Voodoo Science; Praetorians; borrowing to pay bunny inspectors; missed opportunities; and more.

Mail 708 Sunday, January 15, 2012

 

Thanks to all who have recently subscribed or renewed subscriptions. http://www.jerrypournelle.com/paying.html 

I was rummaging through other stuff and found the page that points to two of my illustrated walking trip reports, one in Rome and the other in Paris. http://jerrypournelle.com/jerrypournelle.c/reports/trips/  They actually make for quite pleasant reading.

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Lengthy review of Charles Murray’s latest: Coming Apart: The State of White America 1960-2010:

http://www.toqonline.com/blog/elite-and-underclass/

“At 416 pages, Coming Apart is Charles Murray’s most substantial offering since 2003’s Human Accomplishment. It continues a theme familiar to readers of The Bell Curve: increasing American social stratification. Murray focuses on whites because otherwise the social trends he describes might lazily be explained away as effects of demographic change; he demonstrates that the trends are almost wholly unaffected by race or immigration. As he notes, a constant focus on how racial minorities ‘lag’ whites serves to distract attention from important changes in the benchmark population itself.”

And then he covers those changes in “the bookmark population.”

Sobering.

Ed

I do not have a high regard for Sociology as a discipline, and indeed my C P Snow Memorial Lecture in Ithaca New York was on The Voodoo Sciences http://www.jerrypournelle.com/science/voodoo.html ; but I have always made an exception for Charles Murray. His books are always worth reading, and he pay meticulous attention to the data. The Bell Curve didn’t tell the world anything that the scientists who actually study IQ and mental ability and its measurement didn’t know, but it did bring a lot of the discussion out in the open – to the militant disgust of most of the Voodoo Sciences. I was personally at a session of the American Association for the Advancement of Science at which the session chairman, a prominent Professor of Sociology, proudly announced that he had not read the book he would now discuss – and promptly proved it, to great applause from an audience most of which had not read it either. Such is Sociology. But Murray has always shown that there is a basis for a science in there if you actually look at the data.

I have my own ideas on what the computer revolution has done to the intelligent class. I have ordered his book and I look forward to seeing what Murray has done, and what data he finds significant. One of my heroes, he is.

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Subject: The Rise of the Praetorian Class

Long, but worth reading, IMHO:

http://www.caseyresearch.com/cdd/rise-praetorian-class

Worth reading, but it requires a longer comment than I have time or inclination to give. Do understand that the Iron Law of Bureaucracy applies to military and policy organizations, particularly in peace time; it’s not quite so visible or severe because the standards for admission to the organization can and often are kept high, and the Mamelukes and Janissaries and Praetorians do not admit fools and cowards to their brotherhood; but of course that may change in peace time.

We live in a Republic founded by political leaders who were very much aware of Roman history, who had read their Plutarch, who seriously debated the working of the Venetian Republic – in 1787 the longest surviving Republic in the history of mankind, not yet ended by Napoleon and the bayonets of the French Army – and who were quite familiar with the careers of Julius Caesar, Mark Anthony, Octavian, Marius, and Sulla, the Gracchi – most of whom are known to modern Americans from movies. (Incidentally, if you want a good picture of the character of Julius Caesar, Claude Rains in my judgment does that well in the movie Caesar and Cleopatra, which faithfully puts on screen the George Bernard Shaw play of the same name. Shaw was a complex man but he got that part of history right.

Now I suspect that if you ask the average member of Congress who the Gracchi were you would get stammers or a blank look; and I doubt many of them have read more than a quoted paragraph of Gibbons or Macaulay, or know much about the career of Septimius Severus, who succeeded the last Roman to become Roman Emperor. For a walk through Rome with some comments on Severus who had discovered the dread secret, that Emperors could be made in places other than Rome, see http://www.jerrypournelle.com/reports/trips/rome1.html

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scale of the universe

You’ll like this.

http://www.scaleofuniverse.com/

– Paul

Neat!

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Sometimes, Ann Coulter …

…reminds me of why I added that Lady to my blogroll in the first place.

(I mean besides that picture of her on her page. 🙂

http://paulinhouston.blogspot.com/2012/01/sometimes-ann-coulter.html

From her latest …

Earlier this week, Mitt Romney got into trouble for saying, "I like being able to fire people who provide services to me." To comprehend why the political class reacted as if Romney had just praised Hitler, you must understand that his critics live in a world in which no one can ever be fired — a world known as "the government."

