Noonan on Trump; Trump and America First; Conservatism; On immigration; and other matters

Chaos Manor View, Saturday, April 30, 2016

Immigration without assimilation is invasion.

Liberalism is a philosophy of consolation for Western Civilization as it commits suicide.

Under Capitalism, the rich become powerful. Under Socialism, the powerful become rich.

Under Socialism, government employees become powerful.

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“Those conservative writers and thinkers who have for nine months warned the base that Mr. Trump is not a conservative should consider the idea that a large portion of the Republican base no longer sees itself as conservative, at least as that term has been defined the past 15 years by Washington writers and thinkers.” http://www.wsj.com/articles/simple-patriotism-trumps-ideology-1461886199

That’s how Peggy Noonan concludes today’s column in the Wall Street Journal. I don’t expect that column has won her any friends on the Journal’s editorial board, but she’s been around a long time; not as long as me, but at least long enough to remember Nelson Rockefeller gleefully tearing up a Reagan supporter’s placard in the 1976 Republican National Convention, when Reagan opposed the Republican sitting President, Gerry Ford, for the nomination. Ford won the nomination, and Reagan supported him in the general election, and urged all his supporters to do so. Jimmy Carter won the Presidency. The high point of Carter’s Presidency came after he had lost the 1980 election to Reagan, when Iran finally released the American hostages taken when they stormed Carter’s American Embassy and led them away blindfolded.

It’s unlikely they would have ever come home had Carter won re-election. After the US November election, the Muslim Revolutionary Guard hastened to get them out of their country before Carter left office, and Reagan became Commander in Chief; probably the most intelligent thing they ever did.

In the body of her essay, Miss Noonan observes:

“In my continuing quest to define aspects of Mr. Trump’s rise, to my own satisfaction, I offer what was said this week in a talk with a small group of political activists, all of whom back him. One was about to begin approaching various powerful and influential Republicans who did not support him, and make the case. I told her I’d been thinking that maybe Mr. Trump’s appeal is simple: What Trump supporters believe, what they perceive as they watch him, is that he is on America’s side.

“And that comes as a great relief to them, because they believe that for 16 years Presidents Bush and Obama were largely about ideologies. They seemed not so much on America’s side as on the side of abstract notions about justice and the needs of the world. Mr. Obama’s ideological notions are leftist, and indeed he is a hero of the international left. He is about international climate-change agreements, and leftist views of gender, race and income equality. Mr. Bush’s White House was driven by a different ideology—neoconservatism, democratizing, nation building, defeating evil in the world, privatizing Social Security.

“But it was all ideology.

“Then Mr. Trump comes and in his statements radiates the idea that he’s not at all interested in ideology, only in making America great again—through border security and tough trade policy, etc. He’s saying he’s on America’s side, period.”

And that, I think, is precisely the key to Mr. Trumps astonishing rise from a clown no one took seriously to the presumptive Republican nominee, and quite possibly the Presidency of the United States. Yes: he’s divisive. But he’s not divisive along ideological lines; he ignores ideological lines. Many of his policies are conservative, but that’s hardly surprising: many conservatives believe their policies are best for the United States. But Mr. Trump is opposed to ideological wars.

John Quincy Adams, echoing a sentiment that had prevailed from the founding of the Union, said of the United States: “But she goes not abroad, in search of monsters to destroy. She is the well-wisher to the freedom and independence of all. She is the champion and vindicator only of her own.” This sentiment has been forgotten since the end of the Cold War.

The First Gulf War by Mr. Bush may be argued was in fulfillment of obligations to our Saudi allies, although the notion that Saddam, engaged as he was in a seemingly endless war with Iran, could mount an invasion against a forewarned Saudi Arabia or even another Trucial State is not very plausible; mostly Saddam wanted more funding for his war with Iraq, and his plundering of Kuwait would provide it at little cost to the United States.

Then came the Balkan interventions under Mr. Clinton and Secretary Albright. There was no discernable US interest involved, and although the media demonized the Christian Serbs and made innocent victims of the Muslim Bosnians, the actual evidence shows there were atrocities in plenty on both sides; while forcing Serbia to give Kosovo to Albania: a province that as late as 1921 was known to have a Serbian majority, had never admitted a legal Albanian immigrant, and the insurgency was certainly supplied by Albanians in their sanctuary state of Albania. The US motive in all this was ideological, destroying monsters; of course it also had the effect of earning the disdain – even hatred – of pro-Slavic Russia; hardly an American interest at all.

The Second Gulf War saw us invading Iraq in response to the al Qaeda attack on New York, although there was zero evidence that Saddam had anything to do with it. Then came Afghanistan. In each case we sent just enough to do the job, but not overwhelming force to achieve victory – likely impossible in Afghanistan unless we were prepared for decades of occupation, and given the Soviet experience even that was likely to be arduous. All of this seemed to be destroying monsters, not protecting the liberty of the American people.

Some of us said so at the time. The response from National Review, once (when under Bill Buckley) the voice of the American Conservative Movement, was to feature the Egregious Frum reading out of the Conservative Movement all those who did not enthusiastically support the invasion of Iraq. Since that time I have not been “a conservative”. Paleo-conservative, perhaps; one who believes Edmund Burke and Russell Kirk have much to teach us; yes. But officially not a conservative according to National Review. Since I am not one of them by their own account, having been read out of their movement, I have no obligation to defend their policies – not that I ever defended all of them; after all, they did read me out of their ranks because I opposed the long war in Mesopotamia, did not think we could build democracy in a “nation” composed of Kurds, Shia majority, and Sunni, and ruled by Baathists, and thought we had no business expending blood and treasure when we had no describable national interests.

Trump’s people think the same way: patriotism trumps ideology. That is, of course, a very conservative principle, or was when I was teaching political science; apparently it is not so now. Miss Noonan sees it; I doubt the neoconservatives who have become to leaders of the conservative Movement will understand, or care; but perhaps the American voters will. Reagan was no ideologue, and he won. True: Trump is no Reagan; but you know, Mr. Reagan was not always Ronald the Great either. But he was always a patriot.

I urge you to read the entirety of Miss Noonan’s essay. http://www.wsj.com/articles/simple-patriotism-trumps-ideology-1461886199

I am reminded that Senator Cruz is also on record in favor of being friends of liberty everywhere, but guardians only of our own; I doubt his and Mr. Trump’s foreign policies would differ much. It is a pity that they did not debate real issues much in the debates.

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From View 380 September 19 – 25, 2005 http://www.jerrypournelle.com/archives2/archives2view/view380.html

Why I Missed the National Review Party

My friend Cat held a big National Review party up at her house about a block from here. I was a charter subscriber to National Review, back when paying for it wasn’t easy; but I didn’t go because not long after the Iraqi War started, National Review had the egregious Frum write an editorial denouncing all those who weren’t enthusiastic about our invasion of Iraq. “As they turn their backs on us, we turn our backs on them.”  Then they had “rebuttals” in which Frum got to insult Stephen Tonsor, something I still have trouble understanding given Tonsor’s stature. So I declined to go up the hill, even though I was assured that the egregious Frum wouldn’t be attending.

I had thought I had pretty good conservative credentials, at least of the old school. Possony and I wrote books together, Russell Kirk was a very old friend and godfather to one of my sons, etc. I was, true enough, more Cold Warrior than political philosopher, I did manage to be campaign manager for Barry Goldwater Jr.’s first campaign for Congress, and more than one conservative congressman knows who I am. I have a few credentials and can claim a few accomplishments in slowing the mad rush to Jacobinism. But Frum made it clear, those who weren’t for the war from the start are to be ignored. Without discussion or debate: “We turn our backs on them.”

Incidentally I note that Buckley now says “If I had known then what I know now, I would not have supported the war.” Which is fair enough, but National Review read out of the conservative movement all those who did know then what he knows now: that invading a secular regime in Mesopotamia is not the way to curb militant Moslem fanatics; that killing terrorists in Mesopotamia while allowing the hotbeds and breeding grounds of the madras system to flourish is futile since for each one killed there will be at least one more to avenge him; and that while it is easy for the Army to conquer these places, pacification requires constabulary, not Army, and the tasks of soldiers are not those of constables; that Saddam was largely deterred; and that the argument that if we do not fight them over there we will have to fight them over here is true only if you continue to allow open borders and unrestricted travel to the US.

