Trump Wins; The Task Begins. What Regulations need to be repealed? More on A-10 and immigration; and other matters

Wednesday, November 9, 2016

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

“Deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed.”

Immigration without assimilation is invasion.

bubbles

bubbles

I went to bed late, waiting for Fox news, who’d rather be right than call things too early,. They called Pennsylvania for Trump, but there remained the suspicion that Mrs. Clinton would dispute the result, and we would have weeks of lawsuits, appeals, discoveries of “lost” boxes of absentee ballots going 80% to Mrs. Clinton, and more horrors. As I was getting to bed, Trump appeared at his victory party: Mrs. Clinton had conceded. Trump was gracious, full of Dignitas, and quite Presidential, complimenting Mrs. Clinton on her years of public service, and refraining from any criticisms. He also accepted Speaker Ryan’s olive branch, beginning down the path to at least a semblance of unity.

crow-a

I woke up to discover that it was all true. Trump was indeed the President Designate, and will become President Elect once the Electoral College has done its work.

If Hillary Clinton had won we would know exactly what was coming: Obama’s third term. With Trump the future is less clear. I do expect him to keep his word on the Supreme Court: he has promised us “original intent” scholars similar to Mr. Justice Scalia, and there is every reason to believe that is what we will get quite early in his term. I expect that he will be able to appoint at least one more Justice and perhaps more. The Constitution is not in danger of being dominated by “living document” advocates who decide as the elite intellectual zeitgeist dictates no matter what the governed may have consented to. The Republic will, I think remain one in which governments derive their just powers from the consent of the governed.

We can also expect nearly immediate repeal of the recent constitutionally questionable Executive Orders. I invite you to submit your favorite candidates for repeal. I have already asked my friend Dr. David Friedman for his candidates.

Changes that will require action by Congress will take a while; we can hope that Mr. Trump does not lose patience. Getting things through Congress takes some skill; fortunately Mr.Trump will have experienced expert advice. He seems determined to make peace with Speaker Ryan, who did yeoman service in delivering Wisconsin.

bubbles

I saw Roberta yesterday and helped her fill out her absentee ballot, which was delivered to the polls by a kind hospital volunteer. She has expanded her vocabulary enough that I am sure that over time all her speech will return. She looked much better, if a bit exhausted by the relentless expert therapy. We appreciate your prayers.

bubbles

I found this exposition on the biggest losers last night quite intriguing. I was one of the first subscribers to National Review when it was founded, and while Russell Kirk (my mentor) was a real friend of Buckley while I was more of an acquaintance, we got long well when I was at Pepperdine and Mr. Buckley spoke to one of my prelaw classes. Of course the egregious Frum read me out of the Conservative movement when I opposed the neocon position on Iraq. I remain conservative by inclination, but I no longer claim to be a member of any organized group. I have long held this sentiment:

 

Boswell: So, Sir, you laugh at schemes of social improvement?

Johnson: Why, Sir, most schemes for social improvement are very laughable things.

http://www.jerrypournelle.com/ancient/spacemail.htm

 

http://www.lifezette.com/polizette/four-biggest-winners-losers-2016/

The National Review Editorial Board

In its staunch opposition to Trump, the National Review proved itself to be as out of touch and elitist as the liberals it frequently took to task. The magazine had forgotten its roots. No longer willing to stand athwart history yelling stop, it resigned itself to standing meekly by muttering not so fast.

bubbles

The Navy called USS Zumwalt a warship Batman would drive. But at $800,000 per round, its ammo is too pricey to fire. – MSN News

Instead of this boondoggle, the ZUMWALT should indeed be armed with rail guns and lasers, to go along with its unique design and radar cross-section, to make it truly a ship of the Future.

The Navy called USS Zumwalt a warship Batman would drive. But at $800,000 per round, its ammo is too pricey to fire.

Ben Guarino

The Washington Post – The Washington Post – Tue Nov 8 11:25:24 UTC 2016

Fully loaded, the ammunition for one ship would total about $2 billion.

http://a.msn.com/r/2/AAk2EVy?a=1&m=en-us

 

Zumwalt-class AGS round

Jerry, I’d not worry too much about the cancelled LockMart LRLAP round intended for the AGS guns on the DDG-1000 Destroyers.

I’m sure that Raytheon will be happy to adapt their already in-production and combat-tested Excalibur extended range smart shell to the AGS.

I’d be surprised if Raytheon hadn’t anticipated this situation and included planning for AGS support when designing the new 5″ Naval version, the Excalibur N5.

All the best to Roberta and yourself. Speedy recovery especially to Roberta.

Chuck

 

Thanks.

bubbles

Comment on “Quantum news”

Dear Jerry:
Thanks for posting in your View for November 7 the link to the article about Nobel Laureate Steven Weinberg questioning the interpretation of quantum mechanics under the heading “Quantum news”.
It is good when famous scientists begin to realize that scientists have very little to say about what the world is really like. Equations are merely equations. It seems obvious that Schrodinger’s equation is not an agent that controls and sustains the universe. It is merely a mathematical contrivance found useful for calculating certain quantities that we derive from our observation of the universe. The equations do not explain why they work, nor do they prove the existence of a wave function for the universe. Nor is quantum mechanics consistent with the mathematical contrivance called general relativity.
As David Berlinski writes in his delightful little book “The Devil’s Delusion”:
“… two influential ideas are at work. The first is that there is something answering to the name of science. The second is that something answering to the name of science offers sophisticated men and women a coherent vision of the universe. The second claim is false if the first claim is.
“And the first claim is false. Nothing answers to the name of science.”

“We have been vouchsafed four powerful and profound scientific theories since the great scientific revolution of the West was set in motion in the seventeenth century–Newtonian mechanics, James Clerk Maxwell’s theory of the electromagnetic field, special and general relativity, and quantum mechanics. … The theories that we possess are ‘magnificent, profound, difficult, sometimes phenomenally accurate,’ as the distinguished mathematician Roger Penrose has observed, but as he at once adds, they also comprise a ‘tantalizingly inconsistent scheme of things.'”

“We do not know how the universe began. We do not know why it is there. Charles Darwin talked speculatively of life emerging from a ‘warm little pond.’ The pond is gone. We have little idea how life emerged, and cannot with assurance say that it did. We cannot reconcile our understanding of the human mind with any trivial theory about the manner in which the brain functions. … We do not know what impels us to right conduct or where the form of the good is found.”
Best regards,
–Harry M.

bubbles

https://unitedwithisrael.org/trump-invites-netanyahu-to-washington/?utm_source=MadMimi&utm_medium=email&utm_content=Netanyahu+Congratulates+Trump%21+Jerusalem+Mayor+Urges+Trump+to+Move+US+Embassy&utm_campaign=20161109_m135425093_%5BNB-WIN%5D+Netanyahu+Congratulates+Trump%21+Jerusalem+Mayor+Urges+Trump+to+Move+US+Embassy&utm_term=Trump+Invites+Netanyahu+to+Meeting+in+Washington_0D_0A_09_09_09_09_09_09_09_09

Sheldon and his wife will be very pleased.

bubbles

From the mainstream media:

https://www.cnet.com/news/twitter-facebook-donald-trump-hillary-clinton-president-republican-democrat/?ftag=CAD1acfa04&bhid=21042754377865639731827326151938

The reality TV star has made it very real.

