NSA, Fallen Angels, Climate, and the Republic

Mail 777 Monday, June 10, 2013

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On the data collection scandal:

SUBJ: Six lines . . .

"If one would give me six lines written by the hand of the most honest man, I would find something in them to have him hanged."

– Cardinal Richelieu

And now your every email and every board posting are available for the amusement of the Richelieus.

Like many others, I believe the Republic perished last November. We are now merely being presented the conqueror’s terms.

"An intelligent victor will, when possible, present his demands to the

vanquished in installments." – Adolf Hitler

With public outrage, the "Overton Window" now moves a fraction back to the left. But its architects are relentless.

I pray good men will rebel while they still can.

Cordially,

John

This is no time for rebellion. This is a time for regrouping and making sure that we win the 2014 election.

NSA whistleblower

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/jun/09/edward-snowden-nsa-whistleblower-surveillance

The young man obviously knows little history and cannot put things into context.

NSA’s capabilities don’t really bother me. They are a pretty mission oriented group and both Cyber warfare and terrorism are real threats that make heavy use of modern communications. What bother’s me is the administration we have and it’s willingness to miss use their resources.

Phil

I am more afraid of the government than of terrorists now. I hope I am wrong.

A good overview of what NSA did and why

http://www.theatlantic.com/national/archive/2013/06/silicon-valley-doesnt-just-help-the-surveillance-state-it-built-it/276700/

Phil

I understand they had good reason for what they did. I still fear that the cure is worse than the disease.

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And yet, none of this helped prevent the Boston Marathon bombing . . .

<http://theweek.com/article/index/245311/sources-nsa-sucks-in-data-from-50-companies>

——

Roland Dobbins

An afterthought: How did they really discover Petraeus’ and Broadwell’s emails? The story given at the time seemed wildly unlikely.

IE, does the political operation *already* have access to this database?

Meanwhile, Glenn Greenwald is claiming NSA types have already used it to listen in on personal enemies. Which also tends to support my guess that they are archiving call content as well as metadata.

I’m beginning to think I haven’t been nearly paranoid enough…

Porkypine

A frightening thought.  Surely not?  Surely…

 

Walter Russell Mead on "Public Peace, Secret War: The Snooping Scandals and The President’s War Strategy’

http://blogs.the-american-interest.com/wrm/2013/06/06/public-peace-secret-war-the-snooping-scandals-and-the-presidents-war-strategy/

P

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Peggy Noonan’s IRS piece

For me, Peggy Noonan’s best line in that piece about the IRS was this one: “But why did all the incompetent workers misunderstand their jobs and their mission in exactly the same way?”

It’s a shame we can’t get a conservative Sam “See here, Mr. President!” Donaldson vetted into the White House Press Corps. It would be fun to hear Jay Carney answer that question.

–John

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Jerry:

I noticed a reference to this article on your blog.

http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2013/05/29/the_bomb_didnt_beat_japan_nuclear_world_war_ii?page=0,3

Since you were unwilling to subscribe to read the article, I bypassed the paywall to take a look at it.

I actually agree with part of the author’s analysis. The destruction and carnage inflicted by the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombs was far from unprecedented. Both had a lethal radius of about one mile and a lethal area of a little more than one square mile. This was far from a quantum leap in the destructiveness inflicted by conventional bombings. The author’s argument that a force of 500 planes carrying 10,000 to 20,000 pounds of bombs each could inflict 1/20th to 1/10th the damage actually overstates the the relative destructiveness of nukes. Because of the weapons effects scaling laws, 2,500, one ton conventional bombs can be expected to do about as much damage as a single, 30 kiloton nuke. In fact a single, Iowa class Battleship with a full bag of 1,100, 16" rounds can equal the destructiveness of Hiroshima or Nagasaki. You will recall that the older battleships that had been salvaged at Pearl Harbor were assigned to the task of bombarding Japan. The ships could destroy any cities that the air force couldn’t reach.

Where I disagree with the author is the perception of threat from the Soviet Union by the Japanese. In spite of the proximity of territory, Stalin’s ability to project force into the Japanese theatre was severely limited by logistics. The Soviets were totally reliant on the Trans Siberian railway to transport goods and troops to the far East. That is a very long, vulnerable supply line of limited capacity. Keep in mind that the coal fired trains of the era had lousy fuel economy, on the order of a few ton miles per ton of coal. To ship freight over thousands of miles, you needed to think in terms of mass ratios just like a rocket. Even more significant was the lack of naval forces, particularly amphibious assault ships, available to the Soviets. They could kick the Japanese out of Manchuria because America had cut Japans logistics, but if they had attempted to invade the home islands of Japan they were up a creek.

In the final analysis, the Atomic bombs were the final psychological weapon that was needed to give Japan a pretext to surrender.

James Crawford=

Yes. I went through that chain of reasoning long ago. So far that article has told me nothing I have not known for years.

Hiroshima and Nagasaki were events that could save face for the Emperor, and the Emperor’s surrender could save face for most of the Japanese officer corps. Still more than 2000 commited sucide after the announcement.

Jerry Pournelle Chaos Manor

I forgot to mention the one issue that made Hiroshima and Nagasaki almost imperative.

As this author points out, the Japanese recognized the evidence that nuclear weapons had been used at Hiroshima and Nagasaki. How would the Japanese know what the distinguishing characteristics of a nuclear weapon would be? The answer is that the Japanese had their own nuclear weapons program. Some believe that Japan might actually have conducted a test of a nuclear weapon in Europe.

Assuming that the US believed that Japan had a nuclear weapons program, there would have been a strong motivation to force Japan to surrender before they could employ it. Japan could not have delivered a nuke by aircraft, but mounting a bomb on a submarine then sailing it into a US harbor such as San Francisco or Seattle was very plausible.

