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Comment NASA can do what they like.. (Score 1) 271

The reason that organizations like NASA have chiefs is so that they can make decisions about what to do next.  For NASA it looks like they are running into some serious existential issues, so they are going to do what they need to do in order to survive.

Also, couple of things:

1.  Congress doesn't owe NASA anything.  The People appreciate their service, but NASA has made it clear that they support a particular paradigm of space exploration, and I happen to think it is time to do something different.  We are not going to get much farther with the "Stuff a big metal cylinder with a bunch of fuel and ignite it" approach.  There are much more elegant ways to explore space that we should be looking into.

2.  No business cooperating with the Chinese?  America is clearly all about cooperating with the Chinese.  People like to gripe about currency manipulation and questionable manufacturing practices.  Well, maybe if Americans stopped voting with their dollars to buy the cheapest thing on the shelf things would change.  Keep in mind that there are innumerable American-owned companies manufacturing out of China.  Go gripe at them and leave NASA to themselves.
The Military

Mystery of the Dying Bees Solved 347

jamie points out news of a study attempting to explain the decline of honeybee populations across the US. As it turns out, the fungus N. ceranae that was thought to be killing off bee colonies had a partner in crime — a DNA-based virus that worked in tandem with N. ceranae to compromise nutrition uptake. From the NY Times: "Dr. Bromenshenk's team at the University of Montana and Montana State University in Bozeman, working with the Army's Edgewood Chemical Biological Center northeast of Baltimore, said in their jointly written paper that the virus-fungus one-two punch was found in every killed colony the group studied. Neither agent alone seems able to devastate; together, the research suggests, they are 100 percent fatal. 'It's chicken and egg in a sense — we don't know which came first,' Dr. Bromenshenk said of the virus-fungus combo — nor is it clear, he added, whether one malady weakens the bees enough to be finished off by the second, or whether they somehow compound the other's destructive power. 'They're co-factors, that's all we can say at the moment,' he said. 'They're both present in all these collapsed colonies.'"

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