of the moon, there are certain things to benefit, and an important element is amount of risk, you don t have to convince someone there are risks. when something like that happens, and knowing that those ships were made here, what was it like.
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mission. i could not get here without you, i am not an astronaut and i m not about to go into space. we could arranger to get you inside, and behind the scenes. i hope so. captain scott, come out to the beach house, it has been in nasa family since 1963, with all miles and spacewalks you had, when you are at this beach house, when do you think? this is a very special place for me. i am sure as it is for every astronaut, this is where we spent last few days on earth. you understand the risk that are involved, you are mentally preparing yourself to go and saying good-bye to your loved ones. the they say it is chaotic be launchpad, yet just a few miles
a risk. but you know when you come to this business, you come to where mind set, i m not going to dwell on the risk, but i dwell on the potential reward, we do their ts because we love that challenge. we accept our risk, we don t focus on it, you focus on going forward. and accomplishing your mission. spaceflight and space travel, and space exploration is about everyone, not about one person, that is 50th anniversary of as , neil armstrong hit the nail on the head. that is what we do. you have conversations with apollo astronaut, you are in a unique fraternity. have you a don t deepening.
what is it like? it is incredible, it is a tough time, whenever you lose a spacecraft, it is hard on everyone. but space is hard. the business of getting into space and flying someone and supporting life in space, that is incredible risky, but what we do here, we try buy down that risk, check it out as are thoroughly as we can, test it as much as we can before we send any off th astronaut above. brian: you mentioned after the challenger, people to hear ronald reagan say? he said, we re going to continue, we re going to continue to explore the heavens, because this is what we need to do. we will continue our quest in space. it there will be more shuttle flights and more shuttle crews, and more volunteers and more civilians, more teachers in space. nothing ends here. brian: a new places you can few places that you can build a rocket, if i have spacex or