Daily Archives: February 18, 2021

Donald Trump breaks media silence with call to Fox following death of US conservative radio host Rush Limbaugh – ABC News

Posted: February 18, 2021 at 2:33 pm

Donald Trump has paid tribute to conservative American radio commentator Rush Limbaugh, who has died at the age of 70.

Limbaugh's death came a year after he announced that he had lung cancer.

A leading voice of the American political right since the 1980s, he received the Presidential Medal of Freedom from Mr Trump last year.

The former president called Fox News to thank Limbaugh for supporting his baseless campaign to overturn last year's US election results, saying he still believed he won November's election.

"Rush Limbaugh thought we won," Mr Trump said.

"And so do I by the way. I think we won substantially ... You would have had riots going all over the place if that happened to a Democrat. We don't have the same support at certain levels of the Republican system."

Mr Trump lauded Limbaugh as a "legend" with impeccable political instincts who "was fighting till the very end".

Former president George W Bush said Limbaugh "spoke his mind as a voice for millions of Americans".

Limbaugh pioneered the American media phenomenon of conservative talk radio and became an enthusiastic combatant in the US culture wars.

His appeal, and the success of his top-rated radio show, rose from his brash and colourful style, his delight in baiting liberals and Democrats and his promotion of conservative and Republican causes and politicians.

His radio show became nationally syndicated in 1988 and quickly built a large and committed following, making him wealthy in the process.

Mr Trump, who pursued right-wing populism during his four years in the White House, awarded Limbaugh the highest US civilian honour during his 2020 State of the Union address to a joint session of Congress.

Former first lady Melania Trump placed the Medal of Freedom around his neck after her husband lauded him as "a special man beloved by millions of Americans" and "the greatest fighter and winner that you will ever meet".

The honour came a day after the radio star announced his cancer diagnosis.

At the time Limbaugh said he planned to continue to do his program "as normally and as competently" as he could while he underwent treatment.

Limbaugh espoused an unflinchingly populist brand of conservatism during a daily show broadcast on more than 600 radio stations across the US.

Long before Mr Trump's rise in politics, he was pinning insulting names on his enemies and raging against the mainstream media, accusing it of feeding the public lies. He called Democrats and others on the left "communists", "wackos", "feminazis", "liberal extremists" and other slurs.

Railing against left-wing causes from global warming to healthcare reform, he helped shape the Republican Party's agenda in the media and mobilise its grassroots supporters.

When actor Michael J Fox, suffering from Parkinson's disease, appeared in a Democratic campaign commercial, Limbaugh mocked his tremors. When a Washington advocate for the homeless killed himself, he cracked jokes. As the AIDS epidemic raged in the 1980s, he made the dying a punchline. He called 12-year-old Chelsea Clinton a "dog".

He suggested that the Democrats' stand on reproductive rights would have led to the abortion of Jesus Christ. When a woman accused Duke University lacrosse players of rape, he derided her as a "ho", and when a Georgetown University law student supported expanded contraceptive coverage, he dismissed her as a "slut". When Barack Obama was elected president in 2008, Limbaugh said flatly: "I hope he fails."

Limbaugh had experienced a variety of medical problems over the years, including a loss of hearing, reversed by a cochlear implant, as well as an addiction to prescription painkillers that landed him in rehab in 2003.

Reuters/ABC/AP

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The Supreme Court is still sitting on Trump’s tax returns, and justices aren’t saying why – Channel3000.com – WISC-TV3

Posted: at 2:33 pm

February 18, 2021 8:05 AM

CNN

Posted: February 18, 2021 8:05 AM

(CNN) Lawsuits involving Donald Trump tore apart the Supreme Court while he was president, and the justices apparently remain riven by him.

For nearly four months, the court has refused to act on emergency filings related to a Manhattan grand jurys subpoena of Trump tax returns, effectively thwarting part of the investigation.

The Supreme Courts inaction marks an extraordinary departure from its usual practice of timely responses when the justices are asked to block a lower court decision on an emergency basis and has spurred questions about what is happening behind the scenes.

Chief Justice John Roberts, based on his past pattern, may be trying to appease dueling factions among the nine justices, to avoid an order that reinforces a look of partisan politics. Yet paradoxically, the unexplained delay smacks of politics and appears to ensnarl the justices even more in the controversies of Trump.

The Manhattan investigation, led by District Attorney Cyrus Vance, continues to draw extensive public attention. The grand jury is seeking Trump personal and business records back to 2011. Part of the probe involves hush-money payments Trump lawyer Michael Cohen made to cover up alleged affairs. (Trump has denied those allegations.)

For more than a year, Trumps attorneys have raised challenges to prevent enforcement of the subpoena. The controversy appeared to culminate at the Supreme Court last July, when the justices rejected Trumps claim that a sitting president is absolutely immune from criminal proceedings.

