Syria and other important matters.

Friday, April 7, 2017

The map is not the territory.

Alfred Korzybski

If you establish a democracy, you must in due time reap the fruits of a democracy. You will in due season have great impatience of public burdens, combined in due season with great increase of public expenditure. You will in due season have wars entered into from passion and not from reason;

Benjamin Disraeli

Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.

George Santayana

bubbles

It is now known that although President Trump did not directly notify President Putin of the impending strike against the Syrian airbase, established protocols for notifying Russian military in the region of upcoming operations were activated; President Trump knew that the Russians knew we were going to fire missiles at that airbase, and when we would do it. Since the area is defended with Russian SAM-10 and SAMs of lesser but quite effective capability, yet all 59 missiles apparently reached their targets, it is a reasonable inference that the Russians were ordered to stand down and let the attack take place.

It is also an even greater puzzle: who attacked Khan Sheikhoun, the northern Syrian town struck by war gasses, and why? There are few known military targets anywhere near where the war gas attack – said by the Turks to be sarin – took place. The New York Times summarizes quite well why Assad had good reason not to order such an attack:

The Grim Logic Behind Syria’s Chemical Weapons Attack

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/04/06/world/middleeast/syria-bashar-al-assad-russia-sarin-attack.html?_r=0

 

BEIRUT, Lebanon — The diplomatic situation had been looking bright for President Bashar al-Assad of Syria. With the help of Russia, he had consolidated his power, the rebels were on their heels and the United States had just declared that ousting him was not a priority.

So why would Mr. Assad risk it all, outraging the world by attacking civilians with what Turkey now says was the nerve agent sarin, killing scores of people, many of them children? Why would he inflict the deadliest chemical strike since the 2013 attacks outside Damascus? Those attacks came close to bringing American military retaliation then. And in a stunningly swift reversal, Tuesday’s attack drew a response from President Trump: dozens of cruise missiles launched at a Syrian air base.

One of the main defenses offered by Mr. Assad’s allies and supporters, in disputing that his forces carried out the strike on Tuesday, is that such an attack would be “a crazy move,” as one Iranian analyst, Mosib Na’imi, told the Russian state-run news site Sputnik. [snip]

This logic seems nearly impeccable. But the Times continues

[snip] Yet, rather than an inexplicable act, analysts say, it is part of a carefully calculated strategy of escalating attacks against civilians.

For years, at least since it began shelling neighborhoods with artillery in 2012, then bombing them from helicopters and later from jets, the Syrian government has adopted a policy of seeking total victory by making life as miserable as possible for anyone living in areas outside its control. [snip]

The article continues to make this case at length, and you can believe as much of it as you want to. The fact remains that using war gasses on civilian rebels at that time and place makes no sense for Assad, and whatever he may be, I would not have said he was stupid. If you have a winning position, why take stupid chances that can do you very little good, and can do you a great deal of harm?

So who does benefit from the war gas attack on Khan Sheikhoun? The rebels, of course. And of those rebels, the Caliphate stands to gain most. Assad has lost an airfield. And if the United States can be sucked into a conflict with Russia, all the better. The cost of the attack? One expendable missile, fired from anywhere although preferably from in or near Assad regime territory.

Who is most likely to have war gasses? ISIS – the Caliphate.

For a more detailed analysis, see:

What caused the chemical calamity in Khan Sheikhoun, Syria on April 4, 2017?

https://www.rootclaim.com/claims/what-caused-the-chemical-calamity-in-khan-sheikhoun-syria-on-april-4-2017-18448

Overview

Hypotheses

Calculated

Conclusions

1

Opposition forces carried out a chemical attack (as a false flag).[1]

52% (Inconclusive)

2

A Syrian Arab Army (SAA) conventional bombing caused an unintentional release of opposition chemical agents.[2]

36% (Somewhat unlikely)

3

The Syrian Arab Army (SAA) carried out a chemical attack.[3]

12% (Somewhat unlikely)

While I cannot endorse these numbers for lack of evidence, I do think their rank order of likelihood is correct, and I will go further and say I find it easier to believe this was a false flag operation by ISIS than any other hypothesis. They have the means, motive, and opportunity. Assad has little motive, and international inspectors do not believe he has the means (although this is hardly decisive: he has the means to acquire war gasses; I leave calculating the probability that he has done so without detection to you.

I do not find it likely that any war gas, sarin or otherwise, was lying around in that village and was accidentally released, either by a Syrian air strike or anything else. US intelligence is convinced that there was a Syrian air strike, and that this was the delivery of the war gas. They certainly have evidence that there was an air strike, and that it came from the now destroyed Syrian air field; I have not seen or heard of the evidence that the air strike was delivery of a chemical weapon.

I have seen no evidence that the Syrian air strike was against a rebel owned war gas manufacturing facility, which is another possible explanation for Syrian air presence at the time of the war gas attack. It, is, however more believable than that Assad has secretly hidden war gasses from international inspectors, then chose to use them against his own people in an attack that had no military target at all but was intended merely to kill civilians and children in the presence of the international press.

But if it was a false flag operation intended to deceive President Trump, its success is alarming, and does little to increase the credibility or efficiency of US intelligence operations in that region, or the analysts in the White House. Since we don’t know, we can draw no conclusions. But we can wonder if the main beneficiary of this operation may not be the Caliphate.

bubbles

Was it sarin?

I have seen no evidence of sarin. Sarin need not be breathed; it is a liquid and a very tiny amount absorbed through the skin is deadly. The rescue and medical workers in the TV pictures show victims gasping for breath. With sarin you do not gasp. You can’t.

What was it? Most of the symptoms I observed in the TV pictures suggest phosgene or even chlorine, but both are fairly easily detected and we have heard no accounts of “new mown hay” or Clorox odors. Neither is as lethal as this agent obviously was. It was obviously a war gas, but apparently some were exposed and lived, and unprotected medical and rescue worker were in close contact with victims but were not affected. I have no idea.

bubbles

I have this:

Air Strike “Was it Machiavelli or Sun Tsu?”
LOL, it was Curly, you know the Stooge.
This pitiful excuse for a cruise missile strike has the Russian staff cracking jokes. My favorite: “We have no idea what happened to the missing 36 missiles.”
You may have learned more by now but I’ll help. You can look at the pictures for yourself. The runways are fine, you killed 6 planes and it looks like some powerful spoof threw the rest of the missiles off target. Remember, “the Russians have eye watering EW capacity”, some US general after the Ukraine started.