Republican Donald Trump, a divisive outsider who overcame even his own party’s distrust, took to a New York stage in the early hours of Wednesday to claim the presidency of the United States. His acceptance speech, delivered after he said he had spoken with Democrat rival Hillary Clinton, capped a race that at times seemed out of control and until minutes earlier had been expected to continue well into Wednesday.

“This was tough, this was tough,” Trump told the crowd as he extended an olive branch to Clinton and the Democrats. “This political stuff is nasty and it’s tough.”

He also struck a conciliatory note.

“For those who chose not to support me in the past, of which there are a few people, I’m reaching out to you for your guidance and your help so we can reach out and unify our great country,” he said.

Trump’s acceptance, which came as the final votes were still being counted, followed a chief adviser to Clinton telling her supporters to go home early Wednesday.

Clinton finally gave her concession speech (with accompanying tweets) late Wednesday morning, saying that she hopes he will be successful and offering “to work with him on behalf of the country.”

Mr. Obama has invited Trump to the White House to discuss transition; Trump’s acceptance was dignified and Presidential.

bubbles

A-10 depot can’t recover from illegal neglect

Jerry,

Glad to hear the good news on your wife’s recovery, and that you are writing more.

And good news Strategy Page dot com published November 6, 2016: 

Once more the U.S. Air Force had to reverse its plans to get rid of its most popular combat aircraft; the A-10. In September the air force, faced with the reality that the A-10 was its most effective warplane in the current war against ISIL (Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant) in Syria and Iraq, announced it was restoring maintenance funds for the A-10 and indefinitely delaying plans to start retiring all A-10s in 2018. Now the money is allocated to keep the 283 A-10s flying into the late 2020s. Restored maintenance funds will increase availability rates back to 70 percent or more. In 2015 A-10s flew over 87,000 hours and they could have flown more (as ground troops demanded) if maintenance funds had been available.  The A-10 is a special Cold War era design that was optimized for operating close to troops on the ground. A-10s were designed for use against Russian ground forces in Europe. That war never happened and the last American A-10 attack aircraft left Europe (for good, it was thought) in mid-2013. By 2015 it was back. Meanwhile the A-10 proved to be a formidable combat aircraft in post-Cold War conflicts, first in the 1991 liberation of Kuwait and later in Afghanistan and Iraq. During the last decade the most requested ground support aircraft in Afghanistan has been the A-10. There was similar A-10 affection in Iraq. Troops from all nations quickly came to appreciate the unique abilities of this 1970s era aircraft that the U.S. Air Force is constantly trying to get rid of. In 2011 the air force did announce that it was retiring 102 A-10s, leaving 243 in service.  At the same time the air force accelerated the upgrading of the remaining A-10s to the A-10C standard. This was long overdue because the original A-10 was a 1960s design. Most have now been upgraded. An A-10C has new commo gear was added, allowing A-10 pilots to share pix and vids with troops on the ground. The A-10 pilot also has access to the Blue Force Tracker system, so that the nearest friendly ground forces show up on the HUD (Head Up Display) when coming in low to use the 30mm cannon. The A-10C can use smart bombs, making it a do-it-all aircraft for ground support.  The A-10 is a 23 ton, twin engine, single seat aircraft whose primary weapon is a multi-barrel 30mm cannon originally designed to fire armored piercing shells through the thinner top armor of Russian (or any other) tanks. These days the 1,174 30mm rounds are mostly high explosive. The 30mm cannon fires 363 gram (12.7 ounce) rounds at the rate of about 65 a second. The cannon usually fires in one or 2 second bursts. In addition, the A-10 can carry 7 tons of bombs and missiles. These days the A-10 goes out with smart bombs (GPS and laser guided) and Maverick missiles. It can also carry a targeting pod, enabling the pilot to use high magnification day/night cameras to scour the area for enemy activity. Cruising speed is 560 kilometers an hour and the A-10 can slow down to about 230 kilometers an hour. In Afghanistan 2 drop tanks were usually carried to give the aircraft more fuel and maximum time over the battlefield. The A-10, nicknamed “Warthog” or just “hog”, could always fly low and slow and was designed, and armored, to survive a lot of ground fire.  Despite the success and popularity (especially with ground troops) of the A-10 the air force leadership had cut money already allocated to keep existing A-10s flying and abandoned plans to develop an acceptable (to the troops on the ground) replacement. The reasons for the change of mind were familiar to those who remembered similar situations dating back to the early 1990s. This time it was a recent survey of Marine, Army, and Air Force JTACs (Joint Terminal Attack Controllers and JFOs (Joint Fires Observers) which showed an overwhelming preference for the A-10. JTAC and JFO teams are trained to call in air strikes and most of these teams contain a combat pilot. At the same time these teams work directly with ground forces and are well aware of what kind of air support the ground troops find most useful. Ground controllers mostly (48 percent) preferred the A-10. The next most popular aircraft (which 13 percent preferred) was the AC-130 gunships. While the AC-130 is in no danger of elimination (it is an armed C-130 transport) the A-10 is. Yet the air force leaders insist jet fighters (like the F-16, F-15 and F-18) can replace the A-10 but these 3 fighters are preferred by 14 percent. The AV-8B vertical takeoff jet is preferred by only 4 percent. Armed helicopters are preferred by 11 percent and armed UAVs by 9 percent. Air force leaders insist jet fighters can adequately replace the A-10 but ground troops and fighter pilots serving as JTACs say otherwise. As useful as armed helicopters and UAVs are the overwhelming preference is for the A-10, an aircraft explicitly designed to provide the best ground support. The air force refuses even to design a 21st century A-10 and there are no other aircraft in service that even come close.  This hostile attitude by air force leadership to the A-10 is nothing new. It got so bad in 2015 that the general commanding the ACC (Air Combat Command) was fired (because of Congressional pressure) for giving a speech in which he declared that any air force personnel speaking out publicly in favor of the A-10 were guilty of treason. While ACC is in charge of most combat aircraft (fighters, bombers, recon and ground attack) ACC leadership has long believed that the A-10 has outlived its usefulness and that its ground support job could be done just as well by fighters like the F-16 and F-35. Experience in combat has shown that this is not true, but apparently to senior people in the air force backing the truth, at least when it comes to the A-10, is treasonous.  While the air force leadership officially denounced the “supporting the A-10 is treason” remarks it was eventually revealed that while those apologies were being made those same air force generals were trying to sabotage the A-10 by quietly cutting major maintenance programs 40 percent. This meant that a growing number of A-10s would not be available for service because of “maintenance issues.” It is believed that such excuses would not include the fact that the maintenance problems were self-inflicted by the air force leadership and it would instead be implied that the age of the A-10s was a factor.  The air force has been trying to retire its A-10 aircraft since the 1990s and since late 2014 they tried issuing studies and analyses showing that the A-10 was too specialized and too old to justify the cost of keeping it in service. This generated more opposition, and more effective opposition, than the air forces expected. This was helped by the fact that some of the “studies” were more spin than impartial analysis. All this created unwanted publicity about something the air force denies exists but is nevertheless very real; the air force has never really wanted to devote much resources to CAS (Close Air Support) for ground forces. Officially this is not true but in reality it is and the ground forces (army and marines) and historians provided plenty of evidence.  The problem is complicated by the fact that the air force does not want to allow the army to handle CAS, as is the case with some countries and the U.S. Marine Corps (which provides CAS for marines and any ground forces the marines are operating with). Soldiers and marines both insist that marine CAS (provided by Harriers. F-35Bs and F-18s flown by marines) is superior. The army and marines also have their own helicopter gunships for support, but they lack capabilities only the fixed wing aircraft have. Despite all that the air force wants to eliminate the A-10, which soldiers, marines and many allied troops consider the best CAS aircraft ever, and replace it with less effective (for CAS) fighters adapted for CAS. The ground forces don’t want that mainly because the A-10 pilots specialize in CAS while fighter pilots must spend a lot of time training for air combat and different types of bombing, The A-10 pilots are CAS specialists and it shows by the amount of praise they get from their “customers” (the ground troops). To the dismay of just about everyone the air force dismisses all this as much less important than the fact that the A-10 cannot fight other aircraft. That was how the A-10 was designed, on air force orders, but that is somehow irrelevant now. 