The 7-2 decision crafted by Roberts left some options for Trump on appeal, but lower court judges have since spurned Trump arguments, and his lawyers returned last fall to the high court for relief. Vance agreed to wait to enforce the long-pending subpoena until the justices acted on Trumps emergency request.

The Supreme Courts lack of response has given Trump at least a temporary reprieve.

And his lawyers could soon seek more. CNN has learned that Trumps legal team is preparing to submit a petition to the justices by early March, based on a standard deadline for appeals, asking them to hear the merits of Trumps claim in oral arguments.

In Trumps October filing, his lawyers continued to maintain that the grand jury subpoena was overly broad and issued in bad faith to harass him. They said it makes sweeping demands and crosses the line even were it aimed at some other citizen instead of the President.

The process for a petition for certiorari, as it is called, could add months to the case. If the justices agreed to hear the dispute fully on the merits, resolution could be a year off.

A spokesman for Vance declined to comment. Lawyers for Trump also declined to comment for the record.

When the latest round of litigation began, both sides premised their October filings on relatively quick court action and alerted the court to their pact requiring Vance to refrain from enforcement of the subpoena until the justices acted on the emergency request.

The Trump team added that it would abide by an expedited schedule for its petition that the court hear oral arguments on the merits of the case.

The justices did not respond to that offer or to any part of the filing. Typically, soon after an emergency request and response are filed, the justices announce whether they will grant the requested stay. (A grant, rather than denial, takes five votes; the filings in this chapter of Trump v. Vance were complete on October 19.)

A majority of the justices might have opted against action close to the November 3 election, to avoid any signal for or against Trump in his quest to keep his tax returns private. But the election, the recounts, the Electoral College certification and the January 20 inauguration have all come and gone.

Now that Trump is out of office, the heart of the case tied to his role as president could be moot, irrelevant as a legal matter. But neither side has raised that possibility in a supplemental filing, nor have the justices raised the question in anything made public. And the election results have been known for months.

In their initial October 13 request, Trumps lead lawyers noted that Vance had agreed to earlier delays as the case progressed and argued, His need to secure these records did not somehow become uniquely pressing in the last few weeks.

Vances office countered that the grand jury has waited long enough. The DAs office argued that the subpoena to Trump accountants Mazars USA had been issued in August 2019 and that the high court has warned in past cases against frustrating the public interest by delaying a grand jurys work.

This litigation has already substantially hampered the grand jurys investigation, Vances team wrote.

Throughout the Trump presidency, cases involving Trump regularly split the justices. Disputes over his administration policies, such as the travel ban, often were decided by 5-4 votes.

Controversies over his personal financial records appeared even more difficult. Yet Roberts was able to convince seven of the justices to join together in the July case of Trump v. Vance.

In elevated language and reference to the great Chief Justice John Marshall, Roberts wrote, Two hundred years ago, a great jurist of our Court established that no citizen, not even the President, is categorically above the common duty to produce evidence when called upon in a criminal proceeding.

Roberts emphasized the public interest in comprehensive access to evidence. The majority said, however, that Trump could return to lower courts to assert certain state law claims, including that the subpoena was too broad or issued in bad faith.

Trumps lawyers indeed pressed those claims in a second round but were rejected by lower US appeals court judges. When a New York-based US appellate court ruled in early October, it said of the financial records sought, There is nothing to suggest that these are anything but run-of-the mill documents typically relevant to a grand jury investigation into possible financial or corporate misconduct.

Until October, when Justice Amy Coney Barrett succeeded the late Ruth Bader Ginsburg, the court was divided 5-4 along ideological and political lines. It is now a 6-3 court, with the six Republican appointees generally voting conservative and the three remaining Democratic appointees voting liberal.

On the 5-4 court, Roberts, an appointee of Republican President George W. Bush, was at the ideological middle. That is no longer the situation with the three Trump appointees in place.

That changed dynamic among the justices may be complicating consideration of the new Trump v. Vance case. Even in the momentous July ruling, Justices Brett Kavanaugh and Neil Gorsuch (Trumps first two appointees) concurred only in Roberts bottom-line judgment and expressed a competing rationale that could bolster a presidents ability to fight a subpoena. Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito dissented.

The possible scenarios involving internal debate over Trump v. Vance are numerous, based on individual interests and regard for institutional integrity. Roberts may believe that airing differences privately over many months represents the best option, although it leaves the parties and public to wait and wonder.

If Trumps lawyers still have no word by the first week in March, they would submit a petition asking that the merits of the case be put to oral arguments.

Under current rules, apart from the emergency framework of this dispute, an individual who has lost in a lower court has 150 days from the date of that decision to petition the justices for review. If the individual has first made an emergency request to block the effect of the lower court ruling, the justices usually would have responded by either granting or denying the stay Thats because the party seeking court intervention would want immediate relief.

Here, however, because Vance agreed to hold off on enforcement of the subpoena, his office, rather than the Trump side, is disadvantaged by the courts inaction.