Chris Carson

I have not seen these pictures. The last news I have was that all 59 missiles reached their target, and the target was devastated. Obviously if that is incorrect the situation is radically changed. One reason I hate to comment on breaking news with incomplete information.

bubbles

tomahawks

Friday was the day Donald Trump truly became president. The buck stopped here with him. Before this he was doing a wonderful job as chief administrator. Friday he became commander in chief of the most powerful military in the world. His actions were retrained but powerful. A warning to stop now before it get worse. It’s easy for many to say he should have ignored what happened, but he had to look at the real time Intel of all those dead babies. I’m rather proud of him.

Good Bless the United States of America.

Phil Tharp

I have the same feelings. I also recall Disraeli

http://www.azquotes.com/quote/604987

bubbles

Syrian Gas Attack & Response I’m troubled by many aspects of this gas attack.
It appears to be suspiciously well and quickly documented in war-torn Syria. I have seen no documentation or suggestion of a military target nearby.
Which suggests the question of why Assad would engage in Suicide by Trump?
If this was a false flag operation it was designed and executed expertly. Almost no one would not take the bait and President Trump was almost certain to.
So, if this was a false flag attack, who benefits?
We can be sure the Russians were watching those Tomahawks in great detail with every sensor platform they have.

Tony

I have the same suspicions, and I do not see anyone dealing with them. I do not like this.

bubbles

Other takes on Syria

All may not be as it appears. It rarely is, as we seem to re-discover every day.

http://blog.dilbert.com/post/159300836386/the-syrian-air-base-attack

More evidence that it wasn’t Assad who used the gas (although Hersch seems to assume it was sarin):

https://americanlookout.com/rms-legendary-investigative-journalist-hillary-approved-sale-of-nerve-gas-to-syria/

More about Hersch:

https://consortiumnews.com/2017/04/06/nyt-retreats-on-2013-syria-sarin-claims/

Richard White

I find the Dilbert analysis very well done and interesting. We don’t know anything, and the news slowly filters out.

bubbles

How Convenient For The Israelis

Dear Jerry,

http://www.independent.co.uk/voices/new-war-middle-east-israel-hezbollah-lebanon-iran-syria-donald-trump-us-administration-conflict-a7670126.html

It sure looks like a rematch is being scheduled for the failed 2006 War.  Its probably been forgotten that Israel roundly lost the 2006 fight against Hezbollah tactically and operationally.  Strategically the outcome was a stalemate at best.  Israel then tried to mask this defeat by a period of indiscriminate shelling and bombing of civilians all over Lebanon, similar to what Assad is accused of doing recently.  Except that no one has alleged Assad used US supplied weapons to do whatever he is alleged to have done.

And of course both Assad and Hezbollah are well known allies, proxies and satellites of Iran, the contemporary source of all evil on Earth.

It was certainly fortuitous for Friends of Israel everywhere that Assad chose this precise moment to decide it was vital to his regime’s survival to deploy chemical weapons of mass destruction against unarmed civilians.

Best Wishes,

Mark

No comment. Of course it has to be considered.

bubbles

Strike

Dr Pournelle 

RE: Slay a dragon

This is speculation, but perhaps the strike on the Syrian air base was also intended to serve notice to the Chinese gov’t: Trump will do what he says he will do. You will not see multiple lines drawn in the sand. You will not see even one. 

There’s a new sheriff in town. 

The Chinese president cannot fail to notice the size or the timing: massive strike ordered, dinner, massive strike reported. Trump said he will nuke Pyongyang. He means it. Curb your dog now or we will put it down. 

As to the reduced casualties, I think the timing was driven more by the dinner with the Chinese president than by a desire to mitigate casualties. If I wanted to send a message to the Syrians, I would have struck when they were open and taken out the command element. 

Live long and prosper 

h lynn keith

It will certainly have that effect.

bubbles

Syrian Attack

The missiles strikes against Syria came with many interesting reports.

In 2013, the US government could not link Assad to the strike. I read reports that Syrian rebels claimed responsibility. I do not have a position on the 2013 incident and neither does LTG Michael Flynn:

<.>

During a 2015 trip to Russia, Donald Trump’s pick to be national security adviser, Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn, said he didn’t know whether the 2013 sarin gas attack in Syria was conducted by the Syrian Army or by other forces in an attempt to draw the United States into the conflict.

Flynn not ruling out the possibility of a “false flag” attack raises questions about how the Trump administration will approach the Syrian conflict.

</>

http://www.cnn.com/2016/11/20/politics/kfile-michael-flynn-rt-syria/index.html

Russia seems pretty sure the 2013 incident was not Assad:

<.>

Russia said it has “clear” evidence that Syrian rebels fired a rocket laden with sarin gas at an Aleppo suburb in March, a view that clashed with U.S. conclusions on the same issue last month and was initially rejected Tuesday by Washington.

</>

https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424127887324507404578596153561287028

And the Russians aren’t alone on this:

https://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2013/05/un-sources-say-rebel-forces-not-assad-used-sarin-gas/315588/

http://www.reuters.com/article/us-syria-crisis-un-idUSBRE94409Z20130505

Russia will make a similar argument about the 2017 strike before the United Nations:

<.>

Russia will argue at the United Nations that an apparent chemical attack that left scores dead in Syria was in fact contamination caused by rebels’ chemical munitions, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Wednesday.

</>

http://www.businessinsider.com/russia-to-argue-at-un-that-syrian-rebels-responsible-for-chemical-weapons-attack-that-killed-dozens-2017-4

Now, Russia offered two stories. The one in this article claims the Russian side believes that a Syrian rebel chemical munitions factory was hit in the strike, causing the leak. Others on the ground say two chemical strikes occurred — the initial strike and then a strike on first responders. But, another Russian source stated the rebels knew, in advance, of the airstrike and released the gas around the same time as the airstrike to make it look as if Assad had done it.

As with the 2013 incident, I do not know what to make of the 2017 incident. Like you, I would not have ordered the strike until I was clear on what was happening.

