Red Planet, Red Lipstick: Jeff Bezos Accidentally Launches Marxism into Orbit |bohiney.com

Red
Planet,
Red
Lipstick:
Jeff
Bezos
Accidentally
Launches
Marxism
into
Orbit
and
Inspires
a
Generation
of
Woke-Astronauts

By

Bohiney.com
,
certified
to
be
127%
funnier
than

The
Onion

MARXISTS
IN
SPACE:
A
JEFF
BEZOS
EXPERIMENT
IN
ZERO-G
EQUALITY

Jeff
Bezos
Launches
Marxism
into
Space

When

Jeff
Bezos

said
he
wanted
to
“boldly
go
where
no
man
has
gone
before,”
we
didn’t
realize
he
meant
launching
a
floating
feminist
book
club
into
the
thermosphere.
But
here
we
are—six
women,
a
bucket
of
champagne,
a
duffel
bag
full
of
climate
guilt,
and
Katy
Perry
in
a
sequined
space
suit,
humming
“I
Kissed
a
Comrade
and
I
Liked
It.”

Welcome
to
the

Blue
Origin

flight
that
wasn’t
just
a
rocket
launch—it
was
a
political
statement,
an
ideological

TikTok
,
and
an
interstellar
art
installation
titled
“What
If
Trotsky
Had
a

Vanity

Mirror?”


THE
LAUNCH:
LIFT-OFF
WITH
A
LEFT
HOOK

On
April
14,
2025,
Blue
Origin’s
New
Shepherdezza
rocket
took
off
from
West
Texas—fueled
by
liquid
hydrogen,
feminist
theory,
and
the
ghost
of
Emma
Goldman.
The
all-female
crew,
personally
selected
by
Jeff
Bezos
and
Lauren
Sánchez,
included
pop
icon
Katy
Perry,

news

anchor
Gayle
King,
and
four
other
Marxist-adjacent
influencers
whose
political
views
are
so
progressive
they
orbit
Pluto.

The
mission?
Not

science
.
Not
exploration.
The
stated
goal:
“To
represent
the
future
of
intersectional
interplanetary

equity
.”
The
actual
goal:
to
post
space
selfies
and
read
Das
Kapital
in

zero
gravity

while
sipping
kombucha.

Lauren
Sánchez,
dressed
like
a
Chanel
cosmonaut,
addressed
the
crowd:
“We’re
launching
women
who
believe
in
equality,

social
justice
,
and
the
right
to
have
matching
tote
bags
with
climate
slogans.”

As
the
engines
roared,
so
did

Twitter
:
“Just
saw
six

socialist

influencers
ascend.
This
is
how
the
USSR
would’ve
launched
Barbie.”
—@NeoTrotsky69

WHO
ARE
THESE
SPACE
MARXISTS?
A
CAST
STRAIGHT
FROM
NPR’S
DREAMS

Jeff
Bezos
Launches
Marxism
into
Space

The
six
women
aboard
weren’t
astronauts.
They
were:


  • Katy
    Perry
    ,
    self-declared
    “space
    ally,”
    who
    brought
    her
    dog
    and
    a
    scented
    candle
    called
    “Revolutionary
    Raspberry.”


  • Gayle
    King
    ,
    armed
    with
    a
    space
    camcorder
    and
    Oprah’s
    blessings.


  • Jada
    Solstice
    ,
    an
    eco-poet
    whose
    last

    protest

    was
    against

    avocado
    toast
    .


  • Dr.
    Luna
    Rivera
    ,
    a
    sociologist
    specializing
    in
    “Capitalism-Induced
    Loneliness
    on

    Mars
    .”


  • Nikki-Ann
    “Nebula”
    Carter
    ,
    a
    TikTok
    influencer
    who
    taught
    her

    followers

    how
    to
    cancel

    gravity
    .


  • Rhea
    Zhang
    ,
    founder
    of
    the
    grassroots
    org
    “Earth
    Isn’t
    Yours,
    It’s
    Ours.”

Their
combined
résumés
include
three
memoirs,
two

Netflix

docuseries,
and
a
TEDx
talk
titled
“Reclaiming
Oxygen
from
Patriarchal
Lung

Privilege
.”


