Americans watched with pride as NASA’s Artemis II mission lit the sky on April 1, 2026, a proud return of human spaceflight beyond low Earth orbit for the first time in over half a century. This was supposed to be a unifying moment — a demonstration of American ingenuity and the power of competition — yet the media couldn’t resist turning it into another identity circus.
The four-person crew — Commander Reid Wiseman, Pilot Victor Glover, Mission Specialist Christina Koch, and Canadian Jeremy Hansen — earned their seats by training, skill, and experience, not by signaling or virtue badges. Victor Glover’s role as pilot also carries an honest historical note: he is the first person of color scheduled to travel beyond low Earth orbit, a milestone that should inspire young Americans of all backgrounds to pursue excellence.
So when a reporter tried to drag the mission into identity politics by pressing Glover on what it meant to be the “first Black man” headed to the Moon, the astronaut did what American heroes do—he put country and accomplishment first. Glover’s reply — that he hopes this will be remembered as human history, not “black history” or “women’s history” — was a quiet rebuke to the race-baiters trying to hijack a moment of national pride.
That sensible response should have been the end of it, but of course some in the press doubled down, with outlets reflexively mining every angle to turn triumph into grievance, even suggesting Apollo’s legacy somehow “didn’t represent humanity.” The predictable shape of today’s coverage reveals the media’s priorities: narrative over nuance, outrage over achievement.
Let’s be blunt — the mission belongs to science and to every American who loves this country’s daring spirit, not to the activists and reporters who stalk the margins looking for a race headline. Apollo was about beating the Soviets and proving what free people can do; the astronauts then were chosen for competence, not for optics, and the same meritocracy should prevail now.
If you love America, you celebrate Victor Glover and his crew for their skill and courage and you demand the media stop manufacturing division where none needs to exist. Patriots should cheer clear-eyed achievements, hold the press accountable, and insist that our nation’s greatest moments be remembered for what they are: demonstrations of American greatness and human possibility.
