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User Journal

Journal Journal: I Won't Be Here As Much

Howdy All,

I just wanted to give a quick adios-type message. I started my new job at SpaceX about a month ago and am still getting settled in my new home/lifestyle. One thing that is apparent, however, is that working at SpaceX is going to keep me hopping. I've spent a couple weeks working more than 60 hours already, and I think that may be somewhat common. That said, I don't really have time to keep up on news stories as much as I have for the last three years.

Comment Re:Another step (Score 1) 127

It is always amazing to me when folks are willing to hold up a piece of fictional art to contest a15,000 year old (how long have modern humans been around exactly?) historical trend. We've been developing earth-shattering technologies that could be used to royally obliterate ourselves for awhile now. Think about it, designing a metallic blade that could, literally, break every other blade wielded against it back during the various transitions from stone-age to bronze-age probably convinced many of the folks at the time that the individual wielding the metallic blade was all but invincible. And yet, somehow one metal blade wielding psychopath didn't conquer the whole world (though, some tried).

Technology breakthroughs have been occuring for thousands of years. The nuclear bomb, dynamite, machine guns, rifles, muskets, long bows, hell, even something as simple as putting a rotten corpse on a catapult and flinging it at your enemies could be considered technology. We've managed not to kill ourselves yet.

Does this new technology have the potential to destroy the human race? Maybe it will eventually, but so have a dozen other inventions throughout history. One badass, epic science fiction T.V. series is not an adequate bit of evidence to hold up and dispute this trend.

Comment Re:I actually agree with the Democrat here (Score 1) 239

I think my favorite thing about your posts, Grishnakh, is that you post one or two comments in a story that interests you that are pretty insightful and frank, but simple enough to not be rude or flamebaitish. Then when someone replies to your posts, you almost always respond with a link and a direct insult on their intelligence. It's quite amusing.

Comment Re:Money, money, money (Score 1) 236

I am not sure cutting down the size of the military drastically is necessarily the best way to go after the bloated DoD budget. You could just as easily scrap and cancel a number of government-military-industiral-complex boondoggles and save a lot of money. I mean, if you look at some of the weapon systems being developed by Lockheed-Martin, Northrop-Grumman, Boeing, General Dynamics (is that what they're still called nowadays?), etc. you'll see that they are still, essentially, fighting the cold war. It could even be funny if it weren't so god-damned expensive.

Comment Re:Blaming the wrong people (Score 1) 236

So his actual complaint is that, while President Obama stood up and advocated developing commercial launch instead of the SLS, when push came to shove, he just accepted the Congressional budget that was written despit all the grand-standing?

Interesting. I wonder if he thinks President Obama should have kept vetoing budgets until SLS got cut down to a size that was reasonable....for whatever definition of reasonable you like.

Comment Re:"incident to arrest" (Score 1) 462

I hate to bring reality into this discussion, but the bill that was passed allows the police to search phones of people "incident to arrest".

I hate to bring the Constitution into your pedantry but what the hell does that matter? The fourth amendment is pretty damned clear that an officer of the law needs a warrant to search your belongings. That guaranteed right doesn't get pissed out the window just because a bastard in a uniform slapped a pair of 'cuffs on you. If you are arrested, and if the contents of your cell phone can be reasonably demonstrated to be pertinent to the legal case that you are being held for, then let the prosecutor prove it to a judge and get a warrant to search it just like they are supposed to do with a locked box.

I don't know what your civics class taught you, but as a California native I was taught that folks suspected of a crime (under arrest but not yet convicted) still have the same Constitutional rights that all citizens of the United States are delineated.

Comment Re:Recent experiences in the U.S. and Canada (Score 1) 544

I used to do this. I found a nifty little hack around a lot of the corporate rules and some of the laws associated with having shoes in public places. Many of the rules and laws are written in such a way that makes it necessary for a person to have shoes, "on," but neglect to say anything about wearing them on their feet. I always walked around with a cheap pair of sandals clipped to my hip and the stores eventually figured out that I wasn't really violating any of their rules. :)

Sometimes being pedantic is fun.

Comment Re:The main issue with identifying felons in US (Score 1) 82

Why shouldn't Christians kill?

Well that whole 6th (5th?) commandment gets in the way sometimes.

Thou shalt not kill

Of course, most of the Christian religion is based around the theme of, "Do as I say, not as I do." But since that is also one of the fundamental parenting techniques we use to raise kids in the States, it shouldn't come as a suprise that it is widely accepted.

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