War with the Caliphate

Chaos Manor View, Monday, November 16, 2015

“The analogy we use around here sometimes, and I think is accurate, is if a jayvee team puts on Lakers uniforms that doesn’t make them Kobe Bryant.”

Barrack Hussein Obama

Paris terror attacks: Mother of suspected suicide bomber Brahim Abdeslam says he ‘may have been stressed’

Familyclip_image002 of Ibrahim Abdeslam says he may have blown himself up because of ‘stress’

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/paris-terror-attacks-mother-of-suicide-bomber-says-he-did-not-mean-to-kill-anyone-a6736076.html

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President Obama Calls Rejection of Syrian Refugees a “Betrayal of Our Values”

The US isn’t changing its plans to let in 10,000 Syrian refugees.

http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2015/11/obama-calls-rejection-syrian-refugees-betrayal-our-values

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http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2015/06/09/world/middleeast/obama-isis-strategy.html?_r=0

Jan. 27, 2014

Obama Likens ISIS to ‘J.V. Team’

President Obama described the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, as the Sunni militant group was widely known at the time, as a junior varsity basketball team, playing down the strategic threat posed by the ISIS, compared with Al Qaeda.

“The analogy we use around here sometimes, and I think is accurate, is if a J.V. team puts on Lakers uniforms, that doesn’t make them Kobe Bryant,” Mr. Obama told David Remnick of The New Yorker.

That same month, ISIS seized Fallujah, a city in Anbar Province, Iraq, and parts of Ramadi, the province’s capital.

May 28, 2014

Defining the Extremist Threat

In a speech at West Point, Mr. Obama said, “For the foreseeable future, the most direct threat to America at home and abroad remains terrorism.” But he sought to distance himself from Bush-era doctrine, saying, “A strategy that involves invading every country that harbors terrorist networks is naïve and unsustainable.”

As the president defended his decision not to intervene militarily in Syria, the Islamic State was planning its takeover of the northern Iraqi city of Mosul. Less than two weeks later, the group’s fighters did just that.

Aug. 7, 2014

Action in Iraq

Mr. Obama authorized airstrikes against Islamic State militants advancing on the Iraqi Kurdish city of Erbil as well as threatening to wipe out thousands of Yazidis, a religious minority group, stranded on Mount Sinjar. A day later he vowed that the United States had no intention of “being the Iraqi air force.” Still, it was American airstrikes and humanitarian aid drops, along with Kurdish fighters, that ended the siege, in an operation that also involved the presence of a small number of American forces to assess the situation.

“We’re not going to let them create some caliphate through Syria and Iraq,” the president said in an interview with Thomas L. Friedman, a columnist for The New York Times, a day after he authorized the strikes. “But we can only do that if we know that we have got partners on the ground who are capable of filling the void.”

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When you said you have not underestimated ISIS’s abilities. This is an organization you once described as a jayvee team that has now evolved into a force that has now occupied territory in Iraq and Syria and has now been able to use that safe haven to launch attacks on other parts of the world. How is that not underestimating their capabilities? And how is that contained, quite frankly? A lot of Americans has this frustration that they see that the United States has the greatest military in the world. It has the backing of nearly every other country in the world to take on ISIS. I guess the question is – why can’t we take out these bastards?

CNN reporter November 16, 2015 asks President Obama in press conference.

President Obama is said to have been annoyed by the question.

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I have said for about a year now that we are at war with the Caliphate. Initially I said we could eliminate the Islamic State with an American division and the A-10 Thunderbolts. Later I said it would require two divisions and some air superiority forces. It will now require three divisions, all the SA-10’s, and considerable air superiority assets to protect the A-10’s from SAM and other defenses. The reason the requirement goes up is the growth of Daesh after each successful terrorist operation: the Caliphate gets floods of jihadi recruits, and their existing troops get a great morale boost. This raises the requirement for defeating them without high casualties.

