Planet Earth: You Are a Crew

Planet Earth, from the perspective of Artemis II
Photo of Earth, taken by NASA astronaut and Commander Reid Wiseman from one of the Orion spacecraft’s window after completing the translunar injection burn on April 2, 2026. Two auroras (top right and bottom left) and zodiacal light (bottom right) as Earth eclipses the Sun. Venus is on the bottom right.

This week, as Artemis II returned from a journey that carried four humans farther from Earth than any in history, mission specialist Christina Koch brought back something more important than data.

She brought back a fundamental truth.

Looking back at our home – not as a lonely speck, but as a brilliant oasis defined by the vastness surrounding it – she said:

“Planet Earth: You are a crew.”

She went further, describing a crew as people who are “inescapably, beautifully, dutifully linked.”

On a spacecraft, that isn’t philosophy. It’s physics.

Artemis II crew
(April 7, 2026) – The Artemis II crew – (clockwise from left) Mission Specialist Christina Koch, Mission Specialist Jeremy Hansen, Commander Reid Wiseman, and Pilot Victor Glover 

Being crew means you share the same air, the same water, the same thin hull – and your interests aren’t just aligned, they’re inseparable. You protect one another because the alternative isn’t disagreement. It’s extinction.

That is the truth of our situation.

And yet, it is almost impossible to reconcile that truth with the reality we see on Earth.

It’s hard to see a shared mission in a world defined by division – where conflict is chosen over coexistence, where destruction is justified as strategy, where the idea of “us vs. them” overrides the reality of “all of us.”

This is the same dissonance that struck William Shatner when he went to space. He expected awe. Instead, he felt grief.

He described looking down at Earth – the “warm nurturing” of life – set against the “black ugliness” of the void, and realizing how thin the line is between existence and nothingness. What overwhelmed him wasn’t wonder. It was the recognition of how recklessly we treat the only place that sustains us.

We are aboard a lifeboat – small, fragile, and carrying everyone we have ever known.

And while many are forced to defend it, others are actively tearing it apart.

The tragedy is that the divisions we cling to ignore a deeper, unavoidable reality. Hurt is hurt. Love is love. The grief of a parent who loses a child is the same in every country, in every language, under every flag. The human experience does not recognize the borders we draw.

As Maya Angelou wrote:
“We are more alike, my friends, than we are unalike.”

That is not sentiment. It is survival logic.

It is also the idea behind Me We Too – a platform built on a simple premise: if we are all on the same ship, then the most important thing we can do is identify where we actually align. In a world that profits from amplifying division, it strips away the noise and reveals common ground – the people who, regardless of differences, still want to keep the ship intact.

Because that is the choice in front of us.

Christina Koch saw it clearly from 250,000 miles away: we are linked – inescapably, beautifully, and whether we admit it or not, dutifully.

Koch’s observation isn’t a fantasy; it’s an observation of what humans do best when they recognize their connection. Within a crew, there is a reflexive readiness to sacrifice for one another. We see this daily – not just in professional heroes, but in the quiet courage of ordinary people who risk everything to help a stranger simply because they recognize a fellow passenger in need.

Accepting that truth does not require bravery. It requires honesty.

It requires us to stop pretending that we are separate from the people across the border, across the aisle, or across the world. We are not isolated passengers. We are a crew aboard a vessel that cannot survive internal war.

We can continue to allow the ship to be dismantled, or we can join the millions who are already doing the work of the crew.

Or we can finally acknowledge the simplest, most inescapable reality of our existence:

We are a crew.

Survival is a team decision.

humans-are-really-stupid

Related: The Millions Behind Me: 2026 Reversal

The Power of Protest: Why Showing Up Still Works

The Lion of Paris: How Abdol Hossein Sardari Saved Thousands of Jews from the Nazis

Power, Language, and the Dehumanization of the “Other”

Related Me We Too polls:

I love looking at the stars at night

I wonder if there are stars that can move to different galaxies.

Eclipses can be really dangerous – even if you have the special glasses, they can be defective and not work – a lot of risk

I think eclipses are overrated.

I love the beach – the waves, the sand, the sounds

The beach is sooooo calming.

I love the birds chirping and singing

Fireworks are bad for the environment, especially during fire season, and scare the animals too

Drone light shows > fireworks

I think people should think of the animals and refrain from the traditional fireworks

The bad thing about fireworks is that they scare the animals

I don’t like the idea of putting a chopped down tree in my home for Christmas

Sunset is much better than sunrise

I love the sound of rain.

It is really relaxing

California weather is my favorite – specifically the Bay Area

They really shouldn’t be minimizing war and the mass casualties with phrases like “mowing the lawn”

Not surprised anymore when Trump says phrases like “blown the shit out” … and “fuck” – so vulgar

I do not talk like that.

Targeting a civilian population’s water systems and power plants is a war crime.

The US and Israeli strikes on Tehran’s oil infrastructure should be illegal – it is so dangerous and unhealthy – they are targeting civilians without “targeting” civilians.

Trump is very power hungry.

I don’t think Trump should have started the Iran War.

War should be a last resort – not first resort.

Not to mention, it was totally illegal for Trump to unilaterally decide to wage war – that is what Congress is for.

And Trump should not have ripped up the Iranian agreement in 2018.

Trump shouldn’t have said he has the Iranians’ back and will support and help when he does not have any plan to do so.

Iranian people are some of the strongest people in the world #freeiran #iranrevolution #womenrights

A whole World War Three is about to happen but people are worried about who got what filler injected

Wow to this: White House defends Hegseth’s comments that media coverage of U.S. troop deaths are intended to make Trump “look bad”

Trump makes himself look bad.

Trump is the biggest liar.

The most hilarious thing White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt has said: President Trump does not lie.

It is ridiculous that Trump expects to be involved in who Iran chooses as their next leader.

Trump obviously does not care about democracy or freedom in Iran

Trump just cares about whether he can control Iran’s leader or not and tell them what to do (like in Venezuela)

The White House video promoting the Iran bombings by using “Call of Duty” and in another video a Pitbull song with Marco Rubio is so gross. They are way too nonchalant on what war is.

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