Aug 22, 2023

Today's Rachel


Rachel Maddow - 08-21-2023


BTW, to all my acquaintances, friends or bosom buddies - or anybody else who flies the MAGA freak flag, and who may be one of the dipwads, or who're in sympathy with the dipwads who like to threaten us all with some kinda terrorizing violence if we don't go along with their fucked up ideas:

Here I am, assholes - Come and get me.


Ya buncha whiny-butt pussies

Today's Champion

Sha'Carri Richardson got stiffed really bad four years ago when they kicked her off the US Olympic team for testing positive for marijuana.

It would appear she's just about all the way back.



See ya in Paris next year, kid - tear 'em up.

Today's Tweext


The truthfulness of an Eric Trump can only be expressed in negative numbers.


Aug 21, 2023

Guns

What the fuck are we doing?

Madeleine Dean is a bone fide badass, BTW.




Almost 28,000 dead Americans so far this year.

1,000 kids.

119 Americans killed every day with guns.

119
every.
fucking.
day.

How many is enough?

Give me a number.

Assholes.



Compare & Contrast

Dueling Social Media Posts

See if you can spot the difference.













There's A Difference

... and we can know that difference.


"... moral agnosticism ..."

Aug 20, 2023

Alrighty Then

And now the big question for me is:

How hard is Trump being pressed by his legal team to cut a deal, and take his lumps?

There's gotta be some epic knock-down drag-out fisticuffs going on in the dark recesses of Mar-A-Lago right now.

More:

How long before Trump attacks Mark Meadows?
 
If he doesn't - if he takes it easy on Meadows - what will that say about how maybe Trump's starting to get the word that he can't do the things he loves to do?

And if he can't stomp-n-stumble-n-wreck-the-jungle, what's his play?

And how long can he restrain himself?

Many many questions.

 Brian Tyler Cohen

Ukraine


No such thing as a good war. Sometimes we can find justification that sounds reasonable to us, but no - there are no good wars.


Troop deaths, injuries in Ukraine war nearing 500,000 - NYT citing US officials

Aug 18 (Reuters) - The number of Ukrainian and Russian troops killed or wounded since the war in Ukraine began in February 2022 is nearing 500,000, the New York Times reported on Friday, citing unnamed U.S. officials.

The officials cautioned that casualty figures remained difficult to estimate because Moscow is believed to routinely undercount its war dead and injured, and Kyiv does not disclose official figures, the newspaper said.

Russia's military casualties are approaching 300,000, including as many as 120,000 deaths and 170,000 to 180,000 injuries, the newspaper reported. Ukrainian deaths were close to 70,000, with 100,000 to 120,000 wounded, it added.

The NYT quoted the officials as saying the casualty count had picked up after Ukraine launched a counter-attack earlier this year.

Mykhailo Podolyak, a senior adviser to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, commenting on the NYT article, said only the General Staff could disclose such figures.

"We have adopted a model that only the General Staff has the right to voice the figures on the wounded, the disabled, people who lost limbs, and the missing, and, of course, the number of people who died in this war," he said in a live broadcast on the Youtube channel of journalist Yulia Latynina on Friday.

The Ukrainian military on Thursday claimed gains in its counter-offensive against Russian forces on the southeastern front. Kyiv said its forces had liberated a village, the first such success since July 27, signaling the challenge it faces in advancing through heavily mined Russian defensive lines without powerful air support.

There was no immediate response from Ukrainian officials to Reuters requests for comment. Russia made no immediate comment on the report.

Oops

The obvious jibe:
Russia's invasion of the moon isn't going very well either.

But there's something else.

I think I realize and appreciate how difficult it is to make something work properly over a distance of almost a quarter of a million miles. So I can respect the skill and the effort.

What bothers me is that humans are doing to the moon what we've done everywhere else. ie: We're trashing it.

The US has left junk up there from 6 crewed missions, plus dozens of missions of the US and other countries where we either deliberately crashed the thing into the surface or managed to land nice and easy. But we never clean up after ourselves.

And don't get me wrong - I'm not saying we shouldn't stretch and reach and aspire to bigger and better whatever. But seriously, humans are too often turning out to be a fucking plague. And there's something very karmic about how we're fouling the nest so badly that we're likely accelerating the timeline to where we're no longer the dominant species. And it's more than just possible we're hastening our own extinction.

