Este sitio web fue traducido automáticamente. Para obtener más información, por favor haz clic aquí.

CNN’s Brian Stelter poo-pooed Richard Branson’s foray into space on Sunday, pondering aloud if it was ethical to launch costly, fuel-guzzling rockets into space amid the "climate crisis." 

Branson reached space on a test flight for Virgin Galactic before gliding back to earth and touching down safely Sunday, the latest salvo in the burgeoning space tourism business led by high-profile billionaires. Much of the historical event occurred during Stelter’s ratings-challenged media program, so he was tasked with anchoring a portion of the coverage. 

CNN’s Brian Stelter poo-pooed Richard Branson’s foray into space on Sunday, pondering aloud if it was ethical to launch costly, fuel-guzzling rockets into space in amid the "climate crisis." 

CNN’s Brian Stelter poo-pooed Richard Branson’s foray into space on Sunday, pondering aloud if it was ethical to launch costly, fuel-guzzling rockets into space in amid the "climate crisis." 

CNN’S BRIAN STELTER HAS JUNE TO FORGET AS ‘RELIABLE SOURCES’ RATINGS TANK IN BIDEN ERA

"Stelter was channeling Ebenezer Scrooge during Sunday’s ‘Reliable Sources’ as he bah humbugged the event and decried it as immoral because of climate change and the evils of capitalism," NewsBusters analyst Nicholas Fondacaro wrote

Stelter read out a tweet, "Have to wonder, if, in the future, billionaires taking vanity tours of space while the climate overheats will be one of the moments the historians wrote about," before echoing the point. 

"On Friday, in Death Valley, California, it was 130 degrees, the highest temperature ever. Saturday, same thing. Today, it might, again, set a record for the highest temperature on the planet," Stelter said. "Is it moral, is it ethical to be launching rockets and flying off to space and spending all this money and burning all this fuel in an age of climate crisis?"

IN INTERVIEW PANNED AS 'BOOTLICKING,' CNN'S STELTER ASKS JEN PSAKI TO TELL HIM WHAT THE MEDIA 'GETS WRONG'

CNN aerospace analyst Miles O’Brien didn’t play ball.

"Well, I don't think it's mutually exclusive, Brian," O’Brien said. "I think we can afford to continue to push our frontier, but we still have to fix our own spaceship here first and concurrently."

O’Brien added that space exploration is important as humanity searches for natural resources that could eventually be mined, and it’s crucial to take steps toward extending humankind beyond the solar system. 

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP 

Fox Business Network’s Peter Aitken contributed to this report.