Nov 262018
 

AP Exclusive: First gene-edited babies claimed in China

As with a lot of Chinese claims, this should probably be taken with a grain of salt. But if anyone *was* to create genetically modified children, you can bet it would be the Chinese.

The claim is that twin girls have been modified in vitro not to correct genetic flaws, but to improve the breed: they have modifications to make them resistant to diseases such as AIDS. This sort of thing is considered unethical in the West… but this is China.  If this claim turns out to be true *and* the process worked, expect to see a lot more of it, not only in China, but everywhere else. A “genetic arms race” will presumably ensue… nations will have to keep up out of fear that the other guy will make superior future generations. Resistance to AIDS, for example, sounds nice, but a general resistance to viral infections would not only make – presumably – a healthier, stronger and more economically productive population, it would also make a population that would be resistant to viral bio weapons. If the Chinese populace was largely immune to  some modified strain of bird flu, for example, it would be a distinct temptation for such a flu to magically appear around the world.

 Posted by at 7:02 am
Nov 252018
 

If that’s you, then this web series will cause your soul to shrivel up and die. Not even radiation and chemo will save you. Your only hope will be homeopathic astrology-based treatments.

RADICAL CRAM SCHOOL is a kid-centric, unscripted web series created by comedian Kristina Wong that empowers Asian girls and all kids of color to embrace their identities, fight for social justice, and be the revolution.

Oddly enough, comments are disabled for these vids over at YouTube.

 

There are six episodes of this, but you get the idea.

You might be puzzled by this. Is this a right-wing parody of leftist nuttery? Is it leftist nuttery? Even those at Daily Kos were confused by it until they got some background info. And, yes, it is indeed leftist nuttery. The woman behind it is theoretically a comedian, but she’s one of those comics who is not actually funny… humor apparently being a social construct by the cis-het white patriarchy, I guess. In the end it comes across more “sad” than anything, as a lot of the little girls shown here seem to be well on their way into being indoctrinated into a lifetime of ill-directed hatred and anger, resulting in wasted lives and lost potential, squandered on doomed Marxist whackjobbery and madness.

 

 

 

 Posted by at 1:10 am
Nov 252018
 

Babylon 5’s series finale, “Sleeping In Light,” aired 20 years ago today, November 25, 1998. “SIL” was set twenty years down the line from the rest of the series, and ended with the (apparent) death of Captain Sheridan. So if someone was to do a new B5 show… I guess Sheridan would be gone.

“Sleeping In Light” was… remarkable. Everything about it was perfect, up to and including the way it turned Manly Fans into horrible gelatinous blobs of sadness. It ranks up there with “Old Yeller” and “Jurassic Bark” in that very select group of movies and TV episodes where it is perfectly permissible for a man to burst into tears watching. If you cried at the ending of “Friends” or “Sex And The City,” man the hell up, Nancy (and question why you were watching those in the first place). If you cried at the end of “Sleeping In Light,” or indeed at any of a number of spots in the episode (JMS shutting off the lights, B5 going foom, Garibaldi swiping a shotglass, Sheridan walking away, Delenn sitting alone, etc.), that merely shows that you’ve been paying attention and aren’t a sociopath.

 Posted by at 12:46 am
Nov 242018
 

While working I’ve had the TV on for background noise. One of the programs I’ve had on, and occasionally actually paid attention to, is “Age of Tanks” on Netflix. This is a new documentary series on, as may be obvious, the tank. It appears to be a French series, but it’s in English (interviews with lots of folks… English, French, Russian, German, American, Israeli so far). It’s actually pretty interesting.

The third episode includes, among others, the Yom Kippur War, which featured Egyptian and Syrian tanks invading Israel on a holiday when they knew that most of Israel – including the military – would be off the job. The documentary interviewed an Israeli tanker who fought that day, who said this (translated into English):

“We fought with our backs to Auschwitz.”

That’s… that’s a hell of a way to put it. And it sums up Israels defense – and need for defense – succinctly.

 Posted by at 9:53 pm
Nov 242018
 

Maybe not the best move, comrades:

Marines Were Attacked, Robbed Near “We the People” Rally in Philly

Police say these guys maced, punched, kicked, and robbed a group of Marine Corps reservists after calling them “Nazis” and “white supremacists.”

