LOSCON tomorrow; a mixed bag tonight. A point for Ether theory. They have guns, we have Warthogs

Chaos Manor View, Thursday, November 26, 2015

Thanksgiving Day

bubbles

Spent the day with Roberta and Alex. Mass, brunch, movie The Martian at the Arclight, dinner at Dupar’s. We didn’t have a traditional Thanksgiving because neither I nor Roberta is up to it, and Alex is the only family member in town anyway. It all worked out well.

Tomorrow Alex and I go down to LOSCON, where they have loaded me up with panels, and we also have dinner with the Writers of the Future judges who are there and whomever else they invite. I’ll be there all day, and then Saturday they have me on three more panels, all interesting with interesting people. I expect to be exhausted, so you will probably not hear from me until Monday.

bubbles

Russia is angry with Turkey. There is a dispute over how long the Russian fighter-bomber was over Turkish territory – which is a jutting spur less than ten miles wide. The Turks insist they sent warning after warning that the Russians were approaching their territory, but did not fire until the Russian plane was over Turkey. The Russians claim that it never was over Turkey at all; but even by the Turkish account any rational flight plan would put the Russians over Turkey no more than a minute at longest, and actually the time over Turkey would have been no more than a few seconds. They had to be ready to fire. They claim they were defending their air space; from what is not clear.

See the map references links below.

Putin will not let go of this, and we have not heard the last of the incident.

If Turkey is trying to get the Russians to stop attacking the Turkmen rebels in Syria in hopes of stemming the flow of Turkmen refugees into Turkey, this is not going to accomplish that. If this is jihad against Russia it is likely to trigger countermeasures. I expect the Armenians have their own grievances and would welcome Russian help…

bubbles

Subj: Russia vs. Turkey: Dueling Maps of shot-down Russian jet’s flight track

http://www.businessinsider.com/turkey-russia-maps-jet-shot-down-2015-11

Rod Montgomery==monty@starfief.com

bubbles

We need to remove our tactical nuclear weapons from Incirlik.

We’ve about 60 nuclear gravity bombs stored at Incirlik, which is relatively close to Turkey’s border with Syria.

Given recent events, along with the Ottomanization of Turkey’s government over the last decade (sparked by our misadventures in Mesopotamia), we should remove those weapons ASAP.

—————————————

Roland Dobbins

bubbles

Subj: Calculation of speed of Russian aircraft shot down by Turks

Surely the calculation by Joshua Jordan is ridiculous?

Obviously the Russian airplanes — if they intruded at all — went in and out of Turkish airspace, either following a curved path (most likely) or flying in and turning around?

What useful purpose is served by injecting such absurd calculations into the analysis?

I hope the investigators have access to recorded tracks from ground or AWACS radar.

Rod Montgomery==monty@starfief.com

I haven’t the time to work the numbers, but given the shape of the Turkish spur into Syria, the Russian warplane could not have been in Turkish airspace very long whatever their flight plan was; which was I thought the point that was made? I make no comment on ‘ridiculous’ because I did not check the numbers. Perhaps I should have but I have many distractions. It did not seem unreasonable to me, but I still have no time.

bubbles

something odd

Most of these pics are taken from refugees on the Macedonia-Greece border. Notice something odd?  All the signs etc. are written in English!
http://www.breitbart.com/london/2015/11/26/pics-economic-migrants-sew-lips-shut-demand-to-be-shot-in-protest-at-european-border/

I am convinced that most of this country’s problems could be corrected if we stopped attempting to educate people beyond their intelligence.

They are protesting European border closures.  To whom are their protests directed?

 

bubbles

Bezos says Blue Origin landing achieves ‘Holy Grail of rocketry’

Jeff Bezos’s space exploration company Blue Origin sent a rocket 62 miles up into space and then, in a carefully controlled descent, landed it upright.

http://www.seattletimes.com/business/boeing-aerospace/jeff-bezoss-blue-origin-reaches-milestone-with-reusable-rocket/

Jeff Bezos’s space company just made a dramatic breakthrough (WP)

It looks like they’re now officially well past the DC-X level of achievement.

It’s sad there was a 20-year interruption in the forward progress of the concept, but at least it’s no longer at NASA’s mercy.

Even if Bezos doesn’t know who to thank for getting this concept off the ground, Jerry, we all do.

So thanks, and congratulations to you, too.

.              png

I expect Mr. Bezos knows of DC/X but there’s no particular reason for him to know of my part in the creation of DC/X.

bubbles

Dear Dr. Pournelle,

A blessed Thanksgiving Day to you and yours!

Back in the days it was possible to hear almost anything on the FM radio dial in LA, I remember hearing a recording of Abdul Abulbul Amir being sung — likely most often on Dr. Demento’s Sunday evening program. Not surprisingly, one can hear that old Frank Crumit record dated 1927 on YouTube at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o6vyZ_q-TjA or https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lv6M2omQ__U for a less scratchy version.

YouTube also points me to an old MGM cartoon short of “Adbul the BulBul-Ameer” at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Gt0PRpnShQ based on the poem and song. They don’t make ‘em like that any more!

Pax et bonum, Steven+

bubbles

They have guns, but we have A-10’s

I watched the video you linked, of the small Parisian child whose father tells him that the flowers are being left at the massacre site to protect them.  I watched the video with some sympathy for the father, because I know how hard it can be to explain things to a small child without exposing him to too much reality too quickly.  His boy’s take-away was “They have guns, but we have flowers. So all will be well.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xkM-SDNoI_8

That reminded me of the time I took my oldest child (age 6 at the time) to an air show, at which we saw a ground display of an A-10 and chatted with one of the pilots.  As we were about to walk away, she pointed to the main gun sticking out of the nose of the aircraft and asked “what’s that?”  Well, being a bit of a nerd, my mind flashed up various theological objections to killing and ruminations on just war theory, but in the end all I said was “that’s a really big gun to kill the bad guys with”.