WHAT
THEY
BROUGHT
TO
SPACE



  • Books
    :
    “Gender
    Trouble,”
    “How
    to
    Argue
    with
    a

    Capitalist

    and
    Win,”
    and
    “Intersectional
    Astrology
    for
    Cosmic
    Living.”


  • Snacks
    :
    gluten-free,
    carbon-neutral

    energy

    orbs
    (formerly
    known
    as
    granola).



  • Technology
    :
    one

    AI

    assistant
    programmed
    to
    respond
    only
    to
    inclusive
    language
    and
    unionize
    if
    overworked.


MISSION
ACCOMPLISHED:
THE
FIRST
FEMINIST
SOVIET
IN
THE
SKY

During
the
11-minute
flight,
the
women
read
aloud
passages
from
Audre
Lorde,
passed
around

essential
oils
,
and
renamed
constellations
after
influential
female
philosophers.
The
Big
Dipper
is
now
“Susan
Sontag’s
Ladle.”
Orion’s
Belt
was
deemed
“problematic”
and
redubbed
“Unbinding
Gender.”

Katy
Perry
asked,
“Can
we
do
a
group
chant?”
and
began:
“From
each
according
to
her
ability,
to
each
according
to
her
skincare
routine.”

According
to
onboard
sources,
they
attempted
to
redistribute
their
oxygen
in
solidarity.
Everyone
got
equally
lightheaded.


GAYLE
KING’S
REPORT:
“A
NEW
DAWN
FOR
COSMIC
EQUITY”

Gayle
King’s
report
for
CBS
Space
News
opened
with,
“I
just
made
history—and
also
made
a
smoothie
in
space.”
Her
exclusive
segment
featured
slow-motion
clips
of
feminist
high-fives
and
a

debate

on
who
would
play
Rosa
Luxemburg
in
the
inevitable

HBO

reboot,
“Red
Planet
Diaries.”

She
ended
her
broadcast
with:
“Houston,
we
have
no
problems—only
feelings.”


BEZOS’
ROLE:
SUGAR
DADDY
OF
SPACE
PROGRESSIVISM

Jeff
Bezos
watched
from
Mission
Control,
weeping
softly
as
his
rocket
disappeared
into
the
stars.
His
latest
PR
stunt
was
supposed
to
outshine
Elon
Musk’s
exploding
Mars
colony
trailer
park.
Instead,
it
created
a
new
movement:


#Wokeonauts

.

According
to
insiders
at

Amazon

HQ,
Bezos’
next
plan
is
“Universal
Basic
Spacesuits.”

His
post-launch
statement
read:
“This
is
about
inclusivity.
Also,
it
helps
with
tax
credits.
And
honestly,
I
just
wanted
to
see
if
space
would
fix
Twitter.”

Jeff
Bezos
Launches
Marxism
into
Space

12
TEENS
JOIN
THE
DEMOCRATIC
PARTY
MID-LAUNCH

Back
on
Earth,
reports
poured
in
that
at
least

12


Gen
Z

girls,
inspired
by
the
launch,
changed
their
TikTok
bios
from
“Chaotic
Bi”
to
“Future
DSA
Chairwoman.”
One
even
declared,
“This
is
my
origin
story.
I’m
going
to
Yale.
I’m
majoring
in
Gendered
Astrophysics
and
minor
planetary
reparations.”

Another
tweeted:
“Watching
Katy
Perry
become
a
cosmonaut
made
me
realize

capitalism

is
trash.
BRB
joining
the
Democratic

Socialists

and
buying

moon

crystals.”


FEMINIST
UTOPIA
IN
ZERO
G:
NO
PATRIARCHY,
JUST
PARTICIPATORY



DECISION-MAKING

Instead
of
a
commander,
the
flight
had
a
rotating
“Facilitator
of
Emotional
Safety.”
Every
action
required
a
consensus.
Seatbelt
fastened?
Vote
on
it.
Open
the
window?
Group
discussion.
Flush
the
zero-g
toilet?
Let’s
unpack
what

waste

means
to
us
emotionally.