The path the justices have taken or, rather, not taken has baffled lawyers following the case. Long known for its secretive ways, the court has added a new dimension of mystery with Trump v. Vance.

All thats evident is the justices have diverged from long-standing practice and hindered the investigation of a former president.

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Opinion | Is This the End of Obsessively Hating Donald Trump? – The New York Times

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Yet we too are sticking to a script, as celebrants in the impeachment managers bid to win the hearts and minds of jurors who have not shown ownership of either. Mr. Trump may have railed against it and had his surrogates fight it, but the trial has given a new spotlight to an attention addict whose rehab was not going well. He is not there, but this is still The Impeachment of Donald J. Trump, about Donald J. Trump, featuring applause for Donald J. Trump, and starring Donald J. Trump as Donald J. Trump. His ego and his coffers need you to watch, to tweet, to rage.

So do you not watch, to enlarge the collective spiting of him? Do you give oxygen to an amoral human torch? The Resistance did not create or empower Mr. Trump. But we did make the classic first mistake of concluding that our insights, analysis and morality would convince his supporters that they were tragically wrong. When that failed, we made the classic second mistake of assuming we hadnt made our first mistake loudly or clearly enough. Im not ready to believe that we started it, but I, for one, have gotten loud and blasphemous enough to peel the paint off my walls.

Still, we cannot underestimate the power of righteous and organic hatred to overwhelm everything else. It is hard to fathom now, but in the epic sitcom All in the Family, one of the best running jokes consisted entirely of Carroll OConnors Archie Bunker getting in the face of Bea Arthurs Maude Findlay and announcing the identity of the worst president in history. He would elongate it and he would mispronounce it and when he would intone Fraaaaanklin. Delllllano. Roooooooosevelt!; she would erupt in paroxysms of liberal rage at his heresy.

These political passion plays were performed some 25 years after Roosevelt died, and were thus a real-time testament to something the half century since has erased: Beloved and revered as he may have been, F.D.R. was also passionately hated and blamed, and his memory alone could start political fistfights into at least the 1970s.

One wonders if the visceral hatred of Mr. Trump will end that soon. Or if it ever will.

Just as I have far more history with Mr. Trump than I would have wished, I also have some standing on the subject of people consuming political Soylent that they clearly dont like, dont want to see, and dont want to eat.

At roughly this time of year in 1998, I was at the Super Bowl on assignment for NBC and also doing a week of celebrity-themed shows for my little niche, boutique, offbeat news hour on MSNBC. We were all set up to interview John Lithgow in front of the refrigerator in the kitchen set of Third Rock From the Sun when my producer advised there had been a slight change in plans: I would instead be interviewing Tim Russert via satellite from Washington, because the president might be resigning over his relationship with Monica Lewinsky.

Our audience first doubled, then trebled. The heady, news-packed and unpredictable early days of the show we subtly renamed White House in Crisis made for compelling viewing. Then came an enormous cloud of the kind of illogic which may apply to whatever follows Mr. Trumps second impeachment trial.

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Opinion | Is This the End of Obsessively Hating Donald Trump? - The New York Times

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The geopolitics of space exploration: Space News, Feb. 2021 Space Business – Quartz

Posted: at 2:32 pm

  1. The geopolitics of space exploration: Space News, Feb. 2021 Space Business  Quartz
  2. Space exploration more about collaboration than competition, says Nasa's Dr Bhavya Lal  Times of India
  3. William & Mary professor continues streak of helping with Mars exploration  wtkr.com
  4. NASA rover streaks toward a landing on Mars  KTLA Los Angeles
  5. Perseverance Kick-Starts Journey to Accomplish a 45-Year-Old Dream of Returning Martian Sample to Earth | The Weather Channel - Articles from The Weather Channel | weather.com  The Weather Channel
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Mars missions and space exploration – bang for our buck? – Sky News

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The US, China and UAE launched unmanned missions to Mars last summer in the quest to discover whether the red planet was ever habitable - or could be in future.

In the week that the European Space Agency also launched a recruitment drive for the next generation of astronauts, what does the future of space exploration look like? And is it really worth it?

On this edition of the Sky News Daily podcast with Dermot Murnaghan, we are joined by Libby Jackson, human exploration manager at the UK Space Agency; Nicholas Booth, who co-authored the book The Search for Life on Mars and is a self-confessed Mars obsessive; and Alexander Martin, Sky's technology reporter.

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Mars missions and space exploration - bang for our buck? - Sky News

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Speeding Up Space Exploration with Edge Computing – CXOToday.com

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The vast stretches of outer space may have been a fascination for poets and star gazers for centuries but they can be a nightmare when setting upa reliable IT and communications system. Of course scientists have been working on the latest technologies for decades to drive innovation in space and especially in recent years, we see space exploration is getting ever more technologically advanced.

One such technology innovations comes from Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) that has recently announced it is enabling real-time data processing with advanced commercial edge computing in space, a technique that allows sensor data to be processed by computers in the same place where it was collected, rather than having to travel back to a central server for cataloging and analysis.

