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Photo taken from deck of Warren's home.

On Space Travel

Anyone who knows me or reads my blog knows that I’m fascinated by the possibility that we Earthlings have been visited by beings of extraterrestrial origin. I like to watch shows about sightings and such to see what sort of evidence is offered to substantiate the various claims.

I remain unconvinced that we’ve been visited by ETs but there are things that cannot be explained, credible witnesses that it is hard to dismiss. All of which is to say that I find this topic interesting.

One of the things that bugs me about UFO sightings are the people who ponder the UFO’s rapid course changes and always hypothesize that the craft must have some sort of “inertial compensation” to prevent the occupants from being squished by the G-forces generated when the craft (if it is a craft) abruptly makes a right-angle turn while going 4000 MPH.

Newton’s first law of motion says that an object in motion tends to stay in motion unless acted on by an external force. That is, it has inertia. So, an object moving at 4000 MPH in a particular direction will tend to maintain that speed and direction until acted upon by an external force. The same goes for the contents of an object. Put a grape into a glass jar and give it a good shake. Imagine that the jar is a spacecraft and the grape is some hapless occupant. Poor guy.

After a few shakes, simulating rapid course changes, you can see why some folks might think that inertial compensation is needed. Something has to protect the pilot from inertia, right?

OK, on this point I have to clarify just a bit. Inertia will not harm the pilot. Moving at a great, but constant velocity results in some fixed amount of inertia. Newton’s second law tells us that force is equal to mass times acceleration. If acceleration is zero (as when at constant velocity), there is no force acting on the pilot. The force comes when the craft speeds up, slows down or changes direction. That’s when the pilot will experience G-forces due to acceleration. So, inertia is not the culprit here, acceleration is. So, what’s really needed is acceleration compensation.

Coming from an engineering background and having worked on industrial controls for decades, I can say that any “inertial compensation” system would have to be perfect. A miscalibration of even a fraction of one percent could be fatal, given the tremendous G-forces involved. No beings capable of interstellar flight would dare trust their lives to an inertial compensator. Nor would they have to.

The inertial compensation school of thought is based on yesterday’s technology. Rockets are old tech, very old. Rockets work on the action-reaction principle. The rocket expels hot gasses out one end (an action) and the rocket engine itself is accelerated in the opposite direction (a reaction) by a force equal to and opposite the direction of the expelled gasses. Basic physics: for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. (This is Newton’s third law of motion.)

The rocket is attached to the frame of the craft and thus accelerates the craft and its contents. Within the craft, the pilot’s seat, being attached to the accelerating craft structure is itself accelerated and thus accelerates the pilot occupant. The pilot, accelerated by the seat, is subjected to G-forces as the seat presses against his back, causing his internal organs to be accelerated in turn. The inertia of his internal organs will tend to keep them going in the same direction at the same speed until the external force transferred from the rocket engine to the craft frame, to the seat, to the pilot’s back and finally to his innards gets everything going in the same direction at the same velocity.

Now imagine a rocket ship that makes a right angle turn at 4000 MPH. Inertia will tend to keep the pilot going in the direction he was while the rest of the craft makes a right-angle turn. The acceleration forces on his body would tear it apart. What to do?

There was a time when people said the human body could never withstand speeds of 50 MPH on a train pulled by a steam locomotive. So too, people who want to cobble together some sort of inertial compensation system are living in the past.

I believe that future propulsion systems will operate by generating a force field which accelerates everything within it equally. Every molecule, every atom, every neutron and electron within the field will be acted upon equally, thus doing away with the need for an “external force” to accelerate the craft.

Instead, the propulsion controls will simply change the direction and magnitude of the force field that is applied to the craft and its contents. Since everything within the field will experience the same acceleration at any given instant, there is no danger of squishing.

Newtons laws would still apply, of course, and running into an asteroid or a planet would still have dire consequences for the craft and its occupants. But occupants of the craft will not even feel any effects of the propulsion system’s output — even right angle turns at 4000 MPH would go unnoticed.

Does there exist such a force, one that can accelerate everything within it equally? Well, sure. Gravity is one such. People have long surmised that flying saucers have “anti-gravity” propulsion systems. They may not be much off the mark. There’s no reason to suppose we won’t eventually figure out how gravity works and how to generate gravity-like forces.

Humans have only recently realized that more of the universe is made up of “dark matter” than matter we can see and have hypothesized that it is a force called “dark energy” that is causing the universe to expand at an ever-increasing rate. Perhaps future spacecraft will employ dark energy drives. Dark energy is in great abundance; it makes up more than 70% of all mass-energy in the entire universe. When we harness it, we’ll have abundant power with no “carbon footprint.”

