2019年6月30日 星期日

The Big Corona


Most photographs don't adequately portray the magnificence of the Sun's corona. Seeing the corona first-hand during a total solar eclipse is unparalleled. The human eye can adapt to see coronal features and extent that average cameras usually cannot. Welcome, however, to the digital age. The featured central image digitally combined short and long exposures that were processed to highlight faint and extended features in the corona of the total solar eclipse that occurred in August of 2017. Clearly visible are intricate layers and glowing caustics of an ever changing mixture of hot gas and magnetic fields in the Sun's corona. Looping prominences appear bright pink just past the Sun's limb. Faint details on the night side of the New Moon can even be made out, illuminated by sunlight reflected from the dayside of the Full Earth. Images taken seconds before and after the total eclipse show glimpses of the background Sun known as Baily's Beads and Diamond Ring. Tomorrow, a new total solar eclipse will be visible from parts of South America. via NASA https://ift.tt/2NoGUW8

“Old Town Road” Rapper Lil Nas X Just Celebrated the End of Pride Month by Coming Out

The U.S. Is Finally Going To Talk To China About Space

US Official: US, China Plan to Meet on Civil Space in Autumn, Voice of America

"Kevin O'Connell, director of the Office of Space Commerce at the U.S. Commerce Department, said U.S. companies were voicing growing concern about artificial pricing offered by Chinese competitors and the forced transfer of intellectual property. He said the U.S. government was "greatly worried" about such reports, and what appeared to be Beijing's different understanding of what constituted a "commercial" market."

U.S., China plan to meet on civil space in autumn: U.S. official, Reuters

"U.S. and Chinese officials will meet in the United States this fall for bilateral talks about civil space, a senior U.S. official said on Wednesday, amid growing concerns about China's behavior in the rapidly expanding commercial space market. The meeting, which will likely happen in Washington, is not pegged to progress in this week's meeting of U.S. President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping on the sidelines of a G20 meeting in Osaka, Japan, the official said. "It's completely separate. We have reason to talk to China about being a responsible actor in outer space, regardless almost of anything that happens," David Turner, deputy director of the State Department Office of Space and Advanced Technology, told Reuters. Relations between Washington and Beijing have worsened since talks collapsed in May, when the United States accused China of reneging on pledges to reform its economy. That conflict could eventually spill over to the commercial space economy, but for now, Washington was keen to remain engaged on space matters with China, officials said."



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Taylor Swift Feels “Sad and Grossed Out” After Discovering Kanye West’s Former Manager Now Owns Her Master Recordings

Biden Criticized for Suggesting Homophobic Comments Were Socially Acceptable Five Years Ago

Harris Sees Surge After Democratic Debate as Support for Biden Decreases

The Killers Brought Out Johnny Marr and the Pet Shop Boys at the Glastonbury Festival and It Was Amazing

Trump’s Dictator Envy Is Nothing to Laugh At

Democratic Presidential Hopefuls Criticize Trump Over Meeting With North Korea’s Kim

Former Obama Staffers Say Trump Is Lying About Efforts to Meet With North Korea’s Kim

Watch Ivanka Trump Awkwardly Try to Insert Herself Into a Conversation With World Leaders

New White House Press Secretary Stephanie Grisham Bruised in Scuffle With North Korean Guards

Historic Handshake: Trump Becomes First Sitting U.S. President to Set Foot in North Korea

I Visited the Clint Detention Facility. The Government Needs to Let Independent Doctors In.

Flashback: Wings (1927)


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In the new episode of Flashback, movie critics Dana Stevens and K. Austin Collins discuss the silent film that won the first Best Picture Academy Award: Wings (1927), directed by William Wellman.

Production by Chau Tu.



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2019年6月29日 星期六

Virtual Flight over Asteroid Vesta


What would it be like to fly over the asteroid Vesta? Animators from the German Aerospace Center took actual images and height data from NASA's Dawn mission when it visited asteroid Vesta a few years ago and generated a virtual movie. The featured video begins with a sequence above Divalia Fossa, an unusual pair of troughs running parallel over heavily cratered terrain. Next, the virtual spaceship explores Vesta's 60-km Marcia Crater, showing numerous vivid details. Last, Dawn images were digitally recast with exaggerated height to better reveal Vesta's 5-km high mountain Aricia Tholus. The second largest object in the Solar System's asteroid belt, Vesta is the brightest asteroid visible from Earth and can be found with binoculars. Using Vesta Trek, you can explore all over Vesta yourself. via NASA https://ift.tt/2IYbQIw

Watch Michael Palin Lock Gilda Radner and John Belushi in a Barn Full of Live Bats on SNL

Dems, Please Don’t Drive Me Away

Federal Judge Blocks Trump From Using $2.5 Billion in Military Funds for Border Wall

The Netherlands Can’t Keep Winning Like This, Can It?

Trump Tweets Invite to Kim Jong Un to “Shake His Hand and Say Hello” at Demilitarized Zone

Trump, Xi Agree to Resume Trade Talks, Bringing Truce to Tariff War

Census and Sensibility at SCOTUS


A roundtable roundup of the 2018 Supreme Court term with Dahlia Lithwick, Slate’s Mark Joseph Stern, professor Pam Karlan of Stanford Law School, and professor Leah Litman of the University of Michigan Law School. Analysis of the census case, the gerrymandering cases, and the down-docket items you might have missed, but whose repercussions you won’t.

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The Mindbending Challenges of Growing Food in Space

Read a Stunning New Short Story About What Food Means in Space

Help! How Do I Tell My Boyfriend’s Parents I Can’t Stay at Their Dirty, Urine-Soaked House?

E. Jean Carroll’s Stunning Accusation Forced Me to Remember Who Trump Used to Be

2019年6月28日 星期五

Slate Money: The Apocalyptic Vibes Edition


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This week, Slate Money talks about the exit of Jony Ive, the man behind Apple’s most iconic designs, discusses the employees upset at Wayfair over the company’s involvement with detention centers, and answers a listener question about the Chinese bank Baoshang.

And in the Slate Plus segment: billionaires and their taxes.

Email: slatemoney@slate.com
Twitter: @felixsalmon, @Three_Guineas, @EmilyRPeck

Podcast production by Jessamine Molli.



