Harried but still going; whatever happened to Space Viking Returns?

Chaos Manor View, Sunday, January 03, 2016

“This is the most transparent administration in history.”

Barrack Obama

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

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Roberta has the flu and worse; we didn’t get to New Year parties or much of anything else. Recovery is happening, but it’s a bit slow. Fortunately she has my walker to go to the bathroom because I am not able to help. Alex and Eric are off to Los Vegas for CES. Mike Galloway was over to help and drive me to the pharmacy today. As I said, recovery is happening.

Meanwhile I have been reading Hive Mind by Jones, https://www.google.com/search?q=Jones+Hive+Mind&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8 and it is fascinating: nearly all the stuff I thought I knew about IQ but which was dismissed with prejudice by many of the younger experts remains true. There’s more to know, and we understand somewhat less about it than we thought we did, but I knew that long ago.

The higher a nation’s average IQ the richer that nation is; it’s a strong coupling. Individual IQ isn’t so successful in predicting individual success, but we knew that, too. But collectively – think Hari Seldon – it’s a different story. Couple that with Deaton’s The Great Escape http://www.amazon.com/The-Great-Escape-Origins-Inequality/dp/0691165629?tag=chaosmanor-20, a book on diversity, and you have something important in the social “sciences” although I doubt that it’s politically correct enough to get past “Peer” review. Speaking of which, the February 2015 Reason Magazine has an interesting piece on how much of what we scientifically know is false, in part due to peer review.

So I have a lot to contemplate while not having a lot of time at the keyboard (and with my bad typing production is slow), but there is light at the end of the tunnel.

Happy New Year.

Monday: still recovering.  A strong correlation is not a perfect correlation; and we know a lot about what happened in China.  High IQ would predict a higher economic performance in China, but The Great Leap Forward and the Cultural Revolution among other political events had a predictable effect.

 

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Have a look at this:

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

Most of the climate change stuff is not so much fraud as eagerness to prove and reluctance to question, so that little difference are misinterpreted as significant when the truth is lost in the noise.

Most if it. But there is less and less evidence that we know more than Arrhenius did at the turn of the 19th Century into the Twentieth.

Climate is what you expect. Weather is what you get. And we can’t predict weather over a period of years all that well. It froze the Hudson and The Thames in 1700 and 1800. You could grow cattle and vines in Greenland in the Viking era. It has been both warmer and colder in historical times. Thus it was and thus it will be. Maybe we’ll get better at it now.

 

 

Replicability of results — The Grumpy Economist proposes a Demand-based solution

http://johnhcochrane.blogspot.com/2015/12/secret-data.html

[quote]

So, rather than try to restrict supply and impose censorship, let’s work on demand. If you think that replicability matters, what can you do about it? A lot:

. When a journal with a data policy asks you to referee a paper, check the data and program file. Part of your job is to see that this works correctly.

[end quote]

Followed by many additional suggestions along the same line, to wit:

that those concerned, that lack of supporting data and computer programs constitutes a corruption of science, exert cultural pressure upon the offenders, and thereby stimulate the development of social norms that require making supporting data and computer programs available.

I wish such a solution would work in Climate Science.

Alas, I’m afraid the dominant clique have too firm a stranglehold on the peer-review process, and too firm a political hold on the funding process, in that field.

We’ll probably have to wait until the divergence between the model predictions and reality becomes so blatant that even the politicians who provide the funding realize they’re being sold a bill of goods.

Shall we start a wagering pool, on whether that will happen before the returning glaciers cover New York City?

Hmmm…

On second thought, since the theory is non-disprovable, even the returning glaciers will, somehow, be determined to be caused by anthropogenic emissions of carbon dioxide.

Rod Montgomery==monty@starfief.com

 

“They’re skating on the Hudson!  In November!”