It will eventually come to pass that propulsion systems employing Newtonian physics will be a thing of the past. And there will be no need to “inertial compensators” even when doing right-angle turns at 4000 MPH.

The “Ground Zero” Mosque

It’s been in the news for a while now — the mosque that Muslims want to build near the site of “Ground Zero” — the former site of the World Trade Center twin towers that were felled on 9/11/2001 by suicidal Muslims invoking the name of Allah. It’s time I weighed in on this.

I think Muslims have a right to build their mosque(s) anywhere they can get zoning approval — just like any other religious meeting place, church, temple or facility. I’m OK with their “right” to do so a short distance from Ground Zero. Fine.
It’s just very rude and insensitive.

Americans are constantly being chided for not showing “sensitivity” to other cultures around the world. Isn’t it about time Muslims showed us some? Do Muslims truly not understand why people would be offended by this apparent thumb in the eye of New Yorkers, of Americans?

The U.S., for its part, carefully avoids damaging mosques even in war zones, lest it be perceived as anti-Muslim. Is it too much to ask that Muslims be just a tad sensitive to non-Muslims regarding the ground zero mosque? Apparently, it is.

After all, infidels are not to be tolerated, much less coddled.

Who’s The Boss?

When it comes time to determine whether the federal government of the United States (FedGov) is acting constitutionally in any given situation, the issue is very simple: What does the Constitution say? If the power being exercised by FedGov is not one granted by the states to FedGov, then FedGov is acting unconstitutionally. Simple, really.

Except, of course, that reasonable people can and do disagree on what the Constitution says and means. Some will read it narrowly while others will read it as granting much broader powers to FedGov. When there’s disagreement then, who should decide? We can’t just toss a coin (though I would argue that we’d be better off with a coin toss than the current system, which heavily favors FedGov).

Who gets to decide (more importantly, who should decide) what the Constitution means? To answer that question we must first answer another:

Who’s the boss?  Who’s in charge?

Is FedGov the “boss” of the states or are the states the “boss” of FedGov?

I am of the opinion that the states, having created FedGov and having set forth the rules for its operation (that’s what the Constitution is — rules for running FedGov), are the boss of FedGov.

It seems unlikely to me that the states would have created FedGov, intentionally making FedGov its own boss and thus giving it, essentially, unlimited powers. Bosses, after all, can make the rules. The hired help is supposed to follow them. FedGov is just the states’ hired help. The hired help should not be making the rules or deciding what they mean. The boss should do that.

The system we have now has the Supreme Court Of The United States (SCOTUS) exercising “judicial review” of the laws and regulations of the Legislative and Executive branches of FedGov. Any challenges to FedGov’s laws have to be made through FedGov’s own Judicial branch. Not surprisingly, FedGov most always finds that its laws are “constitutional” and it is very rare indeed that SCOTUS strikes down challenged laws.

A point I cannot emphasize enough is that, in exercising “judicial review,” SCOTUS is itself acting unconstitutionally. Judicial Review is not a power granted to FedGov by the states. That makes exercise of that power unconstitutional — against the bosses’ rules.

If judicial review is unconstitutional, how does SCOTUS get away with it? The answer is Marbury v Madison, a landmark case from more than 200 years ago in which SCOTUS set forth a rationalization for assuming this new power.

In Marbury, the Supreme Court explains that, while they were not able to find the actual power of Judicial Review anywhere mentioned in the Constitution, they nonetheless found it in “the particular phraseology of the constitution…”

‘The power is not actually there, but we can sense it,’ said the court in Marbury. They may as well have held a seance and then announced that the spirit of the Constitution appeared to  them and told them what they hoped to hear. This is pretty much the justification given by the Supreme Court for all subsequent expansions of FedGov power: “We know it’s in there; we can feel it.”

The states created FedGov and gave it rules by which to operate (the Constitution). The states are the ‘boss’ of FedGov — all of FedGov, including SCOTUS. It’s about time the states started acting like it.

We can’t go on letting FedGov make its own rules. SCOTUS has been complicit, nay, instrumental in FedGov’s ceaseless expansion of exercised powers. FedGov’s legislative and executive branches seize powers not granted to them by the states in the Constitution and FedGov’s Judicial branch upholds these usurpations, finding them “constitutional.”

The Constitution’s “checks and balances” prevent any one branch of FedGov from becoming too powerful. But there is no protection for the States and the People, when the Legislative, Executive and Judicial branches, acting in concert, usurp powers rightly reserved to the States and the People by the Tenth Amendment.

The states, who should have been keeping FedGov in check since its inception, have let Marbury v. Madison’s precedent take hold and have sat idly by for more than 200 years while their own reserved powers have been slowly drained away. The states seem to mistakenly believe that decisions regarding constitutionality are “above their pay grade.” The states don’t seem to realize that they are the “boss.”

