Planet Defense

View 824, Sunday, May 11, 2014

If a foreign government had imposed this system of education on the United States, we would rightfully consider it an act of war.

Glenn T. Seaborg, National Commission on Education, 1983

 

Today ends the Spring pledge drive. This is the last pitch about money you’ll hear for a while (well, there may be a similar announcement in the mailbag I’m hoping to get prepared before midnight). As we have said often, this site runs on the Public Radio model. It’s free to all, but it will not stay open unless it gets enough subscribers. I do want to thank all those who chose to subscribe this week, and particularly the new subscribers.

If you have never subscribed to this place, this would be a good time to do it. http://www.jerrypournelle.com/paying.html If you have subscribed, but it has been a while since your renewed – if you can’t remember when you renewed your subscription – this would be a great time to do that. I won’t be reminding you of it for a while, so do it now while you’re thinking about it… http://www.jerrypournelle.com/paying.html

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It appears overwhelmingly clear that the alien attack on the Taliban http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2623330/Is-Inter-Stellar-Assistance-Force-Mysterious-UFO-filmed-blitzing-Taliban-base-Afghanistan.html was Photoshopped, and I have to confess I never thought otherwise because the remarks from those taking the movie didn’t mention the object, just the bombardment. Of course I have just been to a lecture by Claudio Maccone, who is well known for his interest in SETI (Search for Extra Terrestrial Intelligence) and also for planet defense – Space Defense if you will. http://abob.libs.uga.edu/bobk/ccc/cc021502.html That’s something Niven and I have been interested in for decades. (See Yesterday’s View)

Planetary defense usually means defense against impacting objects, but there are other views.

Alien contact

My whole problem with contacting aliens has always been; what if they think humans are as tasty as we consider lobster? Have we ever asked the lobsters about their civilization? Pretty much "No"! Why would you expect a space traveling race to be so noble? They will arrive here hungry after traveling so far. Best to not be the main course…

bill brunton

Those who read FOOTFALL by Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle will know that we do not assume the “they’re friendly and here to help us” view, nor do they want to eat us. Our aliens have a very complex social order. Of course stories about Earth resisting invaders have become more common since we wrote Footfall (and they weren’t rare before we wrote it) but we did work on the question of “If they can cross interstellar space, why don’t they just snuff us and have done with it? What chance have we got?” Footfall was our first novel to make Number One on the publisher’s best seller list, and we’re rather proud of it, and despite having been written before the end of the Cold War it holds up pretty well.

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As it happens I got this today also:

What is your take on this?

Clean Up Space Junk or Risk Real-Life ‘Gravity’ Disaster, Lawmakers Say <http://news.yahoo.com/clean-space-junk-risk-real-life-gravity-disaster-105445423.html>

image <http://news.yahoo.com/clean-space-junk-risk-real-life-gravity-disaster-105445423.html>

Clean Up Space Junk or Risk Real-Life ‘Gravity’ Disaster… <http://news.yahoo.com/clean-space-junk-risk-real-life-gravity-disaster-105445423.html>

While the plot of the hit Hollywood film \"Gravity\" is fictional, the United States must bolster efforts to address the alarming amount of space junk s…

View on news.yahoo.com <http://news.yahoo.com/clean-space-junk-risk-real-life-gravity-disaster-105445423.html>

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You have worked extensively with the space program, so tell me it this is so?

1) Except in rare cases when we want a polar orbit or something unusual, we launch satellites in the direction the Earth spins because that is the economical in terms of energy usage? So most of the satellites move in the same direction.

2) If two Satellites are moving in the same direction but at different speeds, they are in different orbits? So one will be at a different altitude than the other.

3) Even if two satellites are moving at different speeds and/or directions (due to elliptical orbits or not having exactly the same vector) would the difference be enough to cause serious damage?

Everything sent to orbit is launched eastward because that’s the way the world turns, and you want to add rather than subtract the rotational velocity to the velocity change (Delta-V) achieved by the rocket engines. It also makes the clock lose time (http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/relativ/airtim.html ) but that’s a story for another time.) But of course the latitude from which it is launched will play a big part in determining the orbit the satellite will have after it reaches orbital velocity. In general, the rocket will pass over its launch site. A satellite launched on the equator will more or less stay jut over the equator at all times; one launched from Kazakhstan will go that far north during every orbit.

This establishes a lot of orbits, and space is very large. Space junk can be a real danger, but again, space is very large. The Wikipedia article on Space Debris is fairly good (or was when last I looked). The danger of space debris as present is often exaggerated, particularly by those who want to be paid to clean it up, but it is not something to be ignored forever.

Incidentally, while the US and Russia and the other powers wanting to become space faring nations have a shortage of the capability to get stuff into orbit, there is an even more critical lack of the ability to get garbage and waste out of space. One proposal is for a “streamlined” garbage net to be tethered to Space Station, since any mass put in orbit has a potential use if we ever build a more sophisticated space station. In any event, waste accumulation can be a problem. There are a number of science fiction stories written about space junk causing critical accidents, and of course there is the movie Gravity.

