Did the commies actually lose a cosmonaut? Lol
Did the commies actually lose a cosmonaut? Lol
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They lost dozens, but thats just going off many unverified claims. We know for a fact atleast one died.
The Soviets only reported missions existence if they succeeded,and thats it.
Rag yourself, i’m the fix
Don’t remind me :’(
Yeah but we know they died. Commies pretended like their lost cosmonauts never existed.
Ever since the Stalin era, the Soviet state had a tradition of risking human life to test dangerous and often incompletely designed military and aerospace equipment. Sometimes like with Gagarin, it worked, other times it ended disastrously.
yes, vladimir komarov
NASA has had plenty of remembrances for the Challenger crew and whatnot but I never remember anything like that in Russia for the Soyuz 11 cosmonauts or the people who died in the Nedelin Catastrophe.
>Soviets did everything in spacerace first
>Everything we can brag is only moon landing
>Ok, we sucks at space
>Lets make conspiracies, memes and fake discussions on anime forum about how commies are subhuman!
Americans at their best
You're so miserable, so obsessed with Soviets and Russians, everything you can make is only invent conspiracies and gossips. Disgusting
:^)
>actually implying nobody died and it wasn't covered up
Nothing personal, Americans make conspiracies about their own space missions as well.
We do?
Only mission to Venus though, successful on first try.
I just know this legend wanted an open casket funeral just to show the higher ups.
Oh shit nigger what are you doing? It took 12 attempts for them to succeed with Venus. The US space program succeeded on its second attempt.
Ayy Ive been thinking of Venera 13 photos. True took a few tries. Still, the mutts were shitting themselves when Sputnik was passing over them transmitting soviet memes.
You have to understand the 1957 state of mind for most Americans. Being completely brainwashed to hate a society you don't understand does wonders.
Venera 4 was the first successful mission but the lander didn't have cameras, only measuring instruments. However, it took six years of failed attempts before that succeeded.
Yes, it's so bad and wrong to dislike a totalitarian state that denies its citizens basic human rights.
he's the true hero of space exploration
went on the mission even though he would probably die because his buddy gagarin was the backup
>muh right to buy burgers
:^)
RIP. American heroes and real human beans
Fuck off retard
Yeah they lost a few but so did you
They look hungry. Was he served with Borscht and Bread later on?
If landing on the Moon was so trivial, why couldn't you do it? Why did all your rockets blow up?
imagine actually eating that unhealthy industrial trash.
t. revisionist
Pretty cringey thread with cringey burgers
Yeah I guess at the time hysteria prevailed due to nukes and propoganda from both sides. Too bad space exploration is down in the shitter with US wanting to pull out from the ISS. Hopefully Chinese can pick up some slack, I can't imagine us not moving forward in space as a species.
The mission reports for Vostok 6 were not too kind to Ms. Tereshkova's flight performance and later official histories of the Soviet space program also said some unkind and borderline sexist stuff about it.
While over 50 American women have been in space, only four Russian women ever have, with one being the daughter of a key Soviet aerospace industry figure and another the wife of a Roscosmos manager.
The key is to privatize space, before the Chinese dedicate their efforts.
Isn't the ISS near end of life anyways?
>privatize space
That will only work if fucking oil is found on mars. Without it, there’s almost 0 Chance except by the super rich
Same with Americans.
Proofs?
Asteroid Mining and commercial tourism.Along with gaseous extraction.
Its small, and technologically nearing obsoletion. What we need is larger stations where we can try real zerog manufacturing - from raw ore, all the way into a finished product. I mean with foundries and everything - imagine the cost.
What's the incentive for private companies to push the boundaries in space though? If you're talking about minerals - its easier and cheaper to start with the ocean first. Seems like there is a giant leap from where government left off to where private companies that want to do anything more than space tourism can come in.