Unprotected and Benighted

Chaos Manor View, Friday, February 26, 2016

“This is the most transparent administration in history.”

Barrack Obama

Liberalism is a philosophy of consolation for Western Civilization as it commits suicide.

Under Capitalism, the rich become powerful. Under Socialism, the powerful become rich.

Under Socialism, government employees become powerful.

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From here on in, it’s the matter of Trump. You may be for him or against him; but he is a serious contender.  I do not think he really wants to be saddled with the pressure of the duties of President; but more and more turn to him to save what they think is America.  This is the rise of pragmatic populism.  There is something Jacksonian in his rise.

Peggy Noonan today

http://www.wsj.com/articles/trump-and-the-rise-of-the-unprotected-1456448550

Not one of her best written pieces, but I think she nails it.

P

And in fact, she does. Trump is a populist and speaks for those who have given up on a system that is no longer the consent of the governed.

From Noonan’s essay:

But I keep thinking of how Donald Trump got to be the very likely Republican nominee. There are many answers and reasons, but my thoughts keep revolving around the idea of protection. It is a theme that has been something of a preoccupation in this space over the years, but I think I am seeing it now grow into an overall political dynamic throughout the West.

There are the protected and the unprotected. The protected make public policy. The unprotected live in it. The unprotected are starting to push back, powerfully.

The protected are the accomplished, the secure, the successful—those who have power or access to it. They are protected from much of the roughness of the world. More to the point, they are protected from the world they have created. Again, they make public policy and have for some time.

The fundamental premise of the United States is that governments derive their just powers from the consent of the governed. Our governing class no longer has the consent of the governed, and many of them are shocked when you point that out. The protected – the governing class – pretty well consents. Why would anyone object? The intentions are good. And in fact it is so: they have good intent. They are well-wishing with a vengeance.

What marks this political moment, in Europe and the U.S., is the rise of the unprotected. It is the rise of people who don’t have all that much against those who’ve been given many blessings and seem to believe they have them not because they’re fortunate but because they’re better.

You see the dynamic in many spheres. In Hollywood, as we still call it, where they make our rough culture, they are careful to protect their own children from its ill effects. In places with failing schools, they choose not to help them through the school liberation movement—charter schools, choice, etc.—because they fear to go up against the most reactionary professional group in America, the teachers unions. They let the public schools flounder. But their children go to the best private schools.

This is a terrible feature of our age—that we are governed by protected people who don’t seem to care that much about their unprotected fellow citizens.

And a country really can’t continue this way.

In wise governments the top is attentive to the realities of the lives of normal people, and careful about their anxieties. That’s more or less how America used to be. There didn’t seem to be so much distance between the top and the bottom.

The Protected and the Unprotected are not quite the same as the Enlightened and the Benighted, but the Enlightened, who know what’s best for everyone, have gained more power among the Protected and are using it. As I have been saying for two decades, we sow the wind. Now comes the reaping.

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As Noonan notes, it is the same in Europe:

Similarly in Europe, citizens on the ground in member nations came to see the EU apparatus as a racket—an elite that operated in splendid isolation, looking after its own while looking down on the people.

In Germany the incident that tipped public opinion against Chancellor Angela Merkel’s liberal refugee policy happened on New Year’s Eve in the public square of Cologne. Packs of men said to be recent migrants groped and molested groups of young women. It was called a clash of cultures, and it was that, but it was also wholly predictable if any policy maker had cared to think about it. And it was not the protected who were the victims—not a daughter of EU officials or members of the Bundestag. It was middle- and working-class girls—the unprotected, who didn’t even immediately protest what had happened to them. They must have understood that in the general scheme of things they’re nobodies.

The Road to Serfdom ( http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0048EJXCK/ref=dp-kindle-redirect?ie=UTF8&amp%3B%3Bbtkr=1&amp%3Btag=chaosmanor-20, but you can find copies elsewhere including some for free) discusses this same phenomenon.

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Why Trump Is Panicking Robert Kagan.

<http://nationalinterest.org/feature/why-trump-panicking-robert-kagan-15329>

Apparently, Rubio actually said this: “I disagree with voices in my own party who argue we should not engage at all, who warn we should heed the words of John Quincy Adams not to go ‘abroad, in search of monsters to destroy.’”

—————————————

Roland Dobbins <roland.dobbins@mac.com>

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FBI vs. Apple, Google, Facebook, and the American People

Jake Anderson put this best, I’ll post the links to WSJ after his bit:

<.>

Now, the Wall Street Journal has confirmed that there are actually 12 other iPhones the FBI wants to access in cases that have nothing to do with terrorism. According to an Apple lawyer, these cases are spread all across the country: “Four in Illinois, three in New York, two in California, two in Ohio, and one in Massachusetts.”

With each of these cases, the FBI’s lawyers cite an 18th-century law called All Writs Act, which they say is the jurisprudence needed to force Apple to comply and bypass their built-in proprietary encryption methods. Is it any wonder the only case the public hears about is the one that involves terrorism?

</>

http://anonhq.com/we-just-found-out-the-real-reason-the-fbi-wants-a-backdoor-into-the-iphone/

http://www.wsj.com/article_email/justice-department-seeks-to-force-apple-to-extract-data-from-about-12-other-iphones-1456202213-lMyQjAxMTI2MjIzMzMyMTMwWj

http://www.wsj.com/articles/apples-iphone-dispute-with-government-puts-focus-on-centuries-old-law-1455739834

This is where we come to terms with the balancing act of liberty and security; I defer to Benjamin Franklin:

“Those who would give up essential Liberty, to purchase a little temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety.”