Sending “just enough” troops to accomplish a mission is always a last resort; in the vast majority of situations, it is cheaper to send far more than enough. The cost of transportation will be higher, of course, but the casualties will be fewer, the combat shorter, the pursuit and elimination of the opposition more complete, and the success of the operation more complete. Trying to operate with “just enough” troops is sometimes necessary, but it is only preferable politically if at all.  It is seldom a profitable military option unless you need the unsent troops as a reserve for something else of importance.

It doesn’t cost that much to send more than you think you will need. You have to pay the soldiers anyway; their presence limits the cost of the operation. Often the enemy will not face overwhelming force, while they will fight if they think they can win or inflict significant casualties.

Britain sent Gordon to Khartoum to save money; the result was having to send a much larger force under Kitchener. So it goes.

Daesh claims to be the legitimate ruler of the world; the proof of that is that it rules, and enforces true Islamic law in the territories that it rules. If it has no territory to rule with true Islamic law, it is self-evident that it is not the true legitimate ruler of the world. This may not be obvious, but it is true and has been demonstrated time and again. http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2015/jul/23/islamic-state-works-to-establish-functioning-legit/?page=all https://news.vice.com/article/islamic-state-takes-a-stab-at-legitimacy-with-alleged-identification-cards-as-forces-lose-ground-in-iraq

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The President is correct when he says that we need allies in the area capable of filling the void created when we conquer Middle East territories. This requires diplomatic skills that might be beyond Mr. Kerry’s abilities, but they aren’t beyond American abilities. 

The principles are simple enough: we do not seek to impose a government other than that whatever government emerges is not an enemy of the United States, and is tolerant.  We also need what amounts to a Foreign Legion: an armed force that is permanently deployed overseas. Its job is to enforce the terms: not an enemy of the UDS, and tolerant to domestic minorities. But that’s another discussion.

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Is there much point in analyzing the folly of admitting migrants, refugees, immigrants at this time?  We have no way at all of vetting applicants.  We would do better to conquer an area from Daesh and giving it to the immigrants, possibly hiring some as mercenaries to assist them; always with the provision that the newly formed dependencies need not be friends to the United States but they must not be enemies; and that they must be tolerant of various tribal and religious minorities. Oil is fairly cheap, but there’s enough there to finance this, and enough work in extracting it to support the refugees. 

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Daesh (ISIS) Strike in US?

You may have read about the car German police caught that had AK-47s and grenades with a GPS set for Paris. Did you read about the grenades and plastic explosives stolen from a French military base back in July?

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3152461/Grenades-plastic-explosives-200-detonators-stolen-French-military-base-thieves-cut-wire-fence.html

I haven’t been able to research this to see if I could match the types of grenades and explosives with those used in the Paris attack. I expect someone else will do that before I get to it.

However, the recent raid on a military base in Massachusetts did not escape my attention:

http://www.whdh.com/story/30523224/fbi-weapons-missing-after-break-in-at-army-facility-in-worcester

As of yet, I have no details of what was taken but I would not be surprised if Daesh (ISIS) is behind this. The FBI recently admitted to have over 900 active investigations related to the terrorist group inside the United States.

I looked into the building that was raided, the Worcester Armory. The 1st Battalion, 181st Infantry Regiment is stationed there; this tells me the thieves could have access to claymore antipersonnel mines, fragmentation grenades, small arms, light machine guns (M249), sidearms, anti-tank weapons, massive casualty producing weapons e.g MK-19, M240B, etc.

We have enough threat inflation and fear mongering in this country; I don’t want to add to that but this situation should concern us.

◊ ◊ ◊ ◊ ◊

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

Percussa Resurgo

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What ISIS Really Wants 

Jerry

I don’t know if you’ve seen this already:

http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2015/03/what-isis-really-wants/384980/

“People want to absolve Islam,” he said. “It’s this ‘Islam is a religion of peace’ mantra. As if there is such a thing as ‘Islam’! It’s what Muslims do, and how they interpret their texts.” Those texts are shared by all Sunni Muslims, not just the Islamic State. “And these guys have just as much legitimacy as anyone else.”

It will come as no surprise, at any rate.

