Category: Science, Physics, and Philosophy of Science

  • DO RUSSIAN NUCLEAR WEAPONS EVEN WORK? Great question. Difficult but possible to

    DO RUSSIAN NUCLEAR WEAPONS EVEN WORK?
    Great question. Difficult but possible to answer. And it’s probably a worse answer than you’re expecting. πŸ˜‰ That said no one wants to use these weapons because it’s a guarantee of suicide.

    STRATEGIC OPPOSITES IN GENERAL
    (a) as in many things, US arsenal is designed for policing the world not destroying it. US strategic policy pursues the destruction of the command and control chain, minimizing harm to civilians and soliders alike.
    vs
    Russian arsenal is, as we have seen in Ukraine and Grozny designed to destroy everything and kill everyone. Its strategic policy is to expand and conquer and rule regardless of cost in human life.

    STRATEGIC OPPOSITES IN NUCLEAR WEAPONS
    (b) The US arsenal then consists of a large number of small precise weapons. The US did not invest in upgrading its technology – just maintaining it. And the only modern weapons we have are the air force’s nuclear cruise missiles. So by modern terms our weaponry is ‘weak’.
    vs
    The Russian arsenal consists of a similar number of much larger weapons. One of which can turn an area the size of texas into the surface of the moon. Another of which dwarfs that, and is designed to take out coastal cities from underwater turning the entire greater metropolitan area and all its feeder cities and downs into the surface of the moon.

    MAINTENANCE REQUIRED
    (c) These weapons require constant maintenance. In the case of the warhead itself, they are subject to constant radiation, and certain components that guarantee the explosion (lenses) and provide the enrichment necessary for critical mass (tritium), the electronics, the batteries, and the fissionable material itself must be replaced regularly, certainly every decade or so.

    I’m not certain at this point in time, but I understand that the US tends to just replace and rebuild these warheads on a set schedule.
    vs
    It’s difficult to imagine that Russian nuclear forces are much better maintained than their conventional forces. But they keep nuclear submarines in the water, so we would have to pragmatically assume that at least those weapons and some small number of the new absurdly large megatonnage weapons are functional.
    vs
    China and Russia are radically upgrading their nuclear arsenals.
    America has just begun doing so. But as usual, because Americans don’t plan all that well, and are self-destructively optimistic, we are late to the party.

    SUMMARY
    We have under-invested in the military and over-invested in policing the world, and we don’t appear to be in a very good position. In particular, we don’t have a solid strategic industry supply chain, and we don’t have enough production capacity for the advanced weaponry we rely on. We don’t have a standing supply of ammunition shells missiles for a two front war. And we have too small a manpower force for the four coming conflicts we know of:
    (a) Russia
    (b) China
    (c) Iran
    (d) Mexico (cartels, govt)

    CONCLUSION
    So IMO Russia would only need to use three modern weapons off the east and west coasts, and we would never see them launch, because they’re underwater. Take out the broader DC, NY and LA areas and our government, financial system, and pacific trade system are gone.

    So it doesn’t matter if those thousands of unmaintained weapons don’t work when they only need three new ones that do.

    It would mean the end of Russia, because RU consists of basically two cities. The rest cannot function without them. China would then re-capture Siberia for its energy, and Russia would break up into separate countries battling for survival. With RU and USA out of the cycle then CN really has no worries and doesn’t even need to take Taiwan.

    Cheers
    -Curt Doolittle


    Source date (UTC): 2023-03-09 03:26:19 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1633670521886846977

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1633660789943836675

  • DO RUSSIAN NUCLEAR WEAPONS EVEN WORK? Great question. Difficult but possible to

    DO RUSSIAN NUCLEAR WEAPONS EVEN WORK?
    Great question. Difficult but possible to answer. And it’s probably a worse answer than you’re expecting. πŸ˜‰ That said no one wants to use these weapons because it’s a guarantee of suicide.

    STRATEGIC OPPOSITES IN GENERAL
    (a) as in many things, US arsenal is designed for policing the world not destroying it. US strategic policy pursues the destruction of the command and control chain, minimizing harm to civilians and soliders alike.
    vs
    Russian arsenal is, as we have seen in Ukraine and Grozny designed to destroy everything and kill everyone. Its strategic policy is to expand and conquer and rule regardless of cost in human life.

