The Caliphate Emerges

View 837 Friday, August 08, 2014

“Transparency and the rule of law will be the touchstones of this presidency.”

President Barack Obama, January 31, 2009

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I continue to work on the last chapters of Mamelukes. The world goes on. Israel and Hamas have achieved a day of truce, but of course it isn’t peace and won’t be. Having seen what Hamas managed to accomplish in secret – amazing complex of tunnels and launch sites – leaves me wondering what they could have achieved had they put that effort into building schools and hospitals and factories; could Gaza have become another Hong Kong? But there was no attempt to do that.

Of course that’s the fault of the Israelis, as everything is and always will be from the Hamas viewpoint.

Yesterday was my birthday. There are times when I get discouraged.

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“Where was America?” asked Majid, a 28-year resident of Qaraqosh who fled his home this week with thousands of other Christians. He wouldn’t give his last name for fear of being targeted by the Islamists. He said as Peshmerga forces withdrew, the militants entered and took control of Qaraqosh, Iraq’s largest Christian city and home to some of the world’s oldest Christian communities. Some Christians have been told to convert to Islam or leave.

“They took the cross off our church and replaced it with a black flag of the Islamic State,” said Majid, who is seeking refuge in Erbil. Thousands of Christians have fled into the Kurdish territory and are sleeping on the floors of churches and community centers.

Fears Rise in Northern Iraq Despite U.S. Support

Perhaps the President will call off a fundraiser or two and pay some attention to the situation in the Middle East? The time to have been sending in support for the Kurds has passed; now they are under direct attack from the Caliphate. It will take more than Navy and Marine air strikes to assure the survival of Kurdistan.

This crisis has been building ever since Bremer the Unsuccessful disbanded the Baathist Iraqi Army, and anyone who has not seen it coming ought to be dismissed as being incapable of service to the United States. Fortunately a number of officers have known this day would come, and we can hope they have been able to make some preparations; but it will be a near thing.

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It is not too late for a combination of US Special Forces and CIS, with plenty of logistic support, to work with the Kurds to roll back the Caliphate; but whether we have the will to do so is another matter.  If Iraqi Kurdistan falls, the Middle East situation become more serious than it has been for a long  time. American meddling has brought about this result; we have a moral obligation to restabliize and then get out.  I have little confidence that the President understands this.

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

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Winding up the Impossible Experiment reports

View 837 Monday, August 04, 2014

“Transparency and the rule of law will be the touchstones of this presidency.”

President Barack Obama, January 31, 2009

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Karl Lembke is a chemical engineer with the LA Department of Water and Power, and works in the quality department. He is also a one of the leaders of the Los Angeles Science Fantasy Society and thus an old friend. He sends this

Impossible Thruster Probably Impossible

Posted by Chad Orzel on August 4, 2014

I’ve gotten a few queries about this “Impossible space drive” thing that has space enthusiasts all a-twitter. This supposedly generates thrust through the interaction of an RF cavity with a “quantum vacuum virtual plasma,” which is certainly a collection of four words that turn up in physics papers. An experiment at a NASA lab has apparently tested a couple of these gadgets, and claimed to see thrust being produced. Which has a lot of people booking tickets on the Mars mission that this supposedly enables.

Most physicists I know have reacted to this with some linear combination of “heavy sigh” and “eye roll.” The proposed mechanism doesn’t really make any sense, and more importantly, even in the free abstract for their conference talk they state that both the configuration of the device that was supposed to produce thrust and the “null” version that was not supposed to produce thrust gave basically the same result. As Tom notes, this is mind-boggling, and John Baez goes into more detail, including a link to the paper.

The paper itself is kind of a strange read, like it was put together by a committee containing a mix of responsible, hard-headed engineers and wild-eyed enthusiasts. The experimental procedure and results sections are very sober and pretty clear that this is not a meaningful test of anything, but then there’s a whole section planning missions to Mars with scaled-up versions of the technology. Which sort of suggests that this was a test run by some career engineers at the insistence of an enthusiast who’s highly-placed enough to make them do tests and write up stuff that they find kind of dubious. But that’s just speculation on my part.

The only thing I have to add to this discussion is a quick mention of why this is likely to have gone wrong. The core technique described in the report is a “torsion pendulum.” This is a technique for measuring tiny forces that dates back to the days of the singularly odd Henry Cavendish, and is still one of the principal techniques for measuring the force of gravity. The basic idea is to hang your test system from a thin wire, balanced at one end of a barbell-like arm, then do something that makes the barbell twist. The amount of twist in the wire will then tell you how much force was produced.

The basic technique has a long and distinguished history. It’s also notoriously finicky, which is why there’s still a lot of uncertainty and debate about gravity measurements. From stuff quoted by Baez, this seems to be the first use of the NASA lab’s torsion pendulum apparatus, which is not terribly promising. There are zillions of ways this could go wrong, and you’re not going to account for all of them the first time out of the gate.

To give you an idea of what’s involved, one of the very best groups in the world at doing this sort of measurement is the “Eöt-Wash Group” at the University of Washington, whose short-range tests of Newton’s inverse-square law provide the extremely shiny photograph in the “featured image” up at the top of this post. I’ve seen numerous talks by these guys, who are awesome, and in many of them they show a photograph of the lab, which contains a big shiny vacuum chamber and set of magnetic shield at one side of the room, and a knee-high stack of lead bricks right in the middle of the floor. That’s not because some grad student got tired before getting all the lead back to the storage room– the pile is placed very deliberately to counter the gravitational attraction of a large hill behind the physics building there.

That’s the level of perturbation you need to account for when you’re doing these sorts of experiments right. Now, the Eöt-Wash crew are looking for much smaller forces than the rocket scientists in Houston, and Houston is pretty flat, anyway, so they may not need to worry about carefully placing lead bricks. But there are dozens of tiny perturbations that are really hard to sort out– the report specifically mentions vibrations caused by waves in the ocean a few miles away, and if they’re seeing that, they’re going to be bothered by a lot of other stuff. This isn’t something you’re going to sort out in the roughly one week of testing that they actually did.

So, yeah, don’t go booking yourself a ticket to Mars because of this story. It’s almost certainly an experimental error of some sort, most likely a thermal air current due to uneven heating. Which is a failure mode with a long and distinguished history– Cavendish himself noted in 1798 that an experimenter standing near the case could drive air currents that would deflect the pendulum, so he put the entire apparatus in a shed, and took his readings with a telescope. And in his final set of data, he found that he needed to account for the difference in heating and cooling rates between his metal test masses and the wood and glass of the case.

The good news is that there’s enough sober and practical content in the report to suggest that somebody there will eventually do this right. At which time the effect will probably disappear– it’s already a few orders of magnitude smaller than an earlier claim, according to the space.com story linked above. Removing air currents as an issue (which they can do, but didn’t because they were using cheap RF amplifiers that couldn’t handle vacuum) will probably wipe it out completely.

So, don’t go booking tickets to Mars. But do go look at the Eöt-Wash experiment, because they’re awesome, and check out the Physics Today story on measurements of “big G”, because it’s fascinating.

(Also, my forthcoming book has a big section on Cavendish. But that’s not out until December…)

http://scienceblogs.com/principles/2014/08/04/impossible-thruster-probably-impossible/

“As Wired.co.uk reported, this happened last year when a Chinese team built its own EmDrive and confirmed that it produced 720 mN (about 72 grams) of thrust, enough for a practical satellite thruster.”

1 newton [N] = 7.23301385120989 pound foot/second² [lb·ft/s²]

I assume 72 grams thrust is 72/1000 x 2.2 pounds or about .16 pounds of thrust with about 2 kilowatts of power. One presumes that more power would produce more thrust, but even if it couldn’t that 0.16 pounds of thrust is plenty enough to measure with a gravity swing. Torsion pendulum measurements – as used in the Eotvos Experiment that showed that gravitational mass and inertial mass are equal to some seven decimal places – are needed to detect really tiny forces, but they are enormously sensitive, and require a lot of work to compensate for various outside events, as indicated in Orzel’s text.