The company has said that using its Spaceborne Computer-2, (SBC-2), an edge-computing system, astronauts and researchers at International Space Station (ISS) will be able to process data at the edge and speed time-to-insight from months to minutes on various experiments. That includes, processing medical imaging and DNA sequencing to unlocking key insights from volumes of remote sensors and satellites.

Spaceborne Computer-2 will offer twice as much compute speed with purpose-built edge computing capabilities powered by the HPE Edgeline Converged Edge system and HPE ProLiant server. It is equipped with GPU capabilities to support specific projects using AI and machine learning techniques. Like, it can efficiently process image-intensive data requiring higher image resolution such as shots of polar ice caps on earth or medical x-rays.

The most important benefit to delivering reliable in-space computing with Spaceborne Computer-2 is making real-time insights a reality. Space explorers can now transform how they conduct research based on readily available data and improve decision-making, said Dr. Mark Fernandez, solution architect, Converged Edge Systems at HPE, and principal investigator for Spaceborne Computer-2.

HPE is delivering the same edge computing technologies targeted for harsh, remote environments on earth such as oil and gas refineries, manufacturing plants or on defense missions, to space. Some of the experiments that this new venture will empower include modeling dust storms on Earth, medical imaging using ultrasound, and analyzing lightning strike patterns.

Edge computing provides core capabilities for unique sites that have limited or no connectivity, giving them the power to process and analyze data locally and make critical decisions quickly. With HPE Edgeline, we deliver solutions that are purposely engineered for harsh environments, said Shelly Anello, General Manager, Converged Edge Systems at HPE.

Several space efforts now use edge computing, to enhance communications between Earth and the cosmos.For space-based systems, edge computing can save both time and energy, believe IBM researchers.

If we can speed up communication with our far-flung space explorers, it will accelerate how much we can learn and discover, Naeem Altaf, an IBM distinguished engineer andCTO of its Space Tech team, said in its official blog.

Using edge, critical data can be analyzed in hours instead of days, Altaf said.

For example, sensor-equipped swarms of nanosatellites can use edge systems to process the data seamlessly. These satellite swarms, which fly about 250 to 370 miles above the Earths surface, can be clustered and organized to support important missions in the study of weather, climate science, national security and disaster response. In other words, edge computing has a great potential on the International Space Station, the in-flight science laboratory designed to help humans better understand what its like living and working in space.

Its the same reason edge computing has already made a big mark in the enterprise as Gartner reportedthat by 2022, half of all data will be created and processed outside a traditional centralized data center or a cloud network.

SBC-2 is scheduled to launch into orbit on the 15th Northrop Grumman Resupply Mission to Space Station (NG-15) on February 20 and will be available for use on the International Space Station for the next 2-3 years. The NG-15 spacecraft has been named SS Katherine Johnson in honor of Katherine Johnson, a black NASA mathematician who was critical to the early success of the space program.

We are honored to make edge computing in space possible and through our longstanding partnerships with NASA and the International Space Station U.S. National Laboratory, we are looking forward to powering new, exciting research opportunities to make breakthrough discoveries for humanity, he added.

Steven Carlini, Vice President of Innovation and Data Center for Schneider Electric believes the new space age holds great edge potential.

These low orbiting satellite deployments have the potential to propel the digital transformation of the world. They open up tremendous opportunities to bring futuristic technologies to fruition with the combination of high-speed wireless communication and untethered edge computing, he said in a recent article.

Terrestrial business innovations will continue to drive space exploration for years to come. Cloud, edge computing and blockchain are enhancing missions to the International Space Station and beyond. Of course, we are still a long way off before developing fully autonomous systems and making them accessible for scientists, but asCarl Sagan, the popular astronomer, noted, Somewhere, something incredible is waiting to be known.

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Climate Solutions, New Art, and Space Exploration: Things to Do in DC, February 16-17 – Washingtonian

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Illustration by Hannah Good.

Hey yall!

Weve got climate crisis solutions, a new home show, and a talk about the internet.

The matrix: The internet is maybe, possibly, probably melting our brains. In her debut novel, No One Is Talking About This, poet Patricia Lockwood writes an autofictional account of a viral influencer who is consumed in the portal (a.k.a. the internet). Family tragedy snaps the protagonist out of the endless scrolling fog to face the harsh reality beyond her screens. Lockwood, whos been called the poet laureate of Twitter, will chat with New Yorker staff writer Jia Tolentino in this virtual Politics and Prose event. Tuesday 2/16 at 6 PM; Free to $32.99 (book included), buy tickets here.

Chat climate: Bill Gates just released How to Avoid a Climate Disaster: The Solutions We Have and the Breakthroughs We Need, an urgent book that details how he thinks we can eliminate greenhouse gas emissions. Gates will chat with actor and activist Rashida Jones about climate change and the solutions that he puts forth in a virtual talk from Sixth & I. Wednesday 2/17 at 7 PM; $35 (book included), buy tickets here.