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I don’t know if this has anything to do with what Dr. Maccone was working on or if there is a metric that could apply, but I define civilization thus:

That person is civilized who, having the means and opportunity to compel another against his will with impunity and profit thereby, refuses to do it because he believes it is wrong.

Richard White

Austin, Texas

Dr. Maccone’s metric for level of civilization is bits/person, a measure of information processing divided by the number of people in the civilization. The main critique I have of the measure is the denominator: you can change the metric by eliminating the low information members of the population. One can imagine situations in which survivors of a nuclear war would retain much of the technology, and quickly recover to become a considerably higher level of civilization (according to the metric) if the size of the denominator falls greatly relative to the numerator.

I will have more to say on this another time. Maccone’s mathematics was beautiful; and do understand this is a first cut at a metric that would allow us to compare ours with an alien civilization. If I ever have time I may try guessing the metric for the Fithp, the aliens in our novel Footfall, compared with Earth…

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Once again this is the close of the Spring Pledge Drive, and I will no longer be bugging you about subscriptions to this place. This site operates on the Public Radio Model. It is free to all, and we try to keep it interesting. It can only stay open with your support. If you have not subscribed, this would be a great time to do that. If you have subscribed but have not renewed in a while, or can’t remember when you last did, this is the right time to renew.

http://www.jerrypournelle.com/paying.html

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

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The measure of Civilization

View 823, Friday, May 09, 2014

I spent the day with friends going to the JPL Lecture by Claudio Maccone on finding a metric to measure the level of a civilization; this in anticipation of messages from an alien civilization. It is likely that civilization is more advanced than ours if it initiates contact with us. The question is, how much more advanced? Is level of civilization subject to measure? If so what models are there for this?

The answer to the first question is, we don’t know, but it sure would be important if we could do it. As to what models we might employ, until now none at all. This first cut measure by Maccone is is subject to considerable debate, but it is a starting point on a subject I would have previously thought impossible. I sat fascinated during the lecture and I suspect I was overly enthusiastic in some of my questions at the question period, but this was about the most interesting lecture I have been to in years.

Dr. Maccone isn’t certain he has answers but he has developed some beautiful mathematics to produce a model that might let us obtain such a metric, on both ourselves and on some alien civilization. Clearly this is a first cut at a highly difficult task. I’d never have thought of trying it. My thanks to Greg Vane, Senior Executive Advisor for Strategic Planning Solar Systems Directorate at JPL for inviting us to attend. Afterwards some of us went to dinner to discuss it, and my head is filled with questions.

It’s late now and I’m tired, so I’ll have to leave you with that teaser. I intend to do more with his presentation tomorrow, but tomorrow morning Roberta and I will be going to the live video simulcast of Rossini’s La Cenerentola tomorrow at a local movie theater, so I’ll be a bit late getting started.

I’ll ad a picture, but the rest will have to wait.

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Dr. Claudio Maccone, Larry Niven, Jerry Pournelle, and Lou Friedman at JPL just before the lecture on May 9, 2014. The lecture/seminar was on the subject of metrics for comparing development state of civilizations. Lou Friedman is the former Executive Director of the Planetary Society. Dr. Maccone is author of Mathematical SETI, a textbook for university courses on the Search for Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence http://www.amazon.com/Mathematical-SETI-Statistics-Processing-Astronomy/dp/3642274366

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The Chaos Manor pledge drive is coming to an end. I thank the many who have subscribed or renewed this week. This site operates on the public radio model: it is free to all, but it exists only so long as it is supported by subscriptions. If you haven’t subscribed this would be a good time to do it. If you have subscribed but haven’t renewed in a while, this would be a great time to do that. We don’t have advertising and I don’t bug you for money except during the pledge drives, which I run whenever KUSC the LA good music station runs its pledge drive. http://www.jerrypournelle.com/paying.html

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

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Growth, Morality, and economy. A new discussion of programming. UFO or Photoshop?

View 823, Thursday, May 08, 2014

 

If a foreign government had imposed this system of education on the United States, we would rightfully consider it an act of war.

Glenn T. Seaborg, National Commission on Education, 1983

 

If you like your health plan, you can keep your health plan. Period.

Barrack Obama, famously.

 

“…the only thing that can save us is if Kerry wins the Nobel Prize and leaves us alone.”

Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon

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“Slow to Cut Prices, Whole Foods Is Punished

“Shares drop to 19%as Investors Worry About Slowing Growth, Competition; ‘We’re Never Going to Be in Race to the Bottom’ ”

http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702304655304579548343382157608?mg=reno64-wsj&url=http%3A%2F%2Fonline.wsj.com%2Farticle%2FSB10001424052702304655304579548343382157608.html

I have watched the progress of Whole Foods for years, ever since we discovered that Roberta is allergic to gluten and we had to find a reliable source of tasty gluten-free foods. As I remarked after our first Whole Foods experience, “Whole Foods is a way of life.” Our local Whole Foods is on the Studio City/Sherman Oaks border, which is to say, in prosperous suburban Los Angeles, surrounded by middle to upper class homes and families. Whenever we go there ts has had plenty of customers, and the staff are always alert and courteous. When my friend and neighbor Ed Begley launched a housecleaning product called Begley’s Best he did so through Whole Foods, and one day when I ran into him in the store he pointed it out to me. Of course I bought some (he offered to buy it for me), and in fact it proved to be very good, effective, good smelling, and organic and non-toxic, all you would want in a surface cleaning compound. We generally bought it so long as it was available, but alas it is no longer on the Whole Foods shelves. I presume it was just too expensive.

Whole Foods expanded and the stock soared, but of course that put it under pressure from the “investors” who bought the stock because it would go up. It had to keep going up. The fact that the stores were successful and very profitable serving a niche – a large and rich niche, but nevertheless a niche – market wasn’t enough. It had to “grow”.

Nationwide, sales of natural and organic foods now amount to roughly $50 billion a year. Investors had adored Whole Foods, giving it a market value at times exceeding that of Kroger Co. KR -0.54% , the nation’s largest mainstream grocery chain, which has seven times as many grocery stores.

But its accomplishment drew broad new competition, from mainstream retailers like Kroger and Safeway Inc. SWY +0.04% and upstarts like Sprouts Farmers Market Inc. SFM -3.05% and Fresh Market Inc. Wal-Mart Stores Inc. last month said it struck a deal with Wild Oats to launch 100 mostly organic products that will be priced 25% cheaper than national brands.

Phoenix-based Sprouts, which has about 170 stores, on Wednesday said earnings rose 86% for the latest quarter and raised its forecast for the year, pushing its shares up 6% in after-hours trading. The shares had dropped 12% as of 4 p.m.

Its shares had fallen 45% from their peak in October through Wednesday’s market close amid concerns about over expansion and competition among specialty grocers.Sprouts Chief Executive Doug Sanders credited Sprouts’ focus on affordable prices, which attracted customers who wouldn’t otherwise be able to buy natural and organic foods.

Whole Foods has largely tapped out its core demographic in upscale urban neighborhoods. The company’s solution has been to expand beyond its comfort zone in new areas such as poorer neighborhoods, smaller cities and suburbs. It has recently opened stores in Detroit and West Des Moines, Iowa, and plans to open one in Chicago’s South side next year. To fend off new competition and attract customers in those new markets it has had to lower the high prices—and profit margins—that earned it the moniker "whole paycheck."

Which is a course doomed to failure. I am sure that’s one reason Begley’s Best is no longer offered for sale, even in Ed’s favorite home store. If you’re going to grow you have to get new customers. Whole Foods already had a lot of customers in the Studio City/Sherman Oaks area. Its other potential customers are unemployed and hanging on for their lives, and in this economy there won’t be a lot more people willing, able, and even eager to shop in Whole Foods despite the prices. So cut the prices – and open yourself to competition from someone who will emphasize health, effectiveness, ecological friendliness, organic at any cost and cater to those who believe in that and can afford it.

This is the slowest economic recovery in the history of the nation – assuming that you believe we are recovering. The signs of recovery are faint, and if you count the number of permanently unemployed and thus not part of the work force and thus not officially unemployed at all, the economy is a disaster. I think this demand for growth, for income through capital gains rather than from profitable return on investment – taxed as income – is a key. It is no longer enough to have a company making good profits on its investments. Now it must have capital growth as well. This doesn’t serve the customers very well. I could give a hundred example of old staid merchant enterprises that sold things I like at a profit who have experienced the Growth Phenomenon, peaked, crashed, and now no longer exist, or exist in a truncated condition – and no longer sell what I wanted. Woolich Silvertan shirts is one such casualty. Ah well.

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I found this interesting. It may be relevant to the Whole Foods thing:

Sexual assault on campus and the curse of the hookup culture

Jonathan Zimmerman

Survey students about the problem. Train victim advocates. Urge bystanders to intervene.

You can find these suggestions — and other equally sound ones — in the report issued last week by a White House task force on sexual assault at U.S. colleges. But here’s a recommendation that you won’t find in it: Challenge the hookup culture that dominates undergraduate life.

Although about 40% of female college seniors report that they are virgins or have had sex only once, many others are engaging in sexual activity. At colleges nationally, by senior year, 4 in 10 students are either virgins or have had intercourse with only one person, according to the Online College Social Life Survey.

The culture is marked by a lack of commitment and especially of communication between partners, who rarely tell each other what they actually want. So it has also brought with it an appalling amount of unwanted sex.