Hang the apparatus on a swing; 720mNs will be more than enough to cause it to hang measurably off vertical. When it comes to rest off vertical you know you’ve got something, and it will be a lot easier to rule out other errors. A torsion pendulum is far too sensitive for this work.

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Karl also defends his DWP colleagues:

Flooding UCLA

Jerry,

As I suspected, the water trunkline break in Westwood was a major item in the news. (I first heard about it while I was in Woodland Hills, hooked up to an apheresis machine.) I haven’t seen anything beyond your initial observation, so i thought I’d provide a bit of insider perspective.

You write:

There was a 60 foot geyser on Sunset near UCLA, where a water main broke. This being Los Angeles, aka Detroit Southwest, it took the DWP an hour to get someone out there, and while it’s no longer a geyser, the water is – ha. As I write this, the radio announces it has stopped. It started at 1530 this afternoon. Flooded the lower decks of several parking structures. Cars lost. Los Angeles has highly paid city workers, but not a lot of city work gets done.

While I can’t speak for most of the city workers, I’ll offer a couple of points about the DWP response time.

1) Traffic into and out of that part of town that time of day is generally awful. Even in the morning hours, it can take me an hour to get from the DWP building to that precise area, just south of a number of designated sample points for the distribution system. In the late afternoon, it’s always worth the extra time spent going around that area.

To be sure, DWP crews would not be responding from downtown Los Angeles, but rather from one of the maintenance yards. The nearest such yard is the West Los Angeles yard, not far from the West Los Angeles Kaiser hospital. From there, there aren’t many routes to that part of Sunset Blvd that don’t involve driving along Sunset. Looking at a map, the best approach might be to head over to Westwood Blvd and then find a way around the UCLA campus. Another possibility would be to go through Bel-Air: Head north of Sunset on Stone Canyon, and then cut across Bellagio to where it joins Sunset, in about the right area.

But this is being done with 20/20 hindsight and could still have led crews into an impenetrable mess on the ground. (I went over and looked in the gate book. It was open to the detail showing the trunkline going past Stone Canyon. If you wanted to try approaching through Bel-Air, you would head north on either Bellagio or on Bel-Air Road. So much for 20/20 hindsight.)

2) Once a crew has arrived, where are the valves? The gate book shows the nearest valve for the 36" trunkline is over by Copa Del Oro Road, between Stone Canyon and Bel-Air. As they say in the travel ads, "getting there is half the fun." Hopefully, the valve itself isn’t under water. That might require locating the next valve upstream.

3) The water main involved was a 36-inch trunkline, right where it splits into a 36-inch and a 30-inch trunkline. This would be a part under a fair amount of stress from the flow of water. Since it broke, it would seem to follow that we want to avoid further stress by shutting off the water very rapidly. Certainly, the last thing you want is water hammer sending shock waves back up the trunk line and splitting every weld, joint, and bend until the force of the shock wave was spent.

I suspect, when all is said and done, the DWP response to the break will turn out to have been at least as fast as could have been expected.

Another topic that will be discussed (and already is among the talking heads on local radio) is why we have century-old water mains in the city. Shouldn’t we be replacing them?

Well, we are. It takes a while for each main, and has to be done around the other improvements we’re doing, such as bypassing reservoirs that no longer meet stricter environmental and health regulations. Or we could shut down water service to the entire city for half a decade and renovate it from top to bottom.

………Karl Lembke

The Wheel of the Year <http://www.amazon.com/Wheel-Year-ebook/dp/B004MPRET4/> : Now available on Amazon Kindle

The Official Manual for Spice Cadets <http://www.amazon.com/Official-Manual-Spice-Cadets-ebook/dp/B004P8JJUU> : Now available on Amazon Kindle

Yet another illustration of why I don’t usually comment on breaking news.

I am told that Los Angeles is on a three hundred year pipe replacement schedule, and that changing to a two hundred year cycle would be prohibitively expensive; also that old man Mulholland, who headed DWP in the days when the pipes were being laid, kept the only accurate copies of all the plans and maps, and when he was dismissed in disgrace took them with him; but that may be a rumor. In any event they are still cleaning up the Sunset Geyser and sinkhole.

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Tobacco and Ebola

http://www.sott.net/article/283129-Scientists-stumble-across-the-obvious-treatment-for-Ebola-tobacco

Scientists stumble across the obvious treatment for Ebola: tobacco <http://www.nbcnews.com/health/health-news/tobacco-plants-plus-antibodies-equal-possible-treatment-ebola-f6C10963179>

Maggie Fox

NBC News <http://www.nbcnews.com/health/health-news/tobacco-plants-plus-antibodies-equal-possible-treatment-ebola-f6C10963179>

Wed, 21 Aug 2013 20:08 CDT

Print <http://www.sott.net/article/283129-Scientists-stumble-across-the-obvious-treatment-for-Ebola-tobacco#>

<http://www.sott.net/image/s9/198418/full/smoking_plague_2.jpg>

A cocktail of antibodies cooked up in tobacco plants may provide an emergency treatment for Ebola virus, one of the deadliest viruses known, researchers reported Wednesday.

The treatment provides 100 percent protection to monkeys when given right after exposure. But it also helps even after symptoms develop, the researchers report in the journal Science Translational Medicine.

Ebola first appeared in 1976 and causes an especially frightening and deadly form of hemorrhagic fever. Patients die of shock but may bleed internally and externally. Depending on the strain, it kills between 25 and 90 percent of patients.

There is no existing treatment and no vaccine. "It is horrifying," says Gene Olinger of the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases (USAMRIID), who worked on the study.

Various strains of the virus pop up unpredictably across Africa, perhaps as people venture into forests to hunt wild animals, especially monkeys and apes, known as bushmeat. The virus infects apes and monkeys and it infects people who are exposed to bodily fluids, such as blood.

Scientists are working on a variety of approaches to treat the virus and also to make a vaccine. This latest possible treatment comes from the vaccine work.

"We were developing a vaccine and the vaccine was tested in mice and the mice were used to make the monoclonal antibodies to understand how they protected from disease," Olinger said in a telephone interview.

Antibodies are immune system proteins that recognize and attack invaders such as bacteria and viruses. Monoclonal antibodies are engineered to recognize a specific pathogen – in this case, a strain of Ebola.

The team chose three of the antibodies and made them into a cocktail called MB-003. They’ve been testing it in monkeys, which can be infected with Ebola in much the same way as humans can.

In this latest test, 43 percent of the monkeys recovered and survived when treated as long as five days after they were infected, even after they started showing symptoms. "We were excited," says USAMRIID’s James Pettitt.

Usually once symptoms start, that means the virus is already overwhelming the body’s defenses.

Olinger thinks a higher dose of the antibodies might work even better. The antibodies must be given intravenously, but clinics being run by groups such as Doctors Without Borders have the facilities to offer the treatment, he says.

More testing is needed first, before trying it on people. A company in Canada is working on developing other antibodies that might improve the treatment. And this particular cocktail recognizes most, but not all, the known strains of Ebola.

Kentucky BioProcessing in Owensboro, Kentucky makes MB-003 using tobacco plants. The plants are genetically engineered to produce "humanized" versions of the antibodies. "It creates a green juice and we purify the antibody from it," Pettitt says. "It is a much cheaper and quicker way to produce the antibody."

"Our facility can produce these proteins in two weeks at a substantial reduction in cost to other production methods," says Barry Bratcher, the company’s chief operating officer. "This advanced method of manufacturing allows us to address needs quickly and inexpensively."

Africa is loaded with nasty viruses <http://www.nbcnews.com/health/new-virus-africa-looks-rabies-acts-ebola-1C6435402> . Lassa fever virus comes from a family known as arenaviruses and causes 500,000 cases of hemorrhagic fever a year. Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever and Rift Valley Fever viruses are in another family called bunyaviruses; Ebola and its cousin Marburg viruses are in a family called filoviruses.

