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Cal Thomas: What do Artemis II and socialism have in common?

Cal Thomas, Tribune Content Agency on

Watching the enthusiasm, especially among people younger than me, over the Artemis II mission around the moon, recalled that the last men to land on the lunar surface did so in December 1972. Two generations have been born since then and for them the excitement of a powerful rocket and the danger involved in such a mission is something new.

This is about to come true with socialism as it is being imposed in New York City by Major Zohran Mamdani, its longtime American “prophet,” Senator Bernie Sanders (D-VT) and others in and out of Congress. Many younger people who voted for Mamdani have no idea what socialism looks and feels like. They weren’t around for the Cold War. They never had to live under socialism. It sounds so “fair,” the distribution of wealth to others who have not earned it; wealth that was created by capitalism which in their schools and among their Instagram-using friends they have come to hate, but don’t know why. Yet, for now, they still benefit from capitalism.

Most have never served in our all-volunteer military and in too many instances have been pampered by parents who allow them to live at home when their degrees in African American or w omen’s studies don’t qualify them for real jobs in an increasingly technological economy.

Younger people (and older ones for different reasons) are thrilled by the Artemis II adventure. They seem unaware of what that earlier space program did to bring Americans together in ways we haven’t seen since the terrorist attack on Sept. 11, 2001. Again, another generation has been born since that awful day.

As a young reporter in Houston, I covered the space program in the late ’60s and early ’70s. It was the product of President John F. Kennedy’s vision to send men to the moon by the end of the 1960s. Those astronauts really were “The Right Stuff,” as Tom Wolfe labeled them in a book that became a hit movie. Spending time in Mission Control, sitting in a simulator, meeting some of the astronauts, including Alan Shepard, John Glenn, Deke Slayton and Jack Lousma, and watching some of them fly to the moon was thrilling. Though the Vietnam War raged and demonstrators took to the streets to protest, the U.S. space program was a unifying force.

When Apollo 13 got in trouble (“Houston, we’ve had a problem” said Jim Lovell), the three TV networks that had become blasé after previous moon landings at first didn’t cover it. Not until an oxygen tank exploded in the service module, disabling its electrical and life-support system. Suddenly the world was again watching the drama as it did when Apollo 11 first landed men on the moon. Even Congress issued a statement calling for prayer for the safe return of the astronauts. That might not happen today.

We’re again hearing arguments against spending so much money on space missions when the economy is struggling, but we address both. We have before.

 

It is said that capitalism raises all boats. Socialism sinks them or at least prevents them from sailing much at all. People – especially younger people – who have never lived under socialism should study it and listen to or read about people who have.

As for the renewed space program, exploration is in our blood and with even newer technologies soon to come we will be able to go even further than anyone has before. Younger people: put down your phones and learn more about space and socialism.

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Readers may email Cal Thomas at tcaeditors@tribpub.com. Look for Cal Thomas’ latest book “A Watchman in the Night: What I've Seen Over 50 Years Reporting on America" (HumanixBooks).

©2026 Tribune Content Agency, LLC.


 

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