And finally, that $300 billion is better spent on energy independence for these United States than on breaking things and killing people in Iraq; or even trying to pacify the old Turkish Empire provinces welded together into a compensatory kingdom for the Hashemites. Well, some of us knew all that then, and now presumably Buckley does as well; does Frum get to read him out of the party? I confess I almost went up the hill to Cat’s house just to ask him, but I didn’t really want to be the unpleasant guest at what Cat tells me was a pleasant party.

Now it remains true that we can’t just cut and run. The neo-conservatives have got us into a pickle, and if we cut and run now we hand the jihadists a victory of great value and magnitude. That can’t be the right way out of that place. But it also remains true that we need to look very hard at how we got into there; at what arguments induced us to believe that democracy can be exported on the points of our bayonets; at the Jacobin assumptions that seduced us into going abroad to seek monsters to slay. We need to look very hard at the notion of expanding the standing army with foreign recruits so that we can avoid conscription, and at the price of both conscription and a large standing army; and we need to rethink the requirements of a global war on terrorism. There are far better ways to wage that war than putting the flower of our youth into Mesopotamia, disrupting the National Guard and Reserve systems, and generally reorganizing for waging of overseas war of long duration. Those are more the skills of empire than republic, and any student of history, particularly our history, should know this. We need to learn from our own history — but then, until recently, that is precisely how America did learn. By studying the New World Order we created one hot summer in Philadelphia.

William Buckley once notably said that America was unique in that anyone could study and learn to be an American. That was before “diversity” was elevated to the chief goal of the land. Now we aren’t sure what it means to be an American although sometimes events like Katrina demonstrate some of the best of what that used to mean. Is it not time that we turned our attention to what we had all during the Cold War and are now losing? Would it not be better to pay attention to the fading republic rather than seeking overseas monsters to slay? But of course Adams warned us that losing our own republic might well be a consequence of going abroad to slay dragons. I suppose Frum turned his back on Adams as well — assuming that he ever heard of him.

Ah well.

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Another essay from the past: I see no reason to change it. http://www.jerrypournelle.com/view/2011/Q2/view675.html#immigration

On Immigration

From my mail:

more Gingrich!

http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/05/19/
us-usa-campaign-gingrich-idUSTRE74C3UV20110519

He’s advocating amnesty now.

Time for you to admit you’re wrong about him. And no, that does not mean hemming and hawing and talking vaguely about how maybe he has a point. He does not have a point. It is entirely within DC’s power to enforce the law and make it unacceptably difficult for them to remain here; that DC does not is plain treason, and anybody enabling and supporting such treason is going to get caught in the crossfire when the shooting starts. Amnesty is the best way to trigger that.

They are invaders and will be treated as such if this country actually has any future at all. They all must go.

I don’t know what it is that I am supposed to have been wrong about, and this interview doesn’t change it. What Newt said:

Gingrich was asked a question on a different hot-button issue — immigration — on Thursday in Iowa, the Midwestern state with a key early contest in the race for his party’s presidential nomination.

He preceded his response by acknowledging that he risked sparking another controversy.

Gingrich recounted how World War Two-era U.S. draft boards chose who would serve in the military, saying a similar system might help deal with the millions of immigrants living in the United States illegally.

“Because I think we are going to want to find some way to deal with the people who are here to distinguish between those who have no ties to the United States, and therefore you can deport them at minimum human cost, and those who, in fact, may have earned the right to become legal, but not citizens,” Gingrich said.

That is not my definition of amnesty; and it does raise a question that must be answered. There are about 20 million illegal aliens living in the United States. Suppose that Congress and the President decided tomorrow that “they all must go.” How would that come about? Merely transporting Twenty Million People is a non-trivial task. Assume that of the 20 million aliens in the US, ten million will require transport of 1,000 km (621 miles). That is ten billion passenger/kilometers. The total annual rail passenger traffic in the US, including commuter travel, is about 17 billion passenger/kilometers. They would have to be fed. Many would have medical needs. While many of them could be transported by rail to the Mexican border — in boxcars? or must there be at least day coach transport? — many would have to go elsewhere, some to Latin America, but many to Asia and Africa, and many to places that will refuse to accept them.

A non-trivial task, even assuming that we could identify them all, and assuming there would be no expensive legal actions required: just identify, apprehend, and transport. It would take an enormous budget to accomplish.

Now add political realities. It’s all very well to grab some thug with a long criminal record and say “Enough! Out!” to the general applause of a vast majority, but even then there are going to be problems with the ACLU as well as various immigrant rights organizations. Assume that it can be done: what fraction of the 20 million will that account for?

Of course advocates of amnesty or the dream act like to show the example of a teenage girl brought to the US at age five, brought up to speak English and assimilate to American customs, earning a high school diploma with an A- average, and in general an all-American girl who ought to be college bound. Or the young oriental boy with much the same record. We don’t have to concede that people with similar stories will be a very great fraction of the 20 million, but it is not zero, and every one of those will be paraded by the media as soon as apprehended. Who is going to throw Marie into the boxcar headed for Tijuana?

Incidentally that is not a trivial question: an operation this large will require a lot of police agents. Do we insist that they all be capable of handcuffing teenagers and putting them on the train to the border? Do we want a lot of people with that attitude to have police power? And what of illegals who have joined the Armed Forces? Veterans? Active duty soldiers? An operation this large may well require action from the Legions: will they pay more attention to the orders of their officers or the appeals of their comrades? Of course that’s a silly question, but my correspondent did talk about crossfire and punishing treason, which probably means civil war, and the Legions, both Regulars and various reserves and militias and National Guard are certainly not going to be idle while that happens.

But suppose that all the questions of how to do it are answered, and there is magically a black box with a button: push the button and all 20 million of the illegal immigrants will be magically teleported to their country of origin. If we took a national referendum on whether or not to push that button, what would be the outcome?

It’s no good saying that conservatives ought not think about such matters. Of course they must. The problem of the illegals amongst us will not go away simply because we don’t think about it.

Note, incidentally, that Newt distinguishes between the right to be a legal resident and citizenship. This is not brought up in most “amnesty” discussions, but it should be. Citizens have rights, including the right to sponsor other immigrants. The Supreme Court has held that illegal immigrants have rights very similar if not identical to citizens, but that is not the plain language of the Constitution. A sane immigration policy will make that distinction — including entitlements.

I am not going to “solve” the illegal immigrant problem here, but I will say that denouncing as “amnesty” anything other than a policy of ‘deport them all and deport them now’ is not useful. We aren’t going to deport them all, and no Congress or President will do that, nor could even if it were thought desirable. The United States is not going to erect detention camps nor will we herd people into boxcars.  We can’t even get the southern border closed. Despite President Obama’s mocking speech, we have not built the security fence mandated a long time ago. We probably could get Congress to approve a moat and alligators, although there are likely more effective means. We can and should insist on closing the borders. That we can and must do. It won’t be easy or simple, but it’s going to be a lot easier than deporting 20 million illegals. Get the borders closed. We can all agree on that.

That leaves the problem of the illegal aliens amongst us. We can and should do more to enforce employment laws; but do we really want police coming around to demand “your papers” from our gardeners and fry cooks and homemakers? For if “your papers, please” becomes common practice, there will be demands for equality; for not profiling; for equal opportunity harassment — but you get the idea. Think about what goes on in airports.

Every time we bring up immigration policy, someone will bring up Angela and Maria and Alexa and Chanying, charming young ladies illegally  brought to the United States as children, all speaking perfect English and thoroughly assimilated into the American Way of Life, none with a criminal record, and now looking to the future. They will also bring up Felipe and Ramon and Sergei, all young men with flawless records, all brought here illegally when small children, and all willing and eager to join the Armed Forces (and perhaps some of them already have); and it will be demanded that we say what is to be done with them. Those making the demand fully understand that there will be no consensus, but there will certainly not be a majority in favor of putting them on an airplane back to their country of origin.

Of course when that happens we ought to bring up the others, the career criminals with long rap sheets, and insist that the amnesty advocates tell us that they would do with these. And perhaps, perhaps, there will come a time when there is an actual serious discussion of the subject, and we can come up with policies and tactics that have a chance of working and of actually being adopted.

But we will never get there so long as bringing up the subject for discussion makes you a traitor.

