The Moon is calling again — but one veteran astronaut is sounding an alarm. As Artemis II streaks toward history, Charles Camarda, a man who flew after the Columbia disaster, is haunted by what he saw inside NASA. He praises the brave crew, yet fears the agency’s culture, its aging technology… and what could hap…
As Artemis II pushes humanity farther from Earth than ever before, Charles Camarda’s warning cuts through the celebration. He remembers the foam that shattered Columbia, but even more vividly, the mindset that allowed danger to be minimized, questions to be softened, dissent to be inconvenient. To him, the true threat isn’t only hardware; it’s complacency wrapped in confidence, buried under bureaucracy.
Yet his concern is also a kind of love letter. Camarda believes the same bold, research-driven spirit that powered Apollo can still be reclaimed. He points to the aging technology on SLS and the toilet glitch on Orion not as reasons to mock the mission, but as reminders that spaceflight is unforgiving and progress is never automatic. For the fo