Fine by me, so long as the friendly men in black ski masks with automatic weapons realize that I’m not with “those” people…

◊ ◊ ◊ ◊ ◊

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

Percussa Resurgo

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

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Good News

 

Chaos Manor View, Tuesday, February 23, 2016

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Friday

This will be short, but it’s good news for me. Sunday night as I was making my way from the bathroom to bed, I lost my balance and fell. It was sort of controlled, I didn’t hit my head hard enough to cause a bump or bruise or cut, but I did come down pretty hard on my left buttock, and instantly felt a familiar twinge.

Some thirty years ago, when Larry and I were writing Footfall, I bent over to pick something up and got a horrid twinge in my back. It nearly crippled me, and Larry and I had trips we couldn’t avoid. He had to carry my luggage. I couldn’t do it. Fortunately Larry was working with Steve Barnes on another book at that time. And Steve had the goodness to give me a copy of Stretching by Bob and Jean Anderson. It took weeks, but I got better from the day I first got that book, and I must have given 25 copies to friends. It’s great. I no longer use it, because before my stroke, and a little less frequently now, I employ The Five Tibetan Rites, which work better than you’ll believe possible unless you try them for at least six months. My lack of balance makes me have to modify what I do, but I manage. I’ve gotten lazy this year, and my backache reminds me that I need to do them again; and indeed, it’s two days now and I’m going to sleep through the night tonight, So that’s one bit of good news.

Sunday night I changed batteries in my hearing aids. Monday night they rang some tone, a sort of biddely-bodily-boop unlike their usual signals. Of course I have long ago lost the instruction manuals, so I don’t know what it meant. I took them off for the night, Today they were just barely working. I could hear better with than without them, but not a lot better.

I changed the batteries in the hopes that I had put in a bad battery. Unlikely since they were still in the wrappings, but just maybe – of course it was no use. I could not hear much. I took off the hearing aids and it didn’t seem that my unaided hearing was worse, but it was possible. That was a moment of near despair.

Normally that would have been my signal to head for COSTCO or the Kaiser audiologist; it was a serious hearing lost, like I could not understand a word of the news announcer on the morning radio; but we had scheduled a conference with me, Niven, Barnes, and Jack Cohen who Skypes with us from England and gives us no end of advice on biological matters. And if that weren’t enough Chris Stott of the International Institute of Space Commerce whose Hq. is located on the Isla of Mann was coming to Chaos Manor to take me to lunch.

That ruled out going to COSTCO today. It also meant that Chris got the impression that I am more deaf than I really am, but there was nothing for it. I had mentioned his coming, and asked Larry Niven if he wanted to join us, which worked out because Chris had read all the books either of has written, and was more familiar with some of them I am. My son Alex joined us, so I had some people there to help me with the conversation when it turned serious about A Step Farther Out. I hope to have some very good news on that shortly. We also discussed mutual friends in the space community, and it’s amazing that I had never met him before. Anyway that all went well.

I got home and cleaned up some dog work, but I was pretty miserable. My back was killing me, and I could only understood if they stood directly in front of me and talked directly to me; talking to the wall, or someone else didn’t do it.

That went on until Roberta and I watched the news. As we often do we were having leftovers from previous meals in restaurants, eating off TV tables – rather barbarous practice but at our age we do it unless one of has taken pains to prepare a meal. About ten minutes into the news my right hearing aid gave me a grinding clanking sound like nothing I had ever heard, and suddenly the TV was far too loud and I could hear Roberta asking was something wrong.

No, indeed, I told her. The new hearing problem had been electronic, not biological, and had fixed itself. I’ll still have to drive over to COSTCO and have them examine these things, but I am relieved: the worst that can happen is that they are no longer in warranty and I’ll have to buy new ones. Since they cost about $2000 I won’t be pleased, but even if I have to buy a new set every two years I’ll just have to hustle up some more money. One day of being deaf was more than enough. I am now hearing as well, at least with the right one which is my good ear, as well as ever; and the reason I am unsure about the other is that my left ear is so bad that it’s always hard to tell if the electronics are working properly.

So I am ready to shout Hosannas. And there is very likely to be some really good news about the International Institute of Space Commerce and A Step Farther Out. Hurrah. Deo Gratia,

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How to Kill an F-35 with a 60-Year-Old SA-2.

<http://nationalinterest.org/blog/the-buzz/revealed-how-kill-f-35-joint-strike-fighter-15296>

—————————————

Roland Dobbins

The SA-2 was a pretty good bird. And they’ve already got better. And we no longer have Systems Command.

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Saudi Weak!

This is the most encouraging news I’ve seen on Saudi Arabia in my lifetime:

<.>

Saudi Arabia’s petroleum minister on Tuesday ruled out the possibility that a recently announced oil production freeze by several countries might lead to cuts to reverse the plunge in oil prices.

“There is no sense wasting our time seeking production cuts,” Ali bin Ibrahim al-Naimi told energy executives at the annual IHS CERAweek conference. “That will not happen.”

</>

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/02/24/business/energy-environment/saudi-oil-minister-rules-out-possibility-of-production-cuts.html

And we have this:

<.>

Saudi Arabia has ruled out a deal by major producers to cut oil output and warned high-cost operators such as US shale drillers to trim costs or go bust in a stark message that triggered fresh pressure on crude prices.

</>

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/f8896d4e-da3c-11e5-98fd-06d75973fe09.html

For the first time in my life, I’m considering subsidies. We might subsidize the shale industry and even consider subsidizing any non-OPEC, US client states energy programs that will cause the price of oil to go down further so that we can break OPEC and Saudi Arabia.

They started this fight and they’ve not been the best of allies.

But, that will not happen so long as the oligarchs of the tangible economy happen to have many oil men among them; that is, unless it becomes necessary to counter-position the Saudis in this geopolitical negotiation; perhaps I should say “geostrategic business negotiation”.

