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Navajo Nation Demands Delay to Private Mission Placing Human Remains on the Moon

Navajo Nation Demands Delay to Private Mission Placing Human Remains on the Moon

NASA has responded, its argument coming down to “private enterprise” vs. government

On Monday, an American company is poised to make history as the first private U.S. company to launch a mission to send a lander to the surface of the Moon.

One of the payloads include human DNA from a number of science fiction notables.

On Monday (Jan. 8), United Launch Alliance’s shiny new Vulcan Centaur rocket will launch from Kennedy Space Center in Florida carrying Astrobotic’s Peregrine lunar lander and the Celestis and Elysium memorial payloads containing human remains and DNA.

Two memorial companies, Elysium Space and Celestis, will potentially deliver a symbolic portion of remains to the surface of the moon as one of their services, with Celestis’ precious cargo of cremains and DNA riding on its Tranquility mission, the company’s second lunar flight.

A second Celestis payload will also fly on the Vulcan rocket’s Centaur upper stage to head out beyond the Earth-moon system into deep space, to establish the most remote human presence among the stars.

That Celestis Enterprise Flight will include cremated remains and/or DNA material from numerous “Star Trek” icons such as Nichelle Nichols, DeForest Kelley, James Doohan, series creator Gene Roddenberry and his wife Majel Barrett Roddenberry, “2001: A Space Odyssey’s” VFX guru, Douglas Trumbull, as well as the DNA of current ULA CEO Tory Bruno, his wife Rebecca, several former presidents of the United States, and many others.

However, representatives of the Navajo Nation have sent a letter demanding the mission be delayed, as sending the human-sourced materials would be desecrating “the sacredness of the moon.

Leaders of Navajo Nation sent a letter Dec. 21 to NASA and the U.S. Department of Transportation objecting to plans for human remains to be carried aboard the rocket in order to be laid to rest on the lunar surface. Buu Nygren, president of the Navajo Nation, requested the launch window to be delayed until tribe leaders can meet with NASA and other government leaders to discuss their concerns.

In an updated letter on Thursday, Nygren announced plans to meet Friday afternoon with the White House, USDOT and NASA.

“The sacredness of the moon is deeply embedded in the spirituality and heritage of many Indigenous cultures, including our own,” Nygren said in a statement. “The placement of human remains on the moon is a profound desecration of this celestial body revered by our people.”

There are already 96 bags of human waste on the Moon ,and it holds the remains of the founder of astrogeology famous for identifying Earth had been impacted by satellites in the past.

Gene Shoemaker was a US geologist, who studied terrestrial craters and discovered many comets and planets. When he died his ashes were transported to the Moon in a capsule on board the Lunar Prospector space probe. On the capsule, which had been specially designed to be taken to the moon, was a quote from Romeo and Juliet:

And, when he shall die,
Take him and cut him out in little stars,
And he will make the face of heaven so fine
That all the world will be in love with night,
And pay no worship to the garish sun.

Shoemaker will soon be in good company. And as I admire him as a scientist as well as the actors who brought Star Trek to life, I assert that placement on the Moon is appropriate. My claim holds no less weight than those of anyone in the Navajo nation.

The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) has responded, its argument coming down to “private enterprise.

In a pre-launch science briefing on Thursday (Jan. 4), NASA representatives addressed the controversy over the payloads containing human remains being included on the mission, noting that the mission is a private, commercial effort and that NASA has merely contracted for its scientific payloads to be transported to the moon.

“We don’t have the framework for telling them what they can and can’t fly,” said Chris Culbert, Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) program manager at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston. “The approval process doesn’t run through NASA for commercial missions.”

Culbert added that the private companies launching payloads as a part of the CLPS program “don’t have to clear those payloads” before launch. “So these are truly commercial missions, and it’s up to them to sell what they sell,” Culbert said.

Joel Kearns, deputy associate administrator for exploration at the Science Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters, acknowledged that these commercial missions could lead to further controversies.

“With these new opportunities and new ways of doing business, we recognize that some non-NASA commercial payloads can be a cause for concern to some communities,” Kearns said. “And those communities may not understand that these missions are commercial and they’re not U.S. government missions, like the ones that we’re talking about.”

If our nation stays ahead in the space race, it will be because of private enterprise. I can just imagine the woke entities scattered throughout the Biden administration putting a halt to this project because of claims of “sacred space” if this were a government project.

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Comments

ThePrimordialOrderedPair | January 7, 2024 at 4:10 pm

However, representatives of the Navajo Nation have sent a letter demanding the mission be delayed, as sending the human-sourced materials would be desecrating “the sacredness of the moon.”

Who TF do they think they are??

The Navajo Nation didn’t even have the friggin wheel until Europeans came around.