= = = =

I see no reason to change a word of that, although it was written long ago. It ought to be asked of every candidate: realistically what shall we do with the 20 million illegal aliens already among us?

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: ISIS, Trump, Mexican Cartels, National Security

As riots erupt among people waving Mexican flags, denying access to public spaces (disorderly conduct or disturbing the peace, I forget which), smashing police cars (vandalism), hurling rocks at motorists (assault consummated with battery), and committing other crimes, we see why border security, immigration enforcement, and law enforcement are important.

LAPD are outnumbered, according to news reports. This is a danger to national security and domestic tranquility. We have a small army of — what appear to be Mexican nationals waving Mexican flags — menacing citizens of the United States and interfering with activities related to the American body politic generally and the California primary specifically. Why isn’t this happening? Why can’t I travel in my own state without feeling menaced by foreign nationalist criminals? Why isn’t the National Guard stomping their guts out and letting LAPD mop up?

Recently, I emailed you a news article that reveals Mexican drug cartels helped Daesh (ISIS) terrorists scout targets in the United States and helped Daesh terrorists cross the border. Further, this cooperation between Daash and the Mexican cartels becomes personal — for some people — when you learn that 3,600 ordinary New Yorkers have been targeted by Daash hackers who encouraged terrorists to attack

them:

http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/world-news/isis-hackers-release-hit-list-7864663

I have possible solutions:

First: We must take the fight to them and unleash Hell with free reign. We should have no compunctions about collateral damage. This is their problem, they didn’t deal with it and they must not like how we deal with it. This will encourage them to get their act together and keep it together next time. Vagaries in my use of “them”, “their”, and “they” are intentional as this is general policy.

Second: If this situation worsens it seems prudent to encourage, perhaps even compel, capable US citizens to carry a loaded firearm (or

firearms) at all times in case of a terrorist attack

Third: If the Mexican government cannot regulate the conduct of its citizens and criminals in such a way that it does not have an adverse effect on the United States, it’s people, and/or it’s politics then it may become necessary for the United States to take a more active role in governing Mexico.

◊ ◊ ◊ ◊ ◊

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

Percussa Resurgo

ISIS has declared war on us. We can wait until they can actually kill a lot of Americans, or eliminate them before they do; since we are at war, it seems prudent to strike when three divisions of Army (for Iraq/Syria), two regiments of Marines (for Libya), and the Warthogs will be enough for overwhelming force and thus fewer casualties will do the job; waiting means more opposition and more casualties. As to what to do with their territory after we have taken it: there may be parts of Libya worth keeping; I have not studied the map. We know there are parts of Iraq coveted by our Kurdish allies – any competent deal maker should find that easy. Some of Iraq is not Kurdish, and may be more of a problem; but there is oil, enough that we should be able to hire a constabulary. For the rest, once ISIS is destroyed, we can consider our options. We may even want a convenient base with acceptable climate suitable for our troops to bring their families for a year, just to make sure we can nip any opposition in the bud. Again: territory we take from ISIS is no longer Iraq or Syria; it is part of the as yet unconquered Caliphate which has declared war on us, and will no longer exist when we proclaim peace.

As to the ISIS threat on the Mexican border and the Cartels, we can do nothing until we have the will to do something. The power we’ve got. Wild idea: Quite possibly we have illegal aliens who would be glad to join the fight for the right rewards. Of course once ISIS in the Middle East vanishes, the situation south may change for the better.

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Amazon puts Microsoft away in the Battle of Seattle (USA Today)

John Shinal, Special for USA TODAY 7:55 a.m. EDT April 29, 2016

With Amazon raising its revenue forecast for the current quarter, the online retailing giant is leaving fellow Seattle-area tech giant Microsoft in the dust in terms of annual sales.

It’s also closing in on a certain Cupertino, Calif.-based seller of smartphones, the heavyweight in tech sales.

Amazon’s (AMZN) bullish prediction makes Wall Street’s full-year estimates more of a lock, and that view is a sweet one for growth investors. Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos is expected to boost the company’s top line 21.5% this year and another 20% in 2017.

For Microsoft (MSFT), however, the contrast is stark and a good illustration of how growth in the sector has moved from hardware, software and chip companies to Internet firms selling goods or advertising online.

The maker of Office and Word is expected to post a 2% decline in revenue this fiscal year, which ends in June. In fiscal 2017, it’s seen growing just 4% off that lower base.

The upshot?

By next year Amazon is seen generating $156 billion in sales, or nearly two-thirds more than Microsoft’s $95.4 billion.

So while Bill Gates helped put Seattle area on the map as a U.S. tech hub, Bezos now runs the largest tech company in the State of Washington, by far, in terms of sales.

What’s more, Amazon is also putting more distance between itself and two other fast-growing Internet companies, Facebook and Google-parent Alphabet.

While Facebook posted the fastest first-quarter growth, at 52%, and Google sales rose 17%  — a hefty number for its size — it was Amazon that added the most new business in the tech sector.

With revenue surging, Amazon won $6.4 billion in new business during the period, versus a year ago. Alphabet (GOOGL), meanwhile, added $3 billion in new sales and Facebook, $1.84 billion.

That means that while Google and Facebook (FB) began today valued by stock investors more than Amazon, there’s only one tech firm still larger than Amazon by revenue.

That would be Apple (AAPL), which in spite of its recent iPhone slowdown, is still expected to post revenue of more than $200 billion for this year and next.

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A House committee wants to know what the Obama administration is doing to remove illegal immigrants who commit new crimes. A Puerto Rico-born conservative voices reservations about the territory’s fiscal mess. Josh Siegel reports on both. Big businesses have some nerve pummeling a ballot question on religious liberty, Katrina Trinko writes. We’ve also got an excerpt from James Rosebush’s new book on Reagan; James Gattuso on requiring Congress to OK major regulations; and Genevieve Wood’s interview with a CEO for whom Obamacare is personal.

Analysis

A Way to Curb the Power of Unaccountable Bureaucracy

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Each year, regulators impose thousands of rules on the American people—over 20,000 during the Obama administration’s tenure alone.

Read More

We have not heard much from the candidates on this subject; we know Hillary will do nothing; Sanders will do nothing; Bush and the Republican establishment will do nothing. Someone might ask Cruz and Trump.

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

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There Will Be War Vol XI; manic mode continues; Trump; and other matters

Chaos Manor View, Wednesday, April 27, 2016

“This is the most transparent administration in history.”

Barrack Obama

Liberalism is a philosophy of consolation for Western Civilization as it commits suicide.

Under Capitalism, the rich become powerful. Under Socialism, the powerful become rich.

Under Socialism, government employees become powerful.

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I’m still working hard on fiction; just returned from lunch after a conference with Steve Barnes, Larry Niven, and a short confab with Dr. Jack Cohen in England; we definitely have a book, and now to plunge ahead and write it. AS also hear from our agent that “Call of Cthulhu” will not be popular with the sales force of any publisher interested in this book, so it is very unlikely to be the actual title. It will be the third book in the series The Legacy of Heorot followed by Beowulf’s Children, and incorporates the events of The Legend of Blackship Island which chronologically comes between Heorot and Beowulf’s Children. These are the stories of the first interstellar colony, in a realistic universe that has no faster than light travel (which is what scientists believe we live in now, what with Einstein’s Special Theory of Relativity).

Now a second colony ship comes from Earth and appears to be matching orbits with Geographic, the ship that the Avalon colonists came in and which orbits their colony world. In this hard science fiction book we explore the realities and speculate on the motivations of those who go to live among the stars, given the cost of getting there in slower than light vessels. If that sounds like I am practicing writing blurbs for this book, you’re probably right, but it’s as accurate a description as I can come up with; I hope it intrigues you. Sand if you haven’t read the first two books in the series, you may find them to your taste if you’re a hard science fiction fan.

Anyway, that’s much of what I’ve been doing.

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I suppose you can call this a pre-announcement: shortly we will announce that There Will Be War, Volume XI, will be published in November and is now open for submissions. It’s not the formal announcement because I don’t have the web addresses for formal submission. I don’t open attachments to emails to me (obviously with some exceptions which I’m not going to tell you) because I only read plaintext in Outlook, so sending me stories to Chaos Manor isn’t going to work; I’m sure I’ll have the web addresses very shortly.

