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Category Archives: Transhuman News

Advanced Housekeeping Keeps Space Station in Tip-Top Shape – SciTechDaily

Posted: October 11, 2021 at 10:03 am

The Soyuz MS-18 crew ship relocates from the Rassvet module to the Nauka multipurpose laboratory module on September 28, 2021. Credit: NASA

The Expedition 65 crew focused on a variety of advanced housekeeping activities today aboard the International Space Station. There was also time for robotics research, crew departure preparations, and filmmaking activities.

Five station astronauts had their hands full on Friday working on everything from electronics, cleaning, plumbing, and setting up temporary crew quarters. Some of the crewmates also had time to continue ongoing research, which is the main mission of the orbiting lab.

NASA Flight Engineer Shane Kimbrough installed computer networking gear and connected cables inside the Unity module. Over in the Tranquility module, NASA Flight Engineers Mark Vande Hei and Megan McArthur reorganized stowed items to make space for upcoming operations inside the NanoRacks Bishop airlock.

Commander Thomas Pesquet of ESA (European Space Agency) replaced components on the water recovery system located inside the Kibo laboratory module. Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) Flight Engineer Akihiko Hoshide stayed busy in the Columbus laboratory module checking out science computers and then outfitting crew alternate sleep accommodations.

McArthur also turned on an Astrobee robotic free-flyer and tested its maneuvering abilities using a perching arm. Kimbrough removed a science freezer from the Cygnus space freighter and installed it in the Kibo lab. Vande Hei called down to NASA nutritionists and discussed his views about the stations food menu.

The stations three cosmonauts worked on the docked Soyuz crew ships and their complement of Russian space research. Flight Engineers Oleg Novitskiy and Pyotr Dubrov practiced Earth descent techniques inside the Soyuz MS-18 crew ship, and then tried on the lower body negative pressure suit that prevents fluids from pooling toward a crew members head in microgravity. Veteran cosmonaut Anton Shkaplerov checked on life support and computer components inside the Soyuz MS-19.

All three cosmonauts also participated in filmmaking activities in the stations Russian segment with spaceflight participants Yulia Peresild and Klim Shipenko. The two space station guests will return to Earth on Oct. 16 with Novitskiy as he leads the pair to a parachute landing in Kazakhstan inside the Soyuz MS-18 crew ship.

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THIS WEEK @NASA: Space Station’s Next SpaceX Crew Rotation Mission, Change of Command Aboard ISS – SpaceCoastDaily.com

Posted: at 10:03 am

latest happenings around NASA

ABOVE VIDEO: A change of command aboard the space station, getting curious for World Space Week, and expanding commercial opportunities in space a few of the stories to tell you about This Week at NASA!

Change of Command Aboard the Space Station

On Oct. 4 aboard the International Space Station, Expedition 65 Commander Akihiko Hoshide of the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency officially handed over command of the station to European Space Agency astronaut Thomas Pesquet.

Pesquet will command the station until he departs aboard the SpaceX Crew Dragon Endeavour spacecraft in mid-to-late November with Hoshide and NASA astronauts Megan McArthur and Shane Kimbrough.

Get Curious for World Space Week

Get Curious with Vice President Harris is a YouTube Originals video released on Oct. 7 to kick off World Space Week. It follows a group of kids as they meet the Vice President and go on a scavenger hunt with clues delivered by our Shane Kimbrough from the International Space Station. The Vice President is the chair of the National Space Council.

Expanding Commercial Space Opportunities

On Oct. 5, Roscosmos cosmonaut Anton Shkaplerov, Russian actress Yulia Peresild and producer Klim Shipenko launched to the space station from Kazakhstan. Several hours later, the Expedition 65 crew welcomed the trio aboard the orbiting outpost. The actress and producer are filming scenes aboard the station for a movie as part of a commercial agreement that marks the expansion of commercial space opportunities to include feature filmmaking.

Space Stations Next SpaceX Crew Rotation Mission

We previewed NASAs SpaceX Crew-3 mission during a pair of virtual briefings Oct. 6 and 7. Crew-3 is the next crew rotation flight of a U.S. commercial spacecraft with astronauts to the International Space Station.