Subterranean fun: Over the weekend, Dupont Underground opened The February Install, a new exhibit of installations, media projections, and performances from local Black artists and organizations. Walk through the artwork expressing the shows four themes: joy, beauty, transformation, and unapologetic. Masks and ticket reservations required. Catch the show on the weekends of February 19-21 and 26-28; $8, buy tickets here.

A new show: If youre in the staring at aspirational homes on Zillow phase of the pandemic, theres a local series that might satisfy your voyeuristic curiosity. WETAs If You Lived Here looks inside homes and apartments in the DC area; its part house porn, part tour of DC neighborhood history and culture. Learn more about it here.

Your favorite spot: Whats your go-to neighborhood spot? Instead of our annual Best Restaurants issue, Washingtonian put together a collection of more than 60 neighborhood restaurants that have been reliable faves with the best hometown vibes.

Infinity and beyond: Mars scientist Sarah Stewart Johnson wrote about the search for life on the red planet, and Washingtonian politics and culture editor Rob Brunner chatted with her about what space exploration means for how we understand human life. One image I couldnt get out of my mind after I read the interview was this little plant surviving on a volcano in Hawaii: I was up on this completely lifeless summit of a volcano, and then there was this fern that should not have been able to survive in those conditions. But there it was, vibrant and fighting against the void. I just found it magical. There really was something in that moment that made me become a planetary scientist. The idea of looking out into the dark night, trying to find the equivalent [of the fern]: something that was surviving against all odds. Thats what life is, in a lot of waysthis pushing back against the emptiness. Read the full interview here.

Pacheco in particular is a seminal figure in Latin music, co-founding the famous Fania Records, which cultivated talent like Celia Cruz, Hctor Lavoe, Willie Coln, and other phenomenal salseros. The composer, band leader, and multi-instrumentalist was a major force in making salsa what it is today. To get a taste of the kind of energy Pacheco and his crew brought to the stage, Id recommend this clip from the 1974 Fania All Stars Live in Africa show, when they played to a crowd of 80,000 in whats now the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Though I never saw Pacheco live (Im some 20 years too young), my parents tell me that as a baby I got to meet him when, coincidentally, we went to the same physical therapist in Northern New Jerseyhe apparently loved playing with me. (Yes this is a baby brag, Im not sorry.)

Im immensely grateful for the contributions both Corea and Pacheco have made to American music. Have any favorite tracks from these artists? Let me know, Id love to hear them!

Thanks for reading! Tell me what youre up to at home by dropping me a line at rcartagena@washingtonian.com.

Join the conversation!

Web Producer/Writer

Rosa joined Washingtonian in 2016 after graduating from Mount Holyoke College. She covers arts and culture for the magazine. Shes written about anti-racism efforts at Woolly Mammoth Theatre, dinosaurs in the revamped fossil hall at the Smithsonians Natural History Museum, and the horrors of taking a digital detox. When she can, she performs with her familys Puerto Rican folkloric music ensemble based in Jersey City. She lives in Adams Morgan.

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Climate Solutions, New Art, and Space Exploration: Things to Do in DC, February 16-17 - Washingtonian

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For All Mankind Continues to Make Giant Leaps in Season 2 – The Ringer

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You get only one chance to make a first impression, and viewed through that lens, For All Mankind didnt exactly take flight. The Apple TV+ series, which was part of the streamers initial launch in November 2019, envisions an alternate history in which the Soviet Union puts people on the moon before the United States, and the space race continues to evolve from there. With its Cold War tensions and Battlestar Galacticas Ronald D. Moore on board as cocreator, For All Mankind had the kind of pedigree to match its big-picture implications. And prelaunch, the show might as well have been called Game of Astronauts for the amount of hype it generated among space enthusiasts.

But For All Mankind stumbled out of the gate. The series first two episodes hit a saccharine tone that felt like the cringiest parts of The Newsroom transported to NASAs mission control center. The show couldnt seem to decide whether to celebrate the perseverance, grit, and ingenuity of its characters (with the requisite corniness that approach entails), or highlight the flaws of American exceptionalism under Richard Nixon. (It certainly didnt help that this was all happening within bloated, meandering, hour-long running times.) Itd be hard to blame anyone for calling it quits on For All Mankind after those early episodes: After all, who has time to wait for a show to get good when theres more original programming to sift through than ever before?

By the third episode, however, For All Mankind reinvented itself for the better. In what almost functioned like a second pilot, Nixons Women sees the United States scrambling for better optics in the wake of the Soviets landing a woman on the moon. The U.S. hastily recruits female astronauts a decade earlier than it had in real lifewith training sequences evoking The Right Stuffbut the show never shies away from the irony that the push for inclusion is only a PR stunt. (When discussing what hes looking for in NASAs first woman in space, Nixon says preferably a blond.) The further For All Mankind pushed its alt-history, making its way to the 70s by the end of the season, the more the series found its footing. Ultimately, the Soviets landing on the moon was one small step in a show where military bases are established on the lunar surface and plutonium-carrying rockets launch out of the ocean.