Ed

Dear Dr. Pournelle,
I assume that you’ve already heard of the tragic occurrence in Paris. The first question on my mind, though, was what exactly the French intended to do about it. 
http://hotair.com/archives/2015/11/15/france-levels-isis-in-raqqa-after-paris-attack/
The answer is, conduct airstrikes against ISIS and ally with the Russians in a joint effort to destroy ISIS — and, of course, prop up Assad. 
It is a good plan, probably the best plan they could reasonably come up with.  The only bad thing about it is that we aren’t part of it — we’re being muscled out and steadily surrendering the Middle East to the Russian sphere of influence. If you can really call it “muscling out” when the Russians are simply stepping into the vacuum we left. 
Respectfully,

Brian P.

ISIS is at war with the US as well as France.  We could end ISIS at any time, for less cost than waiting will face us with; whether we want to be involved with territorial disputers in Mesopotamia, if one of the participants is at war with us, we have no real choice.  Of course if they are the junior varsity dressed up as Lakers they might not warrant our full attention, but they have repeatedly indicated that they are more than that, and are growing, not contained.  Containment requires that you contain the enemy and that time is not of the essence.  I do not believe that is the case here.  We must be ready to take advantage of the election. The Caliphate is not going away; it must be destroyed.  It has declared war on the American people.

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Yale Student Shrieks At Prof For Denying Her ‘Safe Space’

 http://dailycaller.com/2015/11/06/yale-student-shrieks-at-prof-for-denying-her-safe-space-video/#ixzz3rgas7sBV

The Rise of the College Crybullies

http://www.wsj.com/articles/the-rise-of-the-college-crybullies-1447458587?alg=y

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John DeChancie

8 November at 11:56 ·

Last nite I had a yen to hear a requiem mass. After hieing myself to St. Francis de Sales church in Sherman Oaks, I heard the Cherubini Requiem in C Minor, an edifying spiritual work indeed. Parts of it brought a tear to my eye. The St. Francis de Sales Choir and the Wagner Ensemble performed the work. The Dies Irae was especially powerful. The Ensemble sounded three times its size, and just as professional. The Choir? Marvelously full and resonant. The underrated Cherubini was Beethoven’s favorite composer. Thanks to Roberta Pournelle, who sings alto in the Choir, for the complimentary ticket.

John DeChancie

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

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Education and Self-Control; Bureaucracy; Price of Power

Chaos Manor View, Friday, November 13, 2015

Friday the Thirteenth Falls on Friday This Month

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Everyone with an interest in education – and that is about everyone who reads – should read Eva Moskowitz

Why Students Need to Sit Up and Pay Attention

Our charters are guided by what I learned from a great public-school teacher: Distracted, misbehaving children aren’t learning.

By

Eva Moskowitz

http://www.wsj.com/articles/why-students-need-to-sit-up-and-pay-attention-1447373122

I doubt it says anything that would surprise you, but it is important, because a lot of public school teachers would be horrified by it.

I propose that school boards should have the right and obligation to fire for incompetence teachers who cannot keep good order and discipline in their classrooms. Teaching civility and self-control is one of the major purposes of public education, and if it isn’t being taught, what is the justification for tax support of the schools?

It may be necessary in some school districts to have classrooms where civility and self-control are the only important things taught, and those who refuse to be orderly in regular classrooms should be sent to them; distracting all the other students, talking back to the teacher, disrupting the class, and generally being a public nuisance in an institution supported by money collected by compulsion – taxes – is not a constitutional right in any state or nation I know of, nor should it be. Tolerating disruption – letting some express themselves at will – is depriving everyone in the class. And yes: if what is being taught is boring, as much of what I heard the second year in my two-grades-to-the-classroom grade schools was, there is still no right to disruption and incivility; and learning self-control is valuable even for bored kids. Teachers who keep good order and discipline are not necessarily competent; but those who don’t at least try are certainly incompetent, and firing them will improve the school.

There’s a lot wrong with the content of what is taught in our public schools; but failure to teach civility and self-control is intolerable.

See also https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/answer-sheet/wp/2015/11/03/a-venture-capitalist-searches-for-the-purpose-of-school-heres-what-he-found/

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‘He walked out of a building, got in the car… we took the shot’: Pentagon chiefs reveal how Jihadi John was ‘evaporated’ in the street in midnight drone strike

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/ushome/index.html

For once, some good news.