Photos of the suspects, glorious examples of human perfection all, at the link.

Interestingly, I bet a lot of these chumps are the same type of nitwit who yearn for a civil war between Americas gun owners and the federal government because the government “has nukes.” And yet they think it’s a neato-keen idea to actually attack the same military types they want to order to murder the other side. Yeah, good luck with that, ya blockheads.

 Posted by at 9:40 pm
Nov 242018
 

Childish? Yup. Funny? You betcha. A petition on the official White House website;

White House petition: Seat Alex Jones next to Jim Acosta in Brady briefing room

White House petitions carry no weight in law whatsoever, except that if a petition gets more than 100,000 signatures within 30 days the administration is supposed to address them. This one was created on November 17 and currently has 34,768 signatures.

 Posted by at 9:15 pm
Nov 232018
 

Some recent cat photos for those of y’all who like such things:

The above may look like I’ve grabbed Button’s paw, but what actually happened is that he jumped up on me, shoved his left paw into my hand then grabbed on with the right paw. He is… grabby. That’s cool and all until 3 in the morning when he decides he needs to grab my nose.

Banshee getting comfortable on my typing hand.

Speedbump sticking his tongue out.

One of a trio of orange cats that live up the road.

It writes itself:

 Posted by at 9:19 pm
Nov 232018
 

In 1972 Bell designed a STOL jet transport, a concept that competed for the Advanced Medium STOL Transport role that the McDonnell-Douglas YC-15 and the Boeing YC-14 were built for. The Bell aircraft appeared to be largely conventional in layout, but it was actually quite different from every other transport: the engine nacelles were not only fitted with Harrier-like thrust vectoring nozzles to redirect the core exhaust, the flow could be diverted from the fans to augmenters in the wings. These, it was hoped, would greatly increase static thrust, allowing the aircraft to lift off from unimproved runways in a short distance. As part of their proposal, Bell also designed a proof of concept demonstrator to be built from parts of a C-130. The demonstrator could itself be used as a fair cargo transport, though of course it would not be as well optimized as the all-new vehicles. Unfortunately, the augmenter-wing concept for vertical thrust turned out to be a major disappointment as it steadfastly refused to scale up well.

The demonstrator was recently diagrammed and described in detail in US Recon & Research Projects #03, and the operational version in US Transport Projects #08.

USRP #3 can be downloaded as a PDF file for only $4.25:

USTP #8 can be downloaded as a PDF file for only $4.25:

I’ve uploaded the full rez versions of these scans to the 2018-11 APR Extras folder on Dropbox, available to all APR Patrons at the $4 level and above. If this sort of thing is of interest, please consider signing up for the APR Patreon.

patreon-200

 Posted by at 8:06 pm
Nov 232018
 

The SST designs of the 1960’s are hardly unknown. But what’s generally not well understood is that designs such as the Boeing 2707 were *huge.* This was considered necessary because SSTs with fuselage lengths in line with existing jetliners – such as the Concorde – would have small passenger capacities due to the need for the fuselages to be *very* narrow compared to their lengths. This, as Concorde showed, was a great way to build an extremely cost-ineffective fuel hog.

So the 2707 would be terribly long and pointy, with a geometry quite a bit unlike regular jetliners. A practical concern is “how do we deal with these things at airports?” If nothing else, the long pointed nose of the SST would put the passenger door considerably further aft than for a conventional rounded-nose jetliners. So, like the 747 and the A380, it was assumed that the larger airports would have to make some infrastructure modifications in order to deal with these new beasts.

The illustration below, from a 1967 issue of Aviation Week, shows American Airlines thinking about the airports of the future. Note that the 2707 is pulled in far closer than the other craft, with the tip of t’s very pointed nose just a few feet away from the building while the others are notably further away. The SST is being serviced by two extendable jetways at maximum extension, while most of the other planes seem to be getting along with just one jetway… though one of the 747s is using four. Note that even though the 747 isn’t pulled in quite as far as the 2707, the SST nonetheless projects much further out into the airfield. For some airports this could well have meant that the taxiways would have been a cluttered mess.

 Posted by at 12:14 pm