Do we have some reason not to do this? If Saudi Arabia were a good friend of this country, my opinion might be different. But, since I don’t know what such a Saudi Arabia would look like, I don’t know.

Of course, if we do that we’ll be looking at more problems with “terrorists”. But, since we won’t have to worry about the efficacy of Middle Eastern oil — since we’ll have our own supply here — we’ll have more options on the table to deal with that eventuality. And with the impotent response to ISIS, the anger of the people, and so forth, we might just garner the political capital to impose a more effective solution to the problem. But, I think the Russians might beat us to it.

◊ ◊ ◊ ◊ ◊

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

Percussa Resurgo

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Smoke-filled rooms 

Dear Jerry,
“Smoke-filled room:
Abraham Lincoln, ” Teddy” Roosevelt, Dwight D Eisenhower and William McKinley (a president currently receiving a long overdue reappraisal after having been underrated for most of a century).

Primaries and “open covenants openly arrived at”:

Oral sex in the Oval Office, lectures on the moral equivalent of war and undue fear of communism, “plumbers”, an “unwinnable” war against a third rate tinhorn tooting dirt poor socialist dictatorship and a president who spent as much time skirt chasing movie stars and Mafiosi bimbos as he possibly could.
Bring back the smoke-filled rooms!
Bemusedly,
Petronius

 

 

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Where Are the Scriptoria?

<http://medievalbooks.nl/2013/11/05/where-are-the-scriptoria/>

—————————————

Roland Dobbins

 

 

 

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

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Trump, Rubio, Cruz; Barry Emerson, RIP; South Carolina, immigration, and other matters

Chaos Manor View, Sunday, February 21, 2016

“This is the most transparent administration in history.”

Barrack Obama

Liberalism is a philosophy of consolation for Western Civilization as it commits suicide.

Under Capitalism, the rich become powerful. Under Socialism, the powerful become rich.

Under Socialism, government employees become powerful.

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We are down to effectively three viable Republican candidates; we have allowed Iowa, New Hampshire, and South Carolina, actually a minority of votes within those not large states, to restrict to three who can be President. If this was supposed to promote Democracy and restrict the power of those in smoke-filled rooms, it may have restricted the cigar smoking flip drinkers, but it hardly promotes Democracy. A better way was when, instead of primaries, party activists such as precinct committee leaders named delegates to a national convention. Yes, that produced Barry Goldwater one year, and this terrified the Rockefeller Republicans; and of course Kennedy used primaries to good advantage. And aren’t primaries democratic? Why consult precinct workers on whom their party will nominate? But that’s a topic for another time.

In effect we have Trump, Cruz, and Marco Rubio, and one of them will win. That probably means Rubio as Cruz will attack Trump, Trump will probably respond quite effectively, and Rubio stays out of the line of fire as the other two kill each other; at least that’s the nightmare I have. And I could be very wrong: one of the most astute politicians alive, former Speaker Newt Gingrich, says that Trump has learned faster than anyone he has ever seen, and continues to do so.

I value Newt’s judgment highly; and while he has not formally endorsed Trump, he has named the populist pragmatist a viable and interesting candidate. And note that Trump was the first to say that Scalia must be succeeded by another original intent constitutionalist – indeed was the first to say so. This is not the move of a candidate for emperor.

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I am still working on my essay on education; and I will shortly have a column for Chaos Manor Reviews on Ransomware, backup, and new disk technologies.

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My morning objective newspaper headlines.  Hillary has a reset with a narrow win in caucuses over a 78 year old Socialist Independent.  In Nevada.  Down below the fold, we’re told there was an election in South Carolina, which was an election in a state a bit larger than Nevada.  When I moved to California in 1964 the Times was a liberal Republican newspaper.

 

 

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R.I.P. Howard Barry Emerson

Barry died Thursday afternoon, the day after his oncologist told him the Opdivo wasn’t working.  Only his will had kept him alive almost eleven months.  He had hoped to beat the odds and live two years after the diagnosis but recently recognized that he couldn’t.
He was fully aware until his final moments, and he died with me and a friend holding his hands.  He was in his own bed at home, as he wanted.
He donated his body for research.

Elizabeth Bryson

Barry was the author and inventor of VOPT, the hard disk optimizer that was absolutely essential through most of the life of Windows; it still works, and is still for sale, although is not as necessary as it was in earlier versions of Windows. It is still useful. I have used VOPT for thirty years, on every Windows System I have ever owned, and I have not lost one byte because of it.

I knew Barry only by correspondence and infrequent phone calls, but we were friends. The computer community has lost an important member. RIP indeed.

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A physicist observes:

Heat flux

Jerry,

I’ll point out that a condition of low heat flux from the interior of the earth to the surface is equivalent to a statement of near thermal equilibrium.

Whether that implies that the earth’s surface temperature is more nearly regulated by heat from the interior, or that we’re fortunate that insolation approximately balances heat loss from the interior (and it would be interesting if that were an additional constraint on the development of a habitable planetary surface), further deponent sayeth not without considerable analysis.

Jim

It seems certain interior heat has a considerable effect on such matters as El Nino, ocean currents, volcanoes and thus cooling (which Ben Franklin thought the cause of ice ages), and other local matters; yet plays no part in the very expensive models on which we bet our future. Solar heating is of course greater, but general; and may not be as constant as the models assume.

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South Carolina Last Night

Jerry,

There were some surprises last night in South Carolina. I see several interesting trends in the data. (The final RCP SC polls averages, plus actual SC results, at http://www.realclearpolitics.com/epolls/2016/president/sc/south_carolina_republican_presidential_primary-4151.html

)

One item worth noting: Trump’s SC RCP average dropped five points in the last, intensively-polled week from the debate to the vote. Apparently he cannot after all say anything and still not lose votes; he hurt himself with last week’s looser-cannon-than-usual performance.

