Jan 152016
 

If this is accurate, it indicates that the Swedish government is *insane:*

Sweden: “No Apartments, No Jobs, No Shopping Without A Gun”

Now, Swedes see the welfare system failing them. More and more senior citizens fall into the “indigent” category; close to 800,000 of Sweden’s 2.1 million retirees, despite having worked their whole lives, are forced to live on between 4,500 and 5,500 kronor ($545 – $665) a month. Meanwhile, seniors who immigrate to Sweden receive the so-called “elderly support subsidy” — usually a higher amount — even though they have never paid any taxes in Sweden.

Worse, in 2013 the government decided that people staying in the country illegally have a right to virtually free health and dental care. So while the destitute Swedish senior citizen must choose between paying 100,000 kronor ($12,000) to get new teeth or living toothless, a person who does not even have the right to stay in Sweden can get his teeth fixed for 50 kronor ($6).

Neat. So… who wants a Scandinavian-style welfare state here in the US?

 Posted by at 7:42 pm
Sep 052015
 

Britain pledges to help thousands of refugees – but rich Arab states have taken in NONE

Germany has said they’ll take in hundreds of thousands of Syrian refugees this year. It’s a reasonably safe assumption that a large fraction of these refugees will become permanent residents of whatever European nation they end up in. And why not? I’d sure as shootin’ rather bunk down in a European welfare state than in a middle eastern hellhole.

Arab states such as the UAE and Saudi Arabia could easily take in the vast bulk of the Syrian refugees, just as they could have taken in the Palestinians. But they have not done so, nor are they likely to do so. Why is this? Well… the first answer is that refugees are troublesome. They cost money. They burden local services. They might be unpleasant to look at. They might pose political problems for the local government.

But there are also strategic reasons for not taking in refugees. Again look to the Palestinians. The Arab world has spent decades loudly decrying the conditions the Palestinians live in… while doing nothing to help them. Instead, they have only aided those Palestinians who’s crazy actions will bring down further harm onto the Palestinian people. The Arab states have done this for political reasons: it’s handy to be able to keep the people’s attention on the Evil Israelies, rather than on their own local evil government. When the people notice that their own government sucks, you get Egypt and Libya.

But a longer range strategy is very likely also in play. As mentioned, many of those refugees will become permanent residents of their respective European host countries. While Syria might lose some population, it’s not going to change being an almost entirely Muslim nation. But Germany, say, will see an increase of it’s Muslim population by several million over a few years via immigration, and millions more over the following years by births. The end result: colonization.

Now, this is not to suggest that the migrants are in on this, or that there’s some devious scheme to trash Syria specifically to create an invading army. But as famed political philosopher Rahm Emmanuel once opined:

You never want a serious crisis to go to waste. And what I mean by that is an opportunity to do things that you think you could not do before.

 

 Posted by at 9:56 am
Sep 042015
 

A video that seems to have been produced for the Chinese government depicts an entirely successful Chinese attack on a US aircraft carrier battle group and the conquest of (apparently) Okinawa:

Chinese Animators Envision a Future Asia-Pacific War—and Blow Up the Internet

The video apparently ends with:

China is strong, victorious wars require deaths; for all to be strong and safe, [we] face the risks and dangers of war. We wholeheartedly love peace, but must be prepared for the likelihood of war. We respectfully and solemnly commemorate the 70th anniversary of the war against Japan.

Huh.

As is the way with propaganda videos, this one shows Their Side wholly successful, with their weapons and forces unfailingly accurate and capable of evading interception. Obviously a Chinese attack on a US carrier group and an invasion of Okinawa would be a whole lot messier for the Chinese than depicted here. American military tech is, at least for the moment, substantially superior to Chinese. But I don’t care how advanced you are if the enemy can simply throw waves of cheap weapons and cheaper soldiers at you. China is, after all, far closer to Okinawa than the US is; if for some reason the PLA wanted to set the world on fire, I’m sure they could eventually scrape up enough sheer blunt force to trash the US military in the region. The question is why they would want to do such a thing. The Chinese invade sovereign Japanese territory, and kill tens of thousands of Americans, someone will take offense to that. It would not surprise me in the least if, as the last American forces on Okinawa collapse under the sheer weight of a hundred thousand Chinese invaders, someone pulls the trigger on the megaton-class nuke buried under the base. And then the counter attack would begin, perhaps in the form of Tridents rising out of Ohio-class boomers lurking out int he middle of the Pacific.

Sure, it’s just propaganda. But then, so was Mein Kampf. Propaganda *can* change a country.