    STRATEGIC OPPOSITES IN NUCLEAR WEAPONS
    (b) The US arsenal then consists of a large number of small precise weapons. The US did not invest in upgrading its technology – just maintaining it. And the only modern weapons we have are the air force’s nuclear cruise missiles. So by modern terms our weaponry is ‘weak’.
    vs
    The Russian arsenal consists of a similar number of much larger weapons. One of which can turn an area the size of texas into the surface of the moon. Another of which dwarfs that, and is designed to take out coastal cities from underwater turning the entire greater metropolitan area and all its feeder cities and downs into the surface of the moon.

    MAINTENANCE REQUIRED
    (c) These weapons require constant maintenance. In the case of the warhead itself, they are subject to constant radiation, and certain components that guarantee the explosion (lenses) and provide the enrichment necessary for critical mass (tritium), the electronics, the batteries, and the fissionable material itself must be replaced regularly, certainly every decade or so.

    I’m not certain at this point in time, but I understand that the US tends to just replace and rebuild these warheads on a set schedule.
    vs
    It’s difficult to imagine that Russian nuclear forces are much better maintained than their conventional forces. But they keep nuclear submarines in the water, so we would have to pragmatically assume that at least those weapons and some small number of the new absurdly large megatonnage weapons are functional.
    vs
    China and Russia are radically upgrading their nuclear arsenals.
    America has just begun doing so. But as usual, because Americans don’t plan all that well, and are self-destructively optimistic, we are late to the party.

    SUMMARY
    We have under-invested in the military and over-invested in policing the world, and we don’t appear to be in a very good position. In particular, we don’t have a solid strategic industry supply chain, and we don’t have enough production capacity for the advanced weaponry we rely on. We don’t have a standing supply of ammunition shells missiles for a two front war. And we have too small a manpower force for the four coming conflicts we know of:
    (a) Russia
    (b) China
    (c) Iran
    (d) Mexico (cartels, govt)

    CONCLUSION
    So IMO Russia would only need to use three modern weapons off the east and west coasts, and we would never see them launch, because they’re underwater. Take out the broader DC, NY and LA areas and our government, financial system, and pacific trade system are gone.

    So it doesn’t matter if those thousands of unmaintained weapons don’t work when they only need three new ones that do.

    It would mean the end of Russia, because RU consists of basically two cities. The rest cannot function without them. China would then re-capture Siberia for its energy, and Russia would break up into separate countries battling for survival. With RU and USA out of the cycle then CN really has no worries and doesn’t even need to take Taiwan.

    Cheers
    -Curt Doolittle

    Reply addressees: @georgefox1968


    Source date (UTC): 2023-03-09 03:26:19 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1633670521618325505

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1633660789943836675

  • HOW FAR BEFORE CHILDREN WITHOUT MOTHERS? We’d need eggs and wombs. Human Embryos

    HOW FAR BEFORE CHILDREN WITHOUT MOTHERS?
    We’d need eggs and wombs.

    Human Embryos without eggs?
    –“Katsuhiko Hayashi, is internationally renowned as a pioneer in the field of lab-grown eggs and sperm, said β€œThis is the first case of making robust mammal oocytes from male cells,” Hayashi predicts that it will be technically possible to create a viable human egg from a male skin cell within a decade.”–

    Artificial Wombs?
    And BTW: last year the Chinese created a machine run by an AI that can function as an artificial womb. The Chinese aren’t fuzzy about creating superhumans or compensating for their population collapse.

    I would bet that more men would want children than women. Your own little tribe without having to compromise with a man/woman? The state with a vast pool of pliable women for production and taxation?

    πŸ˜‰


    Source date (UTC): 2023-03-09 01:36:30 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1633642887375118336

  • HOW FAR BEFORE CHILDREN WITHOUT MOTHERS? We’d need eggs and wombs. Human Embryos

    HOW FAR BEFORE CHILDREN WITHOUT MOTHERS?
    We’d need eggs and wombs.

    Human Embryos without eggs?
    –“Katsuhiko Hayashi, is internationally renowned as a pioneer in the field of lab-grown eggs and sperm, said β€œThis is the first case of making robust mammal oocytes from male cells,” Hayashi predicts that it will be technically possible to create a viable human egg from a male skin cell within a decade.”–

    Artificial Wombs?
    And BTW: last year the Chinese created a machine run by an AI that can function as an artificial womb. The Chinese aren’t fuzzy about creating superhumans or compensating for their population collapse.