Publisher is Castalia House. There will be a hardbound edition and eBook editions. We buy nonexclusive anthology rights only: that means we buy previously published works, and if you send an original work – a lot of people do – understand that if it is accepted you still have first serial rights until after November, after which they no longer exist for anyone. Payment on acceptance is an advance against royalties: royalties vary in this strange age, so it’s hard to say exactly, but they are competitive, and contributors receive a pro rate share of half what I receive.

My contribution is a volume introduction, and individual story introductions. I have been known to make editorial suggestions, particularly to original contributions. I have also been known to make other contributions, fiction and non-fiction, as I find necessary.

The series has done well, even the nearly thirty year old volumes. Three stories in Volume X were nominated for Hugo’s (Hugo’s to be awarded in August at MidAmericon II).

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Once again it has become too late for me to write an essay on Conservatism, Populism, and Democracy. I will once again remind you that a primary axiom of conservatism, There never was a democracy that did not commit suicide,” was accepted by nearly every member of the Philadelphia Convention of 1787. The goal was to establish a survivable Union of states with wildly and violently opposite views about some very fundamental principles, Slavery being only one of them. The tendency for a democracy to quickly degenerate into class warfare was always on their minds. How could that be prevented?

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This was no joke. Britain was poised to take advantage of any disunion. There were other threats to liberty.

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Was the goal. No one was entirely pleased with the result; the Federalist papers, once published as essays in popular newspapers, and now considered to difficult for lower division political science majors, address some of the problems.

So long as Washington was President, there was reasonable harmony. The Hamilton-Adams-Jefferson-Burr election went to the House, and resulted in a sitting Vice President shooting his opponent dead in a duel. A ruling class emerged, but that didn’t work. Then the beginnings of a Party system.

We are at a turning point now. For decades the upper-lower class and the lower-middle class have felt themselves ignored by both parties, devoid of influence and power, and losing ground every year.

This election is likely to be crucial. Will they be persuaded that “Hope and Change” – which translates into soak the rich and get free stuff – is the only answer? If not. What is? And who’s listening?

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Of course it was inevitable:

Army regs be dashed – she wants to wear the hijab

Chad Groening, OneNewsNow.com April 27, 2016 at 11:55 am 78 Fresh Ink, Lead Stories

Share!

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A national security expert says political correctness may once again prevail in the case of a female Muslim student who wants to wear a headscarf with her Army uniform during ROTC events.

The U.S. Army recently granted an exemption to a captain who wanted to wear a beard and turban in accordance with his Sikh faith. Now the historic Citadel military academy in Charleston, South Carolina, is considering whether to grant the request of a female student who wants to wear a Muslim head scarf, known as a “hijab.”

According to The Washington Post, the school is considering a second request as well from the student: that she be allowed to cover her arms and legs during exercise. The Post also clarifies that the woman has been “admitted” to the school but has not yet chosen to attend. [snip}

Army regs be dashed – she wants to wear the hijab

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Trump foreign policy speech today

https://www.donaldjtrump.com/press-releases/donald-j.-trump-foreign-policy-speech

You could have written the whole thing.

-- 
Phil Tharp

Well, I would say some things differently, but the principle revealed are not all that different from what I have said for years. I would have to read it more closely than I have before endorsing it, but nothing in my reading stands out for objection. I will have more on that when I have more time.

This should make you happy

http://www.breitbart.com/2016-presidential-race/2016/04/27/donald-trump-win-40-states/

Look at paragraphs 9 and 10.

finally….

-- 
Phil Tharp

In the sense that it seems Mr. Trump is demonstrating his ability to be Presidential, I am pleased that any candidate can do so. But do understand, I have not endorsed Mr. Trump. I do refuse to denounce him.

bubbles

What Could We Build With Extra-Strong, See-Through Wood?     (journal)

Scientists in Sweden came up with a hybrid that’s considerably stronger than acrylic and lets in far more light than normal wood

By

Daniel Akst 

April 21, 2016 12:06 p.m. ET 

Wood is a great building material because it is strong, affordable and renewable. If only it were transparent!

That, at least, was the thought that occurred to a team of scientists in Sweden, who went ahead and made it so—after a fashion. They came up with a hybrid of wood and acrylic that retains some of the advantages of each material. Their Franken-wood is considerably stronger than acrylic, they report, and it lets in far more light than normal wood, which makes it a promising possible building material. 

The team, at Sweden’s Wallenberg Wood Science Center and the country’s KTH Royal Institute of Technology, relied on nanotechnology, the science of very small things. Previous research in this vein has yielded foldable transparent paper, and in 2012, a member of the transparent-wood team, Lars Berglund, was part of a group that managed to create a transparent crab shell. They did it by extracting calcium carbonate, protein, lipids and pigments, replacing them with an acrylic resin while preserving the shell’s shape.

This time, Dr. Berglund and his fellow researchers worked with small pieces of balsa. They first had to remove most of its lignin, a naturally occurring substance that strengthens plant-cell walls, darkens wood and blocks light. Wood with the lignin removed looks white, but it scatters too much light to be transparent.

Lars Berglund explains nano cellulose

So the scientists injected it with prepolymerized methyl methacrylate, a version of the material used in such acrylic panels as Plexiglas, and then heated it at around 158 degrees Fahrenheit for four hours. The result was see-through wood that, thanks to the plastic infusion, was even stronger than before, Dr. Berglund reports. “We are making plywood at this very moment,” he says by email, adding: “We make each layer separate and then laminate them together.”

In their experiment, the scientists were able to dial up or down how much light passed through the wood based on the volume of the chemical infusion, but thickness makes a big difference too. The scientists report that a thin piece of wood—just 0.7 mm thick and treated with their process—let through 90% of light. But when they used a piece 3.7 mm thick (about a seventh of an inch), only about 40% of the light passed though.

The desired transparency would depend on how the material is employed. The scientists foresee its being used someday in construction to let more natural light into buildings, where complete transparency might not be welcome. The transparent wood isn’t as clear as glass, but its haziness can be a virtue in solar panels, the scientists say, because it means light could be trapped for longer in a solar cell. “Longer trapping time means better interaction between light and active medium,” they write, “which can lead to better solar-cell efficiency.”

“Optically Transparent Wood from a Nanoporous Cellulosic Template: Combining Functional and Structural Performance,” Yuanyuan Li, Qiliang Fu, Shun Yu, Min Yan and Lars Berglund, Biomacromolecules (March 4)

Moore’s law spinoffs continue. And the Law is inexorable.

bubbles

Doctor Pournelle,

Wikipedia succumbs to the Iron Law.

Wikipedia Is Basically a Corporate Bureaucracy, According to a New Study

 
   

 

 

Wikipedia Is Basically a Corporate Bureaucracy, According to a New Study

By Jennifer Ouellette

Wikipedia is a voluntary organization dedicated to the noble goal of decentralized knowledge creation. But as th…

 

I cannot see any attribution to Doctor Pournelle, though this is clearly describing the Iron Law in action.

Best regards

Paul T.

Well, I never expect acknowledgement but it is pleasant when it happens.

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Criminal responsibility

Dear Jerry –

Some research on the Murfreesboro arrests suggests that there may be rather less here than meets the eye. Keeping in mind that I am not a lawyer, nor do I play one on television,

Criminal responsibility is ordinarily a pretty common-sense concept. From a related case,

“A person is criminally responsible for an offense committed by the conduct of another, if:

(2) Acting with intent to promote or assist the commission of the offense, or to benefit in the proceeds or results of the offense, the person solicits, directs, aids, or attempts to aid another person to commit the offense;”

In other words, if A is assaulting B, and C prevents B from running away, C is held criminally responsible for the assault on B, even if C did not actually assault B.

Furthermore, under some circumstances a person does have a legal obligation to intervene, but this is apparently applied to parental relationships, and forms the basis for charges of child neglect. A parent who willfully permits his or her child to be harmed is clearly doing something wrong, and criminal charges in these cases does not seem to violate common sense. It’s hard to imagine how such a legal duty can be applied to children 6 to 11, so I’m dubious that it is.

In the case of the Murfreesboto arrests, I’d guess that either the spokesman being quoted was confused, or the reporter reported selectively. To be fair, I suspect the spokesman was constrained in his discussion by the fact that the arrested were minors. I don’t know Tennessee law, but I suspect that in such cases not much information can be released.