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NASA Makes Big Astrobiology Mission Announcement Without Saying "Astrobiology"

NASA's Dragonfly Will Fly Around Titan Looking for Origins, Signs of Life, NASA

"NASA has announced that our next destination in the solar system is the unique, richly organic world Titan. Advancing our search for the building blocks of life, the Dragonfly mission will fly multiple sorties to sample and examine sites around Saturn's icy moon. ... Titan is an analog to the very early Earth, and can provide clues to how life may have arisen on our planet. During its 2.7-year baseline mission, Dragonfly will explore diverse environments from organic dunes to the floor of an impact crater where liquid water and complex organic materials key to life once existed together for possibly tens of thousands of years. Its instruments will study how far prebiotic chemistry may have progressed. They also will investigate the moon's atmospheric and surface properties and its subsurface ocean and liquid reservoirs. Additionally, instruments will search for chemical evidence of past or extant life. ... "With the Dragonfly mission, NASA will once again do what no one else can do," said NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine. "Visiting this mysterious ocean world could revolutionize what we know about life in the universe. ... evidence of past liquid water, organics - the complex molecules that contain carbon, combined with hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen - and energy, which together make up the recipe for life. ... Dragonfly will visit a world filled ith a wide variety of organic compounds, which are the building blocks of life and could teach us about the origin of life itself." ... The moon's weather and surface processes have combined complex organics, energy, and water similar to those that may have sparked life on our planet. ... and exploring a near-Earth asteroid for the building blocks of life," said Lori Glaze, director of NASA's Planetary Science Division."

Keith's note: Look at these multiple references to one of the prime tasks of Dragonfly - to search for organic compounds on Titan due to their relevance to the possibility of life. Once again, for those of you who have not been paying attention: NASA has an astrobiology program and this is what it does. I was in the auditorium at the Astrobiology Science Conference (AbSciCon) in Seattle when this was announced. A loud cheer went up. With all this blatant relevance to topics key to Astrobiology and broad enthusiasm for the mission from the Astrobiology community you'd think that NASA SMD and NASA PAO would use the word "astrobiology" at least once or link to the NASA Astrobiology program webpage. Guess again. Alana Johnson from PAO is listed as a contact on this press release. She attended the entire Astrobiology Science Conference. Either she was not paying attention to the topic of the meeting or she had no influence on the wording of this press release.

NASA complains that people do not understand the scope and breadth of its programs. Small wonder when NASA so effectively and deliberately ignores some of its own programs the way that it ignores "Astrobiology".

- NASA Leads The World In Astrobiology. Wow, Who Knew?, earlier post
- NASA Can't Figure Out What Astrobiology Is - Or Who Does It, earlier post
- NASA Is Incapable Of Explaining How It Does Astrobiology, earlier post
- NASA's Astrobiology Program Works Hard To Ignore Itself, earlier post
- NASA's Astrobiology Programs Ignore One Another, earlier post
- NASA Leads In Astrobiology. It Needs To Act That Way., earlier post



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How Kim Jong-un Came to Embrace His Family’s Anachronistic Political System


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On this episode of Live at Politics and Prose, Anna Fifield discusses her book The Great Successor: The Divinely Perfect Destiny of Brilliant Comrade Kim Jong Un.

You can watch a playlist of videos from other readings that have featured in this podcast feed.

Email: books@politics-prose.com
Twitter: @PoliticsProse

Podcast production by Tom Warren.



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The History of Show Tunes and the Pop Charts


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Musical theater is one of America’s greatest cultural products—and in the mid–20th century, it also dominated the Billboard charts, from My Fair Lady to West Side Story. But the rise of rock ’n’ roll in the ’60s sidelined show tunes on the radio. And even when Broadway tried to rock—from Hair to Jesus Christ Superstar—a new generation grew wary of characters breaking into song (unless they were animated mermaids, teapots, or lions). And yet, in the 21st century, Broadway music has staged a cultural comeback: taking over our movie screens, making shows out of jukebox hits, and raising a new generation to believe they can rap like Hamilton and Lafayette. In this Tonys month, Hit Parade dances down the Great White Way to chronicle the tangled history of the Broadway musical on the pop charts.

Email: hitparade@slate.com



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An Interview With E. Jean Carroll


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Host Virginia Heffernan and special guest co-host Dahlia Lithwick of Amicus share an intimate conversation with journalist E Jean Carroll, author of What Do We Need Men For?, about details of the sexual assault she allegedly experienced from President Donald Trump, how she has responded, and what advice she would give to someone who faced her situation.

Follow Trumpcast on Twitter: @realtrumpcast

Podcast production by Melissa Kaplan with help from Merritt Jacob.



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Trump Immigration and Asylum Chief Blames Father in Devastating Photo for Own Drowning Death

Last Test Article for NASA’s SLS Rocket Departs Michoud Assembly Facility


The last of four structural test articles for NASA’s Space Launch System (SLS) was loaded onto NASA’s barge Pegasus Wednesday, June 26, 2019, at NASA’s Michoud Assembly Facility in New Orleans. via NASA https://ift.tt/2X3viYk

Here Are the Latest Soul-Crushing Things Trump Said While Ingratiating Himself to Vladimir Putin

Pennsylvania’s Landmark Clean Slate Law Goes Into Effect, Sealing Some 30 Million Criminal Records

Dear Care and Feeding: My Daughter Keeps Getting Excluded From “VIP” Birthday Slumber Parties

Think You’re Smarter Than Slate’s Executive Editor? Find Out With This Week’s News Quiz.

The Post-Debate Presidential Candidate Power Rankings, From 1 to 20

The Expertise of John Roberts


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On Thursday, the Supreme Court blocked the addition of a citizenship question to the 2020 census and delivered a staggering win for the Republican Party in the case of partisan gerrymandering. Is this just another case of a small win for progressives and a huge win for conservatives? And what do the decisions tell us about the roles of Chief Justice John Roberts and Associate Justice Brett Kavanaugh on the court moving forward?

Guest: Mark Joseph Stern, who covers courts and the law for Slate.

Podcast production by Mary Wilson, Jayson De Leon, and Ethan Brooks



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Joe Biden Is Old

What Was Going On When the Moderators Didn’t Know if Biden Had Raised His Hand?

The Weirdest Three Minutes of the Second Democratic Debate

Kamala Harris’ Attack on Biden Was a Viral Moment. But Will It Be a Turning Point?

2019年6月27日 星期四

Kamala Harris’ Attack on Biden Was a Viral Moment. But Will It Be a Turning Point?

In Praise of the Bizarre Charm of Marianne Williamson

Watch Kamala Harris Call Out Joe Biden’s Record on Race

How E. Jean Carroll Would Advise a Woman in Her Shoes

A Former Hungarian Ambassador to the U.S. on How Rock Music Challenged the Soviet Union.