Consider a study of 2,500 college students published last year by Donna Freitas. She confirms what we already knew: Many students engage in casual sex. More than that, though, the book shows that students feel a great deal of pressure to keep the sex casual; that is, to remove themselves emotionally from it.

"It’s just something that I feel like as a college student you’re supposed to do," one woman told Freitas. "It’s so ingrained in college life that if you’re not doing it, then you’re not getting the full college experience."

https://www.google.com/#nfpr=1&q=The+curse+of+the+hookup+culture+Johathan+zimmerman

Of course this says nothing that many haven’t been saying before, including Tom Wolfe in I Am Charlotte Simmons, but Zimmerman has data to back up his statements. Of course Arthur Clarke way back in 1952 in Childhood’s End postulated that the invention of reliable contraception and positive paternity determination would change the world’s sexual habits from inhibited to uninhibited, and this would turn out to allow us to grow up and join the aliens, hidden among us, in some kind of new maturity. The changes in sexual mores duly took place after the technology was developed.

Decoupling sexual practices from emotional commitment has probably been the goal of a vast majority of young men both in and out of college for hundreds of years. Traditional moralists pointed out there would be costs to this. Charles Murray in Coming Apart shows that the ruling class in America continues to profess religion, work ethics, industriousness, and family, although “they no longer preach what they practice”, while those who do not participate in those values generally tend to be part of the lower classes with noticeably poorer economic success. Of course there remain well known libertines within the wealthy classes – Mr. Sterling of the Clippers fame being a recent example – but then there have always been such exceptions among the very rich and in the entertainment world.

Zimmerman doesn’t say that we have sown the wind and may expect to reap the whirlwind, but many would. And yes: I am very aware that hypocrisy is the fee vice pays to virtue. So is Charles Murray.

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Substandard Programming Practices and Their Effect on Our Daily Lives and the Catastrophe Waiting Just Around the Corner

Jerry,

I think that it is time to reopen the discussion of Best Programming Practices and the ultimate costs to us as individuals and to our Society and the Future of the Human Race.

I don’t know what is being taught to today’s Computer Science Majors and who is making Corporate Decisions about Best Programming Practices and the appropriate tools to use. What I do know is that the quality, reliability and security of our Operating Systems, Firmware and Application Programs has been steadily declining for more than thirty years.

There are a host of standard excuses regarding complexity and other nonsense. The reality of the situation is poor choice of programming tools, coding starting long before a complete specification is available, (The are we coding yet syndrome.) and little or no stress testing ala the healthcare.gov website.

Firmware for communications devices such as wireless routers seems to be tested superficially with no long term tests to uncover problems such as memory leaks and improperly handled exceptions.

As our Society becomes more and more dependent on these shoddy interconnected Systems it will not be too much longer before what, years ago, was local power blackout and has now graduated to a Regional Blackout becomes a National Blackout.

Our transportation systems are becoming more and more dependent on complex systems to provide control. How long will it be before we have a National Transportation Paralysis.

Something needs to be done. Perhaps the first thing is for Decision Makers to have some insight into the possible consequences of their decisions.

Several years ago some folks at BP made a decision to hurry up the abandonment of the Macondo test well and save perhaps 20 million dollars. The actual cost of that decision was 11 Lives and more than 20 billion dollars and the final bill is not in.

Last year some one at Target made a decision not to do anything when the Computer Security Group warned of potential security threats. The cost to address the problem would have been, more than likely, an order of magnitude less than the 70 Million dollar cost so far as well as the severe damage to Target’s reputation.

A new premium Wireless Router was released over nine months ago by a vendor I choose not to name. It was released with a great many of its premium features not working and firmware that needed to be restarted and/or reset at frequent intervals to restore basic functionality. The situation is essentially no better today than it was at release because the vendor’s software engineering department is scurrying improve functionality without examining bug ridden foundation. This product is seriously damaging the reputation of the Vendor and in the end will cost the Vendor many times the cost of delaying the product launch.

Bob Holmes

Long time readers will remember that I have always been an advocate of readable, understandable source code programs as opposed to the impervious assembler codes like C and its descendants. In particular, the use of tricks with pointers is convenient for those who understand the process, but can be enormously confusing to anyone trying to maintain or modify the code later. Opaque source languages generate faster programs, but in this tenth generation of Moore’s Law that’s no longer a primary concern.

COBOL was a first cut at a comprehensible language, but it had obvious defects. Niklaus Wirth of the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) in Zurich invented Pascal as a program instruction language. It was later used to generate working code, and there are still many programs written in one or another flavor of Pascal. It was once a rival to C, but for reasons I won’t go into lost out to BASIC and then Dbase Ii as the “popular” programming language. Wirth later devised “production” languages meeting his criteria of internal consistency, strong requirements for type declarations, and restrictions on tricks programmers could play to save memory or code lines at the sacrifice of future readability. I recall Marvin Minsky describing me as one who wanted to put on a straight jacket before coding; Marvin of course preferred LISP but also employed APL.