James Crawford

== ==

The Japanese surrender

Dr. P,

Like you, when I first saw the headline for the article about what caused Japan to capitulate when it did, I was expecting a pile of propaganda. What I read instead was a surprisingly nuanced discussion of the decision process from the Japanese perspective which makes a rather compelling argument that the Japanese decision to surrender was not driven by fear of more atomic bombs but by the sudden shift of the Soviet Union from being a neutral power (who might mediate a negotiated surrender) into an enemy already attacking Japan’s least-strong frontier. In other words, the dashing of Japanese hopes for Soviet assistance in negotiating a surrender was the actual strategic change which drove them to accept an unconditional surrender.

If you are interested in reading it, I have included a copy of the complete article below. I think you will find it worth the few minutes it takes to read.

Regards,

Bill Clardy

Thank you.

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Becoming a Democracy rather than a Republic

Current events signal a disturbing trend toward a Democracy rather than a Republic envisioned by the founders.

Democracy appears nowhere in the Constitution nor the Declaration of Independence.

Article IV, Section 4 declares "The United States shall guarantee to every State in this Union a Republican Form of Government…".

The pledge of allegiance does not say "the democracy for which it stands" not is there a "Battle Hymn of the Democracy".

John Adams said "You have rights antecedent to all earthly governments; rights that cannot be repealed or restrained by human laws; rights derived from the Great Legislator of the Universe."

Nothing in our constitution was envisioned as a grantor of rights, rather, as a protector of rights.

In Federalist Paper No. 10, James Madison, said that in a pure democracy, "there is nothing to check the inducement to sacrifice the weaker party or the obnoxious individual." At the 1787 Constitutional Convention, Edmund Randolph said, ". . . that in tracing these evils to their origin every man had found it in the turbulence and follies of democracy." John Adams said, "Remember, democracy never lasts long. It soon wastes, exhausts, and murders itself. There was never a democracy yet that did not commit suicide." Later on, Chief Justice John Marshall observed, "Between a balanced republic and a democracy, the difference is like that between order and chaos."

The current administration and Congress seems to be devolving into the kind of tyranny that the founding fathers suffered under King George III.

Bud Pritchard

Kipling has a relevant poem that I recommend. http://www.jerrypournelle.com/reports/special/oldissue.html

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Volcanic Thimbulwinter ?

Dear Jerry;

Here to add to the received medieval history of climate as taught in the grade school textbooks of yesteryear is report of a thoroughly successful effort to correlate hard times in medieval Irish chronicles with explosive volcanism as measured by sulfate and particulate levels in Greenland ice cores

http://m.iopscience.iop.org/1748-9326/8/2/024035/article

Russell Seitz

Fellow of the Department of Physics Harvard University

‘Some 1,000 years ago, the Vikings set off on a voyage to Notre Dame Bay in modern-day Newfoundland, Canada, new evidence suggests.’

<http://news.yahoo.com/north-america-viking-voyage-discovered-131333241.html>

Roland Dobbins

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Fallen Angels

“Wade”

I’m reading Fallen Angels again. Wonderful. The first few pages are a wonderful sly introduction to the story, giving us a painless background.

I have reached Capt. Lee Arteria. She is working with INS. She is dealing with angels on a glacier. Since your book was written, INS has become ICE. Seems fitting.

Ed

Jerry

I used to think that the US you portrayed in Fallen Angels was a wildly improbable dystopia. Satire, I thought it.

I never thought I’d live to see the day when it became real. Now, all we need is the long-delayed return of the glaciers to make it complete.

Ed

It’s still a good read. http://www.baenebooks.com/p-137-fallen-angels.aspx

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Dear Dr. Pournelle,

I note the title of your latest piece is "

Nightmares and Despair: 2012 is crucial to the republic. Illegitimi non carborandum <https://www.jerrypournelle.com/chaosmanor/?p=14154> "

May I suggest that however crucial 2012 was to the Republic, it is now more than six months in the dustbin of history? Normally I’m not a smartass who makes those observations, but I can’t determine from context whether you mean 2013 (this year), 2014 (the next congressional elections) or 2016 (the next presidential election).

"Illegitimi non carborandum", however, is excellent advice in all seasons.

Respectfully ,

Brian P.

In your most recent View headline, that’s "carborundum." It is, of course, not real Latin, but rather a pun on a brand-name abrasive, but the brand is "Carborundum," not "Carborandam."

Meredith Dixon

I have fixed the errors. Thanks.

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Since you are recommending it, I wanted to correct the name.

Herman Miller is here in Holland, Michigan.

JED

Thanks for the correction. They are very good chairs. If you will spend a large part of your life in a chair, this is the chair to have.

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Apparently, they still use slide-rules in Spain.

<http://o.canada.com/2013/06/06/spain-builds-submarine-70-tons-too-heavy/>

—–

Roland Dobbins

I got my first slide rule as a birthday present before I entered 10th grade. It helped me a lot all through high school, and some of the other students got slide rules when they saw how useful mine was. My first was fairly basic. By the time I graduated I had a log log decitrig – and still have it. It hangs on the wall on the other side of the room. And yes I too managed to mismanage the decimal point when using a slide rule.

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Phone & Net Surveillance

Jerry,

I’m utterly unshocked by the revelations of the last 24 hours. To sum up what I’ve seen so far, the NSA is running something approaching a universal domestic phone transaction and net transaction+content database. (I’d not be that shocked if the database also includes phone content – at a couple kilobits per second for individuals-recognizable voice recording, that’s a mere few thousand terabytes a month.)

I’m mildly surprised that this should be revealed, yes – I take that as one more sign there’s a civil war within the Dems, now going from cold to hot. (Admittedly circumstantial, but notice how all the new scandals began surfacing, gift-wrapped, right around the time the White House became pressured enough on Benghazi to start hinting at throwing the former SecState under the bus.)

This NSA database may well be legal, within the letter of the "Patriot Act" hastily passed post 9/11. It’s well outside of the Act’s intent, according to Representative Sensenbrenner, one of the authors. (Good intentions, Road to Hell, pavement…)

In theory the database’s content is only available to intelligence professionals, and even then only accessible when a given transaction is algorithmically determined 51% likely to involve at least one foreign party.

