🚽 NASA’s Artemis II mission launched on April 1st to great fanfare and one extremely concerning footnote: the toilet on board is refusing to accept urine from the astronauts. Not broken — refusing. According to sources close to the mission, the toilet’s liquid waste collection system has been rejecting inputs “like a very picky maitre d’.” 🚀 The four highly trained crew members — selected from thousands of applicants — are now reportedly “managing the situation creatively” using methods engineers describe as “legacy solutions.”
😂 This marks the second consecutive NASA mission to experience significant toilet drama, prompting the International Space Sanitation Research Collective to publish an emergency 47-page white paper titled “Why Can’t We Get This Right.” 🛸 Meanwhile, the crew has been briefed that the situation is “being monitored from the ground” — a statement one astronaut described as “the least helpful thing I have ever heard in my career, including the part where they told me about the toilet.”
🤯 Engineers have narrowed the problem down to either a sensor issue, a valve malfunction, or — according to one anonymous source on a forum NASA would like us not to cite — “the toilet has simply decided it deserves better.” 💧 SpaceX took the opportunity to release a statement saying their toilet “has never once refused anyone” and that they look forward to “continued innovation in space plumbing infrastructure.”
💬 “The toilet is functioning nominally in all other respects,” NASA spokesperson Linda Creighton said at a briefing that everyone present agreed to never speak of again, adding: “We are confident the crew will adapt. This is fine. Everything is fine.”
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