The Department of Defense tried to get into the act with its invention of ADA but like all projects operated by committees, it grew and added features and never quite got there.

But the time computers had become powerful enough to make code comprehensibility more important than code efficiency, the battle was pretty well over: Microsoft had gone the C route and despite the security problems (buffer overflows and other hacks) was stuck with supporting a huge customer base using an operating system just comprehensible to those who wrote it. And when an opposition to Microsoft developed wide support it turned out to Linux, an open source duplicate of UNIX, which requires C. UNIX notoriously required an on site guru until Apple cleverly came up with its operating system: usable by grandma but deep inside is the all powerful UNIX.

But there was never a popular comprehensible highly structured language/operating system that put maintainability ahead of code efficiency. Wirth’s theory was that programmer are better off with languages that will not compile mistakes (such as statements that take one type as input and return an entirely different type as output, or accepting overflow from data input buffers as program commands). Such programs catch programmer errors. That means that it takes longer to compile the program, compared to programs like FORTRAN and C which notoriously will compile almost anything. Back when computers were slower, compiling an enormous program like Windows took a very long time even with C, which is why comprehensible languages were unpopular with program managers.

The advantage of highly structured and strongly typed program languages were that once you got the program to compile, it generally did what you expected it to do. Most of the bugs were caught by the compiler, and it was not necessary for the programmer to simulate the compiler in his head in order to understand what the program was doing.

Wirth continues to work on his projects, but the fervent discussions of languages that took place in the 1980’s don’t take place any longer. I suspect that may be a cause of the problems you see. Program source code is now readable only by those who have spent time learning the languages they are written in, and it become much harder to figure out what they actually do.

Certainly something must change. I’d hate to see Launch Control at Minot put under the control of a computer network…

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It’s lunch time. I have more in the stack.   I’ll be back.

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UFO bombarding the Taliban?

<http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2623330/Is-Inter-Stellar-Assistance-Force-Mysterious-UFO-filmed-blitzing-Taliban-base-Afghanistan.html>

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Roland Dobbins

  Holy moley.  I have watched that four times, and it sure looks authentic.  I suppose the origin has been verified?  Clearly it would not be all that hard to Photoshop, and the flashing lights prior to the bombardment look a bit odd, but since we have no idea what they were we can’t know what they should look like.  And the rest of it doesn’t look faked at all.  Of course most fakes don’t look faked or at least try not to.  If this holds up it will be interesting.

I hasten to add that my eyes aren’t what they used to be.

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Burning Food

Jerry,

There is at least one good thing that burning food has caused.

With the high price of Corn caused by Ethanol mandates, the price of high fructose corn syrup is at or a bit higher than the domestic price of beet sugar.

If prices stabilize at this point we might hope that high fructose corn syrup is removed from our food supplies and the Obesity Epidemic starts to recede.

I am convinced that High Fructose Corn Syrup is a major cause of Obesity. This is based on my personal experience. About 30 Months ago I stopped drinking Soda Pop. I didn’t drink a lot, only one or two cans a day. Over the 40 plus years since I quit smoking I had gained more than 50 pounds. Since I quit drinking soda pop I have lost most of that weight gain without any attempts at dieting. Admittedly, a sample size of one has no statistical significance, but…..

Perhaps the high fructose corn syrup inhibits or kills tape worms and my infestation is now flourishing. (Said with tongue in cheek.)

Bob Holmes

 

Interesting point.  If we burn it as fuel we don’t eat it/  Seems an odd way to accomplish the result, but devious enough to be true.

 

 

I am going to a lecture at JPL Tomorrow (Friday) with John de Chancie and Larry Niven, and I’ll probably not update this until nightfall.  Saturday Morning we’ll go to a movie theater for the live performance at the Met.  Roberta likes those.

 

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It is still Pledge Time at Chaos Manor.  If you have not subscribed, this is a great time to do it. http://www.jerrypournelle.com/paying.html This site operates on the Public Radio model: it is free to all, but it stays open only if it gets support from those who come here. We do not make fund appeals often: I time them to coincide with the KUSC pledge drives; JUSK is the LA good music station.  I don’t bug you about money otherwise. If you have  subscribed but it’s been a while since you renewed, this would be a good time to do that.

 

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I have to go to the lecture shortly, but lest you think I have really gone mad:

UFO vs. Taliban

I think the video is of an AC-130 or USMC KC-130J Harvest Hawk which is out of picture (high left would be my guess) attacking insurgent forces with 105 and 40 mm rounds (AC-130), or Hellfire/Griffin or small dia bombs (KC-HH). One of the munitions is detonated in the air by debris contact at about 18 seconds. The UFO is photoshopped.

Chris Spratt

ufo bombarding Taliban?

