Category Archives: The Liminal Times

My Algorithm

Harold and Maude – Golden Age Cinema and Bar

Here’s a nifty little quiz/recipe if you’ve ever wondered who you are.

(Warning: ‘What’s My Algorithm?’ results not valid in Kentucky, Ohio, Mississippi, Hawaii, Alaska, Louisiana, Arizona, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Idaho, sometimes Utah, or within any conscious entity.)

Sheridan What’s My Algorithm? (For best results, all questions should be answered honestly.)

Name your favorite:

  • Movie
  • Song
  • TV show
  • Book

Tulangan Utara Cooking instructions: Take all ingredients and google them. Let set forever.

My algorithm:

HaroldandMaudeIStayAwayTheSimpsonsTheCatcherInTheRye

To Infinity and Within

Does Space Force's logo bear an uncanny likeness to a 'Star Trek ...

God knows, sharks patrol these waters whenever Donald Trump (or fans of the imbecile) enter them.

But this is honest praise for an idea of the Pumpkin-in-Chief: The Space Force.

Donnie has taken quite a pummeling on the late-show circuit for the idea, which became a clever Netflix comedy. Even serious news outlets couldn’t resist taking a jab at the notion, including noting how similar the emblem is to the iconic Star Trek insignia.Fictional Crush #1 Cpt. James T. kirk TOS | Star trek, Spock and ...

But let’s resist the irresistible for a moment to seriously consider the notion.

It ain’t bad.

Consider: Every government dollar that goes toward the agency is a dollar NOT spent on an absurd border wall (though, granted, that endeavor is always going to be flush with cash as long as the dimwit and his cronies are in office).

But more importantly, this is the rare instance when GOP money (and interest) is dedicated toward a real scientific pursuit, not on debunking one  — like the administration’s orchestrated effort to undermine findings on, say, global warming. Or a pandemic.

Imagine for a moment that Trump wants the fastest spaceships to round up future immigrants who he believes will fly into orbit and descend smack dab in the middle of the country, bypassing his glorious wall. Or he wants to build a Trump hotel-casino on Mars.What Does a City of One Million People on Mars Look Like?

Ridiculous? Of course. But so is accusing a 75-year-old of intentionally cracking his head open in a presidential conspiracy. The guy puts the dic in ridiculous.

But Elon Musk wants to colonize the red planet, too.

And give Trump this: Few presidents have a political party as obedient as Trump. And if he wants dominion over the galaxy, you know Mitch McConnell and Sean Hannity will literally move heaven and earth to provide the echo chamber of agreement Trump craves — and demands.

In doing so, scientists would be tasked with valid challenges things like improving how quickly we move through the cosmos. Legitimate scientists have been pursuing light speed capability since we learned the concept.

And that casino on Mars? That would mean exploring ways to terraform a planet, another dream of scientists (and considered by some of them an option for an overheating Earth).

History has proven that wild scientific pursuits produce real-world breakthroughs. Kennedy was roundly criticized for his moon landing promise. Critics initially called the $25.4 billion exercise nothing more than a vanity project. But it helped produce more than 6,300 technologies, including the CAT scanner, freeze-dried foods, satellite television, memory foam and the joystick. NASA partnered with Black & Decker to invent various battery-powered tools for drilling and taking rock samples in space, which led to the creation of the DustBuster.

So let’s not unilaterally dismiss Dumbo’s ideas. Some of those big-eared notions might have the power to fly.

 

 

 

 

To Boldly Go

Elon Musk: SpaceX makes investors believe Tesla will be a success ...

In honor of SpaceX’s successful launch this weekend, we offer FactSlaps, Orbital Edition:

  • You can’t cry on space because your tears won’t ever fall.Astronaut Chris Hadfield Simulates Crying in Space - Tested
  • According to astronauts, space smells like seared steak, hot metal and welding fumes.Space Has a Smell and It's... Stinky
  • In 1962, the U.S. blew up a hydrogen bomb in space that was 100 times more powerful than Hiroshima.Did You Know? on Twitter: "In 1962, the U.S. blew up a hydrogen ...
  • Astronauts on the International Space Station witness around 15 sunrises and 15 sunsets every day.Astronauts on the International Space Station See Around 15 ...
  • The International Space Station is the most expensive object ever built, at $150 billion.How the most expensive structure in the world was built - BBC Future
  • A sample of Sir Isaac Newton’s apple tree was sent into space to ‘defy gravity.’Isaac Newton's apple tree falls victim to health and safety as ...
  • In 1977, we received a signal from deep space that lasted 72 seconds. We still don’t know how or where it came from.SETI Searches Today - Sky & Telescope - Sky & Telescope
  • The International Space Station is as roomy as a five-bedroom house and travels at 17,500 mph.Space facts - My site
  • Most astronauts become two inches taller in space.NASA's Twins Study: How Spaceflight (Temporarily) Changes the Body ...
  • There is a water reservoir floating in space that is equivalent to 140 trillion times all the water in the world’s ocean.The biggest oldest body of water in universe | Space | EarthSky

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sI66hcu9fIs