It is curious the Russians did not attempt to intercept any of the cruise missiles. I have some ideas about that, but I’m sure you do too…. Not being a fly on the wall at the Kremlin, I’ll keep my ideas to myself for now.

◊ ◊ ◊ ◊ ◊

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

Percussa Resurgo

I am not privy to Kremlin policy discussions.

bubbles

More on NASA and Em Drive

http://www.digitaltrends.com/cool-tech/emdrive-news-rumors/
A leaked NASA paper was posted on a NASA spaceflight forum –
http://www.digitaltrends.com/cool-tech/nasa-paper-emdrive/
says that the drive actually works!
“But a leaked NASA document obtained this week by the IB Times suggests the system may indeed be viable. The paper, described as “an early draft of Nasa’s much-anticipated peer-reviewed paper”on the technology, details tests carried out by NASA’s experimental Eagleworks Laboratories at the Johnson Space Center in Texas and describes the system “consistently performing.”
I’d prefer a link to the paper rather than a link to a page talking about the paper. But, it is what it is.

Peter

You can believe as much as you want to. I would like to believe it all, but the lack of evidence I can examine keeps interfering.

bubbles

NR: did Obama aide commission false NOAA report

Dr Pournelle,
Spotted this summary in National Review: http://www.nationalreview.com/article/446505/judicial-watch-lawsuit-seeks-obama-white-house-records-controversial-global-warming
A president abusing his office in order to influence holy science? Say it ain’t so!
Maybe that Trump transition team questionnaire to the EPA was sort of justified? Maybe the march of scientists is just practice for a beltway job fair? Maybe Bill Nye is just another loud nut job entertainer? Maybe it was all just a Chinese conspiracy?
Wishing you and Roberta the best,
-d

I bite my lip…

bubbles

Mining Asteroids Just Got Real

Yes, I know it’s “The Sun” and respectable “news” like MSNBC, CNBC, CNN, Fox, and the Wall Street Journal never do fake news — oh wait they do.. WSJ is involved in the anti-Google ad revenue scandal that

I can brief you on if you prefer. But, I digress. The Sun reports

on something picked up by Business Insider (a NYT publication) and others on mining asteroids and Goldman Sach’s support of the same:

<.>

“While the psychological barrier to mining asteroids is high, the actual financial and technological barriers are far lower,” the report said, according to Business Insider.

“Prospecting probes can likely be built for tens of millions of dollars each and Caltech has suggested an asteroid-grabbing spacecraft could cost $2.6bn.”

[Goldman Sachs] added: “Space mining could be more realistic than perceived.”

It is believed an asteroid the size of a football field could be worth up to £40 billion.

However, bringing that much platinum back to Earth is likely to crash the precious metal market – and probably the rest of the economy with it.

</>

https://www.thesun.co.uk/tech/3270708/goldman-sachs-unveils-realistic-plan-to-earn-vast-sums-of-money-by-mining-platinum-from-asteroids/

And this crap about “crashing the economy” reveals that writers at The Sun clearly don’t understand how the diamond trade works. Nobody would want to “crash the market” as that would ruin their profits.

Better to bring the stuff back here, sit on it like a dragon, and release it — discreetly — into the economy while transferring wealth to one’s self and one’s associates. That, I believe, is the more likely course of action — assuming no one pirates the payload. Space pirates will crop up very quickly, I’ll bet.

Whatever the case, we must learn to live in space!

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

Percussa Resurgo

 

I have been saying do since A Step Farther Out…

bubbles

Atmosphere Detected On An Earth-sized Exoplanet

Jerry,
From the BBC: Atmosphere found around Earth-like planet GJ 1132b (http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-39521344).
The planet is 1.4 times Earth’s mass and orbits a M type star. It is estimated to have a surface temperature of 370 degrees C, so there is little hope of life as we know it, but this is a demonstration that atmospheres on Earth-sized exoplanets can be detected and even partly characterized by current technology. Legacy of Heorot, anyone?

Kevin

Speaking of which, it’s time to go working on Godsons and Starborn

bubbles

bubbles

bubbles

bubbles

Freedom is not free. Free men are not equal. Equal men are not free.

bubbles

bubbles

US slays a dragon.

Thursday, April 6, 2017

Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.

George Santayana

bubbles

bubbles

1135 You all know of the US missile strike in Syria. President Trump has found a dragon to kill, and he has dealt it a serious blow, although he did not slay it. The dragon had not attacked the United States, but it had left Syrian children gasping for breath as they died on camera. You could expect any man to react to that. Mr. Trump is certainly one of them.  Only a monster would order that chemical attack, and monsters deserve death and destruction.

Observations:

Apparently all 50 Tomahawks struck home. Assuming that to be true, several deductions are possible.

First, those are slow missiles. Top speed, about 500 miles per hour. They are very accurate, but they are slow. They were in the air for at least half an hour. They went past areas defended by Russian missiles of SA-6 and newer, any of them capable of shooting down a slow cruise missile like a Tomahawk. It is unlikely that the fleet of 50 Tomahawks, fired in a time on target pattern, were not observed; but so far as I know, not one was intercepted. 

Second, the attack was limited to a single military installation which was presumed to be the base from which the chemical attack on the Syrian civilians including children. While limited to that base area, the attack was massive: over fifty Tomahawk missiles, each carrying 1,000 pounds of high explosives, in a time on target attack by highly accurate missiles fired from ships who we may assume took a carefully controlled course during launch. We may assume the base was entirely destroyed. The missiles arrived at 0430, meaning there were few casualties; most base personnel would be in quarters, which we may assume were not targeted.  We may assume the skippers and missile officers of the US destroyers had excellent satellite photographs of the base and knew all its buildings and their purposes. And we may conclude the base was destroyed.

The message is clear: You had six air bases, Now you have five. Do you care to try for four? Or fewer?

I think I would not have ordered that attack, affected as I was by the photographs of the effects of the chemical attack. Yes, it could only have been ordered by a monster deserving slaying. But there are many monsters. We could slay a dragon a month for a year, two years, but we would run out of resources before we would run out of dragons. I agree with John Quincy Adams. We do not go abroad seeking dragons to slay.  We are the friends of liberty everywhere, but we are the guardians of our own. President Trump ordered this strike in the name of national security. It took place while he was at dinner with the President of China the evening before the first formal negotiations with China.  It was only after they parted after dinner that President received the strike report and announced the strike, but the President of China must know that the attack was consummated during their otherwise uneventful dinner.

