Go check out Astropolitics. It looks like it’s only available in print, at least so far, but those who are seriously into space policy may want to subscribe. I have to say that I recognize very few names on the editorial review board.
Broken Windows And Shattered Dreams
That’s the title of this week’s Fox News column, which is an expansion on this post from a couple weeks ago.
Alcor Vindicated
Here’s some good news on the cryonics front.
The Arizona Republic says that their cryonic storage facilities passed state and local inspections recently, and that Larry Johnson’s charges are clearly bogus.
According to Alcor News, Alcor served Mr. Johnson with a lawsuit on August 23rd. It says that in addition to the civil suit, other charges may be pending against him.
Follow Up
A few months ago, I did an interview with pioneer space entrepreneur Gary Hudson. Recently, Clark Lindsey did another one. It’s a good read, and a good update from mine.
Feel The Love
So I was listening to the radio in the car a few minutes ago, and I heard Governor Gray “Gumby” Davis say that “Republicans would rather shoot their mothers than raise taxes.”
Business Prospects For Space Transports
For those who don’t regularly check out The Space Review (you really should), Jeff Foust has a good overview of the financing prospects for private RLVs. Summary: he’s not sanguine about the near-term prospects for getting orbital systems, but thinks that profitable suborbital ones could provide a path to them. I agree, though I’m not quite as pessimistic about orbital transports as he is. We’ll see if Elon Musk can prove him wrong by evolving from a partially reusable system to a fully reusable one.
Misplaced Outrage
As we approach the second anniversary, does anyone else have the sense that many Democrats (particularly the ones swooning over Dr. Dean) are more angry at George Bush than they are at the people who destroyed the World Trade Center?
Still A Republican Party Animal
The Onion has a great interview with P. J. O’Rourke.
…I feel like now, I guess, everybody pays lip service to libertarian?and, indeed, many conservative?ideas, and yet they keep moving forward with an increasingly bureaucratic state. It shows itself in all sorts of little ways. I’m not screaming about injustice here, or gulags. I buy a tractor two years ago, and four-fifths of the tractor manual is about not tipping over, not raising the bucket high enough to hit high-tension wire… not killing yourself, basically. The tractor itself is covered with stickers: Don’t put your hand in here. Don’t put your dick in there. And in that manual, I found out?and it cost me a thousand dollars?that when the tractor is new, 10 hours into use of the tractor, you have to re-torque the lug nuts. If you don’t, you will oval the holes. This is buried between the moron warnings. I never found it. I take the tractor in for its regular servicing, and they say my wheels are gone. A thousand dollars worth of wheels have to be replaced because I didn’t re-torque after 10 hours. How am I supposed to know that? “It’s in the manual.” You f***ing read that manual! You go through 40 pages of how not to tip over! Anyway, that’s the world that we seem to be moving into. And just because a society has absorbed these ideas and pays them lip service, anyone who’s talking about libertarian ideas and certain basic conservative principles will get people who nod politely and say, “Oh, yeah, we knew that already.” It’s a pain in the ass.
Go read the…well, you know the drill.
Another Milestone For Burt
SpaceShipOne had a successful test of its feathered descent last week.
Bad News For The Marsoholics
“‘Forget Mars!’ the president was heard to say.”