I was privileged to be born in the 1950s. I still remember my mum listening to the radio and telling me that there was a man in space (Yuri Gagarin), and I was old enough in the later 60s to witness, and understand the significance of, the Mercury, Gemini and Apollo programs culminating in the Lunar landings.
In Earth orbit we have had Skylab, Mir, Shuttle, ISS, constellations of communications-, broadcasting- and navigational-satellites. Beyond Earth's immediate locale, we have landed or flown-by all the major planets, some asteroids, and a comet. Robotic probes are excavating material from some bodies for future return to Earth. Half a dozen countries, of all political shadings, have soft-landed vehicles on alien bodies, and some of them are still driving around. We've sent probes beyond the boundaries of the Solar system, and spaceborne telescopes are probing the furthest reaches of the universe.
The prototype of a manned lunar probe is currently orbiting the moon; the first person-capable vehicle to do so in 50 years, and we stand on the threshold of permanent lunar settlements, and a manned probe to Mars. Possibly, inshallah, in my lifetime.
Against this backdrop, someone on another thread (who's name I can't even be arsed to look up again) is suggesting that space is boring. Unbelievable. Makes you wonder where we will be in another 50 years.