Except this person is a mannequin. Who conveniently can't talk....
Ripley may not be able to talk, but she was wired up with lots of telemetry sensors, so she really does have a lot to say.
Imagine the bullseye shot in getting 1 tiny object to intercept another, hundreds of kilometres skyward travelling at ~27000km/h
Except that it wasn't a "bullseye shot". It started as a launch to an orbit about 200 km lower than the ISS orbit. Over the next 25 hours or so, the orbit was raised and adjusted several times until it matched the orbit of the ISS.
And globe earthers are just like 'meh' as if it's no small achievement.
Actually, the space community has been hailing it a a rather significant achievement. Although, to be fair, most of the mission profile has been done 16 times before by SpaceX during their ISS resupply missions. The biggest difference is that this was the first launch of a human rated commercial spacecraft to the ISS.
For humans of the early 21st century it is an impossible achievement!
Ummm... No. NASA had been doing if for years with the shuttle until it got retired and the Russians are still doing it today. Again, this is a commercial spacecraft, not a government spacecraft.
If there was any real confidence, that mannequin would have been Elon Musk himself. Or some other moron who thinks it's all real. Because why send up a mannequin when there are no shortage of volunteers or criminal scum you would give 2 shits about if the whole thing blew up on the launch pad?
Unfortunately NASA tends to be rather risk averse and is making SpaceX and Boeing jump through all sorts of hoops before they let any humans fly. This includes launch abort tests and unmanned test flights. The crew Dragon capsule that is currently docked with the ISS is scheduled for an in flight abort test in a couple of months. If the rest of this test mission and the launch abort test go well, then SpaceX could fly humans as soon as July.
Even the earlier Mercury, Gemini and Apollo programs had several unmanned test flights before humans were allowed to fly. In fact, the space shuttle was the only US spacecraft that did not have an unmanned test flight before launching humans.