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So, yeah. How did that whole "Jesus is my vaccine" thing work out back in 1918? Oh yeah, 50 to 100 million dead. Seems like it didn't work back then.
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Because they didn't understand God correctly back then! That was pre-Vatican II!
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well there's all sorts out there...
even "qualified" programmers that still insist array index zero doesn't exist.
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More of a guideline really...
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First thing that didn't blow up (so far). Celebrate the accomplishment
Bastard Programmer from Hell
If you can't read my code, try converting it here[^]
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That simultaneous booster landing was AWESOME!
Hoping to hear the core landed successfully too.
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They should have cut to a panel of judges holding up signs with 10s on them!
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It is a fine piece of engineering is it not!
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Impressive!
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And the most important picture of all:
Honk[^]
I have lived with several Zen masters - all of them were cats.
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Looks like the start of "Heavy Metal".
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It's been a while since I saw that, but you are right.
I have lived with several Zen masters - all of them were cats.
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"Disappointing tens"
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I noticed that too. Very funny!
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Two out of three is pretty good.
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It is, but the irony of a guy who makes environmentally sensitive electric cars, building a rocket with the carbon footprint the size of jupiter is staggering.
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He's addressed this in the past - electric engines don't provide the thrust required, because they have very little exhaust, and batteries are much too heavy.
If you happen to be able to get thousands of m/s of delta v out of an electric engine, though, that would be something the entire world, (and maybe universe), would be highly interested in.
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Do we have to put a Tesla in orbit, or send something to mars?
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The Tesla in orbit is a publicity stunt - you need a heavy unimportant payload for the first flight of a rocket, to test. You don't wanna lose the rocket, and lose a client's multi-billion science project, and no insurance company will go near you if you're planning it. Rocket companies generally send up something unimportant - the Saturn V's maiden voyage, Apollo IV, took with it a fake Lunar Module, the LTA-10R. In sending a Tesla into orbit, Musk has expertly crafted a giant hype machine that anyone interested in space ex, science, nerd culture, and even automobile techs, are all part of.
I mean, just watch the launch broadcast. It's a professional spectacle.
Here it enters the philosophical, though. Do we need to send something to Mars? In my opinion, yes.
Human longevity will outlast the Earth's ability to nurture it, and we will need to migrate, as a species, to another world, or - much more difficultly - to a flotilla. It is instrumental to the survival of our species that we get experience in setting up off-world colonies, exploring legality, funding expeditions, and the like. In doing so, we might cut a couple thousand years off Earth's ability to sustain our life, but we'll gain billions, so that's that. Life on Earth will continue after us, likely until the energy of the Sun runs out - we'll find it hard to change that on our own.
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and sod the carbon footprint?
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It's highly disrespectful of you to not read what I write to you in a conversation.
In doing so, we might cut a couple thousand years off Earth's ability to sustain our life, but we'll gain billions, so that's that. Life on Earth will continue after us, likely until the energy of the Sun runs out - we'll find it hard to change that on our own.
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I did read it.
Regardless of what this might help achieve centuries into the future, if CO2 is going to make us extinct, or damage the earth beyond habitability, as we are told, then isnt the release of so much CO2 right now irresponsible and hypocritical given the Musk is a a believer of CAGW?
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