Paul

The Air Force has always hated the close support mission, but refuses to allow the Army to have any fixed wing aircraft to carry it out for itself. This is tragic.

General Powers many years ago made it Air Force policy to never give up a mission, even if USAF didn’t want it. Close support of the field army was vital in the closing days of WW II; and close recce/strike missions by P-47, particularly train busting, became nearly decisive in some battles. The P-47 was a good close ground support aircraft, but it was also an air superiority fighter (especially as the Luftwaffe faded in ability) so it did not block a fighter pilot’s career path to be assigned to close support; later, as close support became better defined, that mission was seen as a career impairment and to be avoided. The field army wants close support, particularly in urban environments but also in open country counter battery engagements; hot fighter pilots find that less important to their careers than getting Ace status and the other perks of the air supremacy mission.

It has come to a head several times. The Air Force doctrine is to establish air supremacy in a wide area. The Army believes that close support helps the Army win battles and advance to take the enemy airfields. The argument continues.

Given limited funding the close support aircraft are the first to be neglected by USAF. Given air supremacy, close support is the first demand of the Army. The dilemma continues.

bubbles

Asteroid Leading the Vote

I couldn’t bring myself to vote for SMOD2016, but these are funny:
http://www.duffelblog.com/2016/11/election-day-early-voting-polls-show-asteroid-leading-military-voters/?utm_campaign=coschedule&utm_source=facebook_page&utm_medium=Duffel%20Blog&utm_content=Election%20Day%20early-voting%20polls%20show%20%27Asteroid%27%20leading%20with%20military%20voters
https://twitter.com/smod2016
Raise a toast to deep sea nitrifying bacteria!
Regards,
Don Parker

I’m not familiar with that web site. I gather “asteroid” is a web character, but some choose to make that a real earth striking object.

bubbles

re: automating public service jobs

The first requirement to automate public service jobs is to sort out exactly what the rules are so that they can be applied in a deterministic way.
Just doing that would remove a huge amount of uncertainty and eliminate a lot of jobs (both public sector jobs of those who evaluate how the rules apply and the lawyers who make their living at the margins where there is uncertainty about exactly what the rules require)
actually automating them to eliminate the jobs would just be a bonus
David Lang

I expect there is more interest in this subject than you suspect. If a robot can do a job that doesn’t need doing, it’s easy to fire the robot after the GS-9 has been dismissed as redundant.

sc:bubbles]

Immigration redux

You know all this, of course, but I sometimes wonder about some of your readers.

My great grandfather and grandfather were part of the 4.5 million Irish who immigrated to the US between 1820 and 1930.  The population of the US was, at that point between 60-75 million. 

They were Catholic, as well.  GAD, we know about those people, don’t we? 

They lived in the slums through my father’s childhood although my grandfather was a fireman for the NYFD.   My Grandmother did not much like the British, but managed to live with the Poles, Hungarians, and Slavs in the neighborhood. 

My father left by virtue of the GI Bill.

Disraeli told us:

“[The Irish] hate our order, our civilization, our enterprising industry, our pure religion. This wild, reckless, indolent, uncertain and superstitious race have no sympathy with the English character. Their ideal of human felicity is an alternation of clannish broils and coarse idolatry. Their history describes an unbroken circle of bigotry and blood”.

Edmund Spenser wasn’t fond of them either:

“Marry those be the most barbaric and loathy conditions of any people (I think) under heaven…They [the Irish] do use all the beastly behaviour that may be, they oppress all men, they spoil as well the subject, as the enemy; they steal, they are cruel and bloody, full of revenge, and delighting in deadly execution, licentious, swearers and blasphemers, common ravishers of women, and murderers of children.”

http://app.mediahq.com/files/pr/smr135944_%5B1%5D_Poor%20House%20from%20Galway.jpg

I’m glad Roberta is in Holy Cross and progressing.

My best,

Mark

Well, since my wife is very much of Irish descent, I can hardly be accused of discrimination against the Irish. I have always held the opinion that migration for the purpose of assimilation is precisely the way this country was built. From “hyphen Americans” we developed Americans without the hyphens who eat corned beef and cabbage and wear green on St. Patrick’s Day, and pretend to be furious with those who wear orange on that day; or march in a Columbus Day parade; etc. The Italians who entered the US as prisoners of war in WW II and were paroled out to truck gardeners around Memphis mostly stayed as immigrants, often marrying into the families they were “enslaved” to.