Such was my daughter’s real world introduction to the concept of “just war”, and it seems to have stuck.  I still think I did a reasonably good job.

Neil

We can hope so. There Will Be War.

bubbles

Fuzzy dark matter = ?????

In reference to the first article of Jerry’s I ever recall reading, the Galaxy Jan 1975 (IIRC, but after 40 years it still made an impression) essay on Hawking’s visit to JPL, “Fuzzy Black Holes Have No Hair.”

The first thing I thought is that this only makes sense if dark matter is somehow tied to gravitational force lines – which leads to the conclusion that dark matter must be a modern, quantized version of ether.   A la Beckmann and Kooistra.

Doesn’t prove anything – it is just a computer model and subject to the GIGO rule (or even Gospel In, Garbage Disposal, Garbage Out, if the data are good and model flawed). But my interest in modern ether theories just went up a notch.

Jim

As you know I am a fan of Petr Beckman’s aether theories; not that my opinion has any weight, but from what I can tell it is simpler that General Relativity, and accounts for all the observations that led to Special Relativity. I know of no crucial experiment refuting either GR or Beckmann’s entailed aether.

bubbles

I have received this link from a number of PhD readers none of whom care to have their names listed.

http://www.breitbart.com/big-government/2015/11/24/german-professor-nasa-fiddled-climate-data-unbelievable-scale/

bubbles

bubbles

bubbles

bubbles

bubbles

Freedom is not free. Free men are not equal. Equal men are not free.

bubbles

clip_image002

bubbles

Not war. Look for more refugees seeking entry to Europe and the United States. We told you so.

Chaos Manor View, Wednesday, November 25, 2015

We are not at war, but the situation is serious. Turkey fired first and clearly not in self-defense, so their call for a NATO convention is not likely to get the entangling alliance into a shooting war with Russia; spin and propaganda will continue.

It is becoming more clear what happened. The Turks fired on the Russian Su-24 warplane during the minute it was over Turkish territory; the missiles struck the Russian plane after it left Turkish air space and was over Syria. The Russian airmen parachuted over Syrian territory; one of them was killed in the air over Turkmen rebel-held Syrian territory as his parachute descended and his body displayed to celebrating rebels; the other was rescued by Russian and Syrian government special forces. A Russian air/sea rescue helicopter was sent to the aid of the original airmen and was destroyed by the rebels with one reported casualty.

Turkmen rebels claim that they killed both Russian airmen while they were in their parachutes, but it is reported that one survived and was rescued, and claims they were never in Turkish airspace; whether they were or not, they could not have been over Turkey for very long. http://news.yahoo.com/syrian-state-media-russian-syrian-special-forces-rescue-095540893.html

clip_image002[4]

http://www.wsj.com/

bubbles

The Russians are now moving Surface to Air missile assets, both land (to be deployed at the rapidly growing Russian base in Latakia) and sea – a Russian missile cruiser off the Syrian coast – into the area. It is very likely that Russian cruise missiles will ruthlessly bombard the Turkmen areas, causing a large surge of refugees from Syria to go into Turkey. Turkey doesn’t particularly want them, and will try to get Europe or the United States to accept them.

bubbles

> <http://tass.ru/en/politics/838825>

“So, does this mean that they want NATO to serve the Islamic State?”

—————————————

Roland Dobbins

Putin noted that Turkey’s contacts with NATO member states after the attack against the Russian aircraft look like an attempt to make the alliance serve terrorists.

The Russian leader said that instead of immediately establishing contacts with Russia after the bomber incident, “the Turkish side applied to its NATO partners to discuss this issue, as far as we know.”

“It seems as if we have shot down a Turkish plane and not vice versa,” the Russian president said.

“So, does this mean that they want NATO to serve the Islamic State?” Putin noted.

I think we have not seen the last of this.  The Turks want to end Russian bombardment of Turkmen rebels in Syria; I do not think that shooting down Russian aircraft is the way to do that, and shooting descending parachuting survivors is probably not the best way to win favor with Russia.

bubbles

Abdul Abulbul Amir

http://allpoetry.com/Abdul-Abulbul-Amir

The sons of the Prophet are brave men and bold
And quite unaccustomed to fear,
But the bravest by far in the ranks of the Shah,
Was Abdul Abulbul Amir.
If you wanted a man to encourage the van,
Or harass the foe from the rear,
Storm fort or redoubt, you had only to shout
For Abdul Abulbul Amir.

Now the heroes were plenty and well known to fame
In the troops that were led by the Czar,
And the bravest of these was a man by the name
Of Ivan Skavinsky Skavar.
One day this bold Russian, he shouldered his gun
And donned his most truculent sneer,
Downtown he did go where he trod on the toe
Of Abdul Abulbul Amir.

Young man, quoth Abdul, has life grown so dull
That you wish to end your career?
Vile infidel, know, you have trod on the toe
Of Abdul Abulbul Amir.
So take your last look at the sunshine and brook
And send your regrets to the Czar
For by this I imply, you are going to die,
Count Ivan Skavinsky Skavar.

