Frequently Asked Questions about the Lunar Journey

Q:  When will the team make a rendezvous with Luna?
A: Our experts cannot guarantee the exact time, but given current trajectory, fuel usage, and other environmental variables, we are predicting somewhere between 12 to 14 days, unless the government regulatory bodies take actions to hinder us in our journey.

Q: What is the goal of this expedition?
A: This is more of an exploratory trip, to gain an understanding of the lunar surface. Also consider that similar trips have been quite rare and for only the wealthiest in the past. We are democratizing it by making this journey available for a large number of astronauts. Getting there is an achievement by itself, that we must not underestimate. If the fuel situation and the impulse continues, we may consider journeying further into other astronomical bodies as well.

And obviously, the most obvious use case, which everybody understands clearly and we hope is everybody's goal here, is to collect lunar samples, for research and further research and experimentation. We're also hoping to turn the samples into fuel for further trip, so we may be able to conquer other astronomical bodies in similar crafts in the near future.

Q: What are the biggest risks for this expedition?
A: The biggest singlemost risk is the crew and the team losing their drive, causing fuel-leaks and what not, breakage in the machinery, which could cause the entire craft to fall down and explode into a fireball. It is for that reason that we must never ever ever give up, keep our full faith in the system, our teammates, and keep on it. Keep your eyes on the goal, and the rewards at that, and the times beyond. Think of the awesome things that will happen.

The other big risk is if other parties try to use legal or illegal means to undermine our journey in various ways, including making refueling difficult, attacking our craft, or disrupting communication within the crew channels, so we are unable to coordinate the various complex maneuvers. While we are fairly confident, given the regulatory environment, past experience, and the impulse of our machinery, such actions are quite likely, we must never discount such obvious actions, and be on the top of our game.

Additionally, regulatory action could be a hindrance at some point going forward, but as we have discovered, it's often to our benefit than against, so again, this is not a huge concern for us. Given current conditions, we should not be expecting too many disruptions caused by regulatory bodies.

Q: What when we're at the moon? How do we make a safe landing on the earth.
A: Now, that's a great question. The most obvious way that will happen is the counterweight we are using will be pulling us all the way, so we won't have to come down at all...by just dropping the samples slowly, we'll make our headway.
However, we understand the concerns of certain parts of the community who fully are in the 'what goes up must come down' belief system. To them we say, yes, this is bound to come down, but it won't be soon, and the parties harmed won't be you anyway, so don't give it too much thought. Okay sweetie?

Q: Just to be clear, are we talking about like an actual Moon mission, or is this in reference to the stupid stock memes about pump and dump schemes?
A: It is indeed the latter, and we are talking in the financial sense, and not in the physical sense when we talk of using a rocket to go to the lunar body. Apologies to anybody who may have misunderstood that.

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