Of course migration without assimilation is invasion.

bubbles

QEII: Make America Great [Britain] Again

It’s nice to see that someone understands how Americans feel right now; that someone is Queen Elizabeth II:

<.>

In an unexpected televised address on Saturday, Queen Elizabeth II offered to restore British rule over the United States of America.

Addressing the American people from her office in Buckingham Palace, the Queen said that she was making the offer “in recognition of the desperate situation you now find yourselves in.”

“This two-hundred-and-forty-year experiment in self-rule began with the best of intentions, but I think we can all agree that it didn’t end well,” she said.

</>

http://www.newyorker.com/humor/borowitz-report/queen-offers-to-restore-british-rule-over-united-states

Laughter is the best medicine, eh?

◊ ◊ ◊ ◊ ◊

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

Percussa Resurgo

I guess the election has ended that offer. Although perhaps, given the obstacles he faces, Mr. Trump may ask her to extend it again…

bubbles

bubbles

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

bubbles

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Fox news declares Trump has won. Trump Claims.

Tuesday, November 8, 2016

TRUMP!

Hope and Change?

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

“Deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed.”

Immigration without assimilation is invasion.

bubbles

bubbles

2315 Tuesday night.

Podesta says wait until morning. Mrs. Clinton has not conceded, and “every ballot counts.” I would not be at all surprised if they discovered several boxes of uncounted ballots, but only in states that Trump claims; none of Mrs. Clinton’s wins will be challenged. Perhaps I am unduly cynical.

It has been an exhausting night, and the election is still not determined.

bubbles

As I go to bed, Fox News gives Trump 254 electoral votes Pennsylvania has been called for Trump by several networks and news agencies, but Fox has not. Podesta has told Mrs. Clinton’s followers to go home.

We’ll know more in the morning.

So the NY times says in Mich that Trump leads by 1.8 points out of 4.3 million counted votes but out of the 324K uncounted votes remaining, Clinton leads by 2.9 points.

 

I am sure there are an undetermined number of uncounted early votes in Pennsylvania as well. They will be overwhelmingly in favor of Mrs. Clinton. It is not over.

 

 

bubbles

2340:  Fox News has declared Trump winner in Pennsylvania, and thus the winner of the election.  When Trump came down that escalator no one took his candidacy seriously; he could not possibly win the nomination.  I need not remind you of the election.

Fox is very conservative on calling elections; they dread having to take one back. I have not heard that Mrs. Clinton concedes, but Trump has now claimed.

We may be seeing a new era.

 

bubbles

0010 9 November

I have to go eat a crow breakfast; apparently Mrs. Clinton has conceded.  Donald Trump is President Elect of the United States. His victory speech had dignitas; he was Presidential and cordial, and gracious to Mrs. Clinton.   Now Speaker Ryan has sent his congratulations.  Apparently it really is over.

Nothing like this has happened since Andrew Jackson, and that was only similar in some respects.

 

(My nit picking conscience makes me point out that Mr. Trump is President Designate; he is not President Elect until the Electoral College sends its votes to the House of Representatives. An important legal distinction, but unlikely to make any difference.

 

 

 

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sc:bubbles]

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

bubbles

bubbles

Good news and bad news.

Election tomorrow.

Monday, November 7, 2016

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

“Deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed.”

Immigration without assimilation is invasion.

bubbles

bubbles

Mike Donahue drove me out to the hospital in time for me to encourage Roberta at dinner. She’s looking much better now, and said several words. Still frustrated because she wants to say things and can’t, but the therapists at Holy Cross are excellent at helping people overcome that kind of problem. It’s obvious Roberta knows what she wants to say, so her head’s working. She’s still in there and they’ll teach her how to get back out. Deo Gratia.

The election is tomorrow. Of course my vote in California won’t count, and the election will be decided well before the California vote is counted, unlike the election when people went to bed and woke up to discover that California had gone to Woodrow Wilson by about one vote per precinct and Wilson was now the President elect.

I won’t venture a prediction. I will repeat, Trump makes me nervous; Hillary makes this old Cold Warrior terrified that she’ll blunder us into a war with Russia. Trump understands Putin much better than either Clinton does. Mr. Clinton let Ms. Albright get us into the anti-Slav position in the Balkans, where there are no obvious good guys, but the Russians have always been pro-Slavic; things have soured since then. We cannot dictate policy in Iraq and Syria, and neither Obama nor either Clinton seems to understand that the Russians take encirclement by NATO very seriously; if we really mean to act as a superpower, the only First World Nation, we need superpower capability; and we not only don’t have that now, we are losing what superiority we have in favor of more entitlements and crony services. I was an aggressive Cold Warrior, but I understood the limits; I do not think the Clintons do, as Obama certainly does not.

The nation could tolerate four years of Mrs. Clinton – indistinguishable from a third Obama turn – but I do not think we would enjoy it. I do not think we could tolerate another Hot War, especially one where we have no vital interest but survival.

Contemplate this:

New Warship’s Big Guns Have No Bullets.

<http://www.defensenews.com/articles/new-warships-big-guns-have-no-bullets>

—————————————

Roland Dobbins

bubbles

Presidential Election and arch of American History

Hi Jerry, Hope all is well with you and certainly hope Roberta continues to improve. You have a lot on your plate and this US election is probably lower in the priority list at this time. I thought this article by Conrad Black would prove interesting to your and your readers. It is from an outside perspective (Canada)but details in a short piece the context of this election within the greater 2 centuries of US history.
Here is the link:
http://news.nationalpost.com/full-comment/conrad-black-what-a-spectacle-this-election-has-been
Take Care, and good luck.
Sam Mattina

Thank you

bubbles

Best essay of the week.

J

Caddell: The Real Election Surprise

http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2016/11/07/patrick-caddell-real-election-surprise-uprising-american-people.html

Perhaps not the best, but certainly worth attention.

bubbles

I have no idea if this is true. I merely report it. It would not surprise me if the report were literally true.

Wikileaks revealed that CNN asked Hillary’s campaign for questions to ask Trump!!

Donna didn’t have to pass the questions to Hillary, she got them from Hillary!

bubbles

Automate away the public sector workers?

http://www.the-american-interest.com/2016/11/02/public-sector-workers-to-be-automated-away/

[quote]

Next up on the robot kill list are public sector workers: almost 90,000 people stand to lose their jobs in Scotland alone. …

[end quote]

Rod Montgomery==monty@starfief.com

That would certainly reduce both the cost and arrogance of government, and probably improve efficiency. Robots are upon us; they are inevitable and many government jobs easily could be automated; probably half of then within ten years.  Of course we might prefer red tape…

bubbles

A moment of science.