    I would bet that more men would want children than women. Your own little tribe without having to compromise with a man/woman? The state with a vast pool of pliable women for production and taxation?

    πŸ˜‰


    Source date (UTC): 2023-03-09 01:36:30 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1633642887240925184

  • Well it’s just science. Though there is a difference between logical and rationa

    Well it’s just science.
    Though there is a difference between logical and rational, in that rationality can include subjective choice, and logical can explain subjective choice, not argue it.
    At some point the principle difference in intelligence results in error detection. As you get smarter your ability to learn concepts of increasing abstraction and more so with multiple states in working memory, improves marginally. But if you look at human performance it tends to result largely in error detection, more so than any increase in innovation.
    Conversely, the most visible sign of decline in intelligence other than knowledge and sentence content, formation, and length, is logical incompetency.
    Logical competency declines rather rapidly under 100-105 to where simple negative logic (just like neural nets fail to perform) is overwhelming for the individual.

    Reply addressees: @cam2000deluxe @RobOU812Rob @Steve_Sailer


    Source date (UTC): 2023-03-09 00:00:48 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1633618804897923073

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1633616650376466433

  • RT @DegenRolf: Meta-analysis: There is a positive relationship between intellige

    RT @DegenRolf: Meta-analysis: There is a positive relationship between intelligence and survival. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0160289623000193 https://t.co/whvx…


    Source date (UTC): 2023-03-07 15:13:45 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1633123779684573185

  • Great question. Though one that’s difficult to answer, simply because science is

    Great question. Though one that’s difficult to answer, simply because science is so specialized, and there are nearly a hundred solid journals, and countless other niche publications.
    But, for the general audience the Nature family of publication is most respected and most likely to report something interesting.
    They have an eamil list that you can join that will send you a weekly list of what’s been published, and some responses (letters) to those articles.
    FWIW: I set up google alerts for science topics I’m interested in, and follow a number of people who ‘filter’ the lesser quality research for the few worthy (there are only a few really) bits that are useful.
    FWIW2: You would be surprised that it’s reasonably possible to stay current in most of the sciences simply because while a lot is published, very little provides novel insight. And also, there are not as many open questions about the universe as you’d imagine. It’s that those open questions are very hard to research.


    Source date (UTC): 2023-03-05 21:27:36 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1632493085115465730

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1632471269009489922

  • Great question. Though one that’s difficult to answer, simply because science is

    Great question. Though one that’s difficult to answer, simply because science is so specialized, and there are nearly a hundred solid journals, and countless other niche publications.
    But, for the general audience the Nature family of publication is most respected and most likely to report something interesting.
    They have an eamil list that you can join that will send you a weekly list of what’s been published, and some responses (letters) to those articles.
    FWIW: I set up google alerts for science topics I’m interested in, and follow a number of people who ‘filter’ the lesser quality research for the few worthy (there are only a few really) bits that are useful.
    FWIW2: You would be surprised that it’s reasonably possible to stay current in most of the sciences simply because while a lot is published, very little provides novel insight. And also, there are not as many open questions about the universe as you’d imagine. It’s that those open questions are very hard to research.

    Reply addressees: @GracianoGreen @VelenskiMeir @Stoic_Media @PeterZeihan @EconomicsEx


    Source date (UTC): 2023-03-05 21:27:36 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1632493084930916352

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1632471269009489922

  • You have made two delarative statments that are false. First that evolutionary s

    You have made two delarative statments that are false. First that evolutionary speciation doesn’t exist, second that nability to reproduce is the definition of species. A assume you are young or not very bright, but you should be able to easily verify these statements with google or even Wikipedia.

    Fundamentalism is an addiction response.

    Don’t waste my time.


    Source date (UTC): 2023-03-04 03:56:02 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1631866062475079680

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1631860658193985537

  • As far as I know its the movement of ‘lightning’ so to speak as the quantum back

    As far as I know its the movement of ‘lightning’ so to speak as the quantum background is compressed and polarity of dipoles are aligned and not. So it’s why spin has to vary. Essentially it’s the same process of the electric motor. So yeah. That’s the analogy.


    Source date (UTC): 2023-03-03 23:57:42 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1631806083411976193

    Reply addressees: @StevePender

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1631665308694978560