I agree with everything you said, Godfrey, except, of course, the moon is
not really "another planet.'  That does not in any measure diminish the
achievement or what it has meant.

Dan Matyola
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola


On Sat, Jul 20, 2019 at 1:21 PM Godfrey DiGiorgi <godfreydigio...@me.com>
wrote:

> And today is the day, 50 years on, that Mankind first touched another
> planet. All of us, together. OMG! The whole world watched in awe and
> wonder, and was uplifted by that fact.
>
> All the problems of the world were then as well as now, as well as for all
> the generations of history before and since. That will always be. And the
> true sadness of the Apollo missions, despite all that pushing to do this
> and creating all the technology and good stuff that it spawned which helps
> human beings live longer, be more productive, and look at the world and the
> stars around them with new insights, is that it ended and we haven't gone
> back or further yet.
>
> But, g*****n it, we managed to do something incredible. We did something
> worth writing in the history of our species that no other species we know
> has done. And all the naysayers and querulous ambivalents in the world can
> moan and whine and whinge about whether we should have or not, but it
> doesn't matter at all: We managed to do it, and it was good, and it is
> amazing, and it brought all of us worldwide together for one shining moment
> of joy and wonder.
>
> If that's not worth whatever it cost, then nothing is.
>
> G
> —
> No matter where you go, there you are.
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