“I Knew it! Global Warming! When will they learn!  Oh, and ask for another billion to refine our model”

 

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Periodic table’s seventh row finally filled as four new elements are added

http://www.theguardian.com/science/2016/jan/04/periodic-tables-seventh-row-finally-filled-as-four-new-elements-are-added

 

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Russia Says Elon Musk Is ‘Stepping On Our Toes’ – Fortune

Do they give up when they realize they can’t compete? They did it in the Cold War.

http://fortune.com/2015/12/30/russia-elon-musk-spacex/

R

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NYCON II photos: August 31st – September 3rd, 1956.

<https://www.flickr.com/photos/slomuse/sets/72157662390340119>

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Roland Dobbins

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‘Poverty and economic inequality are not identical.’

<http://paulgraham.com/ineq.html>

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Roland Dobbins

No, and we don’t really understand either. But we do know that nations that save more get richer, and high IQ correlates with accepting deferred rewards — saving.

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What are they building skyscrapers out of?

Dear Jerry –

This news item http://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/fire-breaks-out-dubai-skyscraper-near-burj-khalifa-n488586 shows the exterior of an Abu Dhabi skyscraper burning over about 40 stories, yet the fire appears to be confined to the exterior sheathing, and according to the article engulfed the building in a few (less than 10) minutes, apparently set off by an errant firework.

So – what are they making skyscrapers out of, these days? Cardboard?

Regards,

Jim Martin

I don’t know. Interesting.

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Japanese researchers develop touchable holograms, buffy willow

Jerry

This is huge:

http://www.tweaktown.com/news/49286/japanese-researchers-develop-touchable-holograms/index.html

Think ghosts. Think service members or astronauts hugging their loved ones at a distance. This stuff will soon be ready for Internet sex. Where does it end? I am thinking of the planet in Daneel Oliva’s case where there were few humans, and they had no physical contact with each other.

In case you do not want to go to the above link, YouTube has it here:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0nlnRpFoBLo

Ed

But first Hollywood will use it….

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Space Viking?

  According to Wikipedia:
“Pournelle was one of the few close friends of H. Beam Piper and was granted by Piper the rights to produce stories set in Piper’s Terro-Human Future History. This right has been recognized by the copyright owner of the Piper estate. Pournelle did work for some years on a sequel to Space Viking but seems to have abandoned this in the early 1990s.”
What is the status of this? Space Viking was an INCREDIBLE book — will we see you see you doing a sequel?

Gary Rogers

I wrote a daft I wasn’t happy with; it’s lost now.  I had a notion that one of the supercomputers survived and thought it was running the universe with the Gilgameshers as its agents.  They thought so too.  It was a good yarn, but I had other things to do and it slipped between the cracks.  I’m sorry.  I doubt I will ever turn to that again.

 

Beam was a good friend and II;’d have loved to do an homage.  He was one of the best.  John Carr has done well in trying to keep his memory alive. 

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https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/wind-solar-power-soar-in-spite-of-bargain-prices-for-fossil-fuels/2015/12/30/754758b8-af19-11e5-9ab0-884d1cc4b33e_story.html

Wind, solar power soar in spite of bargain prices for fossil fuels (WP)

By Joby Warrick December 31 at 9:01 AM

In normal times, a months-long slide in energy prices would be enough to rattle a man who makes wind turbines for a living. Yet amid a worldwide glut of cheap fossil fuels, business is blowing strong for Vestas Wind Systems and its CEO, Anders Runevad.

The company posted record gains in 2015 and inked major deals to build wind farms in the United States, Europe, Africa and Asia. That boom in turbine sales was part of a global surge for wind and solar energy, which occurred despite oil, coal and natural gas selling at bargain rates.

“We’re seeing very good momentum across the board globally,” said Runevad, a soft-spoken Swede whose firm is now the world’s biggest producer of wind turbines. “We’re seeing growth in every region.”

Vestas’s performance is emblematic of the changing fortunes for renewable energy, an industry that achieved a number of milestones this year.Massive new projects are under construction from China and India to Texas, which now far outpaces California as the nation’s leading wind-power state. Just this month, the United States crossed the 70-gigawatt threshold in wind-generated electricity, with 50,000 spinning turbines producing enough power to light up 19 million homes.