    Well, they have no i$$ue with sacredness when it comes to casino$. Odd.

      The Gentle Grizzly in reply to herm2416. | January 7, 2024 at 7:32 pm

      A variation on my thoughts about their sacred lands until they build a casino on it.

      I also recall that they have complained about light pollution preventing their dark night times on the desert. That is, until the Cabazon casino and hotel went in near Palm Springs. One entire side of the high rise hotel is a garish, flashing display of lights affecting the sky view as far away as Palm Springs itself.

      I like to call that outfit the Roulette band of the Casino Tribe.

      thalesofmiletus in reply to herm2416. | January 7, 2024 at 10:33 pm

      They’d be the first to put a casino on the moon.

        henrybowman in reply to thalesofmiletus. | January 8, 2024 at 1:40 pm

        Give them credit for exploiting white stupidity.
        If we took our head out of our * and repealed the laws outlawing casinos in most non-Indian jurisdictions, it would be tantamount to genocide. It’s pretty much the only economic niche they have left… so much so, that I’m convinced we deliberately keep it noncompetitive for them.

          If you would like to see what happens when you repeal the laws outlawing casino’s, then I would suggest you take a drive up to Montana and see what it’s like. There are “casino’s” in gas stations, restaurants, old buildings and the like. It’s stupid.

          henrybowman in reply to henrybowman. | January 12, 2024 at 4:03 pm

          Stupid people deserve entertainment, too.
          It’s no skin off my nose.
          State lotteries are a nothing but tax on stupidity, and I’m OK with those, too.

    The Navajo maintaining a separate government that creates slaves out of tribal members who are ruled over by unaccountable tribal leaders and BIA bureaucrats is a desecration of the earth.

    All tribal lands should be divvied up in equal portions to tribal members as private property, and all tribal governments converted to voluntary cultural organizations that have no power over their members.

      The Gentle Grizzly in reply to jhkrischel. | January 7, 2024 at 7:35 pm

      That’s not my downtick, but, I disagree just the same. They wanted their own nations, they got them. If the tribal slaves and their sympathizers want to rise up and rebel, let them do it, and we stay out of it 100%. They wanted freedom from The Great White Fathers in Washington, then The Great White Fathers should stay out of it.

        But we need room for the millions of their replacements!

        They don’t have “freedom” from DC, they’re dependents of the federal government.

          amatuerwrangler in reply to Sanddog. | January 8, 2024 at 11:11 am

          And look how that has worked out for them (channeling Henry Ford).

          Same for Miwocs, Piutes, etc in CA, Your local mileage may vary.

        They create three classes of people in the US – at the top, tribal leaders and BIA bureaucrats. Then, vying for bottom position, non-tribal citizens, and tribal members, both of whom have no rights against their superiors.

        If tribal members were not also US citizens, I suppose I would understand your point. Or if US citizens were never subject to the injustice of tribal leadership, I could also agree. As it stands, it was the 1934 work of a white man that pushed forward the Indian Reorganization Act, which undid work underway to give away tribal lands as private property to tribal members, to then live as equal US citizens from then on.

        Tribal members didn’t choose this slavery, it was imposed on them by whites who co-opted a select few tribal members to be slave masters.

      henrybowman in reply to jhkrischel. | January 8, 2024 at 1:42 pm

      I disagree only because that leaves a government vacuum that would be filled by… who? One of “our” governments? I wouldn’t wish that on them. Oppression, like charity, should begin at home.

    First thought: “What, they’re gonna claim the moon as Navajo?”

    Then: “Oh. That was supposed to be sarcastic.”

    Coda: Isn’t it intere$ting how the pa$t claim$ of ownership and offence alway$ mean $omebody owe$ them? And it’$ alway$ $someone doing well, in a way they never have, then or now.

    it’s never ‘Hey, we screwed up back in the day. Let us make it right.”

    Isn’t that conveeeeeeeen-ient

    Q. “Who TF do they think they are??”

    A. The Navajo Nation has joined the Woke Nation.

    Who TF do they think they are? You ask. They are an overwhelming Democrat voting block that decided to pull this stunt because they want a check from Joe.

    Last time I visited the Four Corners area it appeared the Navajos not only worship the moon, but also ’53 Chevys with no wheels up on cinder blocks.

Not surprising.

Woke progressive lefties are now tearing down statue of william penn in PA, because its not “welcoming” to descendants of tribal peoples in the state, despite that they don’t even speak their own language.

    alaskabob in reply to smooth. | January 7, 2024 at 4:24 pm

    Add to that … Penn negotiated for the land with the Indians. So now we have “Indian Takers”. So now as distant satellite of earth is sacred…have they consulted with the Muslims since Allah is the moon god. What else is now revealed as sacred? Manhattan?

