The post was SLS and not STSSee https://www.spaceline.org/united-states-manned-space-flight/space-shuttle-program-history/. DoD wanted a massive payload interest and enough cross-range to land back in the US after one orbit.
The post was SLS and not STSSee https://www.spaceline.org/united-states-manned-space-flight/space-shuttle-program-history/. DoD wanted a massive payload interest and enough cross-range to land back in the US after one orbit.
I think you're confusing "we have the money to build this idea that Bush 1/2 funneled money into X-stuff" with actual innovation. Building *isn't* innovation, making something new is.In aviation for example, China is at the forefront of drone technology, missile technology and they produce rather innovative aircraft as of late.
They're also very much into everything computer and AI related, with all the industries associated with these umbrella terms. IIRC they also lead in battery technology, at least with regards to the automotive sector.
I think pretending the Chinese aren't innovating and at the forefront of scientific discourse and development is teeny tiny bit disingenuous
I don't know where you get your news, but the USA comes considerably further down than Britain does on many rankings of how democratic a country is.Yes I am. And yet we're lightyears ahead of such dystopian dictatorships as Britain and China and Russia... at least for now.
We don't have to worry about being imprisoned for 31 months for a tweet.I don't know where you get your news, but the USA comes considerably further down than Britain does on many rankings of how democratic a country is.
Yet...We don't have to worry about being imprisoned for 31 months for a tweet.
Evidence?Yet...
I can't get arrested n the USA for "malicious communications," i.e. a mean tweet. I can't get arrested in the USA for offending someone. Or for having blueprints of a 3D printable firearm. Or for waving my own flag. Or for complaining about a rapist.I don't know where you get your news, but the USA comes considerably further down than Britain does on many rankings of how democratic a country is.
If any of this was actually true then yes it would be awful. Luckily it's not. Apart from the firearms thing, luckily that is true in the UK.I can't get arrested n the USA for "malicious communications," i.e. a mean tweet. I can't get arrested in the USA for offending someone. Or for having blueprints of a 3D printable firearm. Or for waving my own flag. Or for complaining about a rapist.
And of course "how democratic Nation X is" is hardly the sole metric of how dystopian it is. If foreigners who actively hate that nation/culture/people are increasingly being democratically elected by an increasing population of hostile foreigners into your government, hey, that's all kinds of democratic, and it's all kinds of awful.
Wow.If any of this was actually true then yes it would be awful. Luckily it's not. Apart from the firearms thing, luckily that is true in the UK.
Actually most of this works for Russia too) There is no laws against possessing the blueprints for 3D printed weapons, you can wave your own flag (with the exception of "forbidden" and "extremists" symbolic, but I strongly suspect that no flag Orionblamblam could possibly wave would be considered such in Russia), and complaining about rapist definitedly would not get you in trouble. The offense thing is basically the only difference - we have a law that forbade "offending the religious feeling" (and it's used pretty much haphazardly, albeit the punishment is fines mostly). So... hooray, we are basically one step from American democracyIf any of this was actually true then yes it would be awful. Luckily it's not. Apart from the firearms thing, luckily that is true in the UK.
Okay, sorry. I'm finished with offtop there.As a defense professional who was passively watching this thread just because some interesting points were brought up, I think you guys should stop with the silly political bickering. I see it in a lot of threads around here... it's unbecoming and it's going to drive away people genuinely interested in reading about these topics.
With a thread discussing the pros and cons of government confiscating private business, there was zero chance politics wouldn't enter the equation at some point.So tiresome how it is an urge for some to wave their ideology at any occasions like exhibitionist feels de urge to wave their di.. in public... And call it "freedom".
When i find myself arguing with someone who denies reality, I find it's time to walk away. So I do that now.If any of this was actually true then yes it would be awful. Luckily it's not. Apart from the firearms thing, luckily that is true in the UK.
Mike Rowe also laments this situation.I think that the growth of the management class since the 1990s has crippled all Western economic enterprises. Management that thinks everything is just a "management science" topic to be dealt with by employing jargon and textbook reactions. You can't even call them technocrats because they seem oblivious to the technical issues of their profession, a factory making 155mm shells or bars of soap is just the same to them.