What Twitter’s Smartest Liberals and Conservatives Are Saying About the Thursday Democratic Debate

The Democrats’ Cringey Spanish Contest Is Better Than the Alternative

Beto O’Rourke Was the Star of the First Debate, According to Late-Night TV

Why We Can’t Stop Watching Keanu Reeves, 30 Years On

Facebook Issues Its Own Version of the Federalist Papers

Trump Administration Reportedly Will Strip Deportation Protection for Families of Active-Duty Troops

Trump Administration Reportedly Will Strip Deportation Protection for Families of Active Duty Troops

The Completely Mad Story of the Accidental Beatles

Tumultuous Clouds of Jupiter


This stunning image of Jupiter's stormy northern hemisphere was captured by NASA's Juno spacecraft as it performed a close pass of the gas giant planet. via NASA https://ift.tt/2LlCUTT

Benedict Cumberbatch’s Thomas Edison Movie Is Finally Out of Harvey Weinstein’s Shadow

Two Women Go on the Record and Corroborate E. Jean Carroll’s Trump Sexual Assault Allegations

The Cult of Life Hacking and the End of the Dream of Ultimate Productivity

Help! My Pregnant Wife Says I Can’t Be a Good Parent if I Keep Smoking Pot.

Dear Care and Feeding: Should I Cave on My “No Toy Guns” Policy? My Son Is Begging for One.

One Tactic for Killing Climate Change Bills


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Republican state senators in Oregon are refusing to go to work. In a state legislature where Democrats hold a supermajority, the walkout is one way Republicans can put a halt to their rivals’ progressive agenda. With several statehouses throughout the nation held by supermajorities, is walking out going to become more common?

Guest: Jason Wilson, journalist and columnist at the Guardian.

Podcast production by Mary Wilson, Jayson De Leon, and Ethan Brooks.



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It Was Almost a Good Debate Until Chuck Todd Mucked It Up

Streaming Movies Will No Longer Be Eligible for the DGA’s Highest Award Without an Exclusive Theatrical Release

Why Does It Sound Like Pandering When Democrats Say the Right Things?

Elizabeth Warren Stands Alone

2019年6月26日 星期三

Bill de Blasio Had a Surprisingly Not Bad Night

Everything Democratic Candidates Said About Trump on the First Night of Debate

Debate Moderators: Please Stop Asking Candidates What the Biggest “Geopolitical Threat” Is

John Delaney Cemented His Status as 2020’s Sad Sack With the Saddest Moment of the First Debate

Only Two Democrats on Stage Said They Support Single-Payer. That’s Telling.

NASA Science Mission Announcement On Thursday

NASA to Announce New Solar System Mission, Hold Media Teleconference

"NASA will announce a major new science mission to explore our solar system during a broadcast of NASA Science Live at 4 p.m. EDT Thursday, June 27. The announcement will air on NASA Television, the agency's website, Facebook Live, YouTube, Periscope and USTREAM."



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What Twitter’s Smartest Liberals and Conservatives Are Saying About the Wednesday Democratic Debate

What a Monopoly Superfan Thinks About the New Cashless, Voice-Activated Edition of the Game

All I Want From the Debate Tonight Is a Reenactment of These Two Perfect Minutes From 2016

Neil Gorsuch Is No Friend to Criminal Defendants

The President Seems to Have Just Implied That He’s Glad John McCain Died and Went to Hell

Why Tech Journalists Took Off Their Rose-Colored Glasses


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In this episode, April Glaser catches up with her former co-host Will Oremus. Then the two of them are joined by Future Tense editor Torie Bosch and New York Times opinion writer Farhad Manjoo to discuss why tech journalism has become far more critical in recent years.

Plus, April and Will discuss futuristic science-fiction scenarios on this week’s edition of Don’t Close My Tabs.

Stories discussed on the show: 

The Black Feminists Who Saw the Alt-Right Threat Coming

The One Rule of Content Moderation That Every Platform Follows

I Shouldn’t Have to Publish This in The New York Times

Podcast production by Cameron Drews.

You can follow April @Aprilaser and Will @WillOremus. If you have a question or comment, you can email us at ifthen@slate.com.

If Then is presented by Slate and Future Tense, a collaboration among Arizona State UniversityNew America, and Slate. Future Tense explores the ways emerging technologies affect society, policy, and culture. To read more, follow us on Twitter and sign up for our weekly newsletter.



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Judge Judy’s Lifetime Achievement Is Teaching Us to Laugh at the Less Fortunate

It’s Happening: The Office Is Leaving Netflix

Trump Can’t Fight Iran While Dividing America

STP-2 Mission


At 2:30 a.m. on Tuesday, June 25, SpaceX launched the STP-2 mission from Launch Complex 39A (LC-39A) at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Deployments began approximately 12 minutes after liftoff and ended approximately 3 hours and 32 minutes after liftoff.

Falcon Heavy’s side boosters for the STP-2 mission previously supported the Arabsat-6A mission in April 2019. Following booster separation, Falcon Heavy’s two side boosters landed at SpaceX’s Landing Zones 1 and 2 (LZ-1 and LZ-2) at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida. You can watch a replay of the launch webcast below and find out more about the mission in our press kit.



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Why Men Refuse to Do Yoga


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Listen to Man Up via Apple Podcasts, Spotify, TuneIn, Stitcher, Overcast, Google Play, or iHeart. Read the introductory essay here.

When Terrell Starr started doing yoga in his 30s, it opened up his mind to new possibilities of what his body could do—not to mention what he could do as a man. He realized he’d been restricting himself not only physically but mentally because of what he’d learned growing up. This week on Man Up, he talks with Aymann about yoga, therapy, and breaking free of social limits.

Read his article for the Root: “Yoga Is My Self Care: More Black Men Need to Breathe.”

Tell us what you think about this and other topics by leaving a voicemail at 805-626-8707 or emailing manup@slate.com. We may feature you on the show. And please tell us what you think by leaving a review on Apple Podcasts.

Podcast production by Cameron Drews and Danielle Hewitt.



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There Will Be Crime in Space. How Will We Handle That?

Eric Trump Says He Was Spit on While Out at a Chicago Cocktail Bar

Wayfair Employees to Walkout in Protest of Furniture Sales to Migrant Detention Centers Holding Children

Searching for Freshwater In Snowy Places


Snowflakes that cover mountains or linger under tree canopies are a vital freshwater resource for over a billion people around the world. via NASA https://ift.tt/2YaNZL0

Dear Prudence Podcast: Help! My Husband Finally Admitted He’s a Sex Addict, but I Still Don’t Trust Him.

I Saw My Teen Self in Reviving Ophelia. A New Edition Asks: Do Teen Girls Still Need Saving?

Dear Care and Feeding: My Partner Says People in My Community Might Think I’m a Creep. I’m So Hurt.

Robert Mueller Will Testify Before Congress

Do You Really Have to Watch the Debates?

Mayor Pete’s Policing Problem


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Eric Logan, a black resident in South Bend, Indiana, was shot and killed by a police officer in the early morning hours on Father’s Day. Mayor Pete Buttigieg returned to the city, putting a halt to his presidential campaign, to deal with the fallout. The return home hasn’t been so welcoming.

Guest: Adam Wren, contributing editor at Politico and Indianapolis Monthly.

