Obama Agent; Abiotic oil; Kims and Korea; VX; and other matters.

Thursday, February 23, 2017

“The wealth of our middle class has been ripped from their homes and then redistributed across the entire world.”

Donald Trump.

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

George Santayana

bubbles

This day was devoured by locusts. One letter does require an answer, and it is more part of view than mail. 

0830 Friday:  I wrote this last night, but my cable connection to the Internet – Time Warner , now known as Spectrum – had failed.  Didn’t even have television. This morning had to reset the Internet modem, and all is well.   I confess to a feeling of panic when I discovered I no  longer had Internet access.  I went to the front office on awakening, got the modem reset, but I had turned on the troubleshooter too early and while the Internet connection came on automatically for ,my other machines, I had to reset the one I had been fooling with in my frantic efforts; apparently it resented my efforts.  These things have minds of their own, you know.

bubbles

language

“Known Obama agent”? And our president speaks of “sleeper cells” and “enemies of the American people?” How did this language slither in?
I really do care about civil discourse. Language which would be appropriate if the political party in question had been outlawed is not helpful.
Allan E. Johnson

I care also, as you do; and “Obama agent” is defensible and in my judgment appropriate as a descriptor for Ms. Yates. In fact I gave a source in the original article.

Fired Acting AG Sally Yates now “a symbol of the anti-Trump resistance”

http://legalinsurrection.com/2017/02/fired-acting-ag-sally-yates-now-a-symbol-of-the-anti-trump-resistance/

Why is Obama agent not appropriate? As a holdover from the Obama administration she was Acting Attorney General, a position she accepted; which made her chief attorney for the United States, and an acting cabinet member; and like any lawyer, she is supposed to serve the interests of her client, not of the regime that appointed her. When President Trump issued his executive order of immigration. It was her duty to advise him if she found it vague and therefore defective, and to hive her best opinion on how it ought to be modified.

That is not quite what she did.

Acting Attorney General Sally Yates Tells Justice Department Not to Defend President Trump’s Immigration Ban

http://time.com/4654533/acting-attorney-general-sally-yates-immigration-ban-donald-trump/

 

 

BREAKING: Acting Attorney General refuses to defend Trump executive order on refugees

http://www.theblaze.com/news/2017/01/30/breaking-acting-attorney-general-refuses-to-defend-trump-executive-order-on-refugees/

President Trump fired her, as indeed he should have done ten minutes after taking the Oath of Office; but she should have resigned anyway if she felt she could not approve the new President’s executive order. Instead she acted as if her client was Mr. Obama, not the United States. Obama agent is an entirely appropriate descriptor, and I doubt she would deny it with any vigor.

She is not merely a Deep State official; she was an actual agent of the previous administration, and now has assumed the role advertently. Of course the President must beware the Deep State, which so far he has not done; he probably believes in the myth of the non-partisan Civil Service. He does so at his peril.

Andrew Jackson, a founder of the Democratic Party (see Jefferson-Jackson celebrations) would have none of that: he fired most of the government employees and replaced them with people of his own choosing: his own agents. After all, the people who elected him held him responsible for carrying out his campaign promises.

bubbles

State within a state

“Deep state” redirects here.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/State_within_a_state

State within a state is a political situation in a country when an internal organ (“deep state”), such as the armed forces and civilian authorities (intelligence agencies, police, administrative agencies and branches of governmental bureaucracy), does not respond to the civilian political leadership. Although the state within the state can be conspiratorial in nature, the Deep State can also take the form of entrenched unelected career civil servants acting in a non-conspiratorial manner, to further their own interests (e.g., job security, enhanced power and authority, pursuit of ideological goals and objectives, and the general growth of their agency) and in opposition to the policies of elected officials, by obstructing, resisting, and subverting the policies and directives of elected officials.

Surely Ms. Yates can reasonably be described as an “Obama agent”?

bubbles

Thomas Gold’s abiotic theory

Biotic vs. Abiotic Hydrocarbons

Jerry,
Your recent discussion with Stephanie about the origin of hydrocarbons on the Earth included a comment by Stephanie that hydrocarbons of biotic origin should be rich in carbon 14. That would be the wrong signature to look for. The biotic theory of the origin of hydrocarbons posits that the source organic material was laid down during and just after the Carboniferous period, about 359 to 299 million years ago. Carbon 14 has a half life of about 5700 years, so even the youngest of this material has gone through over 52,000 halvings in concentration. There just would not be any to be found today. What we should find is an abundance of nitrogen 14, the decay product of carbon 14, assuming the nitrogen stayed in proximity to the hydrocarbons and did not mineralize, becoming immobile.

K

Jerry,

You comment in your 23 February post:

“I have no proof of Tommy Gold’s theory of abiotic fossil fuels, but there must have been a powerful lot of dinosaurs given the amounts of oil and gas that we are pumping. We don’t seem to have reached peak oil yet.”

My question for geologists is ‘How did dead and decomposed dinosaurs get nearly 8 miles under the earth surface?’

The current world record (circa 2013) for the longest measured depth ERD well is the Chayvo Z-42 well (Exxon Neftegas Limited, Sakhalin Island, Russia) with a measured depth of 41,667 ft. and horizontal departure [under the ocean]of 38,514 ft. http://petrowiki.org/Extended_reach_wells

Larry

A good question. I asked a similar question to Carl Sagan, but I did not understand the answer. It was in a bar, and very noisy, and of course Sagan had been Gold’s protégé, so perhaps it wasn’t fair.

bubbles

Kim Jong Nam – assassinated with VX?????

An Earlier Report linking video of the assassination

Subj: Kim Jong nam

http://www.nbcnews.com/news/north-korea/kim-jong-nam-death-diplomatic-spat-between-north-korea-malaysia-n724516

https://www.wsj.com/articles/kim-jong-nam-killed-with-vx-nerve-agent-malaysia-says-1487897540?mod=e2tw

I am not 100% sure this makes sense; That does appear inconsistent with the relative vapor inhalation toxicity and percutaneous toxicity given the supposed method of administration. (See https://www.nap.edu/read/5825/chapter/8)

Of course, it appears that the two girls who made contact with Kim Jong Nam were sacrificial, but they don’t seem to have suffered from their exposure to the agent.

Or perhaps Malaysia has misidentified the agent.  The article states that the report is preliminary, and there is some inconsistency with how he was dosed – spray, wetted handkerchief, needle, etc. Still, I’m sure the identification was done with GC/MS, which should have been straightforward if Malaysian sources had a good mass spectrum data base for the conventional agents.

I’ve contacted the Colonel for a sanity check; he agrees this does not seem consistent, but is keeping an eye on the situation (which he saw on a Fox news crawl…)

I am copying the WSJ article here for your reference.

Kim Jong Nam Killed With U.N.-Banned VX Nerve Agent, Malaysia Says

VX listed globally as weapon of mass destruction

By

Yantoultra Ngui

Updated Feb. 23, 2017 9:53 p.m. ET

52 COMMENTS

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia—The chemical substance used to kill Kim Jong Nam last week was a United Nations-banned nerve agent called VX, police here said, significantly raising the political stakes in a case that has already frayed diplomatic ties between Malaysia and North Korea.

Experts believe North Korea possesses several thousand pounds of chemical weapons and nerve agents—including VX—that are banned by the U.N. and considered weapons of mass destruction.

Khalid Abu Bakar, Malaysia’s inspector general of police, said Friday in a statement that identification of the substance came from a preliminary report. He said swabs were taken from the eye and face of the victim.

Mr. Kim, the half brother of North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un, was attacked at Kuala Lumpur International Airport on Feb. 13 while waiting to board a flight to Macau; he died on his way to the hospital. Malaysian police have arrested four suspects, including the alleged attackers and a North Korean citizen who was living in Kuala Lumpur. Police are looking for at least seven more North Korean suspects in the case.

Early Wednesday morning this week, a team of about a dozen forensic specialists swept the area around an airport restaurant where several North Korean male suspects and two female suspects sat for an hour or more before the attack, an airport employee said. The employee didn’t know whether they also checked nearby check-in kiosks where the attack took place.

Diplomatic ties between Malaysia and North Korea have worsened following Mr. Kim’s death. Relations between the two countries had been relatively warm for several years due to business connections, lax travel restrictions and direct flights.

—Ben Otto contributed to this article.

J

I have worked with VX – nasty stuff – and certainly the girls would not have got to the rest room if any VX had got on bare skin. I have studied its potential use to render certain supply trails deadly: put up a sign saying in many languages, ‘cross this line and you will die’; then use VX on the area. Depending on sunlight and rain, it will dissipate, so how long it will be effective is not calculable; but long enough temporarily to deny the enemy access to the area. We never used it to the best of my knowledge, but it would have been effective.

bubbles

North Korean Panic

In the latest commie madness, North Korea is not working and playing well with others. Well, since they only really have one ally — China and only because China doesn’t want a US client state on it’s border

— this must be directed at China:

<.>

North Korea appeared to lash out at Beijing in a state-media commentary published Thursday, aiming unusually pointed rhetoric at a powerful neighbor that Pyongyang has long relied on for economic and diplomatic support.

The commentary, published by the state-controlled Korean Central News Agency, didn’t name China but left little doubt about its target: “a neighboring country, which often claims itself to be a ‘friendly neighbor’.”

The article lambasted China for playing down North Korea’s nuclear capabilities and for curbing foreign trade—an apparent reference to China’s weekend announcement that it would suspend coal imports from North Korea for the rest of the year.

</>

https://www.wsj.com/articles/north-korea-mocks-china-for-dancing-to-u-s-tune-1487852124

North Korea has two “neighbors”: South Korea and China. Anyone who thinks the North Koreans or South Koreans — by and large — would refer to the other as “friendly” is so laughable that they’d have to be some kind of isolated community organizer or activist to be so misinformed about geopolitics, world history, and American history.

This shift in relations between the two countries is interesting.