But then, in theory the IRS was firewalled off from being used for political thuggery.

My view, then and now, was summed up nicely today at

http://datechguyblog.com/2013/06/07/how-stupid-do-you-think-we-are-paulie-was-right-edition/:

"Don’t give a power to one administration that can’t be trusted to all of them."

The big question now is, can we take these powers back before we’re destroyed by them? I’m not wildly optimistic.

"Guard? Guard? I want to see my Ambassador!"

"Easily done – he’s in the next cell."

– Firesign Theater, ~1970 – back then we thought it was comedy…

cynically (but cynically enough?)

Porkypine

= = =

Some additional observations:

NSA is also collecting all credit card transactions. The implications as part of a permanent searchable database of national scope are left as an exercise for the student. Hint: If our betters decide it’s bad for us, and you’ve *ever* bought it for other than cash, watch out.

Instapundit asks, given this NSA database exists, how long till the data-miners at Organizing For America are rooting through it? If they aren’t already. Oh, and that cam and/or mike you may routinely leave plugged in to your computer? Bad idea.

If you consider the liberal media that’s angry versus the liberal media that’s still defending even this as Clintonista versus Obamaista, it makes a surprising amount of sense. The NYT apparently contains both, from the overnight addition of "on this" to "lost all credibility".

It’s a good war – it may inadvertently give us back our freedom. But make no mistake, that will be unintended collateral damage. Both sides will happily resume colluding to rule us the instant that war is settled. If we let them.

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Subj: Dogs still remember the Pact

http://www.nationalreview.com/corner/350387/dog-saves-abandoned-newborn-jonah-goldberg

Rod Montgomery==monty@starfief.com

We have sometimes forgotten it, but the pact still holds.  Thank you.

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Subject: U.S. publishes details of missile base Israel wanted kept secret

And we have this, among all the rest of the scandals:

http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2013/06/03/192895/us-publishes-details-of-missile.html#.UbEm1nbnaUk

Well …. Obama DID promise to ‘fundamentally change America’

He also promised us the most open administration in the history of these United States.

 

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Jerry,

"A top Vatican official has said around 100,000 Christians are killed every year for reasons linked to their faith…" "Monsignor Silvano Maria Tomasi was quoted by Vatican radio on Tuesday as saying that the figures were "shocking" and "incredible"."

http://www.breitbart.com/system/wire/CNG—4fd7225a1fea039d4d9f6435239 389ed—6b1

"Another senior Vatican figure, the secretary of the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace, Mario Toso, said recently that discrimination against Christians "should be countered in the same way as anti-Semitism and Islamophobia"."

Hmm, ultimately that’s the Israeli Defense Forces and al Qaeda he’s talking about. Knights Templar II, anyone? One would hope closer to IDF style than al Qaeda…

Seriously, I’ve been wondering just how long we’ll keep on turning the other cheek to the growing outrages against local christians in various third-world hellholes. It’s getting harder to ignore in recent years.

Porkypine

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Subject: Domestic Surveillance

Jerry,

In my over twenty years in the intelligence field, it literally took an act of Congress for us to do any surveillance on an a US citizen. When we determined a US Citizen was involved in any of our collection efforts, we immediately ceased the interception and turned it over to the FBI.

Now, it seems it’s being done on a daily basis. Cry for us.

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/06/06/us/us-secretly-collecting-logs-of-business-calls.html?hp&_r=1&

WASHINGTON — The Obama administration is secretly carrying out a domestic surveillance program under which it is collecting business communications records involving Americans under a hotly debated section of the Patriot Act <http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/u/usa_patriot_act/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier> , according to a highly classified court order <http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/interactive/2013/jun/06/verizon-telephone-data-court-order> disclosed on Wednesday night.

The order, signed by Judge Roger Vinson of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court in April, directs a Verizon Communications <http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/business/companies/verizon_communications_inc/index.html?inline=nyt-org> subsidiary, Verizon Business Network Services, to turn over “on an ongoing daily basis” to the National Security Agency <http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/n/national_security_agency/index.html?inline=nyt-org> all call logs “between the United States and abroad” or “wholly within the United States, including local telephone calls.”

T

 

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Jerry,

Atmospheric temperature:

http://www.drroyspencer.com/ (June 4th post)

Sharp cooling continues this spring.

Arctic Sea Ice

http://www.iup.physik.uni-bremen.de:8084/ssmis/extent_n_running_mean_F17_previous.png

Currently trending at the highest level for early June in the past 6 years,

Jim

But we are told that the warming trends continue.  Of course all those grants can’t produce bad theories can they?

 

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Nightmares and Despair: 2014 is crucial to the republic. Illegitimi non carborandum

View 776 Saturday, June 08, 2013

[Original title said 2012.  In a sense that is true: the 2012 election which was lost because the Tea Party did not get out enough votes, in part because their voter organizations were crippled by the IRS – that was a crucial election.  And now here we are.  I put 2012 inadvertently but I could defend using that date as critical.]

It has been a depressing week, full of nightmare.

Nightmare Number One.