NASAs Raja Chari, Tom Marshburn, and Kayla Barron along with European Space Agency astronaut Matthias Maurer are targeted for launch to the station Oct. 30 from our Kennedy Space Center. Meanwhile, NASA has reassigned astronauts Nicole Mann and Josh Cassada to our SpaceX Crew-5 mission, expected to launch to the space station no earlier than fall 2022. Mann and Cassada previously were assigned to missions on NASAs Boeing Crew Flight Test and NASAs Boeing Starliner-1 mission, respectively.

Build Your Own Lucy Time Capsule

The team for our Lucy mission invites you to create your very own time capsule for the mission and share it online using the hashtag #LucyTimeCapsule. The plan is to revisit your time capsule at future mission milestones, for personal reflection and/or to maybe add new items. The Lucy spacecraft will carry a time capsule that includes a plaque inscribed with words of wisdom on its 12-year odyssey to several asteroids, including the never-before-explored Trojan asteroids that share an orbit with Jupiter. Lucy is targeted for launch no earlier than Oct. 16.

Celebrating Hispanic Heritage: El Ayer y El Maana

On Oct. 7, award-winning journalist Soledad OBrien hosted El Ayer y El Maana, which translates to Yesterday and Tomorrow in English. The NASA Hispanic Heritage month event featured a conversation about the new National Museum of the American Latino, NASAs impact and influence, and the pioneering spirit of Latinos on NASA Television, the NASA app, and the agencys website.

The 10th International Space Apps Challenge

On Oct. 2-3, NASA collaborated with several space agency partners for the 10th International Space Apps Challenge, which was entirely virtual. Each year the event, which is recognized as the largest annual hackathon in the world, engages thousands of people around the globe to work with the agencys open source data to answer some of the most pressing challenges on Earth and in space. Space Apps is managed by NASAs Earth Science Division.

Thats whats up this week @NASA

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THIS WEEK @NASA: Space Station's Next SpaceX Crew Rotation Mission, Change of Command Aboard ISS - SpaceCoastDaily.com

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Prospects of Indian and Chinese collaboration with Russia on a Joint Space Station – Valdai Discussion Club

Posted: at 10:03 am

Indias strategic rival China has already made advances in maintaining a sustained human presence in orbit and the learning curve for India appears steep. Only collaboration with Russia can give India a leg up and may perhaps be the only path for India to catch up to China in any meaningful way, writes Aditya Pareek, Research Analyst at the Bangalore-based Takshashila Institution.

Russia and China have seen their interests converge in opposition to the West in many strategic domains, including outer space. The two nations are collaborating on a lunar scientific exploration project called the International Lunar Research Station (ILRS). Russia may also be helping China develop an early warning system with orbital components. These moves can be interpreted by some as the two nations presenting a quasi-joint front and an alternative to a de-facto US dominated order in outer space.

The International Space Station (ISS), the iconic symbol of multilateral international co-operation in orbit, has long been plagued by many problems. These include failing equipment reaching the end of its service life, cracks in the modules and threats of a Russian withdrawal potentially taking away a substantial part of the existing structure, leaving it a mere shadow of itself.

Russia has contemplated pulling out of the ISS since at least2009. At the time, it was even giving serious thought to detaching Russian modules from the ISS instead of letting them be decommissioned with the rest of the station.

By contrast, recently Russia has launched an integrated scientific module called Nauka to the ISS, and has an agreement in place with NASA for outer space co-operation until 2030. Russias state space company ROSCOSMOS chief Dmitry Rogozin has also recently clarified that previous reports of his remarks about pulling out of the ISS reflected an error in interpretation and Russia is not looking to pull out after all.

Russia also has plans to launch a separate space station by 2025, likely partly motivated by the anticipated failure of equipment in an avalanche of malfunctions on board the ISS at around the same time. This concern becomes aggravated due to the sheer old age of the ISS and numerous cracks in the modules, leading to atmosphere leaks.

China has already launched the core module, Tianhe, for its Tiangong Space Station, which has many similarities to the former Soviet Space station Mir but is overall smaller in size.

It is curious that Russia and China have not pursued a joint Space Station project like ILRS. One possible reason behind the lack of Russia-China cooperation on a joint space station could be Russias desire to maintain some strategic autonomy and not live up to the Junior Partner image that a lot of observers in the West attribute to it in the highly pragmatic and tentative alliance it has with China.

