Arnold Kling writes about the big issues on which Republicans have turned their backs on their traditional supporters, and lost the libertarians.
Is The Age Of Carriers Over?
Certainly, it’s very long in the tooth, and it lasted quite a bit longer than the age of battleships (the transition between the true was, arguably, abrupt, occurring on a quiet Sunday morning in Hawaii in early December 1941).
It will be interesting to see how new space capabilities start to trump conventional air power in the next few decades.
Economic Myths Of Space
Over at this post, Brian Dempsey writes:
SS1 cost between $20-30M for 3 flights, which means you
Go For It!
John Kerry is (foolishly) considering another run.
It’s sad, in a way, when one is so imprisoned by unrealistic ambitions held since childhood. I’d feel some sympathy for him if he were a…well…sympathetic character.
Mislearning From History
Donald Stoker writes that, historically, most insurgencies are failures.
the real question in Iraq is not whether the insurgency can be defeated
Why Europe Abandoned Israel
A long, but insightful essay.
There are a number of factors that explain European behavior towards Israel. I have identified seven of them:
- Europe’s dependence on Middle East oil
- Europe’s rivalry with the US
- The growing number of Muslims and their militancy
- The small number of Jews, and their passivity
- The role of elites in Europe’s politics
- Europe’s long term disease of anti-Semitism, and
- The decline of Christianity in Europe.
Turning Up The Heat On Iran
Maybe we’re starting to get serious.
And yes, the notion of Iran complaining about violations of diplomatic facilities bent the needle on my irony meter.
Falcon Launch This Weekend?
Elon Musk says that the window opens on Saturday.
I’m guessing that this flight is one of their milestones for COTS.
Meanwhile, speaking of COTS, Jeffrey Bell wonders what’s really behind it.
He confuses VSE and ESAS (as many do). The Space Frontier Foundation is not opposed to VSE–it is opposed to ESAS.
I think that the answer to his question is much simpler than any of his speculations, and I don’t buy his theory of “COTS as management slush fund for Constellation.” COTS is funded because the White House wants COTS to be funded. What their motivation is, I don’t know, but this is not a NASA-driven program, for any reason of the reasons he states. And that’s bad news, since it may not have any defenders in a new administration. They’re going to have to make a lot of progress in the next two years to ensure program survival. And even then, it could be cancelled. We’ve certainly done dumber things.
Escaping The Times Select Firewall
John Tierney is blogging on science.
A Beating Heart
Manufactured from stem cells. Some of the commenters are skeptical, though.