Trump ended up essentially matching his final RCP polls average. The final RCP averages this year have been a pretty good indication of voter intentions a day or so out (they tend to be off where there was a strong late trend) so I take this to mean that Trump’s SC voters generally had their minds made up ahead of time.

Rubio had a good week last week – between a decent debate, strong local endorsements, and not being a primary attack focus he picked up three points to end up tying Cruz in the high teens by Friday. Cruz, meanwhile, stayed essentially level through the week in the face of strong attacks on two fronts.

The chief surprise I see in Saturday’s results is that the voters are apparently beginning to focus on who can and cannot win:

– Rubio and Cruz in the second tier both gained nearly four points from Friday’s final averages to Saturday’s results, closing their respective gaps with Trump from twenty-two and nineteen points at the debate to ten points in the vote.

– Bush and Kasich meanwhile saw significant drops from their final poll averages, into an effective three-way tie for last with Carson at around seven percent each. (Bush has since drawn the appropriate

conclusion.)

The obvious strong trend here is toward a top tier of three contenders, plus any remaining no-hopers.

Much pundit chin-pulling has already gone to figuring out how much effect Kasich and Carson may have by hanging on. My guess is, less than expected, because the SC trend of voters not wanting to waste their votes (and donors their money) will only grow.

One interesting question I see is, how does Trump play this next debate?

Aiming for more controlled would seem obvious, given his five-point slide last week. But at the same time, he now has two serious rivals near-evenly matched and closing fast, both now in need of attack.

Watching him try to square that circle could be fun.

Rubio, meanwhile, may hope to continue combining fire with Trump on Cruz while not taking fire himself, but if so I expect he’ll be very disappointed. Trump has every incentive now to oppose either of his two chief rivals pulling ahead of the other.

One side-prediction: Trump will suddenly find that Kasich is the most warm, wonderful, and talented human being since Albert Einstein and Mother Theresa’s secret love-child. It probably won’t actually do Kasich much good, because anyone inclined to buy that act is likely voting for Trump, but it’ll be fun to watch.

Porkypine

As Newt Gingrich said yesterday, Trump has learned the political game faster and with better results than anyone he has ever seen. Trump does not generally attack people who have not attacked him. One assumes that Rubio has noticed this.

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Some thoughts on immigration

Dear Dr. Pournelle,

I read your comments on immigration in your most recent journal entry with interest.

I would suggest, however, that deportation (or not) is only half the equation.

Item: Disney fired its entire IT staff and replaced them with H1B immigration holders, in a clear violation of the spirit of that law, which is supposed to supplement American labor with skilled professionals, not replace it.

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/01/26/us/lawsuit-claims-disney-colluded-to-replace-us-workers-with-immigrants.html?_r=0

Item: Guatemalan teenagers being held as virtual slave labor on a farm,

http://www.dispatch.com/content/stories/local/2015/07/02/Four-indicted-in-egg-farm-labor-ring.html

Item: Released minors being scooped up by traffickers, and some minors are used as sex slaves.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/failures-in-handling-unaccompanied-migrant-minors-have-led-to-trafficking/2016/01/26/c47de164-c138-11e5-9443-7074c3645405_story.html

http://www.fairus.org/issue/human-trafficking-exploitation-of-illegal-aliens

From this I conclude: Illegal immigration exists because it has powerful corporate sponsors who lobby to prevent new laws, or the enforcement of existing ones, in the name of “compassion”. If corporations could make money from American citizens, there would be no incentive to hire illegal aliens.

So, if I were an activist for immigration reform, here is what I would

do: Focus not on the poor and desperate immigrants, who are figures of pity, and concentrate on the corporations and rich interests who exploit them. Democrat voters especially HATE the “1%”. I don’t

think any Catholic could object to exposing ill treatment of immigrants, legal or illegal , or demanding that they be paid the actual minimum wage.

I would take a camera, and I would go to the farms, go to the factories, go to the sex slaves, and I would put it out on social media, force people to look at what they were doing, make it so we couldn’t look it away. And I would demand that these illegal immigrants receive ‘equality” — i.e, the minimum wage, the 40 hour work week, the paid time off, the benefits, the Obamacare. I would demand punishment of any corporation or “1%” caught underpaying employees.

The more we can make it stick, the less and less attractive illegal immigration would be. Why would a company want illegal immigrants if they can’t underpay and overwork them?

How to enforce it? The honest truth is that I don’t think we can trust the Fed to pursue corporate violations with any vigor; it would have to be done by ordinary citizens, armed with smartphones and cameras, to find these issues and report them, not to the government, but on social media, put it out where it can’t simply be thrown into a file drawer or ignored. To embarrass the government so badly they have to take action. The government actually does have a pretty good track record once you shine a solid light on these kinds of activities.

Immigration reform is never going to be a winner so long as it is perceived to target poor and desperate people. If the perception could be shifted to see that immigration reform is not about targeting poor brown people, but rich white ones who are cheating and exploiting them, I think it would have a much better chance of success.

Respectfully,

Brian P.

Until you can control the borders, no interior measure will be very effective; and until you construct a useful education system instead of the train wreck Federal Aid and centralization has made of ours, educated immigrants will be needed. Our schools cannot meet the needs for workers; what do we do?

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Subj: This Is the Real Reason Apple Is Fighting the FBI

http://time.com/4229601/real-reason-apple-is-fighting-the-fbi/

It’s a shame that 99.9% of the lawyers give the rest a bad name.

Surely you exaggerate—well I think so – well perhaps

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Public Officials

http://www.vox.com/2016/1/7/10729338/academics-study-government-officials

“Most transparent administration in history”

mkr

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I cannot overstate the importance of Nick Cole’s essay:

<http://www.nickcolebooks.com/2016/02/09/banned-by-the-publisher/>

The speculative fiction genre is being undermined from within. From

this time forward, I will buy every single book Nick Cole ever publishes as an independent, on general principle.