Nevertheless, Russia has shown a willingness to send a crew of cosmonauts to Tiangong and China has welcomed it. Most interestingly, an article in Chinas state controlled Global Times, quoting unnamed observers, asserts that while Moscow has decided to do it alone, it has not shut the door for future cooperation on Chinas upcoming space station, which is expected to be operational by 2022.

Chinas national prestige and demonstrated space capabilities will likely be boosted by building Tiangong on its own. The main Chinese goal in this endeavour may be to leave little doubt that it has now entered the same league as Russia and the US, the two pioneering space powers.

With a proven heavy lift launch capability in the form of its Long March 5B and other successive rockets, China will likely continue to undertake more and more ambitious missions and orbital launches. Its efficient launch capability, space technology, industrial base and a burgeoning economic wherewithal to support it all gives Beijing increasingly little reason to depend on Moscow or any other partner for achieving national objectives in space.

It is more likely that China engages with Moscow out of international political balancing and counter-balancing concerns. However, in addition to a shared adversary in Washington, the two nations also share many strategic alignment goals.

The Wolf Amendment makes it impossible for the US to engage with China on any space co-operation, thus making a space race and opposing blocs emerging between China and US inevitable. Russia had its own considerable space capabilities and can shift this balance in the favour of the party it aligns with, thus making it indispensable to Beijing in this contention against the US.

Similarly, India, which is growing ever close to the US, apart from serving as an important lynchpin on terrestrial security co-operation, can also become a major partner in space co-operation. With its own relatively nascent but efficient launch capabilities, New Delhi can be instrumental in supplementing the payload and crew missions required for any prolonged missions in orbit.

According to Chairman Dr. K Sivan of the Indian Space Agency (ISRO), India is also looking at a sustained human presence in space and that technology for an Indian space station may emerge from ISROs human Space flight programme, for which Russia is a key supplier and partner. A critical question to ask may be whether India-Russia collaboration on a joint space station serves as a sort of counterbalance to Russia-China collaboration on ILRS to give Moscow some leverage over Beijing.

However, the possibility of this strategy backfiring and causing rifts in existing co-operation between Moscow, China and India, as well as Washington, can also materialise, thereby pushing all involved towards pursuing unilateral goals and missions in space.

In another scenario, a parallel alignment between Moscow and India for space co-operation can aggravate Beijings anxieties. Any India-Russia high-tech co-operation in orbit roughly on par with their own early warning system collaboration with Russia will deteriorate Chinas own perceived place in the world, dealing a blow to Chinese morale. A less likely but possible source of Beijings anxiety can also be the prospect of India indirectly absorbing ideas from Chinese Intellectual Property (IP) in space systems via co-operation with Moscow.

India has several options for its approach to its envisioned space station, including a unilateral approach, a bilateral approach, or a multilateral approach with either the US or Russia. India can also keep the door open for collaboration with other space faring nations too by negotiating crew training missions on-board the ISS across modules owned by different international partners.

However, should India adhere to the unrealistic goal of launching the entire programme itself with little to no foreign co-operation, it stands to reason that the road to success will not be easy or quick. With the precedent of co-operation on many high-tech projects like the BRAHMOS cruise missile and the Gaganyan Human Space Flight mission, India can look towards Russia for assistance. India can provide the necessary funding for implementing key technologies and Russia can supply the know-how.

However, the partnership out of which the aforementioned Indian space station emerges shouldnt be a vendor-client deal between ISRO and Russian state space subsidiary Glavkosmos but rather a strategic partnership between ROSCOSMOS and ISRO.

Indias strategic rival China has already made advances in maintaining a sustained human presence in orbit and the learning curve for India appears steep. Only collaboration with Russia can give India a leg up and may perhaps be the only path for India to catch up to China in any meaningful way.

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Are celebrity tourists eclipsing the real science done in space? – CBC.ca

Posted: at 10:03 am

Actor William Shatner, famously known as Captain Kirk of the original 1960s Star Trek television series, is the latest in a line of celebrities slated to fly into space aboard a Blue Origin rocket. While these flights are great publicity for the emerging space tourism industry, it could overshadow the real science taking place in space.

At 90 years old, the Canadian-born Shatner will become the oldest person to ever reach space. He'll breakthe record set in July by82-year-old Wally Funk, the pioneering female aviator who flew on board thefirst passenger flightof the Blue Origin rocket. She in turn had broken the record set byJohn Glenn, whospent nine days aboard Space Shuttle Discovery in 1998 at age 77. Glenn was a former astronaut, fighter pilotwho had experienced the rigours of spaceflight and knew what to expect.

