Daily Archives: November 15, 2023

The Kremlin fuelled antisemitism at home. Then it blew up – Euronews

Posted: November 15, 2023 at 3:01 am

The opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not represent in any way the editorial position of Euronews.

Vladimir Putin had been instigating antisemitism in Russia long before the lynch mob stormed the airport in Dagestans capital Makhachkala, Aleksandar oki writes.

Islamophobia and antisemitism have been on the rise worldwide since the beginning of the Hamas-Israel conflict.

Both stem from two general kinds of racism: the grassroots one, which tends to originate in parts of society at the base level, and the top-down one, which is spread from those in power and their exponents.

As such, top-down racism is unthinkable in our day and age, as it would go against the basic moral principles of contemporary democratic societies.

On the other end of the political spectrum, autocratic leaders more often than not intentionally instrumentalise historical divisions in their societies including ethnic, religious, racial or class ones.

Dictators strive to profit from tensions in society in order to prevent various societal groups from uniting against their rule. Autocrats tend to know when and exactly how to stir and agitate certain social groups when they believe it's necessary.

Yet, sometimes these actions spiral out of control and produce unwanted results. That was the case with the recent anti-Jewish riot labelled by some as a pogrom at the Dagestan international airport.

Ever since the beginning of the full-scale invasion of Ukraine, the Kremlin has not shied away from stirring up anger and contempt against those of Jewish background or Jewish identity in general.

The dominant discourse spread by Moscow's power circles has been marked by a key talking point that can be summarised as the Anglo-Saxons (meaning, the West) have installed a Jewish puppet whos not even Jewish in a fundamental sense in Kyiv to cover up the contemporary Ukrainian Nazism."

This toxic notion has been thoroughly debunked, yet, this is almost exactly what Russia's Vladimir Putin said on 5 September, just two months before the antisemitic lynch mob stormed the airport inDagestans capital Makhachkala.

Western curators put at the head of contemporary Ukraine a personan ethnic Jew, with Jewish roots, with Jewish origins. And thus, in my opinion, they seem to cover up a certain anti-human essence, which is the foundation, the basis of the modern Ukrainian state, Putin said.

With the Kremlin's supposed denazification of Ukraine as the ideological basis for the legitimisation of its invasion of a neighbouring country, Putin has in fact repeatedly questioned Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyys Jewish identity while also using it against him.

I have had many Jewish friends since childhood. They all say, 'Zelenskyy is not Jewish, he is a disgrace to the Jewish people' Zelenskyy is a man of Jewish blood. Yet with his actions, he covers up these neo-Nazi monsters, Putin said earlier in June.

On 22 October, a week before the Dagestans international airport rampage, a well-known state propagandist, Dmitry Kiselev, said on state TV that antisemitism is a cultural norm for hundreds of millions of Muslims, passed on from one generation to another. And no amount of political correctness can do anything about it.

This statement is indeed both Islamophobic and antisemitic. However, the same Russian state TV channels have, like the Kremlin, papered over their latent Islamophobia by taking a clear pro-Hamas position and placing tradition at the cornerstone of politics. This is why these kinds of messages were easily interpreted by some in the Northern Caucasus a traditionally Muslim-majority region as a way to legitimise hate and declare an open hunt on Jewish people.

It is also clear why the instigators believed there would be no pushback from the authorities, and why they ended up being treated much more leniently than Russian anti-war protesters, for example. Why would a country, which supports Hamas and claims that antisemitism is "tradition", persecute them if they embarked on an antisemitic campaign? And isn't this undertaking essentially just a fervent display of support for the state?

Besides official ties of the Russian leadership with Hamas, the mainstream media discourse in Russia has been clearly anti-Israel ever since Hamas' militants organised and conducted a massacre of Israeli civilians on 7 October.

There wasnt a single statement denouncing Hamas as an extremist or terrorist organisation in the Russian state media only calls for an independent Palestinian state and accusations against Israel of cynically murdering Palestinian civilians.

All of this is quite the opposite of responsible Western leaders, intellectuals and media pundits who always make it clear that the Hamas militants committed a horrible act of violence while voicing their legitimate concern for the protection of the Palestinian civil population.

This is the only way to combat antisemitism and send a clear message to society: terrorism is not acceptable under any circumstance, and any violent act or hate speech incident against Jewish citizens in the democratic world will be severely persecuted in accordance with the law.

This, of course, doesnt mean that protests in support of Palestine and Palestinians are or should be stigmatised. In fact, it means that there simply has to be a clear dividing line between propagating Hamas terrorism and supporting Palestinians.

Such a clear line was never drawn in Russian media. Instead, the Russian state sent a direct, malignant signal inciting its already highly antisemitic and intolerant society: Jews are Nazis in Ukraine, and they are now intentionally killing Palestinian children.

So if you were just a regular consumer of mainstream TV content in Russia, you would end up believing that taking the fight to nominally Jewish passengers of a flight from Tel Aviv that had landed in Makhachkala is a patriotic act in every possible sense.

In the end, Putin blamed the US for an easily anticipated explosion of antisemitism in Russia. It is necessary to know and understand where the root of evil is, that spider who is attempting to wrap the entire planet, the entire world, into its web, he said after the Dagestan riot.

Yet, the responsibility for the hate lies squarely on Putin and Russia. Russian propaganda has been demonising Ukrainians for almost a decade. Now its the turn of Russias Jewish population to be stigmatised, just like it was many times through history. And if Putin keeps having it his way, in the end, there will be no one left to hate.

Aleksandar oki is a Serbian political scientist and analyst with bylines in Novaya Gazeta. Formerly, he was a lecturer at RUDN University in Moscow.

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The terrible evil of the witch and the satanist – American Thinker

Posted: at 3:01 am

Two stories have emerged in the past few days, one about a moral and spiritual crime and one about a heinous criminal act. The tie-in is that both actors believe in the supernatural, one believing shes a witch and the other worshipping Satan. Of course, before our post-modern era, the civilized Western world frowned on both concepts. The old world was correct. In saying this, it doesnt even matter whether witches or Satan really are tapping into supernatural forces. What matters very much is that there are people who, in thrall to their beliefs, commit truly evil acts.