UnCivilServant | January 7, 2024 at 4:33 pm

Sorry, Evidence suggests no member of the Navajo Nation has even been to the moon. You can’t just claim anything you can see and deny it to people who can actually get there and make use of it.

OMG, now the Moon is one of the Indians’ “sacred ancestral lands” off-limits to the white man?
Hm. I smell a lucrative schlock SF film waiting to be written!

“We don’t have the framework for telling them what they can and can’t fly”
Oh, what a liar. You’re the government. You can pass a law or get Biden to write an order (same thing nowadays) forbidding anybody from doing anything. Even if blatantly unconstitutional, it will still be in force more than long enough to thwart the commercial peons.

    The Gentle Grizzly in reply to henrybowman. | January 7, 2024 at 7:37 pm

    I will believe the moon is sacred to the Indians when I see a casino or a factory outlet shopping center built there.

To me this end around to stop something that shouldn’t be allowed is fine.

Those staking their claim must be sent to moon. Dehydrate them because their water belongs to earth.

Navajo’s a fine airplane as is the Aztec….

BierceAmbrose | January 7, 2024 at 5:19 pm

My historical, nostalgic attachment to classic sci fi stories of the moon means they should get the hell out of the way so we can make that real, finally.

Complaints from women would make sense but not from Indians.

This is what comes of a society that forgets how to say “Hell no you freakin loon” to freakin loons.

Seriously, how in the world is something like this even proposed with a straight face and why does our ‘government’ even entertain such insanity?

That is a story I never thought I would see.

Jump the shark.

Kinky Friedman on Imus, in spiritually wise Indian voice:

You can’t own land, you can’t own a horse or a dog or a waterfall, you can only own a casino.

    Thad Jarvis in reply to rhhardin. | January 7, 2024 at 6:43 pm

    Shouldn’t you be defending the right of foul mouthed high school basketball players to indulge in gutter level anti-semitic shit talking with your usual pedantic pseudo intellectual posturing?

      healthguyfsu in reply to Thad Jarvis. | January 7, 2024 at 7:33 pm

      You aren’t going to last here long

      JohnSmith100 in reply to Thad Jarvis. | January 7, 2024 at 7:47 pm

      There is a huge difference between good verbal skills and analytical skills. I can look at a circuit, electric, pneumatic, hydraulic and visualize their operation static and dynamic, granted not at IC speeds.

      As I have said many times, none of us has much choice about intelligence or the forms it takes.

    smooth in reply to rhhardin. | January 7, 2024 at 9:05 pm

    Get $10 free play guaranteed. Join the club! Fire Rock Navajo Casino.

The Chinese should plant some indian arrowheads on the moon. Then The Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act kicks in.

    JohnSmith100 in reply to rhhardin. | January 7, 2024 at 7:52 pm

    I am a quarter Native American, half German and the rest residuals of the American mixing pot. Native American’s are about the same intelligence as other native groups, 80-85. I never claimed native status or benefits, because I did not need to.

Tribal casino license for the moon?

Ok I definitely don’t know everything but I know for a fact that Native Americans were not “there first” on the moon!

For a long time I’ve wondered, “When Native Americans make a new claim to the ‘sacredness’ of some site or other, are they yanking the Pale Faces’ collective chain?” I now know the answer to that question.

With the 17 D-2 lands part of the Native Claims Settlement Act… it was AMAZING where tribes used to live… like right over oil rich plots in the arctic totally away from any sustainable living. Those were really smart Eskimos back in those days! Forward thinkers. Spoiler alert: After passage they weren’t satisfied and wanted more after agreeing to the settlement. Gosh.

thalesofmiletus | January 7, 2024 at 10:38 pm

The Indians didn’t even know the moon was a place before the White Man told them.

Regardless, the Moon is governed by the Moon Treaty, based on the Antarctica treaty, which tells them to official stuff it up their peace-pipe.

This is just an opportunity to shake-down the Biden admin for heap big wampum.

    Johnny Cache in reply to thalesofmiletus. | January 8, 2024 at 3:22 am

    The Moon Treaty is worthless. The US never signed it, no country that has gone to the moon has ever signed off on it except India, Saudi Arabia pulled out of it. You may be thinking about the earlier Outer Space Treaty, which is really an arms treaty and leaves much else in question. For lunar exploration there the Artemis Accords headed by the US, with dozens of other countries abiding by its guidelines for now.

But where is Delos D. Harriman’s grave marker?

The moon isn’t a kachina doll. The Navajo can’t just claim it as their own.

The surface of the Moon looks quite a lot like the Res so maybe they have some advice to give.