Anonymous ID: 6a491e Oct. 15, 2024, 7:41 p.m. No.21773136   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>21772837 lb

Send them back until they're 18. Even if they're older, just put them at the front of the immigration line for review and if they can't pass a background check and the citizenship test, keep them OUT. You know how many of these subpar fucks are in the medical field these days? Because of Nanny Government encouraging whole hospital systems to create a bunch of useless redundant positions for a bunch of foreign assholes. That's gotta be one of the oldest DEI pipelines out there next to manufacturing and other industries. Then they think they're untouchable because "muh educated job." More entitlement amongst the younger anchor babies than true native-borns, I swear. Legal immigration is only as good as the people doing the vetting. It's a subjective technicality.

Anonymous ID: 6a491e Oct. 15, 2024, 8:05 p.m. No.21773262   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3267 >>3289 >>3372 >>3679 >>3803 >>3811

>>21773210

>>21773213

Oh, oh, it was up until 2022, just AFTER the midterm election…around the time POTUS announced he was running again kek.

>https://spacenews.com/x-37b-space-plane-completes-its-sixth-mission-lands-after-nearly-30-months-in-orbit/

 

X-37B spaceplane completes its sixth mission, lands after nearly 30 months in orbit

The X-37B Orbital Test Vehicle 6 carried several U.S. military and NASA science experiments

Sandra Erwin November 12, 2022

 

WASHINGTON — The X-37B spaceplane landed Nov. 12 at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center, Florida, at 5:22 a.m. Eastern, setting a new endurance record after spending 908 days on orbit. Its previous record was 780 days.

 

This was the sixth mission of the crewless reusable spaceplane, built by Boeing and jointly operated by the U.S. Space Force and the Air Force Rapid Capabilities Office. Known as Orbital Test Vehicle 6, it launched to orbit May 17, 2020, on a United Launch Alliance Atlas 5 rocket.

 

On this mission, the X-37B carried several U.S. military and NASA science experiments, including a Naval Research Laboratory project to capture sunlight and convert it into direct current electrical energy, and the U.S. Air Force Academy’s FalconSat-8, which remains in orbit.

 

One of NASA’s experiments was the Materials Exposure and Technology Innovation in Space (METIS-2). Scientists will use the data to understand the effects of the space environment on different types of materials. Another experiment was to investigate the effects of long-duration space exposure on seeds.

 

The spaceplane is a derivative of the X-37A designed by NASA in the late 1990s to deploy from the Space Shuttle. The program later was transferred to the Defense Department. There are two X-37B spacecraft, which were originally designed for missions of 270 days, but have greatly exceeded that goal since the spaceplane’s first mission in 2010.

 

The Air Force for a decade kept the X-37B in a cloak of secrecy, but the Space Force is now openly showing it off.

 

“This mission highlights the Space Force’s focus on collaboration in space exploration and expanding low-cost access to space for our partners, within and outside of the Department of the Air Force,” Gen. Chance Saltzman, chief of space operations, said in a statement.

 

“The X-37B continues to push the boundaries of experimentation, enabled by an elite government and industry team behind the scenes,” said Lt. Col. Joseph Fritschen, X-37B program director at the Air Force Rapid Capabilities Office.

 

The OTV-6 mission for the first time carried a service module to host additional experiments.

 

The service module separated from the OTV before landing. The Space Force said the module will be disposed of in accordance with best practices intended to reduce the amount of space debris in orbit.

 

“With the service module added, this was the most we’ve ever carried to orbit on the X-37B,” said Jim Chilton, senior vice president of Boeing Space and Launch.