Paul Gordon

Precisely. I do wish that Schumpeter’s Capitalism, Socialism, and Democracy were required reading in journalism school (and indeed in any civilized university education curriculum).

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China Borrowing

While I agree the federal government does not need to be in the bunny inspection business (except perhaps ensuring health checks on any imported bunnies to keep from importing any new diseases), I do find it a bit of a stretch to say we are borrowing from China to pay for the bunny inspections or any federal programs.

While China does hold about a 1 trillion dollars of debt, that is only about 7.8% of the total public debt. The amount of debt that China holds was relatively steady ( 0.3% decrease) from September 2010 to September 2011 while the total public debt grew. Even on a margin basis – if the government would either borrow an extra dollar, or cut expenses by a dollar – it would be unlikely to be reflected by a dollar increase or decrease in debt held by China.

I think the fact that the US has a large trade imbalance with China probably has more to do with the amount of debt Cina holds, then federal borrowing does. After all China has to invest all those extra dollars somewhere.

China does hold 24.6% of the public debt in foreign hands, and 11.3% of the debt in private hands. It only holds 7.8% of the total public debt.

Foreign holders account for less then half (46.0%) of the debt held by the public, and 26.1% of the total public debt.

Of the increase in 1.238 trillon in public debt between 9/30/2010 and 9/30/2011, 336.1 bilion (27.1%) was due to an increase in foreign held debt. The total amount China held actually fell by 3.6 billion over that year.

With almost 75% of the total debt and new debt in domestic hands, I have to say the federal government is mainly using domestic borrowing. The Federal Reserve after the stimulus plan purchases now holds more debt then China does. Of course, the Social Security trust fund holds a large amount of the public debt.

It will be interesting to see how the makeup of the debt will change now that Social Security has began paying out more in benefits then it is taking in in payroll taxes, and has had to use some of the interest on the debt it holds to pay benefits.

Figures come from two US treasury websites

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http://www.treasurydirect.gov/NP/NPGateway

Well, so long as some money is borrowed from China, does it matter? That is, we have bunny inspectors and we borrow money from China. Eliminate enough needless government spending and put off other stuff that might be a good thing if we could afford it; get the debt down so that we don’t have to borrow money from China – and then continue to reduce the needless spending. But thank you . You are correct. We don’t borrow all the needlessly spent money from China. We borrow most of it from someone else. But it’s still needless.

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Indefensible.

<http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2012/01/nsa-cant-defend/>

<http://intelnews.org/2012/01/13/01-908/>

——-

Roland Dobbins

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Two of Final Four Army Brigades to be Withdrawn From Europe

http://www.newsmax.com/Newsfront/Army-troops-withdrawn-Europe/2012/01/13/id/424125

This is something we should have done a decade ago.

John Harlow

Actually I have been saying this for two decades. The French want us to sit on Fritz. The Germans like having Americans spend money in Germany, and not having to have a large Wehrmacht. The troops like it in Europe. The taxpayers have never read George Washington’s advice on entangling alliances and not being involved in overseas territorial disputes. So it goes.

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Subject: The Thin Red Line.

January 13, 2012: Britain is reducing the size of its army to 82,000, the lowest it has been in over 200 http://www.strategypage.com/htmw/htpara/20120113.aspx years. It was hoped, by the politicians doing the cutting, that the Territorial Army, similar to the U.S. National Guard and Reserves, could be reorganized and retrained in order to make them able to quickly join the regulars for overseas assignments. Unfortunately, this may not make much of a difference unless the Army can do something about a severe manpower shortage in the reserves. The army is also unsure if the part-time Territorial soldiers can be made ready for rapid deployment to overseas hot sport.

Most of the problems Britain’s ground forces suffer from are related to years of defense budget slashes and poor pay, which have resulted in a lack of spare parts, equipment, and disgruntled and poorly paid personnel. Currently the Territorial Army numbers around 29,000, which is 7,000 short of what it is supposed to be. But the issue of manpower has always been Britain’s major problem, regardless of whether the military was well-funded or not. During World War II, the constant and unceasing demands for manpower in the European Theatre caused growing personnel shortages in the army. In the old days, this wasn’t so much of a problem since Britain could call upon hundreds of thousands of Empire troops to make up for their own shortage of bodies to fill the ranks. The majority of these soldiers came from South Africa, India, and the ANZAC (Australia and New Zealand). Unfortunately, this is no longer possible since the Indians are no longer associated with the Commonwealth. As for the Australians and New Zealanders, they are unlikely to mobilize thousands of troops unless there is a direct threat to Britain.