Now, with its second season premiering on Friday, For All Mankind has jumped ahead to 1983. What was once a NASA lunar base the size of a typical New York studio apartment has ballooned into a massive complex capable of staffing dozens of astronauts at a time, and the space program has been further enmeshed with the American military under the Reagan administration. (Yes, Ronald Reagan still becomes the president in this alt-history, but [deep breath]: Prince Charles marries Camilla Parker Bowles, the Miracle on Ice never happens, John Lennon is alive, and Roman Polanski is arrested at the border.) One of the creeping tensions this season, in which the Cold War reaches Cuban missile crisis levels, is the development and deployment of weapons on the moonfrom arming military-trained astronauts to equipping space shuttles with missiles.

The vision of armed astronauts hopping around the lunar surface looks like something out of a 12-year-olds Mountain Dewinduced fever dream, and youd forgive For All Mankind for occasionally indulging in the ludicrous thrill of it all. But the series doesnt lose sight of the slippery slope that comes with bringing a military presence to the moon. At a pivotal moment when the Americans and Soviets are fighting over a lunar stronghold rich with lithium, armed astronauts begin humming Ride of the Valkyriesa not-so-subtle allusion to Apocalypse Now, the Vietnam War, and needless cycles of violence.

Which is not to say that For All Mankind makes the aggressive jump to World War III on the moon this season, as the trailers and rad-looking promotional materials might suggest. Instead, most of the political maneuvering between the Americans and Soviets takes place back on Earth, with the respective space programs navigating bureaucratic quagmires and workplace issues. (Its a lot more interesting than it sounds.) And like any good space show should, For All Mankind ensures that viewers are just as emotionally invested with what happens on the ground thanks to an evolving ensemble cast.

Astronaut Ed Baldwin (played by Joel Kinnaman) begins the new season behind a desk, evaluating the other astronauts and assigning missions for them; his buddy Gordo Stevens (Michael Dorman), who had an unreported mental breakdown on the lunar base in Season 1, grows a dad bod and refuses to confront his trauma; Gordos wife Tracy (Sarah Jones) becomes the blond face of the space program, so caught up in the glamour of her newfound celebrity status and frequent late-night appearances that she begins neglecting the actual work required of being an astronaut; and Ellen Wilson (Jodi Balfour) continues to wrestle with being a closeted gay woman while advancing her career under the Reagan administration, with an eye toward being part of a future manned mission to Mars. As long as you can suspend your disbelief that these characters seem to have barely aged a day in the past decadeGordo looks exactly the same minus the beer gut, and NASA mission director Margo Madison (Wrenn Schmidt) was basically just given bigger glassesFor All Mankind delivers satisfying payoffs that conjure the rich character development on Moores Battlestar Galactica.

The first two episodes of For All Mankind missed the mark so badly that they might as well be decanonized, but the second season has no such shortcomings. It can be a slow burn at times, sure, but its easy to be patient with the early episodes when there are boardroom meetings punctuated by lines like Are you two seriously suggesting that we send guns to the moon? And by the time all the story lines intersect in the seasons final episodes, For All Mankind hits on a visceral and emotional level thats as good as televisions ever been outside of Earths orbit.

Its still unclear what the endgame is with For All Mankindboth as a television series, and how it fits into Apple TV+s larger ambitions as a still-nascent streaming service. The show already has been renewed for a third seasonone that will inevitably involve another time jump, ageless astronauts whove apparently discovered the Fountain of Youth, and humanity stretching itself further in our solar system. At some point, the show might start to feel less like alt-history and more like proper science fiction; The Expanse by way of actual historical figures.

That comparison favors For All Mankind, as The Expanse is arguably the best space show on television since Battlestar Galactica. But as For All Mankind slowly but surely moves the astronaut action to Mars and (possibly) beyond, its unclear whether the United States is navigating the solar system for the genuine pursuit of scientific research or as a continued flex of military power. If there is any one lesson to impart from the shows excellent second season, its that space exploration is one giant leap that mankind isnt quite ready forlest this alt-history series turn into a dystopia.

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When the ‘Mars’ mission commander breaks new ground Commander’s Report: sol 6 – Space.com

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Dr. Michaela Musilova is the director of Hawaii Space Exploration Analog and Simulation (HI-SEAS) program, which conducts analog missions to the moon and Mars for scientific research at a habitat on the volcano Mauna Loa. Currently, she is in command of the two-week Valoria 2 mission and contributed this report to Space.com's Expert Voices: Op-Ed & Insights.