That said, an arrest of this sort suggests one of two possibilities: either the police wildly overreacted, or the “fight” which started things off was a very nasty, “Lord of the Flies” bit of work and somebody got seriously injured. In the course of time all may be made clear. Or, since this is a juvenile case, maybe not.

In either case, I doubt that the police are, in fact, implying a general duty to intervene, so my previous comments are probably not really valid.

Regards,

Jim Martin 

bubbles

“Criminal responsibility”

Jerry:

In Warren v. District of Columbia, the US Supreme Court has decided that a law enforcement officer has no legal responsibility to prevent a criminal offense (in this case, violent rape and torture).

If the POLICE have no legal responsibility to make any effort whatsoever to prevent an offense, what responsibility does anyone else have?

There is a certain irony in the police constantly telling people not to take the law into their own hands, then arresting schoolchildren for obeying those admonitions.

Keith

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Murfreesboro and guns

Dear Mr. Pournelle,
I agree that the Murfreesboro arrests open rather too many cans of worms; but I note some immediate responses on the order of “we need to be armed.”
I grew up hunting. I am not afraid of guns. But I am also quite aware that they are not magic wands, which you wave and the bad guys fall down. From everything I can learn, actually hitting your *target* at a time of danger and stress is very difficult. Hitting bystanders instead seems rather likely.
I am convinced that anyone who thinks they should have a gun for self defense or to keep order should be expected to undergo regular combat training. Otherwise, it’s just daydreams.
Yours,
Allan E. Johnson

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SUBJ: “Dear Scrotty Students . . .”

This letter was a hoax of sorts, posted somewhere on the internet as a response from Oxford to students attending as Rhodes Scholars to remove the statue of Oxford Benefactor Cecil Rhodes.

Not sure who wrote this. Best line to the students: “Understand us and understand this clearly: you have everything to learn from us; we have nothing to learn from you.”

http://maggiesfarm.anotherdotcom.com/archives/27886-Dear-Scrotty-Students.html

Perhaps extreme, but tempting…

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Police Power to Detain Drivers

Your correspondent John and the headline from the link he provided both inaccurately describe the decision of the 9th Circuit. The decision did not enlarge police’s authority to detain drivers. All the decision resolved is that officers have no obligation to truthfully tell a detained driver why a detention is occurring. In other words, the police can lie to you. This is hardly news. If an officer sees a driver obeying all traffic laws, but the officer has a reasonable suspicion based upon articulable facts that there are illegal drugs in the car, the officer can legally stop the driver. The officer can then falsely tell the driver that she is being detained because the officer saw the driver fail to signal a lane change. If the driver later moves to get any evidence discovered during the stop excluded because she did signal all lane changes, the police can defeat her motion by establishing their reasonable suspicion of illegal activity.
Rene

And this is all right with you? I’d need time to think about this. Is this not exonerating false arrest? Now true, if the car is full of contraband, the officer will probably not be punished, but will the drugs be admissible?

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Police lying to suspects

Jerry:

I am NOT appalled by the court ruling that cops can lie to suspects.

On the one hand, this levels the playing field, because the suspects often lie to the cops.

On the other hand, it gives cops the chance to make contact with suspects who (as in this case) are committing felonies in the background, but being squeaky-clean to observers. It is certainly a lot less drama than that involved with a “felony stop” event. Compare the risk to bystanders of rolling up on the suspect vehicle, guns drawn, and dragging out the occupants (who may be armed and less than willing to be dragged out), vs. pulling them to the side of the road, saying “you didn’t signal that lane change,” getting them to choose to get out of the car (and away from weapons), THEN making the arrest.

On the gripping hand, this also gives the cops a chance to listen to the suspects respond to accusations of something they know they didn’t do, where they might make incriminating comments regarding the things they ARE doing.

All of this is taking place prior to any arrest, crossing of the Miranda threshold, etc. I would be appalled if the court said that cops are allowed to lie on their paperwork or in court, but the initial contact is an entirely different situation.

Keith

The rulings on admissible evidence were first applicable only to federal officers; it was only relatively recently that the Supreme Court found among the penumbras a right to enforce against the States. Are you convinced that this is a Federal matter at all?

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Dinosaurs weren’t wiped out by that meteorite after all

Jerry

You may find this interesting. Seems that geological factors such as separating continents and volcanoes in the Deccan Traps were already browbeating the dinos, so that the Chicxulub impact was a coup de grace:

http://arstechnica.com/science/2016/04/dinosaurs-werent-wiped-out-by-that-meteorite-after-all/

Since the flowering plants that we think of as trees evolved around the same time, I wonder how the change in herbage entered into the mix.

It seems the dinosaurs had a string of bad luck. Lucky for us.

Ed

There went our few years of fame…

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

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Manic; Hugo nomination; Trump; Roman Ice Age after Roman Warm; and many other important matters

Chaos Manor View, Tuesday, April 26, 2016

“This is the most transparent administration in history.”

Barrack Obama

Liberalism is a philosophy of consolation for Western Civilization as it commits suicide.

Under Capitalism, the rich become powerful. Under Socialism, the powerful become rich.

Under Socialism, government employees become powerful.

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I have been in manic phase, turning out fiction for Call of Cthulhu – not a Lovecraft parody, but the working title of the third book in the Avalon series about the first interstellar colony, which Larry Niven, Steve Barnes, and I are working on. We have 20,000 words and a fairly detailed synopsis, and soon enough we’ll be ready to send a proposal to our agent for circulation to publishers. Tomorrow we have a lunch conference. I’ve done a lot with the outline as well as a few thousand words of actual scenes. Wore myself out, I did.

I seem to have been nominated for a Hugo. “Best Editor, Short Form”. The only work mentioned for the year 2015 is There Will Be War, Volume Ten” released in November. It is of course a continuation of the There Will Be War series which appeared in the 1980’s and early 90’s, of which the first four volumes were recreated with a new preface during 2015; the rest are scheduled to come out in the next couple of years. I’ve edited a lot of anthologies, starting with 2020 Vision in 1973 (I think it will come out in reprint with new a introduction and afterword’s by the surviving authors next year. I did a series of anthologies with Jim Baen that was pretty popular, and one-off anthologies like Black Holes and The Survival of Freedom, amounting to more than twenty over the years, but this is the first time anyone has ever nominated me for an editing Hugo – and actually the first time I ever thought of it myself.

When I first started in this racket, Best Editor Hugo usually meant one for the current editor of Analog or Galaxy. That spread around over the years, but it meant Editor in the sense of someone employed with the title of Editor, not a working writer who put together anthologies, sometimes for a lark.

I used to get Hugo nominations all the time in my early days, but I never won. My Black Holes story came close, but I lost to Niven’s “Hole Man”. Ursula LeGuin beat me for novella. There were others. Our collaborations routinely got nominated, but again usually came second, so at one point I was irked enough to say “Money will get you through times of no Hugo’s much better than Hugo’s will get you through times of no money,” and put whatever promotion efforts I had time for into afternoon and late night talk radio shows and stuff like that. Which worked for sales, but not for Hugo awards. I’m unlikely to get this one – I’m a good editor but that’s hardly my primary occupation – but I admit I’d like to. I was already going to Kansas City this August, so I’ll be there, but I doubt there’s much need to write a thank you speech.

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The Republican Establishment, and some of the anti-establishment people I have considerable respect for, are in panic mode as Trump moves closer to inevitable First Ballot Nomination. It’s easy to see why the Establishment is terrified. Then there are the others.

1. He can’t beat Hillary. Doesn’t he know that? The media are playing along with him now, but they hate him, and the instant he’s nominated they will turn on him with a vengeance.

A few months ago it was considered impossible for Mr. Trump to be the nominee. He’d drop out soon enough. Didn’t he realize it was impossible? Yet, here he is. As to the media, does anyone believe that Trump doesn’t know they hate him? And even if he were that naïve, is everyone around him also that stupid? It is not rational to think Mr. Trump can be astonished at the notion that he is not popular with the drive by media.

