For those of us old enough to remember July 20, 1969—it was a watershed moment. For the first time in history, humans set foot on the moon. The whole world watched Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin hop around the lunar surface with awe and wonder. It was genuinely breathtaking.
Fast forward 57 years and a manned lunar mission is about to happen next week—the first since 1972. If you listen carefully, you can hear the world yawning. This has got to be the worst PR effort ever by NASA.
The new Artemis program will launch on a 10-day mission carrying four astronauts around the Moon and back. Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch and Jeremy Hansen will take their Orion spacecraft farther from Earth than any previous human mission. On top of that, the crew will represent the first person of color (Glover), the first woman (Koch) and the first non-American (Canadian Hansen) to travel around the Moon. That sounds pretty historic—and yet almost no one knows anything about this spaceflight.
Sure the world today is full of wars, protests and other important events. But, trust me, the world of 1969 was not much different—maybe even worse. But back then, the entire world took a moment to recognize our common humanity on this frail blue ball. This mission deserves just as much attention.