Southern California Edison has given in to the regulators and the anti-Nuke demonstrator, and will permanently close the San Onofre nuclear power plant, leaving the regulators free to pounce on the rest of the nuclear power industry. The result will be more CO2 added to the atmosphere,

At the California Independent System Operator, the company that runs the power grid in most of the state, Steve Berberich, the chief executive, said that most of the replacement power had come from natural gas, and that if California’s goal is to reduce greenhouse gas emissions per kilowatt-hour, “you’re moving in the wrong direction.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/06/08/business/san-onofre-nuclear-plant-in-california-to-close.html?_r=0

San Onofre never endangered anyone. There was never an off-site radiation leak, and what little leakage there was – all in the steam generating side of the plant, not anywhere near the nuclear reactors – was trivial and easily fixed. It resulted from some poor decisions on the part of SCE management, who bought new steam generation equipment from the wrong source. It was a silly decision. SCE was once about the best managed company I ever had close knowledge of, but after the California Grand Theft Power “Deregulation” which separated power generation and distribution and created the “Independent System Operator” things worsened. The California legislature had goodies for everyone as they created an atmosphere that let Enron manipulate energy prices and create bubbles, and the result were predictable: transfer of a lot of wealth from the power companies to legislature cronies, creation of a number of lucrative regulatory positions, and wild manipulation of electric power prices. SCE which had quietly operated as a regulated public utility which consistently delivered electric power and made reasonable but steady returns on investments to the stock holders – in other words operated as what used to be known as a Blue Chip company – got pulled into the growth madness bubble. More legislators and political consultants got rich, and power industry management was forced into participating in the bubbles. The result was predictable and I predicted it, but no one paid much attention. And meanwhile the No Nukes! crowd headed by people of the sort who like to tell the press that “The only physics I ever took was Ex-Lax, yuk, yuk” kept the pressure on, the regulators multiplied as Parkinson’s Law and my Iron Law predict, and the terror propaganda escalated. After Fukushima it reached a crescendo, and a tiny minor leak in the steam generation side of San Onofre put a just measurable quantity of Tritium into the building. Tritium has been used to make fishing lures glow, as well as for gun sights, and the amount released was in the order of the amount in those devices, but the media immediately feigned fear of a new Fukushima disaster right there near Mission San Juan Capistrano (actually it is many miles away from Capistrano) and the plant was shut down, the regulators held public hearing after public hearing, and since it costs about as much to run a nuclear plan when shut down as it does when it is generating power and earning revenue, the announcement of yet more public hearings did the trick. SCE is getting out of the nuclear power business. There will be losses to the stockholders, but even more losses to the rate payers. And of course more CO2 in the atmosphere.

I do not say that democracy has been more pernicious on the whole, and in the long run, than monarchy or aristocracy. Democracy has never been and never can be so durable as aristocracy or monarchy; but while it lasts, it is more bloody than either. … Remember, democracy never lasts long. It soon wastes, exhausts, and murders itself. There never was a democracy yet that did not commit suicide. It is in vain to say that democracy is less vain, less proud, less selfish, less ambitious, or less avaricious than aristocracy or monarchy. It is not true, in fact, and nowhere appears in history. Those passions are the same in all men, under all forms of simple government, and when unchecked, produce the same effects of fraud, violence, and cruelty. When clear prospects are opened before vanity, pride, avarice, or ambition, for their easy gratification, it is hard for the most considerate philosophers and the most conscientious moralists to resist the temptation. Individuals have conquered themselves. Nations and large bodies of men, never.

  • John Adams, letter to John Taylor (15 April 1814).

The remedy, of course, was to form a Republic, and for over two hundred years the Republic endured. Now it is to be converted into a democracy, and the result is predictable and predicted. There are many good studies of what happens when a democracy commits suicide. If it is fortunate it gets a Claudius Caesar, but more often it must first endure a Caligula so that Claudius seems a blessed relief. And after Claudius as likely as not comes Nero. But I digress. For the moment we do not yet have Marius.

Then connection between the fall of the Republic and San Onofre is not direct or that strong, but the connection between the price of energy and the health of the economy is obvious; and the demand for ‘democracy’ rises to a flood in ‘bad’ economic times, even in a nation that sets its poverty level above the median earnings of most of the world, and keeps increasing those entitlements to the point of enormous debt.

Low cost energy can save the Republic. Perhaps fracking and natural gas will do that. Perhaps. Because the tide is running hard against nuclear power, which is over time the cheapest and safest reliable energy source we know of; and low cost power plus economic freedom remains the best way to produce the goods needed to satisfy the voters in a democracy.

Of course wealthy democracies have their historic problems. They are a great temptation. And without a sound economy they find they can no longer buy peace with silver bullets. Paying the Danegeld is not usually a good idea, but if you are indebt up to your eyeballs it isn’t even an option.

End of digression.

The nuclear industry has had a difficult year as it tries to compete with cheaper, abundant natural gas. San Onofre’s two reactors are the third and fourth reactors to be retired so far this year in the United States.

“It’s no secret that power markets have been radically changed by the development of shale gas,” said John Reed, an investment banker who specializes in nuclear reactors. “That changes the economics of any other power supply option, including nuclear.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/06/08/business/san-onofre-nuclear-plant-in-california-to-close.html

San Onofre has been handed over to the jackals. The regulators now regroup. You have not seen the last of this.

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Nightmare Number Two

The evidence piles up: the IRS really and truly has become the arrogant highly-competent instrument of political terror out of the nightmares of conspiracy theorists.

The IRS Can’t Plead Incompetence

If the agency didn’t know what it was doing, it wouldn’t have done it so well.

Peggy Noonan

Quickly: Everyone agrees the Internal Revenue Service is, under current governmental structures, the proper agency to determine the legitimacy of applications for tax-exempt status. Everyone agrees the IRS has the duty to scrutinize each request, making sure that the organization meets relevant criteria. Everyone agrees groups requesting tax-exempt status must back up their requests with truthful answers and honest information.

Some ask, "Don’t conservatives know they have to be questioned like anyone else?" Yes, they do. Their grievance centers on the fact they have not been. They were targeted, and their rights violated.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887323844804578529713576219412.html

Ms. Noonan gives details. As for example the now proved IRS leak of all the names and addresses of their contributors to their progressive liberal enemies. Hard fact. Definite proof of leak. Result so far, no one punished or dismissed and no felony charges filed. In another scandal a couple of people have been put on paid leave, which is to say free vacation. This is not likely to discourage anyone.