North Korea has no choice and a naked man chills in the frost. They can thunder and blunder all they want, but China could eat their lunch in less than a week and they know it. So why bother with the idiotic posturing? I’m sure Chinese policy makers understand their decision will cause animosity and I’m certain the North Koreans protested in some way that made those Chinese policy makers aware in case it slipped their minds.

What does this mean, exactly? Well, it means North Korea could become more unstable and could make even more rash decisions than it normally makes. But, it may also present an opportunity. And it will remain to be seen if President Trump sees this and is able to command his government to do much more than leak, sow dissension, and make us look like an Italian parliament.

I am so glad that I left the GOP — I only joined cause of Reagan but they haven’t produced a viable candidate since Reagan and Trump is not GOP and never was. Their party has been hijacked; at least they had the decency and integrity not to screw Trump like a Stanford University professor — in collusion with another professor form another university — proved in a paper they wrote that analyzed the data of various precincts. So, we have emails declaring DNC intent and data to back it up, but at least the GOP isn’t that petty. No matter, they’re both garbage and must be tossed. Time to replenish the ranks…. This time, no factions, if you please.

I’d offer my candidacy, but I’m too candid and insensitive for politics. Still, if the people demanded my service, I would humbly

and respectfully give deep consideration to their request. But, I

don’t know how to raise those kinds of money and my spinal column doesn’t allow me to bend over and kiss butts very well either; so I don’t think I’m suited for politics anyway.

◊ ◊ ◊ ◊ ◊

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

Percussa Resurgo

Your observation about Korea are interesting. I believe your view of party politics is incorrect. I suspect there will be a massive realignment of parties over the next four years that will surprise us all, yet will seem inevitable after it has happened. But that’s another matter entirely.

bubbles

Most scientists ‘can’t replicate studies by their peers’ – BBC News

What does this mean for most of what the MSM calls ‘settled science’?

Science is facing a “reproducibility crisis” where more than two-thirds of researchers have tried and failed to reproduce another scientist’s experiments, research suggests.

“It’s worrying because replication is supposed to be a hallmark of scientific integrity,” says Dr Errington.

Concern over the reliability of the results published in scientific literature has been growing for some time.

http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-39054778

John Harlow

Is comment needed?

bubbles

fAAGEV AND STEYN ON MIGRANTS TO EUROPE

To be honest Jerry my mind is a little foggy. This debate is a very interesting item. It shows how the left can be changed by reasoned proof.

https://www.c-span.org/video/?407440-1/munk-debate-global-refugee-crisis

M

An unusual event, to say the least.

bubbles

a balanced media article

Considering how much bias there is on articles about Trump and his affects on the political landscape, it’s nice to see what appears to be a balanced piece.
http://www.csmonitor.com/USA/Politics/2017/0222/In-age-of-Trump-apocalyptic-rhetoric-becomes-mainstream

M

J got ‘server not found’ when I went looking. That may or may not be interesting. (Probably not. Time Warner antics,)

bubbles

ISIS

This article showed up on my Der Speigel flash briefing on my Alexa. I guess if you’re going to act like a country, with land, etc., then you’ve also got to pay the bills, etc. And that requires revenues. Their revenues were created through growth, and now that they’re not growing, they’re having money problems.
(Perhaps they should talk to the United States about deficit financing?)
http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/islamic-state-finances-are-bad-and-getting-worse-a-1135453.html

F

bubbles

‘The British system that arguably impelled our secession in 1776 is now here on steroids.’

<http://www.unz.com/anapolitano/the-chickens-have-come-home-to-roost/>

—————————————

Roland Dobbins

Surprised? We hoped for change…

bubbles

3 Habitable Planets in Aquarius!

I suppose you’ll get a flurry of email, and most likely from folks better suited to comment on this than I, but in case they missed it:

<.>

For the first time, astronomers have discovered seven Earth-size planets orbiting a single nearby star – and these new worlds could hold life.

This cluster of planets is less than 40 light-years away in the constellation Aquarius, according to NASA and the Belgian-led research team who announced the discovery Wednesday.

The planets circle tightly around a dim dwarf star called Trappist-1, barely the size of Jupiter. Three are in the so-called habitable zone, the area around a star where water and, possibly life, might exist.

The others are right on the doorstep.

Scientists said they need to study the atmospheres before determining whether these rocky, terrestrial planets could support some sort of life. But it already shows just how many Earth-size planets could be out there – especially in a star’s sweet spot, ripe for extraterrestrial life. The more planets like this, the greater the potential of finding one that’s truly habitable. Until now, only two or three Earth-size planets had been spotted around a star.

</>

http://www.breitbart.com/tech/2017/02/22/7-earth-size-worlds-found-orbiting-star-could-hold-life/

I always love this kind of news. I’ve not necessarily believed that we’ve been visited (I’m not sure either way), but I’ve always believed that life exists out there, among the stars, and perhaps even in other dimensions right here where we are right now. I may or may not see it proven in my lifetime, but it is a belief I have. Findings like this really make me hopeful that, maybe, we can meet others and maybe some of us can get out of here and go do something more worthwhile than living here.

◊ ◊ ◊ ◊ ◊

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

Percussa Resurgo

This of course all over the science news sites, and I have my own sources as well as much mail. I’ll have an essay when there’s something I can add to the discussion. I’m glad we didn’t know about these when Larry, Steve, and I began our interstellar colony series; the astronomy is so fascinating that we’d probably have neglected the biology. But perhaps later. Imagine the tides. And we thought Mercury was tidally locked; now they say these are all locked. I wonder.

bubbles

Climate

http://www.theverge.com/2017/2/21/14684630/california-atmospheric-river-flood-storm-evacuations-rain-arkstorm

Every 200 years California suffers storms of biblical proportions. Get ready.

I’m ready.

]

bubbles

bubbles

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

bubbles

bubbles

Plate tectonics and trillions of tons of liquid carbon; Porkypine on the Flynn affair; and much more.

Wednesday, February 22, 2017

“The wealth of our middle class has been ripped from their homes and then redistributed across the entire world.”

Donald Trump

Between 1965 and 2011, the official poverty rate was essentially flat, while the government spending per person on poverty programs rose by more than 900% after inflation.

Peter Cove

Liberalism is a philosophy of consolation for the West as it commits suicide.

James Burnham

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

 

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

George Santayana

 

bubbles

bubbles

It’s been a bit hectic today. Much of the day has been absorbed by administrative details. Since part of that was recording subscriptions – thank you! – I won’t say it was devoured by locusts; at least that part wasn’t. Alas, much of the rest is best described that way.

I did accomplish some fiction work, and Ryan and Kelly report that Roberta had an excellent session with the physical therapist, so the day actually went well.

bubbles

I’ll probably keep Firefox. I like much of it, and now have a fix for the worst problem.

Firefox session save

Hi Jerry,
You might want to install the following Firefox add-on. I think it does what you want.
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/session-manager/
Good Luck!

Jose Tenembaum

On the machine in the back room, where I am now, I went to Firefox add-ons, looked around for a while and found the add-on called Session Manager, installed it, reset, and all was well; there is now an option in the tools menu to “Save Session”, and it does that.

I also installed it on Eugene, the main machine in the front office, and it works there too. Now I can always reset and restore to a recent session, and that’s enough to keep me experimenting with Firefox, which I’m used to. It would take me a while to ,master something else, and this is now Good Enough.

Now if I could just figure out a way to have an ASUS keyboard on the downstairs systems. The ASUS Zen keyboard is just right: big keys, well separated; but it’s attached to a ZenBook, which is a good computer but it’s still a laptop. Ah well. I’m slowly training these big machines to do autocorrection on many of the typing errors I make: those that have a unique answer to the question “what did he mean to type?”. Salas there are still a lot that have very ambiguous answers to that question. To do that, I must right click on the red underlined word; determine if I want an autocorrect to that nonsense, or if there are too many alternate words I might have meant; then, if I decide to autocorrect I select the nonsense, and go up to the ribbon. There I find a tiny lightning bolt icon. It’s there because weeks ago I used the tiny icon that looks like a hyphen with a down-arrow under it, and which displays “Customize Quick Access Toolbar” when you hover over it, and used that function to install AutoCorrect on that Quick Access Tool Bar. Punching that opens the AutoCorrect table, and there in the “replace me” area is my selected nonsense; I type into the cell next to it what I want that nonsense to become, being very careful to do it right, click add, and the click do it, and from now on I will never see the nonsense, nor will what it turns into be marked; which is why I have to be careful about this. But autocorrect does work, and I am slowly fixing my most common errors, which speeds up my productivity something wonderful.

bubbles

Science

“The great problem with science as it is understood today is that authority more and more replaces evidence. The scientists themselves love that, of course, because it means you can’t question them. But the fact is that we should be questioning them everywhere they go because the whole notion of science is that it should be open to the idea of questioning the claims that you make.” – Tom Bethell

I say an article about “breakthrough technology” and it was about the next damn cell phone.

Whatever happened to our future? We’ve go down the tubes. >>>>> less, less, less, and less…

Roger Miller

I haven’t met Tom Bethell in years, but I continue to appreciate his work. Once, long enough ago that it was the Soviet Union, not Russia, I sat with Tom in Moscow in the International Hotel bar; we both carried Atari Portfolio computers, a long forgotten PC Compatible pocket computer that really worked; there is still nothing quite like it now, and I wish I still had mine. Alas I was a touch typist then, and the keys were tiny; you could only two finger the Portfolio. I could use mine to make notes and observations, but Tom banged out a 2000 word column while we enjoyed our cocktails. He is I think the only journalist I know who shares my affection for Petr Beckmann’s Einstein Plus Two theory.

His point is well taken. There’s too much authority and too little hard facts in much of science today. Well, actually there always has been, but with grant money flowing only to those who conform to the consensus it’s really bad now.

bubbles

There follows a long scientific discussion. The essence of the news is given in the very first part; the rest is discussion. You will recognize some of the participants. Fair warning: it is long.

