There was a Dragon capsule docked at the ISS since September that they could have used to return to Earth if needed; they were required (and they were totally ok with it, if you read about it) to stay so that the ISS wouldn't be left without a crew
This is true. They could have come have home months ago, but it was economically more efficient to keep them up there and just wait for the next crew that flew up to switch out. This also allowed more experiments to be conducted without the absence of a science team at the station. The "stranded" talk is coming for overblown morans.
Where are they telling you this nonsense? CNN, NPR?
They were only supposed to be up there for a few days, then come back. That was the plan. Now it was a bad plan to leave the station crewless?
Your woke news bombards you with kettle logic until your brain breaks. They were "required to stay" because their craft turned out defective, not for some other reason more convenient to you
This is true. They could have come have home months ago, but it was economically more efficient to keep them up there and just wait for the next crew that flew up to switch out. This also allowed more experiments to be conducted without the absence of a science team at the station. The "stranded" talk is coming for overblown morans.
Where are they telling you this nonsense? CNN, NPR?
They were only supposed to be up there for a few days, then come back. That was the plan. Now it was a bad plan to leave the station crewless?
Your woke news bombards you with kettle logic until your brain breaks. They were "required to stay" because their craft turned out defective, not for some other reason more convenient to you
Here's a couple articles from NASA from last August that go into some more detail about it
Editor’s note: This release was updated twice on Aug. 30, 2024. First, to correct Roscosmos cosmonaut Aleksandr Gorbunov’s role as a mission specialist. It
NASA will return Boeing’s Starliner to Earth without astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams aboard the spacecraft, the agency announced Saturday. The
It would of cost $100 million dollars to get them early after and the issue with the capsule. In August 2024, NASA decided it was best to wait until the next scheduled delivery on February 2025 to have them return and the two would be a benefit to keep in space.
Literally nothing political about this and the astronauts were very experienced and understood the risks and we ok with staying.
It would of cost $100 million dollars to get them early after and the issue with the capsule. In August 2024, NASA decided it was best to wait until the next scheduled delivery on February 2025 to have them return and the two would be a benefit to keep in space.
Literally nothing political about this and the astronauts were very experienced and understood the risks and we ok with staying.
It would of cost $100 million dollars to get them early after and the issue with the capsule. In August 2024, NASA decided it was best to wait until the next scheduled delivery on February 2025 to have them return and the two would be a benefit to keep in space.
Literally nothing political about this and the astronauts were very experienced and understood the risks and we ok with staying.
Would of? Seriously? And how much is one hundred million dollars dollars?