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I would not think that an all-out negative attack on Dr. Carson would be Donald Trump’s best approach to demonstrating he has the gravitas to be President.

On the same theme:

Republicans Are Ready to Rumble

Substantive arguments are healthy, but personal attacks aren’t. And unity gives Democrats an edge.

By

Peggy Noonan

Nov. 12, 2015 7:34 p.m. ET

http://www.wsj.com/articles/republicans-are-ready-to-rumble-1447374852

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Subject: Perhaps a New Record for Government Waste

If we thought HealthCare.gov was wasteful…how about $1 Billion to put one form online? What happened to that US Digital Services that was supposed to roam Washington and make these things work?

https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/a-decade-into-a-project-to-digitize-us-immigration-forms-just-1-is-online/2015/11/08/f63360fc-830e-11e5-a7ca-6ab6ec20f839_story.html?hpid=hp_hp-top-table-main_immigration910p%3Ahomepage%2Fstory

Dwayne Phillips

Just shaking my head.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/a-decade-into-a-project-to-digitize-us-immigration-forms-just-1-is-online/2015/11/08/f63360fc-830e-11e5-a7ca-6ab6ec20f839_story.html

Heaving under mountains of paperwork, the government has spent more than $1 billion trying to replace its antiquated approach to managing immigration with a system of digitized records, online applications and a full suite of nearly 100 electronic forms.

A decade in, all that officials have to show for the effort is a single form that’s now available for online applications and a single type of fee that immigrants pay electronically. The 94 other forms can be filed only with paper.

John Harlow

Of the candidates for President, Mrs. Fiorina seems the only one seriously interested in government incompetence, and certainly one of the best qualified to deal with it. See also

https://www.aei.org/publication/the-regulators-yoke/

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Another Big War
Could the U.S. mobilize for a major war today? In Parameters, Steven Metz suggests our greatest limitation might be logistical, stemming from the lack of excess industrial capacity (which differs starkly from pre-WWII). Another could be the fact that so many young people today do not meet the standards for military service. Large formations formed in the lead up to a major war would most probably have inferior equipment and men, and may not be able to carry out the mission. Thanks in advance for your response,

Nathan Jaco

There’s not much response to make; despite government hoopla, we remain in close to a depression, and have since 2008. We do not have surplus industrial capacity, and our schools aren’t turning out work-ready graduates. In 1941 we converted to a war economy and overwhelmed both Germany and Japan; it may not be so easy this time. Robots may help.

But our high tech advantages are not so great as they once were either.

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How Free Speech Died on Campus

In a 2012 interview, Greg Lukianoff describes how universities became the most authoritarian institutions in America.

By

Sohrab Ahmari

Nov. 16, 2012 7:11 p.m. ET

New York

At Yale University, you can be prevented from putting an F. Scott Fitzgerald quote on your T-shirt. At Tufts, you can be censured for quoting certain passages from the Quran. Welcome to the most authoritarian institution in America: the modern university—”a bizarre, parallel dimension,” as Greg Lukianoff, president of the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, calls it.

Mr. Lukianoff, a 38-year-old Stanford Law grad, has spent the past decade fighting free-speech battles on college campuses. The latest was last week at Fordham University, where President Joseph McShane scolded College Republicans for the sin of inviting Ann Coulter to speak. [snip]

http://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424127887323894704578115440209134854

To be decided: why should taxpayers support this sort of thing? Harvard and Yale can do as they wish; but the state universities and colleges were established to aid qualified students not able to go to private institutions. Should taxes pay for intolerance of this kind? Certainly those who accept public largess are subject to stricter rules than those who do not. Universities supported by taxes are public, not private, institutions. But surely being subject to a diversity of views is part of a good education?

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The Death of College Sports

The University of Missouri football team has just killed college sports. They have showed that if the football team threatens to not play a game ($1 million fine to the university) the university President and Chancellor will resign. Taken to its logical conclusion — an idea fraught with peril — a football team can demand that admission policies and everything else be changed at a university or they will strike. Imagine A BIG BIG BIG time football program like at U of Alabama or Ohio State U threatening strike.

