Intellectually disabled autistic people are important and they matter, regardless of what they can and can’t do.
Cognitively disabled autistic people are important and they matter, regardless of what they can and can’t do.
Chronically ill autistic people are important and they matter, regardless of what they can and can’t do.
Mentally ill autistic people are important and they matter, regardless of what they can and can’t do.
Multiply-disabled autistic people are important and they matter, regardless of what they can and can’t do.
Young autistic people are important and they matter, regardless of what they can and can’t do.
Elderly autistic people are important and they matter, regardless of what they can and can’t do.
Ver sacrum - 1899 - via University of Heidelberg
i've had them for 2 days but i would do anything for them
This reminds me of some NASA Mars lander concepts. Maybe it’s coz I see the Worm logo on the side of a lander.
This was NASAs human lander for the 1990s proposed First Lunar Outpost missions to the Moon that never made it to the Moon. Unlike Apollo missions which used Lunar orbit rendezvous it was to use direct descent and ascent with the astronauts riding in an Apollo style capsule to and from the Moon’s surface. The unmanned version carried the outpost that could support a crew of four for up to 45 days.
Artemis is ace I think, and ace counts as not straight, and not straight = gay. This checks out.
[people cheering in the background]
biggest betrayal is when it’s supposed to thunderstorm and it doesn’t
Apollo 17 ascent stage returning to moon orbit.
Part 2! 🤩 BepiColombo’s last close-ups of Earth during flyby
A sequence of images taken by one of the MCAM selfie cameras on board of the European-Japanese Mercury mission BepiColombo as the spacecraft zoomed past the planet during its first and only Earth flyby on 10 April 2020.
► Learn more about BepiColombo: https://www.fromspacewithlove.com/bepicolombo/
📸 Copyright ESA/BepiColombo/MTM, CC BY-SA 3.0 IGO
Artist's concept of the missile-mounted Space Shuttle Orbiter during launch.
Date: November 23, 1981
NARA: 6364453
Posted by Numbers Station on Flickr: link, link, link, link, link
21 · female · diagnosed asperger'sThe vacuum of outer space feels so comfy :)
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