Gayle
King
attempted
to
activate
the
reentry
thrusters,
but
Jada
Solstice
insisted
on
“healing
dialogue
first.”

Result:
the
capsule
spent
an
extra
orbit
listening
to
each
other’s
childhood
traumas.


CELESTIAL
COMMUNES:
A
NEW
FRONTIER
FOR



POLITICAL
THEATER

This
wasn’t
just
a
trip—it
was
a
statement.
An
NPR-backed
thesis
wrapped
in
titanium
and
scented
with
patchouli.

The
team
performed
a
symbolic
“Decolonizing
the
Moon”
ritual
using
crystals,
sage,
and
a
Bluetooth
speaker
playing
Tracy
Chapman.
Katy
Perry
lit
a
candle
for
every
country
that
ever
endured

sanctions
.

Rhea
Zhang
released
a
dove
from
the
emergency
supply
kit,
crying,
“Fly,
symbol
of
cosmic

peace
!”
The
dove
immediately
got
sucked
into
the
air
filtration
system.


THE



INTERNET


EXPLODES
WITH
REACTIONS



  • Fox


    News
    :
    “Bezos
    Launches
    Gender
    Studies
    Seminar
    into
    Space,
    Gas
    Prices
    Rise.”



  • MSNBC
    :
    “Historic:
    Women
    of
    Color
    and
    One
    Global
    Pop
    Icon
    Redefine
    the
    Cosmos.”



  • The
    Onion
    :
    “We
    Can’t
    Compete
    with
    This
    Anymore.
    We
    Surrender.”


  • Reddit
    :
    “Space

    Marxism

    is
    real.
    Prepare
    for
    orbital
    gulags.”


ELON
MUSK’S
RESPONSE:

On
X
(formerly
Twitter),
Musk
posted
a
meme
showing
a

Tesla


Cybertruck

outrunning
a

Communist
Manifesto
,
captioned:
“My
rockets
have
more
payload,
fewer

pronouns
.”

Bezos
replied:
“Your
ego
is
in
retrograde.”


THE
AFTERMATH:
WILL
THERE
BE
A
SEQUEL?

Yes.
Blue
Origin
has
announced
the
next
launch:
Red

Rocket
II:
Intersectionality



Strikes


Back

featuring
Lizzo,
Jane
Fonda,
and
Greta
Thunberg.
It’s
rumored
to
include
a
musical
number,
a
live

apology

circle,
and
the
world’s
first
floating
safe
space.

Jeff
Bezos
is
considering

renaming

the
company
Blew
Urchin
and

rebranding

space
as
“a
zone
of
inclusive
acceleration.”

Meanwhile,
Walmart
quietly
funded
a
competing
mission
to
put
six
libertarians
on
the
moon.
Their
capsule
is
shaped
like
an
American
flag
and
runs
on

fossil
fuels

and
spite.


CONCLUSION:
THE
FINAL
FRONTIER
IS
NOW
A
FASHIONABLE
POLITICAL
STUNT

Once
upon
a
time,
space
was
the
realm
of
cold
engineers,
emotionless

scientists
,
and
Tang.
Now
it’s
a
floating
panel
discussion
on

wealth
redistribution

and
the
ethics
of
alien
colonization.
Jeff
Bezos
didn’t
just
send
six
women
into
space—he
accidentally
made
Marxism
cool
again.

In
the
words
of
Katy
Perry
as
she
floated
past
the
Kármán
line:
“We
are
stardust.
We
are
golden.
We
are
reclaiming
the
means
of
production—one
launch
at
a
time.”

WHAT
THE
FUNNY
PEOPLE
ARE
SAYING
ABOUT…

Jeff
Bezos
Launches
Marxism
into
Space

“So
Bezos
sent
six
women
into
space,
and
none
of
them
packed
a
wrench—but
they
brought
five
copies
of
The
Bell
Jar
and
a
therapy
dog.”

—Ron
White

“Jeff
Bezos
used
to
deliver
packages.
Now
he
delivers

performance

art
disguised
as
science.”

—Jerry
Seinfeld

“I
asked

Alexa

what
this
launch
was
about,
and
she
said
‘emotional
validation
at
3,000
mph.’”