The Microwave Space Drive aka Em Drive

http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/emdrive-leaked-nasa-paper-reveals-star-trek-microwave-thruster-does-work-1590244?utm_source=yahoo&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=rss&utm_content=/rss/yahoous&yptr=yahoo
Supposedly it works according to a ‘leaked’ NASA paper!
“researchers achieved a force of 1.2 millinewtons per kilowatt in a vacuum after errors of measurement were accounted for.”
Link to the text of the paper
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B7kgKijo-p0ibm94VUY0TVktQlU/view
Most interesting. I wonder if there is enough detail for the Chinese to take it over since NASA appears to want to kill the topic and close the research center that did the work. Or, do you think that they would prefer for someone to actually do the engineering work so that they can steal that? :-J
Pete

This could be the most important news of the decade. One Newton = force to accelerate one kilogram one meter per second per second. Small, but the EM drive seems to need no reaction mass. At 1.2 KW per millinewton, you could accelerate a small ship to enormous speeds over time. 

 

Quantum news

Submitted to your attention.

Note in the bylines several other items some of you may be interested in.

https://www.sciencenews.org/blog/context/why-quantum-mechanics-might-need-overhaul?tgt=nr

bubbles

Elon Musk Thinks Automation Will Lead to a Universal Basic Income

It’s the science fiction scenario we’ve read about for years. People paid by the government because there are no jobs. This should lessen the burden on most educational institutions. They can openly be enhanced baby sitters since the pupils couldn’t get a job even if they had skills.
https://news.google.com/news/amp?caurl=http%3A%2F%2Famp.timeinc.net%2Ffortune%2F2016%2F11%2F06%2Felon-musk-universal-basic-income%2F%3Fsource%3Ddam#pt0-38057
Thanks,
John

Marx believed that work was unnecessary, if only all the surplus value went to the workers. Burnham in his thoughts on The Managerial Society had different views. Most science fiction authors have believed that the first fruits of real automation would be some kind of basic income: Mack Reynolds postulated it as shares in the national corporation that you couldn’t lose or be conned out of. No one has dug too deeply into designing an economic system that makes it actually work.

bubbles

Offensive on Raqqa

The only question I have after reading this article is why am I reading about this as something that is about to happen, today. Why didn’t i read this last week as something that happened?

<.>

An attack on Raqqa has been long expected, with U.S. Defence Secretary Ash Carter saying on Oct. 25 that the battle to retake it would “overlap” with the assault on Mosul.

The top U.S. military commander in Iraq, Army Lieutenant General Stephen Townsend, said last month that the U.S.-led coalition fighting Islamic State wanted to move urgently to isolate Raqqa because of concerns about the group using the city as a base to plan and launch attacks against targets abroad.

France has also pushed for simultaneous action on both fronts.

President Francois Hollande said last month there was evidence that Islamic State fighters were fleeing to Raqqa, and that everything must be done to stop them regrouping there.

French Defence Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said on Sunday that an offensive on Raqqa should be launched while the battle to push the group out of Mosul is under way.

“We have to go to Raqqa … it will automatically be local forces that will liberate Raqqa even if French forces, U.S. forces, the coalition contribute with air strikes to dismantle Daesh,” Le Drian told Europe

1 radio, using an Arabic acronym for Islamic State.

“Mosul-Raqqa can’t be disassociated because Islamic State and the territories it occupies span that area,” he said.

</>

https://www.newsmax.com/Newsfront/isis-raqqa-us-forces/2016/11/06/id/757273/

◊ ◊ ◊ ◊ ◊

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

Percussa Resurgo

I have believed this since I thought seriously about the requirements for elimination of the Caliphate. It is a purely military question. The real problem is after the liberation of the Caliphate areas, what happens to the people who remain alive in there. Who governs?

bubbles

DC Attorney: FBI Agents Working To Expose Top DOJ Officials | The Daily Caller

Hard to say how true this is, but it seems to fit with everything else we’re hearing.

FBI agents pushed forward, against the wishes of the Justice Department and without the support of bureau leadership, to investigate the Clinton Foundation, according to a Wall Street Journal report.

As a result of the obstacles thrown in their way, DiGenvoa says the agents within the bureau have gone “rogue” and any upper level bureaucrat that gets in their way from investigating Clinton could be exposed.

http://dailycaller.com/2016/11/03/dc-attorney-fbi-agents-working-to-expose-top-doj-officials/

John Harlow

bubbles

Clinton Foundation Probe Update

I’m reading some updates on the Clinton Foundation probe; it seems the IRS is involved now too:

<.>

Secret recordings of a suspect talking about the Clinton Foundation fueled an internal battle between FBI agents who wanted to pursue the case and corruption prosecutors who viewed the statements as worthless hearsay, people familiar with the matter said.

Agents, using informants and recordings from unrelated corruption investigations, thought they had found enough material to merit aggressively pursuing the investigation into the foundation that started in summer 2015 based on claims made in a book by a conservative author called “Clinton Cash: The Untold Story of How and Why Foreign Governments and Businesses Helped Make Bill and Hillary Rich,” these people said.

</>

http://www.wsj.com/articles/secret-recordings-fueled-fbi-feud-in-clinton-probe-1478135518

I may have sent you that video. It gets into friends of the Clintons like Paul Kagame, his human rights abuses, and the financial relationship between him and the Clintons, the sum of payments he made; awards and favors he received. Other names and places are covered. I wondered if anyone was going to investigate; now I know.

Clinton Cash is worth your time and might still be on YouTube. And onto the IRS:

<.>

But the [IRS] does have a mandate to review claims of exemption, including conducting “examinations to identify and address non-compliance” like the one underway with the Clinton Foundation. One IRS document called the “Tax Exempt and Government Entities Fiscal Year 2017 Work Plan” gives a more complete picture. “Filing, organizational and operational and employment tax numbered among the top issues the Exempt Organizations Examinations group uncovered in its 4,984 examinations in 2016,” it says. “The filing issues primarily involved verifying exempt activities and securing delinquent returns.”

</>

http://www.dallasobserver.com/news/the-dallas-irs-office-thats-quietly-determining-the-fate-of-the-clinton-foundation-8864404

◊ ◊ ◊ ◊ ◊

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

bubbles

Iran Sending Soldiers to US!

How much do you want to bet they’re talking about the Quds Force?

<.>

The Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps, the country’s elite military force, is sending assets to infiltrate the United States and Europe at the direction of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, according to recent Farsi-language comments from an Iranian military leader.

The IRGC “will be in the U.S. and Europe very soon,” according to the Iranian military commander, who said that these forces would operate with the goal of bolstering Iran’s hardline regime and thwarting potential plots against the Islamic Republic.

</>

http://freebeacon.com/national-security/iranian-military-sending-elite-forces-u-s-europe/

This is why we need borders….