The World Health Organization documents dozens of Ebola outbreaks <http://www.nbcnews.com/id/22028651/ns/health-infectious_diseases/t/new-deadly-strain-ebola-emerges/#.UhSy4JLvtPM> , including an outbreak of Ebola Zaire that killed 128 people out of 143 infected in Congo in 2003 – a 90 percent fatality rate – and a 2007 outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo that killed 187 out of 264 people infected for a 71 percent fatality rate.

Kirk

I report this without knowing more; it’s certainly a surprise to me.

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And here is the alternate view on reactionless drive:

The World Just Changed

Throughout the course of human affairs, there have been a few defining moments when Technology has changed History. Johannes Gutenberg did it when he invented the printing press. Alexander Graham Bell did it again, when he invented the telephone. Alexander Fleming brought us Penicillin, and Dr. Banting brought us insulin. And all of us have witnessed the birth of the computer, the Internet, and the Cellular telephone. All of these technological turning points have changed our lives; and every single one without exception owes its existence not only to brilliance, but to tenacity.

Why tenacity? Because true invention, by its very nature, challenges the accepted dogma of that which is known. In the grey and sober world of solemn science, true invention sometimes demands that new rules be written; and at other times, true invention requires that the entire rulebook be thrown out the window.

But throwing the entire rulebook out the window is the very definition of scientific heresy; and it is not well tolerated in the world of science. And those who attempt to do so, are even less well tolerated. They are shouted at jeered at, laughed at, and held in contempt. They are objects of ridicule and scorn; for science does not abandon its rulebook without a fight.

Now, let me introduce you to Roger Shawyer.

Shawyer’s a British Aerospace Engineer. He started off in the Industry working on such things as guided missiles, radar, and communication systems. He wound up at working at EADS Astrium (a European spacecraft and payload manufacturer) for 20 years. While there he occupied various positions, including Head of Department for payload equipment, as well as Project Manager for various different payload deployments. He was also responsible for the initial design of the Galileo navigation payload. Shawyer’s a heavyweight, and he knows what he’s doing.

But then, a terrible thing happened: he had an idea.

He envisioned a brand new approach to rocketry; an approach that would make use of the new discoveries being made in the confusing world of quantum theory. And his vision cost him both his job, and his credibility; because he envisioned a magical space drive that didn’t involve rockets, something less aligned with Physics and more aligned with Star Trek.

Perhaps a bit of clarification is in order.

Rockets work by throwing something out the back of the rocket. Imagine that you were standing on a skateboard, holding a baseball; and imagine that you took that baseball, and threw it as hard as you could. The skateboard you were standing on would move in the other direction, taking you (hopefully) with it; and that’s how a rocket works.

That big, bright exhaust plume coming out the back of the rocket? that’s highly energetic gas, being thrown out the back of the rocket at great speeds. It is the reason the rocket goes up, and is perhaps the best known example of Newton’s third law of motion: "For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction."

Unfortunately, you have to take your fuel with you; and when you run out of fuel, that’s it. You coast. That’s just how rockets work. And that’s the only way they can ever work, and if you think differently, well, you can just take it up with Sir Isaac Newton, the Revered Father of Physics. Insert sarcastic chuckle here.

Unfortunately, Shawyer thought differently.

He believed that he’d found a way in which, by manipulating specific properties in the confusing and largely unexplored world of Quantum Physics, he could obtain thrust – a force pushing in a specified direction – WITHOUT having to throw something out the back. Which would be a clear violation of Newtons third law of motion.

In other words, blatant scientific heresy.

When he developed his mathematical model, he showed it to his employer; they showed no enthusiasm. When he pushed, their mathematicians gently reminded him of Newton’s Third Law, and suggested he read a book on the subject. When he requested funding, it was denied; and when he suggested building a working model, he was laughed at. Shawyers folly; might as well build a flying saucer. His career prospects did more than dim; they largely disappeared.

Undaunted, he started his own company called SPR (Satellite Propulsion Research). He refined his mathematics, defined the shapes, determined the energies required, and built a model.

And it worked.

He wrote a detailed scientific paper and sent it to every peer reviewed journal, only to have it rejected by every one. You see, Newton is right. Newton is always right. And because Newton is always right, you must be wrong. And since you must be wrong, you’re not worth our time.

That was the prevailing theme of the rejection letters. When there were rejection letters; many simply trashed his papers without bothering to comment.

He begged scientists to come and see his working model; they all refused. You see, Newton is always right. Since Newton is always right, you must be wrong. Your machine might move, but it’s not because you’ve made any great discovery; you’ve just got some subtle side effect happening here. Nothing important enough to warrant looking at.

Some scientists went further; he was accused of fraud.

He published a video of the machine in action on YouTube; it was ignored. (You can watch that video here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=57q3_aRiUXs )

Finally came a break. The popular British science magazine New Scientist became interested; and after investigating Shawyers story, they not only published his story, they put him on the cover. "The End of Wings and Wheels". Finally. A bit of traction.

The response was vitriolic. "gobsmacked by the level of scientific illiteracy." "meaningless double-talk". Influential science fiction writer Greg Egan even distributed a public letter stating that "a sensationalist bent and a lack of basic knowledge by its writers" was making the magazine’s coverage sufficiently unreliable "to constitute a real threat to the public understanding of science". Other influential scientists piled on as well; but New Scientist stood by their story.

They were the only ones that did, until 2009. Enter the Chinese, stage left.

China doesn’t have quite the same reverence for the western Gods of Science that Western Science does; but they do have great respect for, and great understanding of, both Mathematics and Physics. They examined Shawyers work in detail; and they felt that it could work. So, they built a model, and tested it.

And it worked.

And they reported it; and that’s when things hit the fan. For the Chinese report caught the attention of the very influential western trade journal Aviation Weekly, and they did a story on the research. And suddenly every aviation reporter on planet Earth was calling China. But all they were getting was the Chinese equivalent of "We’re sorry, but this number is no longer in service". The Chinese Government brought down the Iron Curtain, and if the research carried on, it did so out of view.

But people in the West were starting to sweat. What if Shawyer were right? What if… Dear God… what if Newton were Wrong!??!?

So, they turned it over to NASA. And they did so with a great sigh of relief; for it was felt that NASA would get to the bottom of things, demonstrate the error, prove Shawyer wrong, and restore Newton to the Throne.

Unfortunately, on July 30, 2014, NASA proved that it worked.

At this point, the entire scientific community is leaning against the wall, sweating profusely, and breathing very hard. Because this magical machine has been proven to work. Not just once, but three times; once by Shawyer, once by the Chinese Academy of Science, and once by NASA. The NASA approach was particularly rigorous in isolating the elements, and proving that the effect was not a spurious side effect of some other process. NASA meticulously ruled out every other possible reason; NASA proved that, beyond any reasonable doubt, the machine that Shawyer built, works. It’s not yet clear how or why it works – although Shawyer will patiently explain it to anyone who will listen – but it does work.

The implications of this discovery are immense.

For one, it gives us the Solar System; using a scaled up version of Shawyers drive, we can get to Mars in a few weeks, and to any point in the solar system in not much longer than that. Shawyers drive requires electricity, and for large amounts of thrust it requires a lot of electricity; but that’s all. No expendable fuel source is required. For Science Fiction fans, it provides the practical equivalent of the Impulse Power drive used in the science fiction series Star Trek.

Another likely application is in the use of aircraft and helicopters. Both achieve flight through interaction with the atmosphere; this limits aircraft to a practical limit of 35,000 feet. But Shawyers drive doesn’t require an atmosphere, and it doesn’t require jet fuel. Similarly, it provides propulsion through the water without propellers; and this ushers in a whole new world of super quiet and ultra fast submarines.

We haven’t yet reached the corners of our understanding as to how fundamentally this discovery will change our lives; but it will change our lives. And at some point, Roger Shawyer should be considered for the Nobel Prize. For, just like Gutenberg, Banting, Bell and all the other pioneers of Science, Shawyer is one more example of how a clarity of vision, coupled with an unyielding tenacity, can change the world.