The earth’s mantle and British tabloids

Jerry,

Consider the article

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0012821X16307543/#ec0040

Pervasive upper mantle melting beneath the western US

  • Saswata Hier-Majumdera, , , Benoit Tauzinb
  • a Department of Earth Sciences, Royal Holloway University of London, Egham, Surrey, TW20 0EX, UK
  • b Laboratoire de Géologie de Lyon, Terre, Planètes, Environnement, Université de Lyon, Ecole Normale Supérieure de Lyon, CNRS UMR 5276, 2 rue Raphael Dubois, 69622 Villeurbanne Cedex, France

Abstract:

We report from converted seismic waves, a pervasive seismically anomalous layer above the transition zone beneath the western US. The layer, characterized by an average shear wave speed reduction of 1.6%, spans over an area of ∼1.8×106 km2∼1.8×106 km2 with thicknesses varying between 25 and 70 km. The location of the layer correlates with the present location of a segment of the Farallon plate. This spatial correlation and the sharp seismic signal atop of the layer indicate that the layer is caused by compositional heterogeneity. Analysis of the seismic signature reveals that the compositional heterogeneity can be ascribed to a small volume of partial melt (0.5 ± 0.2 vol% on average). This article presents the first high resolution map of the melt present within the layer. Despite spatial variations in temperature, the calculated melt volume fraction correlates strongly with the amplitude of P–S conversion throughout the region. Comparing the values of temperature calculated from the seismic signal with available petrological constraints, we infer that melting in the layer is caused by release of volatiles from the subducted Farallon slab. This partially molten zone beneath the western US can sequester at least 1.2×1017 kg1.2×1017 kg of volatiles, and can act as a large regional reservoir of volatile species such as H or C.<end>

(Article for purchase for $40, which I have not done…)

This sounds interesting, and makes me think of your past articles on Thomas Gold.

Now, I heard of this report by an item from the UK Daily Mail linked on the Drudge Report:

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-4226566/Scientists-discover-massive-reservoir-greenhouse-gases.html

A huge well of molten carbon that would spell disaster for the planet if released has been found under the US.

Scientists using the world’s largest array of seismic sensors have mapped a deep-Earth area, covering 700,000 sq miles (1.8 million sq km).<snip>

What they found was a vast buried deposit of molten carbon, which produces carbon dioxide and other gases, situated under the Western US, 217 miles (350km) beneath the Earth’s surface.

As a result of this study, published in Earth and Planetary Science Letters, scientists now believe the amount of CO2 in the Earth’s upper mantle may be up to 100 trillion metric tons. <snip>

In other words, the existence of a pool of liquefied carbon-based volatiles 217 miles below the earth’s surface (under the Rockies) creates a horrific risk of catastrophic global warming if it all oxidizes and mixes into the atmosphere.

Oh, wait…

“The deep carbon reservoir discovered will eventually make its way to the surface through volcanic eruptions and contribute to climate change albeit very slowly, but a sudden release could have dire consequences.”<snip>

One can only sigh and shake one’s head.

Jim Woosley

 

Subject: Re: The earth’s mantle and British tabloids

Reminds me of a fisk Charlie Martin did a few days back on the scare story some rag had published on the Fukushima radiation issue.

Might want to consider this as a technical Thursday post at According To Hoyt, or seeing if Charlie wants to put it up at Pajamas Media.

The best and most sensible response to all this fake science we are seeing so much of is exactly this sort of reasoned discussion. Not that the idiots will pay attention, but sensible folks just might.

Science is never “settled” damn it! Phenomena can be observed and recorded, theories to explain those observations can be proposed, but the nature of the science is always open to reasoned discussion.

On Feb 15, 2017, at 10:58 PM, Stephanie <VValkyrie@hotmail.com> wrote:

I don’t know how much the rest of you know about seismology, but it’s one of the reasons I picked up an undergrad minor in geology and did some graduate subspecialty work in geology, as well.

Seismology is really a form of optics; the very same rules apply, since you are looking at wave propagation, reflection, and refraction. (Having already just had the Optics sequence in the Physics dept., when I got to seismology in my Geology studies, I was better and faster than the Geology majors, because the concepts were all very familiar to me.) So there are various “types” of seismic waves, which is really just another way of saying they are polarized differently. (The only kind of wave that seismology has that optics doesn’t is the longitudinally-polarized wave — the acoustic wave. And so if you’ve studied acoustics, you even already have THAT.) Now the interesting thing is that certain of these wave polarizations create differing effects on the ground, and the budding science of seismology therefore named them accordingly. (A “shear wave,” which the article references, is a transverse body wave — the wave motion is perpendicular to the direction of motion, and it moves through an object like the Earth via elasticity within the object. It was named “shear” by geologists because it had a shearing effect upon structures when it arrived.)

However, just like in optics, when the medium changes, so does the refractive index. And just like in optics, the boundary between media creates a reflective surface, which in turn also generates additional polarized reflected waves. (Jim is probably familiar with this.) And this is what complicates the thing so much. But certain polarizations are easier to “read” than others, and they can tell us a lot about the various strata, including what state of matter they are in — liquids tend not to transmit some of those waves at all because, once inside the melt, they experience total internal reflection, and so you get a blank zone.

So we know when there is a blob of actual melt down there, because we get all reflections and no refraction through it to speak of. If it’s partly molten, you can get some refraction, but it tends to generate “mushy” surfaces.

The Farallon Plate is an ancient oceanic plate under what has become the Pacific Ocean. There are a few remnants of it left that have not yet been subducted under the North and South American plates; they’re most notable in the Cascadia Subduction Zone, where there are some triangular bits, now known as the Juan de Fuca Plate, and the adjacent Gorda Plate. Another notable remnant is the tongue-shaped plate (Cocos Plate) that forms the west coast of Central America, and the better-known Nazca Plate off the western South American coast. In all cases, the principal direction of motion takes them east and under the continental plates in intensive subduction zones. (It’s worth noting that these are serious quake zones, capable of generating monster quakes and tsunamis, in some cases equivalent to the Boxing Day quake/tsunami combo in 2004.) You can find out more about it by plugging in “Farallon Plate” to Wikipedia.

Now, it is also worth noting that there are volcanic and regular ranges that run parallel to, and just inland of, the west coast from Alaska/Canada all the way down to the tip of South America, and it is this subduction that is responsible for both types of ranges. Obviously the whole “big crunch” thing is responsible for the standard mountain ranges, in various forms. But since most crustal plates are a mixture of mineral types, and various families of minerals melt at different temperatures, as the plate is subducted, low-m.p. minerals melt out of the solid plate. Being liquid, they’re more buoyant and rise upward through whatever cracks and crevices and imperfections they can find, or force. When they reach the surface, blooie, volcano. Note also that the type of volcano changes as you move from coast inland; this is because, as you go farther inland, the plate being subducted is being shoved deeper and deeper into the mantle, encountering hotter and hotter temps, and thus melting out minerals with increasingly hotter melting points. This results in a separation of the minerals and corresponding chemical difference in the melts, in a smooth transition moving from coastal volcanoes and progressing inland. It’s been theorized that this is the reason why certain areas have more explosive volcanoes — the chemistry resulting from the melt leads to a more viscous lava, trapping the dissolved gases inside and allowing for pressure buildup.

There is also increasing evidence that the heat resulting from subduction was insufficient to fully melt the Farallon Plate, and the continental plates overrode the Farallon, which may have fragmented/faulted and “stacked up” in slabs under the continents. According to a NASA research group, a significant portion of the Farallon sank to the bottom of the mantle, and is much farther east, most likely under the eastern USA. (http://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/a000000/a002400/a002410/) The footprint area is quite considerable.

This research may also be, in part, the source of a recent news item I saw indicating that it was essentially confirmed that “fossil” fuels are NOT fossils; they are not produced via fossilized organic material (because those would have a preponderance of 14C, whereas it turns out that most petroleums/nat.gases have a preponderance of 13C).

That said, it strikes me that the Daily Fail (as I’ve heard some UK-dwellers term it) has once again gotten its science mixed up. I can’t tell for sure because the page doesn’t want to load and stay loaded, so I can’t finish reading the article. However, the Daily Mail article references the same area that the Science Direct article does. And the Daily Fail does link to the article that Jim specified from Science Direct.

They, of course, immediately focus on the fact that the Yellowstone supercaldera is supposedly in the middle of it. (I’d really love to know where they got their graphic, and how accurate it really is, relative to what they think they’re talking about.)

HOWEVER:

1) The DM article immediately assumes that the entire volume of “volatiles” is carbon, when the first volatile mentioned by the science paper is hydrogen. And even that is speculative, denoted by the phrase, “such as.”

1a) Typically the constituents of volcanic gases are: water vapor, carbon dioxide, sulfur dioxide, hydrogen sulfide, nitrogen, methane, carbon monoxide, hydrogen, and several of the noble gases such as neon, helium, and argon. (Other gases may be found in trace quantities as well.) According to Wikipedia (and this matches my training), “The abundance of gases varies considerably from volcano to volcano. Water vapor is consistently the most common volcanic gas, normally comprising more than 60% of total emissions. Carbon dioxide typically accounts for 10 to 40% of emissions.”

2) The Yellowstone hotspot is separate from the Farallon Plate structures, and goes far down, into the mantle. Its upper regions have been 3-D mapped, and are not a part of the Farallon structures. More, it has a tracked geologic history of eruptions, with fossil calderas that can be traced back from its current location, regressing southwest all the way to the northeast corner of California. There is no indication of catastrophic gaseous emissions of which I am aware; the volume of ejecta ultimately came from much deeper. The danger from a Yellowstone eruption is in the massive blast which would devastate the area for at least 1-2 hundred miles in every direction, followed by the truly titanic volume of ash which would be pumped high into the atmosphere. There have been discoveries of fossilized, fully-articulated herd animals in mass deaths from acute silicosis as far east as, if memory serves, the vicinity of the Ohio River valley.