◊ ◊ ◊ ◊ ◊

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

Percussa Resurgo

sc:bubbles]

Hope you are well, and something that might be of interest

I’ve prayed for your wife and you, I hope she improves quickly. FWIW try not to be too terrified.

Also I’m curious what you think of this idea:

http://www.cringely.com/2016/10/31/heck-happened-apple/

Relevant quote here:

     Nearly all original ideas in Hollywood, and anywhere else visual entertainment is made, begin in the mind of a writer. Yet writers, like most actors, are notoriously underpaid. Apple just needs to create a welfare state for writers.

     What Apple needs is an option for the online rights to every writer’s work. There are probably 10,000 “writers” in the entertainment business earning anywhere from $5000 to $5 million per year. I want Apple to put under contract every writer who has ever written anything that’s been produced, paying them each a guaranteed baseline of $40,000 per year (that’s $400 million annually) with an additional $600 million going to writers whose work is actually produced. Let’s say there are 2000 films and TV shows produced per year so that would be, say, $500,000 per movie and $50K per series episode.

     These amounts are substantially above Writers Guild rates and what they’d buy is a streaming option. Apple gets its pick of everything.

The industry wouldn’t know what hit them as Apple steals the idea stream at its source. Apple would have to negotiate the deal with the Writers Guild, which would love it. Producers would hate it but would learn to love it because Apple would end up financing many of their productions.

Patrick Melody

Intriguing. I have to give this some thought. I’ve seen nothing on it from the Authors’ Guild (which generally does not talk to the Writer’s Guild and vice versa). Apple changed the music business as Amazon changed publishing.

Thanks for the kind thoughts.

bubbles

And some not so good news:

 

Not so fast on A-10

Dr. Pournelle,
A-10 depot can’t recover from illegal neglect:
https://arizonadailyindependent.com/2016/11/01/usaf-is-not-preparing-to-sustain-a-10-just-treading-water/
I recommend James T. Harris show. http://www.jamestharris.com/
-d

bubbles

bubbles

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

bubbles

bubbles

Progress at Holy Cross; Sweden; and a mixed bag with comments

Saturday, November 5, 2016

Guy Fawkes Day

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

“Deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed.”

Immigration without assimilation is invasion.

bubbles

bubbles

Friday, November 4

Roberta had her first day of intense therapy today, and we’ll go out to see her about dinner time after she’s through. Alex got out there about breakfast time. Frank went out at lunch time but was unable to see her and has gone back to Palm Springs. Holy Cross is a freeway drive from here and the last time I drove on a freeway was before the stroke, so I’m afraid to drive on them now. I’m comfortable driving in the neighborhood such as to Trader Joe’s in the daytime, but when it gets dark I have to be home or have a driver. I managed to get to the Emergency Room a couple or three weeks ago at midnight, and had no real problems, but I don’t want to be the pitcher that went to the well once too often.

We’ll go out about dinner time.

I try to thank those who wished us well, but my schedule isn’t really my own and I’m sure I have missed a lot of them. They are appreciated and I do see them, but I can’t always answer.

bubbles

Saturday, November 5, 2016 We went out to Holy Cross last night at dinner time. Roberta was exhausted from therapy, so we didn’t stay long. Alex was out there at breakfast time and says she looks better than last night; we’ll go out after lunch, which isn’t far away, so I’ll cut this short when we have to go.

bubbles

bubbles

I wrote most of this yesterday. This morning (Saturday) I discovered that Microsoft has “improved” Outlook to the point of making it unusable. I tried to send a send a reply and in my answer to put in a hyperlink, but Microsoft has improved Outlook so that the INSERT tab no longer exists in Reply or Forward. I discovered that the improvement restores the Insert Tab if you “pop out” of what you are trying to do, but I still was unable to make an actual hyperlink, so in frustrations I simply pasted in the link following the reference I normally would have attached the hyperlink to. I have no idea what their intention was, and they aren’t telling; their new help system is even more useless than the old one. It used to be that I was the guy who desperately tried everything until I found a way to do something, and made a column out of my travails; I was happy enough when Microsoft or another major vendor screwed up royally because it gave me something to write about. Now I get frustrated like everyone else.

If you are forwarding something and you create text and want to insert a hyperlink to a book title (with the display the title of the book) you are in for a floundering session; I still have not been able to do it. Since all my subscriptions are recorded in Outlook – back when I used Front Page, Outlook was about the best mail/calendar program around and I got used to it – changing from Outlook is likely to be painful, but I think I’ll have to do it. Preferably to something that works a bit like Outlook did in the old days when the goal was to publish a good productive tool, not demonstrate the cleverness of the programmers.

Friday, November 4.

This morning I decided to simply shut down and restart to see if that fixes Word. It was simply refusing to recognize ^p as a valid search character, and various settings experiments seemed to make it worse.

First I tested to see if the “ignores ^p in replace” error was still in effect.  It was. It simply would not recognize ^p as a search for input.  I know that if you check the wildcard option you get a message that that doesn’t work when wildcard is selected, but this just says ^p is not a valid search symbol.  The big computer in the back room does not suffer from this problem, which is why I thought a reset might fix this machine, Eugene, which is my main machine.

Closed all programs and told it to shut down.  The screen went dark, and you’d have thought the system was shut down, but the blue power light was still on, and the red disk activity light was madly blinking.  Madly.  After a couple of minutes, I pushed the blue power button.  It shut down.  I waited for a count of 30, then turned it on again.

Held my breath; it took a while. The blue power light was on, but nothing else; but then the screen started showing the usual starting messages, BIOS info, etc., and faster than usual after that the screen came up. I put in the password.

All was well, but the red disk activity light was blinking like mad.  Very curious.  Started Firefox, and the usual set of tabs I get, including the August voice recording of me accepting the Heinlein award in a big booming voice, came up.  Some of those tabs I haven’t used since August, but that’s what Firefox gives me every time I shut it down; I wish I knew how to get it to display the most recent set of tabs instead of remembering a set months old, but if it explains that anywhere I can’t find it.  Of course they do add requests for money for Mozilla and for Colorful tabs, and I know that although I deleted them – I couldn’t send them a bill for wasting my time – they’ll be back asking for a handout next time Firefox restarts – along with a set of tabs months out of date.  I once sent them money, but I won’t pay for being annoyed. I wish there were some setting that would bring up the last set of tabs, or a way I could update the set it remembers. It probably has such a setting, but I guess it’s too much to ask for them to tell me how to use it.  I’ve tried to experiment, but they’ve defeated me.  When I restart Firefox, I’m going to get a months old set of tabs, and there’s nothing I can do about it.

Anyway, I then opened Word and tested substituting ^p for ^p^p, and lo! It worked.

By that time the red light was blinking once every few seconds, not madly.