—Sarah
Silverman

“Katy
Perry’s
mission
patch
had
sequins.
If

NASA

did
this,
the

moon
landing

would’ve
been
choreographed.”

—Larry
David

“The
only
thing
these
women
colonized
was
the
concept
of
‘mutual

consent

in
orbital
proximity.’”

—Bill
Burr

“This
is
what
happens
when
Amazon
Prime
runs
out
of
Earth-based
PR
stunts.
You
start
launching
brunches
into
space.”

—Whitney
Cummings

Jeff
Bezos
Launches
Marxism
into
Space:
DISCLAIMER

This
satirical
report
was
produced
by
two
sentient
beings—one
a
cowboy,
the
other
a
farmer—working
together
to
ridicule

billionaires

with
a
space
complex
and
political
theater
with
too
much

glitter
.
All
references
to

communism
,
feminism,
and
kombucha
in
orbit
are
purely
comedic
and
should
not
be
used
to
build
actual
rockets
or
write
doctoral
theses.

For
more
orbital

comedy
,
subscribe
to


Bohiney.com


certified
to
be
127%
funnier
than

The
Onion
,
and
200%
more
likely
to
put
Trotsky
on
a
lunchbox.



Katy
Perry,
Lauren
Sánchez,
and
Jeff
Bezos
Launch
a
Woke
Rocket

15
Observations
on
Blue
Origin’s
Marxist
Space
Sorority


Marxism
just
got
an
upgrade:
zero
gravity
and
a
killer
view
of
the
Earth
they
want
to
redistribute.

Katy
Perry
sang
“Firework,”
and
now
she
is
one.
Let’s
launch
6
liberal
icons
into
the
stratosphere
and
hope
trickle-down
feminism
finally
works
in
orbit.
Here’s
what
happened
aboard
the
Blue
Origin
rocket
that
blasted
off
with
a
full
female
cast
curated
by
Jeff
Bezos’
new
inner
circle
and
an
ideological
compass
that
points
hard
left.

Rocket
Reds:
15
Observations
on
Bezos’
Flying
Feminist
Commune

  • They
    weren’t
    astronauts.
    They
    were
    astro-nots
    wearing
    Che
    Guevara
    patches
    on
    their
    moon
    boots.

  • Blue
    Origin’s
    PR
    said
    this
    was
    about
    “representation.”
    Translation:
    six
    women,
    zero
    scientists,
    all
    with
    master’s
    degrees
    in
    emotional
    wellness
    and
    a
    minor
    in
    Twitter

    activism
    .

  • Each
    passenger
    received
    a
    complimentary
    copy
    of
    The
    Communist
    Manifesto,
    now
    rebranded
    as
    Manifesting
    Equality
    in
    Microgravity.

  • The
    pre-flight
    training
    included
    a
    seminar
    titled,
    “Redistributing
    Oxygen
    in
    Closed
    Systems:
    Breathing
    as
    a
    Collective
    Right.”

  • At
    liftoff,
    Katy
    Perry
    screamed,
    “This
    one’s
    for
    Karl!”
    and
    Gayle
    King
    live-blogged
    it
    as
    “the
    most
    intersectional
    launch
    of
    all
    time.”

  • Bezos
    cried
    during
    launch.
    Not
    because
    of
    the
    moment—but
    because
    he
    realized
    he’d
    just
    paid
    $80
    million
    to
    throw
    a
    Zoom
    therapy
    group
    into
    the
    stratosphere.

  • The
    spacecraft
    had
    no
    steering
    wheel.
    Instead,
    it
    was
    guided
    by
    consensus.
    Every
    decision
    was
    made
    through
    a
    45-minute
    feelings
    circle,
    which
    delayed
    re-entry
    by
    36
    hours.

  • Lauren
    Sánchez
    brought
    crystals
    to
    align
    the
    spacecraft’s
    energy.
    They
    did
    nothing
    for
    the
    navigation,
    but
    Jeff
    clapped
    anyway.

  • The
    rocket
    was
    renamed
    “The
    People’s
    Capsule”
    and
    spray-painted
    with
    slogans
    like
    “Property
    is
    Theft”
    and
    “Eat
    the
    Rich,
    but
    Not
    Bezos—He’s
    Funding
    Us.”