Podcast production by Mary Wilson, Jayson De Leon, and Ethan Brooks.



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It’s “The President Is Allegedly a Rapist” Week on Late Night TV

2019年6月25日 星期二

The Devastating Oddness of E. Jean Carroll’s Trump Accusation

For Joy-Ann Reid, Women Could Be The “Hungriest Constituency” in 2020—And Get What They Want.

Interview With an Old LGBTQ Person: Jeremiah Newton, Age 70, on Making Fun of the Cops at Stonewall

A Muslim and a Sikh Talk Racial and Religious Harassment

GOP Congressman Says If Children Don’t Like Their Desert Detention Camps They Should Just Leave and Go Wherever

ISS Daily Summary Report – 6/24/2019

57 Soyuz (57S) Departure: The 57S crew is scheduled to depart the ISS and return to Earth today. Hatch closure occurred at 3:10 PM CT with undock scheduled at 6:25 PM CT and landing at 9:48 PM CT at the Kazakhstan landing site. On Sunday, Oleg Kononenko transferred command of ISS to Aleksey Ovchinin and …

June 25, 2019 at 12:00AM
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Nobody Actually Knows What Forgiving Everyone’s Student Debt Would Cost

U.S. Border Patrol Is Refusing Citizen Donations Even as It Holds Migrant Children Without Access to Soap and Toothpaste

Trump-Supporting Murdoch Lieutenant at New York Post Reportedly Orders Stories on Latest Rape Allegation Taken Down

Expedition 59 Space Station Crew Lands Safely in Kazakhstan


The Soyuz MS-11 spacecraft is seen as it lands in a remote area near the town of Zhezkazgan, Kazakhstan with Expedition 59 crew members. via NASA https://go.nasa.gov/2X2EITM

NASA Technology Missions Launch on SpaceX Falcon Heavy

NASA technology demonstrations, which one day could help the agency get astronauts to Mars, and science missions, which will look at the space environment around Earth and how it affects us, have launched into space on a Falcon Heavy rocket.

June 25, 2019
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The Biggest Displacement Crisis That Almost No One Is Talking About

Trump Reportedly Has Mused to Aides About Ending U.S.-Japan Defense Treaty Because It’s Too “One-Sided”

Why Shaft Is a Bad Mother—(Shut Your Mouth!)

Help! My Sensitive Yogi Boyfriend Says His Racist Music is Art.

My Husband Says I’m “Withholding Sex.” He Hasn’t Bathed in Two Weeks.

Nancy Pelosi Is Taking the Wrong Lesson From Past Failed Impeachments

Beta Blockers Were a Miracle Cure for My Stage Fright. Then They Took Over My Life.

A Town Fights for Its Air


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For years the residents of St. John the Baptist Parish, Louisiana thought their town was simply the victim of bad luck. Suffering more than their share of illnesses. Almost everyone in the town knows someone that has died of cancer. It was only in July 2016 that the EPA informed the people of St. John that the local neoprene plant was emitting carcinogens, leaving the small town with the highest risk of cancer from air pollution in the whole nation. With the residents in a fight for their very lives, what could the way politicians reacted to another town’s poisonous air pollution tell us about why nobody has acted to save St. John, Louisiana?

Guest: Sharon Lerner, environmental reporter at the Intercept

Podcast production by Mary Wilson, Jayson De Leon, and Ethan Brooks.



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LightSail 2 Has Launched!

2019年6月24日 星期一

Ad Astra Frank Sietzen



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Monday’s “A Closer Look” Segment on Late Night With Seth Meyers Shows Just How Much the Show Has Changed During the Trump Era

NASA Astronaut Anne McClain, Crewmates Return from Space Station Mission

NASA astronaut Anne McClain and two of her Expedition 59 crewmates returned to Earth from the International Space Station Monday, landing safely in Kazakhstan at 10:47 p.m. EDT (8:47 a.m. Tuesday, June 25, local time) after months of science and four spacewalks aboard the microgravity laboratory.

June 25, 2019
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E. Jean Carroll’s Advice Columns Have Been Confronting Sick Sexual Power Dynamics for Decades

When It Would Make Sense for a Sports Franchise to Play in Two Cities


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In this week’s episode of Slate’s sports podcast Hang Up and Listen, Josh Levin is joined by Stefan Fatsis to discuss the United States’ win over Spain and other Women’s World Cup matters. Slate’s Joel Anderson then joins for a conversation with former NBA star David West about Zion Williamson, the NBA draft, and the Historical Basketball League—the startup that’s offering amateur players a new route to professionalism. Finally, Josh and Joel discuss the proposal to have the Tampa Bay Rays play half the season in Montreal.

Here are links to some of the articles and other items mentioned on the show:

• Slate’s Eric Betts on how worried the U.S. should be after its nail-biting win over Spain.

• Jere Longman in the New York Times: “For Spain, Investment Pays Off at the World Cup.”

• SB Nation’s Kim McCauley writes, “Cameroon is allowed to get upset without having to answer to your kids.”

Follow Joel Anderson on Twitter.

Follow David West on Twitter.

• In Slate, Nick Greene wrote that Zion Williamson’s emotional interview was the best moment of the NBA draft.

LaMelo Ball is playing in Australia next year.

• The Wall Street Journal’s Brian Costa on West and the Historical Basketball League.

• Jeff Passan’s ESPN report on the Tampa Bay Rays exploring play half the season in Montreal.

• The Tampa Bay Times’ Marc Topkin on what’s behind the Rays’ plan.

Why the Golden State Warriors are called the Golden State Warriors

Hang Up and Listen’s weekly cownose rays:

Joel’s cownose ray: The UConn football program has some lovely new locker rooms and no clear future.

Josh’s cownose ray: Remember Toby Kimball, who brought a workers’ compensation claim due to the knee injuries he suffered in the NBA.

On this week’s Slate Plus bonus segment, Josh asks Joel to name his favorite and least favorite college sports towns. (Athens, Georgia: good. Eugene, Oregon: bad.)

Podcast production and edit by Melissa Kaplan.

You can email us at hangup@slate.com.



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Roseanne Barr and Andrew Dice Clay Announce Politically Incorrect Pilgrimage Across America

The Fathers Project Is a Vision of Queer Utopia Without AIDS. But Online Censorship Is Making It Hard to See.

Wig’s Nostalgia for a “Realer” Era of Drag Blinds It From Queens Reinventing the Art Today

How Worried Should the U.S. Be After Its Nail-Biting Win Over Spain?

The Angle: What if Anti-Vaxxers Weren’t to Blame for the Recent Measles Outbreaks?

Humans Can’t Watch All the Surveillance Footage Out There—so Computers Are

LightSail 2 is Ready for Launch

What You Need to Know About the Crisis at the Border

Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Mark Hamill, and Annette Bening Want to Help You Get Through the Mueller Report

Help! My Daughter Won’t Talk to Me Because I Left Her Dog Out of My Will.

