
Blue Origin’s first all-female spaceflight is now in the history books. Among those on board were singer Katy Perry and Oprah’s special friend, Gayle King.
Six women wearing custom-made, form-fitting space suits blasted into space for 11 minutes. The gals boldly going where no feminists have gone before.
Blue Origin’s all-girl crew celebrated their brief journey into the cosmos as a great milestone for womanhood.
“I feel super connected to love,” Perry said of her trip to space. “This experience is second to being a mom.”
The ladies have been heralded as astronauts – when in fact the only reason they were invited to be passengers was because they were either famous, or paid millions of dollars in cash, or they happened to be Jeff Bezos’ fiancé.
But let’s get real. They were passengers, not crew members. They were literally strapped into their seats and told not to touch anything.
The first American woman in space was actually Sally Ride. She was accepted into NASA’s space program in 1977 and in 1983 she spent 14 days orbiting the Earth onboard the Space Shuttle Challenger.
But Sally Ride has been shoved aside so modern women can celebrate the glammed-up space gals who promised to put the “ass in astronaut.”
What an insult to the female rocket scientists of America.
By the way — has anyone else noticed that the Blue Origin rocket ship that carried the feminists into the wild blue yonder looks like a very familiar part of the male anatomy?
Pre-order a copy of my new book, “Star-Spangled Blessings: Devotions for Patriots.” You’ll discover untold stories about how God used the most unusual people to build our great nation. Click here to pre-order.