Mr. Shatner may find the ride to space a little less comfortable than the bridge of the starship Enterprise. He'll face the physical challenges of launch and re-entry as he is carried aloft on a straight up, straight down hop above the atmosphere. It may not be the crowning achievement of his long acting career, but it will be a major accomplishment for a very senior citizen.

Space tourism is definitely taking off.JeffBezos, the 57-year-old billionaire behind Blue Originand founder of Amazon, also flew on his rocket's first passenger flight in July.That was justover a week after fellow billionaire and space tourism entrepreneur, Richard Branson, flew aboard his Virgin Galactic rocket plane at the age of 71.

In September four space tourists spent three days in orbit aboard a SpaceX Dragon capsule. And a Russian actor and film director are now aboard the International Space Station to shoot a movie about a medical emergency in space.Even Tom Cruise is talking about filming action scenes on the space station.

All this may sell tickets for space tourism and blockbuster movies, but will it detract from the real science that has been going on for more than 20 years on the space station by dedicated astronauts who spend years training for each flight?

The International Space Station is first and foremost a scientific laboratory operated by the U.S., Russia, Canada, Japan and 11 European nations. Oh, and it happens to be in space.

The walls, ceilings and floors are packed with scientific experiments holding everything from growth chambers that study how plants survive in microgravity, to a flame box that watches fire progress without gravity, to an aquarium and rodent box where we can see how animals adapt to a weightless world.

Over more than 20 years of operations, thousands of experiments have been done in the space laboratory, many of them using the astronauts and cosmonauts themselves as subjects.

For example, Scott Kelly spent almost a year up there and was part of a study that compared him to his identical twin who remained on Earth in an effort to understand the effects of prolonged spaceflight on the human body. This will be an important issue for future spacefarers who will make the long journey to Mars and back.

While NASA and the other space agencies have done a good job justifying the need for these experiments, what they don't seem to be as good at is advertising the results. We seldom hear about new drugs, new breakthroughs or new products that were developed thanks to research done on the space station, though NASA's website points to a raft of findings, from drugs for cancer, and muscular dystrophy, to new understandings of bone loss, to environmental science to improved water purification systems.

It is interesting that much of thepublic knows more about the adventures of a fictional space traveller on a fictional starship than they do about the actual people who are up there in a real space station.

It would be in the best interest of the space agencies to do a better job of publicizingthe results of their space station research. It would go a long way towards justifying the upwards of $100 billion invested in the ISS. Otherwise it could end up looking like the world's most expensive movie set.Space science may not be as exciting as an action movie or seeing your favourite celebrity floating weightless, but it can still be enormously valuable.

In the meantime, good luck Mr. Shatner, as you boldly go where no nonagenarian has gone before.

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What’s Happening in Space Policy October 10-17, 2021 SpacePolicyOnline.com – SpacePolicyOnline.com

Posted: at 10:03 am

Here is SpacePolicyOnline.coms list of space policy events for the week plus a day of October 10-17, 2021 and any insight we can offer about them. The House will be in session for at least one day, Tuesday, and committees are meeting virtually. The Senate is in recess except for pro forma sessions.

During the Week

Tomorrow (Monday) is a federal holiday, Columbus Day, and government offices will be closed, although many companies do not observe this one. We know there is an ongoing effort to rename this Indigenous Peoples Day, but the official name per the Office of Personnel Management has not changed.

On Tuesday, the House will be back in session for what is planned for just one day in order to vote on the revised debt limit bill that cleared the Senate last week. The House was supposed to be in a committee work week where committees hold mostly virtual hearings, but the House itself meets only in pro forma sessions. But the Senate amended the debt limit bill that passed the House earlier, so a new vote is required and before October 19 when the House was scheduled to return for legislative business. Bills can pass by unanimous consent in a pro forma session, but recorded votes are not permitted. It is clear such a contentious bill will not pass by UC, so everyone has to come back to town. A reminder: the Senate-passed bill simply raises the debt limit by a fixed amount that is expected to be reached in early December. At that point, we will have to go through this yet again.

The space program is full of interesting things this week to keep our minds off all that dysfunction. From 90-year-old William Shatner, Star Treks original Captain Kirk, launching to space on New Shepard on Wednesday (a one-day slip due to weather) to the launch of the Lucy mission to the Trojan asteroids on Saturday, and the return of Soyuz MS-18 from the International Space Station Saturday night into Sunday, theres lots going on.