Currently, the active army consists of about 82,000 officers, NCOs, and enlisted men. The 29,000 Territorial Army troops have several different degrees of obligation. The Regular Reserve is composed of two different classes (A and D). The A class reservists are required to answer compulsory calls for training and deployment whereas Class D troops report for service on a purely voluntary basis. Furthermore, Territorial Units are broken up into Regional and National formations. The Regional formations are composed of soldiers recruited locally from specific areas in Britain. Their commitment is a minimum of 27 days training a year. For National formations, who typically fulfill specialized roles such as logistics and medical services, the commitment is even less at 19 days per year.

Despite the limbo in which the Territorials find themselves regarding their personnel shortages, the government is smart enough to realize they’re going to need the reserves. Currently, the Territorial Forces have no fixed timetable for training their units up to full combat-ready standards. This has caused some in the regular army to question whether, in their current state, the Territorials could provide any added value to the offensives in Afghanistan.

Currently, the reserves’ time to get in shape and trained for combat operations is capped at six months. This may not be enough time to conduct basic training and teach advanced skills before shipping the troops to a combat zone. The plan also calls for more training alongside regular army units, to learn heavy weapons skills. This usually results in the reduction of training times in order to get more soldiers in combat faster. Britain has made it clear that during future overseas crises, the Territorials are going to be in combat soon and they want them trained and ready to do their jobs as quickly as possible. Unfortunately, all the training and upgrading may be for nothing if they can’t scrape up the recruits they need and implement training programs that will prepare the reservists for combat quickly enough.

http://www.strategypage.com/htmw/htpara/20120113.aspx

But why would they need an Army? They have the Fleet. Oh. Well, we don’t have to study war no more. The US will take over the world policeman job.

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EU

The European Union might appear a military superpower, at least on paper. It has more uniformed personnel than the United States and overall EU defense spending outstrips Russia or China.

But as Washington pulls troops back from the continent, two decades after the Cold War ended, and refocuses on Asia, the cash-strapped nations of Europe face uncomfortable truths over just how paltry their real military capabilities have become.

NATO’s war in Libya last year was trumpeted as Europe starting to take responsibility for its own backyard, with Britain and France calling the shots while Washington "led from behind." In reality, the campaign was heavily dependent on U.S. military, technical, intelligence and logistical support – the Europeans could not even supply enough of their own munitions.

</>

http://old.news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120110/ts_nm/us_europe_defence

That’s par for the course. Europe has always been unable to fend for itself. They can’t get along and when the wars get really bad, we have to go in and sort them out….

—–

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

Europe could afford Socialism because they didn’t need to defend their territory against Russia during the Cold war. It’s a tradition.

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missed opportunities

Dr. Pournelle-

You may have already seen this …

http://www.american.com/archive/2012/january/the-high-cost-of-government-waste

John Cuson

When presidential candidate Mitt Romney ridiculed former House Speaker Newt Gingrich for favoring a mining colony on the moon during a recent presidential debate, he undoubtedly thought he was scoring political points.  But anyone watching who had ever thrilled to Stanley Kubrick’s thoughtful depiction of interplanetary travel in 2001: A Space Odyssey likely admired the Speaker’s spirited defense of his off-world agenda.

There are many ways to measure the cost of wasteful spending in the decades since the Apollo moon landings—the size of the current national budget deficit, surveys showing Americans’ growing mistrust of government, or the number of duplicative and inefficient federal programs.

Yet perhaps the most disheartening metric is the number of promising space exploration proposals that have been abandoned in the name of “more pressing social priorities.”

And considerably more. The first time I met Newt Gingrich was on the phone – he had got my phone number from my publisher and wanted to discuss A STEP FARTHER OUT, which he had just read and wanted to discuss with me. I discuss lunar and asteroid resources and how we could be back on the moon for good by 2010. Yeah , we missed some opportunities…

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Crow roof tubing –

Jerry

Here is a crow not only using a tool, but using it to play:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YP9RnDp_tms

Amazing. Very smart bird. “Roof-tubing.” Who would have thought?