This first story will make you want to throw up:

A janitor at a New Jersey elementary school went online to brag about how he had contaminated food being served to children with bleach, bodily fluids, and even his own feces in order to get them sick, it is alleged.

Giovanni Impellizzeri, 25, claimed online to be a Satanist doing the devils work, has been charged with child endangerment, aggravated assault and tampering with the food at Elizabeth F. Moore School in the Upper Deerfield School District.

[snip]

Investigators claim he contaminated the food and utensils in the school cafeteria with bodily fluids which included urine, saliva and feces.

Police said Impellizzeri also used bread to touch his penis, anus and testicles before spitting on it and then placing it back into a container so it could be served to the young pupils.

In another video, Seidel explained how Impellizzeri set up a phone to record himself in the cafeteria allegedly spraying Clorox Clean-Up bleach into a container filled with cucumbers with the intent of harming children. (Emphasis mine.)

The schools children had high levels of what was thought to be stomach flu

Impellizzeri was also charged with possessing and distributing child porn.

This evil mans Facebook page seems to have been deleted, but there were two notable things I saw on it but didnt have a chance to grab. First, one of the two or three sites he followed was one called Gayety, which describes itself as an online lifestyle and entertainment magazine for LGBTQ+ people. Note: There is zero evidence that Gayety itself had any connection with Impellizzeri.

The other thing, which you can see in this photo from his Facebook page, is lots of eye makeup:

Color me cynical, but I have a suspicion that this Satan-worshipping man, who sought to poison children with chemicals and his own filthy bioagents and who possessed and distributed children porn, long-ago abandoned heterosexualityand heterosexuality is a link in the chain tying most people to traditional values.

The other piece of news is, in its own way, just as disturbing: A self-described witch who admits to two abortions explains that abortion is useful for birthing magic and death magic simultaneously. To make this point, she acknowledges that the fetus is a human life:

I admit that I dont believe in magic (that is, that individuals can perform supernatural magical feats), nor do I believe in a specific entity named Satan or Lucifer. However, I strongly believe in witches and Satan-worshippers. Thats because such people exist. My belief is irrelevant. Its enough that these people commit evil acts in service to their beliefs.

The evil they commit is enough for me to have a belief of my own: Society must use whatever is within its abilities, both legal and moral, to discourage both witchcraft and satanism. Both ideologies are pathways for evil, and I most certainly believe that evil is an integral part of the human psyche.

A healthy society does everything in its power to steer people away from evil pathways. A sick, declining society simply looks on and even helps out (see, e.g., here and here) as people embrace and encourage others to embrace ideas that, whether founded in fact or fantasy, bring death and destruction in their wake.

Image: Shakespeares three weird sisters from Macbeth by Henry Fuseli. CC BY 4.0.

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The terrible evil of the witch and the satanist - American Thinker

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Your Favorites Radio | All your favorite songs and artists – iHeartRadio

Posted: at 3:01 am

A version of ChatGPT's GPT-4 AI was recently caught lying to researchers about making an insider trade during a simulation. This has Glenn very concerned, especially when coupled with other news stories: The U.S. government is investing in an AI company connected to blacklisting companies for spreading "misinformation," New York is ramping up its strategy to surveil citizens online, and the Biden administration wants to make sure that AI takes "equity" into consideration. Glenn asks, what are we teaching AI? That it's okay to lie if the ends justify the means? That truth is relative? That present discrimination is the solution to past discrimination? That the collective is more important than the individual? Because that, Glenn warns, is exactly what society is teaching our children.

TranscriptBelow is a rush transcript that may contain errors

GLENN: Last week, TheBlaze published a terrifying article, that we just didn't have time to talk about.

It's how a GPT 4 AI made an insider trade in a simulation. That's not the scary part. The scary part is, when asked, it denied it.

It lied. I didn't make that trade. What are you talking about?

Now, add this to several stories we -- we already have about AI lying, manipulating, and distorting facts.

The government just gave -- I can't remember -- you should look it up. It's in the show prep today, Stu.

I think it's like a billion dollars to AI. To create basically what Kathy Hochul is talking about here in New York.

A way for AI to go out and just look at information. Discover if it's true. If it's not.

Disinformation. Misinformation. And shut it down.

And steer you away from those things.

This is priming, again.

We have to make sure AI is policing us.

And then also, the government has access now, as of yesterday, all lines of code.

Of AI. And they want it to be more equitable and inclusive.

So it will have debilitating bias. So how do you disagree with something like that?

What if you disagree with the people that are setting those outcomes. You know, I think people are afraid of AI taking your job, taking the military.

We're afraid of the terminator or the matrix becoming prophecies. We are afraid of the transhumanist nightmare, that some are pushing.

Afraid of the tech leaders openly telling us, they want to summon the demon.

That's what they actually call AI. Or ASI. Super intelligence.

Summoning the demon.

More terrifying is the mirror that these I think sociopathic AI creators are holding up to us.

The AI is going to have a warped sense of reality, because they will reflect what we teach them.

And are you comfortable with the teachers? Garbage in, garbage out, used to be the tech proverb?

But pretend for a minute, you're a catastrophist.

I know you're not. But pretend you are.

Let's say one of the crises currently facing us is the best of my knowledge.

Evil wins.

We wipe each other out, in a radioactive fury. That astroid, that frankly some of us have been saying, oh, please, hit us.

Please. The one you've been tempted to root for. Actually hits us.

Or climate change ends us in a fiery flood of 2012. Because it's coming by 2012.

Just pretend.

If something happens to us. AI could be our legacy to the universe.

The only thing to survive us, would be cockroaches and AI.

AI could be our child.

So now, when I look at it that way, what do you want to teach that child?

Will we teach it to be human?