He has already attracted a significant number of Democrats to his camp. Mostly white working class, who feel betrayed by the Democrat machines but certainly were not going to turn to Wall Street and the Republican Country Club establishment for relief. They want jobs, not free stuff; domestic tranquility, not diversity schemes; some expectation of being important again as they were in the long dead times after World War II. They don’t trust Hillary. They don’t trust the Country Club. They have discovered that the Democrat Establishment has expelled the New Democrats who elected and reelected Bill Clinton, and Hillary has gone over to buying their dignity with free stuff. She doesn’t care.  Bill maybe was once one of them, but she never was.

It may be a close race, but then they said Reagan was just an actor, and that his would be impossible. Better Establishment candidate Gerry Ford… .

2. He’s no conservative.

No. He’s not. He accepts the conservative alternative to many problems, but he’s not an ideological anything. He’s a pragmatic populist. I will have to write more about the differences between Populism, Conservatism, and Democracy, but not today; I’m running out of time.

I will remind you that the one phrase nearly every one of the Founders in Philadelphia were agreed on was “There never was a democracy that did not commit suicide.” They founded a Republic, not a democracy, a nation of states that did not agree on many matters, but were determined to preserve their own way of life.

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Despair is a Sin

I just had an important discussion with some folks and I decided to undercut their positions and say that I was no longer talking about the subject but the principles underlying it and I asked them if they thought they couldn’t make it better? And then I said despair is a sin. Now I understand what you mean and I thank you for repeating that to me over and over again so that now I can understand it. Despair is a sin, and more descriptively, it is a semantic blockage.

◊ ◊ ◊ ◊ ◊

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

Percussa Resurgo

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Our Webmaster reports:

Malware via Advertising

DANGER, WIL ROBINSON !!!
I’ve been getting these via what appears to be a ad-delivered malware attack. They have looked like Flash updates before, but today’s was a bogus/malwared FireFox update.

The domain was registered today, so is bogus. Screenshot below (IP address and location blanked)

The usual warning: although updates a good (and recommended), make sure that you get them from a reliable source. Don’t click on popups.
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…Rick….

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IGNORE this message from me. Message follows:

I did not send this – to myself or anyone else. I have never asked for confirmation of subscriptions. Be warned.

From: Chaos Manor – Jerry Pournell [mailto:jerryp@jerrypournelle.com]
Sent: Monday, February 22, 2016 2:20 PM
To: Chaos Manor – Jerry Pournelle
Subject: Subscription confirmation

 

Chaos Manor – Jerry Pournelle

Subscription confirmation

To finish your subscription, you need to confirm your e-mail address here.
If you can’t click the link above, copy and paste this url into your browser: https://www.jerrypournelle.com/chaosmanor?simpleSubscribe=1&a=s&sb=c609868c97a805efca4d32cac1d7cf1e049fb27a&i=183

 

Here from the Website Master is why you ignore it:

Dr. P.

I noticed just after the malware warning your warning about subscription verifications. You state that you don’t send out those.

The actual fact is that those notification are valid. .There is a ‘subscription’ signup on Chaos Manor (and Chaos Manor Reviews) that will notify subscribers of a new post on either site. When you sign up, you get a confirmation mail (to ensure that it was actually you that subscribed), which has to be clicked to activate the subscription. After verification, the subscriber will get email notice of new content on the sites.

This is different from what you were thinking of — your paid subscriptions. The email notice that you warned about is actually valid, and should not be ignored, if the subscriber wants to be notified of new content..

…Rick…

What we have here us a failure of communication. Sorry

 

 

bubbles

Mini Ice Age AD536-660, New Sci 13 Feb, p. 18

Procopius notes that around 539 AD

“At that time also the comet appeared, at first about as long as a tall man, but later much larger. And the end of it was toward the west and its beginning toward the east, and it followed behind the sun itself. For the sun was in Capricorn and it was in Sagittarius. And some called it “the swordfish” because it was of goodly length and very sharp at the point, and others called it “the bearded star”; it was seen for more than forty days.”
It is likely that this is the same comet that Gibbon talks about in his Decline and fall of the Roman Empire
“Eight years afterward [comet Halley’s 530 AD apparition], while the sun was in Capricorn, another comet appeared to follow in the Sagittary:  the size was gradually increasing; the head was in the east, the tail in the west, and it remained visible for 40 days”
Procopius’s description above implies to me an observed comet with an anti-tail.  Also, Procopius gives us some information of when the comet was seen. He tells us that the sun was in Capricorn.  The date when this occurred during the writing of Procopius was the last few days of December, and the first three weeks of January.  It appearing in Sagittarius at this time may tie in well with the Chinese account of it being seen in S. Dipper?  So it is possible that we have two accounts of the same comet.  If this is the case then Gibbon seems to be out by a year. 

In his list of comets, Ho gives comets in the years 530 (Halley), 533, 535, 537, 539(the above comet) and 541.  If these comets were noticed by many people then we can see how perhaps the comets of 535 and 539 may have been remembered as harbingers for the following volcanically induced climatic events.  Indeed, the two comets of 537 and 541 which appeared during the climatic events may have also been viewed as ill omens. The following is purely speculative, but to an ignorant and/or superstitious population, they may have viewed the comets as a cause of the climatic events, not knowing that distant volcanoes were to blame.  Indeed, while the educated and perhaps more rational/sober may have recorded what they seen as heavenly events, the general populace may only have had stories of myth and legend to fall back upon to try to understand what was happening at the time?

Jonny

It has been colder (4th and 5th Century; Little Ice Age) and warmer (Roman Warm, Viking Era) than now in historical times, all well before the Industrial Revolution. The hockey stick is a contrived falsehood.

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This was actually sent in February. It is relevant today.

Cell phone security,

Jerry

The FBI wants Apple to divulge its security by creating a back door. Apple would do well to create a subsidiary in, say, Japan or Singapore to write its OS – or at least to convert the output of its Silicon Valley engineers to final code. US legal people often engage in extra-territoriality, but locating it in a state where the government can stand up to bullies is required.

The alternative is to see sales leak to Samsung, Nokia and other non-US companies. I hope the logic is clear: no one will trust US products, and they will buy from elsewhere. It’s a slippery slope: dead terrorists, live terrorists, purveyors of child porn, kidnappers . . . child custody cases, etc. It would be like Men in Black, where all the aliens were abandoning the planet because we had a Bug.

Ed

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‘Wouldn’t it be simpler for the Air Force just to blow up Vandenberg and Cape Canaveral launch sites?’

<http://nationalinterest.org/blog/the-buzz/exposed-us-air-forces-war-destroy-americas-space-industry-15925>

—————————————

Roland Dobbins

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College men and women obsolete categories

Dear Jerry:
We read today in “The Chronicle of Higher Education” that student categories of male and female are to be superseded on college application forms.
The prospective students will still be asked to state their “sex assigned at birth.” It remains unspecified as to just who it is who has the authority to assign sex at birth to a prospective college student or whether the applicant will have to provide documentary evidence of that assignment. I can see this becoming a matter of dispute. Also it is unclear whether stating “sex assigned at birth” is optional or required.
Once the touchy business of sex assignment at birth is out of the way, the students themselves will get to specify their gender identities without all the confusion of considering physical or biochemical evidence.

From the Chronicle:

Common Application to Change Gender-Identity Options

[Updated (4/26/2016, 12:01 a.m.) with news of the Universal College Application.]
Starting this summer, students who use the Common Application will be asked to state their “sex assigned at birth.” There also will be an optional free-response text field in which applicants may describe their gender identity.
Those changes, announced on Monday by the Common Application’s leadership, follow calls from students and advocates to change how the standardized application form asks about gender. Currently, applicants are required to choose “male” or “female.” The new prompts are meant to help students express themselves in a way they feel most comfortable with, said Aba Blankson, a spokeswoman for the Common Application: “The feedback from our members and advisory committees has been consistent that, yep, this is the time, this is the right way to go.”
Continued at
http://chronicle.com/blogs/ticker/common-application-to-change-gender-identity-options/110674
Best regards,
–Harry M.

Is comment needed? The Republican Establishment holds both Houses of Congress, doesn’t it? Is this the Will of the People?

bubbles

finally an Ah Shixit button for pilots

http://www.popsci.com/xavion-ipad-app-can-make-emergency-airplane-landing-autopilot?src=offramp&loc=region-3&lnk=img

Very, very, cool.