And indeed, Tenacity and Vision are the only things that ever have.

Regards, Charlie

I confess I wish it were all true. Alas, I think they have found flaws in their testing systems.

Your article on the Dean Drive brought back memories I haven’t thought about in 55 years. The Dean drive was all the rage in my high school Physics class (PSSC Physics) back in 1960. I remember seeing a demo on the Today Show and being very excited because it meant interplanetary space flight was possible. Dean claimed he had a patent which gave his claim even more importance. Somehow one of my classmates got ahold of the patent number and I sent for it. It was obvious from the beginning, even to a high school physics student,that the patent was a fraud as far as a reaction-less drive was concerned. It took me a little longer to figure out that the demo took advantage of the resonance frequency of the bathroom scale.

Gordon Morrison=

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Dean Drive and many other matters: A mixed Mail Bag

Mail 837 Sunday, August 03, 2014

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It began with http://www.wired.co.uk/news/archive/2014-07/31/nasa-validates-impossible-space-drive

Nasa validates ‘impossible’ space drive

Science

31 July 14 by David Hambling

Nasa is a major player in space science, so when a team from the agency this week presents evidence that "impossible" microwave thrusters seem to work, something strange is definitely going on. Either the results are completely wrong, or Nasa has confirmed a major breakthrough in space propulsion.

British scientist Roger Shawyer has been trying to interest people in his EmDrive for some years through his company SPR Ltd. Shawyer claims the EmDrive converts electric power into thrust, without the need for any propellant by bouncing microwaves around in a closed container. He has built a number of demonstration systems, but critics reject his relativity-based theory and insist that, according to the law of conservation of momentum, it cannot work.

According to good scientific practice, an independent third party needed to replicate Shawyer’s results. As Wired.co.uk reported, this happened last year when a Chinese team built its own EmDrive and confirmed that it produced 720 mN (about 72 grams) of thrust, enough for a practical satellite thruster. Such a thruster could be powered by solar electricity, eliminating the need for the supply of propellant that occupies up to half the launch mass of many satellites. The Chinese work attracted little attention; it seems that nobody in the West believed in it.

However, a US scientist, Guido Fetta, has built his own propellant-less microwave thruster, and managed to persuade Nasa to test it out. The test results were presented on July 30 at the 50th Joint Propulsion Conference in Cleveland, Ohio. Astonishingly enough, they are positive.

The Nasa team based at the Johnson Space Centre gave its paper the title "Anomalous Thrust Production from an RF [radio frequency] Test Device Measured on a Low-Thrust Torsion Pendulum". The five researchers spent six days setting up test equipment followed by two days of experiments with various configurations. These tests included using a "null drive" similar to the live version but modified so it would not work, and using a device which would produce the same load on the apparatus to establish whether the effect might be produced by some effect unrelated to the actual drive. They also turned the drive around the other way to check whether that had any effect.

This is big news: Science Magazine, the journal of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, is publishing stories about a new Dean Drive and that generates a lot of hope. It is the first time I know of that Big Science has published stories implying that a reactionless drive is possible. I have far more mail on this than we can publish; one dialog will have to suffice. If you don’t know what a Dean Drive is, see http://www.jerrypournelle.com/sciences/dean.html and http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dean_Drive

Subject: On the new ‘Dean Drive’ and similar impossible devices

Hello Jerry,

I think I have sent stuff about the EmDrive before but given your last post on the new impossible (Cannae) drive and the fact that

there are apparently developments on the EmDrive front I thought I would ‘re-submit’:

First, the EmDrive website: http://emdrive.com

Second, the link to the 2012 Chinese paper (English translation) with some experimental data:

http://www.emdrive.com/yang-juan-paper-2012.pdf The Chinese paper claims experimental verification of the Shawyer’s theoretical

thrust calculations.

Third, talk by Roger Shawyer, inventor of the EmDrive, with accompanying slides: http://www.emdrive.com/interview.html Shawyer

actually mentions, with approval, the ‘Cannae’ device, which apparently uses a different approach to applying the idea and gives

(currently) at least an order of magnitude less thrust than the EmDrive.

Thought you may be interested because the talk heavily emphasizes the applicability of EmDrive technology to the development of

Space Solar Power satellites.

I, of course, know nothing first hand about these devices, other than they apparently do something that I have been told,

repeatedly, by very smart people, can’t be done.

On the other hand, these folks claim to have hardware which does it anyway.

Bottom line, the team at the Chinese university built a test model, tested it, confirmed to their satisfaction that the device produced thrust and no exhaust, per theory, and wrote a paper on their efforts, which was published under the auspices of the university.

I have no independent confirmation, nor do I have any idea what the Chinese are going to ‘do next’.

I know if I were the Chinese and had any faith in the test results as reported, I would keep pretty mum about it and make a serious effort to produce operational hardware based on the principle. A working system would allow them to do ‘space things’ that we can only dream about.

If you want to read their paper, it isn’t very long and here is the link:

http://www.emdrive.com/yang-juan-paper-2012.pdf

Of course the paper itself could be a hoax; I have no way of knowing, although some enterprising reporter contacted the principle investigator and received a ‘We would prefer not to comment until we have done more work.’ for his trouble.

Shawyer also said in his talk that Boeing was given (sold?) his work on the EmDrive after going through all the hoops to obtain an official export license, but anything that Boeing is doing with it is not publicly accessible. He continues to work on advanced hardware and showed what he said was a demonstration of the device causing a 100kg test device to rotate on an air bearing. It in fact rotated, but I have no way of knowing what made it rotate.

Shawyer DOES have a long history in spacecraft engineering as a senior engineer on several programs, so he knows something about space operations.

The Wikipedia article on the subject boils down to two basic sides: The experts agree that the device is impossible because it violates the conservation of momentum, but can’t agree whether the reports of working experiments represent incompetence, fraud, or some combination of both; Shawyer and the Chinese say ’That is all well and good, but we have each, independently, built and tested devices based on the ‘EmDrive’ principle, they work as predicted, and nothing comes out the back.’.

I’m suspicious (chucking the conservation of momentum is not to be undertaken lightly), but I am darn sure rooting for Shawyer and/or the Chinese. And as Mr. Feynman says, “It doesn’t matter how beautiful your theory is. It doesn’t matter how smart you are. If it doesn’t agree with experiment, it is wrong.” The question is: Do Shawyer and the Chinese have experiments?

Bob Ludwick

I fear I have over the years seen many of these papers with charts and equations and diagrams, but until I see an actual demonstration of inexplicable thrust I will wait to celebrate – and even then I suspect it is more likely that they have discovered a flaw in the testing procedure.

Extraordinary claims require extraordinary proof. By Laplace by way of Carl Sagan.

"I await demonstrations of effects, not more claims to be just about ready for public viewing."

Jerry Pournelle

Chaos Manor

Re: On the new ‘Dean Drive’ and similar impossible devices

Hello Jerry,

The Chinese said nothing about public viewing but actually (claimed to have) built and tested a working model. The paper describes the test setup and plots the measured thrust vs applied power.

The measured thrust vs microwave power deviated from the theoretical thrust vs microwave power, but the Chinese test equipment traced the deviation as due to the frequency shift of the magnetron as the power was varied. Once the curve was corrected to plot thrust vs power in the cavity bandwidth the thrust vs power tracked theory pretty well.

Here is a description of the test setup from the Chinese paper, along with measured test results. They didn’t provide make/model of the test source or measurement equipment, but presumably it was actual hardware with functionality as described. I apologize for the fact that during my ‘cut and paste’ from the paper, some of the graphs were truncated. If you want to review them, they are fine (although the annotation was not translated) in the actual paper.:

[A lot of stuff deleted by JEP]

"4 Conclusion

Indifferent equilibrium thrust measurement devices verify that, based on classical electromagnetic theory, creating a propellantless microwave propulsion system can produce a net thrust; Net thrust measurement of propellantless microwave thruster experimentation shows that the direction of net thrust produced by the propellantless microwave thruster is from the frustum microwave resonator big end to the small end. The results are consistent with theoretical calculations."