Then this bold Mameluke drew his trusty skibouk,
Singing, “Allah! Il Allah! Al-lah!”
And with murderous intent he ferociously went
For Ivan Skavinsky Skavar.
They parried and thrust, they side-stepped and cussed,
Of blood they spilled a great part;
The philologist blokes, who seldom crack jokes,
Say that hash was first made on the spot.

They fought all that night neath the pale yellow moon;
The din, it was heard from afar,
And huge multitudes came, so great was the fame,
Of Abdul and Ivan Skavar.
As Abdul’s long knife was extracting the life,
In fact he was shouting, “Huzzah!”
He felt himself struck by that wily Calmuck,
Count Ivan Skavinsky Skavar.

The Sultan drove by in his red-breasted fly,
Expecting the victor to cheer,
But he only drew nigh to hear the last sigh,
Of Abdul Abulbul Amir.
There’s a tomb rises up where the Blue Danube rolls,
And graved there in characters clear,
Is, “Stranger, when passing, oh pray for the soul
Of Abdul Abulbul Amir.”

A splash in the Black Sea one dark moonless night
Caused ripples to spread wide and far,
It was made by a sack fitting close to the back,
Of Ivan Skavinsky Skavar.
A Muscovite maiden her lone vigil keeps,
‘Neath the light of the cold northern star,
And the name that she murmurs in vain as she weeps,
Is Ivan Skavinsky Skavar.

When I was in high school a very long time ago, we read among much else Richard Connell’s “The Most Dangerous Game”, https://archive.org/stream/TheMostDangerousGame_129/danger.txt which I quite enjoyed; but in the class discussion one of the students pronounced the name of one of the characters ‘EEvan”, which was correct; but I and a couple of other students incorrectly and impolitely shouted “EYEvan”, which drew Brother Daniel into the discussion. He first told us that either pronunciation might be correct, because it is pronounced differently in some countries; and it is likely, since the character in question was not American not was his master, “EEvan” was likely the pronunciation intended by the author. More important, though, was the impertinence of those who had interrupted the discussion with such an irrelevant point. Since clearly the intent of those who called out “EYEvan” was to to demonstrate their superior intellects —   But first, he said, those who spoke out of turn will please raise their hands. This being the school that it was, the three of us who were guilty did so.

“There is a poem, not in your book and not likely to be in the school library, about a Russian named Ivan Skavinsky Skiver, and the poem makes it clear that the pronunciation intended by the author of the poem was ‘EYEvan’.  It is not long.  You will bring me a copy of that poem, and you will also recite it to me.  Now may we get on with the discussion?”

Understand, this was just after World War II.  There was no Internet, nor electronic data bases.  We also got no hint whatever as how to proceed.  We certainly were not told that the poem’s name was Abdul the Bulbul Amir. I bicycled to the downtown Memphis library where I was well known, but librarians in those days were not all that well educated, and the ones on duty at the time had no clue. Eventually someone told me to try to find the poem Abdul a Bulbul Amir, and probably around the turn of the century, and that after a bit of search did it. It wasn’t hard to memorize or to copy, and I have remembered it – mostly – ever since.  Some of the verses I found were different from those in the rendition above, but I have no idea of what collection I found it in in 1948, so I will defer to those more familiar with it than I.

bubbles

Not war.

Dear Dr. Pournelle,
Re the above, it’s hard to decide whom to more believe, Turkey or Russia… Both nations would feature highly in my personal “Top Ten List of Bad Regimes”, and both have leaders in whom one cannot place any great degree of trust and who display increasing avarice in matters planetary (in fairness though, few world leaders nowadays strike me as any better, especially the current usurper in my own land of Australia).
In this instance, my sympathies, such as they are, tend to be more on Putin’s side than Erdogan’s; he is less likely to do something stupid, and has more of a western background and outlook than his opponent here. That said though, Russia itself has been guilty of numerous and deliberate if brief incursions over national airspace and in territorial waters of many countries. Even in the circumstances as we currently understand them to be, I find it hard to credit this one as any more accidental than the others were.
Not war; but if Russia wants an excuse for military action, this is one pretext it could use.
I don’t like the way things are shaping up. It’s like watching a chessboard where everything is steadily being moved into position, by a malevolent hand to guarantee an all-out disaster, and every current world leader is either an idiot, an incompetent, an avaricious tyrant, or a maniac… 1914 springs to mind, much more than 1939.

Jack Dwyer

Russia is just learning how to be a country again after a long nightmare. They won’t be good at it – never were actually, but better than now.  But they are a part of western civilization, and communism was a western heresy. Turkey was, under Ataturk and the Brotherhood he left as his legacy, learning to be a part of the west.  No longer, and the guardians of the secular state no longer exist. Turkey may revert to something like Iran. They may not.

Our stake in this is arguable, and sometime I may discuss it; but it certainly includes heaping measures of stability and tolerance.  That may require new boundaries,  and we may have to be involved in their defense.  We cannot nor need not absorb their refugees, but we do have reason to protect them while they establish themselves.

bubbles

Russia to outfit Egypt’s Mistral ‘tin can’ warships — RT Business

Jerry:

It is interesting that this deal was negotiated before the recent terrorist attacks on Paris.

https://www.rt.com/business/319154-russian-helicopters-mistral-egypt/

One the face of it, it would appear that this is an end run around the decision to not sell the helicopter carriers to Russia in retaliation for the annexation of Crimea. Egypt has no strategic use for the ships nor the money to buy much less operate them. I would expect that they would have ended up in Russia’s fleet even if the terrorists hadn’t attacked. Now there will be no significant objection.