Clementine Lunar Orbiter 1994


On the fucking moon.

Anyway - Russians:


Russia’s Lunar Lander Crashes Into the Moon

The robotic Luna-25 spacecraft appeared to have “ceased its existence” after a failed orbital adjustment, the space agency Roscosmos said.


A Russian robotic spacecraft that was headed to the lunar surface has crashed into the moon, Russia’s space agency said on Sunday, citing the results of a preliminary investigation a day after it lost contact with the vehicle.

It is the latest setback in spaceflight for a country that during the Cold War became the first nation, as the Soviet Union, to put a satellite, a man and then a woman in orbit.

The Luna-25 lander, Russia’s first space launch to the moon’s surface since the 1970s, entered lunar orbit last Wednesday and was supposed to land as early as Monday. At 2:10 p.m. on Saturday afternoon Moscow time, according to Roscosmos, the state corporation that oversees Russias space activities, the spacecraft fired its engine to enter an orbit that would set it up for a lunar landing. But an unexplained “emergency situation” occurred.

On Sunday, Roscosmos said that it had lost contact with the spacecraft 47 minutes after the start of the engine firing. Attempts to re-establish communications failed, and Luna-25 had deviated from its planned orbit and “ceased its existence as a result of a collision with the lunar surface,” Roscosmos said.

An interagency commission would be formed to investigate the reasons for the failure, it added.

Luna-25, which launched on Aug. 11, was aiming to be the first mission to reach the moon’s south polar region. Government space programs and private companies all over Earth are interested in that part of the moon because they believe it may contain water ice that could be used by astronauts for future space missions.

Another country, India, will now get the chance to land the first probe in the lunar south pole’s vicinity. Its Chandrayaan-3 mission launched in July, but it opted for a more roundabout but fuel-efficient route to the moon. It is scheduled to attempt a landing on Wednesday.

“It’s unfortunate,” Sudheer Kumar, a spokesman for the Indian Space Research Organization, said about the Russian lander’s crash. “Every space mission is very risky and highly technical.”

That India may succeed after Russia failed would be a blow to President Vladimir V. Putin, who has used Russian achievements in space as part and parcel of his hold on power.

That is part of the Kremlin’s narrative — a compelling one for many Russians — that Russia is a great nation held back by an American-led West that is jealous of and threatened by Russia’s capabilities. The country’s state-run space industry in particular has been a valuable tool as Russia works to remake its geopolitical relationships.

“The interest in our proposals is very high,” the head of Russia’s space program, Yuri Borisov, told Mr. Putin in a televised meeting in June, describing Russia’s plan to expand space cooperation with African countries. The initiative is part of the Kremlin’s overall efforts to deepen economic and political ties with non-Western countries amid European and American sanctions.

Interest in the Luna-25 mission within Russia itself appeared muted. The flight lifted off from a remote spaceport in Vostochny in the country’s Far East at an hour when most Russians, who live in the country’s west, were probably sleeping. The mission’s progress toward the moon was not a major subject in state media.

In recent decades, Russia’s exploration of Earth’s solar system has fallen a long way from the heights of the Soviet era.

The last unqualified success was more than 35 years ago, when the Soviet Union was still intact. A pair of twin spacecraft, Vega 1 and Vega 2, launched six days apart. Six months later, the two spacecraft flew past Venus, each dropping a capsule that contained a lander that successfully set down on the hellish planet’s surface, as well as a balloon that, when released, floated through the atmosphere. In March 1986, the two spacecraft then passed within about 5,000 miles of Halley’s comet, taking pictures and studying the dust and gas from the comet’s nucleus.

Subsequent missions to Mars that launched in 1988 and 1996 failed.

The embarrassing nadir came in 2011 with Phobos-Grunt, which was supposed to land on Phobos, the larger of Mars’ two moons, and bring back samples of rock and dirt to Earth. But Phobos-Grunt never made it out of Earth’s orbit after the engines that were to send it to Mars did not fire. A few months later, it burned up in Earth’s atmosphere.

An investigation later revealed that Russia’s financially strapped space agency had skimped on manufacturing and testing, using electronics components that had not been proven to survive the cold and radiation of space.

Otherwise, Russia has been confined to low-Earth orbit, including carrying astronauts to and from the International Space Station, which it jointly manages with NASA.