I agree with you: everything that I have been taught says that you can’t obtain thrust without throwing something out the back. On the other hand, we have a paper produced by students/faculty of a real university (in China, translated) that says that they built and tested a device that produced thrust without throwing anything out the back and that the measured thrust produced tracked their theoretical calculations within the experimental error.

I have no way of knowing the truth or falsity of Shawyer’s or the Chinese claims. Shawyer shows his hardware and (somewhere, I think) shows a demo of it working. The Chinese describe their hardware, their test setup, and their test results. Are they lying or incompetent? I have no way of knowing, but I admit that I am a ’sucker’ for these types of things (Ecat/LENR, aka cold fusion is another example) because I WANT them to be true. Maybe this time, just this once, it is. I hope.

Bob Ludwick

If they have hardware that does it, why is it not on the front page? It isn’t that hard to demonstrate actual thrust, and theories and equations are not needed. Just a demonstration.

Especially if it’s dramatically greater than what NASA was testing. A gizmo that hangs off vertical when the power is on, and comes to a vertical rest when it is off would do as a first phase and is very photogenic. I’ve got about nine invitations to come see one "when it’s ready" — one in Edinburgh has been in that state for eleven years. Real Soon Now….

Jerry Pournelle

Chaos Manor

Hello Jerry,

It is not often that I envy the ‘super rich’. I live in my world; they live in theirs. In the Venn diagram of our lives there is little to no union of theirs and mine. I have ‘enough’ to be happy, and am. I assume that if happiness is proportional to wealth they are very happy.

This however is one of the times that I wish that I, like the rich who casually purchase huge yachts and expensive cars, had a few million dollars of ‘If it goes down the rathole, I don’t care.’ money. If I did, I would be happy to pour it down the EmDrive rathole to either confirm that it works. Or that it doesn’t. I would rather have absolute confirmation that EmDrive works than any yacht or car ever made. I would even like to have absolute confirmation that the experiments run were faulty and that the conservation of momentum was in fact humming along happy as a bug in a rug. Knowing that there is NO cookie is actually ‘better’ than having a cookie in sight but just tantalizingly out of reach.

For me, a confirmed, operational EmDrive would be close to the ‘ultimate cookie’. And if I had the money I would try to purchase it.

Bob Ludwick

We can agree on that. I would very much like to see a proof of principle for a reactionless drive: a way to convert angular momentum into linear momentum, angular acceleration into linear acceleration, some new cosmic principle that requires energy conservation but does not require equal and opposite reaction; and indeed I applaud NASA for doing the tests.

However, it is my understanding that the current tests have been done in air, using torsion to measure acceleration, and that is suspect to me: I’d prefer they used gravity (a swing) and a vacuum chamber. If that’s too hard to arrange, put a garbage bag around the entire apparatus.

Complex electronics produce complex force fields; it’s quite possible for a torsion spring to be affected by such a field. That’s not mysterious; but if gravity is affected I’d call it extraordinary evidence.

We can only wait for more results. But I I had to bet, so far I’d still bet that they have found a demonstration of flawed testing principles, rather than disproving Newton.

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NASA Looking to EmDrive to Revolutionize Space Travel

http://news360.com/article/250962605

Take care

Alan Rosenberg

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Coup proof…

http://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/141661/erica-de-bruin/coup-proofing-for-dummies?cid=nlc-foreign_affairs_this_week-073114-coup_proofing_for_dummies_5-073114&sp_mid=46597544&sp_rid=Y2FwdGNvdXZAY294Lm5ldAS2

"In short, the problem of how to improve Iraqi military capacity without undermining civilian control won’t go away when Maliki leaves office. It will persist until norms of democratic and civilian rule become entrenched in Iraq — a process that could take decades, if not longer. "

Famously, in recent history, the US does not have the patience (despite having the wherewithal, treasure, and expertise) to carry through efforts at true change. Americans arrogantly refuse to acknowledge that our own path our current (-ly imperfect) state has taken 240 years.

David Couvillon

Colonel, U.S. Marine Corps Reserve, Retired.; Former Governor of Wasit Province, Iraq; Righter of Wrongs; Wrong most of the time; Distinguished Expert, TV remote control; Chef de Hot Dog Excellance; Avoider of Yard Work

 

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Poverty in America"

Dear Jerry:

You mentioned you are working on an essay about income discrepancy.

Those interested in poverty in America should become familiar with census data showing just how well the poor live. The typical household classified as "poor" has a car, air conditioning, two color TVs with cable or satellite, an Xbox or PlayStation, clothes washer and dryer, and the usual middle class kitchen appliances. The typical "poor American" has more living space than the average European and lives in a three-bedroom house with garage and patio. My grandparents lacked almost all of these things, and I lacked about half of them when I was a child.

A couple of articles summarizing these facts can be found at http://www.heritage.org/research/reports/2011/09/understanding-poverty-in-the-united-states-surprising-facts-about-americas-poor

http://www.heritage.org/research/reports/2011/07/what-is-poverty

The relative prosperity of the "poor" has been the case for a long time.

http://www.heritage.org/research/reports/2004/09/understanding-poverty-and-economic-inequality-in-the-united-states

http://www.heritage.org/research/reports/2007/08/how-poor-are-americas-poor-examining-the-plague-of-poverty-in-america

Thomas Sowell pointed out the failure of the "war on poverty", which was aimed at reducing government dependency. Instead the opposite occurred.

http://jewishworldreview.com/cols/sowell012314.php3

Some simple steps can be taken by individuals who choose not to be

"poor." The Brookings Institution reports that three factors are

directly linked to poverty and under the control of individual

Americans: education, family composition, and work.

http://www.brookings.edu/research/opinions/2013/11/19-war-on-poverty-what-went-wrong-haskins

Commentators point out you have a very small chance of being poor if

you do just three things: 1.) Graduate from high school, 2.) wait

until you are 21 to get married and don’t have children out of

wedlock, 3.) get a full-time job.

http://members.jacksonville.com/opinion/editorials/2012-01-27/story/three-rules-staying-out-poverty

http://federalsafetynet.com/1/post/2012/06/a-98-proof-plan-to-stay-out-of-poverty1.html

But the facts about poverty are usually ignored in service of some

political agenda.

http://www.brookings.edu/research/testimony/2014/01/28-poverty-opportunity-begin-with-facts-haskins

As I mentioned in my e-mail to you that you posted on November 20,

2013, the federal government seems to believe that men and women, far

from being volitional creatures made in the image of God and charged

with getting wisdom, are instead no more than mice, slaves to their

desires and appetites.

The government imagines that such citizens can be saved from their

bad decisions by means of bureaucratically-imposed techniques rather

than through the development of moral behavior.

Bill Cosby, Walter Williams, and more recently Dr. Ben Carson have

spoken courageously in favor of taking personal responsibility to

avoid making bad decisions. They are regularly attacked for this in

the liberal press.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/09/16/bill-cosby-don-lemon_n_3935801.html

http://jewishworldreview.com/cols/williamns101612.php3

http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2014/03/16/ben-carson-was-a-role-model-for-black-teens-until-he-sold-out-to-the-right.html

Facts about income mobility are suppressed by the mainstream press

and liberal politicians.

http://www.nationalreview.com/article/368952/inequality-fallacies-thomas-sowell

http://townhall.com/columnists/walterewilliams/2007/12/05/income_mobility/page/full

http://townhall.com/columnists/walterewilliams/2014/03/19/is-there-wage-stagnation-n1810267/page/full

Best regards,

–Harry M.

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‘The stark reality is that, once labor costs reach a tipping point, automation becomes a practical, efficient, and economical alternative, especially for low-skilled jobs. Once implemented, there is no going back, and today automation is more accessible than ever.’