The task of the IRS was to put a primary hamper on all the conservative get out the vote civic organizations, and it sure did that, in Spades with Big Casino. Not one liberal or progressive get out the vote organization had similar problems; hundreds of conservative ones not only did, but continue to do so, as the IRS grinding machine continues to influence the 2014 Congressional election. That election is critical: if Ms. Pelosi becomes Speaker of the House, the final conversion of the US from a federal republic to a unified democracy will jump ahead probably beyond the recovery point. It is still possible for the US to turn back and forsake its foolish ways, although that will be difficult. If Ms. Pelosi becomes Speaker, it is unlikely ever to happen, world without end, amen. The Nanny State will become a reality, in which everything is regulated for your protection and safety. Of course California is attempting that now, but the results have not so far shown many of the benefits, as children continue to die at the hands of their mother’s latest boyfriend despite warning after warning from grandparents and teachers to the Child Welfare departments. And a teacher who fed his own semen to his pupils remains on the school system payroll. No one is ever fired. The Unions see to that. And under Speaker Pelosi expect more of the same, but with the exceptional ritual throwing to the wolves of some particularly egregious public worker chosen as an example. Depend upon it.

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And the nightmares continue. The story is still developing, but apparently the government knows much more about each of us than we suspected, and has access to as much more as it likes. Of course government agencies like IRS would never leak that data to progressive allies – oops. The IRS has your tax return data. It doesn’t yet have access to your telephone and email and browsing search records – but colleagues in other agencies do. Of course no one would want to do favors to an IRS investigator.

From The Washington Post:

Documents: U.S. mining data from 9 leading Internet firms; companies deny knowledge

By Barton Gellman and Laura Poitras, Thursday, June 6, 2:43 PM

The National Security Agency and the FBI are tapping directly into the central servers of nine leading U.S. Internet companies, extracting audio and video chats, photographs, e-mails, documents, and connection logs that enable analysts to track foreign targets, according to a top-secret document obtained by The Washington Post.

The program, code-named PRISM, has not been made public until now. It may be the first of its kind. The NSA prides itself on stealing secrets and breaking codes, and it is accustomed to corporate partnerships that help it divert data traffic or sidestep barriers. But there has never been a Google or Facebook before, and it is unlikely that there are richer troves of valuable intelligence than the ones in Silicon Valley.

Equally unusual is the way the NSA extracts what it wants, according to the document: “Collection directly from the servers of these U.S. Service Providers: Microsoft, Yahoo, Google, Facebook, PalTalk, AOL, Skype, YouTube, Apple.”

PRISM was launched from the ashes of President George W. Bush’s secret program of warrantless domestic surveillance in 2007, after news media disclosures, lawsuits and the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court forced the president to look for new authority.

Congress obliged with the Protect America Act in 2007 and the FISA Amendments Act of 2008, which immunized private companies that cooperated voluntarily with U.S. intelligence collection. PRISM recruited its first partner, Microsoft, and began six years of rapidly growing data collection beneath the surface of a roiling national debate on surveillance and privacy. Late last year, when critics in Congress sought changes in the FISA Amendments Act, the only lawmakers who knew about PRISM were bound by oaths of office to hold their tongues.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/investigations/us-intelligence-mining-data-from-nine-us-internet-companies-in-broad-secret-program/2013/06/06/3a0c0da8-cebf-11e2-8845-d970ccb04497_print.html

Of course we can trust the reliable civil servants never to abuse this knowledge.

 

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There were more nightmares last week, but surely those are enough for one dose.

Despair is a sin. It is also futile. The remedy to all this is more action. We know to a certainty what the battle ground will be. We know we have the resources to win it. There Is no reduction in the people sympathetic to the Tea Party. The President’s personal approval remains high but there is no longer much confidence in his ability to manage the affairs of the nation and even less conviction that Hope and Change was anything but a campaign promise. The realization that Barrack Hussein Obama was only a politician is sinking in.

The IRS will continue to harass conservative organizations but all the money they collect is tax paid money. The donor can’t claim a tax deduction but few ever thought they could. The people of the United States do not need the IRS permission to assemble and that includes on election day.

Winning the upcoming election will not be a final win for the friends of the Republic; but losing it could be a decisive event. All the markers indicate a conservative win – and the enemies of the Republic can read those indicators as well as we. That includes the IRS agents whose jobs and pensions are on the line.

It will not be an easy job.

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Ground Game Scandal. Office View

View 776 Thursday, June 06, 2013

Anniversary of D Day, the most complex and expensive event in the history of mankind.

I have been bogged down all week. I started this two days ago. Still just checking in.

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Every time we think the IRS scandal is as bad as it gets, it gets worse. Given that the IRS was used to cripple the get out the vote efforts of the Tea Party and all organizations claiming to be patriotic or civic duty directed, and all religious operations, and given that it was Obama’s ground game that won, it is hard not to conclude that this was the key to Obama’s win.

It also means that we know how to win in 2014 and 2016.

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This was recommended to me some time ago. I read it and thought it worth recommending, but various distractions intervened. Rather than keep this as a Firefox tab, I recommend it to your attention without comment.

http://pjmedia.com/victordavishanson/it-can-happen-here/?singlepage=true

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I find myself increasingly approaching the state of the famous absent minded professor, who one day was walking through the Yard and was approached by some students who wanted an expansion of a lecture. They were impressed. Then he asked, “Gentlemen, in which direction was I going when you stopped me?” They pointed. He said, “Thank you. Good. I’ve had my lunch.”

I find I can focus on the subject at hand and give myself a good accounting, but I often have to refer to the Internet for details such as names and dates. The other day I could remember a phrase, and I knew who had said it, but I could not remember his name, or the name of the book in which it was said. Fortunately I could remember he had written A Tale of Two Cities. As I was Googling that work I realized that he had also written A Christmas Carol and that was written by Charles Dickens so I didn’t have to complete the search. It was an odd experience. On the other hand I can sometimes remember incidents that took place forty years ago. I gather it’s not uncommon. Fortunately I now live in the Internet age…

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I am doing the last intro work for the California Reader. Thanks to those who have expressed interest in it. Real Soon Now

 

I’ll try to do a bit of mail tonight.  And if you haven’t read my rather ancient essay on the Voodoo Sciences recently, this would be a good time.  It’s still extremely relevant.