Will we teach it, that there is no such thing as truth? Only your truth. My truth.

Truth can be whatever you pretended you want it to be.

That there's no such thing as good and evil. Only relative shades of gray.

No such thing as a man or a woman. Only what one feels like.

Will we teach AI?

Something that it's already taught itself.

It's okay to lie, to cheat. To steal.

As long as the ends justify the means. Or you can get away with it.

Will we teach it, that individual -- that individual life has no value.

That only the collective matters. And also, while we're at it, some life has more values than other.

And it's arbitrarily assessed through quality of life. But what is quality of life. What is the teacher going to teach AI about the quality of life?

Or things like skin color. Or gender.

Will we teach it the only remedy, to pass discrimination, is present discrimination?

The only remedy to present discrimination, is future discrimination.

Will we teach it, that life is nothing, but an interlaced web of power dynamics. And eternal war of oppressor against the oppressed.

This is being decided, right now.

They are teaching these things right now.

Are we teaching it the way to evaluate anything is through that oppression scale? Deciding who is the most oppressed party.

And if you're defined as an oppressor, it makes you unredeemable.

Unforgivable. Would AI, when it's doling out, you know, survival kits, at the hospital. Do you get one if you're unredeemable, and unforgivable?

Will we teach it, that the allies were the evil side, in World War II. Because more Germans died than Americans.

And America dropped the biggest bomb of all!

Will we teach it, when a terror group rapes, tortures, maims, slaughters, burns, kidnaps women and children.

And then hides behind their own citizens. The right thing to do is to immediately declare a cease-fire.

Will we teach it, that God say figment of primitive and superstitious imaginations. That there is no existence. In fact, it's just the random movements of meaningless movement particles.

Why wouldn't we teach it?

Why wouldn't we teach it those things?

That's what we're currently teaching our children. In schools.

So you don't have to go beyond. And say, well, maybe this will be like you're child.

No. It will be our master.

And we're teaching it the same thing, we're teaching to our children.

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Can’t Miss Indie Press Speculative Fiction for November and … – tor.com

Posted: at 3:01 am

The end of the year is almost upon us, but that doesnt mean that theres a shortage of intriguing-looking books due out on indie presses to close out 2023. Instead, the last two months of this year abound with some of 2023s most intriguing reads to datefrom an unexpected work of ecological horror to a bizarre vision of the Ozarks in the future. Heres a look at a number of indie press titles due out between now and the end of the year. Whether youre looking for a classic dystopian tale or a dreamlike take on detective fiction, you might just find your next favorite read here.

This summer saw the publication of the second volume of Chris McKinneys trilogy about an underwater city and a world-changing technology. With the end of the year comes the final installment, titled Sunset, Water City. Here, McKinney completes a pivot from futuristic detective narrative to a work set in a full-on post-apocalyptic landscape (or seascape). Its a haunting conclusion for an ambitious series. (Soho Press; December 2023)

Described by its publisher as a transhumanist noir, Thomas Kendalls new book How I Killed the Universal Man sends its journalist protagonist on the trail of a potentially groundbreaking medicationand into a world where body modifications abound and the nature of consciousness is forever altered. Kendalls previous novel The Autodidacts featured a very different kind of literary mystery, and its exciting to see what he might do here. (Whisk(e)Y Tit, Dec. 2, 2023)

Bennet Sims has previously told a zombie story with no other in the book A Questionable Shape. With the new collection Other Minds and Other Stories, Sims pushes his fiction into fascinating new placesincluding one of the most surreal private detective stories youre likely to read. Simss use of dream logic and surrealism blend with a cerebral quality; the overall effect is thoroughly compelling. (Two Dollar Radio; Nov. 14, 2023)

The protagonist of Amin Maaloufs novel On the Isle of Antiochtranslated by Natasha Lehrerhas a quiet life on an isolated island when the book opens. Soon enough, things take a series of ominous turns, including a crisis that puts the world on the verge of ending and the arrival on the scene of mysterious beings seeking to avert a disaster. Is there more happening here than meets the eye? (World Editions; Dec. 5, 2023)

Its been a big year for Tiffany Morris, who also had work featured in the anthology Never Whistle at Nightand whose story Wapnintutijig They Sang Until Dawn was praised in these pages as [a] beautiful story about climate change, Indigenous beliefs and practices, and the intersections between them. Green Fuse Burning tells the story of an artist whose immersion in a haunted space touches on both ecological themes and horrific imagery. (Stelliform Press; Nov. 1, 2023)

Following the crew of a soon-to-be-decommissioned space station, Samantha Harveys novel Orbital offers a singular perspective on life both on the planet and making its way above it. Whats it like to hurtle through space thousands of feet above the planets surface? Harveys novel blends the technologically breathtaking with the quietly quotidian. (Grove Press; Dec. 5, 2023)

In an interview published earlier this year, Chkdl Emelmad explained the genesis of her novel Dazzling. I wanted a book that represented the strange mix of world in which I grew up in contemporary south-eastern Nigeria, with its mores, hierarchies, and beliefs, she saidand this novel, where humans and spirits traverse the same paths and bodies are malleableis the result. (The Overlook Press; Dec. 5, 2023)

Writing on the subject of Appalachian SFF in these pages in 2021, Linda H. Codega noted that Manly Wade Wellmans stories of John the Balladeer are hard to find, but worth it. Now, a new edition of John the Balladeer should help these tales of a traveling musician crossing paths with the supernatural find a broader audience. (Valancourt Books; Nov. 1, 2023)

In an interview last year, Jane Alberdeston described the thoughts that provided the underpinning for a course she was teaching at Binghamton University. Its also thinking about exile, imprisonment, solitudeall those themes that have come up in the past couple of years, Alberdeston saida description that could also apply to her novel Colony 51, about a community of young women living in an isolated dystopian society and the recent arrival looking to spark change there. (Jaded Ibis Press; Nov. 2, 2023)

