Researchers are upbeat about it.
Well, if they are, then so am I.
Researchers are upbeat about it.
Well, if they are, then so am I.
Thoughts on aging, from Glenn Reynolds.
I’m a few years older, but I view things similarly. I, too, have noticed more of my cohorts shuffling off this mortal coil (e.g., Chuck Lauer two or three years ago, and Mark Hopkins a year or so ago, though he had clearly been in poor health for a while).
I hope I have more than another twenty healthy years, but I obviously can’t count on it. And I don’t really know what “retirement” means, other than being able to do what I want to do, as opposed to what I wouldn’t voluntarily do if someone else wasn’t paying me to do it. I don’t golf, or have any hobbies, really, and I want to stay involved in space in what (despite my having lived through Apollo) is rapidly becoming the most exciting period of my life for that industry. I am still trying to make interesting things happen, and generate enough income from it for us to travel and enjoy life more while we have our health.
Ummmm…no thanks.
Is it a bigger threat than the ones it’s supposed to prevent?
They don’t mention space, but I think that safetyism lies at the heart of Kelly’s and Zach’s concerns.
No, it doesn’t cause inflammation. It’s in fact a very nutritious food, despite the unscientific warnings against it.
Everything he and his cohorts were saying publicly, they were saying the opposite privately.
If there are no consequences for this level of corruption and malfeasance (which literally cost millions of lives), it will continue.
…reads like a bioweapons spy thriller.
Except, sadly, it’s not fiction. And Fauci (and others) have yet to be held to account.
Great summary by Jim Meigs.
Attacks space settlement (again). Peter Hague responds.
I have to say I’m disappointed in Sarah.