‘We can land a rover on Mars, we can beat a pandemic’: Biden congratulates NASA’s Perseverance team

‘We can land a rover on Mars, we can beat a pandemic’: Joe Biden congratulates NASA’s Perseverance team telling them the historic landing ‘restored a dose of confidence’ in the American people

  • President Joe Biden gave a virtual thank you to NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory’s Perseverance team for landing the rover on Mars last month
  • ‘We can land a rover on Mars, we can beat a pandemic,’ he told the team via video from the White House Thursday 
  • Biden said the landing of Perseverance came amid a dark time for the country and ‘restored a dose of confidence’ in the American people 

President Joe Biden gave a virtual thank you NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory’s Perseverance team for landing the rover on Mars last month. 

‘We can land a rover on Mars, we can beat a pandemic,’ he told the team via video. ‘And with science, hope and vision, there’s not a damn thing we can’t do as a country.’ 

Biden talked about how the spectacular February 18 landing of Perseverance came amid a dark time for the country and ‘restored a dose of confidence’ in the American people. 

President Joe Biden gave a virtual thank you to NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory Mars 2020 Perseverance team for successfully landing the rover on Mars last month 

'We can land a rover on Mars, we can beat a pandemic,' President Joe Biden told the team via video from the White House Thursday

‘We can land a rover on Mars, we can beat a pandemic,’ President Joe Biden told the team via video from the White House Thursday 

A portion of a panorama made up of individual images taken by the Navigation Cameras aboard NASA's Perseverance Mars rover shows the Martian landscape

A portion of a panorama made up of individual images taken by the Navigation Cameras aboard NASA’s Perseverance Mars rover shows the Martian landscape

Members of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory Mars 2020 Perseverance team are seen on-screen as President Joe Biden thanked them for giving the country 'a dose of confidence'

Members of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory Mars 2020 Perseverance team are seen on-screen as President Joe Biden thanked them for giving the country ‘a dose of confidence’ 

He also said that message reverberated globally.  

Biden said that a head of state told him, ‘America’s changed so much, they used to be so competent, to do great things and here they can’t even deal with the coronavirus, look how badly organized they are.’ 

‘America’s image in the world, it matter, it matters, because democracies have to demonstrate they can run as efficiently and more efficiently than autocracies,’ the president said. 

He gushed over the team, telling them while it was ‘presumptuous’ to say so, he was ‘so proud.’ 

He also marveled at how Indian-Americans – as he spoke to Swati Mohan, Guidance and Controls Operations Lead of Mars 2020 – ‘are taking over the country,’ pointing to Vice President Kamala Harris, who’s half Indian-American, as well.       

Biden watched the landing from the White House of the $2.2 billion rover when it plunked down on the red planet on February 18. 

He sent out a tweet to the team offering his congratulations. 

On Thursday, he threatened to visit the team once the pandemic is over, saying he would overstay his welcome like a ‘poor relative,’ a joke he also made on the campaign trail.  

Perseverance traveled 239 million miles to Mars and touched down at the base of an 820 foot deep crater called Jezero.  

Scientists believe Jezero was a former water-filled lake 3.5 billion years ago. 

‘Touchdown confirmed! Perseverance safely on the surface of Mars, ready to begin seeking signs of past life,’ flight controller Mohan announced when Perseverence landed. 

Mohan was on the call with Biden Thursday. 

Former President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence often touted NASA’s achievements and attended rocket launches during their tenure.

Trump also prominently backed the creation of Space Force. 

Press Secretary Jen Psaki said last month that the Biden administration would continue to support Artemis, which aims to return astronauts to the Moon. 

From there, the U.S. space program wants to get humans to Mars.  

Psaki said that the U.S. government will work with industry and international partners to send men – and women – to the Moon. 

‘To date, only 12 humans have walked on the Moon. That was a half century ago,’ she noted. ‘The Artemis program, a waypoint to Mars, provides exactly the opportunity to add numbers to that, of course.’ 

She also pointed out that lunar exploration has broad support from members of Congress.    

Read more at DailyMail.co.uk