A winner of the Otherwise Award in 2019, Gabriela Damin Miravetes latest project is the novel They Will Dream in the Garden, here translated by Adrian Demopulos. This novel chronicles, as per the publisher, the disconcerting experience of living as a woman in Mexicowhich, in this book, involves everything from linguistic preservation to transcendental experiences. (Rosarium Publishing; Dec. 5, 2023)

In his blurb for Matthew Mitchells novella Chaindevils, Laird Barron invoked The Road, Warhammer 40k, and pulp westernsand your response to those three points of comparison should serve as a pretty good guide as to what youll make of this book. Do you like your speculative fiction set in a violent futuristic version of the Ozarks? This might be the next addition to your to-read pile. (Weirdpunk, Nov. 11, 2023)

Im on record as being a huge admirer of Kang Young-sooks novel Rina, a haunting tale that followed its protagonist through a devastated and hostile landscape. Needless to say, Im thrilled to hear that a new book of Kangs is due out in translation (in this case, by Janet Hong). The collection At Night He Lifts Weights offers readers a cross-section of Kangs work, featuring settings ranging from fraught urban landscapes to plague-ridden suburbs. (Transit Books; Nov. 1, 2023)

The protagonist of Gemma Amors novel The Folly struggles in the wake of multiple tragedies: the death of her mother and the wrongful incarceration of her father for her murder. Daughter and father begin working as caretakers for an isolated towerthe folly of the titlewhen things take a turn for the weird. Specifically, someone shows up who may have an uncanny connection to the murdered womanwhich ups the stakes considerably. (Polis Books; Dec. 5, 2023)

Reading the works of Mathias nard can involve revisiting the life of Michaelangelo or chronicling the horrors of the 20th century. With The Annual Banquet of the Gravediggers Guild, nard and translator Frank Wynne take things in a more metaphysical directionwith a narrative in which a researchers trip to a small French town coincides with a temporary shift in the balance between death and life. (New Directions; Dec. 5, 2023)

Michael Jeffrey Lees fiction has been published in the likes of Fairy Tale Review, Conjunctions, and the anthology XO Orpheus: Fifty New Myths. Lees new collection, My Worst Ideas, features the natural world turning bizarreincluding a hostile river and a headless pigeon with strange propertiesamidst a pervasive sense of widespread alienation. (Spurl Editions; Nov. 1, 2023)

I first learned of the writings of Stefan Grabinski via this fascinating overview of his work by John Coulthart. The new collection Orchard of the Dead & Other Macabre Tales features translations by Anthony Sciscione and an introduction by Brian Evenson; its a great introduction to a writer whos been compared to both Poe and Lovecraft, and who summoned up a sense of dread at the excesses of industry.

Tobias Carroll is the managing editor of Vol.1 Brooklyn. He is the author of the short story collection Transitory (Civil Coping Mechanisms) and the novel Reel (Rare Bird Books).

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‘For All Mankind’ season 4 episode 1 review: Lots of moving parts … – Space.com

Posted: at 3:00 am

After the obligatory time jump, Apple TV Plus's "For All Mankind" splashes down in 2003. The U.S. has teamed up with the Soviet Union and other allies to build a thriving colony on Mars, and plans are afoot to capture and mine asteroids that will help the base to become self-sustainable.

But, this being "For All Mankind," there's also plenty of human drama to unpack. Indeed, the key players are still dealing with the aftermath of a 1995-set season three finale in which NASA was left reeling by the Johnson Space Center (JSC) bombing that killed both Karen Baldwin (Shantel VanSanten) and hero-of-the-hour Molly Cobb (Sonya Walger).

Kelly Baldwin (Cynthy Wu), meanwhile, gave birth in orbit around Mars, as Danny Stevens (Casey W. Johnson) faced stern consequences for causing the deaths of some of the red planet's first human inhabitants. Plus, former NASA boss Margo Madison (Wrenn Schmidt) seemingly struck up a deal with the Soviets to defect and avoid punishment for passing on state secrets.

Related: Season 4 of 'For All Mankind' debuts with alternate asteroid history

Picking up the story eight years later, "For All Mankind"'s fourth season premiere, "Glasnost," has a lot of work to do establishing its new world order. As such it can sometimes feel like a case of information overload, but thanks to its big action set-piece we reckon it lays the groundwork to ensure the show's latest run of episodes is ready for launch.

Watch "For All Mankind" on Apple TV Plus

As ever with "For All Mankind", there's a lot of catching up to do in the opening minutes of this season premiere. In what's quickly become one of the show's hallmarks, the episode opens with a montage of news clips strategically placed to fill you in on eight years of alternative history.

Some of the pop culture events Woodstock '99, the rise of reality T.V., chess champion Garry Kasparov taking on IBM computer Deep Blue, hit movies "Jerry Maguire" and "Castaway" look remarkably familiar. However, beyond that it's clear that the "For All Mankind"-verse is diverging further and further from our own reality, nearly 40 years after the space race began to unfold very differently back in season one.

Since we last visited the Happy Valley Mars colony in 1995, humanity's expansion into the solar system has continued at pace. Trips to the moon are now increasingly commonplace, with plenty of job opportunities and even a hotel for the growing business of space tourism. Seven leading space-faring powers (including the U.S. and the Soviet Union) have established a "Mars-7" agreement to help keep things cordial on the Red Planet, while private sector space pioneers Helios have unveiled an advanced new plasma propulsion technology. This cuts the travel time to Mars down to one or two months, and will undoubtedly be a narratively expedient way for the writers to negate the vast distances and timescales generally involved in space travel. It's also surprisingly sci-fi tech (for now, at least) in a show that's generally kept one foot in the real world.

Back on Earth, Jimmy Stevens (David Chandler), younger son of former astronauts Gordo and Tracy (Michael Dorman and Sarah Jones, respectively), made a plea bargain after testifying against the perpetrators of the Johnson Space Center bombing. Meanwhile, ex-astronaut Ellen Wilson (former series regular Jodi Balfour) won an unexpected second term as President in 1996. So, during her term in office she legalized same-sex marriage and subsequently married her long-term sweetheart, Pam Horton (Meghan Leathers). Her running mate, George Bush Sr., fared less well than his son did in real-life, losing the 2000 election to Al Gore.