Anyway, Word now recognizes ^p, so that’s fixed.

As to Firefox, I think I have a fix for it not ever updating the saved screen. I had checked the save tabs on exit box, but that did no good. Now I checked the “ask on shutdown” option; it does, and it saves the current screen, so that problem’s over.

I’m in the middle of an adventure with the Surface Pro, but I don’t have a happy ending yet. The Pro 3 (with Pro 4 keyboard with fingerprint reader) will not update: or wouldn’t. It would do wireless but not connect the wireless to the Internet. It connects fine with Ethernet.

Online I found a way to manually download and install an update, and while it did not work exactly as I expected, it did it. SLOWLY. Very slowly.

That allowed me to update several times in the normal way. It’s almighty slow, but it seems to be doing it. I have yet another and I’m in the middle of that. It’s taking forever. We’ll see.

I find the Surface Pro useful when it works and I’m hoping it will recover from the mopes.

 

On to Saturday.  A penny for the  guy…

bubbles

There are some observations about Sweden.

On Sweden

Dear Dr Pournelle,
Most importantly, I hope Roberta is doing well and that the rehab goes well.
I enjoy your blog and while I may not always agree with your view, I strongly feel it important to have commentary from people who have a sound grasp (having lived through it) of our history and the actors therein. And who can write 😉
A quick point triggering this missive on Sweden being a failed state. The UK’s Daily Express is not a reliable source of data; ranking at a similar depth to the Daily Mail in terms of reliable truth, fact and interpretation. A more reasoned essay on Sweden and its immigration issues could be found here http://www.spectator.co.uk/2016/09/how-sweden-became-an-example-of-how-not-to-handle-immigration/
I’d note that the first page on Google when seeking references to no-go areas were from “publications” (sic) of a similar nature and motive to the Express and Mail.
I spent a week in Gothenburg for business in early September and there was certainly no feeling on the ground that there were any particular nor unusual worries (and my Swedish colleagues would have told me if there were).
Best wishes and hopes for a speedy recovery for Roberta,
David

Being of Viking ancestry myself, I have some regard for Scandinavian affairs, and I would be reluctant to call Sweden a failed state; it does seem to be true that much of the population does not appreciate the threat. Absorbing an very large influx of migrants with no intention of assimilation is not easy, if indeed it is possible. I realize that “diversity” is said to trump everything else, but I haven’t accepted that conclusion. It seems to me that historically the US melting pot has worked very well, making Americans out of all kinds of hyphenated Americans while absorbing some of the hyphenated migrant customs – a perhaps trivial example being the St. Patrick’s Day rituals commonly observed by people whose ancestor never visited Ireland, or, who like my Viking ancestors, were not welcomed when they went there.

I do think that Sweden needs to give a lot of thought to these problems, but I have not been there in a while. My friends there are beginning to worry.

Swedish Police

Dear Jerry –

My best wishes on your wife’s recovery.

A letter referred to Sweden as becoming a failed state due to the existence of “no-go” areas for the police. I’d have to disagree. By our standards, Sweden has an extraordinarily small police force, and it’s no wonder that it is (temporarily, one hopes) being overwhelmed in the inner cities.

The Wiki page for the Swedish Police Authority states that police presence in “disadvantaged areas” is about 1 per 5000. Contrast this with New York City. There are about 40,000 sworn officers for a population of 8.5 million, or 1 per 213 persons, and some areas aren’t what you’d call great places to raise kids.. By our standards, Sweden has an extraordinarily small police force. Of course, we’re a pretty violent place for an First World country.

Additionally, the article does not specify how large the “no-go” areas are, and this makes a difference. If the areas are a square mile each, that’s one thing, but if they are 10 blocks each that’s something else. At any rate, the politics of diversity will make tailoring the size of the police force to the crime level difficult, but that’s not remotely the same thing as calling Sweden a failed state.

Regards,

Jim Martin

We moved toward “abandoned areas” in some urban environments some years ago, but New York aggressively reclaimed them years ago. It can be done, but it takes an intent to do it. I fear the years of small police forces may be over in Sweden, which would be lamentable.

bubbles

Immigrants riot in Paris.

Thanks to Hillary destroying Libya and Syria, the immigrants from there are rioting in Paris.

They don’t seem to report any of this in the U.S.;

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uRfyFhm2OR0

This item came in my daughters health insurance enrollment application;

Welcome to Hillary’s wonderfully diverse multicultural America!

(When you import 3rd world, you don’t get 1st world, you get 3rd world. – S. Molyneux)

I don’t know if the sheet is Radical Islamic attack plans or just a privacy rights notice.

I don’t know why they bother with privacy notices. All your info is already on

Anthony Wiener’s computer. The good news is it’s in the hands of the FBI now.

That guarantees it won’t go anywhere now because the new guy in charge of Hillary’s email

investigation is John Podesta’s close friend….

(You can’t make this stuff up.)

(They’re just funnin’ us now.)

The bad news is, before the NYPD turned Wiener’s Computer over to the FBI,

they downloaded it and sent it all to WikiLeaks….

The good news is, they’ll be more interested of pics of Hillary on the Lolita Express

with under age girls than looking at your info.

The bad news we can look forward to having riots like in Paris;

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uRfyFhm2OR0

Eric

We will endure.

bubbles

Europe’s New Blasphemy Courts

by Douglas Murray
November 4, 2016 at 5:00 am

https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/9253/europe-blasphemy-courts

  • Europe is currently seeing the reintroduction of blasphemy laws through both the front and back doors, initiated in a country which once prided itself on being among the first in the world to throw off clerical intrusion into politics.
  • By prosecuting Wilders, the courts in Holland are effectively ruling that there is only one correct answer to the question Wilders asked. They are saying that if someone asks you whether you would like more Moroccans or fewer, people must always answer “more,” or he will be committing a crime.
  • At no point would it occur to me that anyone saying he did not want an endless flow of, say, British people coming into the Netherlands should be prosecuted. Nor would he be.
  • The long-term implications for Dutch democracy of criminalising a majority opinion are catastrophic. But the trial of Wilders is also a nakedly political move.
  • The Dutch courts are behaving like a religious court. They are trying to regulate public expression and opinion when it comes to the followers of one religion. In so doing they obviously aspire to keep the peace in the short term, but they cannot possibly realise what trouble they are storing up for our future. [snip]

One of the reasons for the First Amendment. States had “blasphemous libel” laws; many repealed them in the early years of the Union (as they repealed their laws establishing one or another religion) but the Federal Government never had those powers to begin with,

bubbles

The agony of video buffering…

https://priceonomics.com/the-video-buffering-agony-threshold/

“The Internet’s vast size means users can afford to be fickle. 

