Paul Ehrlich, on Mark Steyn’s latest.
Desalinating Water
I wonder if there’s a catch? If not, this would be revolutionary.
Synthetic Messenger RNA
…to tell our bodies how to manufacture their own medicine.
Cool, if it works. Faster, please.
Back In LA
I was scheduled to come home this evening, but I had no other business in Seattle, and it turned out that Alaska lets you change flights same day for only $25, so I actually caught a 6 AM flight.
The bad news is that Fedora doesn’t seem to want to boot into the 4.2.5 kernel, in either Fedora 22 or Fedora 23 (I hoped upgrading to the latter would fix). It just bombs out and loops in a continual effort to boot. I had to revert to 4.1 to boot it. Not sure how to diagnose. I’ve seen hints that others are having similar problems in the Fedora fora, but no indication of what to do about it.
The Learning Period For Regulating Spaceflight Participant Safety
It will be extended until 2023.
If we haven’t started flying by then, we might as well give up.
The Clinton Email Probe
Well, well, well. The FBI has stepped up the interviews.
But wait! I thought the president said here was nothing there. Why won’t the FBI listen to him?
Tethers Unlimited
Just had an interesting visit there, where they’re working on a lot of tech that will reduce (to the limited degree it exists) the justification for large-fairing launch payloads, with new orbital-assembly techniques, including 3-D printing. They’re working on (among other things) ways of building large lightweight trusses for orbital structure, that could lead ultimately to assembly hangars. They’re also developing ways to recycle a lot of plastic goods (like bubble wrap and zip locks) into cord to feed 3-D printers at the ISS. Very exciting stuff.
The Mess On Campus
Are we creating a generation of mentally-ill, credentialed, physically mature children?
These people will never survive in the real world.
[Update a couple minutes later]
What the Yale shame should teach us.
I spent a lot of time in Columbia over the past couple weeks.
Somehow, this seems like cheap theatrics. I suspect that if they’d had a chance at a bowl, they wouldn’t have made this threat. Amusingly, I heard this morning that the basketball team (which I’d imagine has a black player or two) wants nothing to do with it. But they still have hopes for a successful season.
[Tuesday-morning update]
The “collective guilt of white people in Missouri“:
The goal is not to establish responsibility and identify actual perpetrators. The actual goal is power: the power to make demands that will be obeyed—the power to turn the tables and reverse the power differential, putting the protesters in charge of what Allan Bloom called the “dancing bears” in the university faculty and/or administration. A central demand of protesters such as those at Missouri is almost always a university-wide process of mind-control and intimidation, with the mandatory requirement that administrators offer and faculty and students attend classes and/or workshops that describe exactly what is now required in terms of speech, thought, and behavior that the protesters deem acceptable.
In other words, the protesters want to become the official campus propagandists. Perhaps they already have done so.
Yes. And in addition to the re-education camps, they won’t be satisfied with these two scalps.
Oopsie, that was racist, I guess.
Islamists are watching American universities die in a blizzard of special snowflakes, and liking their odds against the next generation.
— John Hayward (@Doc_0) November 10, 2015
[Update a while later]
Remember this is one of the top “journalism” schools in the country:
“You need to back up if you’re with the media!” a voice in the background yelled to the journalists trying to document the protest. “You need to respect the students! Back up!”
“I am a student,” Tim Tai, a student photographer trying to cover the protest, responded.
After Tai protested that the crowd was trying to push him, several people in the crowd laughed, tried to cover the camera with their hands, and responded, “Okay, then we’ll just block you.”
“You don’t have a right to take our photos,” one of the protesters asserted, apparently unaware that he was on taxpayer-funded public property that is by law open to the press.
Later in the video, the crowd aggressively started pushing the reporter around in an attempt to get him to stop covering their behavior.
As noted, I suspect they don’t think that police has such a right to “privacy” from being photographed. Freedom for me, not for thee.
[Afternoon update]
This is a little good news. The J-School faculty is voting to withdraw the courtesy appointment of the little fascist.
Lying Politicians
Compare and contrast how the media cover them, depending on political party.
[Update a while later]
It’s good to be a Democrat. Well, except for that unpopularity-when-they’re-not-running-with-Obama-at-the-head-of-the-ticket thing.
The Democrats
How they lost the war for staying power.
They mistook the popularity of the (bewildering, and invisible to me) charisma of Obama for the power of their (lack of) ideas.
[Update a couple minutes later]
Barack Obama ain’t nobody special.