James Crawford=

 

bubbles

From April, 2007  :  www.jerrypournelle.com/archives2/archives2view/view463.html 

Jerry.

COL North’s essay on the consequences of the Reid-Pelosi Strategy:

http://www.townhall.com/Columnists/OliverNorth/
2007/04/27/americans_now_love_losers_im_not_buying_it

<LARGE snip, but I cannot see how to soft pedal this conclusion>

…classified U.S. intelligence assessments, military contingency plans and staff studies evaluating the consequences of a precipitous U.S. withdrawal from Iraq, coupled with the lack of funding for political reform measures, as contained in the legislation just passed by Reid’s party, paint a far more dismal picture than anything that happened after Vietnam.

— Within months, an immediate upsurge in vicious sectarian violence fomented by Iranian intervention on behalf of Shiite militias and Wahabbi-supported, Al Qaeda-affiliated terror groups. As U.S. forces retreat to a half-dozen staging areas for retrograde through Kuwait and Jordan, American casualties will dramatically increase as suicide bombers seek “martyrdom” in their victory.

— Inside of 18 months, the fragile democratically elected government in Baghdad will collapse, precipitating a real sectarian civil war and the creation of Taliban-like “regional governments” that will impose brutal, misogynistic rule throughout the country. The ensuing flood of refuges into Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Syria, Turkey and Iran will overwhelm relief organizations, creating a humanitarian disaster making what’s happening in Darfur pale by comparison.

— The Kurds in northern Iraq are likely to declare an autonomous region that could well result in Turkish, Iranian and even Syrian military intervention.

— In the course of withdrawing U.S. combat brigades and support units, billions of dollars in American military equipment and ordnance will have to be destroyed or left behind. More than $40 billion in reconstruction projects for schools, health-care facilities, sanitation, clean water, electrical distribution and agricultural development will be abandoned. Plans to exploit the new West Qurna oil field in southeastern Iraq will be forsaken.

— The governments of Kuwait, Jordan, Abu Dhabi and Bahrain, intimidated by Iranian boldness in acquiring nuclear weapons, will likely insist on the withdrawal of American military bases from their territories. Such a move will jeopardize U.S. naval operations in the Persian Gulf and logistics, intelligence collection and command and control facilities supporting operations in Afghanistan.

— As Iraq becomes a battleground for the centuries-long Sunni-Shia conflict, radical Islamic terror organizations will use the territories they control to prepare and launch increasingly deadly terror attacks around the globe against U.S. citizens, businesses and interests.

Reid and his cohorts in Congress who believe “this war is lost” have acted to ensure that it will be. No one asked them: “If we lost, who won?” The answer should be obvious.

Respectfully,

J.

Of course this was my fear before we ever went in there. I am told that several retired 4-stars declined the job of warlord in Mesopotamia.

The costs of staying in are large, but perhaps not in comparison with the costs of leaving. What we must not do is lose it and stay in; and any admission that we will, sometime in the near future, cut and run is a loss. If we are getting out, then best we just get out. If we are staying in, we need to start recruiting constabularies to supplement the US Army.

Three brigades of MP’s would be a good start. It will be expensive, but all our choices are expensive.

 

bubbles

Self-Driving Cars: A Coming Congestion Disaster?

<http://www.humantransit.org/2015/11/self-driving-cars-a-coming-congestion-disaster.html>

—————————————

Roland Dobbins

bubbles

‘When they fail, of course they are desperate to blame others.’

<http://www.latimes.com/opinion/op-ed/la-oe-1126-greenwald-snowden-paris-encryption-20151126-story.html>

—————————————

Roland Dobbins

bubbles

So, I’ve looked at this Turkish BS for a day or so now. I looked at maps and so on and I’ve been suspicious from the beginning and now I call BS:

<.>

“Disregarding these warnings, both planes, at an altitude of 19,000 feet, violated Turkish national airspace to a depth of 1.36 miles and

1.15 miles in length for 17 seconds from 9:24:05 local time.”

So, as RT notes, even if we buy Turkey’s story (i.e. if we accept that Russia actually did violate Turkish airspace), then it would appear that Ankara has something of an itchy trigger finger. That is, Turkey was apparently willing to risk sparking a wider conflict between NATO and Russia over a 17 second incursion.

But something doesn’t sound right.

Journalists: Learn to do basic maths. Look at Turkey’s statement to

UN: 1.15 miles / 17 seconds x 60 x 60 = 243 miles/hour = 391 km/hour

— WikiLeaks (@wikileaks) November 24, 2015

In other words, as Sputnik put it earlier this evening, “according to those numbers, the Su-24 would have had to be flying at stall speed.”

The Su-24’s max speed is 1,320 km/hour.

So if we assume the Su-24 was actually going much faster, was 17 seconds more like 5 seconds? Or perhaps even less?

</>

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2015-11-24/17-seconds-changed-world-leaked-letter-exposes-turkeys-hair-trigger-reality

The idea that Turkey wanted to create a conflict among Western nations that would otherwise exercise influence in the Middle East was a hypothesis of mine since I heard about this incident. This evidence weighs against competing hypotheses — for me — at this time, making this the most likely hypothesis since it has the least evidence refuting it compared with competing hypotheses.

Let’s see if the low info, maladjusted policy makers allow us to get sucked into this one too….