But if I were to order such an attack, it would have been as President Trump did it: massive, decisive, but limited in scope, destroying its target but with minimal collateral damage.

bubbles

A few observations: the gas employed probably was not sarin, soman or any other nerve agent. You do not die gasping for air if exposed to those nerve agents. You just die.  What war gas was employed?

The symptoms resembled those of phosgene, but that war gas is so easily detected and identified that it is unlikely. I don’t know of many war gasses other than nerve agents that have the lethality reported. Wild speculation: medical personnel treated a suffocating gas with massive doses of nerve agent antidotes. Those antidotes plus the initial exposure to the suffocating agent might very well be fatal.  But this is speculation, not to be taken as a conclusion based on anything other than TV observations,

 

bubbles

We wait to see what effects this will have. Good night, and God Bless America.

bubbles

Was it Machiavelli or Sun Tsu?

Never do your enemy a small injury.

US launches military strike on Syria airbase

US launches military strike on Syria airbase

The United States launched a military strike Thursday on an airbase in Syria, multiple U.S. officials have confi…

 

B-

Both I expect. And that was my first reaction.  But this was not a small injury.  It was on out of only six operational bases, and it was destroyed.

 

bubbles

bubbles

bubbles

bubbles

Freedom is not free. Free men are not equal. Equal men are not free.

bubbles

bubbles

Writers of the Future; Upcoming projects; mysterious affairs. Rational discussion? NASA and space development; and new physics.

Monday, April 3, 2017

The map is not the territory.

Alfred Korzybski

If a foreign government had imposed this system of education on the United States, we would rightfully consider it an act of war.

Glenn T. Seaborg, National Commission on Education, 1983

bubbles

bubbles

Pretty well spent the weekend on the Writers of the Future awards ceremony events. Every year the Author Services people who run the Writers of the Future contest fly in a bunch of my colleagues so I can have dinner with them, and I always look forward to that. Of course this isn’t what Authors Services thinks they’re doing; they believe they are getting all the Writers of the Future contest judges together so be presenters at the awards ceremony, with a big book signing production before the dinner of Friday night and now they’ve got a lot of professional authors to talk writing with the contest winners, so we all spend some of Friday and Saturday talking writing to the newcomers, some of whom will indeed be our colleagues in future.

Also I spent some time with Colonel Doug Beason, now retired Chief Scientist of Space Command as well as former Commandant of Holloman where USAF does a lot of their highest tech weapons development; Doug is interested in planetary defense, a subject touched on but not analyzed in The Strategy of Technology, Possony and Pournelle, 1970, and which Doug and I have been interested in since he was a captain. We’re discussing a new anthology, similar to the early volumes of There Will Be War: stories, essays, and analyses on the theme, with introductions and/or afterwords on the stories and articles by one or both of us; that was pretty well the format of my old anthologies, and they were fairly popular. Doug has also done some best selling fiction, which is why he’s one of the WOTF judges, but our main concern is to focus some attention on planetary defense. Obviously the main threat is one or another natural events, but there’s room for other thoughts.

While I’m on that, the boffins at the Isle of Mann space outfit are taking apart A Step Farther out with a view of bringing out a revised edition; we’ll see, but I have some good feelings about this.

I also had lunch with Pat Henry, President of Dragon Con – the theme of the WOTF presentations this year was dragons. It’s been a while since I was last at DragonCon what with brain cancer and then the stroke, but I really enjoyed the Con. We discussed the logistics of my getting there again, and it’s maybe possible. We’ll see.

Anyway, Writers of the Future always enjoyably consumes a weekend every year, and I’m happy when it does.

But it’s also tax preparation time at Chaos Manor, and this year what with expenses associated with Roberta’s stroke, as well as the residual financial effects of mine, it’s going to be complicated. I’ll try to keep up here.

bubbles

I’m about to go up and work on Starborn and Godsons – would Grendels, Starborn and Godsons be a better title? – so this will be truncated, and I’ll ad some more tonight after Roberta goes to bed or maybe sooner.

When I do I’ll also add to the title so you can know there’s stuff you haven’t seen. One thing about the old Front Page journal, I could add to it at any time, but there were a lot of drawbacks to that, too. Some day I’ll give some thought to journal or daybook design so it makes sense while being easier on the readers as well as the author.

bubbles

Washington Post March 1:

 

Trump questions who is really behind anti-Semitic threats and vandalism

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/post-nation/wp/2017/02/28/trump-questioned-who-is-really-behind-anti-semitic-threats-and-vandalism-official-says/?utm_term=.538c2ad77aab

President Trump questioned who was behind a recent spate of anti-Semitic threats and incidents during a meeting with state attorneys general on Tuesday, according to two people present.

When Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro (D) asked him about the recent threats against Jewish facilities, the president responded by condemning the incidents but then “suggested the ‘reverse’ may be true,” Shapiro said.

“I don’t know what the president meant by that statement,” Shapiro said in a statement.

Trump “made this reference that sometimes it’s the reverse” and then “used that word ‘reverse’ several times,” Joe Grace, a spokesman for Shapiro, said in a telephone interview Tuesday afternoon. Grace was relaying what Shapiro had said publicly during a phone call with reporters earlier Tuesday.

[Trump is flirting with the idea that anti-Semitic incidents are false flags — again]

D.C. Attorney General Karl A. Racine (D), who was at the meeting, confirmed Shapiro’s account and said he was disturbed by the president’s comments.

 

Note the editorial comment inserted into this “journalism”.

That followed the February 28 Post:

 

Trump is flirting with the idea that anti-Semitic incidents are false flags again

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-fix/wp/2017/02/28/trump-is-reportedly-hinting-that-anti-semitic-incidents-are-false-flags-it-wouldnt-be-the-first-time/?utm_term=.a50eb68fd48f

President Trump seemed to suggest Tuesday that the recent bomb threats and vandalism at Jewish community centers and cemeteries across the country might be false flags, according to a Democratic attorney general who met with him. And Trump’s comments came the same day that one of his top advisers suggested the culprits could be Democrats.

It wouldn’t be the first time Trump went down this road.

Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro (D) told reporters Tuesday that Trump expressed horror at the situation but also appeared to suggest it might not be anti-Semitism and that it could be “the reverse,” The Post’s Mark Berman confirmed.

 

And yet, it turns out, Israeli police – with help from FBI agents – arrested in Israel an Israeli-American hacker who, it turn out, was the source of the wave of anti-Semitic attacks:

Israel arrests hacker linked to threats on US Jewish centers

http://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory/israel-police-arrest-suspect-threats-us-jewish-targets-46323677

A 19-year-old American-Israeli Jew was arrested Thursday as the prime suspect in a wave of bomb threats against U.S. Jewish community centers, a startling turn in a case that had stoked fears of rising anti-Semitism in the United States.

The surprising arrest of the man, a hacker who holds dual Israeli and American citizenship, came after a trans-Atlantic investigation with the FBI and other international law enforcement agencies. U.S. Jewish groups welcomed the breakthrough in the case, which had drawn condemnation from President Donald Trump.

Israeli police described the suspect as a hacker, but said his motives were still unclear.

“He’s the guy who was behind the JCC threats,” police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said, referring to the scores of anonymous threats phoned in to Jewish community centers in the U.S. over the past two months.

 

 

This isn’t the only instance of this, as Israel Shamir explains:

Eerie Prescience of Donald Trump

http://www.unz.com/ishamir/eerie-prescience-of-donald-trump/

 

bubbles

I will have considerably more on the Flynn affair. One thing to remember: Flynn did more than discuss the Obama sanctions against Russia. From Shamir’s article above:

Flynn did his best (I presume on orders of Trump) to calm the Russians. He offered and procured help: the expelled diplomats needed a plane to leave on very short notice, and seats weren’t available. Flynn fixed it. Flynn told the Ambassador that Trump would roll back Obama’s punitive measures related to the expulsion. The Ambassador passed the message to Putin, and Putin, always a gentleman, refrained from tit-for-tat expulsion of the US diplomats from Moscow, as he would definitely do otherwise. Putin even invited children of the US diplomats to a Christmas event in Kremlin. So Flynn acted for the benefit of America and its diplomats, and saved the two great countries from much aggravation. He deserves a medal for his work, not a dismissal; and it is really shame that Trump could not keep him.

 

If anyone now believes that Trump was unaware of Flynn’s discussions of the sanctions with the Russian Ambassador, they must believe he acted without orders in procuring the airplane for the Russian families.

I’m going upstairs to work but this needs more analysis.

Remember:

Justice Department warned White House that Flynn could be vulnerable to Russian blackmail, officials say

https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/justice-department-warned-white-house-that-flynn-could-be-vulnerable-to-russian-blackmail-officials-say/2017/02/13/fc5dab88-f228-11e6-8d72-263470bf0401_story.html?utm_term=.7246a2edff8e

The acting attorney general informed the Trump White House late last month that she believed Michael Flynn had misled senior administration officials about the nature of his communications with the Russian ambassador to the United States, and warned that the national security adviser was potentially vulnerable to Russian blackmail, current and former U.S. officials said.

The message, delivered by Sally Q. Yates and a senior career national security official to the White House counsel, was prompted by concerns that ­Flynn, when asked about his calls and texts with the ­Russian diplomat, had told Vice ­President-elect Mike Pence and others that he had not discussed the Obama administration sanctions on Russia for its interference in the 2016 election, the officials said. It is unclear what the White House counsel, Donald McGahn, did with the ­information.

Flynn resigned Monday night in the wake of revelations about his contacts with the Russian ambassador.

If anyone can explain how any of this makes sense, I welcome the attempt.

bubbles

After dinner and some work on Starborn etc.

The whole obsession with Russia is either very low politics or insane: we all know that we employed all kinds of aggressive measures from Voice of America to clandestine operations against Communism, as they did against us. Their system was not successful in overthrowing the capitalist system, but intellectually it was a much nearer thing, and now there are probably more Marxists in our University system than people who have read Adam Smith or have any idea of how capitalist economics works; and even fewer have ever heard of Roepke’s Humane Economy or any of the other alternatives to both Marxism and capitalism. The American system of higher education, once the marvel of the world, is sinking into a swamp of unitary thinking intolerant of rational discussion of its core ideas, and seeking not Socrates’ examined life, but safe places where there will be no disturbing ideas or triggering of unpleasant feelings.

 

We are aware of many felonies, beginning with the unmasking of American citizens caught up in the investigations undertaken when Mr. Obama was President. Not only were American citizens’ names revealed to unauthorized personnel, but they were also leaked to the press; black letter law felonies. And as the investigations continue, more evidence appears that American citizens, associated with the Trump operations, were discussed openly at the Obama White House, and not in connection with any investigation into Russian operations in the US elections.

A favorite ploy of the left: suppose, they say, that it is true and Trump conspired with Russia to get Russian help in winning the election. What should be the consequence>

Nut, you protest, there is no evidence whatsoever that anything like that happened.

Yes, but just suppose it’s true, what should happen?

At this point the conversation could end, but if you say, well, in that case there should be an impeachment, you are now a statistic: an American who believes there ought to be a impeachment.  I have seen it happen. Of course this makes no more sense that asking what should happen if we discover that Mr. Obama eats babies for breakfast, or that Mr. Trump enjoys ragout of human teenagers, but it seems to be happening.c After all, didn’t Mr. Trump and Mr. Putin vacation together in Thailand, and surely they discussed the election, and couldn’t it have happened…  Of course there is no evidence that Mr. Trump and Mr. Putin were ever in Thailand at the same time. But it could have happened, couldn’t it?

And apparently this passes for rational discussion today.

 

 

 

bubbles

The Biggest Rocket ever Designed? – The Sea Dragon Dear Doctor Pournelle,

Robert Truax’ truly brobdingnagian baby:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6e5B7EKVg48

Eighty million pounds of thrust, from a single engine first stage, delivering half a kiloton payload to LEO. NASA killed it because, well, “who needs a million pounds in LEO?”

I sometimes I wonder if there is any intelligent life in NASA. Other times, as now, of the answer I am certain.. The shuttle ate the dream.