Commander's report for the Valoria 2 Mars mission at HI-SEAS

Sol 6 (Feb. 9, 2021)

Being stuck in my ways that's not something I thought I would be guilty of anytime soon. I thought I was a pretty adaptable and flexible type of person, but it is starting to dawn on me that leading mission after mission has left a mark on me. The Valoria 2 analog Mars mission at HI-SEAS is around the 27th mission that I have led as a commander. Honestly, at this point, all my previous missions are starting to become a blur. I keep in touch with my ex-crewmembers, but the mission details all merge into one long story. Nevertheless, what I'm now starting to see are patterns in my behavior and my leadership.

During a typical lunar or martian mission at HI-SEAS, I spend the first few days training my new crewmembers. I try to use only an empowerment leadership style, allowing my crewmembers to embrace being analog astronauts without micromanagement. As long as the crew respects several important rules during our mission, I almost never need to enforce any kind of authority on the crew. Instead, we usually get along very well and everyone respects the guidelines that I put in place for every mission.

Related: What didn't kill us on 'Mars' only made us stronger Commander's report: sol 13

It's not unusual for the crew to make mistakes during the first three days or so of the mission. There is a lot to learn about living and working on the moon or Mars, so I have a lot of patience with them. One of my main rules is for them to ask me as many questions as they need. I would rather they double-check certain matters with me than to do something incorrectly. With every mission, I've developed checklists that I go through when training the crew. Only when they are well versed in working and surviving on the moon or Mars, then I could focus on my research and only check in with them when necessary.

This seemed to be the best way to do things until recently. A new realization hit me: changing things up would not only benefit me to escape from my "Groundhog Day" cycle, but also the crew. I'm not a huge fan of repeating activities over and over again, so sticking to a certain routine to help the new crew break into the HI-SEAS habitat has drained a lot of excitement out of me. I try my best to not lose enthusiasm when training the crewmembers, as I love teaching and sharing my otherworldly experiences with others. However, this takes a toll on my energy levels.

Then, something changed that completely opened my eyes to a new world of possibilities. My routine had been broken. We had to suffer through a number of dust storms on Mars (aka rainstorms on the Big Island of Hawaii) during my previous Valoria 1 mission a couple of weeks ago. I could not train the crew in the same way and in the same order of activities as I normally would. Suddenly, I was forced to think out of the box and improvise. Abstract problem solving and improvisation are vital in the space sector, so this was a welcome change for me.

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It was like a completely new world of possibilities opened up for me. I changed the way in which I did our-in-the-field geology training during the Valoria 2's first Marswalks, limiting them to the surroundings of the habitat because of bad weather. The previous Valoria 1 crew even hid the famous HI-SEAS "Easter egg" of crew treasures in a different location than it had been hidden in over the past three years. My analog space missions didn't have to be as repetitive as I thought that they were doomed to be. I found a new hope and energy in me to power through the three lunar missions that await me after Valoria 2.

Now, the Valoria 2 crew is setting more precedents. Some of them are not so great, like the fact that they were the first crew to set off our habitat's fire alarm. That was during their attempt at making pancakes at the start of the mission, so no harm was done, but many lessons were learned. The crewmembers then decided to try to become the crew of many firsts, so this trend continued. They have since made the first butter and first very fluffy scrambled eggs on Mars. I am looking forward to what they will come up with next.

Related: Avoiding digestive problems is part of daily activities on the moon for the Sensoria M3 crew

As a crew, we have definitely now become a space family, and every day I spend with them is a joy. Each one of them is progressing quickly with their individual research projects as well. Operations Officer Rilee Kaliher has collected ten samples of volcanic rocks near HI-SEAS, including cinder, pahoehoe and 'a'a, for her in-situ resource utilization research. Similar kinds of rocks are likely to be found in some parts of the moon and Mars. Rilee began characterizing and analyzing the samples in order to determine their potential use as building blocks for the first sustainable human settlements on Mars.

Plant Biology Officer Paul Tomko has successfully sprouted his first batch of organic broccoli, crimson clover and radish sprouts for the crew, while he continues to work on his batch of legume sprouts. Paul is experimenting with various growth and harvesting techniques to maximize produce yield and give a boost of nutrition to the crew, which includes using the LettuceGrow system to grow new lettuce seedlings.

Science Communications Officer Lain Velasco's hand-balancing training program is progressing with great results. The crew has only been working on their program for a few days and they have already started to develop higher body awareness in inverted positions.

They are also reporting a decrease in vertigo, confusion and fearfulness when being upside down. Their feedback is mostly positive and they seem to be feeling motivated to continue their training even post-mission.

Finally, Crew Engineer Chris Jackson has discovered that the crew really enjoys tracking and understanding their activity, sleep and tone using the Amazon Halo fitness tracker. His observations are that the crew try to always wear their individual devices rather than resent them. Chris reports that the crew is willingly sharing updates from the device when the crew congregates.

Commander Musilova signing off feeling both refreshed and motivated. The Valoria 2 crew has brought a breath of fresh air into my life on Mars and I can't wait for what new "firsts" they have yet to bring to HI-SEAS.