—————————————

Roland Dobbins

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Space Access ’16 Conference Detailed Agenda – April 7-9 in Phoenix

Sunday, 2/21/16 – Updated SA’16 Info with Detailed Agenda is available, along with conference registration and hotel room reservations links,

at: http://space-access.org/updates/sa16info.html

We have about 80% of our program confirmed for Space Access ’16, April

7-9 2016 in Phoenix Arizona, Space Access Society’s next annual conference on the business, technology, and politics of radically cheaper access to space, this year with a strong sub-focus on Beyond Low

Orbit: The Next Step Out.

SA’16 is less than seven weeks away – start making those travel arrangements soon!

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

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Trump and the Holy Father; Immigration; Science and Statistics; Aether; and other matters

Chaos Manor View, Friday, February 19, 2016

“This is the most transparent administration in history.”

Barrack Obama

Liberalism is a philosophy of consolation for Western Civilization as it commits suicide.

Under Capitalism, the rich become powerful. Under Socialism, the powerful become rich.

Under Socialism, government employees become powerful.

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Trump and the Pope.

I doubt that His Holiness pays any detailed attention to American politics, and since all the mainstream media runs headlines making fun of Trump and parodies his positions, I suppose it was inevitable. On the papal airplane a reporter – whose name is curiously omitted from every account of the incident I have ever seen – asked about the desire to build a wall along the Southern border of the United States. I put it ambiguously because I cannot find the text of the question, nor the reporter’s name.

His Holiness answered “A person who thinks only about building walls, wherever they may be, and not building bridges, is not Christian,” which is the answer you might expect from this Pope if the question is a general question in the abstract. What would you have him say? It is certainly true: if your entire policy is building walls and rejecting people, you are certainly acting as Jesus would have; would you have the Holy Father say otherwise? Indeed, if his sole activity in the Vatican were to be to order the Swiss Guard to erect a fortress, it would hardly be a Christian act. The Vatican certainly has walls – as Trump later pointed out – and indeed in its time has had fortresses, tunnels to them, cannon, and a rather good army to protect it, and this not just in the time of the Borgias. The Pope knows this; he is clearly discussing an abstract principle, not a particular man, as his staff’s frantic attempts to de-escalate the situation have tried to make clear.

I would think it really depends on the wording of the question.

Whatever the wording, the reporter had his story, and rushed off to phone it in. The media went into triumph mode, and the headlines and TV crawls started immediately. “Pope Francis Suggests Donald Trump Is ‘Not Christian” trumpeted the Newspaper of Record, the New York Times, and that was one of the mildest banners.

It was a tempest in a teapot. Trump, as is his want, fired a salvo in his defense, then began to moderate it. The Vatican backed and filled. This is not a new round in the Thirty Years War; the Treaty of Westphalia prevails. States are allowed to defend their borders – as the Vatican does—and remain Christian. Whether a big wall is either necessary or sufficient to control our Southern border, it certainly won’t hurt, and there are many reasons to believe it will be a big help. Trump doesn’t hate Mexicans. American Christians can and do contribute to tons of causes in Mexico, and do. Trump remains a good Christian Protestant as Jack Kennedy was a Catholic.

Peace and Joy.

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Whatever your views on migrants, I doubt you would read this day book for long if you believed in unrestricted immigration and a world without borders. To be clear: I am an enthusiast for the American Melting Pot and assimilation, and I firmly believe that migration with no intent at assimilation is invasion, and we have a perfect right to resist invasion.

I do not believe we can deport all the illegal immigrants in any reasonable period, but that does not mean unlimited acceptance. It is a complicated matter. I do think those who cannot obey the laws should be at the top of the list for deportation, but I don’t suppose any significant number of Americans would disagree with that statement. I would consider paying a significant bounty to anyone willing to self-deport, but I put that as a matter for discussion, not instant implementation. As a firm believer in mens rea as a necessary condition for criminal punishment, I have very mixed emotions concerning those brought to the United States as minor children. I would certainly consider honorable service in the Armed Forces as a path to citizenship. All those matters can be discussed; but until we have control of the borders, the discussion is moot.

bubbles

I am working on a Chaos Manor Reviews item on Ransomware, how it works, and how to defend yourself. Whatever else you do, install Microsoft Security Essentials; and do not click on any attachment to any email that does not come from a known source – and just because it has a friend’s return address doesn’t mean that your friend sent it. Not only can the friend’s address be faked, but the fact this this sender is a friend of yours isn’t that hard to discover.

Ransomware is an insidious attack that encrypts all the data on your system; by all I mean not only the stuff on your computer, but any other drive that it’s networked to. The only way to get the data back is to pay the ransom for the encryption key; payment is usually to be made in bitcoins, and can run to multiple thousands of dollars. There’s nothing for it but to pay; Abbey a NCIS won’t be able to get your data back, much less anyone you know.

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South Carolina Tomorrow

Jerry,

In tomorrow’s South Carolina primary, the polls are, in important ways, cryptic.

http://www.realclearpolitics.com/epolls/2016/president/sc/south_carolina_republican_presidential_primary-4151.html

Trump’s average has slid slightly, from mid to low thirties – this tells me he hasn’t (thus far) picked up much support from the recent dropouts.

His ~1/3rd of Republicans ceiling, for now at least, seems real and holding. Extrapolating this, in a two-way race he loses the nomination handily, and in a three-way race his chances aren’t great.