“With an estimated 4.66 billion web pages available to browse, users have a virtually unlimited menu to choose from. This means even the smallest obstacles – a clunky interface, or a detour to download a required plug-in – can send users running away from a site. Amazon discovered that just an additional 100 milliseconds of waiting led to a 1% decrease in sales from their users.

“And when it comes to watching video online – an increasingly central part of what people do on the Internet – nothing deters users like buffering breaks.”

“Our [Mux a Priceonomics customer’s] analysis shows that just one buffering event decreases the amount of video a viewer watches by 40%. The more time a video spends buffering, the less video people watch, and even a small amount of buffering has a huge effect on an audience’s behavior.”

Reminds me of the meme “Lord give me patience…right now!” 

Charles Brumbelow

Roberta has a “Give me patience – now” placard on her office wall

bubbles

Stunning “Revelations”

I suspected the first, third, and fifth — though without that much specificity:

<.>

1. The Clinton Foundation investigation is far more expansive than anybody has reported so far and has been going on for more than a year.

2. The laptops of Clinton aides Cherryl Mills and Heather Samuelson have not been destroyed, and agents are currently combing through them. The investigation has interviewed several people twice, and plans to interview some for a third time.

3. Agents have found emails believed to have originated on Hillary Clinton’s secret server on Anthony Weiner’s laptop. They say the emails are not duplicates and could potentially be classified in nature.

4. Sources within the FBI have told him that an indictment is “likely”

in the case of pay-for-play at the Clinton Foundation, “barring some obstruction in some way” from the Justice Department.

5. FBI sources say with 99% accuracy that Hillary Clinton’s server has been hacked by at least five foreign intelligence agencies, and that information had been taken from it.

</>

http://www.realclearpolitics.com/video/2016/11/02/fbi_sources_tell_fox_news_indictment_likely_in_clinton_foundation_case.html

Why are we just now hearing about point five? Why wasn’t this mentioned, publicly? “We wouldn’t want to cause a panic”? Neither would a bank robber.

TOP SECRET//SI//TK//NOFORN (Top Secret, SI is a subset of Sensitive Compartmentalized Information — SCI, Keyhole satellite collections, No Foreign Distribution; Americans only) information was on this system and was compromised be no fewer than five foreign intelligence agencies and possibly more?

◊ ◊ ◊ ◊ ◊

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

Percussa Resurgo

Understandably, I have not been following any of this, and have no idea of its accuracy. Things have become so bizarre that a number of news items I would normally ignore as absurd turn out to be true. God looks after fools, drunks, and the United States of America. We need that. Alas, I gather His patience, unlike His forgiveness, is not infinite.

bubbles

Bret Baier on the two investigations

This IS from Infowars and I can’t find the video on Fox, but it appears to be legitimate.

Details the Clinton Foundation investigation, and states that the laptops that the FBI agreed to destroy as part of immunity deals for Cheryl Mills and others have not been destroyed because “an immunity deal is voided if someone lies to the FBI.”

Subj: Tweet from Paul Joseph Watson (@PrisonPlanet)

Paul Joseph Watson (@PrisonPlanet) tweeted at 7:41 PM on Wed, Nov 02, 2016:
Avalanche of evidence in Clinton Foundation investigation. Clinton emails on Weiner’s laptop are NEW – not copies.

https://t.co/QkitMRlfrz

(https://twitter.com/PrisonPlanet/status/793976393524772864?s=02)Iince

I have never tweeted.

bubbles

Intel launches 500 drones for nighttime light show

http://www.pcworld.com/article/3138518/robots/intel-launches-500-drones-for-nighttime-light-show.html#tk.rss_all

There is a video…

Charles Brumbelow

bubbles

An Alternative To American Citizenship?

This is interesting:

<.>

Scientists and astronomers have revealed plans to set up a new nation in space called Asgardia.

Anyone can apply to be a citizen in the cosmic country, which will be based around one or more satellites orbiting the Earth.

</>

https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/2099865/conspiracy-theorists-claim-plans-to-create-asgardia-space-nation-in-orbit-above-earth-is-secret-illuminati-plot-to-take-over-the-world/

Asgard reminds me of the Norse myths. I am now a citizen of Asgardia!

=) I’ll save you some seats on our space ship. =) ◊ ◊ ◊ ◊ ◊ Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

Percussa Resurgo

They may have problems gaining recognition, particularly for their passports. In my younger radical days I knew and sympathized with Garry Davis, a WW II veteran who sat in camping on the Turtle Bay grounds where they were building UN headquarters; but that was long ago. I still have considerable appreciation for Garry, but the world is not as he saw it then, and it does not look like going there.

I once memorized Locksley Hall

Heard the heavens fill with shouting, and there rain’d a ghastly dew

From the nations’ airy navies grappling in the central blue;

Far along the world-wide whisper of the south-wind rushing warm,

With the standards of the peoples plunging thro’ the thunder-storm;

Till the war-drum throbb’d no longer, and the battle-flags were furl’d

In the Parliament of man, the Federation of the world.

sc:bubbles]

Russian Empire or Soviet Union? — “A difference which makes no difference is no difference.”

Russia’s Ramping Up for War Where Nobody’s Looking

Paul D. Shinkman

U.S. News & World Report – U.S. News & World Report – Wed Nov 2 21:47:00 UTC 2016

The Nordic countries of Norway, Sweden and Finland fear greater likelihood of conflict with Putin.

http://a.msn.com/r/2/AAjMuGi?a=1&m=en-us

As an old cold warrior I have considerable respect for Russian capabilities, but I think their current ambitions are greatly limited by lack of Russians, and not much ideology for loyalty to an Empire with many non-Russians. The “nationality problem” as Soviet theorists used to term it was always a problem even in Soviet days with compulsory Marxist course from first grade through graduate school.

Russia’s first goals, I would say, is to get more Russian nationalists into Russia. The United States threatened nuclear war over Soviet missiles in Cuba; the Cuban crises abated with Soviet withdrawal from Cubs – and US bringing home IRBM’s from Turkey, although that latter was deliberately not publicized. I do not think they want to revive the WTO; and anyway isn’t that more a European problem? They aren’t helpless in Britain, France, and Germany…

 

Of course the first Russia (the Kievan State) was established by Swedes. On the other hand, Finland proved a very tough nut to crack by the Soviet Union; Putin will not have forgotten that, nor the body bags coming home from Afghanistan.

bubbles

Anonymous Release Bone-Chilling video of Huma Abedin every American Needs to See https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nRu3U-nwyhw

This is all verifiable, too.

Hillary MUST NOT become POTUS.

{o.o}

Well, I certainly would not want Huma as Harry Hopkins to President Clinton.

bubbles

bubbles

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

bubbles

bubbles