In The News...

How bout that power outage in Spain? People don't realize how fragile daily life is with this extreme dependency on electricity, and little to no backups/alternatives. 1 nuke from a hostile country exploded high in the sky could destroy most of Europe's grid just from the EMP. A powerful solar EMP might do similar damage at least to large scale systems.
 
I request that you do further research on EMP. There's a reason that it's not an active weapon in anyone's arsenal. Too easy to shield against. It's honestly a boogyman.
 
Yes and no, and I could be wrong too. I'm not saying this event was an EMP. Shielding needs to be strong enough to protect against the EMP. Too strong of an EMP will either penetrate through or burn the shielding. Still, it would be no quick fix or easy going if every fuse in a country or continent blew. I think it's too easy to shield small targets against, and too bulky and energy consuming to keep in one's arsenal unless they use a nuke, which is undesirable for the wide spread collateral damage.
 
In one of my morning update emails… preaching to the choir:

Planting more trees in cities would save lives.More than a third of all heat-related deaths in the world from 2000 to 2019 could’ve been avoided with more vegetation in urban zones, researchers in Australia reported this week. According to their model of temperatures and greenness across 11,000 urban areas, boosting flora by 30% in areas with a lot of concrete would have reduced average summer heat by about one-third of a degree Fahrenheit, potentially preventing 37% of heat-related deaths from 2000 to 2019 (equivalent to 1.16 million lives). The cooling power of trees and other vegetation is becoming increasingly critical—the study’s lead researcher projected that heat exposure would cause more than 15% of deaths in Southeast Asia in the last decade of the century “under the most extreme global warming scenarios.”
 
In one of my morning update emails… preaching to the choir:

Planting more trees in cities would save lives.More than a third of all heat-related deaths in the world from 2000 to 2019 could’ve been avoided with more vegetation in urban zones, researchers in Australia reported this week. According to their model of temperatures and greenness across 11,000 urban areas, boosting flora by 30% in areas with a lot of concrete would have reduced average summer heat by about one-third of a degree Fahrenheit, potentially preventing 37% of heat-related deaths from 2000 to 2019 (equivalent to 1.16 million lives). The cooling power of trees and other vegetation is becoming increasingly critical—the study’s lead researcher projected that heat exposure would cause more than 15% of deaths in Southeast Asia in the last decade of the century “under the most extreme global warming scenarios.”
Increasing flora by 30% causing a 1/3 of a degree reduction in temperature....and thereby saving over a million lives....seems a bit far-fetched to me.
 
It’s volumetric… if globally we had the same reduction it would reduce the severity of storms… lessen the capacity for superstorms to pick up as much water and speed…
 
It’s volumetric… if globally we had the same reduction it would reduce the severity of storms… lessen the capacity for superstorms to pick up as much water and speed…
They're talking about heat related deaths, like 1/4 of a degree will make a difference. I don't think you'd care if it was 110F or 109.66F with or without shade.



In other news, the whole video is worth a watch, easy listen at 1.5x or more, so it's not bad

 
It’s volumetric… if globally we had the same reduction it would reduce the severity of storms… lessen the capacity for superstorms to pick up as much water and speed…
Planting more trees in cities would save lives.More than a third of all heat-related deaths in the world from 2000 to 2019 could’ve been avoided with more vegetation in urban zones, researchers in Australia reported this week. According to their model of temperatures and greenness across 11,000 urban areas, boosting flora by 30% in areas with a lot of concrete would have reduced average summer heat by about one-third of a degree Fahrenheit, potentially preventing 37% of heat-related deaths from 2000 to 2019 (equivalent to 1.16 million lives).

Yeah, they specifically said HEAT-RELATED DEATHS....again, I find that farfetched and quite preposterous.
 
I'm affected by this, and I find it suspicious that these ticks, which were recorded as being first described in 1758, suddenly gained the ability to cause this disease after the year 2000.
I think worth a watch even at 2x. funny in some places.
 
I think DJT is a bit shocked at the lack of influence he wields in international affairs since his re-election.
He thought he could wave the big stick and everyone would fall in line.
It seems like no one, Putin, Netanyahu or Tehran cares what he says or thinks.

Opinions vary of course.
 
“Having nurtured conspiracy theories for his entire political career, Trump suddenly seems in danger of being consumed by one. In many ways it’s delicious to watch, but there’s also reason for anxiety, because for some in Trump’s movement, this setback is simply proof that they’re up against a conspiracy more powerful than they’d ever imagined. “What we just learned is that dealing with the Epstein Operation is above the President’s pay grade,” posted Bret Weinstein, an evolutionary biologist and podcaster. An important question, going forward, is who they decide is pulling the strings.

