ALBAWABA - Since the launch of Blue Origin's all-women spaceflight on April 14, a huge controversy has been ignited on social media, questioning the real meaning behind the logo on their spacesuits.
The all-woman spaceflight (called NS-31) departed Earth at 9:30 a.m. EDT (8:30 a.m. local Texas time), The Times reported. The trip lasted for about 11 minutes only as the spacecraft reached the Karman line, the internationally recognised "boundary of space", and returned to the launching site in Texas, US.
The all-female spaceflight included Katy Perry, Aisha Bowe, Amanda Nguyễn, Gayle King, Kerianne Flynn and Lauren Sánchez, fiancee of the American billionaire and the founder of Blue Origin company, Jeff Bezos.

The logo of the Blue Origin's spacesuits is seen upside-down (X)
The dark side of Blue Origin's spacesuit: Worshipping devil or rocket symbol
Many incidents took place during the less than half an hour spacetrip, first Jeff Bezos was trapped and face-planted while checking on the all-female crew. Nonetheless, superstar Katy Perry was mocked after she kissed the ground upon landing back on Earth.
However, many rumors continued to flow on social media, especially on the X platform (formerly known as Twitter), where some people highlighted that there's a dark side of the logo attached to the spacesuit the six females wore on Monday.

Photo allegedly claimed to represent satan on the Blue Origin's spacesuits. (X)
A claim was made online that the logo on the all-women's spacesuit has another meaning if it is flipped upside-down, it "literally depicts Satan," people allegedly said, claiming that the spaceflight rituals and the spacesuit logos are possibly associated with the "occult, witchcraft, and even Satanism."
It is worth mentioning that the logo on the spacesuit depicts a rocket, stars, the space mission name "NS-31" and the names of the six women who were included in the trip.