Is it possible for some of these volatiles to “leak” into the Yellowstone magma chamber? Sure it is. That’s how natural gas and petroleum gets around, after all, not to mention groundwater. But there are limits; impermeable strata effectively block such migrations (which is how artesian wells occur).

And frankly, if we have a Yellowstone eruption, we got way bigger, and much more immediate, problems than trying to figure out how much carbon dioxide the thing is belching.

~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

 

FWIW I got an email from one of Jerry’s blog readers earlier tonight, basically inviting me to visit Australia one of these days. Which I’d love to do. But he’s seen my moniker enough on Jerry’s blog to be interested in meeting me face to face, apparently. And to have visited my website and found the contact form.

But yeah, if Jerry isn’t interested, we could modify it for any or all of the other things you said. Or hell, for that matter, Jerry can put it up, get the “scoop,” and then we can maybe expand on it for an article for Sarah or for Instapundit or whatever/whoever. Sarah, are Instapundit and PJmedia the same thing? I never have quite understood the connex, if any…

Anyhow, y’all work out who wants dibs on posting it. I’m game and appreciate the exposure regardless. And am available for additional questions.

I’m not a pro geologist (though I thought about it at one point — I mean, goodness knows, I got all the other degrees), but when I visited the Johnston Ridge Observatory at St. Helens, well. I was fascinated, and I could watch the recording drums for the various seismo stations they had on the mountain, while WATCHING the mountain. So I’m standing there watching, and muttering, “Rock fall… rock fall…quake…phreatic eruption…rock fall…” as I interpret the graph. But I didn’t know there was a ranger standing behind me. He moved up beside me and asked if I was a pro seismologist. (Not geologist, seismologist.) I was a little shocked, and explained that no, I wasn’t, but I’d studied, yada yada. Well, we got into a rather in-depth discussion of backgrounds. He had a degree in forestry, and had had to do special studies in the Parks Service in order to be stationed there, so he’d know the geology. But I was explaining stuff to HIM, and of course I also remembered the eruption.

After that, for as long as I was there, when a tourist would come to him with a question about the volcano, etc…he sent ’em to me…

I guess I’m good at answering questions.

That said, I learned a lot while I was there. And I got to hear the entire recording of David Johnston’s broadcast message — most people don’t know that it’s truncated for public dissemination. If you don’t know who he was, he was the geologist stationed on the ridge immediately to the north of St. Helens, and who saw it go. He’s the guy who made the radio transmission, “Vancouver, Vancouver, this is it! This is it!”
But, you see, he was directly across from the point where the pyroclastic flow broke out. And only about four and a quarter miles from it. And it was moving at very nearly Mach 1, according to all accounts and to reconstructions.

The mountain ranges there run east-west, except for a few spurs. East of the volcano was Spirit Lake, at the base of a N/S spur. The pyroclastic flow emerged from the failing slope, roared north, slammed into the ridge hard enough to turn the timber into sawdust — there’s nothing on that slope of the mountain bigger than MAYBE an inch — and scour the soil right down to bedrock, and take off part of the bedrock. The ridge diverted part of it, and some of it headed east, slamming into Spirit Lake and knocking it something like 1000ft up the side of the mountain spur. The main body of the pyroclastic flow topped the ridge and came down the back side, taking out the timber; slammed into the next ridge and stripped every tree trunk of limbs and bark, laying them all over, pointing away from the volcano, following the slopes. It topped THAT ridge and slammed into the next ridge, still with sufficient force and heat to strip the limbs — but not flatten the trees — and leave nothing but charred trunks standing. The fourth ridge was more or less intact, but showed signs of damage…and it was the 20th anniversary when I was there.

The Toutle River valley, around St. Helens itself, was still a moonscape 20 years later, and there were still bluffs of tuff and unconsolidated ash 30ft high, miles down the Toutle River.

But the ridge on which Johnston sat was unnamed at the time he sat there. And, like I said, whenever a documentary airs, they always truncate his broadcast. What he really said was, “Vancouver, Vancouver, this is it! This is it! This is…it…” His voice cracked that last time, and you can hear in his voice that he’s just realized he’s about to die.

I asked a ranger how long the carrier signal from his radio lasted after he made that final call. She thought for a moment, then said, “About fifteen seconds.”

They never found any sign of his body or his camp.

And now the ridge is named Johnston Ridge.

~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

 

Oh, I’m going to put it up once I gathered enough information on what is pretty well confirmed, what is good speculation, what is plausible and what is far-out speculation or probably refuted.

I have never seen an actual refutation of Gold’s theory. But I have sure been ridiculed for talking about it; and as I don’t know enough I put it aside for another time.  But I never saw it refuted, just as no one including my daughter has been able to convince me that CO2, man made at that, is the real climate change driver. (Freeman Dyson is not convinced either, which makes me feel better.)

 

The earth’s mantle and British tabloids

CO2 is a minor component of any greenhouse gas effect. Water vapor is a much larger factor. And never forget that without CO2 most plant life dies off.

But CO2 can be tied to manmade events so it must be attacked and demonized to serve the narrative of the extreme environmentalists.

And in my humble opinion the so called fossil fuels are simply the end result of plant and animal matter decomposing into complex hydrocarbons over time.

Larry

 

The earth’s mantle and British tabloids

We know that hydrocarbons are found in great quantity in the universe. There’s entire methane oceans within our own solar system. Comets have lots of hydrocarbons, and the blackish coating that forms the “dust” is composed of hydrocarbons. There are hydrocarbons aplenty in the spectra of distant nebulae. There are even hydrocarbons in the spectra of some very cool stars.

If there are truly differences in the isotopic composition of, say, coal, where 14C is found along with obvious plant fossils, and petroleum/crude, where apparently there is a preponderance of 13C, rather than 14C, then the sources must be different.

Now, whether any of this is so or not, I don’t know. And unfortunately I cannot for the life of me find the article I looked at just a couple of days ago. I had not previously heard of the abiotic theory for organic fuel formation, let alone that it is apparently so hotly contested. I find that interesting in light of the fact that there’s tons of the stuff out there in space.

So I guess leave out the whole carbon-13 vs carbon-14 thing, Jerry. Because I can’t provide you a reference. Dammit.

~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

You don’t have to do anything; I’ll make it plain that you are not asserting abiotic oil and Tommy Gold’s theories. Since I’m on public record as having been personally persuaded by Dr. Gold in some long arguments, they can put that all on me. I do point out that abiotic oil or no is irrelevant here. A trillion tons of liquid carbon – even if only 10% of it is carbon and the rest is pollutants – is nothing to joke about.

And the abundance of the stuff in the universe was what got Gold to wondering how it could be fossil remnants.  It still has me wondering.  Of course if you believe in panspermia…  I seem to recall arguing this with Sagan once.  Of course he didn’t want ever to get in a fight with Tommy, so if he had criticisms they were always theoretical. But to this day I have heard no reasonable theory about hydrocarbons on lifeless bodies…

The earth’s mantle and British tabloids

Panspermia isn’t required for the notion of non-fossil hydrocarbons. Like I said, there’s great gajillions of tons of hydrocarbons in stellar atmospheres, in nebulae, in cometary bodies, etc.

~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

 

Panspermia has always held a lot of allure to me, but I’m not sure it’s to the rational or the writer side of me.

Sarah

 

Jerry, I doubt I could recover the source, and I don’t recall if I noted it to you or not, but I saw another item a couple of years ago that I took as verification of Thomas Gold’s hypothesis. That said, this one could go both ways, because a pool of volatiles forming on the remnants of a totally subducted continental plate could come from high temperature/high-pressure reduction or hydrolysis of organic fossil detritus.

(Incidentally, did you see today’s news that appears to confirm that New Zealand should be considered the visible surface of a complete, if small, continent? This isn’t the link I first found on the subject, but it’s a reputable source for coverage – the tabloids appear to be having a field day with this as well:  http://www.businessinsider.com/zealandia-continent-new-zealand-australia-2017-2.

(Note that this item is relevant to the discussion and turned up serendipitously while searching for the New Zealand article:

https://m.phys.org/news/2017-02-scientists-geology-ceres.html)

Frankly, I suspect that Gold’s hypothesis of primordial hydrocarbons and the conventional hypothesis that petroleum is formed from the remains of primitive organisms are complementary. Gold’s hypothesis very likely accounts for the hydrocarbons that existed before the first organic life, and it seems very plausible that life has assimilated only a fraction or the originally available carbon. The rest may be available from somewhere, and the idea that petroleum is a mixture of primordial hydrocarbon and fossil organisms is nothing more than a squishy version of “from dust thou art, and to dust thou shalt return.”

Jim Woosley

This conversation ended abruptly with the storms in Southern California and the Studio City sinkhole, so there is no resolution. The important part is the trillions of tons of liquid carbon and how it trickles upward. I do not accept the consensus theory of man made climate change; we know too little about alternate sources of CO2; we know too little about temperature measurements and the reliability of any data older than thirty years (reliability to a tenth of a degree from buckets of sea water hauled up by a British tar?). We do have good evidence that the Earth was warmer than at present during the Viking era and the early Roman Republic. We know for a fact that it has been much colder, not just in historic times, but many times over the millennia; and we know that the cold was a lot more than a tenth of a degree.

I have no proof of Tommy Gold’s theory of abiotic fossil fuels, but there must have been a powerful lot of dinosaurs given the amounts of oil and gas that we are pumping. We don’t seem to have reached peak oil yet.

bubbles

bubbles

Tax Bots

Dr. Pournelle,
You linked an article headlined [by Bill Gates] “The robot that takes your job should pay taxes.”
I think this is an excellent idea, although my definition of robot is probably different than Bill’s (or that of the writer of the headline). Microsoft, Apple, and Oracle are welcome to start paying my taxes as reparation for the thousands of clerical jobs eliminated by office automation, and for those lost in the printing, publishing, typewriter, and adding machine industries. At minimum, there ought to be a fine paid by the software industry equal to the national debt for the sheer quantity of nonsense presented to citizens via PowerPoint and other multimedia software.
-d

Well, I probably wouldn’t go that far. At least not without a fair amount of good brandy.

bubbles

Jerry,

Thanks for collecting that background info on l’affaire Flynn. It was already obviously a political vendetta, but this clarifies the matter of by whom: An alliance between the “Deep State” faction of the permanent intelligence bureaucracy out to get Flynn, and the departing Obama Administration out to sabotage this new Administration in general.

