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Trump's Remarks at Kennedy Space Center; May 30, 2020
REMARKS
Remarks by President Trump at Kennedy Space Center
INFRASTRUCTURE & TECHNOLOGY
Issued on: May 30, 2020
Kennedy Space Center
Cape Canaveral, Florida
5:16 P.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT: Well, thank you very much. Please. Please. Big day. This is a big day. And I want to thank our great Vice President for your fearless and tireless commitment to fulfilling Americas destiny in space. Thank you very much, Mike. Great job. Great job. (Applause.)
Were also grateful to Mikes wonderful wife, Karen, for being here and for all she does for our country. Thank you. Thank you, Karen. (Applause.)
Before going further on this exciting day for all America in space, I want to say a few words about the situation in Minnesota. The death of George Floyd on the streets of Minneapolis was a grave tragedy. It should never have happened. It has filled Americans all over the country with horror, anger, and grief.
{snip}
Radical-left criminals, thugs, and others all throughout our country and throughout the world will not be allowed to set communities ablaze. We wont let it happen. It harms those who have the least. And we will be protecting those who have the least.
The leadership of the National Guard and the Department of Justice are now in close communication with state and city officials in Minnesota. And were coordinating our efforts with local law enforcement all across our nation.
{snip}
With this launch, the decades of lost years and little action are officially over. A new age of American ambition has now begun.
Past leaders put the United States at the mercy of foreign nations to send our astronauts into orbit. Not anymore. Today, we once again proudly launch American astronauts on American rockets, the best in the world, from right here on American soil. (Applause.)
{snip}
This launch also marks an exciting turning point for NASA. This agency will now focus its unmatched ex- expertise, like nobody has ever seen, and power and integrity to do what NASA does better than anyone else and its not even close: embark on the most difficult, most daring, most audacious missions in the history of humankind.
When I first came into office three and a half years ago, NASA had lost its way, and the excitement, energy, and ambition, as almost everybody in this room knows, was gone. There was grass growing through the cracks of your concrete runways. Not a pretty sight. Not a pretty sight at all.
The last administration presided over the closing of the Space Shuttle and almost all of the giant facility that keeps so many people working, so many brilliant minds going. People were crying. They were devastated. But now its the greatest of its kind anywhere in the world and will get greater and greater with years to come. I promise you that. (Applause.)
We have created the envy of the world and will soon be landing on Mars, and will soon have the greatest weapons ever imagined in history. Ive already seen designs. And even I cant believe it.
The United States has regained our place of prestige as the world leader. As has often been stated, you cant be number one on Earth if you are number two in space. (Applause.) And we are not going to be number two anywhere. (Applause.)
Nowhere is this more true than with our military, which we have completely rebuilt. Under my administration, we have invested two and a half trillion dollars in new planes, ships, submarines, tanks, missiles, rockets anything you can think of. And last year, I signed the law creating the sixth branch of that already very famous United States Armed Forces: the Space Force. (Applause.)
For every citizen who has eagerly waited for America to reignite those engines of will, confidence, and imagination that put a man on the Moon, I stand before you to say: You need wait no longer.
Through NASAs Artemis program, the United States is preparing for a crewed mission to Mars. Earlier this week, I saw the Orion capsules being worked on in this building. As part of the Artemis Moon-to-Mars program, those capsules will soon return Americans to lunar orbit for the first time in over 50 years half a century.
By 2024, our astronauts will return to the lunar surface to establish a permanent presence and the launching pad to Mars. (Applause.) And the first woman on the moon will be an American woman. And the first nation to land on Mars will be the United States of America. (Applause.)
Since I signed the order to establish these goals shortly after taking office, we have made rapid gains. A new 22,000- pound capsule is already built. The next generation of space suits are already made. Colossal rockets are now being tested. And the contracts for three separate lunar landers have been awarded and signed, and they are magnificent.
In the years ahead, America will go bigger, bolder, further, faster, and America will go first. America will always be first. (Applause.)
To be certain, we will meet the adversity and hardship along the way. There may even be tragedy, because that is the danger of space. Theres nothing we can do about that. The power that were talking about is unrivaled. Theres nothing we can do about problems. But well have very few of them.
We will confront all of those challenges, knowing that the quest for understanding is the oldest and deepest hope in our souls. The innate human desire to explore and innovate is what propels the engines of progress and the march of civilization. We will preserve and persevere, and we will ensure a future of American dominance in space.
To that end, over the last three years, I reestablished the National Space Council. I issued a directive cutting red tape for innovative space companies such as SpaceX. We created the worlds first comprehensive space traffic management system. Last month, I signed an executive order establishing U.S. policy for the recovery and use of space resources and minerals. Administrator Bridenstine announced the Artemis Accords to govern the future of space exploration and development.
Together, we will assert Americas rightful heritage as the greatest space-faring nation on the planet. And already, its not even close.
In the half a century since the United States stopped sending astronauts to deep into space 1972 no other country has ever done it. The reasons are simple: cost, technological complexity, and tremendous danger.
For instance, I was told that the rocket you just witnessed had to be launched within one second, or it would be impossible for it to hit its target. And I was here two days ago, and I said to Jim: Jim, its okay. Why dont you wait 5 or 10 minutes? (Laughter.) And he said, Sir, we only have a window of one second. And I walked out of here shaking my head. (Laughter.) Is that true, Jim? Yes, it true.
{snip}
Now, like our ancestors before us, we are venturing out to explore a new, magnificent frontier. Its called: space. Our most daring feats, our most epic journeys, our biggest adventures, and our finest days are just beginning. Americas proudest moments are still ahead. We are on the verge of our most exciting years, and next year may be the most exciting of all. You just watch.