It’s a Photoshop (or video equivalent) job. They reversed this and added a fuzzy image:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ELe52UcZJb4

Kit Case

Jerry,

I’m sure you’ve gotten a hundred emails about this already, but the ufo video is a "real" airstrike or artillery barrage with a fake ufo added in. This used to be called "special effects", some are calling the ufo "CGI", but it’s not even all that good of an effort.

But the foundation of the vid looks an awful lot like a real artillery barrage, including at least one airburst where an incoming round fused off of airborne debris instead of the ground. It doesn’t take much effort nowadays to add some fake grainy graphics to an old video, and this one is not nearly as good as some others I’ve seen recently.

Sean

 

 

 

I haven’t played with Photoshop in years, but of course that was the obvious explanation. Ah well.  If the aliens do intend to manifest themselves this is a very unlikely way for them to do it.  And no, I haven’t gone mad in my old age.  It was very well done, I thought, but I warned you my eyes aren’t what they used to be.

Clearly if there are aliens with that kind of gunship, there is no rational reason why suddenly they would reveal themselves there and in that way, so the picture was always to be regarded as an illusion of some sort.  Apparently it wasn’t done as well as I thought it was. 

UFO, 

Jerry

The UFO side shot (http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2623330/Is-Inter-Stellar-Assistance-Force-Mysterious-UFO-filmed-blitzing-Taliban-base-Afghanistan.html) is vague, but clear enough: it’s the Millennium Falcon coming out of its strafing run.

Ed

Not fair. You’ve known me far too long…

 

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

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Climate Change and Eternal Youth

View 823 Wednesday, May 07, 2014

“Transparency and the rule of law will be the touchstones of this presidency.”

President Barack Obama, January 31, 2009

 

If a foreign government had imposed this system of education on the United States, we would rightfully consider it an act of war.

Glenn T. Seaborg, National Commission on Education, 1983

 

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The big news today is that a report prepared by 300 climate change experts supervised by 60 climate change scientists – I quote from an approving account – are telling us that climate change is here, now, and the news is not good.

Climate change is here, action needed now, says new White House report

By Kevin Liptak, Jethro Mullen and Tom Cohen, CNN

http://www.cnn.com/2014/05/06/politics/white-house-climate-energy/

Climate change report warns of frantic future for Florida

A federal report released Tuesday shows much of South Florida could experience dramatic, damaging effects of climate change and rising sea levels within just a few decades.

The Third National Climate Assessment, compiled by more than 300 national experts over the last three years, says climate change threatens Florida’s tourism industry, water supply and public health. Sea levels will rise between 1 to 4 feet by 2100.

http://www.news-press.com/story/news/2014/05/06/climate-change-report-warns-frantic-future-florida/8787807/

It is disputed, of course:

‘Climate Hustle’ or ‘American Doomsday’?! Obama climate report panned by scientists – ‘Pseudoscience’ ‘sales pitch’ ‘follow the money’ ‘total distortion’ ‘false premise’ ‘outdated & wrong’ ‘failure’

Heartland Institute’s James Taylor: Obama climate report exposed: ‘Leading authors of this report include staffers for activist groups like the Union of Concerned Scientists, Planet Forward, The Nature Conservancy, and Second Nature’

http://www.climatedepot.com/2014/05/07/climate-hustle-or-american-doomsday-obama-climate-report-panned-by-scientists-pseudoscience-sales-pitch-follow-the-money-total-distortion/

US physics professor: ‘Global warming is the greatest and most successful pseudoscientific fraud I have seen in my long life’

http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/jamesdelingpole/100058265/us-physics-professor-global-warming-is-the-greatest-and-most-successful-pseudoscientific-fraud-i-have-seen-in-my-long-life/

Readers here will not find any of this surprising. We all know that the trend has been toward global warming since about 1812. Prior to that was the Little Ice Age during which the Thames and Hudson froze over so hard that not only were there skaters, but farmer’s markets set up on the ice. The Little Ice Age set in about 1320, ending the Medieval Warm period during which the Vikings settled Greenland, Domesday Book showed vineyards in York, Nova Scotia was called Vineland and supported fierce Skraelings who drove the Viking settlers out after lengthy attempts to form Viking settlements in the New World well before Columbus, and monasteries across Europe reported longer growing seasons and better crops. And before that there was another cycle of warm and cold, with rising seas flooding coastal cities during the warm periods, and bad crops and shorter growing and sailing seasons during the cold.

In other words, the Earth has in historic times been warmer and colder than now; and while CO2 may have a warming effect, it certainly was not the cause of the Roman Warm period, nor of the Viking Warm period; nor was lack of CO2 the cause of the cold period that contributed to the fall of the Western Roman Empire and the migrations of the Goths, Visigoths, Huns, various Slavs, and other invading tribes that changed the face and composition of Europe.

The current weather patterns are attributed to La Nina and El Nino, but no climatologist understands the causes of those ocean circulation events, and few even purport to. And my weatherman has predicted rain for our area for weeks, any day now, but so far there hasn’t been much, and Niven and I will go hiking when he gets here.