Energy analysts say the boom is being spurred in part by improved technology, which has made wind and solar more competitive with fossil fuels in many regions. But equally important, experts say, are new government policies here and abroad that favor investment in renewables, as well as a growing willingness by Wall Street to pour billions of dollars into projects once considered financially risky.

“Renewables have turned a corner in a fundamental way,” said Dan Reicher, a former Energy Department assistant secretary who is now executive director of Stanford University’s Steyer-Taylor Center for Energy Policy and Finance.

While solar and wind power have been expanding for years because of steadily falling costs, recent regulatory and financial decisions have set the stage for continued growth for years to come, according to Reicher and other energy experts.

In the United States, these include the Obama administration’s Clean Power Plan, which requires states to reduce emissions from power plants, and the latest congressional budget compromise, which extended tax credits for wind and solar energy. Also key was this month’sclimate accord in Paris, where more than 190 countries approved a plan to reduce pollution from fossil-fuel burning worldwide.[snip]

 

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

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Land of the Lost

Chaos Manor View, Monday, December 28, 2015

“This is the most transparent administration in history.”

Barrack Obama

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

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I never had this happen before. I had prepared a bunch of stuff to post in Windows, and it’s gone. Gone forever and not in the recycle bin. A couple of hours work, and I have no idea what I did. And of course it’s cold, and I can’t type, and I am about as down as I can get, so this will be brief as I try to reconstruct at least some of it. Word has never caused a file to vanish before. I am sure it is due to my hitting alt-spacebar and some key sequence. I need epoxy to disable the left hand alt key. I hate this.

 

Mostly I am working on fiction and doing family things and surviving the cold, which isn’t cold to anyone but Angelinos; I’ve long since become adjusted to here. Happy New Year.  If you haven’t bought There Will Be War Volume Ten, you know what to do.

Another time.

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Last week I wrote about Eugene, a new system Eric and I built. Well, he did about all the work. Anyway we are still doing many tests, and there will be a lot more. I must say 4K video is gorgeous even with the built in Video. We’ll add a video car next month or so.

The SSD in Eugene isn’t merely an SSD, which nobody in their right mind who makes a decent living would be without, it is a PCIe connected SSD with read speeds up to 2.5 GB. One of the reasons for running the Insider version of Windows 10 is this drive is so fast the system cannot fully exploit it but Microsoft surely has plans as these will become common by this time next year.

                Also, the hard drive is 3 TB, because 4K video adds up quick. Now that high-end phones can capture 4K video and semi-pro gear is very affordable for the budding movie maker, multi-TB drives continue to justify their role in a PC where SSD capacity is now affordable for most other needs.

Eric Pobirs

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This article is worth your attention.

http://www.theguardian.com/technology/2015/dec/27/love-robot-artificial-intelligence-elon-musk-stephen-hawking

Ever since IBM’s Deep Blue defeated then world chess champion Garry Kasparov in a six-game contest in May 1997, humanity has been looking over its shoulder as computers have been running up the inside rail. What task that we thought was our exclusive preserve will they conquer next? What jobs will they take? And what jobs will be left for humans when they do? The pessimistic case was partly set out in the Channel 4 series Humans, about a near-future world where intelligent, human-like robots would do routine work, or stand on streets handing out flyers, while some people worked (law and policing seemed to get a pass, mostly) but others were displaced – and angry.

In May, Martin Ford, author of Rise of the Robots: Technology and the Threat of Mass Unemployment, described the concern for both white- and blue-collar workers as that Humans-style world approaches: “Try to imagine a new industry that doesn’t exist today that will create millions of new jobs. It’s hard to do.”[snip]

The prospect of robot Lamarckian evolution, self aware robots building their prodigy to design, has been with us a while. Of course some, like Penrose, have doubts about strong AI; and in any event I will not live to see it.

I think that the biggest problem we’ll have in the near future is the automated cars. There are so many possibilities of the car saving its occupants only to kill others, or saving kids to kill the occupants, et cetera, ad infinitum, ad nauseam.