Our entire body of “constitutional law” is based on the fiction that FedGov is its own boss. It’s time that the real bosses, the states, exercised control over FedGov as they should have been doing all along.

FedGov Takes Over My TV

In the past, when a government agency felt it needed to communicate with me via my television, it ran a “crawler” across the bottom of my screen. While annoying, it was not overly intrusive. The recent change to this mechanism is unacceptable.

Recently, this mechanism has changed. FedGov now takes over my TV receiver entirely. This includes my TV and my TiVo Digital Video Recorder (DVR). This escalation goes way beyond annoying.

Now, when I am watching a recording on my DVR and the national Weather Service decides I need to be warned about something, my DVR is taken out of playback mode and FedGov’s own screen replaces the movie or other content I had been watching. This is accompanied by a too-loud, piercing siren sound — because, apparently, I won’t have noticed that my movie just went bye-bye — and then an audio message accompanies the written message on the screen.

My DVR controls become disabled — I assume that the FCC has mandated inclusion of circuitry in my receiver that allows FedGov to take over my TV at will — and I am, even after viewing this intrusive message, unable to return to what I was watching until FedGov is ready to return control of my receiver to me.

This is unacceptable. Totally, completely unacceptable.

It is one thing to mandate inclusion of a V-chip in receivers; I can choose not to use it if it is not applicable to my situation. This new alerting mechanism allows me no choice. That’s just wrong.

I am opposed, in principle, to FedGov ever taking control of my TV or DVR without my consent. It’s just wrong and this recent escalation goes too far. There is, and can be no justification for this.

There is zero (0) chance that a flash flood will sweep through my family room while the wife and I are watching the big screen. None. Zero.

At the same time, it is highly unlikely that families encamped in a flash flood area are watching television.

I don’t care if a nuclear war breaks out — FedGov should not intrude into my home in this manner without my consent. Period.

I’ve talked to the cable company and they told me that the FCC requires that these messages be passed through to all viewers. There is no way to avoid them. This is wrong. Shame on FedGov and the FCC.

Now, if FedGov feels like making these advisories available, that’s fine, but employ a mechanism that allows people who are interested to subscribe to these alerts. Do not force them on all viewers. Were I a more outdoorsy type, I might subscribe but, as is, I have no use for any of these advisories and cannot recall ever having changed my behavior based on having received such a notice.

In point of fact, I have a weather band radio and, on the rare occasion that I need to consider the forecast in my plans, I get it straight from the National Weather Service. I don’t want or need these intrusions into my activities at home.

If I lived in tornado alley, I’d definitely subscribe to these alerts. But many people simply do not need them and they serve only to annoy and remind us of how very intrusive government has become.

As is, these notices are like spam email that cannot be filtered out.

Thrice Annoyed

While watching a recording this afternoon, it was interrupted by a live weather advisory for a county hundreds of miles away (living remotely as we do, we get cable TV from Phoenix — several hundred miles away), I noted that my DVR was also recording two shows at the time. This means I will, at a minimum, be “warned” about this same condition twice more when I watch each of the recordings that were interrupted by the alert. This for a condition that did not apply to me even when it was current! Too much. Too far. Unacceptable!

My wife and I are retired. We don’t get out much. TV is our primary recreation and FedGov has taken it upon itself to ruin this experience for us. Watching a movie this afternoon, I found that it included a weather advisory from the day it was recorded last week and when the advisory was ended and the movie was once again playing, pandemonium had broken out in the movie plot. I had no idea what I missed due to the unwanted and unwarranted intrusion but it was crucial to the plot and I missed it. Shame on FedGov.

In summary, this new, more intrusive alert mechanism — taking control of my receiver — is unacceptable. Fix it. At minimum. provide a mechanism to allow viewers to disable these interruptions. Until that mechanism is in place, return to the old “crawler” across the bottom of the screen method of alerting. This new mechanism is unacceptable.

Yet Another Federal Double Standard

A federal judge today issued a partial injunction blocking enforcement of Arizona’s new illegal alien law. FedGov suspects that some parts of this new law are unconstitutional and so has blocked enforcement until the matter is settled in the (federal) courts. Better safe than sorry, right?

Now this is very strange since, when the States or the People suspect that some federal law or regulation is unconstitutional, FedGov goes right on enforcing the suspect law until it’s proven unconstitutional in FedGov’s own Supreme Court.

How’s that for a double standard?!? If we were to err on the side of caution, we’d block enforcement of all suspect laws but we don’t. Instead FedGov gets the benefit of any doubt each and every time. How’s that for lop-sided justice?

This is just another example of why the federal judiciary cannot be entrusted with the determination of what is and is not constitutional.