<http://www.americanthinker.com/2014/07/automation_the_joker_in_the_deck.html>

——–

Roland Dobbins

Precisely as I have said many times over the years. With low costs of capital – artificially low interest rates imposed by the Fed – and rising labor costs – Minimum Wages raised by both federal and state governments – the incentive is to invest in robots, not in training new skilled workers. The result is predictable and has often been predicted. Lower unemployment rates because more and more people give up looking for work and thus are not part of the officially unemployed; lower numbers of people employed; higher wages for those who are employed, as for example in unionized government jobs which cannot be mechanized (or electroncized) for political reason; and rising numbers of people out of work but who are not officially unemployed.

This doesn’t appear to be a stable situation.

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Diversity in academia

Hello Jerry,

I noticed this in your commentary for 30 July, which I didn’t get around to reading until this morning:

"The American melting pot worked very well, but we have abandoned it for ‘diversity’; the result was predictable and in fact was predicted by many, including me."

It reminded me of the email that I sent to my daughter (science teacher in local high school) and daughter-in-law (program director at local university) earlier this morning:

"Dr. Mike Adams, Associate Professor of Sociology and Criminology (with tenure, fortunately for him) at UNC Wilmington, comments on his university’s recent effort to recruit a new Chief Diversity Officer (CDO) to manage the campus’ five separate Diversity Offices and their administrative support staff. He provides some background, quotes from the job description, and translates those quotes into ordinary English so that it is understandable by the hoi polloi.

http://townhall.com/columnists/mikeadams/2014/06/27/our-new-chief-diversity-officer-n1856213/page/full "

Bob Ludwick

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Great work, if you can get it.

<http://www.buzzfeed.com/johnstanton/obama-administration-spent-federal-money-on-strippers-fight>

And it sure beats hunting around for actual illegal immigrants at the actual border and doing something about them.

————

Roland Dobbins

It’s nice work if you can get it, but you can’t get it if you try…

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DMV is the exception to the rule

I, too, have had pleasant and efficient experiences with the motor vehicle bureaucracy, however the opposite was true every time I had to interact with the Social Security Administration.

Each time I had to visit the SSA office, it was filled to SRO. Random alpha-numerics were assigned to those waiting so no one could get an idea of where they stood in the queue. With more than 50 people waiting, only two service windows [of the 10 available] were manned at any time. Often, someone walking in would jump the queue for a "short" question that lasted more than 10 minutes.

There was an armed guard in the waiting room [unlike my bank’s local branch].

It actually took two months for the SSA to correct their errors in my case — I needed to qualify for Medicare disability because of end-stage renal disease, yet keep some independent health insurance coverage under my working wife’s benefits. Everyone in the bureaucracy acted as if this situation had never occurred before.

From the way the bureaucracy fouled up both coverage and start dates, I fear coverage under the Affordable Care Act will be even worse. I suppose if I wanted to die quickly, I’d apply for my VA health coverage.

Most federal bureaucracies are like a toxic tar baby.

Pete Nofel

"It ain’t ‘fair?’ Hey pal, ‘fair’ is where you buy funnel cakes."

Dog bites man isn’t a story….

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America’s current genteel ‘poverty’

I read your comments on America’s current genteel ‘poverty’, where ‘poor’ people have medical care and access to information etc. that until about 50 years ago not even kings could dream of. Yes indeed, that should not be forgotten.

However, we need to remember that progress is not guaranteed. God does not come down from the heavens and grant Americans prosperity. It was built up by hard work over a long period of time, and if we fail to defend it, it can and will be taken away.

Consider that in India today there are about a half billion people who are chronically malnourished (and most of the rest aren’t doing much better). Indeed, recent research has shown that in post-Black Death Europe, the standard of living was considerably higher than modern third-world countries! (see “British Economic Growth 1270-1870”, by S. Broadberry, B. Campbell, A, Klein, M. Overton, and B. van Leeuwen, 2010).

Real poverty still exists in the world. Technology, as wonderful as it is, cannot keep up with a population explosion. Consider that India, with the technological fruits of 500 years of western progress, with the fifth largest economy in the world and chemical fertilizers and computers and free trade and satellites etc., and things are WORSE than before the Western renaissance began. There is no technology so advanced that it cannot be overwhelmed by ever more people. That is an established fact.

So yes, for now Americans are still lucky. For now. But we must beware the downwards trend. Every extra dollar an hour that median wages decline is that much more in the pockets of the oligarchs – and they have no reason to stop at just driving wages down by only one dollar. What is today a modest downturn in living standards could easily continue down to feudal european levels, if we are so stupid as to assume that progress is automatic, that technology is an unlimited cornucopia, or that our leaders always have our best interests at heart – because they don’t.

Globus Polidus

We are in a race between increased productivity and disaster. It’s not entirely clear which will win. Either way there will be far more discrepancy between rich and poor. It will be interesting when more than half the citizens of the Republic simply cannot do anything that someone will pay them money to do—at least more money than they are entitled to simply by having been born.

The Gods of the Copybook Headings
by Rudyard Kipling
AS I PASS through my incarnations in every age and race,
I make my proper prostrations to the Gods of the Market Place.
Peering through reverent fingers I watch them flourish and fall,
And the Gods of the Copybook Headings, I notice, outlast them all.

We were living in trees when they met us. They showed us each in turn
That Water would certainly wet us, as Fire would certainly burn:
But we found them lacking in Uplift, Vision and Breadth of Mind,
So we left them to teach the Gorillas while we followed the March of Mankind.

We moved as the Spirit listed. They never altered their pace,
Being neither cloud nor wind-borne like the Gods of the Market Place,
But they always caught up with our progress, and presently word would come
That a tribe had been wiped off its icefield, or the lights had gone out in Rome.

With the Hopes that our World is built on they were utterly out of touch,
They denied that the Moon was Stilton; they denied she was even Dutch;
They denied that Wishes were Horses; they denied that a Pig had Wings;
So we worshipped the Gods of the Market Who promised these beautiful things.
When the Cambrian measures were forming, They promised perpetual peace.
They swore, if we gave them our weapons, that the wars of the tribes would cease.
But when we disarmed They sold us and delivered us bound to our foe,
And the Gods of the Copybook Headings said: "Stick to the Devil you know."

On the first Feminian Sandstones we were promised the Fuller Life
(Which started by loving our neighbour and ended by loving his wife)
Till our women had no more children and the men lost reason and faith,
And the Gods of the Copybook Headings said: "The Wages of Sin is Death."

In the Carboniferous Epoch we were promised abundance for all,
By robbing selected Peter to pay for collective Paul;
But, though we had plenty of money, there was nothing our money could buy,
And the Gods of the Copybook Headings said: "If you don’t work you die."

Then the Gods of the Market tumbled, and their smooth-tongued wizards withdrew
And the hearts of the meanest were humbled and began to believe it was true
That All is not Gold that Glitters, and Two and Two make Four
And the Gods of the Copybook Headings limped up to explain it once more.

As it will be in the future, it was at the birth of Man
There are only four things certain since Social Progress began.
That the Dog returns to his Vomit and the Sow returns to her Mire,
And the burnt Fool’s bandaged finger goes wobbling back to the Fire;
And that after this is accomplished, and the brave new world begins
When all men are paid for existing and no man must pay for his sins,
As surely as Water will wet us, as surely as Fire will bum,
The Gods of the Copybook Headings with terror and slaughter return.

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Muslim Accomplishemnts

"Obama’s brief statement, issued earlier this week to send best wishes to Muslims during the Eid al-Fitr celebration, said that the observance reminds him and wife Michelle "of the many achievements and contributions of Muslim Americans to building the very fabric of our nation and strengthening the core of our democracy."

I am fairly familiar with American history but find myself at a loss to come up with any such achievements. Apparently, I am not alone, since a quick search of the Internet revealed only others asking the same question. Now, it is quite possible, even likely, that I am missing something. Does anyone know of any or is this list kept in the same vault as Obama’s college transcipts and other related personal papers?

As with most of his speeches, Obama speaks in vague generalities while avoiding saying anything specific.