  • Inside
    the
    capsule,
    they
    banned
    the
    term
    “Mission
    Control”
    for
    being
    too
    patriarchal.
    It
    was
    renamed
    “Mutual
    Support
    Pod.”

  • When
    offered
    space
    food,
    the
    crew
    refused
    it
    on
    ethical
    grounds.
    They
    instead
    attempted
    to
    grow
    kale
    hydroponically.
    The
    kale
    unionized
    and
    demanded
    fair
    lighting.

  • Twelve
    young
    female
    fans,
    inspired
    by
    the
    flight,
    launched
    a
    movement
    called
    “Democratitas
    in
    Space.”
    Their
    platform?
    Free

    Botox

    for
    all
    and
    abolishing
    Earth-based
    gravity
    because
    it’s
    a
    form
    of
    cis-hetero
    oppression.

  • Back
    on
    Earth,

    AOC

    proposed
    a
    congressional
    bill
    to
    make
    all
    future
    astronauts
    pass
    a
    litmus
    test
    on
    dialectical
    materialism.

  • The
    capsule
    didn’t
    land—it
    decolonized
    the
    atmosphere
    gently
    and
    with
    consent.
    It
    then
    applied
    for
    reparations
    from
    the
    ozone
    layer.

  • Bezos
    called
    it
    a
    success.
    But
    leaked
    documents
    revealed
    the
    onboard
    Wi-Fi
    was
    throttled
    whenever
    anyone
    tried
    to
    open
    an
    Ayn
    Rand
    PDF.

Auf
Wiedersehen…
The
revolution
will
not
be
televised.
It
will
be
livestreamed
in
4K
from
60
miles
up—with
blush
filters
and
a
Beyoncé
soundtrack.



WHAT
THE
FUNNY
PEOPLE
ARE
SAYING

Comedian
lines
about
Bezos
launching
six
Marxist
women
into
space

“Only
Jeff
Bezos
could
launch
six
women
into
orbit
and
still
somehow
make
it
feel
like
a
TED
Talk
on
menstrual
equity.”

—Ron
White

“It
wasn’t
a
rocket—it
was
a
flying
graduate
seminar
with
crystals
and
a
group
playlist
called
‘Songs
to
Dismantle
Capitalism
To.’”

—Jerry
Seinfeld

“I
love
that
they
renamed
the
capsule
‘The
People’s
Pod.’
Because
nothing
says
revolution
like
$58
million
per
seat.”

—Sarah
Silverman

“They
said
‘Houston,
we
have
a
patriarchy.’
And
then
they
held
a
vote
to
replace
it
with
a
matriarchal
lunar
commune.”

—Larry
David

“Bezos
launching

Marxists

into
space
is
like

Elon
Musk

opening
a
gluten-free
food
truck.
It
makes
no
sense,
but
it’ll
trend.”

—Bill
Burr

“That
wasn’t
zero
gravity—it
was
just
the
weight
of
privilege
floating
around
unsupervised.”

—Wanda
Sykes

“Imagine
explaining
to

Lenin

that
Katy
Perry
is
now
the
face
of
cosmic
revolution.”

—Trevor
Noah

“One
of
them
brought
kale.
Not
seeds—an
actual
salad.
That’s
how
committed
they
are
to
annoying
the
universe.”

—Ali
Wong

“Gayle
King
livestreamed
from
orbit
and
said,
‘This
is
for
every
girl
who’s
ever
been
mansplained
to
during
a
group
project.’”

—Hasan
Minhaj

“Bezos
was
crying
during
launch—not
because
it
was
moving,
but
because
someone
said
they’d
unionize
the
flight
crew.”

—John
Mulaney

“The
capsule
was
gender-neutral,
non-hierarchical,
and
running
3
hours
late
because
someone’s
vibe
was
off.”

—Tig
Notaro

“NASA
had
Neil
Armstrong.
Blue
Origin
has
‘Rhea
the
Moon
Empath’—who
claims
to
astrally
project
to
Pluto
when
anxious.”

—Nikki
Glaser

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