Reheated (123)
On the subject of space exploration, some items from the archives:
The Inadequate And Resentful Should Not Be Put In Charge.
A “diverse group of thought leaders” opine on space travel. It does not go well.
We are, however, told that we need more deaf and disabled people in space. Because space exploration just isn’t difficult enough and dangerous enough as it is. And choosing astronauts with hearing problems, poor eyesight and motor-control issues will make things much more exciting.
And frankly. when you’re asking, apparently in all seriousness, how a mission to Mars would benefit Black Lives Matter, as if it somehow should, I think we can say that the foolishness in the room has risen to hazardous levels.
On the stupefying flattery of aboriginal mythology.
No “Eureka!” moments there. No recalibration of scale.
What’s notable about aboriginal “astronomy,” and aboriginal culture more generally, is that it stayed primitive, all but prehistoric, for such an incredibly long time.
You Will Pretend It Has Great Value.
At Montreal’s Concordia University, even light must be “decolonised.”
This “indigenous knowledge,” the particulars of which are elusive and treated rather coyly, will, we’re told, be “elevated” – presumably, above its station – while “Eurocentric western science” – or, you know, science – will be “de-centred and scrutinised” for any residual wickedness. Any oppressive taint. And hey, what better use could there be of other people’s time and money?
In Space No-One Can Hear You Scream.
In which we poke at the burning, worthless rubble of Scientific American.
Despite the list of problematic things and much furrowing of brows, it remains unclear what the “decolonisation” of SETI, and of astronomy in general, might realistically entail. “Listening to marginalised and historically excluded perspectives” is mentioned as imperative, though the specific benefits of doing so, and any consequent enhancements of twenty-first century science, are left mysterious and intriguing.
Whether those “Indigenous peoples and other marginalised groups” – these keepers of hidden knowledge beyond the ken of white devils – might have “biases” of their own, or any shortcomings at all, is not explored.
After some pre-emptive disapproval of the “colonial” violation of hypothetical microbes, whose autonomy and wellbeing would apparently be desecrated by human curiosity, we’re told that “making SETI more diverse” – i.e., giving influence and authority, and a salary, to people with no relevant skills – is a matter of great importance. “There’s really no downside,” says Ms Charbonneau.
The upside, however – i.e., the premise of the whole 2,300-word article – is, to say the least, a tad vague. Apparently, hiring Iroquois or Pawnee people, or Australian Aboriginals, or whoever is deemed sufficiently brown and therefore magical, would result in “the expansion of our pool of what civilisations might look like.” “It just makes sense,” says she.
Readers unschooled in intersectional woo may be puzzled as to why those chosen as suitably indigenous and put-upon would have much to add to the doing of modern astronomy and space exploration. A pivotal role in any success seems unlikely. Readers may also wonder why those who can construct orbital telescopes and land robots on distant planets should defer in matters of science to those who can’t.
For those craving more, this is a pretty good place to start.
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Why is anyone even listening to these losers?
The level of fundamental wrong-headedness is quite something. It’s actually difficult to convey – the visceral sense that these are not people to whom one should defer. About pretty much anything.
They start with a faulty assumption – a problem that doesn’t actually exist – and then start piling up non-sequitur and irrelevance, while sneering at members of the audience who try to steer the discussion back to the ostensible topic.
And again, the end of the video – the final question and the struggle of this “diverse group of thought leaders” to formulate any meaningful response, any response at all – is, I think, quite telling. It reveals who they are.
I mean, when you’re expected to defer to supposedly learned figures who insist that jobs and influence should be given to people with no relevant skills, based on their magical brownness, and that you should “de-centre” things that work in favour of things that don’t, then the prospect of a flourishing, space-faring humanity recede that little bit further.
There’s a contrivance, a perversity, that’s hard to put into words. It’s practically sabotage.
Yes I can definitely smell shite.
Heh. Quite.
It’s a bold manoeuvre – brazen – and one seen repeatedly in other, related posts. Insisting that this “ancient wisdom” must be incorporated and deferred to, without even once specifying what said “ancient wisdom” is, or why one should defer to it. Safe in the knowledge that even asking for particulars risks social disapproval and possibly career consequences.
Who all think exactly the same.
Insofar as they think at all. I mean, it doesn’t appear to be an activity in which they could be said to excel.
It would give angry and resentful under-performing blacks an opportunity to murder non-blacks while millions of miles from the nearest cop.
One can sometimes find such particulars in “afro-centric” “education” resources, but even then it’s a farrago of vague assertions, misrepresentations, and outright lies.
Much of it feels like a shit-test. As if they were practically daring you to say what they themselves have made necessary to say. In that, I wouldn’t usually go out of my way to, for instance, list the numerous, rather profound shortcomings of aboriginal societies. It would normally seem… well, impolite.
But these clowns have engineered situations in which that polite reluctance is exploited and turned into an insulting farce.
And so, correction becomes necessary.
Voting closes at 14:00 GMT on Wednesday 18 March 2026.
[ Titivates store-bought pizza, starts compiling Friday’s Ephemera. ]
Yes, when they are saying it to us.
But they say it to each other and to their children far more.
Thinking, especially of the joined-up kind, is more hindrance than help in those circles.
As so much of the posture is based on endless pretending, a contrived denial of the obvious, there must be an accumulation of things one has to learn to ignore or wildly misconstrue. Can’t pull at this thread, can’t connect these ideas here, can’t look up the statistics on that. It seems both exhausting and stupefying.