Perhaps not yet provable (pending serious investigation) but the tracks left behind are not subtle.

One useful addition to The Atlantic’s timeline that occurs to me is the dates of the Obama Administration’s last-second opening-up of access to raw NSA phone and email intercept data to 16 Federal intelligence and law-enforcement agencies. (Previously, NSA passed along only data filtered of any identifications of US persons.)

The new policy was signed by DNI Clapper December 15th, by AG Lynch January 3rd, and announced January 12th – the same day Ignatius broke the story in the Post based on egregious leaks of NSA intercepts.

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/01/12/us/politics/nsa-gets-more-latitude-to-share-intercepted-communications.html?_r=0

Not that this policy was hastily conceived – it’s been in the works since 2008, with details under review by the Obama Administration since 2009, and written about publicly at least a year ago.

https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2016/02/obama-administration-closing-in-on-rules-to-let-nsa-share-more-freely-with-fbi-cia/

But that this policy was only implemented as Obama headed out the door does allow some reasonable conclusions.

Absent more data, it’s hard to make a convincing direct connection between this new policy and the Flynn vendetta, though AG Lynch’s signoff just around the time her people would have been reviewing Flynn recordings may or may not be coincidental.

But one obvious reason for the Obama people to get this done right before heading out the door is to empower their Deep State stay-behind allies in the various intel and law-enforcement agencies for the guerilla struggle to come. (This will also make it harder to figure out exactly where future politically targeted intercept leaks come from, by multiplying the possible sources.)

Somewhat speculatively, this may be an attempt to retroactively legitimize what could well have been serious rules violations about tapping raw NSA data for identifying info on US citizens who just happened to be involved with the incoming Administration. That deserves serious investigation. Hasty track-covering tends to be less than 100% efficient. The evidence may still actually be available.

In general, it is a seriously bad state of affairs when the old Kemalist “Deep State” designation has become totally appropriate for a major segment of the US federal bureaucracy. As someone recently pointed out, there is no “4th Branch Of Government” in the U.S. Constitution. This Deep State is a part of the Executive Branch that is in not-very-covert revolt against the new Chief Executive.

Porkypine

Well, it did smoke out Sally Yates, although she stuck around long enough to see that no career Justice attorney spruced up President Trump executive order on immigration, so that despite black letter law the Ninth Circuit found some tendrils of possible constitutional error and was able to confirm an injunction against the whole order, not just some part of it. President Trump should have learned a lesson about Deep Government that he ought not ever forget. The hate him in there.

bubbles

The Offer that Turns the Gaza Strip into Singapore

by Bassam Tawil  •  February 21, 2017 at 5:00 am

  • Last week, Hamas received an offer that no sane entity would turn down. The offer did not come from Hamas’s allies in Iran and the Islamic world. The offer, to turn the impoverished Gaza Strip into “the Singapore of the Middle East,” came from Israel.
  • “The Gazans must understand that Israel, which withdrew from the Gaza Strip to the last millimeter, is not the source of their suffering — it is the Hamas leadership, which doesn’t take their needs into consideration… The moment Hamas gives up its tunnels and rockets, we’ll be the first to invest.” — Israeli Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman.
  • Hamas does not want a new “Singapore” in the Middle East. Hamas wants Israel to disappear from the face of the earth. The welfare of the Palestinians living under its rule is the last thing on the mind of Hamas. The dispute is not about improving the living conditions of Palestinians, as far as Hamas is concerned. Instead, it is about the very existence of Israel.[snip]

I suppose no comment is needed.

bubbles

Sweden today

Horowitz: Sweden now rape capital amidst Muslim immigration http://video.foxnews.com/v/5248024459001/?#sp=show-clips

It’s long (just over 10 minutes). It’s discouraging. It’s important to watch the whole thing. The Swedes he interviewed at the end are not cherry picked. Swedes I have emailed with are in the same deluded state as those interviewed. Reality could drop a piano on their heads and they’d still insist gravity didn’t exist.

I feel sorry for Sweden. I feel sorry for Europe. I feel sorry for Britain. If they cannot wake up VERY soon now, Europe will become a Muslim hell hole. They are all importing the worst of the worst of Islam.

{o.o

Again, I wonder just how long those Vikings will put up with this.

bubbles

a10

http://www.bbc.com/future/story/20170217-bringing-the-soviet-unions-flying-tank-back-to-life
found this on the BBC compares it to Your favorite ‘plane A10

Well, that’s not quite true. Flying tanks are not always my favorite airplane. I would be happy to let the Air Force have what they need for the air superiority mission, which they think only they can do, if they would give close support of the field army which the Air Force johnnies don’t want anyway. Let the Army have an Army Air Corps again.Air Corps again.

bubbles

DCX

Dr Pournelle

You have your DCX now. But it’s called Falcon.

CRS-10 | Falcon 9 First Stage Landing

Live long and prosper

h lynn keith

bubbles

Republican Control

“They have the White House, both houses of Congress, most state governors, and in fact most local offices outside the big cities in New York and California. Of course they tremble in fear even so: the media says they should.”

——————-

But how did they manage to do that?  Most of the Federal Government have an R after their name, true, but to accomplish that

did they have to loosen up the principles the Republicans are supposed to stand for?  I have seen that going on for years.

If a number of R’s are RINO’s, than what has been accomplished?  Is the Iron Law in operation here, where the leadership has

done what best benefits the party?

B-

I suspect some will grow less timid. But it is a time of party realignment. Even the Black Caucus is getting some dissidents as crime rates grow. What the poor need is jobs; to get them they need [people who will pay them for something they can do.

bubbles

Sidestepping word “improvements”

Dr. Pournelle:
I, too, have trouble with my typing. Mine is due to neuropathy, but that’s neither here nor there. What I have done to help alleviate my situation is to use KeyTweak keyboard remapper. I used it to turn off Caps Lock and the dedicated Windows keys. Turning off the Alt key may not be an alternative in your case, but it’s possible.
When I bought my new desktop about eight months ago I also “upgraded” my 2003 version of Word to the 2016 version. What a stinker: all of the menus were “improved” to the point it was like learning a new program. To add to my misery, Microsoft changed its licensing so users no longer own it outright. I’m now renting Office Suite for a year. Feh!
I’ve downloaded Open Office and find it much more suited to the skills ingrained from Office 2003. Once my rented Microsoft Suite expires, I’ll be exclusively Open Office.
I hope KeyTweak offers some help.
–Pete Nofel

I haven’t come to that yet, but I may. Some improvements really are, but others ought to be optional.

bubbles

Obama’s 30,000 and NPR on Trump

Obama’s 30,000 agitators have a protesting manual; more evidence for a RICO investigation, etc. if the left starts rioting this spring:

https://nypost.com/2017/02/18/obama-linked-activists-have-a-training-manual-for-protesting-trump/

And, I heard this on NPR on Thursday or Friday and forgot until seeing an article now and I laughed when they said it. NPR is fake news!

<.>

After eight years of Barack Obama putting his office into permanent campaign mode while keeping his campaign machinery in constant operation, NPR is accusing Donald J. Trump of waging a “permanent campaign.”

</>

http://www.breitbart.com/big-government/2017/02/17/after-8-years-of-campaigner-in-chief-obama-npr-accuses-trump-of-permanent-campaign/

This article doesn’t mischaracterize what they said at all. I heard all of it and it was a joke.

◊ ◊ ◊ ◊ ◊

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

Percussa Resurgo

bubbles

bubbles

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

bubbles

bubbles

Western Civ; Flynn and McMasters and Sally Yates; Firefox; and news on neurology.

Tuesday, February 21, 2017

John Glenn must surely have wondered, as all the astronauts weathered into geezers, how a great nation grew so impoverished in spirit. Our heroes are old and stooped and wizened, but they are the only giants we have. Today, when we talk about Americans boldly going where no man has gone before, we mean the ladies’ bathroom. Progress.

Mark Steyn

Liberalism is a philosophy of consolation for the West as it commits suicide.

James Burnham

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

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

George Santayana

bubbles

bubbles

Wednesday: There is below a discussion of Firefox.. It is perhaps interesting, but no longer as relevant as it was. After posting yesterday I received:

 

firefox session save

Hi Jerry,
You might want to install the following firefox addon. I think it does what you want.
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/session-manager/
Good Luck!

Jose Tenembaum

 

On the machine in the back room. I went to Firefox add-ons, looked around for a while and found the addon called Session Manager, installed it, reset, and all was well; there is now an option in the tools menu to “Save Session”, and it does that.

  Now back to yesterday’s post.

 

bubbles

 

beowulf

 

Do We Still Want the West?

The best antidote to the politics of Trump or Le Pen is a course in Western Civ.

https://www.wsj.com/articles/do-we-still-want-the-west-1487635725

By

Bret Stephens

Feb. 20, 2017 7:08 p.m. ET

684 COMMENTS

In the late 1980s Stanford University did away with its required Western civilization course after Jesse Jackson led students in a chant of “Hey, hey, ho, ho, Western Civ has got to go!” Campus conservatives tried to bring it back last year, but the effort failed in a student vote by a 6 to 1 margin.

They should try pushing Western Civ again. To adapt the line in that Passenger song, you only know you love it when you let it go.