{snip}
END 5:49 P.M. EDT
Remarks by President Trump at Kennedy Space Center
INFRASTRUCTURE & TECHNOLOGY
Issued on: May 30, 2020
Kennedy Space Center
Cape Canaveral, Florida
5:16 P.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT: Well, thank you very much. Please. Please. Big day. This is a big day. And I want to thank our great Vice President for your fearless and tireless commitment to fulfilling Americas destiny in space. Thank you very much, Mike. Great job. Great job. (Applause.)
Were also grateful to Mikes wonderful wife, Karen, for being here and for all she does for our country. Thank you. Thank you, Karen. (Applause.)
Before going further on this exciting day for all America in space, I want to say a few words about the situation in Minnesota. The death of George Floyd on the streets of Minneapolis was a grave tragedy. It should never have happened. It has filled Americans all over the country with horror, anger, and grief.
{snip}
Radical-left criminals, thugs, and others all throughout our country and throughout the world will not be allowed to set communities ablaze. We wont let it happen. It harms those who have the least. And we will be protecting those who have the least.
The leadership of the National Guard and the Department of Justice are now in close communication with state and city officials in Minnesota. And were coordinating our efforts with local law enforcement all across our nation.
{snip}
With this launch, the decades of lost years and little action are officially over. A new age of American ambition has now begun.
Past leaders put the United States at the mercy of foreign nations to send our astronauts into orbit. Not anymore. Today, we once again proudly launch American astronauts on American rockets, the best in the world, from right here on American soil. (Applause.)
{snip}
This launch also marks an exciting turning point for NASA. This agency will now focus its unmatched ex- expertise, like nobody has ever seen, and power and integrity to do what NASA does better than anyone else and its not even close: embark on the most difficult, most daring, most audacious missions in the history of humankind.
When I first came into office three and a half years ago, NASA had lost its way, and the excitement, energy, and ambition, as almost everybody in this room knows, was gone. There was grass growing through the cracks of your concrete runways. Not a pretty sight. Not a pretty sight at all.
The last administration presided over the closing of the Space Shuttle and almost all of the giant facility that keeps so many people working, so many brilliant minds going. People were crying. They were devastated. But now its the greatest of its kind anywhere in the world and will get greater and greater with years to come. I promise you that. (Applause.)
We have created the envy of the world and will soon be landing on Mars, and will soon have the greatest weapons ever imagined in history. Ive already seen designs. And even I cant believe it.
The United States has regained our place of prestige as the world leader. As has often been stated, you cant be number one on Earth if you are number two in space. (Applause.) And we are not going to be number two anywhere. (Applause.)
Nowhere is this more true than with our military, which we have completely rebuilt. Under my administration, we have invested two and a half trillion dollars in new planes, ships, submarines, tanks, missiles, rockets anything you can think of. And last year, I signed the law creating the sixth branch of that already very famous United States Armed Forces: the Space Force. (Applause.)
For every citizen who has eagerly waited for America to reignite those engines of will, confidence, and imagination that put a man on the Moon, I stand before you to say: You need wait no longer.
Through NASAs Artemis program, the United States is preparing for a crewed mission to Mars. Earlier this week, I saw the Orion capsules being worked on in this building. As part of the Artemis Moon-to-Mars program, those capsules will soon return Americans to lunar orbit for the first time in over 50 years half a century.
By 2024, our astronauts will return to the lunar surface to establish a permanent presence and the launching pad to Mars. (Applause.) And the first woman on the moon will be an American woman. And the first nation to land on Mars will be the United States of America. (Applause.)
Since I signed the order to establish these goals shortly after taking office, we have made rapid gains. A new 22,000- pound capsule is already built. The next generation of space suits are already made. Colossal rockets are now being tested. And the contracts for three separate lunar landers have been awarded and signed, and they are magnificent.
In the years ahead, America will go bigger, bolder, further, faster, and America will go first. America will always be first. (Applause.)
To be certain, we will meet the adversity and hardship along the way. There may even be tragedy, because that is the danger of space. Theres nothing we can do about that. The power that were talking about is unrivaled. Theres nothing we can do about problems. But well have very few of them.
We will confront all of those challenges, knowing that the quest for understanding is the oldest and deepest hope in our souls. The innate human desire to explore and innovate is what propels the engines of progress and the march of civilization. We will preserve and persevere, and we will ensure a future of American dominance in space.
To that end, over the last three years, I reestablished the National Space Council. I issued a directive cutting red tape for innovative space companies such as SpaceX. We created the worlds first comprehensive space traffic management system. Last month, I signed an executive order establishing U.S. policy for the recovery and use of space resources and minerals. Administrator Bridenstine announced the Artemis Accords to govern the future of space exploration and development.
Together, we will assert Americas rightful heritage as the greatest space-faring nation on the planet. And already, its not even close.
In the half a century since the United States stopped sending astronauts to deep into space 1972 no other country has ever done it. The reasons are simple: cost, technological complexity, and tremendous danger.
For instance, I was told that the rocket you just witnessed had to be launched within one second, or it would be impossible for it to hit its target. And I was here two days ago, and I said to Jim: Jim, its okay. Why dont you wait 5 or 10 minutes? (Laughter.) And he said, Sir, we only have a window of one second. And I walked out of here shaking my head. (Laughter.) Is that true, Jim? Yes, it true.
{snip}
Now, like our ancestors before us, we are venturing out to explore a new, magnificent frontier. Its called: space. Our most daring feats, our most epic journeys, our biggest adventures, and our finest days are just beginning. Americas proudest moments are still ahead. We are on the verge of our most exciting years, and next year may be the most exciting of all. You just watch.
{snip}
END 5:49 P.M. EDT
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