Petronius

Historic Reflight Rocket Launch of Falcon 9

First reflight of an orbital class booster. This Falcon-9 has now lifted two payloads to orbit, and returned to earth to land on a tail of fire.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sPEPKGEQuiU

In sixty years of lifting mass to orbit, NASA has never done this, Russia has never don this, China has never done this, ESA has never done this, the Japanese have never done this, yet American private enterprise in less than a quarter of that time has.

Perhaps there be be a lesson here as to what government might be good at, and NOT so good at?

Petronius

America can accomplish marvels when she gets her act together. Think of TVSA, Hoover Dam, the flood of ships, planes, tanks, artillery, rifles, uniforms and boots that poured forth from 1942 to 1945.  We covered this in The Strategy of Technology.  NASA was created to beat the Russians to the Moon.  NASA couldn’t do it, and General Phillips did it the military way: break the job down into sub tasks, and put a man you know is competent to do the job in charge of each. He now does the same thing. The Project is completed. In the military you disband the Army after victory. Alas, NASA created a force of civil servants who couldn’t be disbanded, so their first task was to make sure there was work for 22,000 development scientists and their non professional minions,  They did that.  Shuttle fulfilled that mission, even if the NASA budget was the same when there were half a dozen launches or none at all.   It was a remarkable job of accomplishing the mission.  Of course the mission wasn’t what the American people thought it was.

NASA wasn’t incompetent, it’s just that few understood what they were accomplishing.  But yes, if NASA had vanished and contracts were let for specific missions, I don’t doubt that we’d be mining the asteroids by now.

 

bubbles

“These issues were previously swept under the rug, but taking them into account can explain the acceleration without the need for dark energy.”

<http://newatlas.com/dark-energy-existence-questioned/48708/>

—————————————

Roland Dobbins

We will discuss this another time. We really have no direct evidence for dark matter or dark energy. Neither Einstein nor Feynman had need of it, but of course they had not the observations of enormously distant galaxies..

bubbles

Quantum thermodynamics

http://www.nature.com/news/battle-between-quantum-and-thermodynamic-laws-heats-up-1.21720

I don’t think it should be this hard, and anyone making it hard is probably hoping for a quantum perpetual motion machine.

(Specifically – wave function collapses are irreversible. Thermodynamic -nor information- entropy is not a measurable quantity until the wave function collapses. It should be QED from there, though the technical details are left to the dedicated analyst…)

Jim

 

Another development you should be aware of.

bubbles

Afterthought:  the Books tab at the top of this page leads to a list of eBooks, which you may like if you haven’t already read them.  And the Reports tab may show you marvels you haven’t seen.  Now I’m for bed, and will work on Starborn etc. tomorrow, God willing and the creeks don’t rise.

 

bubbles

bubbles

bubbles

bubbles

bubbles

bubbles

Freedom is not free. Free men are not equal. Equal men are not free.

bubbles

bubbles

Obamacare and Ryancare

Thursday, March 30, 2017

The map is not the territory.

Alfred Korzybski

If a foreign government had imposed this system of education on the United States, we would rightfully consider it an act of war.

Glenn T. Seaborg, National Commission on Education, 1983

bubbles

It’s been a tough week. I’ve started my taxes, there are tons of paper to sort through, and all kinds of minor things eat my time or energy or both. I’m coping, but I have neglected this place. I have managed to sort of keep up on Starborn and Godsons, the book Niven and Barnes and I are doing. I keep finding and creating scenes to add, not long, but they turn out to contribute to both characterization and plot. And every now and then Niven adds some more magic. Steve. Bless him, is almost done with the first draft and it’s pretty complete.

And the new version of Word isn’t helping. They seem to have introduced some bugs in the simplest operations, while adding some really good improvements to the capabilities for cooperation at a distance. It’s really possible to have two people work on the same document at the same time, but it gets pretty annoying when you lose the ability to control the layout on your own screen to make room for cooperative effort. My normal practice, learned in typewriter days, of course, is to have the text about 60 characters wide centered in the middle of the screen. I’ve got that on what I’m writing now. But when I open the on-line version of our book, it’s invariably either way over at the left side of the screen, or there’s a fat window there moving my text farther over to the right than I want; but if I close that window, all my text migrates to the left side of the screen and stays there.

I’ve tried the various options in the view and layout “tabs” in the ribbon, and even things like the design tab; some seem to create exactly what I want but when I go back to the text it’s crowded over to the left side again. Maybe cooperative documents have to be this way? Ah well. At least we can both work on the same document at the same time. And eventually someone will be able to communicate with a human on the Word design team at Microsoft. I’m sure there is one.

bubbles

I wasn’t an enthusiast of Ryancare, and the complex scheme the Speaker had to get three phases of changes to the health care situation through Congress, starting with the arcane rules of using reconciliation to get through the Senate with a simple majority didn’t help. I did fear that some Democrats would be smart enough to vote for it; it would ameliorate some of the disasters of Obamacare, but it would definitely be owned by Ryan and the Republicans; when it didn’t work, Democrats could say, well, we tried, we cooperated, and if you’d just left Obamacare alone all would have been well, but…

As to how I know Ryancare wouldn’t work, come on, I’ve told you all along: this is not health care, It’s a system of entitlements. You can’t insure against events that have already happened, and if you insist that previous conditions don’t matter, that’s exactly what you are doing. Insuring against something that has already happened but hasn’t manifested itself yet isn’t insurance. It’s an entitlement. Ryanvcare was Obamacare light. The problem is that Obamacare is imploding and will cause a national disaster, and it was designed that way: the real crunches come after Obama has left office (and the Democrats have lost both Houses, although that doesn’t seem to have the effect you might have thought it would).

Obamacare is a system of subsidies and entitlements, and Ryancare would be the same thing: a few fewer steps down the road to socialized medicine than Obamacare, but headed in the same direction. If we’re going to have that, we ought to recognize it and do what we can to make it work as well as it does in Britain. For one thing, insist that it covers the working poor, “the deserving poor” better than it does “the undeserving poor.”

Of course the whole notion that we need to tax the productive to pay for the needs of the unproductive is another matter and we don’t have time for it. Obamacare and Ryancare both assume that everyone will get healthcare insurance whether they can afford it or not.