◊ ◊ ◊ ◊ ◊

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

Percussa Resurgo

Turkey has discovered that we can live without their friendship.  They desperately want us to need them.  They want to drive wedges into all our other coalitions. Most of Turkey probably wants to be left alone, but their secular Republic is no longer guaranteed, and those who see jihad as a command from Allah see those who disagree as heretics.

bubbles

bubbles

bubbles

bubbles

bubbles

bubbles

bubbles

Freedom is not free. Free men are not equal. Equal men are not free.

bubbles

clip_image004[4]

bubbles

Are We At War? Reusable First Stage. Vanishing Quasars, and the world goes on.

Chaos Manor View, Tuesday, November 24, 2015

We are now on the brink of war with Russia.

<http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/world-news/russian-rescue-helicopter-shot-down-6891003

Roland Dobbins

Turkey has called for an emergency meeting of NATO.

The Russian warplane was over an area of Syria inhabited largely by Turkmen, ethnic Turk Syrian citizens who are in rebellion against Bashar Assad. Turkey has supported this rebellion. There are political factions in Turkey who support the annexation by Turkey of Syrian Turkmen areas of Syria, although I know of no formal claim by Turkey.

Firing on the Russian warplane by a Turkish Air Force F-16 is reported as authorized by the highest levels of the Turkish government. It was claimed that the Russian warplane was in Turkish airspace, but apparently that is not the case – unless Turkey is laying claim to the northern area of Syria inhabited by Turkmen.

Two Russian pilots ejected from the Russian plane. They were reportedly killed by Turkmen rebels, and a Russian rescue helicopter was grounded by ground fire and then destroyed by heavy weapons. There is no news of the crew.

bubbles

1130: It is time for a walk. More when there is something to know. I cannot guess what President Obama will do, except to note that he took weeks to months to authorize the strike against Bin Laden; he is not likely to act in haste. This morning he said that ISIS must not be tolerated, it must be destroyed; but he said much the same thing before, and there is little indication of how he expects to accomplish this.

bubbles

1310: Turkey is adamantly claiming that the Russian airplane was in Turkish airspace, and they were justified in shooting the Russians down.

Russia continues to deny that their aircraft ever crossed into Turkish airspace.

The President of the US has said there are no plans to send US divisions to fight ISIS, but emphasized that the Caliphate cannot be tolerated and must go, but if he knows how to do this he is keeping it confidential: so far as we can tell, he is staying with his strategy he formed last summer. Oil is up a dollar a barrel.

No one seems eager to go to war, but President Putin has yet to announce his plans. It is futile to speculate. He has announced that he will attend the climate conference in Paris, and that this is a major rebuke to the terrorists.  He did not say why.

Meanwhile the world goes on.

bubbles

Some good news from my son Richard:

A perfect landing

Your grandson watches this over and over. I told him the landing might make his Grandpa in California cry for joy just a little bit.

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=9pillaOxGCo&feature=youtu.be

Apparently a reusable first stage. The rocket has no reentry vehicle, but a reusable first stage is one key to cheaper access to orbit.

Blue Origin sticks rocket landing, a major step toward reusable spaceflight | Ars Technica

This is too cool for words.

http://arstechnica.com/science/2015/11/blue-origin-sticks-rocket-landing-a-major-step-toward-reusable-spaceflight/

John Harlow

Bezos did it.

https://youtu.be/9pillaOxGCo

Dan

bubbles

The Case of the Disappearing Quasars.

<http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/the-case-of-the-disappearing-quasars/>

—————————————

Roland Dobbins

I wish I had known this when – but maybe not.  it sure happens fast!

bubbles

“No one needs to learn cursive.”

So say today’s K-12 “educators”. Accordingly it is being eliminated from many schools’ curriculum.

I was doing some genealogical research and realized that much original source historical data, such as census reports, was created in cursive. Some may have been scanned and converted or keyed as computer searchable data but much has not.

Will the American people, in a generation or so, have to rely on government gatekeepers to interpret these source documents? Will the nation be as functionally illiterate in cursive English as it is in historical Latin or Greek or Hebrew or Aramaic (or any number of other languages both historical and current)?

Why do some in positions of authority consider this a “good thing”?

Charles Brumbelow=

Is this the end of cursive writing? We can hope that we always have electric power.

bubbles

FROM DELL

Response to Concerns Regarding eDellroot Certificate

Today we became aware that a certificate (eDellRoot), installed by our Dell Foundation Services application on our PCs, unintentionally introduced a security vulnerability. The certificate was implemented as part of a support tool and intended to make it faster and easier for our customers to service their system. Customer security and privacy is a top concern and priority for Dell; we deeply regret that this has happened and are taking steps to address it.

The certificate is not malware or adware. Rather, it was intended to provide the system service tag to Dell online support allowing us to quickly identify the computer model, making it easier and faster to service our customers. This certificate is not being used to collect personal customer information. It’s also important to note that the certificate will not reinstall itself once it is properly removed using the recommended Dell process.

We have posted instructions to permanently remove the certificate from your system here. We will also push a software update starting on November 24 that will check for the certificate, and if detected remove it. Commercial customers who reimaged their systems without Dell Foundation Services are not affected by this issue. Additionally, the certificate will be removed from all Dell systems moving forward.

bubbles

A little arithmetic

It seems we have let in some 785000 Muslim refugees from the Middle East etc.

But, we are told we are safe because the overwhelming majority do not support ISIS or terrorism. In context it turns out that “overwhelming” part is a “huge”

87% or so. But, if you think about it that amounts to about 13% who DO support ISIS or terrorism (or both, of course.) That’s about 100,000 enemy personnel (of all ages, of course) who are our enemies.

