Jul 082014
 

Since the US team finally lost and left the World Cup Of Kickball  Boredom a while ago, the news – at least from what I’ve seen – has been blissfully free of socceryammerings. This indicates that Americas interest in the World Cup was solely driven by the fact that some Americans were in it. Woo! There’s hope for us yet; remove the nationalism, and people realize just what a snore that game is to watch.

Still, apparently there was a game today that the Brazilian team lost. Who cares? Well… apparently a whole lot of Brazilians. It’s good to see this game bring so much joy to these people:

All Of Brazil Is Crying Right Now

thebeautifulgame

The link is just *filled* with people with a really screwed up sense of priorities. Is Brazil such a utopia that things are so awesome that a loss in a *game* is the emotional equivalent of watching your baby getting torn apart by rabid hamsters?

 

tb1g8gc7wlaatwnb2xkf

 Posted by at 4:39 pm
Jul 082014
 

Yaaaaayyyyyy….

Forgotten vials of smallpox found in Bethesda, Md.

Officially, smallpox is supposed to exist in only two places on Earth: science labs in Atlanta and Moscow. Many people argue that these samples should be destroyed so that they cannot be used to re-create the disease. Others argue that the samples should be retained in order to recreate the smallpox vaccine in case the disease makes a comeback somehow. IMO, this incident provides ammo for the latter argument. Smallpox is *out* *there,* somewhere. In some forgotten storage facility, or some population of rodents in some Amazonian backwater, it’s out there. And chances are good that it’ll find its way back into the human populace. And without a vaccine, millions could easily die.

 Posted by at 1:45 pm
Jul 082014
 

There actually seemed to be a bit of interest in the idea I posted a few days ago for an alternate history book idea I’ve been tinkering with for a while. So I’ll take it off the “nice, but probably never gonna happen” list and bump it up to “Hmm. Maybe…”

This is planned to be an official history, with the (tentative, subject to change) title: “Pax Orionis: A History of the Third World War and Its Aftermath.” Written in the alternate history 2014, it focuses on nuclear pulse propulsion, how it began in the fifties, turned into a reality as a result of a small nuclear war in the sixties and became a dominant force in geopolitics until the Third World War in the 1990’s (currently scheduled for 1994, so the book is a “20th anniversary” thing). This alternate world is quite a different place due to some very small changes that quickly spiral into massive consequences. WWIII is as bad as it gets; somewhere in the history will be population tables from before the war, right after and as of 2014, with discussions of the possibility that within the next X years the planetary population might make it back up to one billion. But on the other side, the war leaves translunar and interplanetary infrastructure largely intact; while Earth is trashed, the universe is now open and the ships are there.

In looking at what I have already put together, I’ve got about 30 pages more or less cribbed from my Nuclear Pulse Propulsion book, and a fifteen page outline of the alternate history. The history will be changed considerably from what I originally wrote; the original scribblings were in support of a collaboration with another feller, but now it’s a one-man show and a lot of stuff I’ve written will be dumped or greatly altered.

Being an official history, the usual form of third person fictional narration doesn’t work, and there are some aspects of the story where I’d really like to include that (some of the war events, for example). An idea I’ve been playing with is having the authors of the official history including snippets from autobiographies, diaries, novels and screenplays. This is not how official DoD histories are usually put together these days… but Pax Orionis is a whole different world. It is of course a very, very bad world with a whole lot of dead folk, blasted cities and whole nations that have been simply erased; but history shows that massive devastation is often an opportunity for new things.

 Posted by at 2:10 am
Jul 072014
 

ISIS Blow Up ‘Heretical’ Shia Mosques In Mosul

Them ISIS boys have been busy. Click the link to see some Michael-Bay-esque photos of centuries-old religious sites being blown sky high.

Here’s the purported trashing of the tomb of the Biblical prophet Jonah (the “great fish” feller):

[youtube D25Jl2fLU6M]

And good times had by all in wrecking a Christian cemetery (to the familiar strains of “Allahu Ackbar,” the phrase that let’s you know something barbaric is afoot):

[youtube Xyu-3I3mweI]

 

Just keep repeating “It’s a religion of peace, it’s a religion of peace…”

 Posted by at 11:58 pm
Jul 072014
 

If tales and photos and videos of reasonably intelligent critters being horribly abused fill you with an uncomfortableness… then here ya go:

Incredible sight of the elephant that cried: Raju was held in chains, beaten and abused for fifty years and on the day he was released tears rolled down his face

Some people need a whoopin’. I remember how messed up I was when I learned the extent of Marvin’s abuses at the hands of humans; I imagine some of the people involved in rescuing this elephant must have been about ready for some creative manslaughter.
Tell me this doesn’t look like a sad old man:
aaaargh
 Posted by at 2:51 am
Jul 062014
 

A while back I posted a bit of fiction describing part of a battle featuring Orion nuclear pulse propelled “space battleships.” It was only a small scrap, and I didn’t think much of it, but someone else seemed to like it and suggested an effort that would have seen it fleshed out to novel length. I put a considerable amount of scribbling behind the project, but it recently fell through. As I hate to see effort wasted, I’m considering plowing ahead with a modified version by myself.

What it would be is an alternate history, where the US develops Orions starting in the 1960’s and, as the earlier tale partially describes, tangles with the Soviet Union some time later. Here’s the thing: there’s no using Orion battleships for anything other than total global thermonuclear war. The story would be at best grim. But in my plan, the tale would be told in the form of an official history of the Orion program, as seen from (handwave) 2014, starting from the beginning, through early development, into World War III and then into the post-war period of economic and ecological disaster, but also great progress in space due to the existing infrastructure. The post-war US would be a very different place than Real World US, and would basically stride the wreckage of the world like a pissed-off giant.

Being an official history, it would of course be illustrated, featuring Orion vehicles of my own design (which designs were begun under the previous book project).

But before I waste another millisecond on this, I gotta know: is anyone even remotely interested?

 Posted by at 11:47 pm