Incidentally, if you think it obvious that the productive have a moral or ethical obligation to pay the health expenses of all those who can afford it, where did they get that? It’s in no State Constitution I know of, and it’s certainly not in the Philadelphia Constitution of 1787. You may plead “plain Christian, or Jewish, or Judeo-Christian duty” and I answer that the courts have already settled that one: there isn’t any. We can’t even display a manger in the public square at Christmas. If you feel an obligation to pay someone else’s medical expenses, please do so. No one will stop you and many will applaud.

bubbles

bubbles

bubbles

health insurance problems

This is in response to your comments about the health insurance problems. The fees the citizens pay for health insurance could be determined, in part, by variable factors such as whether or not a citizen has committed any recent crimes and to what extent he or she maintains a healthy weight, doesn’t smoke, and exercises regularly. Such factors are within a citizen’s control, and if he or she doesn’t make the correct decisions regarding them then the health insurance rate should go up.
Dan Gollub

 

And whether he is a citizen or not, and does he hold his mouth right in the presence of civil servants, and is he properly deferential to the civil service Nurse, doctors, administrator and ward boys: in other words is he deserving or undeserving poor?

Republican health care bill

Dear Mr. Pournelle,
I think I understand some of the reasons why you’ve opposed the Affordable Health Care Act; but I don’t understand your support of the proposed Republican bill, nor the notion that Democrats should have supported it.
From reports I’ve seen, the Republican bill kept intact the pre-existing conditions provisions, which you’ve described as creating an entitlement. However, the bill seems to have scrapped any incentive to sign up while you’re healthy; which would definitely make it an entitlement rather than insurance. It also cut many of the taxes which were intended to pay for the program. As Peggy Noonan pointed out, this would have been something of a catastrophic victory for Republicans.
As for Democratic support; well, I’ve seen no reports that it was ever sought or asked for. It seems more of a case of “we’ve shouted for years that you Democrats did a terrible thing, now you can watch while we scrap it and do something better.” If the proposal had indeed been better, perhaps some case could have been made for Democratic support (note: not “Democrat” unless you want to be intentionally offensive). But as far as I can see, the bill preserved most of the weaknesses of the ACHA, cut out elements which could make it work, and added expense.
I can’t see any reason why Democrats, unasked, should have supported the bill. Such complaints seem more like a case of “The buck stops elsewhere.”
Yours,
Allan E. Johnson

I fear I was thinking as a former political strategist. The Democrats should have leaped on the chance to have Ryancare – possibly even Trumpcare – fail instead of experiencing the disaster that will be Obamacare. I also have some concern for my children,

This is not insurance, and all thinking people know it is not insurance. It is an entitlement to have someone else pay your medical bills. There are far better ways of doing that than to mask it as insurance. Simply repeal Obamacare and add a provision that everyone is entitled to $5104.79 in reimbursed medical expenses, after which you are on your own or a charity case might work.

bubbles

TrumpamaCare

You say that nobody is interested in compromising on the health care fiasco. Here is an example of a liberal blogger who still wants Trump and Ryan to “win”.
His host site needs you to click through political action popups to get to the article, so I’ll past the major portions below. The first post describes a very minor set of tweaks that he thinks will both help Obamacare and will give everyone a “win” before moving on.
http://www.motherjones.com/kevin-drum/2017/03/combining-obamacare-and-trumpcare-might-save-health-insurance
* Reduce the income-based subsidies by about a third.
* Add a flat-rate version of Trumpcare’s age-based subsidies: $500 per person across the board.
* Change the age band to 4:1, a compromise between Obamacare and Trumpcare.
* Ensure continued funding of Cost Sharing Reductions.
—————————————–
* Donald Trump gets a big win. Paul Ryan couldn’t get his plan through Congress, but then Trump steps in and pulls off a huge deal. His presidency is back on track.
* Republicans in Congress get an albatross off their backs. Right now, health care is a loser for them, and the Freedom Caucus is riding high. But if they pass a bipartisan plan, it sticks a finger in the eye of the FC ultras. And if they’re worried about their base, they don’t have to be. Trump will sell the hell out of the plan, and his fans will buy it.
* Democrats have to make some concessions, but in return they get stability and permanence—and the possibility of future enhancements—for a social welfare program they’ve been trying to get enacted for decades.
* The health care industry gets some certainty about the future, along with a system that promises to be a moneymaker for them.
The proposal is from Kevin Drum.
Greg Goss.

And when that fails? The problem is we are not answering the fundamental question: just what does being a citizen entitle you to? Of course the courts will soon extend it to legal resident aliens, then undocumented..

bubbles

AHCA

Hello, Dr. Pournelle –
My consternation with the entire federal healthcare rigmarole is that the plans are simply unconstitutional on their collective faces.
AHCA is just as unconstitutional as ACA was.
I can see no provision in Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution that gives authority to Congress to come up with any healthcare plans.
General Welfare can’t cover them, because these plans are INDIVIDUAL welfare, not GENERAL. They deal with the healthcare needs of individuals, not the population as a whole. They cut a check to a provider for the healthcare needs of an individual.
It’d be a refreshing change to have politicians actually OBEY the document they swore an oath to defend and uphold.
Running out of hair to pull out in frustration,
Cam Kirmser

You are constitutionally correct, and so what? The courts will not rule that way, and the general public educated in our public schools will not believe it.

 

bubbles

Repeal & Replace Fiasco

My take is that President Trump, having spent many, many years in business, probably expected the people he was working with to have some level of honest cooperation in their dealings with him, each other, and their constituents. History shows that just isn’t the way those ‘people’ work. Remember, congress is the opposite of progress. At least this time no one said “If you want to know what’s in it, you’ll have to wait until it is in use.” (a moderate paraphrase)

Doane

bubbles

One Sentence Bill to Repeal ACA

I wonder what the GOP excuse will be this time. They couldn’t craft proper legislation? This seems simple and effective enough; I wonder why they won’t be able to agree to this:

<.>

On the same day that the House of Representatives canceled its vote on Ryancare, Alabama Rep. Mo Brooks filed a simple one-line bill to repeal Obama’s signature health care law.

The Huntsville Republican titled the bill ‘Obamacare Repeal Act.” It is short and to the point, AI.com reported.

“Effective as of Dec. 31, 2017, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act is repealed, and the provisions of law amended or repealed by such Act are restored or revived as if such Act had not been enacted,”

the bill reads.