Bernie Sanders’ Plan to Forgive All Student Debt Doesn’t Make Much Sense

Interview With an Old LGBTQ Person: Barbara Satin, Age 85, on Her Ministry of Trans Presence

The Supreme Court’s Naughty Trademarks Ruling Shows Why It Must Also Kill Partisan Gerrymandering

NASA Leads The World In Astrobiology. Wow, Who Knew?

NASA Can't Figure Out What Astrobiology Is - Or Who Does It, earlier post

"If you go to the main NASA science page (which makes no mention of "Astrobiology") and use the search function to search for "astrobiology" you get a search results page that says "no results found" but has some old Astrobiology press releases from 2008."



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John Oliver Fake-Climbs Mount Everest to Prove It’s Probably Not Worth It

Preparing for the Expedition 59 Space Station Crew Landing


NASA astronaut and Astronaut Office Representative Joe Acaba is seen along with other NASA, Canadian Space Agency and Roscosmos teams as they deploy from Karaganda for the Expedition 59 landing. via NASA https://go.nasa.gov/2ZHnOMh

NASA CIO Misses Little Things That Could Cause Big Problems

Raspberry Pi used to steal data from Nasa lab, BBC

"An audit report reveals the gadget was used to take about 500MB of data. It said two of the files that were taken dealt with the international transfer of restricted military and space technology. The attacker who used the device to hack the network went undetected for about 10 months. The malicious hacker won access to the Jet Propulsion Lab internal network via the Raspberry Pi by hijacking its user account. Although the Pi had been attached to the network by the employee, lax controls over logging meant Nasa administrators did not know it was present, said the report. This oversight left the vulnerable device unmonitored on the network, allowing the attacker to take control of it and use it to steal data."

NASA OIG Finds Pervasive Problems With JPL Cybersecurity, earlier post

"Multiple IT security control weaknesses reduce JPL's ability to prevent, detect, and mitigate attacks targeting its systems and networks, thereby exposing NASA systems and data to exploitation by cyber criminals."

Report: "JPL did not have complete and accurate information about the types, location, and value of NASA system components and assets connected to its network. ... The April 2018 cyberattack exploited this particular weakness when the hacker accessed the JPL network by targeting a Raspberry Pi computer that was not authorized to be attached to the JPL network.32 The device should not have been permitted on the JPL network without the JPL OCIO's review and approval."

NASA Needs A New Chief Information Officer, earlier post

"NASA's CIO has been asleep at the wheel for years. Its time for a reboot."



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My Mom Texted Everyone Her Excitement That My Sister Had a Boy. Doesn’t She Care About Her Granddaughters?

My Husband Wants to Watch Me Have Sex With Another Man. I Think I Love That Idea a Little Too Much.

The Anti-Vaxxer Movement Isn’t Really Growing

An Iran Deal Architect Watches It Get Nuked


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Last week, a series of escalations brought the US to the brink of a strike on Iran. But only a few short years ago, the leaders of both countries were celebrating a landmark nuclear agreement. What changed? One of the architects of the Iran Nuclear Deal takes us through the journey, and lays out the Trump Administration’s limited options in the coming weeks.

Guest: Ambassador Wendy Sherman, former Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs

Podcast production by Mary Wilson, Jayson De Leon, and Ethan Brooks



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2019年6月23日 星期日

Watch Cardi B’s Scorching Performance of “Clout” and “Press” at the BET Awards

Watch the Trailer for The Terror: Infamy, a Work of Historical Fiction With No Relevance to Anything Our Country Is Currently Doing

Can France Keep Winning Like This?

All the Things That Can Go Awry When Parents Bring Their Kids to Work

Texas Mom Accused of Killing 3-Year-Old Son in Game of “Chicken” With SUV

This Twitter Choose Your Own Adventure Story About Working as Beyoncé’s Assistant Is a Triumph of Humanity

Trump: “Biggest Mistake” of Presidency Was Appointing Jeff Sessions as Attorney General

Trump Brushes Off Call for FBI Probe Into Khashoggi, Cites Importance of Saudi Arms Sales

What’s It Like to Run an Aquarium?


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Listen to Working via Apple Podcasts, Overcast, Spotify, Stitcher, or Google Play.

What do you do with an architecture degree and a love of animals? Well, as it turns out, running an aquarium is a great option. This week, Working brings you another stand-alone episode with Jon Forrest Dohlin, director of the Wildlife Conservation Society’s New York Aquarium.

Jon tells Jordan all about the joys of the job, like educating city-dwellers about all the unseen wildlife around them, and the existential dread that comes with it—like holding the lives of thousands of animals in your hands every day.

You can email us at working@slate.com.

Podcast production by Jessamine Molli.



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Trump Says “Probably Not” Prepared to Lose in 2020, Doesn’t Believe He Lost Popular Vote

Police Arrest 70 Climate Change Protesters Outside New York Times Building

'Green' Alternative Fuel Set for First In-Space Test


Satellites love hydrazine – a type of space propellant – but it’s toxic to people and extremely difficult to handle. A non-toxic alternative will be put to the test with NASA’s Green Propellant Infusion Mission (GPIM), set to launch on a SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket. via NASA https://go.nasa.gov/2N69GuQ

Trump Denies He Threatened to Demote Powell (But Says He Has Authority to Do So)

This Is the Best U.S. Women’s Soccer Team Ever

Toy Story 4’s Forky Has Horrifying Metaphysical Implications for the Toy Story Universe

2019年6月22日 星期六

Carina Nebula Panorama from Hubble


How do violent stars affect their surroundings? To help find out, astronomers created a 48-frame high-resolution, controlled-color panorama of the center of the Carina Nebula, one of the largest star forming regions on the night sky. The featured image, taken in 2007, was the most detailed image of the Carina Nebula yet taken. Cataloged as NGC 3372, the Carina Nebula is home to streams of hot gas, pools of cool gas, knots of dark globules, and pillars of dense dusty interstellar matter. The Keyhole Nebula, visible left of center, houses several of the most massive stars known. These large and violent stars likely formed in dark globules and continually reshape the nebula with their energetic light, outflowing stellar winds, and ultimately by ending their lives in supernova explosions. Visible to the unaided eye, the entire Carina Nebula spans over 450 light years and lies about 8,500 light-years away toward the constellation of Ship's Keel (Carina). via NASA https://go.nasa.gov/2N5te2s

George Conway: Republicans Who Believed Juanita Broaddrick Should Believe New Claims Against Trump

Trump Goes on Tirade to Deny Latest Assault Allegation: Women “Paid Money” to Make False Claims

Trump Defends Planned Deportations as Cities Brace for Mass Raids

Tucker Carlson Was One of the People Who Talked Trump Out of Attacking Iran

New Splits and New Rules at the Supreme Court


A flurry of decisions this week, but few big-ticket items. Mark Joseph Stern takes us through the opinions and dissents in Flowers v. Mississippi, Gundy v. United States. and American Legion v. American Humanist Association. Dahlia Lithwick is also joined by Jed Shugerman and Andrew Kent of Fordham University Law School, two of the authors of the Harvard Law Review article “Faithful Execution and Article II,” which examines whether the Constitution holds the president to some higher standard than not just not doing crimes.