Epstein obsessives are right to be suspicious about the weird turns the case has taken. So much about it feels inexplicable, including the sweetheart plea deal Epstein got in 2008, and the fact that he was apparently able to kill himself despite being one of the most monitored inmates in the country. The “raw” video footage released didn’t ’t even have the metadata scrubbed, and showed it had been changed four times in video-editing software.

Even if it turns out that a review of the case doesn’t implicate anyone who hasn’t already been charged, it should be a scandal that Bondi misled the public about the existence of a client list.

But the administration lies all the time — that alone doesn’t explain why this issue has so tested the MAGA coalition. To understand why it’s such a crisis, you need to understand the crucial role that Epstein plays in the mythologies buttressing MAGA. The case is of equal interest to QAnon types, who see in Epstein’s crimes proof of their conviction that networks of elite pedophiles have hijacked America, and of right-wing critics of Israel, who are convinced that Epstein worked for the Mossad, the country’s spy service.

The way Trumpists have made this case a cause célèbre can seem bizarre to outsiders. After all, Trump’s friendship with the sex-trafficking financier has been widely documented. Epstein’s best-known victim, Virginia Roberts Giuffre, said she was recruited at Mar-a-Lago, Trump’s private club. And Trump has his own history of alleged creepiness around underage girls; several teenage contestants in one of his beauty pageants accused him of deliberately walking in on them when they were undressed.

As Senator Jon Ossoff, Democrat of Georgia, said at a rally this weekend, “Did anyone really think the sexual predator president who used to party with Jeffrey Epstein was going to release the Epstein files?”

But I’ve always seen the fantasy of Trump as a warrior against sex trafficking as a way for his followers to manage their cognitive dissonance about his obvious personal degeneracy. To believe that they are on the side of light while championing a man of such low character, Trump’s acolytes have had to conjure an enemy of vast and titanic evil, and invent a version of Trump that never existed.

Among those on the right who believe there’s an Epstein coverup, few seem to be entertaining the idea that Trump is protecting himself. That, after all, would require a re-evaluation of his integrity and their judgment. But they still take for granted that Epstein was trafficking girls to powerful men and then blackmailing them, and that he was killed so he couldn’t talk. Now they have to figure out why Trump won’t give them the information they long for.”
 
Whatever, start the chipper. We all know what needs done...

I have beautiful daughters, and thus a vested interest. If it can happen to some rando, it can happen to my sacred, beloved Kathryn or Esme. The thought is intolerable.

As if I wasn't disenfranchised before...
 
First term was all about impeaching Trump and blocking his conservative policies as he built an image for himself, now it's smooth sailing for him as he does the bidding of those above him. Whether against his will or not, Trump's in on it as far as I'm concerned. They do a good job of doing things in such a way that there's plausible deniability, but the patterns are there for all to see if they would see it. Reality has become less believable than movies.
 
Epstein didn't kill himself. How do I know? Because I risked my own life (allegedly) by reenacting the event, as described by the official, publicly released documents. I couldn't achieve unconsciousness without Sarah's assistance. Try it yourself, the worst that will happen, is that your knees will get sore, and it'll feel like a sore throat later.

Now some fat old that is telling me to stop talking about "That old creep".

T'Hell with that.

Kaveman for President 2028. Now accepting applications for cabinet positions.
 
Trump Administration Leading a Race to the Bottom.

Since the beginning of the 21st century, China has moved — confidently — to seize the future, especially in the realm of innovation and ideas. China’s total research and development funding has grown 16-fold since 2000. Now China is surging ahead of the United States in a range of academic spheres. In 2003, Chinese scholars produced very few broadly cited research papers. Now they produce more “high impact” research papers than Americans do, and according to The Economist, they absolutely dominate research in the following fields: materials science, chemistry, engineering, computer science, the environment and ecology, agricultural science, physics and math.

These achievements of course lead directly to China’s advantages across a range of high-tech industries. It’s not just high-tech manufacturing of things like electric vehicles, drones and solar panels. It’s high-tech everything. In the years between 2003 and 2007, according to a study by the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, the United States led the way in 60 of 64 frontier technologies — stretching across sectors such as defense, space, energy, the environment, computing and biotech. By the period between 2019 and 2023, the Chinese led among 57 of those 64 key technologies, while the United States led in only seven.


The Chinese gains in biotech are startling. In 2015 Chinese drugmakers accounted for just under 6 percent of the innovative drugs under development in the world. Ten years later, Chinese drugmakers are nearly at parity with American ones.