The key thus becomes how soon does the race (currently six-way) narrow to three, or two. Trump’s interest in preventing a single strong challenger emerging for as long as possible is obvious; hence his recent barrage against Cruz. This has apparently been working. Cruz’s poll average numbers have slid from a solid second place in the low twenties, to an effective tie for second in the high teens with the rebounding Rubio.

But those averages are based on numbers all over the place. Cruz’s this-week SC polls high/low mark is 23/13, Rubio’s 22/15. Dig deeper and these variations in part result from different assumptions on turnout by various groups, notably older voters and conservatives.

Bush and Kasich meanwhile duel for fourth place at around ten percent, with Carson bringing up the rear at around seven.

What to look for tomorrow night:

Twice now, the final polling averages have concealed surprises. In Iowa, Trump significantly underperformed, while Cruz and Rubio overperformed. In New Hampshire, Trump turned this around to a modest overperformance, Kasich did likewise to take (distant) second, while Rubio suffered from the Cristie debate hit and fell to fifth.

A lack of surprises in SC tomorrow – Cruz/Rubio effectively tied for distant second, Bush/Kasich for more distant fourth – is a significant tactical Trump win. He does not then automatically “run the table”, but he’d be a step closer. Add a significant Trump overperformance from his current 32.9 average, and even more so.

Surprises to watch for are either or both of the apparently close battles, for second or fourth, not being close. An unambiguous strong second could lead to increased perception of being the one who might beat Trump, a weak fifth to increased donor pressure for dropout. A significant Trump underperformance is also possible (not predicted, but

possible) at which point his inevitability perception could take a major hit.

Tomorrow, it’s the voters of South Carolina’s turn. We’ll see.

Porkypine

Well, thanks for telling us what to look for.

Sander and neverland

Dear Dr. Pournelle,

First, I’m experimenting somewhat with google mail. The formatting of the last few emails I have sent you seems to be off. This sentence, for example, marks the end of a paragraph.

That bastion of right-wing extremism, Mother Jones, has examined the numbers coming out of the Sanders campaign — or at least, numbers they imply they support without explicitly endorsing them — and declares them fantasy.

http://www.motherjones.com/kevin-drum/2016/02/sanders-campaign-has-crossed-neverland

The link includes some graphs and data, which I leave for the perusal of yourself and your readers.

Respectfully,

Brian P.

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: Pat Buchanan on Trump

http://www.breitbart.com/big-government/2016/02/18/exclusive-pat-buchanan-donald-trumps-rise-is-rejection-of-a-quarter-century-of-bush-republicanism/

What he said!

Phil Tharp

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Back Doors

Jerry,

My knee jerk reaction to Apple’s refusal to create a special OS to break into the San Bernardino Terrorist’s iPhone was indignation. How could Apple stand in the way of learning about other potential acts of terrorism?

After a few moments of thought I came to the conclusion that Apple took the correct stand and is trying to protect the privacy and freedom of all iPhone users throughout the World.

It is clear that our Central Government is too big and literally out of control. It is our duty as Citizens to carefully way our options and use the ballot box to protect our privacy and freedom.

Bob Holmes

I think the Republic can survive strong encryption; I am not sure it can survive indefinite increases in government power.

 

 

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Belmont, Fishtown, and Church

I enjoyed the robust exchange between you and Mark on Murray’s work.

I’m not pointing this out because I think you or Mark missed this understanding; I’m pointing it out because it wasn’t mentioned and I think it contributes to your exchange.

I would offer that church attendance may play an important function for very practical reasons. I think it was in the opening of the film “The Departed” that Jack Nicholson said it, plainly: “Years ago we had the church. That was only a way of saying – we had each other.”

Church, as I understand it, comes from Greek and means “community”. I did not look that up in the OED; that’s what I was told by people who attend church and that’s how they feel about it. I don’t know that everyone feels that way, but I do know that social order flows from church attendance. I’ve seen it first hand. People have relationships they would not have any other way simply because they’re “brothers in Christ” if you will.

Other organizations, the Rotary Club, the Freemasons, and so on offer something similar but church is unique in the content it offers and

the participants it attracts. Simply put, people benefit from

interaction with others with common values. People who attend church share some common values and it would be more easy to build rapport and leverage social capital into economic rewards.

People might be more likely to go into business together if they know one another from their church groups. A couple might be more likely to marry, having met at church. In fact, church people tend to wear their best or at least more formal than usual clothing to church. Is this only to show respect in their worship or do they mean to impress others as well? Perhaps subconsciously? Even if not, maybe some women look better to some men when they dress for church and vice versa….

◊ ◊ ◊ ◊ ◊

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

Percussa Resurgo

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WSJ no longer available through Google

Dear Jerry:

As you said on 2/17/2016 about access to WSJ articles through Google:

“However. If you Google the exact title – which I will cite – that often takes you to the article; it’s some sort of deal the Journal has with Google, and it’s quite legal for you to use it.”

Unfortunately, WSJ turned off that mode of access a few weeks ago as described at many locations including http://digiday.com/publishers/wall-street-journal-paywall-google/

I had been reading Taranto’s “Best of the Web”

through Google access ever since they put it behind their paywall. Unfortunately they blocked it a few weeks ago. Then it was open for a couple of days again before being blocked again.

WSJ has closed in upon itself behind its paywall, sort of like passing beyond the event horizon of a black hole.

Authors who want to be widely read should avoid publishing in WSJ as their works will have very limited distribution. There are many, many sites that provide open access to columnists. Even some of WSJ’s own columnists publish their articles independently on their own or other web sites, though they may not appear on those other sites until several days after they appear in WSJ.

Best regards,

–Harry M.

Jerry,

Actually, the use of Google to bypass the WSJ firewall has apparently been suspended; it hasn’t worked for me for almost three weeks.

Very frustrating.

Jim

Thank you. I missed that announcement.