To listen to this episode of Amicus, use the player below:

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All-Natural Deodorants Are a Scam, but Honestly, Antiperspirants Are a Scam Too

Help! I Resent My Husband for Being a Stay-at-Home Dad.

A Philosopher Examines the Meaning of YOLO


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Drake coined “YOLO,” short for “you only live once,” in 2011, and then later apologized for all the douchiness it subsequently engendered. But the spirit is ancient, and cross-cultural, perhaps speaking deeply to the kind of decision-making that is supposed to make for the good life. It says that risk is what makes for a good life—but is that true?

This week, we take calls from listeners about their YOLO stories. We follow two college buddies who venture into the Malaysian jungle, naked, with nothing but a machete and oodles of YouTube survivalist knowledge.

Philosopher Nick Riggle meditates on the significance of YOLO, and why maybe living twice, or an infinite number of times, makes no difference to the value we place on adventure and risk-taking. The spirit of YOLO, then, might have nothing to do with living once, but rather about living at all.

Guest voices include James Moynihan, Daniel Olifi, Nick Riggle, and many Hi-Phi Nation listeners.

For all back episodes from Seasons 1 and 2 of Hi-Phi Nation, visit www.hiphination.org.
Facebook: www.facebook.com/hiphination/
Email: hiphination@slate.com
Twitter: @hiphination



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Toy Story 4 Escapes the Curse of the Feminized Sequel

2019年6月21日 星期五

Slate Money: The Literally Making Money Edition


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Listen to Slate Money via Apple Podcasts, Overcast, Spotify, Stitcher, or Google Play.

This week, Slate Money talk about Libra, Facebook’s new cryptocurrency; the merits of upzoning; and the Beyond Meat IPO.

And in the Slate Plus segment: The billionaire who bought Sotheby’s.

Email: slatemoney@slate.com
Twitter: @felixsalmon, @Three_Guineas, @EmilyRPeck

Podcast production by Jessamine Molli.



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Ares 3 Landing Site: The Martian Revisited


This close-up from the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter's HiRISE camera shows weathered craters and windblown deposits in southern Acidalia Planitia. A striking shade of blue in standard HiRISE image colors, to the human eye the area would probably look grey or a little reddish. But human eyes have not gazed across this terrain, unless you count the eyes of NASA astronauts in the scifi novel The Martian by Andy Weir. The novel chronicles the adventures of Mark Watney, an astronaut stranded at the fictional Mars mission Ares 3 landing site corresponding to the coordinates of this cropped HiRISE frame. For scale Watney's 6-meter-diameter habitat at the site would be about 1/10th the diameter of the large crater. Of course, the Ares 3 landing coordinates are only about 800 kilometers north of the (real life) Carl Sagan Memorial Station, the 1997 Pathfinder landing site. via NASA https://go.nasa.gov/2ZEWoH2

“Postmate It,” Postmates’ New Slogan, Is a Grammatical Disaster

In a Gentrifying Los Angeles, Vida’s Second Season Finds Only Hard Choices

Netflix’s Tales of the City Gives Me Hope for Queer Intergenerational Communication

Even Tan France and John Mulaney Are Surprised They’re the Same Age

Lil Nas X’s New EP Proves He’s More Than a One-Trick Pony

Should Insurance Companies Pay Ransomware Demands?

ISS Daily Summary Report – 6/20/2019

Fiber Optic Production (FOP): The crew performed a preform and spool exchange allowing the ground to initiate a print run. The Hardware was then removed from the Microgravity Science Glovebox (MSG) and stowed. The Fiber Optic Production investigation creates optical fibers with high commercial value aboard the ISS using a blend of zirconium, barium, lanthanum, …

June 21, 2019 at 12:00AM
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ESA to Launch Comet Interceptor Mission in 2028

Milestone Achieved as X-57 Mod II Takes Shape


The electric motors for X-57’s Mod II vehicle and their propellers were powered up and spun together for the first time as part of an integrated spin test. via NASA https://go.nasa.gov/2Lcdesy

Early Morning Explosions Set Off Massive Fire at a Philadelphia Oil Refinery

The refinery is the largest on the eastern seaboard and the 10th largest in the country.

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France Kicks Data Scientists Out of Its Courts

A Genius Peach Cobbler With a So-Wrong-It’s-Right Hot Sugar Crust

Trump Authorized an Airstrike on Iran Then Called It Off With Planes Already in the Air

Dear Care and Feeding: My Son’s Fortnite Rage Is Making Us All Miserable

Think You’re Smarter Than the Editorial Director for Slate Podcasts? Find Out With This Week’s News Quiz.

The Surge: Elizabeth Warren Achieves Liftoff


3. Joe Biden

He said something he shouldn’t have, again.

The front-runner is currently experiencing his worst crisis since announcing his campaign in April (and second-worst since the inappropriate touching accusations that came out just before). At a fundraiser in New York earlier this week, Biden harkened back to his early years in the ’70s when the Senate still had unreconstructed segregationist senators, but “at least there was some civility. We got things done.” Progressives, along with aforementioned lower-polling candidates looking to catch a break, hammered Biden for the walk down memory lane, suggesting he shouldn’t be touting his interpersonal relationships with some of history’s greatest monsters. Biden has refused to apologize, saying that his point was merely that it’s important to forge consensus where possible even with the worst sorts of people. Though this is an ongoing media mess for Biden that he’d do well to put behind him, we’re not sure yet it will make any difference in his polling. Older Democrats, his strongest demographic, have previously dismissed what younger progressives and the media viewed as five-alarm outrages, and a lot of voters enjoy happy talk about the good old days of “gettin’ stuff done,” even with white supremacists. In the long run, though, if Biden’s mouth keeps running loosely—a very good bet—it could accumulate into a serious dent in his chief asset as a candidate: perceived electability. If that perception dissipates, then so does Joe Biden.



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The Upright Citizens Brigade Theatre Revolutionized Comedy. Can It Survive a Tough New Era?

