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Jan 022018
 

As a followup… y’all may have seen me disparage the 70’s from time to time. Now, there were a few good things to come from the 70’s… Star Wars probably being about the best. But apart from Star Wars, when I think back to pop culture from the 70’s, there is, for no readily perceivable reason, one thing above all else that comes to my mind:

Gordon Lightfoot’s The Wreck Of the Friggen Edmund Fitzgerald, a hit from late 1976, about a year after the sinking of the actual Edmund Fitzgerald. It is technically a good song. Probably technically a *very* good song. But Got Dayum is it gloomy and depressing. And for some reason… it just seems to encompass the mood of America at the time (even though it came from a flappy-headed Canadian). Even with Logan’s Run’s promise from only a few months earlier that one day you’d be able to download your very own Jenny Agutter, Edmund Fitzgerald just seemed to make it clear to the world that everything was terrible.

 

 Posted by at 10:28 pm
Jan 022018
 

This piece of art depicts the McDonnell-Douglas “Drawbridge” orbiter in orbit delivering a satellite. Note that the wing are deployed, even though they would be folded up during entry. The geometry of the craft was such that in order to get the cargo bay door open and payloads safely in and out, the wing needed to fold down out of the way.

This points out one of the reasons why you don’t often see a whole lot of “cool” stuff in aerospace… everything has tradeoffs. And needing the wings to constantly go up and down is a bit of a headache. When it comes to spacecraft, mass is a primary priority; the mechanisms needed to deploy the wings weight a lot… never mind the mechanisms needed to retract the wing again. As an example, the real space shuttle orbiter had no landing gear retraction system. And why should it? The landing gear is hardly something the Orbiter would ever need to retract. That could be done by the ground crew without adding weight and complexity to the craft itself.

Note that the Orbiter and the payload here seem to have not NASA markings, but Red Cross markings. I suspect that a number of variants of this piece of art would have been produced with several different markings (NASA and Pan Am being the obvious ones), but why exactly Red Cross? Dunno.

Also note that this might not be an actual “Drawbridge” design, as no extension mechanism for the wing s in evidence. This might be an oversight on the part of the artist; it might be that this was a fixed-wing design. Given the RCS thrusters on the wingtips, this is most likely *not* a Drawbridge.

I’ve uploaded the high-rez version of this artwork (11.2 megabyte 6271×4763 pixel JPG) to the APR Extras Dropbox folder for 2018-01, available to all APR Patrons at the $4 level and above. If you are interested in accessing this and other aerospace historical goodies, consider signing up for the APR Patreon.

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 Posted by at 2:59 pm
Dec 312017
 

If you are in the US, you could hardly be unaware of the prevalence of nostalgia for the 1980’s running rampant in current popular culture. Modern TV series like “Stranger Things” and “The Americans” and “The Goldbergs”and “Halt and Catch Fire” and movies like “It” are set in the 80s, and while the forthcoming movie “Ready Player One” is set some decades into the future, it is based explicitly on people pining for the glorious pop culture of the 1980s, some half-century earlier.

For two reasons this 80’s nostalgia is entirely understandable:

  1. Gen Xer’s like myself, the children and teenagers of the 1980s, are now at the age where they are the writers and producers of TV shows and movies. And people tend to be nostalgic about their childhood and teen years, so, there ya go.
  2. The 1980s was when pop culture… well, perhaps it didn’t reach it’s peak, but it certainly figured out how to *be* popular culture. Thirty and more years later, many of the shows and movies are still popular, still watched; many of the actors, actresses and musicians are still popular, and a good chunk of the musical styles that came into their own in the 80’s still exist and dominate the airwaves. Bracketing the 80’s was disco from the 70’s and grunge from the 90’s, both monsters in their time, but largely gone now.

(And there is another, less objective reason why the 80’s is popular in concept: it was a world that was built on horrors… the oil problems of the 70’s were still there, the Soviet Union was still threatening to kill or enslave us all, the auto and steel and agricultural and other industries were tanking. The 80s began with a tin pot dictatorship in Iran making a joke of the US, under the leadership of the most ineffectual President in recent American history. And there was the horror of Disco. And yet… the 80’s wound up being one of the most exuberantly optimistic times in American history, where it became ok to be proud of America again, where the future looked brighter (damn bright, typically in neon yellows and pinks and greens), it became possible to get rich and live well again, where the President was someone that you could actually be glad to have in the White House. That was, at least in my experience, a unique time, so far not recovered.)

