This is an adapted excerpt from the Aug. 11 episode of “Morning Joe.”
Former NASA astronaut Jim Lovell, commander of the harrowing Apollo 13 mission, died Thursday at the age of 97. In addition to that near-fatal 1970 mission to the moon, Lovell took part in several other spaceflights: Gemini 7, Gemini 12 and Apollo 8. He was one of the great explorers in the history of humankind.
Lovell’s Apollo missions gripped not only Americans but people around the globe. This was a time when the United States was pushing out against the boundaries, not only of space exploration, but also science, technology and medicine — daring to go places that no one in the history of humankind had ever dared to go before. It was an America, as historian Jon Meacham would say, that manifested itself “in an inclination to open our arms rather than to clench our fists.”
It was an America, as historian Jon Meacham would say, that manifested itself “in an inclination to open our arms rather than to clench our fists.”
We’re still standing on the shoulders of giants who started pushing the exploration of science, physics and technology. That’s why we live in the world we live in today — because we did open our arms, we did look to the future; instead of closing up, clenching our fists and retreating, like we seem to be doing these days.
Under Donald Trump’s administration, so many programs are being cut and slashed for no good reason at all. He has gutted funding for the National Institutes of Health, for women’s health, for Alzheimer’s, for cancer research — you could go down the list. It makes absolutely no sense, and America will become a poorer country because of it.