The thought comes to mind following Sergei Lavrov’s Orwellian speech last week at the Munich Security Conference, in which the Russian foreign minister called for a “post-West world order.” He also used the occasion to deny Moscow’s involvement in hacking U.S. and European elections, to announce that his government would recognize passports issued by its puppet state in eastern Ukraine, and to call for an end to the “post-truth” and “post-fact” state of international relations. [snip]

I am no great fan of Mr. Stephens, and I am not so sure we need an antidote to Mr. Trump, but I am certain that more understanding of the history of Western Civilization would give better understanding of the Trump phenomena, and perhaps some insights into the Reverend Jesse Jackson.

I am pleased to see at least one large circulation medium saying a word for Western Civ. When I went to the University of Iowa in 1952 I was required, like all entering freshmen, to take Western Civilization, a two semester course, under George Mosse, one of the greatest lecturers I have ever experienced. In a real sense that course changed my life; it integrated a bunch of bits and pieces I had learned from books and other courses. I have said more about this before in an essay I wrote when I could type faster and better, and I refer you to it. Since that time I have witnessed the truth of James Burnham’s definition of liberalism as the West commits suicide, and the truth of Santayana’s observation about history in general.

Despair is a sin.

bubbles

LTGEN McMaster is actually a much better choice for National Security Advisor than Flynn. He’s much less likely to push for war with Iran, and while he’s a bit overly aggressive on Russia, he isn’t a neocon, either.

—————————————

Roland Dobbins

I would agree; as a strategist with battle operations experience he is so much better qualified than an intelligence expert as was Mr. Flynn that I wonder why General McMaster was not offered –or assigned to – the post in the first place. The office requires no Senate confirmation, but the NSA is traditionally in the war room when an operation goes down; and a great priority need is a battle plan to wipe out the Caliphate, which, unlike some of the other terrorist organizations, stakes its legitimacy on actually holding and governing (under Sharia Law) real territory and Islamic subjects. That will take military operations, not counter terrorist operations.

We will need counter terrorist ops, and Mr. Flynn’s experience may justify calling him back into active service to direct them (or may not; I am not making actual recommendations); but eliminating the Caliphate is going to require armored divisions and A-10’s, not feeding Iraqi troops led by American Special Forces into a battalion a month meat grinder. A real strategist knows that if you need a regiment, send two divisions; the battle is shorter, and there are far fewer civilian casualties. And there is no substitute for Victory. McMaster, as an old school West Pointer, knows that down to the cellular level.

General McMaster

Taking wagers that when all the layers of the approaching attacks on General McMaster are peeled back they turn out to be based on his failure to genuflect before the memory of the sainted John Kennedy?

Dereliction of Duty: Lyndon Johnson, Robert McNamara, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and the Lies That Led to Vietnam

Rod McFadden

I wouldn’t take that bet, but there are probably other reasons for some to hate him.

bubbles

Flynn’s Conversation

Hello, Dr. Pournelle –
I hope all is well with you and your wife and that a speedy recovery is in store for both of you.
In your Chaos Manor of Feb 20, you said of the Flynn Affair – hmm, is that a movie with James Coburn? – “… for some reason General Flynn denied the talk had taken place.”
Might the reason be that he considered the conversation was classified in some manner? Of course, then the response should have been, “I can neither confirm nor deny” etc., etc., etc., but maybe the MSM would call that a denial.
Unfortunately, the damage is done and I’m sure the Obama camp is wringing their collective hands in glee, having scored a point in spite.
Well wishes to both of you,
Cam Kirmser

Considering that Flynn MUST have known that the Russian Ambassador’s telephone was tapped, and that Mr. Trump’s inner circle must have been aware that Flynn was calling the Russians – assuming he was not calling under orders and knew exactly that he was going to say, which is actually more likely than not – that doesn’t make much sense. Sally Yates, acting attorney general, a holdover Obama appointee and known Obama agent, was the one who supposedly alerted the White House – after the inauguration.

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=.d8da886eea85

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.[snip]

But this doesn’t make sense either. As former Director of Military Intelligence, how could Flynn not have known that his calls to the Russian Ambassador were being tapped? And whether or not those taps were being made available to the President Elect and his National Security Advisor designate, they would certainly be available to the President after inauguration, in the very unlikely event that he didn’t already

As Roland notes, General McMaster is probably better qualified for the post, but why give Mr. Trump’s opponents a scalp? It isn’t as if Mr. Flynn did not know that before very long, Mr. Trump would certainly know exactly what was said in those phone calls.

A puzzlement. For more on Sally Yates, see http://www.powerlineblog.com/archives/2017/02/sally-yatess-legacy-of-injustice.php

And

‘It was as if the Bureau and Justice Department intentionally waited to pounce until Trump was in power — which meant that any misstatement could now be framed as a false representation by the sitting president.’

<http://www.nationalreview.com/article/445045/general-michael-flynn-national-security-adviser-fbi-investigation-phone-call-russian-ambassador>

—————————————

Roland Dobbins

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Flynn, you’re fired!, and successful bureaucracy

Dr. Pournelle,
Flynn’s dismissal makes perfect sense: Mr. Trump deliberately operates at the center of a whirlwind, and any competing controversy has to come from his opposition. I imagine that the General is mildly relieved to be relieved.
If we say that spending on the war on poverty is wasted, how do we explain the growth in bureaucratic positions and increase in the population of “public masters.” Their bottom salary is probably equal to LBJ’s. Was not this government jobs program was the real point all along?
I suspect the author of the Iron Law of sandbagging his readers!
Remembering George Washington, despite the devaluation of his birthday,
-d

image Oh, would I do that? But I think we have not seen the last of General Flynn.

bubbles

Firefox slowdowns are perhaps Microsoft’s

Dr. Pournelle,
I’ve been having a lot of problems with the last two iterations of Firefox, too, and have gone to what I consider great lengths to reinstall and reconfigure the software, with little success. I also used task manager to look at processes during the times slow-downs occur, and it did indeed appear that Firefox was the problem, but I now think that background operating system services (that I don’t use) from the Microsoft store, Microsoft Edge, and Cortina, among others, are what “breaks” Firefox. They are choking down the available bandwidth, and causing Firefox to time out, stall, blank pages on refresh, and generally act like I’m running a dial-up modem.
Even though I do not use those software services, I’ve been unable to disable or uninstall them. Cortina and Edge are embedded in the operating system and in search, and the Microsoft Store (along with One Note and Xbox, neither of which I use) are, I’m beginning to believe, prioritizing “phoning home” my user information and usage data, no doubt so as to improve my user experience.
I’ll let you know if I find a fix, but I’m discouraged.
-d

Firefox session save

Hi Jerry,
You might want to install the following Firefox addon. I think it does what you want.
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/session-manager/
Good Luck!

I will try that presently, when I have some time. For the moment I do not have time to reconstruct my Firefox which I will have to do if I reset.

Firefox restoration issues after crash

Sir,
Please consider using the Firefox add-on “tab mix plus”. In the options, select “session” tab, and ensure the “use Firefox’s built in session restore” is unselected, and select what you want to “save” or restore in the options on the rest of the page. There are many more options/tabs to select/explore that might also be useful. You are also able to save multiple versions of the options selected, so it is easy to revert to a previous “state” for the add-on if things go wrong.
Hope this helps.
Very respectfully,
Todd

Actually I thought I had, but it keeps giving me Session Manager, which offers me a bunch of weeks to months old saved sessions. I will experiment with all this stuff presently and just see what is going on; that was the essence of the old column, to understand how to use computers to get actual work done.

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Restoring lost Firefox settings

Hi Jerry,
To save and restore Firefox profile data (the loss of which is causing you grief) just locate your Profiles folder and copy it to another location as a backup. A simple script using copy should suffice to do this (set it up on Task Manager to run nightly) and another one should let you restore it if required.
Here’s how to find your Profiles folder: (extracts from MozillaZine):
Firefox stores a user’s personal information such as bookmarks, extensions, and user preferences in a unique profile. The first time you start Firefox, it will automatically create a default profile; additional profiles can be created using the Profile Manager. The settings which form a profile are stored in files within a special folder on your computer — this is the profile folder.
The Firefox profile containing your user data and settings is not found in the installation directory but rather in a separate location on your computer. Use the information given below to find your Firefox profile folder.
On Windows Vista and above, profile folders are in this location, by default:
C:Users\AppDataRoamingMozillaFirefoxProfiles.
The AppData folder is a hidden folder; to show hidden folders, open a Windows Explorer window and choose “Organize → Folder and Search Options → Folder Options → View (tab) → Show hidden files and folders”.
You can also use this path to find the profile folder, even when it is hidden:
%APPDATA%MozillaFirefoxProfiles
%APPDATA% is a variable represents the C:Documents and SettingsApplication Data folder on Windows 2000/XP and the C:Users\AppDataRoaming folder on Windows Vista and above.
Image:Appdata.png
To find a profile folder in the default location on Windows:
Press “Windows key Image:Windows_Key.png + R” to open the Run box
(or, you can click “Start → Run…” on Windows 2000/XP)
In the Run box, type in %APPDATA%
Click OK. A Windows Explorer window will appear.
In this window, choose Mozilla → Firefox → Profiles.
Each folder in the “Profiles” folder (e.g., “xxxxxxxx.default”) is a profile on your computer.
Cheers,
Julian

Thanks; it will be a while before I get time to do all that, and I have to confess, it will probably take me an hour or so to understand it all. You confirm what I suspected, Microsoft has made things complicated – hidden folders that it takes a lot of work to find – and apparently Mozilla is following suit. I wonder why? I guess the experts don’t want to trust users with the ability to control their machines. Think what they will do to robots and our ability to control them.

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English cops refuse to carry guns 

“. . . one in eight officers would not be prepared to carry a gun under any circumstances, despite the threat of a Paris-style attack in Britain.”

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4221644/We-t-armed-officers-warns-Hogan-Howe.html

Britain’s leaders have, over three generations, destroyed the English gun culture. This is the pitiable and predictable result.

This is a prime exemplar of the collectivist process which turns men into sheep: First take away their ability to resist and to defend their own and the common good. Next grant them food and shelter they did not earn. Then just wait for the “baaaaaaa”. It will come.

