Category Archives: Health

The Left Were The Mad Scientists

…and we were their lab rats.

This reminds me of the old Soviet joke about the schoolkid:

“Teacher, is it really true that Marx was the greatest scientist in history?”

“Yes, Pyotr, it is true.”

“Then why didn’t he try this crap on rats first?”

[Friday-morning update]

Heretics against the cult of authority.

Emily Oster

With whom does she want an amnesty?

We won’t forget all the lives and livelihoods, and children’s development destroyed, and we’ll let them know that next Tuesday.

[Update Wednesday morning]

Another request for amnesty.

[Update a while later]

We need accountability, not amnesty.

[Update Thursday morning]

The tyranny of a Covid amnesty.

[Update a while later]

Try saying “sorry” first.

No forgiveness without repentance.

[Update a while later]

More on the same theme: There can be no “amnesty” without a reckoning.

[Update a few minutes later]

The Atlantic‘s amnesty request was a massive political blunder.

You don’t say.

[Bumped]

ASCEND

I’ve been to many AIAA space conferences over the decades, but this was my first attendance to the new format called ASCEND, in Las Vegas, and I have to say that it’s a huge improvement over the traditional ones. In my experience, the large AIAA conferences on space have traditionally been overwhelming in terms of the number of papers presented, and the high number of them being presented simultaneously, often with very low attendance at any particular one.

ASCEND was in comparison much more focused, with fewer, but higher-quality presentations, and much less frustration at having to miss events due to inability to be multiple places at once. There were also ample breaks from sessions to provide valuable networking opportunities, which has always been one of the more important reasons for in-person attendance.

While there were fewer presentations, there was no reduction in the scope of topics covered. As always, this was not merely a technical conference, but a conference on all aspects of what it is going to take to advance humanity into the solar system, with sessions on: space law; the economics of spaceflight; space transportation; space investment; space history; sustainability in terms of orbital debris and situation space awareness, utilization of in-situ resources for transportation, life support, and space manufacturing; space medicine; space assembly for telescopes and perhaps solar-power satellites; and even sociology for future space inhabitants.

The attendees ranged from students to seasoned industry professionals, not just from the US, but many other countries, with many opportunities for interaction between generations and nations. I applaud the AIAA for creating such an exciting and useful venue for those interested in moving humanity and life off its home planet.