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on board the international space station, a japanese billionaire preparing to fly to orbit. we re seeing this rush of this new era of space tourism. no question. we re watching the crew get ready. it s called a shelter room there. we are just passing 30 minutes to launch time all these steps are key. they had to take off the little booties over your shoes. you want to keep, i would imagine, the capsule clean from dirt or dust. commander hadfield, can you explain how important these final little prep steps are because, again, space is hard, and you don t want to get anything in the way of a successful launch. i think one of the most important steps right now is bill shatner just sat down. that s a 90-year-old that just climbed multi stories. i really hope at 90 years old i m as physically able as bill is right now. i m glad he s taking a moment to catch his breath. but before bernard and i flew, we go through a quarantine. part of it is because we don t want to take diseas
AstronautsPartAstrophysicistHarvard-smithsonian-centerLaunchesMissionJourneyPeopleLotHistorySpace-tourismPhaseMinutes for the launch. the second hold on this launch lifted now. commander hadfield, i don t want to jinx anything, because other questions could come up between now and then, but this is progress. tell us the significance of that, and does it look likely that the launch will go off? whenever you see a hold that s at an even number, like 15 minutes, then you know it s a planned hold. what they were waiting for, just like for my two space shuttle launches, you have to wait for the closeout crew to get back in their vehicle and get away so that if the rocket explodes, they ll be safe. you can see the trucks pulled over on the wide concrete apron. today it took 15 minutes to do the final closeout. the important part is the clock is now ticking through 14 minutes. in 14 minutes my buddy bill, captain kirk, is about to go to
Pre-launchAnythingQuestionsCommander-hadfieldSignificanceProgressWill-holdNumberHoldSpace-shuttle15TwoConcrete apron. and why is it still dragging its feet with iaea inspectors, sometimes allowing them in, sometimes not. rick: christian, to a lot of people it sound like a familiar story and we certainly don t want to have what happened back ten years ago, when iraq was doing a lot of the same things that iran is doing now, and we went in there, looking for their nooung program, only to find that there wasn t one. how do we keep from making the same mistakes? well, it s a good point, rick. and our intelligence community failed us then, failed us now, failed to catch pakistan about to go nuclear, they weren t terribly good at catching or at least providing policy makers with good information on north korea. and its program. we spent 80 billion dollars a year, if you calculate the entire girth of the intelligence community, it completely missed arab spring. it s a part of the washington foreign policy establishment and the broader washington establishment that s failed.
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