The other stuff awaits true AI, which is, IMHO, a good piece off yet. If it ever arrives at all; it seems to me to be developing a “sustained fusion reaction syndrome,” always “only” a couple decades away.
Stephanie Osborn

“The Interstellar Woman of Mystery”

three laws, no waiting
Dr. Pournelle,
A good summary of the state of real AI.
http://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2015/12/demystifying-artificial-intelligence-no-the-singularity-is-not-just-around-the-corner/
As for the singularity or sky net, I think there are more important and likely things to worry about.
-d

Of course, even with the best of intentions, robots can leave us with not much to do as they take over all our work. See Jack Williamson, With Folded Hands…

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Visual picture of near Earth space, then and now

Jerry

From 1957, 58 years of space junk:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wPXCk85wMSQ

Ed

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Suppose I am a Fubartarian. That’s a peaceful get along religion that allows its adherents to do what seems necessary if somebody else sticks a nose, pee-pee, scream, or even gun in to the adherent’s face. Otherwise adherents are expected to be peaceful and honest co-dwellers on this great ball of crusty molten gup.

Suppose my holiest day is coming along, fimblemas. So I go around and as a Fubartarian I wish others around me a glorious Fimblemas.

Why are some people repelled and moved to lawsuits over the simple wish for a specially good day on a day I consider significant? I am not wishing them to take on my idiosyncratic religion. I’m just wishing them a good day. Most other religions take the wish at face value even if the day is not significant to them. It becomes, “I hope you have a wonderful day on the 47th of gargle.”

(Whenever that is.) But atheists seem to be VERY religious about taking offense.

Is it because they see money in it? Is it their religion’s creed to feel threatened when a member of another religion uses improper phrasing to simply wish them a good day? Or are they just plain old fashioned fuggheads?

Regardless, I’d like to wish all readers here a VERY Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year beginning with the first strains of Robert Burns’ traditional melody to the last tick of 2016.

{^_^} Joanne Dow (And please underline Christmas in your minds.)

 

A Grim Fate for Syrian Christians.

<http://warisboring.com/articles/a-grim-fate-for-syrian-christians/>

Be sure to read the comments.

—————————————

Roland Dobbins

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250,000 fine for Misgendering Transexuals…

Yes, I know this is local and topical, but it’s related to the national trend of “safe spaces”, “microagressions” and all this “social justice warrior” nonsense:

New York City will fine certain people 250,000 dollars for using the wrong pronoun with a transsexual…

http://www.breitbart.com/tech/2015/12/27/nyc-will-fine-you-250000-for-misgendering-a-transsexual/

◊ ◊ ◊ ◊ ◊

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

Percussa Resurgo

Brave new world, fueled by progress.

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https://aeon.co/essays/why-do-scientists-dismiss-the-possibility-of-cold-fusion

 

And there is still some funding to investigate the Pons Fleischmann effect.  Energy without fossil fuels and enormous central distribution nets would change the world.  Of course oil and gas companies know that. Hot fusion has been thirty years in the future for forty years. And, as the article says, Rossi continues to produce heat than anyone can find going in.

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

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Merry Christmas to All

Chaos Manor View, Thursday, December 24, 2015

Christmas Eve

.

It came upon a midnight clear,
That glorious song of old,
From angels bending near the earth
To touch their harps of gold!
“Peace on the earth, good will to men,
From heaven’s all gracious King!
The world in solemn stillness lay
To hear the angels sing.

Still through the cloven skies they come
With peaceful wings unfurled
And still their heavenly music floats
O’er all the weary world;
Above its sad and lowly plains
They bend on hovering wing.
And ever o’er its Babel sounds
The blessed angels sing.

Yet with the woes of sin and strife
The world hath suffered long;
Beneath the angel-strain have rolled
Two thousand years of wrong;
And man, at war with man, hears not
The love song which they bring:
O hush the noise, ye men of strife,
And hear the angels sing.

For lo! the days are hastening on,
By prophet bards foretold,
When, with the ever-circling years,
Shall come the Age of Gold;
When peace shall over all the earth
Its ancient splendors fling,
And all the world give back the song
Which now the angels sing.