R

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I was on TWIT last Sunday http://twit.tv/show/this-week-in-tech/468 and at some point it was mentioned that modern technology and computer games seem to be reducing the size of kids vocabularies. It was speculated that this would do no harm, but I brought up New Caledonia where one official language is Pidgin, a trade language with a very restricted vocabulary . I have a newspaper election issue written in pijin. It’s a bit deficient in abstract terms for anything…

musings after your recent guest spot on Twit

Hi Jerry

Using less vocabulary is certainly a danger to expressing ideas and philosophies. At least the more complex ones.

Try this: http://splasho.com/upgoer5/

inspired by http://xkcd.com/1133/

Years ago I read about the situation in the outskirt quarters of Paris, the banlieus.

This area of Paris is mostly inhabitated by immigrants and first to third generation decendants. As the immigrants come from a diversity of former French colonies and have an even bigger diversity of native languages, the communication took place in a lingua franca of a French with only a few hundred words. The bare minimum. As far as I remember, studies showed that the mere limit of the used language limited again the exchange of ideas, the general interest of the community to strive towards improvement and a content of the individual to strive towards better living conditions, as if the idea of having a better live died with the possibility to express it in words.

I bet there is a novel in it

My best wishes to you from Munich, Germany Manuel

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Democracy

Jerry:

I ran across a condemnation of democracy on a political site that I occasionally visit, that went something like this:

"Democracy is when 200 million Americans decided that 80,000 of their native-born neighbors and their aging parents should be sent to concentration camps because of their choice of ancestors."

The reference, of course, is to Executive Order 9066, signed by FDR, the hero of democrats and Progressives, which resulted in 120,000 Japanese Americans being torn from their homes in the cities of California and shipped off to camps in desolate parts of the country. All it took was "one drop of Japanese blood" to be sent to the camps, no matter the age

— one camp even had a "Children’s Village" for young orphans, who were in some cases pried out of the arms of their (non-Japanese) foster parents. This makes the United States one of only two countries ever to have a special "children’s prison," the other being Iraq under Hussein.

The denial of their most basic rights met the approval of most of the rest of the country, including all but a small handful of ACLU members.

If not for the fact that this is a REPUBLIC, there would have been no Supreme Court to free them (and even then, it took several years).

Keith

The Framers wanted nothing to do with Democracy. They were interested in freedom and rule of law, which are usually threatened by Democracy…

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No appreciable attention paid to Cyclical Analysis of Weather

you may find this interesting

http://armstrongeconomics.com/2014/07/25/university-of-washington-paper-states-plainly-that-there-has-been-no-appreciable-attention-paid-to-cyclical-analysis-of-weather/

University of Washington <http://yly-mac.gps.caltech.edu/AGU/AGU_2008/Zz_Others/Li_agu08/Mayewski2004.pdf> paper

Ron

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Violating Niven’s first Law

1. Never throw organic fertilizer at an armed man. Never stand next to someone throwing organic fertilizer at an armed man.

https://twitter.com/CohenShim111/status/490926738633805824/photo/1

OR… throw organic fertilizer at an armed man while standing next to your son, hoping he’ll be killed for the glory of Islam while you escape to find someone else’s son to stand next to when you throw organic fertilizer again.

J

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Carrington Event Almost Happened in 2012

 

Remember all the hype about CMEs in 2012? Some of this centered around the apocalyptic prophets of doom in populist circles, but NASA’s attempts to calm the public made me suspicious that there was actually something to worry about.

If the eruption of July 23, 2012 has happened a week earlier, it would have hit us. And, the cat is out of the bag:

<.>

Analysts believe that a direct hit by an extreme CME such as the one that missed Earth in July 2012 could cause widespread power blackouts, disabling everything that plugs into a wall socket. Most people wouldn’t even be able to flush their toilet because urban water supplies largely rely on electric pumps.

A similar storm today could have a catastrophic effect. According to a study by the National Academy of Sciences, the total economic impact could exceed $2 trillion or 20 times greater than the costs of a Hurricane Katrina. Multi-ton transformers damaged by such a storm might take years to repair.

"In my view the July 2012 storm was in all respects at least as strong as the 1859 Carrington event," says Baker. "The only difference is, it missed."

In February 2014, physicist Pete Riley of Predictive Science Inc.

published a paper in Space Weather entitled "On the probability of occurrence of extreme space weather events." In it, he analyzed records of solar storms going back 50+ years. By extrapolating the frequency of ordinary storms to the extreme, he calculated the odds that a Carrington-class storm would hit Earth in the next ten years.

The answer: 12%.

"Initially, I was quite surprised that the odds were so high, but the statistics appear to be correct," says Riley. "It is a sobering figure."

</>

http://science.nasa.gov/science-news/science-at-nasa/2014/23jul_superstorm/

—–

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

Percussa Resurgo

 

 

1) In that week’s time that we supposedly had a near-miss, the Sun rotated so far that the centroid of the CME was angled 135 degrees away from Earth in the plane of the ecliptic. This doesn’t take into account any tilt above or below the ecliptic. Video of the event indicate that it was in fact south-tilted by a substantial amount. I don’t call that a near-miss.

2) No argument whatsoever as to the effects, should one that big hit us. And it is inevitable that it shall, sooner or later. There is also some evidence that may indicate that such events are more probable during the descents into, and ascents out of, extended minima. So if we are indeed going into an extended minimum, then woe betide. (On the other hand, that 2012 event may have been the Carrington going in. The question then becomes, how many of those happen on the "walls" of the minimum? We don’t have enough data to say, since we’d not have noticed THAT one if not for the space-based solar observatories we now have.)

3) Having read the statistical analysis paper that gave that 12% figure (which was published in 2012, not 2014 as stated), the actual values range from 1.1% all the way up to 21%, depending on how he tweaks his initial conditions and what properties he assigns to Richard Carrington’s 1859 event. What the researcher is really trying to accomplish is to link together several databases in an effort to extend the known data back several centuries, to around 1500-1600AD.

The problem with this is twofold: A) it requires different methods of analysis to do so, and B) one of those databases is nitrate spikes in ice cores, and the space physicists and the ice core chemists don’t agree as to the source of the nitrate spikes.

I would, for instance, expect to see NO nitrate spikes during the period of the Maunder Minimum. How can you have flares and CMEs when the Sun’s surface is uniformly blank? But in fact there are several spikes during that time. This leads me to be somewhat skeptical of the nitrate data. There does seem to be some small reflection of the Maunder and Dalton minima in the graphs, and certainly the Carrington event seems to produce a titanic spike, but the evidence is not sufficient for me to say definitively that they match. In fact there is sufficient variance for me to say that I do not think the data can be entirely attributed to CME events. Therefore until the additional source of the nitrate spikes can be determined, I’m not sure it’s valid to use them as an extension of the database for Carrington-level events.

End result is that I am not at all certain of that 12% figure.

And if there is a triggering mechanism in the onset of an extended minimum, it may be sufficient to raise the figure to 100% in any case.

Stephanie Osborn

Interstellar Woman of Mystery

http://www.Stephanie-Osborn.com <http://www.stephanie-osborn.com/>

It may be time for survivalist movements again…

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State Department Propaganda Continues

Put your beverages and snacks to the side or you’ll ruin your screen and possibly your keyboard when you start laughing. This State Department spokesperson is at it again. First let’s look at allegedly invented reports of artillery fire by Russia on Ukraine:

<.>

Apparently still laying the groundwork for their own planned military intervention [http://is.gd/WZ3zAV], the US government has invented a narrative of massive Russian artillery strikes against Ukrainian military bases along the border.

State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf introduced the story to the press at today’s briefing [http://is.gd/bCtZn5], claiming that the US has secret evidence [http://is.gd/Nm8ZQw] from “human intelligence information” that the attacks are taking place. The Pentagon concurred, saying such attacks have been going on “for several days.”

During the past several days, there has not been a single report out of Ukraine of an artillery strike against any of their military bases, anywhere in the country. The last such incident was two weeks ago, when rebels fired a BM-21 grad at a military base [http://is.gd/AteqXr].

