400 Employees Fired: NASA SLS finally Canceled!? Boeing's New Big Trouble...

400 Employees Fired: NASA SLS finally Canceled!? Boeing's New Big Trouble...

T
Tech map

"400 Employees Fired: NASA SLS finally Canceled!? Boeing's New Big Trouble...
===
#techmap #techmaps #elonmusk #starshipspacex #spacex
===
intro 0:00
The end of SLS 0:38
The uncertainty 7:20
===
1) SOURCES OF THUMBNAIL
2) SOURCES OF IMAGES AND VIDEOS
Spacex 3D Creation Eccentric: https://t.co/QGbEwDwv7j
===
400 Employees Fired: NASA SLS finally Canceled!? Boeing's New Big Trouble...
Taxpayers can rejoice at this news.
Our money sucker, Nasa's Space Launch System, would be canceled in the near-term future.
Indeed, Boeing, the primary contractor, is preparing to pull the plug, potentially resulting in 400 layoffs.
But will powerful forces in Congress save this money pit? Or is this finally the beginning of the end for SLS? Stay tuned to find out!
Anyway, our next goal is 100,000, and we need your support to get there. If you haven't subscribed yet, please do! We appreciate your help—thank you!
400 Employees Fired: NASA SLS finally Canceled!? Boeing's New Big Trouble...
Break news: Boeing warns employees working on the SLS program that up to 400 of them could lose their jobs as the new administration considers canceling the program. Specifically, in the announcement on February 7, Boeing SLS employees were informed that the company was making preparations to cut up to 400 jobs from the program because of “revisions to the Artemis program and cost expectations.” The specific positions being considered for elimination were not announced but would account for a significant fraction of the overall SLS workforce at the company. Job cuts may occur in April 2025.
400 Employees Fired: NASA SLS finally Canceled!? Boeing's New Big Trouble...
David Dutcher, Boeing's vice president and program manager for the SLS rocket added that Boeing's contracts for the rocket could end in March.
To be honest, the controversy surrounding the Artemis program and the SLS, a key element of the program, has been around for a long time. In the last November, Ars Technica space journalist Eric Berger, who has deep sources in the Space industry, revealed:
""To be clear we are far from anything being settled, but based on what I'm hearing it seems at least 50-50 that NASA's Space Launch System rocket will be canceled. Not Block 1B. Not Block 2. All of it. There are other ways to get Orion to the Moon.""
===
Subcribe TechMap: http://tinyurl.com/3z5ysrtf"