There is neither new data nor new science in this report, and the assertions that we now know how to predict future hurricane and tornado seasons are absurd. The sea levels have been rising for years, but the seas haven’t reached the levels they were at in 1066, and from my visit to Thermopylae and the distance of those Hot Gates from the Aegean Sea I’d say the seas are considerably lower than they were in the time of the Persian War. In any event they are not rising faster now than they were in 1850.

We will be asked to pay lots more money to avert this new climate disaster, and the costs will be enormous because the effects of the remedies on the economy will be enormous, and cause famines in Africa. Now that they might get in on this industrial progress we are closing the gate in their faces, but that’s the way the climate changes.

At least there are jobs in climate change analysis. So long as you come up with the accepted results. If you don’t, well, you must work for an oil company.

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Niven is here and we’re off for a hike. More later, on how to get eternal youth, and the problems that new discovery will have,

 

We’re back.  Good hike.  Stopped 1/2 mile and 200 feet climb from the top today, as I was a little unsteady.  We need to do this more often so that we get to the top every time.

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BREAKING: Massive Explosion in Qazvin, Iran – May Have Nuclear Origins …Update: Roads Blocked Off for 2km | The Gateway Pundit

Jerry,

My heart bleeds for Iran.

http://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2014/05/breaking-massive-explosion-in-qazvin-iran-may-have-been-nuclear-origins/#!

James Crawford=

Most nuclear enrichment facilities don’t explode.  Of course by now the NSA will know all about the nature and characteristics of the explosion, and there may even be a fly-through to get air samples…

 

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ETERNAL YOUTH

Young Blood Renews Old Mice

Rejuvenated. Reconstructions of blood vessels in an old mouse’s brain (left) and in an old mouse that received young mouse blood.

Could the elixir of youth be as simple as a protein found in young blood? In recent years, researchers studying mice found that giving old animals blood from young ones can reverse some signs of aging, and last year one team identified a growth factor in the blood that they think is partly responsible for the antiaging effect on a specific tissue—the heart. Now, that group has shown this same factor can also rejuvenate muscle and the brain.

"This is the first demonstration of a rejuvenation factor" that is naturally produced, declines with age, and reverses aging in multiple tissues, says Harvard University stem cell researcher Amy Wagers, who led efforts to isolate and study the protein. Independently, another team has found that simply injecting plasma from young mice into old mice can boost learning.

http://news.sciencemag.org/biology/2014/05/young-blood-renews-old-mice?rss=1

Repeated from yesterday’s View (which see)

Methuselah’s Children?

http://www.nature.com/nm/journal/vaop/ncurrent/abs/nm.3569.html

>>[E]xposure of an aged animal to young blood can counteract and reverse pre-existing effects of brain aging at the molecular, structural, functional and cognitive level.<<

Rod Montgomery==monty@starfief.com

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/05/05/science/young-blood-may-hold-key-to-reversing-aging.html

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/science-news/10807478/Vampire-therapy-could-reverse-ageing-scientists-find.html

 

Larry Niven long ago postulated that his teleportation booths might be the secret of eternal youth: each time you teleport, waste materials are not carried along with you, nor are aging compounds, and thus you get renewal and eternal youth.  Science fiction.  And Heinlein’s Methuselah’s Children had something of the sort, enough young blood into an adult will arrest aging. Of course the Medieval Vampire legends suggest much the same thing.

But it has long been suspected that enough youthful blood exchanged into mature adult will arrest aging  in that adult.  Indeed, it has long been suspected by conspiracy theorists that this is well known to insiders, but of course the knowledge is carefully suppressed.  In any event it is becoming more and more clear that it is no longer just science fiction, but a possible hypothesis, and animal testing seems to confirm the view.  In other words, the possibility of eternal youth.

If there is anything to the hypothesis, we may look for a great deal of negative evidence suddenly to appear.  After all, the last thing governments want is to stimulate a demand for eternal youth if it can be achieved only at the cost of premature aging for younger people – you can avoid getting older by draining the life out of younger people.  If eternal youth is possible it will soon become an entitlement.  And if there is a class of people more aware of and demanding of their perquisites and entitlements than Senators and Members of Congress, I am not aware of it.  Then too there are the rich.

And some of the rich are already be buying young people as slaves.  True they mostly buy girls for sexual purposes (although one supposes some boys are sold for such purposes as well) but if you are willing to buy sex slaves you are probably willing to buy enslaved blood donors.  Economics will dictate whether it is better to keep a known healthy crop allowed to live in quarantine as they are repeatedly bled and allowed to recover, or simply bleed them to death and replace them with fresh young blood.  I suspect both approaches will be tried. I say the rich, but that is a conclusion: someone is buying sex slaves, and there is a great deal of money in the traffic which has been going on for a long time.