If you havent seen Anderson Coopers interview with Shatner, its hilarious. And at almost 20 minutes, longer than the flight will be (its 10-11 minutes from liftoff to landing).

And of course were all interested in how film director Klim Shipenko and actress Yulia Peresild will be feeling when they climb out of the Soyuz MS-18 capsule at 12:36 am Sunday morning EDT after 12 days in space. They certainly looked happy when they arrived on the ISS last Tuesday. They are returning with Oleg Novitsky, a professional cosmonaut who has been on ISS since April. Peresild portrays a surgeon who must fly to the space station to tend to an ill cosmonaut. Novitsky plays the patient. Should be a fun film.

The Lucy mission launches on a 12-year mission from Cape Canaveral early Saturday morning (5:34 am EDT), preceded by a series of briefings on Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday. Its quite a fascinating mission not just scientifically, but the trajectory it will follow to study seven of the Trojan asteroids that are at the widely-separately L4 and L5 Sun-Jupiter Lagrange points. Unlike many NASA missions, Lucy is not an acronym. The spacecraft is named after the fossilized human ancestor found in 1974 in Ethiopia and given that name.

The week also has some excellent conferences.

Among them is the American Astronautical Societys annual Von Braun symposium, taking place in-person at its usual venue in Huntsville, AL and virtually. This will be the first public talk by Jim Free in his new role as NASAs Associate Administrator (AA) for Exploration Systems Development. NASA Administrator Bill Nelson split the Human Exploration and Operations Missions Directorate (HEOMD) in two on September 21. Now they are the Exploration Systems Development Mission Directorate (ESDMD) and the Space Operations Mission Directorate (SOMD). Kathy Lueders, who was the AA for HEOMD, is now AA for SOMD. She speaks on Tuesday, as does Space Technology Mission Directorate AA Jim Reuter. Associate Administrator Bob Cabana (the top civil servant in the agency) is the luncheon speaker on Wednesday, and Free is the luncheon speaker on Thursday. [UPDATE, OCT 11: AAS just sent an email saying that Cabana and Free have swapped places, so Free is on Wednesday and Cabana on Thursday.] Just before Wednesdays luncheon is a panel of five NASA Center Directors that illlustrate the agencys diversity efforts. Four are women: Janet Petro (Kennedy), Marla Prez-Davis (Glenn), Jody Singer (Marshall), and Vanessa Wyche (Johnson). Two are African-American: Wyche and Langleys Clayton Turner, the panels moderator. Prez-Davis is Hispanic.

The Mars Societys annual symposium runs Thursday through Sunday. Each morning Pacific Daylight Time (add 3 for EDT) is full of plenary sessions, including a talk by NASA Chief Scientist Jim Green on Friday and NASA Deputy Administrator Pam Melroy on Saturday. The afternoons are technical sessions. The whole event looks terrific.

There are a bunch of committee meetings and other great events, too many to summarize here.

Chinas Shenzhou-13 launch, which we mentioned last week, could take place Friday or Saturday EDT. China still is not saying anything officially. but rumors are the three-person crew will launch on October 16 Beijing Time, which could be October 15 EDT depending on the time of day (EDT is 12 hours behind Beijing time). We will post whatever we learn when we learn it on our Calendar entry for this event.

Those events and others we know about as of Sunday morning are shown below. Check back throughout the week for others we learn about later and add to our Calendar, or changes to these.

Monday, October 11

Monday-Thursday, October 11-14

Monday-Friday, October 11-15

Tuesday, October 12

Tuesday-Wednesday, October 12-13

Tuesday-Thursday, October 12-14

Wednesday, October 13

Wednesday-Thursday, October 13-14

Thursday, October 14

Thursday-Friday, October 14-15

Thursday-Sunday, October 14-17

Friday, October 15

Saturday, October 16

Saturday-Sunday, October 16-17

Last Updated: Oct 11, 2021 8:33 am ET

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Reflections on the ‘quasi-federal’ democracy – The Hindu

Posted: October 9, 2021 at 7:45 am

Despite a basic structure, Indian federalism needs institutional amendment to be democratically federal