I’ve been around long enough to have seen this before. In the 70’s into the 80’s, it was all about the ’50’s. In the 80’s and into the 90’s, the hippies tried to make the world revere the 60’s. In the 2000’s, we freakin’ ignored the 70’s, cuz the 70’s sucked donkey balls on virtually every level. And now… the 80’s and the first hints of 90’s nostalgia.

It’s the way of things. But something I see a lot of, expressed both by Gen Xer’s in positions to control pop culture, and in comments sections by regular schmoes, is the opinion that *kids* today are nostalgic for the 80’s. Millenials who were born after the 80’s ended, perhaps after the 90’s ended, supposedly think the 80’s were just totally tubular, or neato-keen, or the bees knees, or the cat’s pajamas, or whatever the hell it is kids these days say. When I was a kid and they were cramming 50’s nostalgia like “Grease” and “Happy Days” and “Laverne & Shirley” down my throat, I had no particular use for the 50’s. When 60’s nostalgia came along like a tied-died freight train hauling LSD, I avoided it like a smelly bum from Woodstock. Of course, my own experience counts for nothing, but I don’t recall a whole lot of my contemporaries having much more use for the 50’s and 60’s, with the exception of the causeheads who glommed onto 60’s nonsense. Hell, the pop culture of the 80’s and into the 90’swas generally a direct rejection of the 60’s.

So, my question, especially to any millenial types who might be reading this: *is* there really 80’s nostalgia among current younguns? Or is this just wishful thinking – or intentional propaganda – on the part of people pushing 8’s nostalgia for business purposes?

 Posted by at 4:18 pm
Dec 312017
 

While poking around one of my old computers I found the partially finished 3D CAD model of the Martin “Aldebaran” I made some years ago for my NPP book. I’ll use the model to create diagrams for the book, in hopes that someday I’ll finish the damn thing, but I’m curious if there might be interest in physical models of the thing. Let me know. I might take a stab at this with Shapeways or some such.

 Posted by at 1:13 pm
Dec 302017
 

The obsession with Russian “interference with the election” seems to be leading the Dems into weird directions.  The source here is “The Young Turks,” a far-left group that named itself after the people who carried out the Armenian Genocide, so take it for what it’s worth.

Anyone Of “Russian Descent” Now Targeted In Senate Investigation

 

The Senate committee probing alleged Russian interference in the U.S. political system has deemed anyone “of Russian nationality or Russian descent” relevant to its investigation, according to a document obtained by TYT.

In an email dated December 19, 2017, April Doss—who serves as senior minority counsel on the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence (SSCI)—defined the scope of the committee’s inquiry as anyone a subject “knows or has reason to believe [is] of Russian nationality or descent.” The senior majority counsel for the SSCI, Vanessa Le, was cc’d on the emails.

 Posted by at 6:08 pm
Dec 302017
 

The rewards for APR Patrons have been issued. This month:

CAD Diagram: Marquardt hypersonic burning ramjet booster

Diagram: Convair Class VP Airplane High Performance Flying Boat

Document 1: Apollo Exploration Shelter System

Document 2: Chrysler Work Station Capsule (“work pod” for astronauts)

Document 3: Sikorsky S-97 “Raider” brochure

 

If you are interested in helping to preserve (and get copies of) this sort of thing, consider signing up for the APR Patreon.

 

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 Posted by at 11:15 am
Dec 302017
 

Ladies and gentlemen… your tax dollars at work.

Infamous Tampa mother back in court, facing eviction; demands once again ‘somebody needs to pay’

In 2010 she had 15 biological children (article doesn’t say how many mechanical ones) and she demanded that someone had to pay for them. That someone being, of course, anyone but her. So the property tax payers in the Tampa region got to foot the bill to get her a house, paid for through the Tampa Housing Authority. She doesn’t have to pay rent, but due to “maintenance problems,” she and her now *seventeen* children are being evicted.

Dumb.

Dumb, dumb, dumb. There’s so much dumb in this story it’s hard to know where to begin. The woman may or may not be dumb, though it certainly seems likely; what’s certain is that she’s an awful (greedy, selfish, short-sighted, uncaring) person. Who clearly *is* dumb is anyone who thinks it’s a good idea to subsidize this sort of behavior, anyone who thinks that responsibility- and consequence-free welfare states will lead to better societies, anyone who thinks that simply paying the unproductive to have children is better than getting them fitted with Norplant.