We can hope so, anyway. God bless you all.

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And a special Merry Christmas to all on deployment, and to all who sit in ready alert rooms, or deep underground in silos, or under the sea in submarines, on watch in warships or in fire stations, on patrol or watch in cities and towns and in the country.  Thanks to you the rest of us can sleep tonight. God bless you, every one.

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

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A Step Forward toward SSX; The threat of giant comets;

Chaos Manor View, Tuesday, December 22, 2015

“This is the most transparent administration in history.”

Barrack Obama

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

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I have rediscovered the authors page on Amazon; if you have not claimed authorship of your book and there are contributors who have, one of those will be listed with link to author page, and often a bio. A boon to that author. I figured out what was happening and got some of it fixed. I’ll probably do more. It’s the first time I have thought about that author’s page in a decade or more.

Unfortunately that ate up time I should have been spending on the Avalon book, and we have a conference and lunch on that tomorrow. That means I have somewhat neglected this place. Nothing I can do about that but apologize.

We have a new system. SSD C drive and a terabyte spinning metal drive, 4K screen, experimental grade Windows 10. I’ll have more to say another time; it’s still on a shakedown cruise. I can say that Windows is shaping up nicely. They have improved the improved Office; I wish I could go back to Office 7 and stay there, particularly Word; I presume they will tune the “improved” version to make the autocorrect work like Office 7 did, but maybe not. Some of the Improvements are OK, but it’s well past my requirements; I wish they would get a good text creation editor, optimize it for that, and leave it alone; use Publisher or some fancy program for exotic formats. Sometimes you just want to write a book. Publishers do the formatting.

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“The disintegration of such giant comets would produce intermittent but prolonged periods of bombardment lasting up to 100,000 years.”

<http://news.yahoo.com/giant-comets-may-threaten-earth-astronomers-145625835.html>

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Roland Dobbins

RE: “The disintegration of such giant comets would produce intermittent but prolonged periods of bombardment lasting up to 100,000 years.”

1) This is not news. Astronomers have known this for years, if not decades. The Kuiper Belt and especially the Oort Cloud are likely reservoirs of just such objects as this, and are probably made up of this type of thing. After all, New Horizons is studying Pluto and its system of moons, and these are all ice bodies insofar as we can tell from the data, with precious little bits of rock thrown in — aka dirty iceballs. Slip ’em into a high-eccentricity orbit, they would get dubbed centaur comets.

2) Practicality of search is the problem. Look at what we’ve had to do just to explore the Pluto system.

3) Comet strike is a possible KT-boundary event causation, but not the most probable. That still remains the Chixulub impactor, which evidence indicates was an asteroid, not a comet.

4) The more probable means of throwing one or more of ’em inward is passage by a neighboring star, and tidal disruption of Oort cloud objects thereby. This has been a general consideration for the various extinction events over the epochs.

5) Secondary problem: we’re still speculating on the best way(s) to move a bloody asteroid. How do you move something the size of a small moon? Because yes, we are talking about objects the size of Pluto’s moons Nix and Hydra.

Stephanie Osborn

“The Interstellar Woman of Mystery”
http://www.Stephanie-Osborn.com

 

We’re already experiencing “intermittent but prolonged periods of bombardment,” which we call “meteor showers.”

Clearly it _could_ be worse, but the data to show that this threat is _likely_ to get worse seem to be lacking.

. png

 

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A SpaceX Twofer

Jerry,

SpaceX’s first post-accident Falcon 9 launch is in orbit and deploying payloads.

Far more important in the long run, the F9 booster first stage is back on the landing pad at Canaveral, upright and intact, after engine-braking back down from something over 5,000 km/h at over 100 km altitude. A good day, for the company, for the industry, and for all of us who think that learning how to get off this planet affordably is important for the future of the species.