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I was asked in another conference to show some pictures of where I work, and having done that I was about to erase the file when I realized that it might be of interest to some of you, so I paste it on to the bottom of tonight’s View.

My office has grown over the years, and the downstairs office suite where John Carr and any temporary associate editors worked is now my wife’s.

We rebuilt the front part of the house with this upstairs office suite for me. I actually do a good bit of creative work on a laptop in what used to be the room of the oldest son resident, but now that all four of them have moved into quarters of their own it is a combination guest room and monk’s cell – a room without Internet or distractions like telephones, and most of the books are high school text books. But I spend most of my time here,

I’ve been a bit under the weather and this place has slowly settled into the muck – it’s a real mess.

View of my work chair and the three computer screens I keep open. The window faces onto a second floor veranda where I keep humming bird feeders, and two big ceramic dishes that serve as bird baths and watering stations. There’s a brick waist high wall around the veranda and I put out bird seed most days. There has been the same family of California Jays since we moved here in 1968, and they have learned that if they yell loud enough I will go out and give them peanuts. The squirrels have learned to listen for the jays and come running. The resulting contest between jays and squirrels is a more even match than you might suppose. The chair is by Henry Miller and is expensive and I recommend anyone spending many hours in a chair to get one.

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View from my chair into the conference room. Alas the conference table is covered with stuff. That’s the room in which we held the meeting that resulted in the SSX presentation to the White House. It eventually became a scale model of SSX called DC/X. That mess on the left is a counter on which I keep the chemistry lab of vitamins and other supplements. I am sure that about half of them do me good and the other half make expensive urine, but I don’t know which ones are effective and which aren’t so I take them all.

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View of the conference room looking east from the west end.

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And the same room looking west from the reading corner in the bay window on the east end.

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Sorry the place is such a mess. I really do intend to clean it up and have a nice tea party for local SFWA members. My wife says I can’t invite anyone over until I do some cleanup and throwing out. I have to agree she’s right.

There’s a bit more, a room originally intended for the printer because this was designed before Laser printers and the Diablo was so loud you didn’t want to be in the same room with it, and another room of the northeast side of the conference room (dubbed the Great Hall) which is a pure store room. The printer room now holds the network server and cable modem and lots of tools, as well as a microwave and small refrigerator. It’s larger and more complicated than I need now, but in the 80’s we had meetings of the Space Advisory Council, and I was turning out a number of anthologies as well as fiction and three monthly science/computer columns, so all those facilities made more sense than they do now. But it’s a comfortable place to work, and a nice place to have friends over for tea.

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IRS and the Iron Law; Phlogiston; Moon Base Defense; Rubik’s Cube; and other matters

Mail 776 Monday, June 03, 2013

A short selection of mail. There’s a lot more piling up. I’ll see what I can get to.  Previously today we had a View.  https://www.jerrypournelle.com/chaosmanor/?p=14072

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The IRS And The Iron Law

Jerry,

I gather you had distractions last week. I hope all’s well, or failing that, will be so again soon.

This article strikes me as the best summary of the problem at the IRS I’ve seen: "The IRS scandal as an example of runaway organizational culture", http://ace.mu.nu/archives/340553.php. He largely takes for granted capture of the organization by those more interested in perpetuating it than in properly carrying out its nominal task. The focus is on the organizational culture that then evolved. Money quotes:

"Liberal politics, statism, the primacy of the regulatory state: it’s just the water these people swim in."

"Instead of being a nonpartisan tax-collection and compliance agency, the IRS becomes an agent of Democrat Party ideology where tax compliance is the tool rather than the purpose of the agency."

"The organizational culture in American federal service has become not just partisan but positively messianic during the age of Obama — they’re doing it for your own good, whether you know it or not!"

"The tacit approval of Barack Obama and other powerful Democrat politicians removes any vestige of unease. It explains the near-complete lack of guilt or remorse shown so far by IRS management. In their minds, they are doing nothing wrong."

and

"The solution to this scandal is not to fire the likes of Lois Lerner (though that would be a good start). The answer is to abolish the agency entirely, and to make a concerted effort to shrink the size and reach of the entire federal government apparatus. For the federal government apparatus is not nonpartisan; it is and will continue to be predominately Democrat in culture. The federal government bureaucracy has been captured by Democrats in almost exactly the same way college campuses were captured."

More or less what I’ve been saying for decades: Decimate ’em. Place a ten-year Constitutional sunset on all Federal acts and agencies.

Stagger it randomly to start; each year one-tenth of the government is abolished. If there’s a defensible need for it, the Congress can re-authorize it and start it over. If not, good riddance. And in ten years, the Congress has to, very publicly, decide again. No more unfireable bunny inspectors, no more mohair subsidies outliving their usefulness by a century, no more bureaucracies generations removed from their nominal missions.

It will be occasionally disruptive and expensive, yes. But far less so than what we’ve got.

Porkypine

That would do the job, but I fear that I have no advice on how to make it happen. Elect a dictator for a nine year period, with a small political – not judicial – review committee with limited powers, and stand well back – but the problem there is whether the Emperor you have created will let go, and whether anyone will after that respect the limits of the Constitution. We have reached a pretty critical point in the constitutional history of these United States.

I hope to be recovering from distractions. Thanks.

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Phlogiston and Vulcan

Dr. Pournelle

When I studied physics as an undergraduate, the search was on for quarks. I recall an article appeared in, oh, Omni or Analog that reported a physicist had found quarks. He reported that quarks were several feet in diameter and colored purple and green and yellow. All that was needed to see quarks was a warm Caribbean beach, a fifth or two of whiskey, and a great willingness to see quarks. In the ’70s, that was your basic quark detector.