Follow Michaela Musilova on Twitter @astro_Michaela. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

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When the 'Mars' mission commander breaks new ground Commander's Report: sol 6 - Space.com

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How to Engage Kids in the Mars Landing and Exploration – pbssocal.org

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Caregivers and educators, NASA needs your kids' help.

Have your children or students ever wondered about life elsewhere in the universe? Have they ever been curious about whats on other planets? Well, scientists at NASA and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) are curious about that too. They all strive to answer questions and solve problems. Theyve actually figured out how to land a robot on Mars and how to take pictures on other planets. But there are a lot of problems and questions that scientists are trying to figure out. Caregivers and educators, this is where your kids come in.

Here is their mission straight from scientists at JPL: Engage [your] curious minds, get a good science education and come help us solve problems.

The most advanced rover built by NASA was launched July 30, 2020, and will be landing on Mars, Thursday, Feb. 18, 2021, in hopes of answering the questions we mentioned earlier. Ota Lutz, Ph.D., a STEM elementary and secondary education specialist at JPL, summarizes the rovers mission: Were landing the most capable rover on the surface of Mars in arguably one of the most dangerous places to land. Were basically looking for signs of past life on Mars and this rover has the potential to determine whether those signs existed.

With this groundbreaking mission that will likely change our understanding of the universe, Lutz provides insight into how you can encourage childrens engagement in the Mars rovers landing.

Its going to be one of those turning points in their knowledge and understanding of the universe. Its going to be for everybody, but were going to have another generation after this that has a completely different understanding than the generations before, Lutz says. And besides that, its just super cool to land a robot on Mars.

Here are some discussion points and activities to get you and your kids started on your space exploration mission at home and beyond.

The first thing I would do is have them talk about Mars, Lutz said. Learn a little bit about Mars and why we go there. NASA provides a website with a little bit of everything about exploring Mars, from previous missions, facts about the Red Planet to future exploration plans. Check out their Mars Exploration website.

Its also important to encourage kids to ask questions. And lets face it; sometimes, kids ask the toughest questions. But its vital for caregivers and educators to know that they dont have to have all the right answers. Engage your own curiosity with them and find out the answer together. Teach them not only to ask questions but how to investigate and research answers.

I think its important to model learning together because nobody knows everything. Thats why we do science, to learn more, Lutz says. The more science we do, the more stuff we learn, and the more stuff we learn we dont know.

The second thing would be to follow along with the mission by trying out these activities at home and in class that will relate to what scientists are working on.

This cutting-edge rover, named Perseverance (Percy, for short), is taking along a technology demonstration which Lutz explains consists of things we dont know if theyll work, but we want to try.

On the belly of the rover is a specialized helicopter named Ingenuity, which will allow scientists to explore a wider range of Mars. This is new technology that will change the way future exploration will look. The remarkable thing about the helicopter is that its specifically designed to fly on Mars, which was a tricky thing to engineer. Helicopters need air to fly and Mars atmosphere is about 1% as thick as Earths atmosphere. Their blades push against the air making a force called lift and they lift off the ground, Lutz says. So, if you dont have much air, how do you fly?

Help kids in making their own Mars Helicopter with this activity. But dont stop there. Challenge your brains and try to improve its performance. After you experiment with your first design, try to figure out with your kids, How can we make it fly better? What would make it fly longer or faster? Try folding the helicopter blades differently, cutting the template differently or using thicker cardstock or thinner paper. Experiment! This encourages children to engage in the engineering design process.

Learning Space: Make a Paper Mars Helicopter

It gives kids the opportunity to do what NASA engineers do. Its the same concept of investigation and testing and refining and retesting until you get your desired result, Lutz says.

So now youve got your helicopter exploring Mars. How do you receive the information of what it finds?

Lutz explains the importance of NASAs Deep Space Network (DSN) in communicating with Perseverance and Ingenuity. By using a series of antennas and giant parabolic dishes placed at three different points on Earth, Lutz explains that this is how NASA is able to communicate with the rover and orbiters on and around Mars. They can give it commands and receive information back through these towers.

Try building your own antenna tower with this activity and see how strong you can make it together.

There is so much to exploring space. Challenge your curiosity and follow along with the Mission to Mars Student Challenge, with activities, videos and lessons that will keep kids engaged and informed about NASAs exploration leading up to the landing and even after.

The excitement doesnt end when Perseverance lands; far from it. Within the first few hours, there will be photos received of the river delta in which the rover will be landing.

On Earth, we will be able to see and hear what Perseverance sees and hears on Mars. But more than that, were going to be able to follow this mission for years, Lutz says.

Watch the live broadcast of the Mars Landing on Thursday, Feb. 18, 2021. The stream begins at 11:15 a.m. PST with a special program that includes virtual JPL tours and interviews with leading scientists. But make sure youre tuned in around noon for the aptly named "seven minutes of terror" when Perseverance will make its official landing.

So, remind your kids to follow along with these activities and remember their mission:

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