Not a whole lot of obvious advancement, but a lot of refinement at the small scale… landing gear, radar dishes & arms, etc.
Wow. Just… wow.
Short form: NASA had an astronaut lined up to ride a Soyuz to the ISS in 2014… but Sarah Brightman ponied up $51 million, and now she’s going in his place.
OK… can we please get our own space launch capability now?
Same “ban blasphemy,” different religion:
State will keep believers safe from attacks – Kremlin
“The state will use the force of law in its entirety to defend our citizens’ religious feelings and our national and spiritual values from blasphemy and insult,” [Kremlin chief of staff Sergey] Ivanov said in Moscow on Monday
Early days in the project, but here’s the start on the Soviet “LK” lunar lander for Fantastic Plastic. This is targeted at 1/48 scale. It will not come with an interior (be damned hard to see through the rather tiny window), but it is being modeled in hollow shells so that if someone wants to add an interior, it’ll be doable.
American civilians buy as many AK47s as the Russian military and police… and demand is surging because gun owners fear they will be banned
In short: about 40% of the AK-47s made in Izhvesk, Russia, home of the Izhmash Kalashnikov factory, are going to the US civilian market.
While these are, sadly, semi-auto rather than full-auto, it’s good to see the increase. The Daily Mail article links to a New York Times article, and both make a massive journalistic faux pas: they both point out that many of the AK-47’s are going to American hunters, who are, contrary to the politically correct talking point, effectively using the AK-47 to go hunting. And why not? It’s cheap, reliable, easy to maintain, and kinda-sorta vaguely accurate.
This is good for everyone involved: the Russians get an economic boost, America gets more quality firearms. When you consider that gun rights and gun ownership rates have been on the rise for the last ten years or so, while at the same time crime has been on the decline, increased ownership of AK-47’s can only be a good thing.
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Heh. Reading the comments section of the New York Times is both instructive and entertaining.
Maybe start by passing local government laws to tighten up on gun control, then local government could take on central government on this issue. Who needs a semi-automatic weapon in an urban concrete jungle? The days of the Wild West have long gone and people go to the supermarket to get food these days. You’ve got the government and military forces to protect you. You need to put your trust in your government to protect you like other nations do.
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Just you wait. The next mass killing is around the corner. And guess what the weapon will be? Why do we need this? Is there any way we can stop the insanity? Can we take to the streets? Let’s organize, people!
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This is crazy. There isn’t one good reason why anyone over here would ever need one of these.
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Wait. Did I say “entertaining?” I mean “sad.”
Found this on eBay:
ARTICLE 17KS – *MIR* SPACE STATION BASE MODULE TECHNICAL DESCRIPTION ALBUM
It’s offered to your attention about A3 format album named “Article 17KS. Technical description. Part 2. General composition.”, with the technical data, schemes and drawings of the Soviet space station MIR, known as “article 17KS” – the special limited issue for its designers, manufacturers and cosmonauts. This particular album is taken from MIR army testers. It was stored in a “military unit” which number is striked out because of the top secrecy regime for all Soviet space industry, including proving grounds and launch pads.
And it’s cheap, too! (For certain definitions of “cheap”)