</>

http://www.breitbart.com/big-government/2017/03/27/alabama-republican-rep-mo-brooks-introduces-one-line-bill-to-repeal-obamacare/

Doesn’t get any simpler or easier than that. The bill is H.R. 1718 and has been referred to seven committees with no time table set by the Speaker.

◊ ◊ ◊ ◊ ◊

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

Percussa Resurgo

I wouldn’t hold my breath.

 

bubbles

bubbles

Ryan Care

I would be happy to do away with the pre-existing condition mandate once you get your time machine working and repeal the tax deduction for employer provided health insurance.
In an ideal free market for health insurance there would be the health equivalent of whole life available. We didn’t have such a system because health insurance got tied to employment. Maybe back in the Grey Flannel Suit days employer provided was the same as lifetime, but it sure isn’t for my (and Barack Obama’s) generation.
Back when I was young and healthy I chafed at the gouge in my paycheck from the employer provided insurance. I would have preferred the cash. I damn well paid my dues into the system. But as a free agent these days with the loss of invulnerability that comes from passing the half century mark, “free market” insurance would be unaffordable.
If you call for abolishing Medicare, including for seniors already on it, then you have cred for complaining about the pre-existing condition mandate.
Yes, I think full on free market insurance should be legal, complete with exclusions for pre-existing conditions. But such should receive no government subsidy, not even the tax deduction.
A government subsidy is useful for keeping people off Medicaid, and allowing people to be free agents instead of lifetime wage serfs. But the subsidy should primarily be for catastrophic coverage; we want people to pay more out of pocket so we have a pricing mechanism.
The RyanCare model was a decent start. A capped tax credit encourages people to get something without encouraging high salary firms from buying Cadillac plans. I want the well off to shop! The Ryan plan could be made better by increasing the credit substantially, but beginning the phase out at a much lower income: 20,000 instead of 75,000 for an individual.
Low wage day laborers need more than catastrophic coverage. If they cannot afford lower deductible plans, they will end up on Medicaid or clogging the emergency rooms. A couple making $150K can afford to pay more directly out of pocket — and should since we need to restore a cash market in medical services.
There does need to be a few other strings attached to subsidized insurance. It needs to be insurance, not prepaid likely medical, as most dental “insurance” is. This can be easily described:

1. Such insurance must cover everything Medicaid covers.
2. The copay rate must stay the same or go down as expenses go up.
Any other features can be up to the market.

Carl

 

As you say, the notion that health care is provided by employers was an accident of wage and price cojtrols during WWII. It worked because it sorted the deserving from the undeserving poor: those who had someone else pay for their health care had jobs and were willing to  work

The “pre-existing conditions” came from that, too: if you lost your job you lost your insurance, and when you got a new job you got new insurance; a significant number found they had developed pre-existing conditions not detected the first time, and they had been paying – or their employer had been paying – so they should not have had the rate increase.  Also they were older and thus their premiums were higher although they would not have been had they been able to keep the old policy. Like as not, though, the new job came with new insurance, and your previous insurance could not be continued.

That problem could possibly have been solved; COBRA was an early attempt to ameliorate it. And the question of deserving or undeserving did not come up: those working were assumed to be “deserving”, as they generally were, and no one had to decide.

The old system worked better that Obamacare. It was, after all, actually insurance.  And letting employers deduct the insurance costs as a business expense had a beneficial  effect for the company and was not widely thought to be unreasonable.  Simply making health insurance deductible for whomever paid it was in fact reasonable.

 

bubbles

bubbles

Chromosphere Press Announces Book 2 in the Division One Series!

27 MARCH 2017

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

HUNTSVILLE, AL

What if Sir Arthur Conan Doyle was right all along, and Harry Houdini really DID do his illusions, not through sleight of hand, but via noncorporeal means? More, what if he could do this because…he wasn’t human?

clip_image002

Ari Ho’d’ni, Glu’g’ik son of the Special Steward of the Royal House of Va’du’sha’ā, better known to modern humans as an alien Gray from the ninth planet of Zeta Reticuli A, fled his homeworld with the rest of his family during a time of impending global civil war. With them, they brought a unique device which, in its absence, ultimately caused the failure of the uprisings and the collapse of the imperial regime. Consequently Va’du’sha’ā has been at peace for more than a century. What is the F’al, and why has a rebel faction sent a special agent to Earth to retrieve it?

It falls to the premier team in the Pan-Galactic Law Enforcement and Immigration Administration, Division One — the Alpha One team, known to their friends and colleagues as Agents Echo and Omega — to find out…or die trying.

Stephanie Osborn, aka the Interstellar Woman of Mystery, former rocket scientist and author of acclaimed science fiction mysteries, goes back to the urban legend of the unique group of men and women who show up at UFO sightings, alien abductions, etc. and make things…disappear…to craft her vision of the universe we don’t know about. Her new series, Division One, chronicles this universe through the eyes of recruit Megan McAllister, aka Omega, and her experienced partner, Echo.

Award-winning author Osborn is a 20+-year space program veteran, with multiple STEM degrees. She has authored, co-authored, or contributed to more than 30 books. She currently writes the critically-acclaimed Displaced Detective Series, described as “Sherlock Holmes meets The X-Files,” and the Gentleman Aegis Series, whose first book was a Silver Falchion winner. She “pays it forward” through numerous media including radio, podcasting and public speaking, and working with SIGMA, the science-fiction think tank. Osborn’s website is http://www.stephanie-osborn.com.

Division One series Book Two, A Small Medium At Large, will be released in ebook formats on 11 April 2017, and in trade paperback format on 25 April. Book One, Alpha and Omega, was released in January of this year. Additional installments in the ongoing series are anticipated later this year.

ISBN:

978-0-9982888-2-6 (ebook)

978-0-9982888-3-3 (print)

The ebooks are available for preorder at:

Amazon (Kindle/print): http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/books/1126038430?ean=9780998288833 (Nook format will be available on the release date).

Look for the trade paperback at your favorite bookseller!

~Stephanie Osborn, “The Interstellar Woman of Mystery”

http://www.Stephanie-Osborn.com

Award-winning author of the Division One, Gentleman Aegis, and Displaced Detective series

 

bubbles

bubbles

bubbles

bubbles

bubbles

bubbles

Freedom is not free. Free men are not equal. Equal men are not free.

bubbles

bubbles