[Early afternoon update]
In case you don’t understand the importance of this charity, you need to read about the struggles of Hillary.
[Early afternoon update]
In case you don’t understand the importance of this charity, you need to read about the struggles of Hillary.
Hey, guys, please stop saying dumb things about it.
A review, including a review of the reviews.
No, you can’t just rewrite the law to justify your junk science, EPA.
This is a good victory, but it doesn’t completely undo the damage from the court’s previous decision, which was also based on junk science.
Over at Bloomberg News, Adam Minter quotes me, sort of. Actually,the quote is from the Space Access Society, via the Reason piece (which misleadingly doesn’t make it a blockquote). Also, the future commercial crew contracts will be fixed price under the FAR, not SAAs.
This seems like a pretty clear explanation to me.
How are they getting away with it?
…mull over what might happen if regulators found significant evidence to implicate Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein in an insider trading scheme.
Let’s say Blankfein asserted his Fifth Amendment right not to answer any questions. Say Goldman was subpoenaed to provide all of Blankfein’s emails. Goldman replied that, instead of complying with the subpoena, it was itself reviewing the emails in question and was considering which ones to release.
Now imagine that, nearly a year later, Goldman admitted that it had not, in fact, reviewed the emails in question, because they had been lost in a computer crash two months before it claimed to be reviewing them. Imagine Goldman also said copies of the emails were lost, because while under subpoena, it had destroyed the “backup tapes” (whatever those are) that held them and that it had also thrown away Blankfein’s actual hard drive.
The thing about dogs eating homework is, it could actually happen. This can’t.
Laws are for the little people, like Goldman Sachs, not the IRS.
…Obama’s assertion that there was “not even a smidgeon of corruption” in the IRS’ attacks on right-wing groups does not reassure. Obama cannot have known there was no corruption given the mountain of evidence that has yet to be produced and now appears to have been destroyed. He could believe there was no corruption because he has faith in everyone who works under him, or he could know there was corruption and be lying about it, but he can’t know there was no corruption. It’s impossible.
For all he knows, there’s a Lois Lerner email that says, “I want you to go after these Tea Party bastards with everything you got. Use every trick you can to keep them on the sidelines for this election cycle. Nuke those fascists.”
IRS Commissioner John Koskinen is sworn in during a congressional hearing on the missing emails from the hard drive of former director Lois Lerner.Photo: Getty Images
Lerner wouldn’t have pleaded the Fifth unless she had reason to believe that there was potential illegality and it could be tied to her.
I wonder if Kyle Smith was influenced by my tweet the other day?
Note: Unlike the IRS's ridiculous email fairy tale, it actually is possible for dogs to eat homework. #StrangeButTrue
— Rand Simberg (@Rand_Simberg) June 14, 2014
And the picture is certainly apt.
[Early afternoon update]
“The emails that came out were bad enough. The ones that were destroyed must have been really, really incriminating.”
When they fall from the sky.
It’s just a matter of time until someone is killed or injured by one. And I have no doubt that some are going to start using them as personal weapons.
It’s been ten years since its first flight into space. Jeff Foust reflects, and he has a new book out to commemorate it:
People have written a lot about this long gap in suborbital spaceflight, and a thorough examination of the causes is beyond the scope of a single post. Virgin Galactic has gone through an extended technical development, including a recent switch in hybrid rocket motors; it now plans to begin flights late this year, about seven years later than its original plans announced in September 2004. XCOR Aerospace’s progress has been hindered at times by limited funding, as Forbes recently reported, although the company announced last month it raised more than $14 million in a Series B funding round that should allow it to bring the Lynx to market. Blue Origin, meanwhile, keeps its plans under tight wraps; it would seem that founder Jeff Bezos, who is also funding the 10,000-Year Clock, is not in a particular rush.
And John Carmack always treated Armadillo as more of a hobby. No, it’s not any single reason (“space is hard”). As I tweeted yesterday, the problem with commercial space, until recently, is that the people with good ideas couldn’t get money to execute them, and the people with the money picked bad ideas. In the case of Virgin, it started when (the late) Jim Benson sold Burt Rutan a bill of goods on hybrids, and people who didn’t understand the technology thought that it would scale easily (though it was never a good idea). It all cascaded from there.
[Update a while later]
The top five posts on this page are my reporting that morning from Mojave.
[Sunday-afternoon update]
Dale Amon remembers that day as well.
[Bumped]