 Posted by at 3:02 pm
May 192015
 

Years and years ago (late 80’s, early 90’s) I read a short story in Analog where pretty much everybody wore, IIRC, “Rose Colored Glasses.” This wacky, terribly sci-fi concept was a computerized pair of spectacles that slightly altered the world you saw, by making everything better. Stains, cracks in the wall, roadkill, dead lawns would all be digitally painted over, resulting in a prettier, “cleaner” and “better” world. Of course, this leads to collapse; if you can’t see the flaws, you can’t fix the flaws. I’ll have to go digging through the old back issues, I suppose.

So, with that out of the way, some months back Microsoft announced that they are working on a system called “HoloLens,” which, if they can get it to work as advertised, will be an incredibly powerful augmented reality system that can add stuff to your visual world… or perhaps paper over real stuff. It looks like it could be monumentally useful for a vast range of applications. One not shown: you’re out on a blind date. Your date is a bit of a disappointment in the looks department. But with the touch of a non-existent button… now they look amazing! And so do you!

And of course… the hackers and the spammers. How long before someone figures out a way to delete themselves from the system? Say… insert a subroutine that recognizes someone wearing a hoodie with a particular pattern of shapes and colors, and then paints that person out. This would make such a person partially invisible to people wearing the system (they’d be visible until the system recognized the code-pattern).

The system would be fabulously useful for drivers and pilots… a heads-up display that lets you look *through* the walls of your vehicle (I described something similar in my exceedingly short story fragment “Launch“) and automatically alerts you to anything you need to be alerted to. But then the hackers will get involved and pilots will calmly fly their planes into mountains they didn’t see and cars will plow into farmers markets without the drivers having to actually be old people.

 

 Posted by at 9:44 am
Mar 282015
 

OK, right up front: What Freeman Dyson meant when he first described the concept now called a “Dyson Sphere” was that a civilization sufficiently advanced would build so many space habitats and solar power satellites that the cloud of ’em would blot out the star they orbit. Since the artificial structures would re-radiate the sunlight they receive as lower-energy infra-red (basic physics: if you want to maintain a stable temperature, total energy coming into the system needs to precisely balance total energy leaving), from the outside the Dyson sphere would appear dark… but in infra-red it’d be a great big glowing thing.

The idea of the vast cloud was quickly interpreted as a giant solid “bubble” around the star. This vast construct would absorb all of the suns output, and would result in a monumentally vast place to live. If the star was much like the sun, the Dyson Sphere would need to be at least one AU in radius to keep the temperature roughly Earthlike. But there are of course problems: primary of which is that no material known to science, theorized by science or even guessed at could withstand the stresses involved. Additionally, there’s the problem of gravity. There would be none on the inside of the shell, except for that produced by the star; if you stood on the inside of the shell, you’d fall “up” into the sun. If you stood on the outside of the shell, you’d still have the suns gravity pullign you down… but at 1 AU from the star, that gravity would be miniscule. The gravity added by the sphere itself would be vastly more miniscule, given that its mass would be a tiny fraction of the mass of the star. So to live in or under a Dyson sphere with a Sol-type sun, you’d need artificial gravity habitats, either rotating structures or whatever magical “gravity generators” you can scrape up.

But a new type of Dyson sphere has just been described by two fellers from the Department of Physics of Bogazici University, Bebek, Istanbul, Turkey. Instead of building the shell around a Sun-like star… build it around a white dwarf. The resulting shell will be far smaller if it is to be at the “habitable zone,” since white dwarfs are far less luminous than main sequence stars. But a side benefit here is that the reduced Dyson sphere radius (depending on the white dwarf… from about 2,000,000 km to a bit over 4,000,000 k) results in surface gravities right near Earth normal. So humans would be able to comfortably live on the surface, using energy intercepted within the sphere to provide illumination.

The down side is that the problems of physical stresses within the Dyson sphere, already bad with the 1-AU-type sphere, become much worse at the smaller radius and higher gravity loading. But presumably by the time humans are ready to tear planets apart to build shells around distant stars, we’ll have made important advances in the field of materials science.

Download the PDF file of the paper here:

Dyson Spheres around White Dwarfs

 Posted by at 8:02 pm
Mar 022015
 

NASA SP-413, “Space Settlements, A Design Study,” was published in 1977 and brought together the results of a 1975 NASA-Ames Research Center effort to do a preliminary study of a giant torus space station for several thousand permanent inhabitants. It is a basic text on the subject of space colonies, but obtaining a copy of the printed book of course requires money (but not much… a quick check at abebooks.com shows them going for about $8) and online versions have typically been either black-and-white scan PDFs of indifferent quality, or versions rendered into painful HTML format. Fortunately, someone (it’s unclear to me who, though it seems a professional job) has scanned in the book and all the illustrations and reformatted the text into an all-new, clean PDF version.

The PDF can be downloaded HERE.

spacesettlements4 spacesettlements3 spacesettlements2 spacesettlements1

Much more aerospace stuff is available via the APR Patreon.

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 Posted by at 11:35 pm