Ed

Smart birds. Our local crow flocks are down again. I haven’t seen more than 12 at a time for months; it used to be we had several flocks of fifty or more. I miss them. But apparently the are flourishing in other places. It’s the West Nile that’s killing them. Didn’t used to have any West Nile in Southern California when I moved here.

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Saturn’s Rings and Two Moons

Jerry,

Another keeper from Cassini

<http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA14591>

Regards, Charles Adams

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Marine Urination Video –

Jerry,

… assuming that the marine urination video is real and not a videoshopped piece of propaganda:

I am very surprised and appalled by your cavalier attitude toward the Marine urination on dead Taliban incident.

Respect for the dead should be instilled in all our warriors – this is what separates a marine from a savage.

It is the job of NCO’s, recruiters, and drill sergants to find, discipline, and remove such troopers from the ranks.

It’s also the job of the NCO’s to train our troops to not do stupid stuff. It hurts their mission.

That being said, in a large group of people the bell curve will apply and stupid actions will happen. What matters then is how a free, open, honest, and just society deals with those who allegedly break the rules.

Jim Coffey

I doubt it was video shopped.

I have seen troops who honored dead enemies; some enemies deserve honor. I have also known troops who went out of the way to desecrate dead enemies. Oddly enough, in Korea Chinese dead and prisoners were treated much better than North Korean dead and prisoners.

The Marines acted without thinking of the consequences and must be made to realize that; but I have always believed that far more serious acts take place in every combat action. War is Hell. A rational army would run away. Those men did not run away, and I’d far rather have troops who urinate on the enemy than troops who surrender to get their throats cut while in captivity.

And I hope they had bacon for breakfast that morning. I’m told they did.

I don’t appall as easily as many, I suppose.

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Romney moves right; kerfluffle; some sites to see;and false flags.

View 708 Sunday, January 15, 2012

CES is over, with plenty of new stuff but nothing startling. We’ll get to that another time. On the national scene, Santorum continues to make Presidential speeches but doesn’t seem to be moving in the polls, Mitt Romney is working to run to the right of Newt Gingrich and sounding more conservative on most issues than anyone else (he supports the Ryan budget), and Newt seems to be coming down out of his fit in which he would rather destroy Romney than look like a President. I doubt South Carolina will change those trends.

Having got rich as a capitalist, Romney ran as a liberal Republican back in 1994 when he ran against Ted Kennedy for Senate. Kennedy won easily in a year when the Democrats lost both the Senate and House to Newt Gingrich’s Contract With America. It is an interesting speculation: had Romney run as a Contract With America conservative, would he have done better? He probably would not have won, but it was a Republican year, and it makes an amusing fantasy. Instead he went back to his business career, then turned the Utah Olympics from a predicted disaster into a resounding success.

He governed as a liberal Republican in a liberal Democratic state, which makes him about the most conservative governor Massachusetts has had in a long time; and since that time he has moved steadily to the right. Romney is trying to run to the right. That’s an encouraging sign. And he defends the Ryan budget. That’s another.

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A mixed bag of links.

I have a number of Firefox open windows. Too many, actually. Each marks a place that I found interesting enough to save either as inspiration for an essay, or to recommend. Unfortunately I am running out of time. Here are several places you may find interesting; in general the reasons I found them interesting should be obvious. Some are inspirations. Others are horrible examples. And I may come back to some of them as basis for an essay, but meanwhile you are invited to consider:

A Cold War Secret revealed: http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=D9RRJUV02&show_article=1 I have many memories of those days.

http://www.maximumpc.com/article/news/chrome_engineer_explains_near_billion_dollar_investment_mozilla The title should be enough to make this interesting.

http://www.infowars.com/one-man-stands-up-changes-the-world-nightly-news/ on SOPA.