And this is Ukraine we’re talking about, which comes up with its own dubious stories of Russian attacks on a near daily basis. If Russia was carried out concerted shelling against Ukrainian military targets, Ukraine would be harping on about it constantly. They aren’t even alleging anything close to that is happening.

The latest invented story appears to have been produced primarily as a replacement for Harf’s increasingly debunked allegations surrounding the MH17 shoot-down, a talking point which has gained her no small mocking in the press over the past week, as she directly contradicts the US intelligence community’s own releases on the matter [http://is.gd/XfWT27].

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http://is.gd/wRufgr

And, second, as you may have read, the Intelligence Community admitted a lack of evidence indicating direct Russian involvement in the MH17 tragedy. Once more 2+2=5:

<.>

Determined not to let the US intelligence community’s open admission that they have “no evidence of direct Russian involvement”

[http://is.gd/6rGAJt] in the shoot-down of Malaysia Airlines MH17, the State Department has once again insisted Russian President Vladimir Putin is “directly” to blame for it [http://is.gd/l54OFi].

Puzzlingly, State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf cited the exact same intelligence community briefing as proving Putin’s guilt, even though the officials delivering that briefing said the exact opposite of it. [http://is.gd/HfeO06] Harf also claimed to be privy to even more secret evidence that had not gone public yet, which also pinned the whole thing on Putin.

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http://is.gd/If0Fiv

I would think that, after the ongoing Iraq debacle that started with Powell’s "facts and conclusions based on solid intelligence", the people are little tired of secret evidence that contradicts open source intelligence. Of course, anytime anyone says they have "facts"

that are "based on intelligence" you should know they’re either (1) deceptive or (2) incompetent. I won’t insult your intelligence by explaining why.

—–

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

Percussa Resurgo

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Russia vs United States

This may be the Russian perception, or it may be an attempt by the kleptocracy to direct animus against the West:

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The real reasons that US-Russia acrimony has been inexorably building, they say, is that Russia is at the leading edge of emerging countries that are challenging the US-run global financial and political order.

The US plan, Mr. Markov says, “is to continue tightening the screws over the long term, aiming to increase discontent among Russia’s middle class, and to turn people against Putin. The ultimate goal is regime change, and we would be fools not to see that.”

Although the Kremlin has claimed that sanctions against Russia will “boomerang” against Western economic interests, few analysts believe Russia can win against the overwhelming financial and economic firepower of the US and its allies in any extended showdown. As such, some argue that Russia has no choice but to accept a measure of isolation as its lot.

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http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Europe/2014/0723/Is-US-bent-on-bringing-down-Russia-Some-in-Kremlin-say-yes.-video

Matt, at 1913 Intel, offers this:

<.>

Russia is at a revolutionary tipping point. Not that there is going to be a revolution today, but things could easily change in the not too distant future. In a couple of years Russia might be staring at a revolution. And that will mean death to the thugs in the Kremlin.

If you are the godfather of a mafia family, and someone is out to get you, what do you do? You get them first. If Russia is given a good enough excuse, there is the potential for a great-power war with the US.

In the end I guess Russian leaders feel the US should just sit back and let Russia change the entire world order while doing nothing to stop it. Seriously, the Russian leaders are delusional. Unfortunately, the West is delusional too. The West has disarmed in the face of two thuggish regimes: Russia and China. While the Russians may be delusional, they have the means and nerve to take out the West (read US).

</>

http://www.1913intel.com/2014/07/24/is-us-bent-on-bringing-down-russia-some-in-kremlin-say-yes-video-csmonitor-com/

With our gutted nuclear arsenal, our unfundable navy (such that it is), and the budget cuts in the army, etc., his analysis seems more correct than most Americans want to admit, but — like Matt says — the West is also delusional. And it seems that I have little to say on this matter that is constructive.

—–

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

Percussa Resurgo

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Slate article on failure to replicate in the Voodoo Sciences

I thought you might like this article on Slate:

Psychologists’ Food Fight Over Replication of “Important Findings”

http://www.slate.com/articles/health_and_science/science/2014/07/replication_controversy_in_psychology_bullying_file_drawer_effect_blog_posts.html

Alas, I do not expect much from the voodoo sciences… http://www.jerrypournelle.com/science/voodoo.html

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

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Dean Drive and NASA

View 836 Friday, August 01, 2014

“Transparency and the rule of law will be the touchstones of this presidency.”

President Barack Obama, January 31, 2009

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Dean Drive Again

The most interesting things I have read recently are complicated, and the most interesting of all is breaking news with no estimate of time required for further developments. Let’s begin with this: there is some speculation that NASA has confirmed the existence of a reactionless drive: a gizmo that undergoes a small but real thrust without expending reaction mass or reacting against a fixed object, or bobbing as happens with small boats and bobsleds because of differential friction.

Note that this would be revolutionary if confirmed, and the NASA engineers who tested the device are well aware of it. This isn’t like the reports I keep getting of tests that are about to be made, and offering to pay my expenses for an impartial inspection. Some years ago the Vaughn Foundation paid the expenses of participants in a rather informal conference of those who had any experience with the Dean Drive. That story is told here http://www.jerrypournelle.com/sciences/dean.html and if you aren’t familiar with any of this it might be worth your attention for a few minutes.

In any event the conclusion of the conference, which included the late Bob Forward and I believe either Greg or Jim Benford (twin Ph.D’s in physics) concluded that nothing could be done, and it was pointless to pay attention to various theories, such as that of the late Dr. William Davis, Col. USAF Ret’d, whose theoretical principle involving phase relationships of spinning disks and weights intrigued many people, particularly the late Harry Stine. Theories were not enough to justify sinking more money in research on reactionless drive. What would be interesting would be results: any results that could show thrust without reaction. If that worked the theory would be worked out – and it would be a revolutionary theory indeed.

The most likely explanation is Peter Glaskowsky’s hypothesis: NASA has indeed discovered a flaw, not in Newton’s Law, but in their test procedures, but they don’t yet know what the flaw is. That was my conclusion from the first instance, but I am prepared to believe – let us say I hope to see evidence that lets me believe – that there is such a thing as reactionless drive, a way to convert angular acceleration into linear acceleration. But as the years have worn on, and I have been told of case after case in which the first conclusion was Reactionless Drive!, only to find that it was a bad test, I am more convinced that I won’t see a working Dean Drive in my lifetime and neither will you. But I can still hope.

I do wonder why NASA hasn’t tried a swing as a test. If that shows there is thrust, put the test stand in a big chamber and pump the air out. And if still hangs off vertical with the motor on and returns to vertical when you turn the power on, Call Stockholm…

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Some relevant mail.

So, NASA are now asserting they have seen a working Dean Drive?!

<http://www.wired.co.uk/news/archive/2014-07/31/nasa-validates-impossible-space-drive>

<http://ntrs.nasa.gov/search.jsp?R=20140006052>

<http://arc.aiaa.org/doi/abs/10.2514/6.2014-3853>

My guess is that this is either an instrumentation/telemetry artifact or an outright hoax. We’ll see.

——–

Roland Dobbins

Nasa validates ‘impossible’ space drive (Wired UK)

Hey, Jerry, this sounds like they did exactly the sort of test you’ve been talking about for years..

http://www.wired.co.uk/news/archive/2014-07/31/nasa-validates-impossible-space-drive

 

new quantum space drive

http://www.popsci.com/article/technology/fuel-less-space-drive-may-actually-work-says-nasa?src=SOC&dom=fb

The interesting part for me is NASA says they have tested the drive and measured thrust¦

jim dodd

There’s more but you get the idea.

 

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The other interesting flap involves an old friend, and I’m not sure I want to be involved; I’ll wait at least until it either heats up more or gets colder…

 

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The situation in the Ukraine continues without anything new surfacing, and the Hamas-Israeli war threatens the Middle East. And what happens when the Revolutionary Guard of Iran gets a pair of Hiroshima style weapons?  Which is fairly likely in the quite near future.

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

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