LizzieMaine
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True, for industrial and military applications. But you won't find anyone anywhere today who can manufacture or rebuild a 12AP4.
True, for industrial and military applications. But you won't find anyone anywhere today who can manufacture or rebuild a 12AP4.
I once bought my niece a T Shirt, it read: "My parents got to see a man land on the moon but all I got was Freaking Facebook!"
We went to the MOON, Dudes!
Love your post.
While I too am nostalgic about manned (and womanned) space missions and the era when the public accepted the tremendous expense and physical risks of these efforts, the scientific community is not at all in unanimous agreement that this type of space mission is the best foot forward in the current age. I don't have a dog in that fight, but I do think you have a lot of brilliant science missions to get excited about. From Voyager in the 1970s on to the mars rovers, the Cassini Mission, the Solar Dynamics Observatory taking photos of the sun from space 24/7/365... the images from these missions are, to my mind, as inspiring as the iconic Hasselblad photos of the lunar landscape and the portraits of earth from the moon. Designing these missions within today's wafer thin NASA budget adds another magnitude of magic. I am sure you are aware of the JPL facility up on Mt. Wilson 18 miles from Los Angeles. I hope you have a chance to visit and experience the science going on there. You can even get together a bunch of friends and rent the 100 inch Hooker telescope (the largest in the world for more than a generation) for an evening of observing.
clear skies!
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My real point was the horrible irony of '73 and the blue marble photograph being the symbolic end of a certain type of age of exploration and imagination. Until then the ends of the earth were still mysterious and the moon was somehow possible. The same moment is evocative of our hitting our limit both above and below. As I said, you could still have a Skull Island and a Land That Time Forgot ... those things were unlikely, but not impossible here on earth. The "Golden Era" referenced here so often is full of the discovery of exotic places both real and fictional.
I disagree that there was ever a time when people went into the unknown lands without government support. Columbus was sponsored by Isabella. The government made the Allegheny frontier more or less safe for settlement by defeating the selfish Indians who wanted it for themselves and tried to claim squatter's rights. Then the rest of the country, skipping over the parts that had already been settled by somebody else's government, was bought and paid for or conquered by the government. And likewise, it was made safe for settlement or passage through by dealing with the Indians, which included some that had been displaced already from east of the Mississippi.
The myth of the Rugged Frontiersman Who Wears No Man's Collar dies hard. The entire westward push was fueled by government land giveways -- the "Homestead Acts" which divided up and gave away millions of acres of territory seized or otherwise "acquired" from various Indian tribes. Although these programs were intended for individual farmers, it became all too easy for "individuals" to be used as pawns by huge ranching, logging, or oil operations, thus passing huge swaths of "public" land into corporate ownership at little to no expenditure. Many of the great fortunes of the late 19th and early 20th centuries were thus built on the foundation of a hijacked government program.
And don't forget, the Army was giving away free boxes of 50-70 ammunition, to any one that would kill buffalo in order to starve the Natives and force them onto reservations, a very cheap and easy way to take their land!The myth of the Rugged Frontiersman Who Wears No Man's Collar dies hard. The entire westward push was fueled by government land giveways -- the "Homestead Acts" which divided up and gave away millions of acres of territory seized or otherwise "acquired" from various Indian tribes. Although these programs were intended for individual farmers, it became all too easy for "individuals" to be used as pawns by huge ranching, logging, or oil operations, thus passing huge swaths of "public" land into corporate ownership at little to no expenditure. Many of the great fortunes of the late 19th and early 20th centuries were thus built on the foundation of a hijacked government program.
If you read books on Trapdoor Springfield's, Remington Rolling Blocks, and the ubiquitous, Sharps Falling Blocks, you will come across it! Here are a couple of articles on it, no mention of the 50-70 rounds, but I imagine most of these people have never handled such a round, let alone shot a rifle or carbine chambered for said ammunition. No coincidence, that General William Tecumseh Sherman was the architect of the plan, to deny the enemy a food sorce! http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwo...-slaughtered-buffalo-plains-indian-wars-30798 http://www.dailykos.com/story/2012/3/6/1071659/-Indians-201-Indians-Saving-the-Buffalo-PeopleWho told you that?