To put that in perspective Wikipiddle claims a typical US Army division is 17000 to 21000 people, not all out there pounding mud, of course. That means we have a count of 5 divisions of enemy personnel in our country, perhaps half as many front line troops as our Army maintains. Does having 5 divisions of worth of enemies in our country make YOU feel safe?

I don’t feel safe at all. Dig into the facts and pry out the numbers that are being obscured by “vast majority” type words. We are in deep doo-doo with the enemy count behind our lines in our homeland. Europe is likely toast. Their numbers are MUCH worse than ours. Obama is doing everything he can to “correct”

that error.

This is the article that led me to pry out some real numbers of significance.

http://www.foxnews.com/us/2015/11/24/fact-check-claims-no-refugees-since-11-took-part-in-terror-plots-ring-false/?intcmp=hplnws

O’Reilly failed us by not going the next numerical step.

{^_^}

bubbles

bubbles

bubbles

bubbles

bubbles

bubbles

bubbles

bubbles

bubbles

Freedom is not free. Free men are not equal. Equal men are not free.

bubbles

clip_image002

bubbles

Strategy; the Caliphate; refugees. Dating the Fall of Troy.

Chaos Manor View, Monday, November 23, 2015

bubbles

We had a panel Saturday for the Greater Los Angeles Writers Association. Larry, John DeChancie, Barbara Hambly, and I, pretty well free form writer’s class. I said that Niven having got 2/3 of the way through the mail-order – this was before anyone ever thought of the Internet or “on-line – Famous Author’s School for Writers, which got a laugh, but in fact John and Barbara actually teach writing. I was the only one there who never taught writing or took any kind of writing class. I even got excused from freshman comp and bonehead English – the Christian Brothers were really thorough in my high school – so I had no idea of what they taught in those classes.

I really didn’t have a lot to say, and since I hadn’t brought the Surface Pro 3 (with Pro 4 keyboard) I couldn’t read them my decades old essay How To Get My Job which tells all the secrets I know about being a professional writer. They still bought me dinner and gave me a badge that says I am a lifetime member of GLAWA, and a ribbon that proclaims me an AUTHOR, so I guess now I am one.

bubbles

The news continues. The President insists he has a winning strategy in the war on terror. We will cut off all the money and destroy the Caliphate without sending any – well not many – troops, mostly by air bombardment and encouraging other people to fight and die for the United States. We will also accept refugees, and no, there won’t be any terrorists lurking among them; and the Governors who reject having them settle in their states are just mean spirited and don’t know who the true Americans are, and I have a pen and a phone and I don’t need to pay attention to Congress. And if Congress tries to shut down the funds for importing refugees, they are just being mean and as President I’ll just spend it anyway, because I won, and if Congress tries to cut my funds I have a veto, and if they have the votes from traitor Democrats to pass it over my veto I’ll shut down the government. That will defeat ISIS or Daesh or The Caliphate or whoever they are.

That is a parody of his position, of course, but it actually sounds like he thinks it is a policy.

It isn’t a policy, and many of his advisors know it; as do some of the Democrats in Congress. The Caliphate can be destroyed, but only by taking away its claim to govern by the Will of Allah; and that can be done by owning the land they claim to govern.

“You may fly over a land forever; you may bomb it, atomize it, and wipe it clean of life -but if you desire to defend it, protect it, and keep it for civilization, you must do this on the ground, the way the Roman Legions did – by putting your soldiers in the mud.”

T.R. Fehrenbach. “This Kind of War” .

Mr. Obama has never learned that lesson, and I think he has no advisors with the courage to tell him – if they know it, as increasingly few of them do.

The Senate grinds on; and the President has made it clear that he rules, with or without the consent of the governed.

bubbles

Intelligence and the Paris attacks

Dear Dr. Pournelle,

John Dvorak observes that there was a complete absence of chatter before the latest round of attacks.

http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2495289,00.asp

This implies, perhaps, that our intelligence agencies are looking in the wrong places for terrorists and are not successfully detecting the most sinister groups via electronic surveillance; it appears we are going to need old-fashioned HUMINT infiltration. Perhaps the refugees may be of use?  They speak the language, have friends and cousins in the area, and moreover have a deep and abiding grudge against ISIS.

Respectfully,

Brian P.

But can we assume the refugees are genuine refugees?  Deception and false flags are allowed under the Koran

Jerry Pournelle

Intelligence and the Paris attacks

Dear Dr. Pournelle, 
I would be surprised if ISIS *wasn’t* attempting to infiltrate terrorists through that vector. Surely they  wouldn’t waste the opportunity? 
Be that as it may, I doubt they are all that big a percentage of the overall refugee flow.  ISIS is fighting a conventional war to establish a nation-state, after all. So I suspect they are already using the bulk of their riflemen types as precisely that; riflemen.   The pool of candidates who can successfully infiltrate the west and carry out a terror action must be much smaller. 

It also is in their interest to push out other brands of Muslims, such as Kurds, as well as Yazidis and Christians.  So I suspect most of the refugees are exactly what they appear to be; frightened people with no special hatred of the west and a great deal of hatred for the people who drove them out. 

Also, while refugees are a potential vector for terrorism, it is by no means the only one nor, perhaps, the most likely.  Of the attackers in Paris, just as with the 9/11 attackers, none appear to be refugees. Rather, they appear to be raised in the west, and perhaps became bored. 

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/france/11996120/Paris-attack-what-we-know-about-the-suspects.html

The most dangerous threat, I suspect, is not from first-generation refugees but from second- and third- generation descendants who grow up in the west and become radicalized by Saudi propaganda, or perhaps by social media. 