The Smugglers Getting Rich Off Trump’s Policies

2019年6月20日 星期四

Sunset Analemma


Today, the solstice is at 15:54 Universal Time, the Sun reaching the northernmost declination in its yearly journey through planet Earth's sky. A June solstice marks the astronomical beginning of summer in the northern hemisphere and winter in the south. It also brings the north's longest day, the longest period between sunrise and sunset. In fact the June solstice sun is near the top, at the most northern point in the analemma or figure 8 curve traced by the position of the Sun in this composite photo. The analemma was created (video) from images taken every 10 days at the same time from June 21, 2018 and June 7, 2019. The time was chosen to be the year's earliest sunset near the December solstice, so the analemma's lowest point just kisses the unobstructed sea horizon at the left. Sunsets arranged along the horizon toward the right (north) are centered on the sunset at the September equinox and end with sunset at the June solstice. via NASA https://go.nasa.gov/2NaEZV0

If The Current Message Does Not Work Then Get A New Message



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How Does an Algorithm Know the Music I Like?


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On The Gist, are children growing horns?

In the interview, how does Pandora know what music I want to hear? That’s all thanks to the work of Nolan Gasser, musicologist and the architect of Pandora’s Music Genome Project. He’s here to talk the origins of the project, the classification of music species, and why Sarah McLachlan fans might be in for a surprise. Gasser’s new book is Why You Like It: The Science & Culture of Musical Taste.

In the Spiel, the most ambitious climate deal the world has ever seen.

Join the discussion of this episode on Facebook.

Email: thegist@slate.com
Twitter: @slategist

Podcast production by Daniel Schroeder and Pierre Bienaimé.



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Zion Williamson’s Emotional Interview Was the Best Moment of the NBA Draft

This Passage From Hope Hicks’ Testimony Crystalizes the Inanity of the Democratic Impeachment Stance

If Trump Actually Deported Millions of Immigrants, There Could Be Food Shortages Within Days

RockOn! and RockSat-C: Launching Student Experiments to Space


At 5:30 a.m. EDT Thursday, June 20, 2019, a 40-foot tall rocket carrying 28 student experiments (measuring acceleration, humidity, pressure, temperature and radiation counts) launched from Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia. via NASA https://go.nasa.gov/2x555ht

GAO Notes Continued Delays In NASA Commercial Crew

NASA commercial Crew Program: Schedule Uncertainty Persists for Start of Operational Missions to the International Space

"As of May 2019, both contractors had delayed certification nine times, equating to more than 2 years from their original contracts (see figure). This includes several delays since GAO last reported in July 2018. ... NASA's ability to process certification data packages for its two contractors continues to create uncertainty about the timing of certification. The program has made progress conducting these reviews but much work remains. In addition, the program allowed both contractors to delay submitting evidence that they have met some requirements. This deferral has increased the amount of work remaining for the program prior to certification. In February 2019, NASA acknowledged that delays to certification could continue, and announced plans to extend U.S. access to the ISS through September 2020 by purchasing seats on the Russian Soyuz vehicle."



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Biden Now Demanding That Cory Booker Apologize for Saying That Segregation Was Bad

ISS Daily Summary Report – 6/19/2019

Materials International Space Station Experiment-11 (MISSE-11): Robotics Ground Controllers swapped MISSE Mission Science Carrier-5 (MSC-5) and MISSE MSC-6 positions. The ground then  commanded theElectrodynamic Dust Shield (EDS) hardware located in MSC-6 to an active status and verified full door open/closing capability. MSC-5 which is a passive payload was only able to open its hinge doors …

June 20, 2019
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Risk And Exploration Go Hand In Hand

Blood and Money, Wayne Hale

"We must have a clear-eyed appreciation for the risk involved in space exploration. Flying to the moon will not be much safer in 2024 than it was in 1969. Exploration always comes with risk, and with some regularity exploration risk is realized. The real cost of Artemis will be written in blood. Face that fact. This may be considered a poor time to bring this up - at a time when so many folks are actively working toward program approval. Death is hardly a selling point. But if we don't recognize that fact, the program will come apart at the first bad day."

Administrators Symposium on Risk and Exploration: Earth, Sea and the Stars, NASA (2004)

"Challenge fosters excellence, often drawing on previously untapped skills and abilities. Each of us takes and accepts risk as a part of our daily existence. We often go out of our way to seek challenge. However, seeking challenge often means accepting a high level of risk. The dictionary defi nes risk as being exposed to hazard or danger. To accept risk is to accept possible loss or injury, even death. One of the key issues that continues to be debated in the tragedy of the Space Shuttle Columbia is the level of risk NASA accepted. And, ultimately, the entire nation is now engaged in a broader debate over whether or not the exploration of space is worth the risk of human life. While risk can often be reduced or controlled, there comes a point when the removal of all risk is either impossible or so impractical that it completely undermines the very nature of what NASA was created to do--to pioneer the future. Everyone today understands that human space exploration is a risky endeavor. However, the quest for discovery and knowledge, and the risks involved in overcoming seemingly insurmountable obstacles is not unique to NASA. Whether the challenge is exploring the depths of our oceans or reaching the top of our highest mountains, great feats usually involve great risk."

Fortuna Audaces Juvat, @JimBridenstine, earlier post

"During that time when the VSE was seen as a refreshing recommitment to exploration post-Columbia - there was a momentary alliance between all factions. People thought bold adventurous thoughts again. Back to the Moon and then on to Mars. Craig Steidle was looking to do some branding and meme generation. He hit on one thing that was really ballsy (larger image) . The motto was "Fortuna Audaces Juvat" which is usually translated as a variant of "Fortune favors the bold" - a latin proverb most prominently repeated in Virgil's "Aeneid" at 10.284. You have no doubt seen this phrase before. Its common in the military - for good reasons. It has a Star Trek vibe to it. Craig Steidel drew a line in the sand and provided a motto to wear on one's shoulders as the agency set forth back into space. I thought it was a master stroke. Too bad NASA doesn't do things like this any more."

Keith's note: Wayne Hale's words ring true in a way we seem to be forgetting again. In 2004 John Grunsfeld and I organized a symposium on Risk and Exploration for Sean O'Keefe. At the core of this event was an attempt to compare risks faced - and accepted by NASA and those faced and accepted by other explorers. We held this event barely a year after the loss of Columbia - so these risk evaluations were foremost in everyone's minds. This event had a big effect on people's thinking - including Wayne Hale who ordered a box of copies of the Symposium's proceedings to use to educate his staff at JSC. So now here we are in 2019. We've had several accidents or "mishaps" as we develop commercial crew flights while flying on Soyuz spacecraft. NASA is now talking about skipping a "green test" - and all-up firing of the SLS first stage so that we can meet a rushed deadline - one set with little warning - to land humans on the Moon in 5 years.

Yes fortune does often favor the bold. But it also punishes the ill-prepared.



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Lindsay Lohan’s Beach Club Is Dead. I’m Mad!