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Replication Crisis and Repetition Crisis

“With data becoming ever more abundant, this should be the golden age of the social sciences. And yet they seem to be suffering two mirror-image nervous breakdowns—the Replication Crisis and the Repetition Crisis.”

“Something like 70 or 75 percent of America is now in a protected group. This is a disaster for social science because social science is really hard to begin with. And now you have to try to explain social problems without saying anything that casts any blame on any member of a protected group. And not just moral blame, but causal blame. None of these groups can have done anything that led to their victimization or marginalization.”

“[I]t is unacceptably easy to publish “statistically significant” evidence consistent with any hypothesis.”

The article is focused on the social sciences but many of its observations appear to apply equally well to climate “science”.

http://takimag.com/article/the_replication_crisis_and_the_repetition_crisis_steve_sailer/print#ixzz40QzB5ESu

Charles Brumbelow

I agree; Steve’s article is worth your time if you have anything to do with modern research evaluation or conducting. Undergraduate statistics in most department other than Mathematics is not rigorous and does not spend much time in statistical inference and its assumptions; it’s mostly cookbook, and fairly useless for actual understanding. Good for generating publishable “peer” reviewed works, though.

Hogwash in science

Dear Dr. Pournelle,

I believe you will find this article quite worthy of your time, as it lists some of the myriad ways in which scientists pass off hogwash as legitimate science.

http://quillette.com/2016/02/15/the-unbearable-asymmetry-of-bullshit/

My apologies that the word he uses is not “hogwash”, but it is equally accurate.

The three most obvious methods that I saw in the article:

1) Assert that something has been “proven,” “shown,” or “found” and then cite, in support of this assertion, a study that has actually been heavily critiqued (fairly and in good faith, let us say, although that is not always the case, as we soon shall see) WITHOUT acknowledging any of the published criticisms of the study or otherwise grappling with its inherent limitations.

2) Refer to evidence as being of “high quality” simply because it comes from an in-principle relatively strong study design, like a randomized control trial, without checking the specific materials that were used in the study to confirm that they were fit for purpose

Here’s the one that is almost certainly fraudulent:

3) Step 3.1:

Scan the scholarly databases for anything which might critique your hypothesis.

Make it a point to dash off a letter to the editor critiquing the problematic paper.

Do this for all such papers.

3.2 At the end of the year, write a “systematic review” in which you consider all the papers for and against your position. Now summarily dismiss the offending papers as “refuted by experts” (i.e. you and your cronies) . However, you fail to find any problems in the studies supporting your position.

3.3 NOW you publish.

Now that we know about it, it would be useful to have some way to track this kind of activity, so we can catch such unscrupulous researchers out.

Respectfully,

Brian P.

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The End of DuPont Central Research

Dear Jerry,

The short-termers have won again; another giant of corporate research has fallen…

—————–

“Why DuPont Shrunk Its Central Research Unit Experts see the cuts to the illustrious unit as part of a trend that puts business first

“Less than a week after DuPont announced its merger with Dow Chemical on

Dec. 11, DuPont managers told scientists at DuPont Central Research &

Development in Wilmington, Del., to halt all laboratory work. The

researchers were to label unmarked samples and leave everything else in

place. Severe and unprecedented cuts, the researchers were warned, were

coming.

Between Christmas and New Year’s Day, employees received Microsoft

Outlook invitations for 10-minute meetings with their supervisors. On

Jan. 4, they took their turns learning if they would be let go.

Cardboard file boxes were left in the lobbies at DuPont’s Experimental

Station for workers to carry out their personal effects. Delaware state

troopers were on-site in case of incident.

“It was one by one all day long,” a former researcher who asked not to

be named tells C&EN. “And it was one of the most miserable days I ever had.”

The layoffs were part of a DuPont plan to roll up its storied Central

R&D (CR&D) organization and fold it into a new group called Science &

Innovation. The move was part of a larger program at DuPont meant to

save $700 million annually, cut 10% of its workforce, and prepare the

company for the merger with Dow….

…Leading-edge chemistry flourished at CR&D. “It was, for many years,

arguably the world’s center of fundamental research in organometallic

chemistry,” noted Harvard chemistry professor George M. Whitesides

recently in an essay in Angewandte Chemie International Edition (2015,

DOI: 10.1002/anie.201410884). Influential carbene chemistry specialist

Anthony J. Arduengo III, now at the University of Alabama, began his

career at CR&D in the 1970s. So did Massachusetts Institute of

Technology chemist and Nobel Laureate Richard Schrock.

At CR&D, publishing “was viewed as a worthwhile objective in its own

right,” Nugent recalls. “We were expected at the end of the year to have

publications in primary, revered, peer-reviewed journals.”

In the 1960s, according to Nugent, CR&D was publishing more papers in

the Journal of the American Chemical Society (JACS) than MIT and

California Institute of Technology combined. “That is beyond belief,” he

says. “Sixty papers a year.”

DuPont, Nugent says, was one of six companies—including Bell Labs,

Eastman Kodak, Exxon, IBM, and Merck & Co.—that represented a large

chunk of JACS articles from the 1950s through the 1990s. These six

companies continued to be responsible for two-thirds of the JACS

submissions from industry in the 1980s even as central R&D waned at many

firms….”

——————

http://cen.acs.org/articles/94/i4/DuPont-Shrunk-Central-Research-Unit.html

I reluctantly turned down a contract position there in the mid-1990s

because I was looking for something longer term. It was a campus

environment where they were doing some really neat chemistry. A sad

situation. The take-home quote which summed it up:

“’Kevlar, to my understanding, took 20 years to get from the red to the

black,’ says Andrew Feiring, a chemist who was with CR&D from 1974 to

2006. ‘Wall Street just isn’t going to stand for that sort of thing today.’”