-- 
Phil Tharp

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New Plant Designed to Push GE Further Into Digital (journal)

It sure ain’t. It also shows that manufacturing jobs are not coming back.  Meet Mr. Robot, his co-worker Miss 3D printer  and their dedicated process control counter parts. It’s really cool. I just don’t know what we will do with the IQ 100 types.

Phil Tharp
 

On 4/24/16 4:49 PM, Jerry Pournelle wrote:

It sure ain’t Chevrolet…

Jerry Pournelle

Chaos Manor

New Plant Designed to Push GE Further Into Digital

  • (journal)

A new incubator-like facility, to be launched Friday, will allow General Electric Co.GE -1.39% to test real-world applications of big data, the Internet of Things, and a range of IT tools in the industrial manufacturing process, the company said.

Advanced Manufacturing Works, a 125,000-square-foot facility housed within the company’s sprawling Greenville, S.C., industrial complex, is equipped to produce working gas turbines, jet engines, wind-turbine blades and other power-industry parts and products.

But it also includes advanced capabilities to apply big data, IoT, 3-D printing, automation and robotics to that process. The $73 million facility is operated by GE Power, the company’s power-generation unit.

Through digital technologies, it seeks to create streams of data linking industrial processes and systems that often are isolated at more traditional manufacturing plants. GE calls the stream a “Digital Thread.”

The goal is to develop tools to more quickly adjust to input from across the supply chain and other external sources, use insights drawn from the data to fine-tune production on the fly, and get new parts and products to market faster, GE Power Chief Information Officer Johnson told CIO Journal.

He said it can be difficult to insert new technologies into the traditional manufacturing process without slowing down or even shutting off production. Industrial plant managers and engineers can spend days or even weeks analyzing data in a spreadsheet before initiating any changes. In the meantime, the plant keeps churning out faulty parts, or stays idle, Mr. Johnson said.

To address this issue, the new facility will act as a testing ground for applying data instantly, through automated processes, to make those changes in real-time, using streams of data to create a “digital feedback loop,” he said: “A true digital loop is about seeing data and using that to make adjustments to the process without human intervention. That’s the next stage” of IoT, he added.

To further speed up the process, the facility will use 3-D printing and 3-D modeling to create rapid, intricate prototypes for parts and products, to share quickly with customers along the supply chain.

Digitized processes that test successfully will be applied at the company’s main manufacturing plants, GE Power CEO Steve Bolze told CIO Journal.

“We can innovate offline and introduce these technologies into one of GE’s largest manufacturing facilities,” Mr. Bolze said. “It’s going to be a hotbed of the latest technology for more speed, more performance and cost competitiveness,” he said about the Greenville plant.

On top of the initial cost of getting the plant up and running, GE plans to invest a further $327 million into the facility over the next few years, Mr. Bolze said, largely on new equipment, additional buildout and prototype development.

It is expected to create at least 80 new engineering and manufacturing jobs, he said. The company estimates each job in advanced manufacturing supports 3.5 jobs through the supply chain. [snip]

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Gen Mattis: ‘I Don’t Understand’ Speculation about Presidential Run

Jerry,

Another example of Heinlein’s “Crazy Years.” Regards, Charles Adams, Bellevue, NE

<http://www.military.com/daily-news/2016/04/22/mattis-i-dont-understand-speculation-about-presidential-run.html>

Mattis: ‘I Don’t Understand’ Speculation about Presidential Run

Apr 22, 2016 | by Hope Hodge Seck

Following his lecture on the Middle East and Iranian aggression, Mattis, the former four-star commander of U.S. Central Command and a current fellow at the Hoover Institution in California, implied he was mystified by the buzz surrounding his hypothetical candidacy.

“It’s been going on for 15 months. Since coming back from overseas, this is more of a foreign country than the places overseas,” he said. “I don’t understand it. It’s like America has lost faith in rational thought.”

And Trump swept all five states today.

bubbles

Corruption in drug tests

Dear Dr. Pournelle,

I believe that I should bring the case of Annie Dookhan to your attention:

http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/crime/2015/10/massachusetts_crime_lab_scandal_worsens_dookhan_and_farak.html

“Dookhan was sentenced in 2013 to at least three years in prison, after pleading guilty in 2012 to having falsified thousands of drug tests. Among her extracurricular crime lab activities, Dookhan failed to properly test drug samples before declaring them positive, mixed up samples to create positive tests, forged signatures, and lied about her own credentials. Over her nine-year career, Dookhan tested about

60,000 samples involved in roughly 34,000 criminal cases.Three years later, the state of Massachusetts still can’t figure out how to repair the damage she wrought almost single-handedly.

By the close of 2014, despite the fact that there were between

20,000-40,000 so-called “Dookhan defendants” (depending on whether you accept the state’s numbers or the American Civil Liberties Union’s), fewer than 1,200 had filed for postconviction relief.*

“In Massachusetts it doesn’t even end there. Only a few months after Dookhan’s conviction, it was discovered that another Massachusetts crime lab worker, Sonja Farak, who was addicted to drugs, not only stole her supply from the evidence room but also tampered with samples and performed tests under the influence, thus tainting as many as

10,000 or more prosecutions. Records show Farak used cocaine, crack, or methamphetamines daily or almost daily while she was at work, as well as ketamine, MDMA, ecstasy, phentermine, amphetamines, LSD, and marijuana. Farak pleaded guilty and served 18 months behind bars.”

========

I believe I mentioned the first thing we should do is restore integrity to our institutions, and this is definitely an example of that crying need; while quite a few of those defendants would probably be in prison anyway, there’s still thousands of people in jail on falsified evidence. The bottom line seems to be: Don’t take a drug test if you can help it, and stay out of the legal system if

you can help it. At least in Massachusetts, but slate reports that

we have had 20 drug lab scandals in multiple states, so we can’t assume the problem is isolated.

Respectfully,

Brian P.

Everything is going to hell, and we wonder why Trump is rising? We got Hope and Change, and we got it good and hard; we elected Republicans to both Houses of Congress; and the beat goes on…

bubbles

More on the EmDrive

Dear Dr. Pournelle,
Been reading your columns since 1982, when I started reading Byte. Started reading your fiction not much later, and been hooked on both ever since (Alas, kudos on the Robert Heinlein prize you won the other day).
Regarding the EmDrive you wrote about recently, I’ve been following the matter with interest, and just came across a surprisingly well-written article which goes beyond the maddening shallowness I’ve seen so far, but is still very approachable by the a layman: https://www.technologyreview.com/s/601299/the-curious-link-between-the-fly-by-anomaly-and-the-impossible-emdrive-thruster/
Thought you’d be interested.
Cheers,

Durval Menezes.

I will believe it when I can be at the test… twice.

bubbles

Rethinking Humanity’s Roots.

<http://discovermagazine.com/2016/march/13-rethinking-our-roots>

—————————————

Roland Dobbins

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

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Unerasable lines, Border lines, and other Word arcana;

Chaos Manor View, Thursday, April 21, 2016

“This is the most transparent administration in history.”

Barrack Obama

Liberalism is a philosophy of consolation for Western Civilization as it commits suicide.

Under Capitalism, the rich become powerful. Under Socialism, the powerful become rich.

Under Socialism, government employees become powerful.

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I think I have the full handle on the mysterious black line that sometimes appears in WORD documents and cannot be deleted. It’s not the feature called “Border lines” that I have never needed, but which can be erased by backspacing over them; this is far more persistent, and neither backspacing nor select/delete will get rid of them. Backspace literally does nothing; and you cannot select the line, and thus you can’t delete it. It looks like thus.

[Pasting into LiveWriter did in fact erase it; oh well.]

If I (in Word) backspace over that line, the result will be that text above the line is deleted; but the line remains. It can drive you mad, or at least had that effect on me.

It turns out to be a feature I will almost certainly never use, and there is a way to get rid of it. The feature is called “borders” (as opposed to border lines), and you can get such a line by:

1. Clicking anywhere in the paragraph above the lin. The line is a border to the paragraph above it.

2. Looking at the ribbon when “Home” is selected. At the bottom of the ribbon are some labels for boxed sections above them. The third section from the left is labeled “Paragraph”. The Paragraph box contains some icons. At to bottom right of those rows of icons is one that looks like a box with a cross in it. (At the bottom right of the whole box, to the right of the word Paragraph is a tiny icon all by itself. Ignore it for now.) At the right of the cross in box icon is a down arrow. Click on that.

