Category Archives: Technology and Society

Politicos Put Graft Before Progress

While this is a good general topic, nowhere is it more true than in human spaceflight:

Sometimes the new competition wins anyway. Uber has been good at generating a large base of mobile customers, then using them to pressure politicians: When New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio went after Uber, Uber used its app to let its users pressure de Blasio.

Happy Uber customer Kate Upton weighed in, producing more pushback than de Blasio could withstand — especially when it turned out he’d gotten over $550,000 in donations from taxicab interests.

Other services aren’t so lucky, and the ability to do an end run around regulators, though welcome, isn’t universal. And if, on top of setting up your lemonade stand, you need licenses, permits, lobbyists and subsidies to make it, not many new lemonade stands will get started. That’s good news for existing lemonade stands, and for the politicians they support, but it’s bad news for everyone else.

Including people who actually want to affordably accomplish things in space.

High Blood Pressure

This looks interesting, but I’d like to see some numbers. Like, how much does it cost, and what kind of reductions are they seeing? I often see studies that amuse me, as though a barely-statisrically-significant 10% risk reduction for some expensive drug with unpleasant side effects is actually worth it.

And is it a permanent solution, or does it require periodic retreatment? Also, are there side effects (like insufficient blood flow to the brain on suddenly standing up)?

Good Space Policy Advice

Stephen Smith has some for the presidential candidates:

U.S. Census statistics show that more people alive now were born after Apollo (185 million) than before (123 million). For the majority of the population, the 1960s Space Age is a page in a history book, and has little personal emotional resonance.

So do yourself and the nation a favor. Don’t invoke Kennedy.

As your campaign staff develops its space policy white paper, begin with a fundamental question — why should people be in space?

Yes.

Arming Our Armed Forces

This is pretty funny, particularly in light of recent flag-related events: “In a twist to recent controversies, Southern States’ militias arming quickly to defend Federal (Union) troops.”

The level of stupidity from the elites in this conversation has been more staggering than usual. First, General Ordierno issued this idiocy:

“I think we have to be careful about over-arming ourselves, and I’m not talking about where you end up attacking each other,” Gen. Ray Odierno, chief of staff of the Army, told reporters. Instead, he said, it’s more about “accidental discharges and everything else that goes along with having weapons that are loaded that causes injuries.”

No one is proposing that anyone “over-arm” service people. And the notion that this has anything to do with Posse Comitatus is ridiculous. They aren’t going to be carrying automatic weapons.

Then we had Martha Radatz, who asked something like “what does that look like”?

Here’s the reality. In the many states that are shall-issue (and the number is growing), a properly soldier can go out and get a CCW, and carry anywhere it’s forbidden. Few non-idiots think that this actually presents a threat to the populace. But when he enters his place of employment, (s)he has to surrender the weapon that (s)he can carry everywhere else, giving up the Second-Amendment natural right of self defense. As a result, a few dozen military personnel have been killed on base over the past few years, mostly by Islamic nutjobs who (unaccountably!) ignored the no-gun policy on base. (including one that was an Army major). The death toll in each and every one of these cases would have been eliminated or dramatically reduced had those present trained and allowed by the civilian government to carry been allowed to carry on base.

The issue of recruiting stations is a different problem because it’s a result not of outdated military policies, but of the “gun-free” mentality of shopping malls. In this case, I think the solution is a few lawsuits by the families of those murdered by people who (unexpectedly!) didn’t pay attention to the sign or policy.

[Update a few minutes later]

More links from Instapundit, and this from (Colonel (ret) Kurt Schlichter):

So why would a commander not order troops who have qualified on their M9 pistols to draw sidearms and ammo and carry them during their duties, at least until this crisis passes? Perhaps their discretion has been withdrawn from higher command – that’s possible, especially with this toxic administration. But more likely it’s because of fear.

It’s the fear that some solider is going to have an “incident” carrying a weapon, and that that incident is going to lead to questions, and in an environment where the Armed Forces are shrinking, the mention of an incident on an officer’s annual evaluation report can mean the difference between a career and a pink slip. It’s the same zero defects mentality that is keeping our military leadership from being an audacious, aggressive band of warriors and morphing it instead into a timid, passive pack of timeservers.

Yeah, troops do dumb things sometimes. During my 27 years leading soldiers, I was consistently amazed by their creativity both in solving problems and in getting into trouble. But while real issues are rare – negligent discharges, lost weapons – they do happen. I dealt with them myself. But that risk is the price of doing business, and when our men and women are being shot down in the street without even a chance to defend themselves, it’s not too high a price to pay.

You train your troops and then you trust them. You punish the knucklehead who screwed up and then you drive on. You don’t turn everyone in uniform into a sitting duck because you don’t want to have to explain to the two-star why Private Snuffy misplaced his Beretta.

Modern America would have lost WW II.

Busy Moon Day

First (as he told me last week he planned to do), Charles Miller rolled out his proposal for a return to the moon, using commercial launchers, at the National Press Club. I haven’t read it yet, but I’m sure it will contain a lot of good info to inform my own project.

Second, Elon had a press telecon to present preliminary findings on the accident. It was apparently a broken strut on the helium tank in the LOX tank, which failed at 20% of the rated strength (it seems to have failed in tension). Return to flight no sooner than September, depending on customer willingness to fly, redesign of strut (and new supplier). Falcon Heavy first flight delayed until Q2 next year. He admitted that it may have occurred due to “complacency” after long string of successful flights. Most current employees had never seen a failure.

[Update a few minutes later]

Alan Boyle (who seems to have retired from NBC, congratulations) has the story at Geekwire.

[Tuesday-morning update]

Here’s a description of what went wrong from the Space Access Society.

[Update a few minutes later]

Here’s Stephen Clark’s takehttp://spaceflightnow.com/2015/07/20/support-strut-probable-cause-of-falcon-9-failure/ over at SpaceflightNow.

SLS

Let the fisking commence: Continue reading SLS