There’s plenty more hard work ahead, but this, on top of Blue Origin’s similar but less extreme booster-landing feat a few weeks ago (roughly the same height but without the large horizontal velocity) is a huge step forward. With two rival outfits both succeeding, it’s not just luck, or a stunt – we really are finally learning how to reuse space-launch rockets.

http://twitter.com/SpaceX/status/679114269485436928/photo/1

Henry

 

 

SpaceX launches rocket 6 months after accident, then lands | Fox News

Jerry,

It isn’t SSTO, but it achieves many of the same goals.

http://www.foxnews.com/science/2015/12/21/spacex-launches-rocket-6-months-after-accident-then-lands.html?intcmp=latestnews

The next step is to either reduce structural mass of the booster to make it SSTO or develop an upper stage that is itself recoverable and reusable. I for see Ballutes playing a role in the later idea.

James Crawford=

It isn’t my SSX but it’s definitely a step forward from DC/X and on the path we need to follow. The Commercial Space Act which we worked so hard for has also been working. Cheer.

 

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A neat video of 360 days of sky over San Francisco

Jerry,

Enjoy! The video is just under 5 minutes.

“Each panel shows one day. With 360 movie panels, the sky over (almost) an entire year is shown in time lapse format as recorded by a video camera on the roof of the Exploratorium museum in San Francisco, California”

<http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap151222.html>

Regards, Charles Adams

 

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http://www.amazon.com/There-Will-Be-War-X-ebook/dp/B019KYLOKQ/ref=asap_bc?ie=UTF8&amp%3Btag=chaosmanor-20

Has been selling very well, and the reviews have been good.

 

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The Pipe Organ Desk.

<http://www.kagenschaefer.com/pipeorgandesk.html>

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Roland Dobbins

 

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Random presidential candidates

Dear Dr. Pournelle, 
I read one of the comments to your blog in which an author proposed that presidential candidates be chosen by lottery.   I believe there is a problem with this approach, and the name of the counterexample is Barack Hussein Obama. As in, this is what happens when a major political party nominates a person without meaningful executive experience to the white house , and he proceeds to “govern” for eight years. 
The fundamental problem is that , in a world where the presidential candidates are selected by lottery, those candidates still have to run for office and win the election. That’s going to cost millions of dollars in advertisements, tv spots. The person also needs to travel from state to state “selling” him or herself, participating in TV debates, answering questions on topics like ethanol in Iowa that the average citizen doesn’t think about. 
Which means that they’re going to need a bevy of handlers, pr people, airplane pilots, advertising copy writers, you name it. 
I don’t believe a randomly selected person is going to be able to put together that machine by themselves.  But that won’t be a problem, because the existing Democratic and Republican machines will beat a path to their door offering all those services in exchange for signing onto the platform.  If the candidates are the products of the American school system, I find it unlikely they will have independently thought about these issues. Instead, the majority will simply blindly cling to whatever creed happened to be popular in their social circle at the time they were selected.
What that means is that instead of a runoff consisting of governors and senators, we’d have a political nomination of people who are the bought-and-paid-for creatures of the existing machines, people without meaningful political ideas of their own, people who make Obama look competent and well-prepared , since HE at least had national political experience as a senator before his run. 

I would suggest the current system is a better solution.  And will remain so, so long as the cost of running for President is as expensive as it is.

Respectfully,

Brian P.

 

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‘The study found existing models for climate change had been too simplistic and did not account for these factors.’

<http://www.express.co.uk/news/uk/628524/Climate-change-shock-Burning-fossil-fuels-COOLs-planet-says-NASA>

I’ve spent about six months of my life in China, all told, mainly in Beijing and Shanghai. Of that six months, only on two days did I see blue skies and sunshine – and those were by far the hottest days I experienced in China.

Those two sunny days, one after the other, were bracketed by darker days full of the usual Mordor-like soot. It was noticeably cooler on the darker days.

—————————————

Roland Dobbins

The models were designed when computers were not so good; now I have on my desk a faster machine with more memory than they had when they started climate models and chose the sizes of weather cells to use (and of course all had to be equal),

Perhaps it is new model time.

Meanwhile models are what we have; if they had better date they might find some new answers; but it is certainly time to refine the models – only they “test” the models against each other. And while temperature measuring equipment is so much better, they can’t use it to measure the past…

 

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

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