Imagine how much better off American society would be in a few generations if the culture changes so that the *rich* thought it was neato-keen to have whole squads of kids, while the poor reigned it in. If you want to narrow the divide between rich and poor, want to reduce the “wealth gap,” *that* would be the way to do it. With each bagrillionaires death, the fortune is split up among a larger number of offspring. With poor families having fewer children, the parents have more time to improve their lot, let effort required to raise their kids… and less tax dollars needed to do it. How exactly you go about changing society in this fashion, I don’t know. Maybe expensive baby licenses, with substantial criminal sanction against those who violate the law. This would make babies a status symbol of sorts. (the fee for the license could go into a bank account for the baby to pay for their college or some such, untouchable till they’re 18 or otherwise eligible)

 

 Posted by at 9:13 am
Dec 292017
 

Huh. More than a year after Associate Professor of Politics and Global Studies at Drexel University in Philadelphia George Ciccariello-Maher called for the extermination of white people, he has been allowed to resign. One wonders how many milliseconds it would have taken the higher-ups at Drexel to can him had he called for genocide against any other group… trans-people, for instance. Imagine if he’d said “Harvey Weinstein did nothing wrong.”

Of course, Drexel hired him to teach politics even though they knew he advocated communism and abolition of the police. One is left to wonder just who he thinks are going to hold guns to the heads of productive and wealthy people  in order to maintain his police-less communist paradise. The kulaks aren’t going to toss themselves into the gulags, after all.

 Posted by at 12:25 pm
Dec 292017
 

A blog reader kindly provided this depressing set of links to news stories from over the last few years…

Study suggests humans are slowly but surely losing intellectual and 
emotional abilities
November 12, 2012 in Genetics
http://medicalxpress.com/news/2012-11-humans-slowly-surely-intellectual-emotional.html#ajTabs


People Getting Dumber? Human Intelligence Has Declined Since Victorian 
Era, Research Suggests
The Huffington Post  | By Macrina Cooper-White
Posted: 05/22/2013 7:58 am EDT Updated: 05/22/2013 10:59 pm EDT
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/05/22/people-getting-dumber-human-intelligence-victoria-era_n_3293846.html


Leading Geneticist: Human Intelligence is Slowly Declining
by Mike Barrett
February 17th, 2013 | Updated 02/17/2013 at 12:43 pm
http://naturalsociety.com/leading-geneticist-human-intelligence-slowly-declining/


Dawn of the dumb – scientists say IQs are beginning to fall in the UK
Thursday 21 Aug 2014 3:37 pm
http://metro.co.uk/2014/08/21/dawn-of-the-dumb-scientists-say-iqs-are-beginning-to-fall-in-the-uk-4841114/
http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg22329830.400-brain-drain-are-we-evolving-stupidity.html


Are we becoming more STUPID? IQ scores are decreasing - and some experts 
argue it's because humans have reached their intellectual peak
By Sarah Griffiths for MailOnline
Published: 08:50 EST, 21 August 2014 | Updated: 09:42 EST, 21 August 2014
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2730791/Are-STUPID-Britons-people-IQ-decline.html


Are humans becoming less intelligent? It could very well be
By Tia Ghose
updated 11/12/2012 2:03:25 PM ET
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/49792179/ns/technology_and_science-science/

Yup. We’re boned.

Now, I don’t know what the actual hard facts are in this. Can it be objectively proven that the west is getting stupider? And is that stupid that comes from genetics, meaning the species is in trouble, or from lack of intellectual exercise, meaning it could in principle be reversed for people who are actually really here (as opposed to a eugenics/selective breeding/genetic engineering program which would only benefit future generations)?

Do I have hard facts to prove that we’re dumber? Not as such, but I do know this: in the 1950’s, belief in nonsense like astrology and the “flat Earth” and creationism were seemingly on the way out the door, headed for the dustbin of history. And sixty years later… here we are. We’ve been putting humans into freakin’ orbit for most of a human lifespan; we’ve sent probes to every planet and out of the solar system; we’ve found evidence of life in rocks more than three and a half billion years old, and yet, belief in nonsense is on the rise. Fifty years ago, if you told people “we have vaccines for almost everything,” people would’ve lined up around the block to get their kids in on that action. Today? Protests. In the 50’s, engineering students studied engineering. Critical Race Theory teachers had the good sense to not exist. Geography teachers taught geography. Today? Guh.

We’ve made the world mankind has always wanted, and it seems like it’s biting us in the ass. The western world is safe and often challenge-free; you can get through a good long life, up to and including breeding a whole bunch more just like you, with hardly a life-threatening challenge that will cause you to spool up your thinkin’ abilities.

 Posted by at 3:01 am