The battlecruiser INSS MacArthur. http://www.starshipmodeler.net/contest4/ss_s15.htm

http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2011/12/why-pilot-projects-fail/250364/ A thoughtful and worth reading piece. I’m not deleting this one.

http://www.americanthinker.com/2011/12/our_growing_police_state.html

http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/01/12/us-molecule-climate-idUSTRE80B1U820120112 Another answer to global warming?

http://www.spaceref.com/news/viewpr.html?pid=35725 On finding Earth sized planets Out There.

http://boingboing.net/2012/01/10/lockdown.html Corey Doctorow uses more words than most would, but he makes some good points. The issue is important.

http://freefall.purrsia.com/default.htm I put this here in case there are any of you not following FreeFall. If you don’t know what that is, you should. The important point is don’t try to make sense of the strip from what’s happening now. There’s always a link to the story beginning. Go there. Read it all in order. It will take you a week if you do it at a fairly natural pace of a few dozen of the strips at a time. It’s worth it. The first few episodes will be a bit confusing but that will end quickly enough. The background is a time when we have colonized other planets at other stars, and there are a lot of robots. One thing you probably should know is that Sam is not human, and is the only member of his race in human jurisdiction and thus has something of the status of an ambassador so he gets away with stuff that others could not. Not only is he not human, he is not vertebrate. This gives him an interesting cultural background the discovery of which is a part of the story. Have fun. I certainly have.

http://colinmcinnes.blogspot.com/2011/01/is-sustainability-dangerous-idea.html#more This definitely warrants an essay.

http://www.spacefuture.com/archive/access_to_space_ssx.shtml This is credited to Jim Ransom but I wrote most of the quoted material in it. I hasten to say that Jim was in the conferences that generated the material. It’s a good exposition on SSX and X projects.

http://www.aipnews.com/talk/forums/thread-view.asp?tid=19857 On Hormesis

http://www.theregister.co.uk/2011/11/08/how_to_stay_anonymous_part_ii/print.html On cookies and tracking what sites you visit and like that.

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I have a huge hunk of mail I’ll try to get up. Meanwhile I am working on another Chaos Manor Reviews column, and our novel proceeds. And thanks to all those who recently subscribed or renewed their subscriptions.

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The Marine urination kerfluffle continues with the Secretary of Defense getting into the act. The US will probably lose some good troops out of this, not because of what they did, but because they were dumb enough to film it and let that film be seen. There doesn’t seem to be any way out of this. Were they in my command they’d be put on KP for at least a week, and they’d certainly not get a positive recommendation for promotion, but shooting them for the encouragement of the others seems a bit extreme.

Meanwhile I do hope the Taliban understands that we often give the troops bacon for breakfast, and while this will make the troops a lot more cautious about what they allow their comrades to film them doing, the practice of putting it in a dead enemy’s eye has been traditional since before the Trojan War, and is unlikely to be ended now. There have been many incidents of acts of respect to dead enemies in the centuries, but that was toward brave and honorable enemies.

I understand that argument that the United States must be on higher moral grounds than the enemy. We already are. This doesn’t change that a bit. And I will say again that in the unlikely event they ever put me in a command position, those Marines would be welcome in my outfit. But they would have to peel a few potatoes, and turn in their cell phones. For weeks.

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Have you noticed that the US has gone out of its way to apologize to Iran for the execution of the Iranian nuclear scientists?

http://www.cnn.com/2012/01/15/world/meast/iran-nuclear-scientist-killed/index.html

U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta Thursday told troops in Texas: "We were not involved in any way — in any way — with regards to the assassination that took place there…. that’s not what the United States does."

Brig. Gen. Yoav Mordechai, a spokesman for the Israel Defense Forces, said on his Facebook page Wednesday: "I have no idea who targeted the Iranian scientist but I certainly don’t shed a tear."

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Bacon, Hot Fudge, and Radiation

View 708 Friday, January 13, 2012

FRIDAY THE 13th FALLS ON FRIDAY THIS MONTH

Hot Fudge Sundae falls on Tuesdae

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You may rest easy. The government has borrowed money from China, handing the debt to your grandchildren, in order to keep you from being radioactive, and it worked. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission has found that a particular brand of Bed, Bath and Beyond tissue holder is contaminated with Cobalt 60. If you put it on a shelf in your bathroom and spend half an hour a day in there near it, you might get a whole body equivalent of a chest x-ray – perhaps two – over the year.

Of course if you move to Denver, or take a couple of transcontinental flights a year you’ll get the same effect, and that’s not counting the radiation the TSA will subject you to before you begin your flight. I don’t know what this protection by the NRC cost but I suppose it is more valuable than bunny inspectors. But should we be borrowing money to do it?

http://www.nydailynews.com/life-style/health/radioactive-tissue-box-holders-yanked-bed-bath-shelves-article-1.1005746

http://yourlife.usatoday.com/health/story/2012-01-13/Radioactive-tissue-holders-pulled-from-stores/52528908/1

http://enenews.com/no-imminent-public-threat-bed-bath-beyond-pulls-radioactive-items-from-stores-cobalt-60-detected-in-tissue-holder

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I am told those Marines had bacon for breakfast that day. What will the Secretary of State say to that? But Taliban beware. The US often serves bacon to the troops.

