Category Archives: History
Learning The Lessons From The Thirties
Jews are buying guns (something they couldn’t do in Germany).
[Wednesday-morning update]
Happy Armed Jews Week.
[Bumped]
[Afternoon update]
Sorry, link is fixed.
The Rotten Core Of College Campuses
Thoughts on anti-Semitism throughout history.
[Update a few minutes later]
Advocating For Genocide
Thoughts from Eugene Volokh.
The problem to me is that we’ve overbroadened the definition of genocide to the point that it’s lost useful meaning. I don’t agree that simply killing large numbers of an ethnic group justifies being called that. While what the Japanese did in Manchuria was atrocious and horrific, and clearly a war crime, I don’t think that it was genocide, because I don’t think (correct me if I’m wrong historians) that it was done with an intent to wipe an ethnicity off the face of the planet. Similarly, while what we did in Dresden and Tokyo and other cities was arguably a war crime, it was not genocide. But what the Nazis did clearly was, and what Hamas is calling for, and those college students are supporting (“gas the Jews”) clearly is.
The U.S. Air Force
…is in serious decline.
DEI degrades and corrupts every institution it touches.
I wonder if it’s as bad with the Space Force?
[Update a while later]
DEI at the FAA is lunacy. It will kill people.
The B-Team
More like the C-Team, actually. What happens when mediocrities are promoted.
[Update a few minutes later]
Related: Academics thrill to rape and murder.
[Update a while later]
Is Gen Z turning against Western civilization? And thoughts on Weimar America:
…the overwhelmingly minority students (whose school is ranked academically near the bottom among New York City schools) were acculturated to the racist reality that as the “oppressed” they were exempt from any punishment for hunting down their own teacher. As a Jewish (and thus white) “oppressive” supporter of Israel, she was reduced to, in the words an enthusiastic commenter on a Tik Tok video of the riot, a “cracker ass bitch.” And so the student pack tracked her down as if they were hunting an animal. The old Nazi youth gangs tried to kill Jews because they were not considered “white;” our new Nazis hunt them down because they allege that they are. The common denominator between the 1930s and 2023 is an unhinged hatred of Jews.
Yes.
[Afternoon update]
The people who mobbed the Jewish restaurant in Philly are total psychopaths.
[Wednesday-morning update]
Addressing the rot in the universities.
[Bumped]
[Friday-morning update]
Genocide and Jews at Harvard.
And are Americans finally starting to see the depravity of academia?
[Bumped]
[Update a few minutes later]
Reverse speech codes aren’t the answer.
Human Rights
Do they extend beyond the planet?
The fact that the UN declaration is a “universal” one strongly suggests that they do. I disagree that “health” is a human right, though.
Another “City On Mars” Review
Joe’s Long Record Of Lying about Biden Inc.
A Long, But Interesting Video
Thoughts on Artemis.
Here’s the problem: Ignoring the politics that have driven much of the architecture decisions, NASA is trying to do Apollo again, without the budget or schedule driver. When he cites the document “What Made Apollo A Success,” it begs the question of what the definition of success is. Obviously, it was successful in terms of the program objectives: to get a man (or men) to the Moon and return them safely to the Earth within a decade. But it was a complete failure in terms of opening space to humanity, which is why we haven’t been back in over half a century.
He says to remain mission focused, but that’s the problem. We have to end the “mission” mentality. We have to create a transportation infrastructure that makes getting back to the Moon, to other points in cislunar space, and beyond, routine. The fact that we’re not attempting to do so is why Artemis, as currently conceived, will prove as unsustainable as Apollo was.
I would also disagree with his recommendation that we train “pilots” on a simulator where their ass is on the line, as Neil did. We are in an age in which humans cannot fly these machines as well as they can fly themselves, and we’re going to have to test them and build in resiliency and redundancy to the point at which we can trust them to get us where we want to go with an acceptable level of risk.