Another logical conclusion is that those who operate state universities, a.k.a. state legislatures, cannot allow a situation where 40 students, who happen to be on the football team, dictate policy. They have inadvertently given economic power to those students. Hence, they will remove the football program from the university.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/grade-point/wp/2015/11/09/missouris-student-government-calls-for-university-presidents-removal/?hpid=hp_rhp-top-table-main_missresignation-1124am%3Ahomepage%2Fstory

It will be interesting to see what happens at the University of Missouri.

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Alumina smelting
Smelting Bauxite into Aluminum uses huge amounts or electricity. To meet military needs (and other) The Bonneville Dams on the Columbia were built to supply this power cheaply. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_dams_in_the_Columbia_River_watershed
In the eighties and nineties increased demand found Kaiser and others selling their power south at a profit higher than making aluminum. No good idea is safe from government and they changed the rules and started charging market clearing rates for the power.
Pricing US aluminum smelters out of market.
The results of increased recycling of cans and waste aluminum has also reduced US price points further.

Tom Weaver

As everyone used to know —I believe I learned it in 6th grade – aluminum is made where electricity is cheap, not where bauxite is found; it’s cheaper to ship bauxite. Energy is ultimately the governing price of most everything. The pipeline from Canada would have been important, and perhaps will be after the election.

We are not building power plants.  Nuclear fission plants are “green” and emit no CO2, but it is impossible to build them because of regulation upon regulation.  Coal works but is messy and creates waste.  Natural gas would be reasonable but creates CO2.  None of this discourages China or India who are building all three, and will become economically much stronger.

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Make of this what you will

http://www.independent.co.uk/student/shu/how-xbox-kinect-can-transform-breasts-literally-a6721051.html

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FBI expands probe of Clinton emails, launches independent classification review

By Catherine Herridge, Pamela Browne

The FBI has expanded its probe of Hillary Clinton’s emails, with agents exploring whether multiple statements violate a federal false statements statute, according to intelligence sources familiar with the ongoing case.

Fox News is told agents are looking at U.S. Code 18, Section 1001, which pertains to “materially false” statements given either in writing, orally or through a third party. Violations also include pressuring a third party to conspire in a cover-up. Each felony violation is subject to five years in prison.

This phase represents an expansion of the FBI probe, which is also exploring potential violations of an Espionage Act provision relating to “gross negligence” in the handling of national defense information. [snip]

Does this affect the election?

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In Case you missed this

Miranda Devine: Perth electrical engineer’s discovery will change climate change debate

http://www.news.com.au/national/western-australia/miranda-devine-perth-electrical-engineers-discovery-will-change-climate-change-debate/story-fnii5thn-1227555674611

I have seen no refutation.

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

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Education and Bureaucracy; Ice Age?

Chaos Manor View, Wednesday, November 11, 2015

Veterans Day

Armistice Day originally; 11/11/ at 11 AM

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Steve is at a conference, and Jack Cohen was busy, so Niven and I used the morning to confer on details for our Avalon series novel: number three in the story of Earth’s first interstellar colony in a slower than light travel universe. The colony is forty years old, and without any warning a new ship is coming; there was no warning. Meanwhile they are exploring the mainland having become secure on their original island; and they are finding astonishing facts about the planet’s life forms.

We got sorted out who will write certain needed scenes and went to a very good lunch. Alas it’s pollen season in Los Angeles, and it has rained very little this fall. Ah well.

I watched the debates last night, and I was pleased to see that Carly Fiorina is more than holding her own. She kept to the theme that government has got out of control, and it is time for the American people to take back their government from the professionals. In particular, we must have Zero based budgeting: every dollar spent has to be justified, not just spent because it was spent last year. That would be the end of bunny inspectors and many other absurdities, and a reduction in the total size of regulatory agencies; nothing should be spared from scrutiny. I recall that Barrack Hussein Obama made a “laser fine” inspection of each item in the budget one of his primary goals upon taking office, but that never happened or was alluded to again.