Events coinciding with the jubilee of Indias Independence draw attention to the federal structure of Indias Constitution, which is a democratic imperative of multi-cultural India, where the constituent units of the sovereign state are based on language, against competing identities such as caste, tribe or religion. This built-in structural potential for conflict within and among the units, and that between them and the sovereign state, need imaginative federal craftmanship and sensitive political management. The ability of the Indian Constitution to keep its wide-ranging diversity within one sovereign state, with a formal democratic framework is noteworthy. Possibly, with universal adult suffrage and free institutions of justice and governance it is nearly impossible to polarise its wide-ranging diversity within any single divisive identity, even Hindutva; so that, despite its operational flaws, the democratic structure and national integrity are dialectically interlinked. But its operational fault lines are increasingly denting liberal institutions, undermining the federal democratic structure as recent events have underscored.

First, the tempestuous Parliament session, where the Rajya Sabha Chairperson broke down (in August 2021), unable to conduct proceedings despite the use of marshals; yet, the House passed a record number of Bills amidst a record number of adjournments. Second, cross-border police firing by one constituent State against another, inflicting fatalities, which also resulted in retaliatory action in the form of an embargo on goods trade and travel links with its land-locked neighbour.

Such unfamiliar events of federal democracy are recurrent in India, except their present manifest intensity. Legislative disruption was described by a Union Law Minister (while in Opposition) as a legitimate democratic right, and duty. In the 1960s, the Troika around Lohia claimed its right to enter Parliament on the Janatas shoulders to exit on the Marshals; posters with labels such as CIA Agent were displayed during debates; suitcases were transferred publicly to save the government; occasionally, Honorable Members emerged from debates with injuries. This time, in the federal chamber, Honorable Members and Marshals are in physical contact both claiming casualties official papers vandalised and chairpersons immobilised. Even inter-State conflict has assumed a new dimension.

Such empirical realities have led scholars to conceptualise Indias Post-colonial democracy, and federalism, differently from their liberal role-models. Rajni Kotharis one party dominance model of the Congress system has now been replaced by the Bharatiya Janata Party; Myrdalls soft state is reincarnated in the Pegasus era with fake videos and new instruments of mass distraction and coercion. Galbraiths functioning anarchy, now has greater criminalisation in Indias democracy, which includes over 30% legislators with criminal records, and courtrooms turning into gang war zones; it is now more anarchic, but still functioning, bypassing any Dangerous Decade or a 1984.

Federal theorist K.C. Wheare analyses Indias centralized state with some federal features as quasi-federal. He underscores the structural faultlines of Indian federalism not simply as operational. So, while many democratic distortions are amenable to mitigation by institutional professionalism, Indian federalism, to be democratically federal, needs institutional amendment despite being a basic structure. Wheares argument merits consideration.

Democratic federalism presupposes institutions to ensure equality between and among the units and the Centre so that they coordinate with each other, and are subordinate to the sovereign constitution their disputes adjudicated by an independent judiciary with impeccable professional and moral credibility. But Indias federal structure is constitutionally hamstrung by deficits on all these counts, and operationally impaired by the institutional dents in the overall democratic process. Like popular voting behaviour, institutional preferences are based either on ethnic or kinship network, or like anti-incumbency, as the perceived lesser evil, on individual role-models: T.N. Seshan for the Election Commission of India, J.F. Ribeiro for the police or Justices Chandrachud or Nariman for the judiciary.

Indias federal structure, underpinned on the colonial 1935 Act which initiated provincial autonomy, attempted democratising it by: renaming Provinces to autonomous States; transferring all Reserved Powers to popular governance; constitutionally dividing powers between the two tiers; inserting federalism in the Preamble, and Parts 3 and 4 containing citizens Fundamental Rights and Directive Principles; but nothing about States rights, not even their territorial boundaries. This has enabled the Centre to unilaterally alter State boundaries and create new States. The Indian Constitution itself has been amended 105 times in 70 years compared with 27 times in over 250 years in the United States.

With nation-building as priority, the constitutional division of power and resources remains heavily skewed in favour of the Centre; along with Residual, Concurrent and Implied powers, it compromises on the elementary federal principle of equality among them, operationally reinforced by extra-constitutional accretion. While the judiciary is empowered to adjudicate on their conflicts, with higher judicial appointments (an estimated 41% lying vacant), promotion and transfers becoming a central prerogative, their operations are becoming increasingly controversial.