Not to mention, the people who have done the gravest damage to American national security in this decade — Edward Snowden and Manning — are neither Islamic nor refugees. 

So I think the refugees as they exist offer a potential pool of recruits, much as refugees from Castro’s Cuba or Czarist refugees from the old USSR did.  I suggest we make use of that. Surely, of the 278 million or so American citizens, there is at least one person like Horace Hussein Al-Shamlan Bury from your Gripping  Hand novel?   Find that person, put him in charge of vetting. We don’t need very many, just one. And then that one recruits two or three, and those two recruit two or three, and eventually snowball to the point where they can act as an expeditionary force or as an intelligence group. 

Of course vetting will fail and the bad guys will slip in one or two ringers; they’ve done that to us since Turing and his Cambridge associates spied for the Russians.   But I’m given to understand that this is precisely why intelligence agencies use cells and need-to-know; so that a single turned operative does not compromise the entire network. 

Looking at it from the other side, I’m sure ISIS has the same problem; no doubt the Russians , the Iranians, and everyone else are trying desperately to penetrate their organization, yet somehow they are able to maintain a credible threat despite potential infiltration. 

That reminds me … The Russians DID manage to pacify Chechnya , didn’t they?  

So the problems we face are not unsolvable; they merely require a determination to do what is necessary, and a willingness to see through the solution across multiple administrations. That’s why doomed Bush’s efforts; I think. The Awakening was a success before the Democrats pulled the plug on the whole thing, For this to work, it has to be something both parties will stick to beyond the election cycle. 

*Thinks* Or perhaps done by career people outside of the election cycle altogether.

*Shrug* that’s my opinion anyway.

Respectfully,

Brian P.

While I agree that the first requirement is the will to win and we don’t have that, the fact remains that the refugees are migrants who have not any intention of assimilating; an indigestible lump most of whom will require considerable public assistance for food, shelter, health care, and education; all of which would cost us less if it were delivered in the Middle East, not Iowa or Louisiana. And if we conquer oil producing lands we have land to settle them on. If they then want to come to the United States, they can go apply for visas like anyone else.

We are going to have to defeat the Caliphate, and having done that we will have considerable land we do not want – and refugees who want land. We will have oil that we do not need (after we have sold some to pay for our having to conquer the land). Sometimes problems solve themselves.

We tried nation building. We are no good at it. But we can apply other philosophies. Protectorates are cheaper than assimilating vast hordes who do not want to be assimilated, and have no claims upon us other than pity. Alas we have not time to train the refugees into a fighting force – assuming they would actually want that.

Stretched FBI braces for Islamic State holiday terror attacks

http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2015/nov/17/fbi-braces-for-isis-holiday-terror-attacks/

I think we need not add to their burden. This is war.

bubbles

Muslims Take Over US City

It seems we have our very own Hamburg, Germany:

<.>

It’s traumatic for them,” said Majewski, a dignified-looking woman in a brown velvet dress, her long, silvery hair wound in a loose bun.

Around her at the Tekla Vintage store, mannequins showcased dresses, hats and jewelry from the mid-20th century, and customers fingered handbags and gawked at the antique dolls that line the store, which sits across the street from Srodek’s Quality Sausage and the Polish Art Center on Joseph Campau Avenue, the town’s main drag.

Majewski, whose family emigrated from Poland in the early 20th century, admitted to a few concerns of her own. Business owners within

500 feet of one of Hamtramck’s four mosques can’t obtain a liquor license, she complained, a notable development in a place that flouted Prohibition-era laws by openly operating bars. The restrictions could thwart efforts to create an entertainment hub downtown, said the pro-commerce mayor.

And while Majewski advocated to allow mosques to issue calls to prayer, she understands why some longtime residents are struggling to adjust to the sound that echos through the city’s streets five times each day.

“There’s definitely a strong feeling that Muslims are the other,” she said. “It’s about culture, what kind of place Hamtramck will become.

There’s definitely a fear, and to some degree, I share it.”

</>

https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/for-the-first-majority-muslim-us-city-residents-tense-about-its-future/2015/11/21/45d0ea96-8a24-11e5-be39-0034bb576eee_story.html

◊ ◊ ◊ ◊ ◊

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

Percussa Resurgo

The joys of diversity?

bubbles

Government As the Enemy

This is interesting:

<.>

Pew Research Center found that 27 percent of registered voters say they think of government as an enemy, up 8 points since 1996. The latest poll looked at general public opinion regarding the federal government.

The findings suggests that 57 percent of voters feel frustrated with the government, while 22 percent feel angry and 18 percent feel “basically content.”

The majority of Americans feel the federal government has room for serious improvement, with 59 percent saying the government needs “very major reform.” Only 37 percent of voters felt that way in 1997.

When asked what particularly makes the government problematic, congress and politics were cited most often. Thirteen percent mentioned Congress, while 11 percent named politics.

More than a third (35 percent) of Republicans believe the federal government is the enemy, while 34 percent of Independents believe the same. The poll found that half of all Democrats (50 percent) view the government as a friend and only 12 percent see it as the enemy.

</>

http://washington.cbslocal.com/2015/11/23/report-more-than-1-in-4-americans-believe-government-is-the-enemy/

What surprises me is that independents and republicans are close on this matter.

