For decades, people have wondered why humans haven’t gone back to the Moon since the final Apollo mission. According to former Jim Bridenstine, the answer isn’t a lack of technology—it’s a lack of sustained commitment. The capability to return has existed for years, but long timelines, shifting priorities, and the pressure of public scrutiny have slowed progress. Space exploration, he has suggested, often stalls not because it’s impossible, but because it requires consistent support over time.
At the heart of the issue is how large-scale programs are managed. Missions beyond low Earth orbit demand long-term investment, coordination, and a willingness to accept risk. When plans change with leadership cycles or budgets fluctuate, momentum can fade. The challenge isn’t just engineering—it’s maintaining a shared vision long enough to see it through. Without that stability, even achievable goals can remain out of reach.
That’s where NASA’s Artemis program comes in. Missions like Artemis II represent a renewed effort to return humans to lunar orbit and eventually the Moon’s surface. These missions are not just technical milestones—they are steps toward rebuilding consistency in exploration. Each phase is designed to test systems, refine operations, and create a foundation for future missions, including those that may one day reach Mars.
Behind the technology are the people who carry these missions forward. Astronauts selected for Artemis missions represent a diverse and highly trained group, each bringing personal motivation alongside professional expertise. Their role reflects a broader shift—from viewing space travel as a one-time achievement to seeing it as an ongoing journey. If the past decades were marked by pauses, the coming years may define how humanity moves forward again—carefully, steadily, and with a renewed sense of purpose.