“Gee, why do you scream about homeschooling your kids?”
Almost 40 years ago, I read a manifesto by some female academics that they were going to develop a “feminist” mathematics. They failed to specify what that might be. Alas, lo these 40 years I am still waiting with bated breath for their results…
The laudable drive to respect all peoples as being equally human has led, by one of those slippery slope things, to the insane belief that all cultural aspects of all peoples are equally valid, and thus to aboriginal telescopes and Australian university profs being told they must teach that aboriginals have always been in Australia etc. To the lunacy that government plans for managing public lands in Canada and the US require that native people’s opinions about how to conserve endangered species and manage fire be given strong weight (but which native people get the right to opine is not specified) in spite of the natives historically burning the hell out of the woods for their convenience.
Oh, you mean the Scientific American that recently had a full page spread lauding Anthony Fauci (who personally funded the Wuhan lab) as a great scientist? That Scientific American? hahahaha not so funny IRL
Pizza as politics.
Hubris and Prejudice.
Scott Adams used to say there is no such thing (as a slippery slope), and now I can’t ask him why he believed that or what he actually meant.
We’ve been in “Give them an inch and they’ll take a mile” territory for a long time now.
Winston Churchill to be scrapped from banknotes as Bank of England outlines ‘overdue’ decision
The “expert” making the decision.
Everyone knows telly presenters are experts. Especially when demonstrably possessed of ‘indigenous ways of knowing’.
More from that link:
Not explained is how pictures of animals are harder to counterfeit than pictures of people. They’re hardly even trying to make their lies plausible.
They’re definitely NOT ‘the right stuff’.
That. We’re past politeness.
And on more than one front, I’d say.
See Karl Popper’s Paradox of Tolerance. Intolerance of actual enemies is not merely legitimate, it is necessary. Morally obligatory.
Pardon my smile.
It’s just our bringin’ upke
That gets us out of hand.
Heh.
FYI: You can remove everything after the question mark in such URL’s. Those parts are called “decorations” and merely tell such things as where the link came from.
If you want to see what the Woke consider successful space travel, Netflix created a series called Another Life, which has to be seen to be believed, although that may be too high a price to pay.
Far easier, and much more amusing, is watching the Youtube review of it entitled “Netflix has made the worst show I’ve ever seen“. At 2.8M viewers, it actually had higher viewership than the series it was mocking.
It was commonly referred to as “Melrose Space”, or “USS Diversity Hires”, with good reason. I’d never heard the phrase “diaper fire” before, but it describes the show perfectly.
The backstory to it is more interesting than the actual show. Netflix wanted an SF show like Trek, so they hired a writer who claimed to have worked on The Next Generation for several years. And he had.
It was only after he finished the production, and Netflix asked “WTF is this?” when the saw it, did they discover that he had worked on the show Degrassi: The Next Generation. That’s a high school show about angsty teenagers having sex and doing drugs. So he produced a show about angsty teenagers (and transgenders, and nonbinaries, and…) having sex and doing drugs. What, you were expecting something else?
I generally do & thought I had.
My 2 cents on election integrity via SAVE Act.
The joys of diversity.
Piper, having worked a bit with Adams, my guess is that he thought that the slopes weren’t so much slippery, as paved smooth by and for a set of intentional downhill drivers.
Eloi vs. Morlocks.
Rara avis.
The “expert” making the decision.
How about we replace the “expert” with wildlife? And that space travel panel of “experts” too, while we’re at it? I can’t foresee worse decisions coming from panels so staffed…
‘It was commonly referred to as “Melrose Space”, or “USS Diversity Hires”…’
And then Starfleet Academy said ‘Hold my Romulan ale and watch this!’
One for the Golgafrinchan Ark Fleet Ship B.
These are people who indulge in theatrical fretting about the use of the words civilisation and intelligence to refer to… well, civilisation and intelligence. Because these words are bad somehow. They’re “colonial baggage.”
Ms Charbonneau and her peers also want us to believe that space exploration is very nearly like racism, with lots of racist “biases,” and that the siting of telescopes is almost certainly racist, and so those telescopes should be dismantled and moved somewhere much less effective. For science.
These are people who can see “no downside” to wasting other people’s time and money on an indefinite basis and in large quantities. People who feel they should be deferred to – obeyed – without ever being coherent or convincing about why. And none of this is challenged. The interviewer just nods. The editor just nods.
Scientific American, ladies and gentlemen. Where mental activity is smothered until it stops.
The thought process seems to be “Something, something, er, racism… Ah, that’s good enough.” Because as long as you land on the racism square, you’ll get points.
There’s no substance to practically anything Ms Charbonneau says, no particulars, no obvious relevance, no underlying logic. It’s just modish waffle with a predetermined conclusion that in 2,300 words is never actually justified. It’s just air.
“It’s… important to think very critically,” says Ms Charbonneau, while doing nothing of the kind. It’s the level of argument for which an A-level student should expect to be corrected.
See also this.
Anyone who say ‘folks’ is suspect for a start.
It does rather add to the pile of affectation.
I rewatched the video yesterday and am still savouring the inadvertent surrealism. Posing the question of what constitutes “the right stuff” – the kinds of temperament and competence required to be an explorer of other worlds – to a panel of unfocussed and resentful inadequates.
Wait until she learns about the violent language used in astronomy.
Heh. I’d forgotten about that one. It is, dare I say, quite good.
Based poetry.
Excuse me while I admire my own awesomeness.