Charles Murray, who is one of the few sociologists I can respect as a scientist, has an article: The Regulators’ Yoke, https://www.aei.org/publication/the-regulators-yoke/ which does a better job of telling why this is important than I can.

The de facto legislative power delegated to regulatory agencies is only one aspect of their illegitimacy. Citizens who have not been hit with an accusation of a violation may not realize how Orwellian the regulatory state has become. If you run afoul of an agency such as the FCC and want to defend yourself, you don’t go to a regular court. You go to an administrative court run by the agency. You don’t get a jury. The case is decided by an administrative judge who is an employee of the agency. You do not need to be found guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, but rather by the loosest of all legal standards, a preponderance of the evidence. The regulatory agency is also free of many of the rules that constrain police and prosecutors in the normal legal system. For example, regulatory agencies are not required to show probable cause for getting a search warrant. A regulatory agency can inspect a property or place of business under broad conditions that it has set for itself.

There’s much more, but it amounts to this: Regulatory agencies, or the regulatory divisions within cabinet agencies, operate as self-contained entities that create de facto laws that Congress would never have passed on an up-or-down vote. They then act as both police and judge in enforcing the laws they have created. It amounts to an extra-legal state within the state.

I have focused on the regulatory state because it now looms so large in daily life as to have provoked a reaction that crosses political divides: American government isn’t supposed to work this way.

There is a lot more, all good, and I commend it to you. And Mrs. Fiorina is one of the few candidates who seem to take such things seriously and – I think – she means it. All Republicans, and until recently most Democrats – recall Mr. Obama’s promise of a laser like inspection of each item in the budget – talk about making sure that each tax dollar goes for something we want done; but the country club establishment Republicans never did anything about it when they had the power, and the Democrats never took it seriously at all. Hope and Change always means bigger government; increasing the middle class means adding more higher ranking civil servants to the payroll. Little thought is given to those who must pay for it.

And another government instruction is education: why is it paid for by taxpayers? Why can’t it earn its own way? Well, because poor people could not afford it. But does it do anything you would pay to have it do if you looked at it seriously?

Dr. Pournelle,

I stumbled across this interesting article from a venture capitalist’s point of view about what he sees wrong with our educational system.  I thought you might enjoy this article.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/answer-sheet/wp/2015/11/03/a-venture-capitalist-searches-for-the-purpose-of-school-heres-what-he-found/

Best regards,

Dave Boyette

Read this and think on it: if the students aren’t learning much, why do we pay to have then study it?

And the remedy to this starts with returning control of education to the states; better would be to local school district boards elected by local tax payers. Sure, that would result in some appalling school districts – although it is hard to get worse than we have now – but it also give us some good ones; and eliminating Federal institutions controlling education would be worth doing anyway.

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I will repeat my offer: give me two divisions and the A-10’s with enough air supremacy forces to protect them, and I will eliminate the Caliphate within a year. By hat I mean of course I know generals who could do it if commanded to. The other factions in Iraq and Syria have not declared war on the US; ISIS has; and claims to be the legitimate ruler of the Moslem world, and the world in general. They need elimination, and we know who to give the conquered territory to. It would be costly, but not as costly as allowing Libya, Iraq, and Syrian to further down while ISIS grows and attracts recruits with successes.

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License renewed? Air Force says it needs A-10 a bit longer, thanks | buffy willow

Jerry

No comment needed, I think:

http://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2015/11/us-air-forces-top-combat-general-says-a-10-retirement-may-be-postponed/

Ed

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While we are looking at notions worth reading:

 

Soviet collapse due to fortunate Reagan-era error?

I came across a Professor Watkins who wrote that a budgeting mistake by the 1980’s OMB led to a greater increase in Pentagon spending than was originally directed by the Reagan’s administration.
As I don’t remember any reporting on this, I thought you might like to refresh us on this topic, especially if there’s anything to Watkin’s claims.
http://www.sjsu.edu/faculty/watkins/sovietcollapse.htm

B. Pastoral

While economic stress on the Soviet Union was a key element in the Reagan strategy, it was deliberate; I had not heard that any part of it was accidental.  Otherwise this is a reasonable account.