Then along came A.I. Americans overall are fearful about it. Last year, the polling organization Ipsos asked people from 32 countries if they were excited for the A.I. future or nervous about it. Americans are among the most nervous people in the world. The countries most excited by the prospect of that future? China, South Korea, Indonesia and Thailand. The fact is that nobody knows what the A.I. future holds; people’s projections about it mostly reflect their emotional states. Americans used to be the youthful optimists of the globe. Not right now.

Still, America has its big tech companies filled with bright young things charging into the future, so you’d think our lead would be secure. But over the past year, Chinese firms like Alibaba, ByteDance and Tencent have produced A.I. models whose quality is nearly equal to that of American models. DeepSeek has produced a model that comes in at a fraction of the cost of American ones. In A.I., as in military and economic might generally, the United States retains a lead, but China has a lot of momentum.

The A.I. race is perhaps the most crucial one, because it will presumably be the dominant technology of the next several decades. “The No. 1 factor that will define whether the U.S. or China wins this race is whose technology is most broadly adopted in the rest of the world,” Microsoft’s president, Brad Smith, told a congressional hearing. “Whoever gets there first will be difficult to supplant.”

So how is America responding to the greatest challenge of Cold War II? With huge increases in research? By infusing money into schools and universities that train young minds and produce new ideas? We’re doing the exact opposite. Today’s leaders don’t seem to understand what the Chinese clearly understand — that the future will be dominated by the country that makes the most of its talent. On his blog, Tabarrok gets it about right: “The DeepSeek Moment has been met not with resolve and competition but with anxiety and retreat.”

Populists are anti-intellectual. President Trump isn’t pumping research money into the universities; he’s draining it out. The administration is not tripling the National Science Foundation’s budget; it’s trying to gut it. The administration is trying to cut all federal basic research funding by a third, according to the American Association for the Advancement of Science. A survey by the journal Nature of 1,600 scientists in the United States found that three-quarters of them have considered leaving the country.

The response to the Sputnik threat was to go outward and compete. Trump’s response to the Chinese threat generally is to build walls, to erect trade barriers and to turn inward. A normal country would be strengthening friendships with all nations not named China, but the United States is burning bridges in all directions. A normal country would be trying to restore America’s shipbuilding industry by making it the best in the world. We’re trying to save it through protectionism. The thinking seems to be: We can protect our mediocre industries by walling ourselves off from the world. That’s a recipe for national decline.

The problem is not just Trump. China has been displaying intellectual and innovative vitality for decades and the United States has scarcely mobilized. This country sometimes feels exhausted, gridlocked, as if it has lost its faith in itself and contact with its future.

In the progressive era, America built new institutions like the Food and Drug Administration and the Federal Reserve. During the New Deal, Americans created an alphabet soup of new agencies. By 1949, Americans had created NATO and the precursor to the World Bank. Where are the new institutions fit for today? Government itself is not great at innovation, but for a century, public sector money has been necessary to fuel the fires of creativity — in the United States, in Israel and in China. On that front, America is in retreat.

Can confidence be restored? Of course. Franklin Roosevelt did it and Ronald Reagan did it. Is China’s dominance inevitable? Of course not. Centrally controlled economies are prone to monumental blunders.

But the primary contest is psychological — almost spiritual. Do Americans have faith in the power of the human mind? Are they willing to invest to enlarge the national talent pool? Right now, no. Americans, on the left and the right, have become highly attentive to threat, risk-averse and self-doubting about the national project. What do you do with a country with astounding advantages but that no longer believes in itself?

And drones:

A four-day test in the Alaska wilderness shows how far the U.S. military and American drone companies lag behind China in the technology.
On a patch of dirt in the vast wilderness in Alaska, a long-range drone roared like a lawn mower as it shot into the sky. It scanned the ground for a target it had been programmed to recognize, and then dived, attempting to destroy it by crashing into it. But it missed, landing about 80 feet away.

On another attempt, a drone nose-dived at launch. On a subsequent try, a drone crashed into a mountain.

These drones weren’t flown by amateur hobbyists. They were launched by drone manufacturers paid by a special unit of the Department of Defense as part of an urgent effort to update U.S. capabilities. For four days last month, they tested prototypes of one-way drones by trying to crash them into programmed targets, while soldiers tried to stop the drones with special electronic equipment.

The exercise aimed to help U.S. defense contractors and soldiers get better at drone warfare. But it illustrated some of the ways in which the U.S. military could be unprepared for such a conflict. The nation lags behind Russia and China in manufacturing drones, training soldiers to use them and defending against them, according to interviews with more than a dozen U.S. military officials and drone industry experts
 
Back
Top