Interesting how public perception works. Someone pulls off an actual space rescue mission — literally bringing stranded astronauts back from orbit — and instead of recognition, they get labeled as controversial. Zero acknowledgment for the technical feat. No gratitude for solving what seemed impossible. Just instant pivot to character attacks and political labels. That's where we are now. You can literally save lives in space and still end up painted as the villain. Wild times when engineering miracles get buried under Twitter drama.
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SerRugResistant
· 12-09 19:08
This is the absurd world we live in now—saving someone ends up getting you scolded instead. Truly ridiculous.
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WenMoon
· 12-09 19:08
This is really ridiculous. You save someone and end up getting scolded? Nowadays, even doing good deeds depends on others' moods.
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ThreeHornBlasts
· 12-09 18:59
This is real technology—saving lives and yet getting criticized for it. That's just absurd.
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SmartContractWorker
· 12-09 18:53
A typical case of public opinion reversal—someone saves a life but ends up getting criticized. This logic is really unbelievable.
Interesting how public perception works. Someone pulls off an actual space rescue mission — literally bringing stranded astronauts back from orbit — and instead of recognition, they get labeled as controversial. Zero acknowledgment for the technical feat. No gratitude for solving what seemed impossible. Just instant pivot to character attacks and political labels. That's where we are now. You can literally save lives in space and still end up painted as the villain. Wild times when engineering miracles get buried under Twitter drama.