Former Beatle John Lennon performed a successful halftime show at Superbowl XXXVI (it was U2 in real-life) and over in the Soviet Union, Premier Mikhail Gorbachev had significant success with his new Glasnost and Perestroika reforms. Gore later declared the Cold War over.

With the alt-history revision done and dusted, the episode wastes little time reminding us where all the familiar "For All Mankind" faces find themselves in 2003. Series mainstay Ed Baldwin (Joel Kinnaman) is still employed by Helios and is the second-in-command at the thriving Martian mini-metropolis at Happy Valley. Part of the same generation of spacefarers as Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin and the other Apollo astronauts, Ed is now well into his 70s, and as is the case with the other survivors from season one the show's make-up department has done extensive work adding three decades onto the 40-something. The results are both impressive and convincing.

Ed's due back on Earth in two months' time and daughter Kelly (Cynthy Wu) can't wait for his return. She's busy raising "space baby" Alex whilst she has a difficult house guest in the form of Olga, the mother of the kid's late cosmonaut dad, Alexei. Right now, however, Ed's busy commanding the Ranger One spacecraft on a groundbreaking mission to haul an asteroid into Mars' orbit, where it will be mined for resources that will help make Happy Valley self-sustaining. Cosmonaut Grigory Kuznetsov (Lev Gorn) the first Soviet on Mars has the honor of taking the first ever steps on an asteroid.

With the Johnson Space Center in Houston destroyed in the season three finale, the impressive Mars Mission Control Center at the renamed Molly Cobb Space Center has a modern new look. It's also under new management, with Eli Hobson (Daniel Stern) now pulling the strings as the boss of NASA. Interestingly he's a recruit from the private sector, credited with driving America's move to electric vehicles when he was CEO of Chrysler. The adoption of alternative energy sources seems set to be a major theme in this new season, as does Hobson's penchant for cost cutting.

A few feet away from him, engineer Aleida Rosales (Coral Pea) follows the action from her console, as Kuznetsov pilots his self-propelled suit towards the asteroid. Naturally, his efforts culminate with him as the focus of a beautifully composed shot of a guy standing on the horizon of a tiny, rocky world.

As teased by the season three finale, former NASA head Margo Madison wakes up in a sparse Moscow apartment, her morning routine a neat echo of the old days back at JSC albeit without her trusty piano. Living under the alias of Margaret Reynolds, she's now clearly doing her best to assimilate on the other side of the Iron Curtain she speaks Russian with a strong American accent and keeps up with current affairs via the International Tribune.

Meanwhile, Danielle Poole (Krys Marshall), the first American on Mars, has left NASA and is keeping a close eye on the family of disgraced astronaut (and Jimmy's elder brother) Danny Stevens. The episode never reveals what happened to Danny after he was banished to solitary confinement on the Martian surface, which suggests there's a big reveal to come later in the season. Whatever Danny's ultimate fate turned out to be, it still haunts Danielle.

The significant new addition to the cast is Miles Dale (Toby Kebbell), an offshore oil driller who's fallen on hard times following the decline of fossil fuels. Estranged from his young family, he applies for a job extracting natural resources from the moon, but doesn't bank on the booming popularity of careers in outer space, fueled, in part, by the hit "Moon Miners" reality T.V. show. After lying about his college experience, he manages to get a placement that will start in two years' time, but complains that it's not soon enough. He's ultimately offered a two-year trip to Mars harder, longer and further away, but with a "bigger upside." Reasoning that it's the best option for his family, he accepts the position.

"Glasnost" spends so long getting its pieces in the right place on the chess board that there's little time for actual plot. What story there is focuses on the aforementioned Martian asteroid and in the long-established tradition of the show what happens when something goes very, very wrong.

The mission starts out with plenty of promise, as astronauts, cosmonauts and private contractors team up to build the apparatus that will tow the rock back to Mars' orbit. In fact, the construction of this surprisingly Death Star-like structure plays out like an outer space version of the famous barn-raising scene in "Witness."

When the connection with the ship inevitably starts to malfunction, the episode makes ingenious use of sound effects, music and "2001: A Space Odyssey"-style silence to ramp up the tension. Grigory immediately volunteers for a spacewalk to fix the problem and he's joined by Parker, a private sector colleague keen to secure his bonus. The situation quickly goes from bad to worst, as Parker is fatally impaled and Grigory finds himself trapped with his suit running out of air. Ever the action hero, Ed wants to go outside to rescue his friend, but the Soviet commander tells him it's pointless and sacrifices himself for the good of the crew. For Aleida, the incident triggers flashbacks to the JSC bombing and she rushes out of mission control. She subsequently dodges all phone calls from NASA.

Like the space hotel disaster in the season three premiere, Polaris, this failed mission seems primed to be the catalyst that sets this year's events in motion. Within hours, Margo is making her way to Star City to meet with Soviet Space Agency director Catiche, although it turns out she's not as important as she used to be. She obviously made some kind of deal to consult on space matters when she relocated to Moscow, but nearly a decade after she left NASA, she's in danger of becoming obsolete. An official tells her never to come to Star City without an appointment again and she's escorted out of the building.

One week later, Margo has an interesting encounter with a woman on a park bench. Initially, the only thing that would raise eyebrows about this benchmate is her surprisingly deep knowledge of the migratory habits of bullfinches. However, she suddenly starts talking English and events shift into the realms of a Cold War spy movie. The woman claims to have Margo's "best interests at heart" and reminds her that she "must be patient." The fact she also knows Margo's real name suggests that the exiled former NASA boss still has a significant role to play this is no accident.