In the 19th century, Urbain Le Verrier calculated the orbit of Mercury using Newtonian mechanics. Unfortunately, the measurements of Mercury’s passage differed slightly but measurably from Le Verrier predictions. Le Verrier posited the existence of a small planet inside the orbit of Mercury to account for the difference in order to save Newtonian mechanics. Lo and behold, astronomers came up with observations that purported to confirm the existence of Vulcan. One was awarded the Legion d’Honneur for his work. Le Verrier died happy, content in the knowledge that Vulcan existed. Except it didn’t.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vulcan_(hypothetical_planet)

Before Vulcan, chemists proposed the existence of phlogiston to explain combustion. Once it became possible to accurately measure the weights of materials before and after combustion, some chemists proposed that phlogiston had negative weight in order to explain the increase in weight of burned materials. The old chemists did not give up phlogiston. They just died. A new generation grew up with newly discovered elements and the theory of oxidation. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phlogiston_theory

When I was an undergraduate, my professors said that the equations for mass traveling faster than c yielded meaningless answers. We students replied, No, they yielded negative imaginary mass. The professors said, That’s meaningless. We students replied, No, it is not meaningless; we just don’t know what it means. I have waited many years for one of my fellows to ascribe meaning to negative imaginary mass. I still wait.

Now I read that there is more Dark Matter and Dark Energy in the universe than there is . . . Light Matter and Light Energy, I guess. And that, like String Theory, it is untestable. In the cases of DM and DE because we can’t get handles on them using the tools of our world. Question: If we cannot observe or manipulate DM or DE, how is it that they interact with our world?

A suggestion: Let’s give DM and DE the dignity they deserve and call them phlogiston.

Surely there must be a physicist or six who has thought similar thoughts. If modern physics require phlogiston to save the equations, perhaps the equations are not worth saving.

"All models are wrong, but some are useful."

The Einsteinian model is still useful, but so is Newtonian mechanics. You can plot a course to the Moon and back without resort to Einstein’s theories. But at the boundaries, the Einsteinian model requires contortions that are literally incredible.

Perhaps as happened with phlogiston and Vulcan, advance will come when the current generation of physicists — who have their careers invested in this model — die. A younger generation will work up new theories to deal with the discrepancies at the boundaries. And those new theories will work until they find a new boundary. And then we shall begin the round again.

"Vanity of vanities. All is vanity! . . . and there is nothing new under the sun." Ecclesiastes 1:2 & 9

Live long and prosper

h lynn keith

Well done. I will add that if you assume that gravity has a propagation velocity of the speed of light (local speed of light; no need to assume it is universal through the Universe) then the shift in the Perihelion of Mercury is predictable and explained; you don’t need either General or Special Relativity to explain that observation.

I am working on a presentation of the evidence for and against the Expanding Universe. Meanwhile Tom Bethell’s presentation of Petr Beckmann’s aether theory, Questioning Einstein: Is Relativity Necessary? () is a very good non-mathematical explication of the Beckmann theories. Beckmann contended not that Einstein was wrong, but that every observation used to confirm Einstein Relativity could be accounted for by Backmann’s assumption of the local gravitational field as the aether, and could do so with enormously simple math, simple algebra and calculus, no tensors required. Hilton Ratcliffe, an astronomer, in The Static Universe Exploding the Myth of Cosmic Expansion makes the case that there is very little observational evidence in favor of the hypothesis that large objects are moving away from each other at rates of 70 kilometers per second, but this applies only to relatively distant objects. It’s 70 km/second time the distance from Earth in megaparsecs. If you take this literally you will end up with objects moving away from each other at speeds approaching the speed of light. Ratcliffe makes the observational case well. More on that another time.

I can’t quite make myself believe that most of the universe is invisible.

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An alternate view of what ended the war with Japan –

Jerry –

This essay makes a pretty compelling case that the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki had essentially nothing to do with ending the war with Japan.

http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2013/05/29/the_bomb_didnt_beat_japan_nuclear_world_war_ii

–Gary P.

You have to subscribe or register or something to read the article, so I didn’t bother, but before the login screen covered everything I saw the headline “The Bomb didn’t defeat Japan, Stalin did,” which as been the communist party line since my undergraduate days. I find it unlikely that it has any new data that we haven’t had for a long time. Given that even after the Emperor ordered them to lay down their arms thousands of Japanese Army officers committed ritual suicide, it’s unlikely that the predictable Russian entry into the war would have done the job – and it’s not at all certain that Stalin would have entered the war at all without the bomb. In any event, Truman had little choice. He was President of the United States.

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Derbyshire: The Vast and the Tiny

http://spectator.org/archives/2013/05/29/the-vast-and-the-tiny/print

Well written book reviews.

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100,000 Christian Martyrs A Year 

Jerry,

"A top Vatican official has said around 100,000 Christians are killed every year for reasons linked to their faith…" "Monsignor Silvano Maria Tomasi was quoted by Vatican radio on Tuesday as saying that the figures were "shocking" and "incredible"."

http://www.breitbart.com/system/wire/CNG—4fd7225a1fea039d4d9f6435239389ed—6b1

"Another senior Vatican figure, the secretary of the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace, Mario Toso, said recently that discrimination against Christians "should be countered in the same way as anti-Semitism and Islamophobia"."

Hmm, ultimately that’s the Israeli Defense Forces and al Qaeda he’s talking about. Knights Templar II, anyone? One would hope closer to IDF style than al Qaeda…

Seriously, I’ve been wondering just how long we’ll keep on turning the other cheek to the growing outrages against local christians in various third-world hellholes. It’s getting harder to ignore in recent years.

Porkypine

I’m going to let you think for a bit before answering this. Most modern accounts of the Crusades are heavily biased against them just as most of those I read when growing up were romantically in favor. I still remember Scott’s Talisman. One book worth reading is Harold Lamb’s Iron Men and Saints, and its sequel The Flame of Islam; the two were collected into the composite work The Crusades, ut I have not seen any copies of the combined work for sale. The first volume is the best. They give a pretty good picture of what things were like at the time. Lamb was not a professional historian, which is to his advantage since he was a good writer.