 

“We make men without chests and expect from them virtue and enterprise.

We laugh at honor and are shocked to find traitors in our midst.” –

C.S. Lewis

I wonder if there ever again be an England.

Cordially,

John

 

 

The Lewis quote is from his book, The Abolition of Man, a book I recommend everyone will have read at least once in their lifetimes.

And seven of eight would carry a gun.

 

 

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Changing color of wavy underlines

Hi Jerry:

You may have already solved this, but if not, this Microsoft knowledge base article should help:

https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/help/925597/how-to-customize-the-color-of-the-spelling-and-grammar-checker-underlines-in-microsoft-word

It seems that there is no way to do it with Word settings, but can be done by editing the registry.

HTH–

Doug Ely

Thanks, but alas I really don’t want to  edit the registry. I know you can do amazing things, but you really have to know what you’re doing.

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screen issues

Jerry,

Reading about your travails with the keyboard today, I was reminded to ask about one of the single most infuriating features of Windows: is there any way to turn off the function that automatically changes a window to full screen if you drag it to the top of the monitor? That inevitably happens when I am trying to posture two windows side-by-side for work, so it completely undoes what I am trying to accomplish.

Jim

An interesting question. Doesn’t really bother me with big screens but drives me mad with the Surface.  If there is such a command to turn it off I don’t know it.

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http://www.pcmag.com/news/351726/how-to-organize-your-desktop-with-windows-10-snap-assist

Here it is again. Once you know how to use Snap, the arrangement Jim was seeking is actually far easier than with manually arranged Windows.

Eric

It is worth learning how to use Snap. Beats my old manual arrangements. Usually.

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Incredible News about Neurons!

This is incredible! It flies in the face of Wendell Johnson’s disdain for aggression, but makes sense and is not incompatible. After all, scientific thinking is an application; we must not allow it to become another semantic blockage. Nor can we allow this to excuse a regression to maladjustment. I consider this a way of “fine tuning” an acceptable series of social strategies, communication, thinking, and acting presented in People in Quandaries:

<.>

Researchers studied the changes that occurred in the brains of mice demonstrating aggressive behaviour. These mice attacked other mice and won in fights. After a win, they became even more aggressive, and new neurons appeared in their hippocampus, a key brain structure. In mice that were allowed to continue fighting, certain changes were observed in the activity of their nerve cells. The scientists hope that the new information on the neurobiological bases of aggression will not only help in understanding this important phenomenon, but will also encourage research in other areas – and even help in finding causes of autism and other similar disorders in humans.

</>

https://m.medicalxpress.com/news/2016-02-aggression-nerve-cells-brain.html

So, how do we harmonize this? Well, play sports instead of watching them like the bunch of obese couch potatoes that populated my childhood locality, colloquially known as “sports fans”. Go out and fight, legally, in boxing gyms or in competitions. Get some gloves and go spar. Do some fencing; go out and be a human being in a safe way where aggression can be safely and productively expressed! Or, if you can’t do that, buy a punching bag and get to work!

Even these Five Tibetan Rites are a great way to express aggression in a very controlled and disciplined way. The better I get, the slower I do them. I always seem able to get some kind of a workout from these exercises… Expressing aggression in a patient and persistent way can be most rewarding as well. And that gets into meditation and the disciplines you must learn to impose on yourself to still the body and the mind so that you can have a kind of clarity to do something more…. It all flows together in a beautiful way.

This scientific discovery really helps pull things together for me. I hope you find it as useful as I do.

◊ ◊ ◊ ◊ ◊

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

Percussa Resurgo

People in Quandaries by Wendell Johnson – one of my undergraduate professors – is another book I recommend for nearly everyone. It is old, but I would not think yet outdated. It is long out of print, but his son, Nicholas Johnson has arrangements. http://myweb.uiowa.edu/johnson/wj/wjpinq.html

The Five Tibetan Rites is the exercise I recommend to everyone.

I haven’t had time to digest this.

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The robot that takes your job should pay taxes, says Bill Gates

https://qz.com/911968/bill-gates-the-robot-that-takes-your-job-should-pay-taxes/?utm_source=pocket&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=pockethits

Robots are taking human jobs. But Bill Gates believes that governments should tax companies’ use of them, as a way to at least temporarily slow the spread of automation and to fund other types of employment.[snip]

 

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

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The Flynn Affair puzzle; Em Drive yet again; Firefox; and other matters

Monday, February 20, 2017

“The wealth of our middle class has been ripped from their homes and then redistributed across the entire world.”

Donald Trump

Between 1965 and 2011, the official poverty rate was essentially flat, while the government spending per person on poverty programs rose by more than 900% after inflation.

Peter Cove

Amnesty International Boss Endorses “Jihad in self-defence”

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

We are a nation of assimilated immigrants.

Immigration without assimilation is invasion.

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If you wonder about the relevance of the aphorisms I use, contemplate that Amnesty International, with UN bureaucrats, provides much of the vetting of refugees. You may judge their rate of success by those admitted to Europe; we don’t collect statistics on crimes of refugees in the US other than terrorist acts, and the media seldom reports it lest you draw improper and politically incorrect inferences. The Swedes seem to have learned to live with it, but you can never be sure when Vikings have plain had enough. One might say that of Germans, or Poles, or for that matter the French, at least as late as 1789.

We do know that crime rates have risen in neighborhoods where some immigrant refugee communities have been established, but with few exceptions we don’t have reliable statistics on their origin or for matter the crimes themselves unless they are pretty spectacular.

Acts of terrorism are reported, but the previous administration tended to label those acts workplace violence, not terrorism, no matter the slogans chanted by the perpetrators. This is called in many J schools “responsible journalism.”

Note than poverty is apparently not terminatable, despite exponential spending on poverty program. Note also that one of the major costs of poverty programs is administrative personnel, and if they actually succeeded in ending poverty (or even substantially reducing it, as we saw way back in the work for welfare days) they would be pitting themselves out of their jobs; they may have mixed emotions about that.

And I doubt I need remind you that education costs have increased exponentially without much improvement (if any) since Nobel Prize winner Glenn T. Seaborg concluded that the school system was indistinguishable from an act of war against the American people; particularly the impoverished and unskilled; in my experience they learn little in school that anyone would pay them to do. Many do learn good civic and work habits but that is generally an extracurricular activity.

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I weary of Firefox but I have yet to bite the bullet and eliminate it. If anyone from Mozilla is listening, please add one feature: a prominently displayed easy way to save a session, so that when the inevitable crash comes – not always caused by Firefox – it restores a configuration you recently saved instead of some arbitrary session weeks – perhaps months! – old. Rebuilding my system of windows monthly I can take. Weekly even. But daily is too often to find windows I closed months ago back, often talking to me. Assume your automatic configuration saves don’t work properly and at least give us a chance to do it manually. And yes, it has done it to me three days straight now: I will open some link that overwhelms Firefox. It endlessly tries to open that stubborn link. It responds to no commands, or takes minutes to respond. The only remedy is to use Session Manager to close Firefox and reopen it. That works but it offers me restoration sessions of weeks to months ago, not yesterday’s, or even last good session. Is this considered a good joke on your users? Or is it that you actually have a way to save a session configuration and you are proud of how well you hide instructions on how to do it? I’d really like to know.

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While I am at it, Microsoft, please tell me how to get back to the spell and grammar check system used fairly recently, in which grammar suggestions are marked with a blue line, spelling with red. Yes, I meant “actually have” in the previous paragraph, and for that matter I intended to say “fairly recently” earlier in this sentence, thank you. I understand that in both cases I might be using a needless word. I even appreciate being reminded to think about this. But neither is a spelling error and neither deserves a red line for instant correction. I have enough problems having to look at the keyboard when I type, then looking up at the screen to see a sea of red marking errors I made by striking two or more keys at once; I don’t need MORE red because you prefer a different syntax from what I customarily use. Incidentally, I wrote ‘different syntax than’ in the last sentence, but your program didn’t flag that; and that really is a grammatical error. Hire a better grammarian, and no, I don’t want a job.

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The Flynn Affair

This is complicated. General Flynn is probably the best qualified advisor on various intelligence organizations and affairs that the President could have chosen, and he has some experience with all foreign threats, but little experience in military operations. He is said to have fallen out of favor with the Obama administration (which appointed him to be Director of the Defense Intelligence Agency) for holding that the United States was more vulnerable to Islamic terrorism now than it was in 2001 before the World Trade Center attack. He was caused to retire from DIA Director (and the Army) a year before his term as Director of DIA would have ended.

His domestic threat credentials and experience are pretty thin, and I have no data on his ability to come up with national security strategies, which, by their very nature, tend to be both foreign and domestic. The National Security Advisor post with its ready access to the President (or at least to the Chief of Staff) and few personnel management responsibilities is not a Constitutional office (does not require Senate approval, unlike his promotion to flag rank, which did), and we don’t have a lot of experience with it. We have Cabinet positions for Homeland Security, Foreign Policy, and of course the Military; all vitally important to national security, but all also involved with creation and management of bureaucracies and supervision of many operations.. There are also the 21 Intelligence agencies and shadows, which are both sources of intel and bureaucratic rivals, both to each other and to the other relevant Departments.

And then there’s the FBI, which is nominally part of the Justice Department, but retained control of counterintelligence in the US and Caribbean when the CIA was formed – if it still has that jurisdiction I don’t know; at one time the bureaucratic internecine warfare was open and brutal. The FBI always insists on domestic jurisdiction in counterintelligence. I do not here argue that it should not, but the conflict with both the spies and the Department of Homeland Security is obvious (and I haven’t even touched on Military counterintel.)

The National Security Advisor has to be privy to all this and more before he can even begin his task of helping the President make decisions about all of those – sometimes brutal – internecine conflicts – and we have not yet got to foreign open and clandestine operations ranging from open invasion to smuggled atom bombs to assassinations of friendly allied officials.