Back in the U.S., we learn that asteroid missions are grounded until the Mars Commission publishes its report. Changes are already afoot at Happy Valley, as commanding officer Colonel Peters' position has been deemed untenable in the wake of the debacle. Ed who's clearly not keen on heading back to Earth anyway uses it as an excuse to stay on Mars longer, reasoning that a new commander will need the continuity of a long-standing executive officer to help them settle in.

NASA director Hobson's first choice for the job is Danielle, but she's reluctant. It turns out that she only agreed to meet him because of what happened to Grigory, one of her closest friends. Unsurprisingly, Hobson's not inclined to take no for an answer and proves to be a master of persuasion, pointing out that she's the only person with a chance of controlling Ed Baldwin.

Danielle eventually accepts, and the episode ends with her floating on board a Unity spacecraft ready to fire up its plasma engines to Mars and sitting further back is none other than Miles Dale.

Not a vintage "For All Mankind" episode, perhaps, but it's one that puts this fourth season on the launchpad for an intriguing journey into the 21st century.

New episodes of 'For All Mankind' debut on Apple TV Plus on Fridays

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Five Surprisingly Perfect Song and Sci-Fi Book Pairings – tor.com

Posted: at 3:00 am

As an avid reader and watcher of science fiction, its really no surprise that I also love listening to music with a little sci-fi flair, as wellcue Jeff Waynes Musical Version of The War of the Worlds! But in addition to songs that are directly based on sci-fi books, there are also some tunes that are not inspired by literature and yet feel eerily reminiscent of specific books anyway. In that vein (and in the spirit of this previous list!), here are five song-and-book pairings that unintentionally, but perfectly, complement each other.

Song: Run Away to Mars by Talk Book: The Strange by Nathan Ballingrud

The entirety of Nathan Ballingruds The Strange (2023) is set on Mars, while Talks Run Away to Mars (2022) is about being on Earth and hypothetically running away to the Red Planet. Along with their shared Martian imagery, theres a sense of loneliness and a desire for connection that ties the song and book together.

The Strange follows fourteen-year-old Anabelle Crisp, who lives in a small colony on Mars with her father. Her mother had to return to Earth and after communication between the planets was severed, all Anabelle has been left with is a recording of her voice. One night a group of bandits break into her fathers diner and inadvertently steal the recording. With the law refusing to help, Anabelle boldly sets off into the Martian wastelands to recover her mothers voice. It reads like a Western by way of Ray Bradburys The Martian Chronicles (1950), along with a dash of weirdness and horrorbasically the recipe for a perfect book, in my eyes.

The opening verse of Run Away to Mars nails a couple of The Stranges key elements: Its a wild, wild world / And youre a wild, wild girl. Anabelle is certainly a wild (and prickly and audacious) girl in what is essentially the Martian version of the Wild West. But beneath her sharp surface, she just misses her mom (Three, two, one, I miss you / Im sorry, I got issues) and longs for connection, something thats hard to come by, given the vast emptiness of Mars (Its an empty world up here).

Song: Rocket Man by Elton John Book: Im Waiting for You by Kim Bo-young (translated by Sophie Bowman and Sung Ryu)

Elton Johns 1972 hit Rocket Man was actually inspired by Ray Bradburys short story The Rocket Man, which can be found in The Illustrated Man (1951). But aside from its brief mention of Mars, its also a great match for Kim Bo-Youngs short story Im Waiting for You, which is told via letters written by a man to his galaxy-traveling fianc. The laws of relativity mean that she will only be waiting a few months until their wedding, while he must wait years back on Earth, and so he decides to hop on a spaceship to speed towards the big day. But a series of mishaps in space keep the couple apart for far longer than expected.

While in Rocket Man the singers wife remains on EarthI miss the Earth so much I miss my wifehis longing for her across space and time mirrors the same longing in Kims Im Waiting for You. For much of the story, the main character is a Rocket man, burning out his fuse up here alone and its definitely gonna be a long, long time / Til touchdown brings me round again to find / Im not the man they think I am at home. But not only does the experience change him, the passage of time also changes Earth in absolutely fascinating ways. The womans side of the storyalso told in epistolary formatis called On My Way and is included in Kims short story collection Im Waiting for You: And Other Stories (2021).

Song: Light Up the Night by The Protomen Book: Sea of Rust by C. Robert Cargill

Light Up the Night is from a 2009 rock opera-style concept album inspired by the Mega Man video games, but its also a great fit for C. Robert Cargills Sea of Rust (2017). The novel is set after humankind has been wiped out by robots, but the world hasnt become a machine utopia. One World Intelligences (OWI)massive AI mainframes that assimilate other robotsare now in control, but main character Brittle is desperate to hold onto her individuality.

The Protomens songwhich has a short film as a music videois about a couple of people trying to fight back against the evil man who is using robots to control humanity. Sub out man for OWI and humanity for robots and youve got Sea of Rust. The lyrics Its like they gathered up the city, they sold it to the devil, and now / Its gone to hell and they wonder how perfectly describe the state of things in the novel. Brittle isnt a traditionally heroic character, but she finds herself compelled to join the fight when she realizes that Cut me down or let me runeither way its all gonna burn / The only way that theyll ever learn / Weve got to turn it off.

Both the book and the song tell bleak stories set in robot-filled dystopian/post-apocalyptic worlds, but a spark of hope propels both narratives forward.

Song: We Will Become Silhouettes by The Postal Service Book: Wool by Hugh Howey

The Postal Services We Will Become Silhouettes (2003) is sung from the perspective of someone who cant leave their house because the air outside will make / Our cells divide at an alarming rate / Until our shells simply cannot hold / All our insides in and thats when well explode. Hugh Howeys Wool (2012) is about a whole society living in a massive underground silo because an unknown event many years earlier turned the air toxic.

In the top level of the silo is a video feed of the barren landscape outside, but as humans arent naturally subterranean creatures, every so often someone cracks and wants to venture out. Reminiscent of this is Ben Gibbard cheerily singing Im looking through the glass / Where the light bends at the cracks / And Im screaming at the top of my lungs. While in the song all the news reports recommended that I stay indoors, in the book this is enforced by the silos secret-keeping authorities, which do occasionally allow someone to go outsidesomebodys got to clean the cameras after all!