3. This gets you another menu. The first four choices will get you a border for the paragraph you clicked before starting all this. The fifth choice is “No Border”. Click on that.

4. Close this menu and get back to the text you were writing; Lo! the ugly line is gone.

5. Note that by default this feature is set to “no borders”, but you can get it if you are a sloppy typist hitting multiple keys at once, which is how I got it; and no, I don’t know what keystroke sequence caused it. Yesterday I got it for perhaps my fourth time in decades of using Word, so it’s not a frequent problem

The “Border lines” Feature is similar to this paragraph border feature, but it is entirely different. By default it is on. When you type three or more consecutive = or – characters followed by Return, a line of them appears; this is not a paragraph border. It’s a standalone line, and it actually can be erased by backspacing over it. Indeed, when you first type Return creating that line, a small icon appears with it; clicking that icon offers a menu, one item of which is to erase that line. You can turn this feature off by the tedious process of File>Options>Proofing>AutoCorrect Options>AutoCorrect As You Type and then look for a box called “Border lines”; if the box is checked, you can make these Border lines with three or more ___ or — or === (and possibly other characters) followed by Return. I’m not sure you’ll ever want them, but if you do, that’s the way to get them.

My thanks to Eric Pobirs, Rick Hellewell, and Peter Glaskowsky, hard working Chaos Manor Advisors, who dug all this up for me. Thanks also to reader Kenneth Mitchell.

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My typing is awful today, sloppier than usual, so I’ll hold off on writing more about Trump. Do note that I am not endorsing him neither am I condemning him. I am merely trying to assess him as fairly as I can. Unlike Andrew Jackson, our first populist pragmatist president, he is not a general with command experience, but he does have managerial experience of large projects.

As Newt Gingrich, whom I consider one of the most astute politicians I have ever known, says, Trump learns fast; when he began this campaign, it was well known that many Republicans rejected the Establishment (the rejecters included Newt), but no one except Trump had any faint notion that Trump would be the front runner in Republican delegates by April, 2016. If anyone had been sure of that, they could have cleaned up in Los Vegas. Yet Trump learned fast – faster than anyone Newt has ever known. It would be foolish to imagine that someone who can learn that quickly about electoral politics would not be able to do the job of President.

Pure management is not so difficult; having great vision is more important.

Which again is not an endorsement; it is an argument against rejecting him out of hand.

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The final straw…

Considering the incident in Murfreesboro where grade school children as young as first graders were arrested and handcuffed for NOT trying to break up a fight, I suspect that was a “damned if you do damned if you don’t” situation. Had they tried to break up the fight, odds are they would have been arrested and handcuffed for fighting.

“…the kids were charged with “criminal responsibility for the conduct of another,” which according to Tennessee offense criminal code includes incidents when a “person fails to make a reasonable effort to prevent” an offense.”

That opens a can of worms!

Suppose an individual with a handgun carry permit is legally armed and sees someone running from the convenience store across the street with what appears to be a bag of money in one hand and a gun in the other. If the legally armed individual takes no action, that could be considered justification for a charge of “criminal responsibility”. If the legally armed individual does take action the result could range from a detained and ultimately arrested robber and a commendation for the armed individual to a wounded or dead robber with the armed individual arrested and in jail charged with murder. Or the armed robber could shoot and kill or seriously injure the legally armed individual and make an escape. Or in an exchange of gunfire innocent bystanders could be wounded or killed.

Seems to me as though the Murfreesboro police stepped in a pile of **** by their actions here.

FWIW I live about thirty miles south of Murfreesboro.

Charles Brumbelow

I agree; I certainly do not see how intrusion into a criminal act can be made a citizen responsibility under the threat of pains and penalties for inaction; at the same time, self-government requires some citizen responsibilities.

And of course in your example the running man could be the store owner fleeing from unarmed robber whom he declined to shoot and was subsequently attempting to escape brutality. I could come up with many other scenarios.

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Murfreesborough school arrests and gun control

Dear Jerry –

The arrests in Murfreesborough would seem to have a remarkable unintended consequence – the Murfreesborough police are apparently claiming an affirmative obligation on bystanders to intervene when a crime is committed. From the article you linked: “The arrests at Hobgood Elementary School occurred after the students were accused of not stopping a fight”.

If so, this would seem to fly in the face of the advice of many big-city police forces and gun-control advocates, who say “Let the police handle it. They are trained and equipped to do the job.”

And if we, as citizens, are obligated to intervene, it’s hard to argue that we should be prohibited access to the tools needed – guns.

Of course, the article may have garbled the facts of the incident (which would not be a total surprise). It’s entirely possible that, given the age group, the kids essentially forced the combatants to fight – but that is not what is being reported. I’m sure you remember incidents from your grade school years when this sort of thing happened – I do. A ring of bystanders forms around an argument, and the two are goaded into a fight while the onlookers urge them on.

Interesting development.

Regards,

Jim Martin

The principles involved deserve discussion. That is what legislatures are supposed to do.

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Norway Violated Rights of Anders Behring Breivik, Mass Killer, Judge Rules – MSN News

He thinks his isolation in his three-room suite with a window and fresh air, a treadmill, refrigerator,  t.v., DVD player, and PlayStation is “torture” — his word, and that the government is “slowly killing him.”
He should watch MS-NBC and see how prisoners in isolation are treated in the United States and be BLOODY GRATEFUL that this is his prison sentence for murdering 77 people,  most of them teens, out of religious bigotry — the plan for which he had made on his computer in his bedroom in his mother’s house.
He is upset that they won’t let him use the Internet to communicate with other white supremacists in other countries.

What happens in American prisons is barbaric.  What is happening to him is a mercy beyond privilege, given his crime.

Norway Violated Rights of Anders Behring Breivik, Mass Killer, Judge Rules

By HENRIK PRYSER LIBELL

The New York Times – The New York Times – ‎10‎:‎41‎ ‎AM

Mr. Breivik had argued that the conditions of his confinement, including restrictions on communication, were a violation of the European Convention of Human Rights.

http://a.msn.com/r/2/BBs1ROu?a=1&m=en-us

If I had a complaint about the terms of his sentence, it would not be that it wax inhumanly unpleasant; were I a relative of one of his victims, I would have a great deal more to say.

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New EmDrive Theory “ MIT Tech Review Subject : New EmDrive Theory “

Jerry,
I have been disappointed in the apparent ‘scientific’ response to the EmDrive. If we have tests that show it works, and ‘scientists’ respond by saying ‘It cannot work if I cannot explain how it works’, then we have returned to the times of the Inquisition, just short the burning stakes. Does anyone recall that steam engines were built before we had any good explanation for how they worked? Thermodynamics and statistical mechanics were inspired by the effort to understand the theoretical basis for the steam engine. Then, they were used to design better steam engines.
Reading the MIT article, I note that the theory put forth by McCulloch appears to require a variance in the speed of light at the different ends of the drive cone. Any such difference could be accounted for by differences in the medium the light is passing through. It’s a thought.

Kevin

Peter Glaskowsky observes:

I’m unqualified to have an opinion about Unruh radiation or whether it might explain these observations, but I will note that there is considerably less experimental evidence for the EmDrive thruster than there is for cold fusion, and that turned out to be pathological science, so this might also be.

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I was once a fusion enthusiast (see Twenty Twenty Visions), but  practical fusion plant has been (according to enthusiasts) thirty years away for fifty years, and remains so now even for the most enthusiastic of its supporters. If we are to be saved by controlled fusion, it will be our great grandchildren who achieve it.

 

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lying to federal investigators

Jerry,

I don’t know how we got into this mess, but I think the founders would be rolling in their graves about the idea of lying when not under oath in court being a federal crime. Apparently, lying to just about any federal investigator is now a federal crime.

-- 
Phil Tharp

I completely agree. Signing a false document under penalty of perjury or lying under oath is an obvious crime; but it is now best never to talk to Federal Officers, even to give your name or the time of day. Cooperating with them and later shown that you were wrong can get you charged with a felony. “Icht will gar nicht sagen,” is better.

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Nice Trio

Jerry,

A little relief from the very silly season

The Comet, the Owl, and the Galaxy : <http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap160421.html>

Regards, Charles Adams, Bellevue, NE

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

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