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Comment Re:Old news (Score 2) 218

Yes, because military leadership is demostrated in Photoshop compositions.

Do you think the photo was chosen/doctored by a navy assessor? Most likely, it is the job of some assistant who thought "Well, the thing under looks like the sea, so the big things on it must be ships. And they are grey and have guns, so they probably are from the military (they lack *so much* imagination when it comes to colour!). And since we won the Cold War, only we have ships, don't we".

If you want to worry about military leadership, a better issue would be the childlike bickering between officers of the different branches ("if you say that a Navy plane is an Air Force plane they won't hear to you, even if it is not related to the argument!")

Comment Re:Much ado about nothing (Score 3, Insightful) 145

You are confusing terms.

The GP didn't say that the government assumes the people who signed the petition is gay, he said that the government (or the minister) thinks that the people that signed the petition worrying about a gay immigrant may be interested in the rights of gay immigrants. I think this is a logic process (except for those who signed because they were relatives/friends/admirer of that particular person, and would not care for any other gay immigrant).

The logic for "anyone who promotes legalization of drugs is a drug user" is a far more twisted. It involves making assumptions (like that only "current drug users" would support such a law).

Also, the government didn't compile anything. Probably an association requested the people to sign in and it was that association who did compile the list and gave it to the government. The government just used it.

The only concern about this issue is the government used data available only to them (that is, that no other political party had access to) and public means to publicite their gestion only for electoral reasons(instead of having the government run the country and the party prepare the elections). But that seems the usual conduct everywhere, so it is less of a news.

Comment Re:HUH? (Score 2) 718

Upgrade a battleship with modern anti aircraft systems and a single IOWA class battleship would utterly destroy most nations entire navy fleet before it was taken down. Unless Japan brings back the Yamato, that one was HUGE with 46cm guns that was basically shooting a school bus full of explosives at the enemy.

I see a problem with that... to fight the Iowa we would need to call in the Yamato... but to do that, we would need to recover it from the bottom of the ocean... and it was put there by a bunch of vintage aircraft...

Your words make little sense to me. Of course you talk about upgraded AA systems, but thinking that there are "perfect" systems that make something invulnerable is like thinking that I may beat a marathon runner just by deciding to not slow my pace.

Comment Two answers (Score 1) 171

I am in doubt, I treat my books like ordinary possessions but also, once in a while I have to shake out the sand and food of the rest of my ordinary possessions, too. What would you chose?

Comment Re:Submarines (Score 1) 718

But it is "all or nothing" intimidation, and that has a lot of disvantages.

If you say "obey my order X or I fire" then either:

1: They obey you, you get your short place objetive but appear as the international mad man. Also, as it is easy, you will surely step your demands leading to option 2

2: they don't obey you, you have either to back off or kill thousands of people (at the minimum) to make your point. Even if your opponent has no nuclear deterrence itself, the very fact of appearing to the world as someone capable of launching a nuclear first strike will aim a lot of missiles at you.

So, the MAD is effective to ensure that your enemy does not attempt to destroy you, but for subtler situations it is not so useful. Think how the USA and the URSS still fought a lot of proxy wars even with their nuclear arsenals. In that sense, an aircraft carrier is way more flexible.

Remember that war is a continuation of politics, not the other way around...

Comment Re:Not sure about the thesis of the article, but.. (Score 3, Insightful) 718

I stopped reading when he suggested that current air carriers could be destroyed by "a swarm of iranians flying Cessnas" (I didn't know Iranians had that many Cessnas) or with a German V2 (yes, really). That guy is a joke, and presents any information as if he had a personal issues with aircraft carriers (maybe one of them ran over his mother?)

Comment Re:Simply use SMART-L (Score 1) 44

I guess that a (modified version of) SMART-L radar could do this job. Don't understand why 6 milion Euro is needed for building a demonstrator.

Have you read your own link? It says it can track an aircraft at 480 km. Now, assuming that just area is the only concern (and that radar waves are not altered when crossing the ionosphere), an space object with an area of 0.25m^2 (which can easily destroy a rocket/satellite) would be undetectable at just 100km. And that is just the lower limit of "space", and assumes that the radar is vertically under the object.

Comment Re:First...why? (Score 3, Funny) 423

I strongly disagree. The OP is right, since someday in the future the kid will be a computer user, he need to learn now computer architecture. Everyone knows that without knowing computer architecture you cannot use a computer!

I did the same to my son when it came to the car; until the time he was able to explain me internal combustion engine and the operation of gas vs diesel motors, I did not allow him to use the car; I would be driving it and he would run by my side.

He still has not convinced me that he knows well enough about central heating, though. Until that, he is sleeping outside. I really hope he learns it before winter settles in.

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