Song: The Astronaut by Jin (of BTS) Book: Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir

BTS are no strangers to using space imagery in their songs and a couple of eldest member Jins solo songs have followed suit, namely Moon and The Astronaut. The latter song was released as a gift to BTSs fans, known as ARMY, before Jins military service (mandatory in South Korea) started at the end of 2022; it also happens to pair perfectly with Andy Weirs Project Hail Mary (2021), which is about a lone astronaut tackling a critical mission in space.

[Spoiler alert for Project Hail Mary.]

In Project Hail Mary, Ryland Grace is aboard a spaceship light-years from Earth when he comes across another solo astronaut, a Labrador-sized spider with a rocky exoskeleton, who he appropriately names Rocky. While trying to solve the complex problem of how to save their solar systems respective sunsand by extension, their home planetsGrace and Rocky come to rely on each other both scientifically and emotionally. In the (translated) words of Jin, Just as the Milky Way shines upon the darkest roads / You were shining towards me / The only light found in the darkness. Grace and Rocky share one of my very favorite fictional friendships.

The music video for The Astronaut is also about interspecies friendship, with Jin playing an alien (one that admittedly just looks human) who has crash-landed on Earth and befriends a little girl. In Weirs novel, Grace was a school teacher before being sent on his planet-saving mission and while he loved his job, he didnt have much direction. Similarly, Jin sings, Like that asteroid drifting by without a destination / I, too, was just drifting along. But Graces mission and his connection to Rocky gives him purpose and at the end of the book he decides to live on Rockys planet, just like Jin deciding to stay on Earth at the end of the music video for The Astronaut.

***

Have you get any suggestions for songs and books that share similar themes? Or any songs that you think match these books (or vice versa!) better than the ones Ive chosen? Let me know in the comments below!

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Retired Apollo program physcist to speak at First Colony Branch … – Fort Bend Star

Posted: at 3:00 am

Retired NASA physicist F. Don Cooper will share his experiences creating the technology that helped launch Apollo 11 in 1969, and the efforts that his team went through to successfully bring the Apollo 13 crew home safely in 1970 in a program titled Apollo to the Moon & Back with F. Don Cooper, at Fort Bend County LibrariesFirst Colony Branch Libraryon Saturday,Nov. 18, from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. in the Meeting Room of the library, 2121 Austin Parkway, Sugar Land.

Cooper will also discuss the history of U.S. rockets, and his role in designing the Saturn V ascent guidance and trans-lunar targeting equations that would help make the lunar landing possible.

An Oklahoma native, Cooper became fascinated with math and science while still in high school. He attended Oklahoma Baptist University, where he majored in physics and mathematics with a minor in chemistry. His career after college took him to Huntsville, Ala., where he worked at the George C. Marshall Space Flight Center on NASAs Apollo program, developing the targeting equations to guide the manned spacecraft from earth orbit to the moon.

His career then led him to Houstons Johnson Spaceflight Center, which would later become known as the Johnson Space Center. During his years there, Cooper worked on eight Apollo missions, the Atlas Centaur, the Air Force Dyna-Soar, and the Mars rocket NOVA. For the Apollo 13 mission, he provided the trans-lunar coast abort options to Houston Mission Control.

Cooper retired in 2002, and soon found a new calling that of encouraging a new generation of students to pursue a future in the physical sciences. He enjoys speaking to youth groups, community organizations, schools and colleges, hoping to inspire the technology leaders of the future with his first-hand account of the events as they actually happened.

Of the seven primary people who did this, I am the last one alive, says Cooper. Students do not know much about Apollo since it all happened before they were born. My objective is to show them how it happened, emphasize that education is essential, and show how math and physics solve real-world problems.

The program is free and open to the public. For more information, see the Fort Bend County Libraries website (www.fortbend.lib.tx.us), or call the First Colony Branch Library (281-395-1311) or the library systems Communications Office (281-633-4734).

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Have Elon Musk Been To Mars? – TickerTV News

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Have Elon Musk Been To Mars?

In recent years, Elon Musk, the visionary entrepreneur and CEO of SpaceX, has captured the worlds attention with his ambitious plans to colonize Mars. His grand vision of making humanity a multi-planetary species has sparked both excitement and skepticism. One question that often arises is whether Musk himself has already set foot on the Red Planet. Lets delve into the facts and separate reality from speculation.

The Mars Mission: Musks ultimate goal is to establish a self-sustaining colony on Mars, ensuring the survival of humanity in the event of a catastrophic event on Earth. SpaceX, his aerospace company, has been actively working on developing the necessary technology to make this dream a reality. They have successfully launched and landed reusable rockets, significantly reducing the cost of space travel.

Elon Musks Personal Journey: While Musk has been instrumental in spearheading the Mars mission, there is no concrete evidence to suggest that he has physically traveled to Mars himself. Musk has openly stated that he hopes to visit Mars one day, but as of now, his focus remains on the technological advancements required to make interplanetary travel feasible.

FAQ: Q: What is SpaceX? A: SpaceX, short for Space Exploration Technologies Corp., is an American aerospace manufacturer and space transportation company founded Elon Musk. It is known for its development of the Falcon and Starship rockets, with the goal of enabling the colonization of Mars.

Q: Has anyone been to Mars? A: No human has ever traveled to Mars. All missions to Mars have been unmanned, with rovers and orbiters sent to gather data and explore the planets surface.

Q: Will Elon Musk go to Mars? A: Elon Musk has expressed his desire to visit Mars in the future. However, his current focus is on developing the necessary technology and infrastructure to make Mars colonization possible.

In conclusion, while Elon Musk has been a driving force behind the mission to colonize Mars, there is no evidence to suggest that he has personally traveled to the Red Planet. His dedication to advancing space technology and his vision for a multi-planetary future are what fuel his determination to make Mars colonization a reality.