Innovation loses again. 🙁

Cheers,

Rod Schaffter

“Rebellions often start in an attempt to recapture an old world. In

truth every cataclysm worth the name washes away more than we bargain

for and takes us on roads we never suspected.”

–Richard Fernandez

bubbles

SUBJ: Another author cited your law

Apropos of nothing . . . just FYI.

Charles Stross in the latest Laundry series _The Annihilation Score_ mentions your iron law of bureaucracy, without attribution on p.307.

and dropped a money quote from _Oath Of Fealty_ as a kicker.

“There is no point in prioritizing _doing your job_ when your organization faces being defunded in less than three months’ time if you don’t do something else: you do what’s necessary in order to ensure your organization survives, _then_ you get back to work.

.

(This is how the iron law of bureaucracy installs itself at the heart of an institution. Most of the activities of any bureaucracy are devoted not to the organizations’s ostensible goals, but to ensuring that the organizations survives; because if they aren’t, the bureaucracy has a life expectancy measured in days before some idiot decision maker decides that if it’s no use to them they can make political hay by destroying it. It’s no consolation that some time later someone will realize that an organization was needed to carry out the original organization’s tasks, so a replacement is created: you still lost your job and the task went undone. The only sure way forward is to build an agency that looks to its own survival before it looks to its mission statement. Just another example of evolution in action.)”

Don’t know how you literati folk feel about such things. Better to be plagiarized than ignored, I guess.

That Stross did not mention you may simply be due to differing politics.

Stross is an unabashed SJW. Or it may not. Quien sabe?

I am gladdened to hear you and Roberta continue to mend and improve.

Cordially,

John

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Sex and AI,

Jerry

Both Isaac Asimov and David Brin have commented on the vanishing wish to have children on the human race. In Asimov’s world, we had a planet with only one person left. In Brin’s world, all the non-reproducing people died off or suicided, leaving the world to those who want children. Interesting that sex robots will facilitate both results.

Ed

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Russia, the Balkans and history

Dear Jerry,
I had the pleasure, years ago, to study European history under Prof. Henry cord Meyer, Ph.D. Specifically, a course in historiography, the subject being the immediate causes of the crisis in the summer of 1914 that led directly to the outbreak of World War I.
No genius, I quickly realized the primary factor in the crisis and the eventual, seemingly inevitable, downward spiral from general mobilization to declarations of war, was a total disregard by the Austrians, and to a lesser degree their reluctant partners the Germans, of the sense of obligation and noblesse oblige the Russian state, Orthodox Church and people felt towards the Little Brothers in the Balkans.
I sometimes think, when I let myself think of such ridiculous things, that the current version of “Empire” that is called the European Union, might as well be called Austria – Hungary. After all, it’s a multinational “state”, with essentially no real military of its own, but plenty of auxiliaries from tributary states, and overwhelming and stultifying bureaucracy, and is seemingly unbounded determination for a “Drive To The East” come hell or high water.
I suppose you could say, at least you could if you are to accept the above, that that makes us the “the Germans”. We can either backup the Europeans, as the Germans did the Austrians in the summer of 1914, or we can watch our “Austrians” go down the tubes once the Russians decide they have had enough of Western interference with the Little Brothers.
I wouldn’t bet much on the discretion of EU bureaucrats, or the patient’s of put in the Poisoner. Of course, the real joker here is that Putin is smarter, tougher and more ruthless than any Czar since Peter the Great. It occurs to me that Donald Trump, though lacking the withered arm, bears a passing similarity to Wilhelm the second, the ineffably confused supporter of Habsburg ambitions while composing “Dear Nicky” notes to his Russian cousin.
If what they say about history is true: first as tragedy, then farce, then perhaps were due for a Trump presidency. Zeitgeist and all that sort of stuff.
Or maybe it’s all just something I ate!
Petronius

If I were a moderate Russian I would be fed up with the new Holy Roman Empire and its constant attempts to use American power to encircle Russia. I do not share your dismay at Trump, but do not take that as endorsement.

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ether

Jerry, I enjoy your column, but I find it hard to read the frequent references to Beckman’s theories and ether. We’ve had Special and General Relativity around for a century now, with zillions of confirmed predictions. Particle accelerators in particular show time and mass dilation thousands of times. I haven’t studied it, but what does Beckman’s theory predict? If there’s any point to it, it can make a prediction that is different from current theories. What is that prediction? – Maybe someone can check it.

If it makes no predictions that are different, it’s probably the same theory in a different guise: that isn’t uncommon. Dyson earned fame by showing how Feynman, Tomanaga, and Schwinger were all explaining the exact same QED with three very different pictures.

mkr

As I understand it, aether and General Relativity are not compatible, but no crucial experiment other than Michaelson-Morley has been devised; and there are reason to believe it was nor as definitive as thought. Michaelson never believed so. It ought to be conducted on the Moon, but that’s unlikely. I know of no other crucial experiment, and since I can no longer do Tensors but can still manage the calculus needed for Petr Beckmann’s work, I am probably prejudiced; I know General Relativity explains the data; but, so far as I understand it, so does Beckmann.

The existence of aether has a lot of implications, including quite possibly negating much ado about dark matter and energy; I’d like that a lot.

bubbles

 

Another question which EU answers and which standard science does not

The entire notion that the present Solar System is a descendant of a former collapsed Herbig-Haro object is ludicrous on its
face simply by virtue of the now absent immense magnetic fields.

That being the case, how do YOU account for the rough 26-degree axis tilts on four of the system’s planets including our own??  If our system had formed in anything like the manner we all learned about in school, all of the axis tilts should be nearly zero.
Between the two of us, I have an explanation for that, and you don’t.
Ted
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Freedom is not free. Free men are not equal. Equal men are not free.

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