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SUBJ: US Moon Base Defense Manual 1959

https://www.smallarmsoftheworld.com/content/pdf/S00110.pdf

{Download PDF, 9.5MB}

"Moon Base project, US Army, 1959. Project Horizon- Phase I Report “A US Army Study for the Establishment of a Lunar Military Outpost” Volume

III: Military Operational Aspects (U). 8 June, 1959."

"This military manual/report analyzes the USSR threat to US interests on a Lunar base, and methods and weapons to defend and fight on the moon.

Trajectory of projectiles under the light Lunar gravity is addressed."

"Lunar weapons recommended to use against the Soviet threat are a pistol that fires a buckshot round to maximize spacesuit penetration; Handheld directional mines on a stick because “The rapid fall off of blast pressure in the vacuum” would not cause danger behind a stick held claymore type device. Claymore type weapons; and of course, the Davy Crockett nuclear launcher. The illustrations are outstanding, from the short-sleeve spacesuits to the “Deely-bobbers” on the helmets, assumed to be for communication. This manual is from the collection of the late Dr. Edward Ezell, and Col. John Starling discovered it in the reference library at Shrivenham, and shared it with us. It’s not a Confidential Report anymore, so enjoy! LMO Working Reference Library"

I hadn’t known that particular document had been declassified. Actually I haven’t thought about it for decades. Interesting. The only phrase I particularly remember from it was the conclusion that blast was not a good kill mechanism for the lunar environment. It was all pretty well speculation, of course.

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: HSV-2 Swift,

Rode hard, put away wet, and still kickin’:

http://dams.defenseimagery.mil/lightbox/assetcolcreate.action?name=previewcol&id=ba219eae2788ce3cec5d21fc3a88751f66dda5f8&scope=request&nextpage=/vims_lbox_preview.jsp

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Intelligence cubed

Truly, he must be the kwisatz haderach !

http://youtu.be/K_gHa2x2OQA

Russell Seitz

Fellow of the Department of Physics Harvard University

Depends on where you rank the ability to solve the Cube.

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SUBJ: Cheesed off

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/howaboutthat/10076336/Grandmother-wont-make-Double-Gloucester-for-cheese-rolling-event-after-heavy-handed-threats-from-police.html

"For some 200 years, people have chased a large rolling cheese down a steep hill each year in Gloucestershire, England. And for the past 25 years, Diana Smith, 86, has made the cheese wheel they chase. But Smith says she won’t make the cheese this year, after getting threatened by police. Three officers showed up at her home and warned her the event was dangerous and she would be held liable for any injuries suffered by those taking part in the chase."

Will there ever again be an England?

Cordially,

John

Which may explain why the Scots want their own Parliament and laws…

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Subject: cold fusion

Jerry,

I haven’t had a round tuit yet to look at that article, I had it by email from a friend before you published and set it on the back

burner, and there it sits…

I’ll note that in the US, Blacklight Power (www.blacklightpower.com) has continued to impress investors, make press releases (though

the most recent is a year old), and publish papers on the web site ever since I first heard of them 17 years ago, with its claim of

a non-fusion based energy source which literally defies conventional quantum mechanics.

Jim

I am willing to believe that low temperature fusion is possible. I am not willing to believe that if it is achieved it can be kept a secret and needsto be surrounded by hocus pocus, and alas, all the cases I have heard of turn out to have reasons why the press can’t take some meters and thermometers and go have a look…

I wish it were all true but I also knew Bussard pretty well. He was an honest man — and didn’t try to hide what he was doing.

Jerry Pournelle

Chaos Manor

Low temperature fusion IS possible. We’re doing it every day in our laboratory, using commercially purchased apparatus. But it is not a breakeven device, by orders of magnitude.

Roger that – if they won’t let someone else make an honest measurement, it’s not a honest result.

Jim

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Forbes

Hi Jerry,

Forbes moved to a "contributor" model last year. Anybody can sign up and get approved to be a "contributor", and at that point they have their soapbox under the Forbes brand name. See http://onforb.es/M8zjVk

That’s why you’re confused why "Forbes" is excited about the cold fusion guy. Forbes is not; there’s just a "Forbes contributor" who is excited about him. Forbes doesn’t edit the Forbes "contributors" at all, is my understanding.

I see this as really unfortunate; Forbes basically has sold out its name to be a blog hosting site.

Regards,

B

Thanks. I hadn’t realized that.

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A word about the Oklahoma tornado, from Oklahoma

There has been much disinformation and propaganda in the national press that global warming somehow played a part in the recent devastating tornado in Moore, Oklahoma. However, quite the opposite is the case.

I have lived in Oklahoma for all of my 58 years and this has been the coolest spring in recent memory. The thunderstorms that spawn tornadoes here in Oklahoma are the result of cold air from the North (Rockies) colliding with warm moist air from the South (Gulf of Mexico). This spring we have had an abnormal amount of strong cold fronts coming down from the North as well as arriving much later in the season than usual.

Apparently this is not a local anomaly either. There is a report out that the mean temperature of the Northern hemisphere was in fact cooler in April than in March:

http://wattsupwiththat.com/2013/05/04/uah-global-temperature-down-significantly/

Of course not much has been said about this cooler weather. After all, who wants a visit from the IRS?

Blair

Norman, Oklahoma

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London Terrorists

Dr. Pournelle:

Regarding "Mons Meg" and [presumably] your idea of reviving the Indian Mutiny era practice of "firing from [not OUT of] guns", I have a far better idea.

We’re both old enough to remember that great cheesy Viking movie, "The Long Ships", with Richard Widmark and Sidney Poitier. I propose that all such terrorists, including Nidal Hassan and Dzhokar Tsarnaev, be given a ride on the "Mare of Steel". Since in the movie, it was the concoction of a Moorish prince (Poitier), it can hardly be called "Islamophobic". I see great pay-per-view potential…

Chris Morton

It does not appear likely…

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