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I was also uninterested until seeing the astronauts out there. I saw a comment that sums it up: "turns out, I'm not tired of space. I'm tired of Musk and Bezos and corporate bullshit in space."
I'm still bummed that the mission was reduced to a photographic flyby without any meaningful interaction. There's nothing especially triumphant about this trip as it was already known to be achievable. That makes me assume there's something hidden, such as secret probes, positive PR for the US government in the most heinous of times, more cover up for the epstein files, slapping the orange name on yet more activities despite robbing the NASA budget, etc.
But, for an hour or two spread across the last few days, it was still beautiful seeing 4 humans being genuine people. They even got the "end of vacation" sad feeling 24 hours before return. I can't decry the loss of NASA funding and be disinterested in this. I have to beleive this mission will inspire the next generation there's still something valuable in bigger projects with cooperation and scientific endeavors. I don't think we'll match the power of the first lunar landing anytime soon, but from the Apollo and Shuttles to now, we've just been subjected to corporate spaceflight and dick swinging competitions about whose craft docks more often. For just one more time, we don't have a billionaire's name visibly attached.
This is just the start of the Artemis program, so the flyby was just testing things and a few science missions flying past the moon farther than we have before. Future Artemis flights will land and stay on the moon for longer.
It's been so long since we did this that it's all new people and newer technology now (although unfathomably, they used Microsoft products on a critical mission!?! but I digress). So before attempting to land on the moon, they still have to do the preliminary missions to test all the systems and work out any bugs--and they found some. So this was important, and a success.