◊ ◊ ◊ ◊ ◊

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

Percussa Resurgo

When I was young, no one would have said the government is the enemy.

bubbles

Gingrich on Obama

In pleasant surprise, I find myself agreeing with Gingrich:

<.>

Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich said Saturday that President Barack Obama is heading “the most dangerous national security administration in American history.”

“They’re totally wrong about the war on terror and they lie about what is going on,” he told Uma Pemmaraju on Fox News. “Secretary [John] Kerry suggested that there was justification for the attack on Charlie Hebdo. He said al-Qaida has been degraded, which is not true.

“The president has called ISIS the junior varsity,” Gingrich added, referring to the Islamic State. “He said just last week that they have been contained. This administration is out of touch with reality.”

</>

https://www.newsmax.com/Newsfront/gingrich-obama-worse-national/2015/11/21/id/703118/

He goes on to speak about a young woman being radicalized in France and blowing herself up; he says this Administration doesn’t understand what we face.

Gingrich did not get into details,but he’s referring to a girl who posted pictures of herself wearing cowboy hats and making suggestive faces. Then, you see pictures of her dressed with a hijab and making hand signs. She sounds like an impressionable girl who got the wrong impression and we know the rest.

Gingrich has a rational position in that we need to consider this, calmly, and cope with it.

◊ ◊ ◊ ◊ ◊

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

Percussa Resurgo

Newt and I are no longer close, largely because I seldom get to Washington any more; but he remains a good friend. Given time to consider he often has excellent reasons for what he says. Do not forget that he led in restoring the House to the Republicans when everyone thought it was irretrievably lost.

bubbles

Propaganda

https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/inside-the-islamic-states-propaganda-machine/2015/11/20/051e997a-8ce6-11e5-acff-673ae92ddd2b_story.html

David Couvillon
Colonel, U.S. Marine Corps Reserve, Retired.; 
Former Governor of Wasit Province, Iraq; 
Righter of Wrongs; Wrong most of the time; 
Distinguished Expert, TV remote control; 
Chef de Hot Dog Excellence;  Avoider of Yard Work

bubbles

Mafia Against Daesh

You may have read that Anonymous declared war on Daesh, even releasing a hacking for “noobs” (novices) tutorial. Now the Mafia is after

Daesh:

<.>

The son of a New York mob boss has given Islamic State a stark warning, saying if they are planning any attacks in New York, they will have to contend with the Sicilian mafia. The notorious crime syndicate say they want to do their bit to protect locals.

TrendsIslamic State

Giovanni Gambino, the son of a key figure in the Gambino mob organization, says the mafia is in a much better position than security bodies, such as the FBI or Homeland Security, to give New Yorkers the protection they need.

“They often act too late, or fail to see a complete picture of what’s happening due to a lack of ‘human intelligence,’” he said in an interview with NBC News, as cited by Reuters, adding that the mafia’s knowledge of individual movements and interaction with locals gives it the upper hand, even compared to the latest surveillance technologies.

</>

https://www.rt.com/usa/323032-mafia-isis-warning-gambino/

◊ ◊ ◊ ◊ ◊

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

Percussa Resurgo

Cosa Nostra has the Constitution to protect its soldier against the American forces of law. They can provide preventative protection; but at what costs? A Sicilian Committee of Vigilance?

bubbles

Cushy, well-paid government jobs
Government employment isn’t just a “sweet gig” in the USA; it is also very much so in the UK – maybe even more so.
If I had kids and/or grandkids, which incidentally isn’t the case and isn’t going to be, I would strongly suggest a career in government as being better paid, far less stressful and more secure (and with far better pension arrangements) than private industry. I would be gritting my teeth while saying it, but I’d still say it.
But this only really applies to government paper-shufflers; when the occasional crackdown on expenditure happens it ALWAYS hits services and people who actually do useful jobs (which do exist in government service) first. This is, of course, because it’s the paper-shufflers who make the decisions, as you have repeatedly pointed out.
Also incidentally, all this applies to some of the more monopolist and cartel-oriented industries as well. Banking, for sure.
I don’t think it’s ever going to happen, but I think this is only going to change when someone like Thatcher or Reagan gets into power and that is highly unlikely in the near future. (Maggie Thatcher’s granddaughter is natural-born Texan, so there might be a chance in maybe 2030…) Someone who is going to respond to disdainful masters in the way Reagan responded to the air traffic controllers. (“You’re on strike? Very well, you’re fired.”)

Ian

bubbles

bubbles

short video interview about Paris attacks Sender Name : Kerry Liles
Sender Email : kerry.liles@gmail.com
Sender Message
Jerry, have seen this interview with a young boy in the aftermath of the Paris attack? I urge you to watch it (less than 90 sec) – it is perhaps small proof there is some hope for humanity… Out of the mouth of babes…
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xkM-SDNoI_8
Kerry

‘They have guns, but we have flowers. So all will be well.”

I think I’d rather have the guns.

bubbles

TROY

‘If true, this would date the fall of Troy itself to precisely 1188 BC.’

<http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/features/the-end-of-an-odyssey-homers-epic-is-finally-pinned-down-852850.html>

—————————————

Roland Dobbins

There was a time when this would have been enough to go over there and look. I have a number of theories about the Bronze Age at the dawn of history. This fits them rather well.

Lost Island of Ancient Greece Discovered in Aegean Sea.

<http://news.nationalgeographic.com/2015/11/151119-lost-island-aegean-kane-sparta-athens-archaeology/>

—————————————

Roland Dobbins

bubbles

bubbles

bubbles

bubbles

Freedom is not free. Free men are not equal. Equal men are not free.

bubbles

clip_image002

bubbles