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It just keeps getting worse. I guess we will see how things go when they attempt to detach it and deorbit from the ISS tomorrow.

Archive: https://archive.today/80mTx

From the post:

>Two NASA astronauts will endure months of intense radiation exposure after Boeing's Starliner spacecraft stranded them on the International Space Station. Astronauts Sunita Williams and Barry Wilmore have been stuck on the ISS for three months. This has already put them at risk of receiving about 40 mSv to 80 mSv of radiation, which is roughly equivalent to 120 to 240 chest x-rays. They won't return to Earth until February 2025 at the earliest, and will have spent at least eight months in space and risked radiation exposure roughly equivalent to 310 to 630 chest x-rays.

It just keeps getting worse. I guess we will see how things go when they attempt to detach it and deorbit from the ISS tomorrow. Archive: https://archive.today/80mTx From the post: >>Two NASA astronauts will endure months of intense radiation exposure after Boeing's Starliner spacecraft stranded them on the International Space Station. Astronauts Sunita Williams and Barry Wilmore have been stuck on the ISS for three months. This has already put them at risk of receiving about 40 mSv to 80 mSv of radiation, which is roughly equivalent to 120 to 240 chest x-rays. They won't return to Earth until February 2025 at the earliest, and will have spent at least eight months in space and risked radiation exposure roughly equivalent to 310 to 630 chest x-rays.
[–] 3 pts

That's OK, the Boeing executives can sleep well at night, knowing that all DEI quotas were met. That's what we need to keep in mind...