But the incentive to buy sex slaves is small compared to the incentive to greatly slow aging.  True, so long as it is not assured that this works the incentive is not so high, but I would think that the possibility of its working is now high enough to make it tempting to try; moreover, Moore’s Law is inexorable. Technology just now advances in a part of the S curve that is indistinguishable from an exponential curve.  If we don’t yet know how to arrest aging, we’re making so many advances in biology that it would be odd if we didn’t learn the causes and preventions of aging – and alas all the best theories seem to lead to a requirement for young parts.

Meanwhile, Clarke’s theory that reliable contraception and paternity identifications would lead to the disruption of moral codes and sexual mores, changing sex from a means for reproduction into just another cool thing to do, seem already to have taken place in much of the West and are slowly boring their way into less progressive cultures. I see not reason for that trend to slow down. This weakens families, and thus weakens protection for young people belonging to a libertine culture.  Perhaps I am just speculating.  It is hard  to think of people who would sell their own children into slavery. It is not so hard to think that there will not be organizations that exist to sell other people’s children into slavery.  It’s just business…

We can hope that technology will take another giant step and come up with some way – nanotechnology? – to synthesize not just blood, but young blood.  This may not prove so easy to do. We can clone Dolly, but we are still in the era of Schliemann and Schwann. It won’t be easy – and there is an easy way to collect young blood. There are already reasons for trafficking in young girls.  Now there is an even more compelling payoff for those who buy them.

 

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The good news is that advances in technology bring increased productivity, more goods with less work, with fewer people required to get the work done.  Meanwhile the schools are kept in a condition indistinguishable from an act of war against the United States,  and increasing numbers of citizens graduate without learning how to do one single thing that other people will pay you money to do. Now comes the news that many of them aren’t useless at all – at least not if they are young and healthy.

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A late night thought:

In another conference I stated that the trend was clear, and that at some point half the population would be useless.  This led to a challenge: it’s a serious charge, I was told.  I should not say anything like that. The implication was that I was immoral for saying it, and had an evil definition of useful, and I suppose the inference I was supposed to make was that I should change my views of humanity, and presumably be more Christian. People are never useless, and I should be ashamed of myself for saying it.

It’s not bad advice but it had missed the point of what I was saying.

I am not advocating I am pointing to what appears to be an inevitable trend.

In 1900 well over 80% of the population was required to work in agriculture to grow enough crops and tend to enough animals to feed the farmers and families and the rest of the nation. Over time farms became more productive.  Capital was invested in farm implements, farm labor became more productive, more farm products were available – and fewer and fewer farm worker were needed.  Now considerably fewer than 20% of the population are needed to produce enough food to feed everyone in the US far better than we were fed in 1900, we can burn corn as fuel and do other wasteful nonsense, and we still have food to export.  The productivity rise was just too much for the bureaucracy and the farm workers unions to stop, and the trend continues inexorably.  We do not need 50% of the population to feed the other half and feed them well.

US manufacturing output has always been large compared to the rest of the world.  During World War II we built an enormously productive war products manufacturing system and did it from scratch.  From producing a thousand rifles a year we went to millions.  When the Germans developed a Panther tank ten times better than our Sherman, we sent after each Panther twenty Shermans and several low cost Tank Destroyers to finish the job while the Panther was engaging ten Shermans.  We built better airplanes than the Zero and the Betty, and we built a LOT of them.  We turned out a Liberty ship a day from places that used to be mud flats.

After the war the economy boomed, and workers of all skills and abilities participated, so that a lot more than half the population possessed the goods of fortune in moderation – Aristotle’s definition of Middle Class, as Rule by the Middle Class was democracy.  It all worked, we built schools to turn out workers for the new economy, and it looked as if we had reached the end or that part of history in which a large part of the population was doomed to Lower Class status.

But Moore’s Law – I use this for shorthand to indicate the great advances in all fields of technology that are so typical now – inexorably produces higher productivity.  Labor costs never go down, but the capital cost of replacing a worker falls every year.  US factories produce as much as they ever did, but they don’t need half the population working in them to do it. Or even a quarter of it. Robots are cheaper and their cost falls all the time.  We can now print stuff that used to be forged, cast, injected…   The trend is clear.

The schools could slow it a bit by teaching skills to increase productivity without incurring capital investment (the school being a kind of capital investment) but of course they don’t.  Most of the schools teach their students nothing that anyone will pay them money to do.  What they do teach isn’t so clear. 

So it is easy to project the trend and come up with the possibility that half the population will not be able to do anything needed to grow the food and produce the goods needed by the entire population.  They will be economically useless, because they can’t do anything someone will pay them to do.  This is not a moral judgment it’s an economic statement.  And it would appear to me to be the fate of this nation; and I cannot think that a republic can survive in those conditions.

There is always an ecology. It may not be one we much care for.  Me, I sing for my supper.

 

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

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