

Während Artemis II sich darauf vorbereitet, zu einer Reise um den Mond zu starten und Menschen zum ersten Mal seit 1972 aus der unteren Erdumlaufbahn zu bringen, haben wir beschlossen, zu prüfen, ob die britische Öffentlichkeit selbst zum Mond fliegen möchte, wenn sie eine Chance bekäme, bei der ihre sichere Rückkehr zur Erde garantiert werden könnte.
Es stellt sich heraus, dass es sich um eine überraschend umstrittene Hypothese handelt – 44 % der Briten sagen, sie würden die Gelegenheit nutzen, während 49 % sagen, dass sie sie ablehnen würden.
Bei denen, die nicht hingehen wollen, ist schlichtes mangelndes Interesse der häufigste Grund (23 %), während andere sagen, dass es keinen Sinn hätte (8 %) oder dass es dort nichts zu tun gibt (6 %).
Persönlich denke ich, dass sich die Reise lohnen würde, wenn Ihre Sicherheit gewährleistet wäre, allein schon um den Erdaufgang zu sehen, und schon gar nichts anderes. Was ist mit dir?
Alle Daten finden Sie hier: https://yougov.com/en-gb/articles/54460-how-do-britons-feel-about-going-to-the-moon
Werkzeuge: PowerPoint, Datawrapper
Von YouGov_Dylan
27 Kommentare
I certainly wouldn’t want to spend a month in a box even if it did mean walking on the moon for 10 minutes in a space suit.
I think it would be a fascinating experience, but I am not sure I would be interested in doing it without it becoming more… Comfortable.
The idea of being locked in a fridge for what would likely be a few weeks is… not a fun one, to me. And I am not claustrophobic.
Who the hell wouldn’t want to go to the moon?
Well yes how can one truly enjoy tea when you’re sipping out of a bag..
„Do you want to do this potentially dangerous and uncomfortable thing for very little payback?“ Men and young people: SURE! Women and older people: nah…
One of the most unique experiences a human has ever had? Absolutely count me in
If it were possible? Yes definitely!
I’m totally unsurprised that a portion of Britons reject a trip to the moon on the basis that it’s too far to go. A lot of Brits seem to think driving an hour to an attraction is „too far“. My American-born husband thinks it’s quite funny (and frustrating) that my friends are so reluctant to drive a few hours to see us.
This is mostly a study of British humor
[Whitey on the moon](https://youtu.be/goh2x_G0ct4) all over again…
Would. I just wished the toilet situation was better. (But I also wish that even at home)
The fact that the safe return is guaranteed and still people would decline boggles my mind a bit.
I assume people still attribute risk to the journey despite that.
I’m forbidden from ever wanting to go to space because of a dream my wife had a decade ago.
How miserable do you have to be to say no? Jesus.
And you can’t „reject the premise of safe return“, it’s a hypothetical where your safety is literally guaranteed. People are stupid.
Some people don’t want to because the trip back and forth would be dangerous or boring, but I would do it just for that part. If I had a chance to ride a rocket ship and see space, even without the possibility of walking on the moon, I’d do it in a heartbeat
After they found out the moon was an awkward metaphor for abortion,things got controversial
Many Britons wanted Brexit, so do we really care what they think?
I would If there was a moon base, even a small one where I could stay for a few days and do small trips outside all suited up.
I don’t think I would just to wander around for a little while then have to come straight back. Plus I get very motion sick so I imagine the journey would not be pleasant for me.
Is no one going to comment on how the data is depicted? Imho It’s simply wonderful!
I read all of the reasons listed in the second slide in Karl Pilkington’s voice.
I would, but only during nighttime obviously
This explains the “wage gap” too. Men are more curious and risk takers, women are not.
These results get funnier if you imagine the alternatives to not going – as if people are stressed over whether a 3-day trip to the moon would disrupt a Teams work meeting on Monday morning.
On one hand I would absolutely want to go.
On the other, if the moon becomes so accessible that I am able to go, then we’re at a point where space travel is so simple that it’s a daily part of life and it would the the equivalent of bobbing over to a nearby city. Still a nice time, but tame in comparison
Honestly.
This sums up the problem with society today.
I’m flabbergasted.
While interesting, the presentation certainly isn’t beautiful. Half the reasons are incredibly hard to read
My answer would always been fuck yes! I don’t care if it kills me on route and if it does I can have a burial on the moon!