What is known is that General Flynn was, after consultation with many others, chosen as National Security Advisor, formally a position as Executive Assistant to the President. Probably his best known predecessor was Henry Kissinger, Nixon’s National Security Advisor, who also became Secretary of State, and was instrumental in engineering the rapprochement with China. Kissinger also once compared himself with Metternich; but that’s another story. Here is what is known:

https://www.theatlantic.com/news/archive/2017/02/flynn-resigns-timeline/516594/

November 8, 2016: Donald Trump is elected the 45th president of the United States. Flynn, a former Army general who was an early and ardent supporter of the Republican nominee, is expected to get a senior position in the Trump White House.

November 18: Trump names Flynn as his national-security adviser.

December 29: President Obama announced measures, including sanctions, on Russia for its interference in the U.S. election. The sanctions are in addition to those imposed on Moscow following its invasion in 2014 of Ukraine’s Crimea region. Flynn and Kislyak speak that day, The Washington Post reports, citing a Trump transition official. The official says sanctions weren’t discussed. Additionally, CNN reports the Russian ambassador texted Flynn on December 28.

December 30: Russian President Vladimir Putin says Moscow will not retaliate. The Post says that prompted U.S. intelligence analysts to look for reasons why Putin declined to impose his own measures against the U.S. They found, the newspaper reported, Kislyak’s communications, including the phone call, with Flynn. Sally Yates, then the deputy attorney general, found Flynn’s comments in the call “highly significant,” the Post reported.

January 12: David Ignatius, the Post columnist, wrote that Flynn and Kislyak spoke several times on December 29, the day the sanctions were announced. “What did Flynn say, and did it undercut the U.S. sanctions?” Ignatius wrote. He added a Trump transition official told him the calls, which occurred before the U.S. sanctions were announced, did not cover that topic. Ignatius added:

This official later added that Flynn’s initial call was to express condolences to Kislyak after the terrorist killing of the Russian ambassador to Ankara Dec. 19, and that Flynn made a second call Dec. 28 to express condolences for the shoot-down of a Russian plane carrying a choir to Syria. In that second call, Flynn also discussed plans for a Trump-Putin conversation sometime after the inauguration. In addition, a second Trump official said the Dec. 28 call included an invitation from Kislyak for a Trump administration official to visit Kazakhstan for a conference in late January.

January 13: Sean Spicer, the White House spokesman, told reporters in a conference call that Flynn and Kislyak only discussed a post-inauguration call between Trump and Putin. “That was it, plain and simple,” he said.

January 15: Pence, on CBS’s Face the Nation, said Flynn “did not discuss anything having to do with the United States’ decision to expel diplomats or impose censure against Russia.”

January 19: Yates, the deputy attorney general, and senior intelligence officials debated what to do with the information they had on Flynn. The Post reported that FBI Director James Comey argued against notifying Trump administration officials of the communications.  

January 20: Trump was inaugurated; Flynn officially became national-security adviser.

January 23: Spicer told reporters he spoke with Flynn about the issue the previous night (January 22). He said Flynn and the Russian envoy spoke once. They discussed, he said, the Russian plane crash, the Syrian civil war, Christmas, and a call between their two leaders. Yates raised the issue again with Comey, who the Post said dropped his initial opposition to briefing the administration.

After that, things got hot. Most of it is public.

Washington Post Accidentally Reveals Who Leaked Flynn Call: Nine Obama Administration Officials

http://americanlookout.com/washington-post-accidentally-reveals-who-leaked-flynn-call-nine-obama-administration-officials/

It’s becoming obvious that General Flynn had a target on his back from the moment he joined Trump’s team.

Obama loyalists working in Washington set the wheels in motion to take Flynn down before Obama was even out of office.

The Washington Post may have accidentally spilled the beans on this in a recent article.

Take a look:

“National security adviser Flynn discussed sanctions with Russian ambassador, despite denials, officials say

National security adviser Michael Flynn privately discussed U.S. sanctions against Russia with that country’s ambassador to the United States during the month before President Trump took office, contrary to public assertions by Trump officials, current and former U.S. officials said.

Flynn’s communications with Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak were interpreted by some senior U.S. officials as an inappropriate and potentially illegal signal to the Kremlin that it could expect a reprieve from sanctions that were being imposed by the Obama administration in late December to punish Russia for its alleged interference in the 2016 election.”

Here’s the key passage:

“Neither of those assertions is consistent with the fuller account of Flynn’s contacts with Kislyak provided by officials who had access to reports from U.S. intelligence and law enforcement agencies that routinely monitor the communications of Russian diplomats. Nine current and former officials, who were in senior positions at multiple agencies at the time of the calls, spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss intelligence matters.”

“At the time of the calls” means these officials were in office during the Obama Administration.

That means it was nine Obama officials who leaked the calls.

Of course, they only “spoke on the condition of anonymity.”

That leak is the first, and I think the only, criminal act in the Flynn affair. It was from unnamed intelligence officials, and made classified information available to journalists and other unauthorized persons. It not only confirmed what I am sure the Russians knew anyway, that their Ambassador’s telephone was tapped, but also identified who talked with Ambassador Sergey Ivanovich Kislyak several times on December 29; one day before Mr. Putin announced that Russia would not retaliate for Mr. Obama’s expulsion of 35 Russian diplomats and their families.

Obama expels 35 Russian diplomats in retaliation for US election hacking

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2016/dec/29/barack-obama-sanctions-russia-election-hack

The Obama administration on Thursday announced its retaliation for Russian efforts to interfere with the US presidential election, ordering sweeping new sanctions that included the expulsion of 35 Russians.

US intelligence services believe Russia ordered cyber-attacks on the Democratic National Committee (DNC), Hillary Clinton’s campaign and other political organizations, in an attempt to influence the election in favor of the Republican candidate, Donald Trump.

Given that Mr. Trump was on record – had campaigned on – seeking better relations with Russia, it would be astounding if someone in Trump’s circle did not call the Russian Ambassador; and given that 35 Russian diplomats and their families were about to be displaced and sent packing, I cannot believe anyone would be surprised to discover these sanctions were discussed. Was Trump likely to rescind the order, or should Mr. Kislyak’s friends start packing? It was inevitable that the question would be asked, and the White House knows it.

Priebus: ‘Nothing wrong’ with Flynn talking about sanctions with Russian ambassador

By Rebecca Morin

02/18/17 08:40 PM EST

White House chief of staff Reince Priebus said there was “nothing wrong” with former national security adviser Mike Flynn talking about sanctions against Russia with the country’s ambassador.

“No, there’s nothing wrong with having a conversation about sanctions,” Priebus said in an interview on CBS’s “Face the Nation” to be broadcast Sunday. “And there’s nothing wrong about having a conversation about the fact that the Obama administration put further sanctions in place and expelled some folks out of the United States. There’s nothing wrong with that topic coming up in a conversation.”

If General Flynn answered that question – and who can believe it was not asked – there is no intimation that any quid pro quo was sought or obtained. There is something strange about the selective leak of the contents of that telephone call: it does not include the transcript, which remains classified. However, the “intelligence community” will answer specific questions, and the “quid pro quo” question was asked; the answer was that there was none discussed.

We don’t know the content of the conversation, although the fact that we know it took place and how we know that remains highly classified – and was leaked by Mr. Obama’s anonymous officials. The Washington establishment is probably used to this sort of thing, but I expect that Mr. Trump is not, and that he will do what he can to find out just who those criminals are; and indeed they are criminals. Of course the Intelligence Establishment will resist this discovery with all its heart and mind.

So: General Flynn unsurprisingly called the Russian Ambassador, and did in fact discuss the sanctions – although we are not about to hear what was said – and later told public officials that the sanctions were not discussed. After much storm and stress, General Flynn resigned his post as NSA, although everyone is quick to reassure us that he committed no criminal act, and indeed did nothing wrong – at least in that conversation. I suspect he was asked to get Mr. Putin to stand down on what everyone expected would be routine retaliation – 35 US diplomats expelled – and generally smooth things over. When the Intelligence Community leaked that conversation, and some journalists seemed to know more about it than they ought to, for some reason General Flynn denied the talk had taken place. Any speculation on why remains speculation. I find it inconceivable that the NSA designate acted to call the Russian Ambassador without the knowledge and consent – possibly the urging – of someone in the Trump inner circle, which makes it all even more mysterious.

General Flynn isn’t saying; I doubt he ever will. But something strange happened to cause his resignation.

Meanwhile, the narrative that the Russians influenced the American election through hacking continues to make its rounds. The USSR with its rockets and thermonuclear weapons, and thousands of agents in the US along with countless sympathizers in government and academia could not fix an American election, but Mr. Putin’s rump of the USSR can? The assertion is absurd. Some people even assert that the Flynn incident proves the ‘Russia hacked the election’ narrative, but that’s even more absurd. Can anyone believe that General Flynn, former Director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, was unaware that the Russian Ambassador’s phone was tapped? To ask the question is to answer it.

Flynn knew. He knew he talked to the ambassador about the upcoming of the expulsion of 35 high level Russian diplomats and their families. He got fired for saying he had not. That makes no sense. One thing that will come of this: there will be an investigation, and some of the previous administration’s intelligence officials will be seen to have leaked classified information. Others, particularly in Justice, may be involved. Beyond that we cannot know, at least as yet.

bubbles

The EM drive again.  How much money have the Chinese invested in this?

 

EmDrive: Chinese space agency to put controversial microwave thruster onto satellites ‘as soon as possible’

http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/emdrive-chinese-space-agency-put-controversial-tech-onto-satellites-soon-possible-1596328

 

If they are trying to get us to invest in further tests, they win: I think we should.  The upside is enormous if it works; the cost of an experimentum crucis is low. We probably spend more on bunny inspectors and other jobs not worth doing.

 

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It’s dinner time. I may get more in later, but surely this in enough.  Thanks for the subscriptions.

 

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

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