On Friday afternoon, Bill Maher stood in front of his Real Time audience and noted it was four o’clock Pacific time — about an hour from the Artemis II splashdown. Then he dismissed the entire mission. Roughly an hour later, the capsule punched through Earth’s atmosphere at 25,000 miles per hour, its heat shield absorbing temperatures hotter than lava, before splashing down in the Pacific off San Diego.
Four astronauts — Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch, and Jeremy Hansen — had just completed a 10-day trip around the moon, traveling farther from Earth than any humans in history.
Maher missed the landing. He was busy calling the moon a rock.
“Let’s Fix the Sh*t Show Here on Earth”
Earlier this week, Trump threatened to wipe out Iran’s “whole civilization.” He said: I’m not bluffing. Did you see what I did to Atlantic City? pic.twitter.com/4eGoM1JhQx
— Bill Maher (@billmaher) April 11, 2026
During his monologue, Maher told his audience he didn’t understand the excitement. Everywhere he went, people asked if he’d seen the photos. He’d seen Earth before. People kept telling him the moon was a stepping stone to Mars, and he didn’t want to go there either. Nothing out there except other rocks.
Panelist Paul Rieckhoff — a veteran and founder of Independent Veterans of America who has spent years advocating for troops coming home to broken systems — pushed back. He said Artemis II inspired hope. Maher wasn’t moved. Ten more miles, he said. We’ve been to the moon before.
What One Launch Costs

Here is what it costs to send four people around the moon and bring them back: $4.1 billion. That is the per-launch price of NASA’s Space Launch System and Orion spacecraft, according to a NASA Inspector General audit. The White House’s own 2026 budget proposal called the SLS “grossly expensive” and noted it had exceeded its original budget by 140 percent.
Here is what else $4.1 billion could do.
The Department of Veterans Affairs’ entire annual budget for homeless veteran programs is $3.2 billion. That covers outreach, shelter, and supportive housing for the more than 32,000 veterans who are homeless on any given night in America. One Artemis launch exceeds that budget by nearly a billion dollars.
The Flint water crisis — a disaster that poisoned roughly 100,000 residents, many of them children — required an estimated $1.5 billion to repair the city’s water infrastructure. One launch could have fixed Flint’s pipes with $2.6 billion to spare.
At a national average of $300,000 per unit, one launch could fund the construction of more than 13,000 affordable homes.
What the Whole Program Costs


Zoom out, and the math gets louder.
Total spending on the Artemis program has exceeded $93 billion through 2025, according to a NASA Inspector General estimate. Analysts project it will surpass $100 billion as additional missions proceed.
The Department of Housing and Urban Development has estimated it would cost $20 billion to end homelessness in the United States. Less than a quarter of what has already been spent getting back to the moon’s neighborhood.
An additional $9.6 billion would provide housing placements to every household currently staying in a homeless shelter in America, according to the National Alliance to End Homelessness. That is roughly the cost of two Artemis launches.
The $15 billion the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law set aside for lead pipe replacement nationwide — covering 9 million lead service lines — expires in 2026. The Trump administration has not committed to upholding the EPA rule that requires those pipes to be replaced within a decade.
The Question Washington Is Already Fighting Over
Maher may not realize it, but he is asking the same question dividing Congress.
The Trump administration’s proposed 2027 budget would slash NASA funding by roughly 25 percent. Congress rejected nearly identical cuts for the current budget cycle, protecting Artemis with bipartisan support. The political argument rests heavily on competition with China, which has announced plans for a permanent lunar base by 2030.
Meanwhile, the same budget proposes cuts to the domestic programs that serve the people Maher says should come first.
Rieckhoff pushed back on Maher’s cynicism Friday night. But Rieckhoff has also spent his career arguing that the government isn’t doing enough for veterans who come home to find the systems waiting for them are broken. The VA’s homeless programs budget — the one that falls short of a single Artemis launch — is the system those veterans rely on.
Nobody on the panel mentioned that number. But it was sitting right there between them.