 

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Long, interesting, and somewhat tragic.

“I do not expect this scroll will be read during my lifetime.”

<http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2015/11/16/the-invisible-library>

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Roland Dobbins

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You will see this here again after I have looked into it a bit; is the Cold coming? And when?

 

Cold Sun Rising.

<http://www.nationmultimedia.com/opinion/Cold-sun-rising-30272650.html>

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Roland Dobbins

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

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Impartial Reporting

Chaos Manor View, Friday, November 06, 2015

Ben Carson admits fabricating West Point scholarship. Politico

“I never once saw Ben Carson at West Point when I was Chairman of Brain Surgery & Grain Pyramids there from 1954-1985.” Rob Delaney

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It is inconceivable that in 1960 a black high school graduate with the academic credentials enabling him to get into Yale, and also graduating from high school ROTC at the top of his class would not have been courted by many including Army generals to apply for West Point, or that he would not have received an appointment had he applied. The benefits would be free tuition and room and board: sort of a full expenses scholarship and it’s not unlikely that one or another of those trying to recruit him would have used the phrase “like a scholarship.” Dr. Carson chose to go to pre-med and medical school and the rest of the training to become a neuro surgeon rather than to join the Army; but it is not a surprise that he is proud of having been asked to go to West Point. It is also not a surprise that certain people calling themselves journalists use this pride to malign him because he may have said he was offered a scholarship.

And see http://www.dailywire.com/news/960/no-ben-carson-didnt-lie-about-west-point-its-ben-shapiro

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It’s late and I’ve been busy.

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When a 127-Year-Old U.S. Industry Collapses Under China’s Weight.

<http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-11-03/when-a-127-year-old-u-s-industry-collapses-under-china-s-weight>

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Roland Dobbins

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Physics Mystery

NASA conducts MORE secret tests of its ‘impossible engine’: Study reveals fuel-free thrusters do work, but no one knows why

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-3305990/Nasa-conducts-secret-tests-impossible-engine-Study-reveals-fuel-free-thrusters-work-no-one-knows-why.html

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Solar Storms Strip Air From Mars, NASA Says

By KENNETH CHANG, NOV. 5, 2015
The air on Mars — what there is of it — is leaking away, about half a pound a second sputtering into space, scientists announced on Thursday.
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The planet’s early atmosphere is thought to have been as thick as or thicker than Earth’s today, and even over the 4.5-billion-year history of the solar system, that slow leak would not explain how it atrophied to its current wisps.
But new readings from NASA’s Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution mission — Maven, for short — show that when Mars is hit by a solar storm, the ferocious bombardment of particles from the sun strips away the upper atmosphere much more quickly.
That could help explain the disappearance of the atmosphere. The sun during its youth was more unsettled, with many more solar storm eruptions, and it shone brighter in the ultraviolet wavelengths that also help knock atoms out of Mars’ atmosphere.
Continue reading the main story
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From left: Europa, the moon of Jupiter; Titan, the moon of Saturn; a composite image of the Valles Marineris across Mars; a mosaic of Venus’s surface.
NASA’s Next Horizon in SpaceAUG. 28, 2015
An illustration of the Maven spacecraft approaching Mars on a mission to study its upper atmosphere.
NASA Craft Is Orbiting Mars, to Study Its AirSEPT. 21, 2014
A painting of early Mars, showing shallow seas across the northern lowlands and weather systems drifting in a denser atmosphere than today’s.
Looking to Mars to Help Understand Changing ClimatesDEC. 8, 2014
“What this tells us is loss through space has been an important process,” said Bruce M. Jakosky, a scientist at the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics at the University of Colorado and the principal investigator for the Maven mission.
[We do this so you don’t have to, dear Jerry!!!]
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/11/06/science/space/mars-atmosphere-stripped-away-by-solar-storms-nasa-says.html?&hp&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&module=photo-spot-region&region=top-news&WT.nav=top-news&_r=0

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Army Research Lab 2050 Report

The US Army Research Laboratory report Visualizing the Tactical Ground Battlefield in the Year 2050 is worth taking a few minutes.