Luna-25 was to have completed a one-year mission studying the composition of the lunar surface. It was also supposed to have demonstrated technologies that would have been used in a series of robotic missions that Russia plans to launch to the moon to lay the groundwork for a future lunar base that it is planning to build with China.

But the schedule for those missions — Luna 26, 27 and 28 — has already slipped years from the original timetable, and now there are likely to be further delays, especially as the Russian space program struggles, financially and technologically, because of sanctions imposed after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Although NASA and the European Space Agency continue to cooperate with Russia on the International Space Station, other joint space projects ended after the invasion of Ukraine. For the lunar missions, that means Russia needs to replace key components that were to come from Europe, including a drill for the Luna-27 lander.

Russia has struggled to develop new space hardware, especially electronics that reliably work in the harsh conditions of outer space.

“You cannot really fly in space, or, at least, fly in space for a long time, without better electronics,” said Anatoly Zak, who publishes RussianSpaceWeb.com, which tracks Russia’s space activities. “The Soviet electronics were always backwards. They were always behind the West in this area of science and technology.”

He added: “The entire Russian space program is actually affected by this issue.”

Other ambitious Russian space plans are also behind schedule and will likely take much longer than the official pronouncements to complete.

Angara, a family of rockets that has been in development for two decades, has only launched six times.

A few days ago, Vladimir Kozhevnikov, the chief designer for Russia’s next space station, told the Interfax news agency that Oryol, a modern replacement for the venerable Soyuz capsule, would make its maiden flight in 2028.

Back in 2020, Dmitry Rogozin, then the head of Roscosmos, said that the maiden flight of Oryol would take place in 2023 — meaning that, in just three years, the launch date has slipped five years.

Landing on the moon is treacherous, and China is the only country to do so successfully this century — three times, most recently in December 2020. Three other missions have crash-landed in recent years, most recently an attempt by Ispace, a Japanese company. Its Hakuto-R Mission 1 lander crashed in April when a software glitch led the vehicle to misjudge its altitude.

Still A Problem


From Reddit:

MAQA Friend who thought it was all a hoax is dying from long COVID.

We're almost 50 and we've been good friends since high school so this really sucks and I feel partly to blame. It's hard to walk in the middle of the road politically and hate everyone equally but that's how I try to view things. My opinion for years has been that none of these rich bastards care about us average citizens.

Enter my friend who has become a die hard trumper since 2016 and a proud member of the fuck your feelings crowd. Everyday during Trump's presidency he was constantly posting memes and just generally being an ass to anyone who disagreed with him. His views are the same as a lot of others, COVID isn't real, the doctors are all lying, and the only one telling the truth was Trump. He would bash the doctors and anyone even wearing a mask outside would catch hell from him.

After a while I had enough and started trolling the trumpers on my friends list with just random funny memes blasting trump and the gop. I was just doing it for laughs because I refuse to take social media seriously. He pretty much immediately started commenting rude shit on my posts and wanting to argue q conspiracies and other bs. When I would ignore him he would even go to my spouses page to go on about some stuff I posted that he didn't agree with.

Here is where my personal blame comes in to play. I started saying things to him like "if you don't want to trust the doctors now then just stay home when you get COVID and spare them your bs." I'd say "do you ask what they are putting in your iv at the hospital? If you don't trust the doctors how do you know it's not the vaccine?" This was just me trolling trying to get him to realize how dumb he sounds with all the Q bs. He took it serious because he did get COVID really bad and he refused to go to the hospital for weeks. It wasn't until his girlfriend threatened to leave him if he didn't go.

Apparently it was such a huge issue that they did eventually split up. Because he waited he now has long COVID and his heart is only working at 20 percent. He is dying from heart failure. He has also lost his voice from COVID and sounds like the crypt keeper when he talks.

We have both admitted to each other it was stupid and we both apologized but I can feel the animosity towards me and I can't help but feel partly to blame for him not going to the hospital, but at the same time I get so sick and tired of the Q crowds disrespect toward anyone that doesn't agree with them. His rhetoric was starting to affect my teenage sons views but now hopefully he sees the real danger of this cult.

It's a really sad fucked up situation and I hate that it's going to cost my friend his life. He has lost everything over this. His job, his car, his gf, his family, health, friends, everything.

Thanks for reading.

08-19-2023:
2,209 new cases
8 new deaths