The story is not different for the all India services, including the State cadres. What is operationally most distorted is the role of Governors: appointed by the Centre, it is political patronage, transforming this constitutional authority of a federal link to one of a central agent in the States. Thus, the critical instruments of national governance have been either assigned or appropriated by the Centre, with the States left with politically controversial subjects such as law and order and land reforms. Thus, most of Indias federal conflicts are structural, reinforced by operational abuses.

Yet, there is no federal chamber to politically resolve conflicts. The Rajya Sabha indirectly represents the States whose legislators elect it, but continue even after the electors are outvoted or dismissed; with no residential qualification, this House is a major source of political and financial patronage for all political parties, at the cost of the people of the State they represent.

Possibly, this explains its continuity. Constituting roughly half the Lok Sabha, proportionately, it reinforces the representative deficit of Parliament, which, through the Westminster system of winner-take-all, continues to elect majority parties and governments with a minority of electoral votes. The second chamber is not empowered to neutralise the demographic weight of the populous States with larger representation in the popular chamber; it cannot veto its legislations, unlike the U.S. Senate. It can only delay, which explains the disruptions. Joint sessions to resolve their differences are as predicable and comical as the voice votes in the Houses. Indias bicameral legislature, without ensuring a Federal Chamber, lives up to the usual criticism: when the second chamber agrees with the first, it is superfluous, when it disagrees, it is pernicious.

Historically, party compositions decide when they agree or disagree. Whenever any party with a massive majority in any state finds itself marginalised in the central legislature, it disrupts proceedings, just as popular issues not reflected in legislative proceedings provoke undemocratic expressions and reciprocal repression. Such examples abound in Indias quasi- federal democracy till now.

Empirical and scholarly evidence suggest Wheares prefix about federalism arguably applies to other constitutional goals (largely operationally), while the federal flaws are structural, reinforcing conflicts and violence, endemic in the distorted democratic process. It is a threat to national security by incubating regional cultural challenges to national sovereignty, and reciprocal repression. We might learn from the mistakes of neighbouring Sri Lanka and Pakistan rather than be condemned to relive them. Indias national security deserves a functional democratic federal alternative to its dysfunctional quasi-federal structure, which is neither federal nor democratic but a constitutional basic structure.

Aswini K. Ray is a former Professor of Comparative Politics and International Relations, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi

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Reflections on the 'quasi-federal' democracy - The Hindu

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Scientists Find That "Class Clowns" Are Actually the Smartest People in Class – Futurism

Posted: at 7:40 am

Humor seems to be a valuable tool for schoolchildren.Clown School

According to scientists, that class clown from seventh grade may have been the brightest kid in the room.

It turns out that humor ability and overall intelligence are tightly linked in middle-school-aged children, according to research published in the International Journal of Humor Research.

We were particularly interested in the quality of humor made by children but evaluated by adults, lead study author and Anadolu University researcher Ugur Sak said in a press release. Parents and teachers should be aware that if their children or students frequently make good quality humor, it is highly likely that they have extraordinary intelligence.

Also interesting about the study is the revelation that children seem to use humor for different purposes than adults do.

While humor is frequently used for entertainment by adults, children use it mostly for peer acceptance, Sak said in the release. Therefore, the nature of adult and child humor differ.

In order to determine which students were funnier and smarter, the researchers arranged for experts to rate the captions that 217 middle school kids wrote for a series of ten cartoons. The experts, who the paper describes as cartoonists and humor education instructors, judged the cartoons for comedic value and relevance, finding that the students with greater verbal reasoning skills as well as more generalized measures of intelligence also happened to be the funniest.

Perhaps its not surprising that the better wordsmiths were able to conjure up better jokes, but the study does seem valuable as a way to measure students progress in school and find ways to improve their education.

READ MORE: Class act: Clever children tell better jokes [De Groyter]

More on humor: 10 of the Most Futuristic April Fools Jokes So Far

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Light Show Goes Wrong When Drones Start Plummeting Out of the Sky – Futurism

Posted: at 7:40 am

The organizer claims there was foul play.Raining Drones

In an eerie bit of imagery, drones literally started raining from the sky in Zhengzhou, a city of 10 million people in the Chinese province of Henan.

Videos shared on social media show a constellation of drones starting to quickly lose altitude before clattering down on the ground. Onlookers can be seen jumping out of the way to avoid getting struck by the small drones.

