…is a hot mess.
That doesn’t really distinguish it from any other Biden policy.
…is a hot mess.
That doesn’t really distinguish it from any other Biden policy.
The police chief of Uvalde shouldn’t just have been fired. He should be in prison as an accomplice to mass murder.
There is no precedent for it, but I hope that they do it, because it would enrage the left, and there’s nothing they could do about it.
Withdrawing from the Moon Agreement is a pretty big deal. Let’s hope it leads to a stampede.
Why are they “finding” the classified documents now?
…and the dark underbelly of American censorship.
I’d like to see a lot more punishment than removal from the intelligence committee, but I suspect I’m unlikely to.
This is a couple weeks old, but I just noticed it.
The airline analogy is fundamentally flawed. Barring catastrophe (or skydiving), when you take off in an aircraft, you remain in it for the entire flight, until after landing, so it makes sense for a unitary entity to regulate the process. But in spaceflight, once we have orbital destinations, the “launch” ends when the destination is reached. So (setting aside the fact that the FAA should never have been involved in regulating launches) there is no reason for the same agency to regulate safety on orbit as the one that regulates trips to and from space. The project on which I’m currently working proposes that the Department of Commerce regulate on-orbit activity, and while I’m open to discussions whether or not that’s the right place for it, the notion that it should be the FAA is absurd.
[Update a while later]
I’ve been reliably informed that this isn’t just an op-ed; DOT is apparently actively lobbying Congress for this role. I’ll be in DC next week, and trying to find out more about what’s going on.
Republicans should refuse to raise the debt ceiling until we get a Republican president?
I’d be more interested in this if McCarthy wasn’t going to be Speaker of the House.
A compendium of what we currently know.