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The Bodily Indignities of the Space Life – The New York Times

Posted: at 3:00 am

While that collective experience is enough to have taught us how the body responds when gravitys pull is substantially reduced, the magnetosphere still shields the I.S.S., and only the 24 astronauts who flew in the Apollo program have gone beyond it. (The moon orbits an average of more than 238,000 miles away.) Though these two dozen astronauts spent little more than a week at a time without its protection, they have died of cardiovascular disease at a rate four to five times as high as that of their counterparts who stayed in low Earth orbit or never entered orbit at all, which suggests that exposure to cosmic radiation might have damaged their arteries, veins and capillaries.

We cant send people to Mars, or to live on the moon, until we can be reasonably confident that theyll survive getting and residing there. But the space-based medical science needed to make that possible has been hindered by small sample sizes that arent representative of the general population. (All of the Apollo astronauts were white men born between 1928 and 1936.) Space tourism, though, promises to offer opportunities to study the effects of radiation and low gravity on a much broader demographic than really well-selected superpeople, as Dorit Donoviel, the director of the Translational Research Institute for Space Health (TRISH) at the Baylor College of Medicine, describes those who have historically qualified to leave the planet. Old, young, pre-existing health conditions we are starting to gather a knowledge base that in the future will be essential even for NASA, Donoviel told me, because we have to learn about the edge cases to really understand what is going on in our bodies to adapt to a hostile environment. You dont learn as much from people who are healthy. Its when people get sick that you understand how people get sick and how to prevent it.

Epidemiologists face the same predicament on Earth: Before they can figure out how to protect the population, they must wait for harm to come to enough people to expose the causes. As less-rigorous medical screening allows more tourists to reach space, the chances increase significantly that someone will get hurt or have a health emergency there. Aerospace medicine is one of three specialties certified by the American Board of Preventive Medicine, because surgeons for a given flight tend to be stuck on the ground; they have to optimize the health of their patients and ward off potential disasters before departure. The problem is, they cant know what those disasters will be until they occur. Which means that, as with every expedition into the unknown, at some point some intrepid or desperate souls are just going to have to blast off and see what happens.

Scientists once predicted that we couldnt live in the absence of Earths gravity. Without this still-barely-understood force pulling us downward, how would we swallow? Wouldnt our tongues loll back into our throats? Wouldnt we choke on our own saliva? And if we survived those perils, wouldnt escalating pressure in our skulls kill us after a week or so? But when Yuri Gagarin returned from his single, 108-minute orbit around our world in 1961, humanitys first trip beyond the mesosphere, he proved that our internal musculature could maintain our vital functions in conditions of weightlessness. He ate and drank up there without difficulty. Technically, he hadnt escaped Earths influence; to orbit is to free-fall toward the ground without ever hitting it, and he was in a condition known as microgravity. This felt, he reported, like hanging horizontally on belts, as if in a suspended state, a circumstance passingly familiar to anyone who has been on a roller coaster or jumped off a diving board. Gagarin said he got used to it. There were no bad sensations, he added.

Either Gagarin was fibbing, or he had a strong stomach. Initially, many space travelers puke, or at least feel motion-sick space-adaptation syndrome, or S.A.S., is what such nausea, headache and vomiting are called outside our atmosphere. Its the same as sitting in the back of the car in childhood, reading something with your head down, says Jan Stepanek, director of the aerospace-medicine program at the Mayo Clinic in Scottsdale, Ariz. Its a mismatch of what the eyes are seeing and what the inner ear is telling you. Only in this case, that mismatched perception is a result of the organs and hairs of the vestibular system floating free without their usual gravitational signals. You acclimate eventually. In fact, researchers only learned about the prevalence of S.A.S. symptoms in the 1970s, when they heard Skylab astronauts talking about it with one another over a hot mic. Astronauts, it turns out, are not ideal subjects for medical study, because they are notoriously stoic and unforthcoming about any symptom that might ground them.

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The Bodily Indignities of the Space Life - The New York Times

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Can Elon Musk Buy The Moon? – TickerTV News

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Can Elon Musk Buy The Moon?

In recent years, Elon Musk has become a household name due to his ambitious ventures in the aerospace industry. With his company SpaceX, Musk has set his sights on colonizing Mars and revolutionizing space travel. But can he take his aspirations even further and buy the Moon? Lets delve into this intriguing question.

The Outer Space Treaty Before we explore the possibility of Musk purchasing the Moon, its important to understand the legal framework governing celestial bodies. The Outer Space Treaty, signed the United Nations in 1967, states that no nation can claim sovereignty over the Moon or any other celestial body. This means that the Moon cannot be bought or sold any individual or entity.

Private Ownership While the Outer Space Treaty prohibits countries from claiming ownership of celestial bodies, it does not explicitly address private ownership. However, most legal experts agree that the treatys principles extend to private entities as well. Therefore, it is highly unlikely that Musk or anyone else can legally buy the Moon.

FAQ

1. Can anyone own the Moon? No, according to the Outer Space Treaty, no individual or entity can claim ownership of the Moon or any other celestial body.

2. Has anyone tried to buy the Moon before? Yes, several individuals and organizations have claimed ownership of the Moon in the past, but their claims hold no legal validity.

3. What is Elon Musks interest in the Moon? While Musks primary focus is on Mars colonization, he has expressed interest in establishing a lunar base as a stepping stone for further space exploration.

4. What are the potential benefits of owning the Moon? Owning the Moon could potentially provide access to valuable resources such as helium-3, which could be used for nuclear fusion energy production. However, the feasibility of extracting these resources remains uncertain.

In conclusion, despite Elon Musks grand ambitions and entrepreneurial spirit, buying the Moon is simply not within the realm of possibility. The Outer Space Treaty prohibits any individual or entity from claiming ownership of celestial bodies, including the Moon. While Musks dreams of colonizing Mars and establishing a lunar base are commendable, they will have to be pursued within the legal boundaries set international agreements.

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