The incident involved about 200 drones which were up in the sky forming the name of a nearby shopping mall, according to Vice. Spectators then started shouting, warning of the falling drones as the scene descended into chaos.

More and more drones came off, a spectator told Vice. Some flew very far away, and some hit the trees.

While the exact cause of the failure has yet to be confirmed, rumors are now swirling that a rival drone maker was interfering. The shows organizer reported the incident to local police, alleging a competitor was at fault, causing the drones to fall out of the sky by overwhelming their navigation systems using transmitters, according to Drone DJ.

Its not the first time drones rained down from the skies. In October 2018, 46 drones plummeted from the sky during a display over Victoria Harbor in Hong Kong. Officials at the time suspected somebody was using radio jammers from the ground to force them to crash, according to the South China Morning Post.

READ MORE: This Is What Happens When a Drone Light Show Fails [Vice]

More on drones: Check Out This Awesome Drone Footage From Inside a Hurricane

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Fauci Says People Are Threatening His Wife and Daughters With Violence – Futurism

Posted: at 7:40 am

At one point, he received a letter that opened with "a puff of powder."Abuse and Harassment

A new National Geographic documentary sheds light on the abuse topUS infectious diseases specialist Anthony Fauci has had to endure since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic.

These fucking dark web people are really, really getting bad, he told AIDS activist Peter Staley last year in the documentary, as quoted by Insider. I mean, theyre really, really harassing Chris, referring to his wife Christine Grady.

Even his daughters were constantly targeted, according to Fauci.

The documentary paints a grim picture of the most recent chapter in US history, a time when misinformation and extremist beliefs flourished and those who furthered trustworthy and scientifically accurate information became the scapegoat.

Things got so bad last summer that Fauci and his entire family were assigned personal security. Far-right extremists and conspiracy theorists were making serious threats while the Trump administration was actively attempting to undermine him.

One of them called up with violent threats like eight times today on [Christines] cell phone, until she figured I gotta just change my cell phone,' Fauci said in the documentary.

Fauci was even sent a letter that opened with a puff of powder.

It was on my shirt, my tie, my pants, my hands, and my chin, Fauci recalled. The first thing I thought of was holy shit, why did I open up this letter?'

As a precaution, Fauci had to get naked and get hosed off, though the powder ultimately turned out to be a hoax.

Fauci has dedicated his entire career to furthering the truth but hes had to pay a steep price as a result.

READ MORE: Fauci rails against dark web people harassing his wife and daughters with violent threats [Insider]

More on Fauci: Fauci Wants To Know Why Three Virus Researchers in Wuhan Got Sick

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Wife Sues Hospital to Treat Husband With Ivermectin, Then Husband Dies – Futurism

Posted: at 7:40 am

Image by Getty / Futurism

A man who was hospitalized and placed on a ventilator for COVID-19, and whose wife later filed suit to force the hospital to treat him with ivermectin, has died.

The man, Jeffrey Smith, was first admitted to the intensive care unit at West Chester Hospital in July. In August, his wife sued the hospital to force it to treat then-intubated husband with ivermectin, a horse dewormer thats become the new hydroxychloroquine: a drug favored by the far-right and anti-vaxxer crowds that doesnt actually seem to help coronavirus patients whatsoever.

Specific details on Smiths death are few and far between, but his attorney told the Fox News affiliate station Fox19 that he passed away in late September. By then, the court order to enforce a prescription from a doctor named Fred Wagshul to treat Smith with ivermectin again, a drug that doesnt effectively fight the coronavirus had been reversed.

Wagshul is the founding physician of a questionable group of doctors called the Front Line COVID-19 Critical Care Alliance, which touts ivermectin as a silver bullet against COVID and, as MedPage Today reports, actually argues that it would be unethical to wait for a clinical trial to show that the drug works.

As the ABC News affiliate network WSB-TV notes, a judge reversed the ivermectin order earlier in September, just two weeks after it was issued, because Wagshul had never actually seen Smith and because Wagshul does not have privileges at West Chester Hospital.

The whole saga is unfortunate, but doctors are using it as an opportunity to remind patients that the best protective measure that we have against COVID is to get vaccinated.

Its the best treatment option that any of us can think of, Ohio Department of Health director Bruce Vanderhoff told Fox19. Actually, a therapeutic preventative, but nevertheless the best medical intervention that weve come up with.

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