The Artemis Generation Doesn't Seem To Be Interested In Artemis

Space Exploration: Attitudes toward the U.S. Space Program, AP

"There is not overwhelming enthusiasm for returning to the moon. In March, Vice President Mike Pence called for NASA to send astronauts to the moon within five years. Forty-two percent favor that idea, while 20% oppose and 38% neither favor nor oppose. Thirty-seven percent say sending astronauts to Mars should take precedence over going back to the moon, while 18% would rather have NASA send more astronauts to the moon. But 43% do not think either action should be a priority for the country. While about half of Americans would take the opportunity to orbit the Earth, most say they have no interest in traveling to the moon or Mars. Space travel has more appeal for younger adults."

Back To The Moon - By Any Means Necessary, earlier post

"If Jim Bridenstine can craft the proverbial "elevator speech" that gets everyone, everywhere on board with Artemis - whether it is in the Halls of Congress or in a Walmart parking lot in 'Flyover Country' - then there will be no stopping NASA. Right now, PR slogans aside, the only clear reason we have is a directive from the White House with a delivery date that is equal to the length of a second term. Why isn't all of America buzzing about going back to the Moon? If NASA and Jim Bridenstine can answer that question then they will be well along the path of understanding how to find that elusive "Why" that Artemis is currently lacking."

Keith's note: It seems that this poll is answering my question. A lack of overt enthusiasm for Artemis and returning to the Moon may well reflect what the country is thinking right now. That can change - but only if the proponents for space exploration - be they NASA employees - or just regular citizens - need to make a better case for doing things in space. Absent that the polls are going to continue to be showing mediocre support.



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How Three Women Made Trump’s Lies Palatable to the Public


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On this week’s episode of the Waves, Christina, Marcia, and Nichole discuss the Women’s World Cup. The U.S. Women’s National Soccer Team came under fire for celebrating every goal when they defeated the Thai team 13–0—but “sportsmanship” has long been used to police how women and people of color conduct themselves on the field. Was the criticism fair, and what might this World Cup might reveal about women’s sports more generally? Then, Sarah Huckabee Sanders’ departure from the White House has sparked an evaluation of the ways in which she, Hope Hicks, and Kellyanne Conway made the president’s lies palatable to the public. The trio is among the most prominent women in the Trump administration—how did their gender factor into their work as communicators (or obfuscators) of his intentions? Finally, the hosts debate the likely efficacy of the U.K.’s ban on sexist stereotypes in advertising, considering how companies have historically signaled certain values and how that might change in the age of increasingly targeted advertising.

In Slate Plus, a question from a listener: Is homework sexist?

Other items discussed on the show:

• “Scoring 13 Against Thailand Was Great, Some of the US Celebrations Were Not” by Hope Solo in the Guardian
• “How the U.S. Government Is Failing Women’s Soccer” by Hampton Dellinger in Politico
• “The 2019 World Cup Has Become a Referendum on Women’s Sports” by Louisa Thomas in the New Yorker
• “All the President’s Lying Ladies—Hicks, Sanders and Conway—Make News” by Virginia Heffernan in the Los Angeles Times
• “The Genius of Sarah Huckabee Sanders” by Lili Loofbourow in Slate
• “How Kellyanne Conway Became the Greatest Spin Doctor in Modern American History” by Lili Loofbourow in the Week
• “Hope Hicks Left the White House. Now She Must Decide Whether to Talk to Congress.” by Maggie Haberman in the New York Times
• “The Puzzle of Sarah Huckabee Sanders” by Jason Schwartz in Politico Magazine
• “Gender Stereotypes Banned in British Advertising” by Valeriya Safronova in the New York Times
• “UK Advertising Watchdog to Crack Down on Sexist Stereotypes” by Jim Waterson in the Guardian
• “Cheerios Commercial Featuring Mixed Race Family Gets Racist Backlash” by Braden Goyette in HuffPost

Recommendations

Nichole: Jami Attenberg’s 1,000 Words of Summer challenge

Marcia:Smash the Wellness Industry” by Jessica Knoll in the New York Times and “The Fitness Craze That Changed the Way Women Exercise” by Natalia Mehlman Petrzela

Christina: Tales of the City on Netflix

This podcast was produced by Danielle Hewitt, with board operation assistance by June Thomas. Our production assistant is Alex Barasch.

Please remember to like our Facebook page. Send your comments and recommendations on what to cover to thewaves@slate.com.



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Avengers: Endgame Is Returning to Theaters in Search of Avatar’s Box-Office Record

Coverage Set for NASA Tech Missions Launching on SpaceX Falcon Heavy

NASA Television coverage is scheduled for an upcoming prelaunch activity and first nighttime launch of a SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket, which will be carrying four agency technology missions to help improve future spacecraft design and performance.

June 20, 2019
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Who Elizabeth Warren’s Child Care Plan Really Helps

Philadelphia Pulls 72 Cops After Watchdog Uncovers Thousands of Officers’ Violent, Racist Social Media Posts

Predictions About the Future of Farming Rarely Involve Farmers

Iran Says It Shot Down U.S. Drone to Send a Message: “We Are Ready for War”

Iran Says It Shot Down U.S. Drone to Send a Message: “We Are Ready for War”

Help! My Dad Found a Girlfriend Two Months After My Mom Died.

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2019年6月19日 星期三

A View Toward M106


Big, bright, beautiful spiral, Messier 106 dominates this cosmic vista. The nearly two degree wide telescopic field of view looks toward the well-trained constellation Canes Venatici, near the handle of the Big Dipper. Also known as NGC 4258, M106 is about 80,000 light-years across and 23.5 million light-years away, the largest member of the Canes II galaxy group. For a far away galaxy, the distance to M106 is well-known in part because it can be directly measured by tracking this galaxy's remarkable maser, or microwave laser emission. Very rare but naturally occurring, the maser emission is produced by water molecules in molecular clouds orbiting its active galactic nucleus. Another prominent spiral galaxy on the scene, viewed nearly edge-on, is NGC 4217 below and right of M106. The distance to NGC 4217 is much less well-known, estimated to be about 60 million light-years. via NASA https://go.nasa.gov/2Y3W18C

SpaceX Looks At November Launch For Crewed Dragon Mission

Space Exploration Technologies Corp. Application For Special Temporary Authority (FCC)

"This application uses information from previous grant 0068-EX-ST-2019. This STA is necessary for Dragon2 capsule telemetry, tracking, and command, for the upcoming SpaceX Commercial Crew vehicle demonstration mission to the International Space Station. The launch and re-entry licensing authority is the FAA. Launch is also to be coordinated with the Eastern Range. On-orbit rendezvous with the ISS is to be coordinated with the NASA.

Requested Period of Operation
Operation Start Date: 11/01/2019
Operation End Date: 05/01/2020"



from NASA Watch http://bit.ly/2MTy2Yj
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