http://www.arl.army.mil/arlreports/2015/ARL-SR-0327.pdf

Section headings include:

Ubiquitous Robots

Swarms and Teams

Dynamic Hacking and Spoofing

Super Humans

Directed Energy Weapons

Force Fields

◊ ◊ ◊ ◊ ◊

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

Percussa Resurgo

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Climate Change Weather Attribution
I ran across this article the day after the note I sent wishing that there was a blog for looking at the numbers of Climate Change and discerning the impact of that change. The group, World Weather Attribution (WWA) started in 2014 “aims to deliver timely information on how patterns of extreme weather may be affected by climate change”:
http://www.climatecentral.org/wwa
Whether humans are or are not at fault is moot. Clearly patterns are changing in our human time frame of several generations and we need to deal with it. And taking a really long view, at some point it time it was natural for a 1 mile thick ice sheet over the state of Michigan, which is still rebounding from it’s disappearance.
This group seems to be trying to make sense of all the information and models in a way that we can maybe use it in a shorter time frame of our children and children’s children. Bravo for the attempt. I look forward to following them.
Bob P

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TPP Nightmare

The TPP is worse than we expected, which was to be expected. To make matters even worse, the cries against it are about “repealing fast track authority”. Apparently, whatever Congress did that allowed the Iran Debacle — excuse me the Iran Nuclear Agreement — to pass as fitting policy also allows the same process for TPP. So, the Senate will not have to ratify this treaty, they’ll have to get an impossible number of votes to deny the treaty’s automatic ratification.

Apparently, now, it’s called “Trade Promotion Authority”.

http://www.breitbart.com/big-government/2015/11/05/jeff-sessions-kill-the-anti-democratic-trans-pacific-partnership-in-the-crib-repeal-fast-track-authority-now/

And what Senator Sessions has to say about this is beyond unsettling.

We’re looking at a synarchy, much like EU synarchy. We will be ruled by unelected bureaucrats in a regulatory framework that looks more communist than capitalist and we’ll have lose certain rights under TPP since we’ll all be under some commission that will dictate our rules to us without consent of our congress and without regard for out Constitution — according to Senator Sessions.

◊ ◊ ◊ ◊ ◊

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC
Percussa Resurgo

And dependent for energy on imports. It’s part of the design.

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No RF from KIC 8462852.

<http://arxiv.org/pdf/1511.01606v1.pdf>

This doesn’t preclude artificiality, though. They could’ve died out before the epoch in which the light reaching us from KIC 8462852 – and, therefore, any possible RF emissions – can be observed.

In other words, the time window for the persistence of megastructures is potentially much larger than that of a civilization which produced such megastructures.

There’s probably a natural explanation for what we’re seeing – including something much closer headed our way from KIC 8462852 and running silent, which nobody has mentioned, AFAIK.

—————————————

Roland Dobbins

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Time Warner and 1600 to 1615

Could it be they are downloading the evening’s (or the next 24 hours’) new commercials and/or commercial broadcast schedule for their cable head end?

Just wondering. The consultancy leads me to think they are.

Charles Brumbelow=

I doubt it, but I do not know,

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return of the nitpicker II
Dr. Pournelle,
Minor errata: I believe that you meant 1960. I find a black high school graduate is indeed inconceivable in 1060!
..and I had considerable trouble typing that line correctly despite not having a brain injury: don’t be so hard on yourself! I have considerable trouble hitting the qwerty number row at all, intentionally, yet alone correctly; in spite of years of practice. Patience.
There is also some strange text between a couple of the e-mails in the Nov 7 post. I paste:
sc:bubbles]
…I fear may be a missed segment of someone else’s PII.
Anxiously awaiting news from Avalon, and from Tran,
-d

Fixed, and thanks.  The Sc bubbles are a script to save loading times and dis space; it produces  an image.

I’m anxiously awaiting Mamelukes  and the colony novel too; and experimenting with ways to type faster.  I suspect it’ll take a new machine and some negotiations about using autocorrect.  And Live Writer doesn’t even have AutoCorrect. You’d be amazed at how many words I had to correct in these sentences.

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

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