Meanwhile our allies in Afghanistan have allowed a 13 year old girl to leave jail where she was being held for adultery, but only on condition that she marry the uncle who raped her.

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Dr, Jim Busby and I had a discussion of reusable spacecraft at LASFS last night. Most of it rambled through history, which is probably my fault, but we did look a bit at what Space X is trying to do. There are a number of paths to reusable space ships, You can find a discussion of that in my SSX Concept papers written, alas, a very long time ago. www.jerrypournelle.com/slowchange/SSX.html

I never really thought of it before, but the irony of what happened to SSX came to me during the discussion. The Council I chaired submitted space policy papers to President Reagan. The most recommendation made in Fall 1980 as a Transition Team paper talked about strategic missile defense, which Reagan adopted, and when he came out with his Strategic Defense Initiative it was instantly labeled Star Wars by Ted Kennedy and many Democrats. SDI turned out to be a significant factor in the economic war with the Soviet Union, and is generally credited with a major role in Soviet Collapse and the end of the Cold War.

Alas, the major funding for SSX came from SDI, and with the end of the USSR the major driver for reusable spacecraft was ended. Shuttle was designed to be reusable but performance requirements forced NASA to run the Shuttle Main Engines at 110% of their rated capacity. At 95% performance the engines were reusable – just fill the tank and fly again, next day – but at 110% they became rebuildable. They had to be taken apart and refurbished because of the strain on parts such as the impellors. Thus we had no reusable ships to fly a hundred missions a year. We did well to fly three.

So the success of the SDI policy recommended by the Council that also recommended SSX (scale model was DC/X) was instrumental in winning the Cold War and ending one of the major drivers for X programs to develop reusable spacecraft. And so it goes…

It’s lunch time.

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We are not alone.

http://www.spaceflightnow.com/news/n1201/11exoplanets/

But will we find them?

http://www.spaceflightnow.com/news/n1201/12jwst/

And should we be borrowing money from China to do it with? I am of the opinion that good technology research always pays off, but some payoffs are much better than others, and much more likely. It’s a matter of allocation of scarce resources. I’d rather build telescopes than pay people to watch stage magicians to be sure their rabbits are licensed, but how urgent is the telescope?

 

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Working. Tony Blankley RIP

View 708 Thursday, January 12, 2012

I have a lunch appointment regarding a speaking engagement, and I am still going through Lucifer’s Hammer to check the formatting of a new release of the book.

I put up some mail last night, and found I had to do several adjustments this morning. Bad typoes, and I had posted the wrong letter on phonics; I have a new one up that was what I had intended, It’s pretty funny, and there’s an actual lesson in it as well. If you haven’t seen that mail yet it’s fine; if you have and any part puzzled you, it was probably one of the errors I fixed. Apologies. It’s pretty good mail, and the fault was all mine, and it’s fixed now anyway.

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Rudy Giuliani has said that Newt Gingrich sounds more like Saul Alinski than Ronald Reagan in his attacks on Romney. I don’t know that I would go that far, but I know that the Reagan I knew wouldn’t have been running those ads.

I note that some Rush Limbaugh callers are saying that Newt has lost their vote due to these attack ads. They seem quite sincere.

I must confess that I am confused to hear Romney being accused of being a capitalist. Yes, I understand, conservative does not mean unrestricted laissez faire capitalism; that left to itself without regulations the maker will sell anything including human flesh (both as slaves and meat); but that is not what happens in America, and has not. I know that Newt has read  Schumpeter’s Capitalism, Socialism, and Democracy, but I do wonder if it is not time for him to read it again.

I note that Tony Blankley, Newt’s long time friend and advisor, died recently. Tony was dedicated and devoted, and served Newt well during his days as Minority Whip. He will very much be missed. RIP. http://townhall.com/columnists/tonyblankley/

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Back to work. I am also working on Chaos Manor Review and the year end/beginning column. I have neglected all that but I’m back on it. Now off to work.

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