zoom.earth is showing a projected path of the eye that will take it straight through the Kennedy Space Center.
someone
Imagine what it would be like to be some human hunter's prey animal. You sprint, they follow. You hide, they follow. You attack, they somehow hurt you back while you're biting on their strange long arm with a sharp point but they feel no pain and keep hurting you with that strange long arm. Days and nights may pass. They follow. Sometimes the pointy arms that hurt you fly at you like a bird. You start hurting bad, start slowing down, you escape and hide. But they follow.
All the other animals could ever accomplish at most was killing each other.
We humans killed the planet.
We're honestly rather terrifying.
I keep thinking about the Fermi Paradox, the question of why we've not yet detected intelligent life elsewhere in the universe. I think about the possibility that it simply takes awhile in a universe's history for it to happen. Maybe a few rounds of heavy star formation and supernovae spreading elements heavier than lithium in mass quantities are needed for life to be able to start. Maybe we're alone because we're the first spacefaring intelligence in the universe. At first that may sound like some revival of geocentricism, but some intelligent species has to be the first to be spacefaring, and maybe by pure dumb coincidence we are them.
In the future history of the universe, assuming we humans don't drive ourselves into extinction, younger intelligent species may reach the stars that humans visited long before and gaze on our wondrous technology a billion years more advanced than theirs - like an ape gazes at a Monolith. There is no way to explain to the ape what the Monolith is and does. Future younger spacefaring intelligences may look at our works with the same futile but earnest desire to understand our Godlike minds and purposes.
But we may not have left, and we may not be benevolent. We might not be the Progenitors. We could be the Shadows.
I've been trying to think of some glib funny joke about the situation for my Florida comrades. Gallows humour is my way of coping with stress, even second-hand stress. But I've got nothing. Hope it all goes well for you and yours.
internally justified with american exceptionalism but the EU is behaving a lot like this too.
America is the child of Britain and France and Germany. The apple didn't fall far from the tree.
I'd dispute the "bad movie" label on that one. Robot Jox is a definite B-movie, but actually a pretty good one.
Even circumstantially, the Enterprise D is pretty lethal to have families on board.
I really appreciated the turbolift conversation between Troi and Picard in "The Bonding". It was a great in-character way to call out Roddenberry's weird idea about families being aboard Starfleet ships.
TROI: I sense the weight of this duty on you, Captain.
PICARD: I really wonder. Halt. I've always believed that carrying children on a starship is a very questionable policy. Serving on a starship means accepting certain risks, certain dangers. Did Jeremy Aster make that choice?
TROI: Death and loss are an integral part of life everywhere. Leaving him on Earth would not have protected him.
PICARD: No, but Earth isn't likely to be ordered to the Neutral Zone, or to repel a Romulan attack. It was my command which sent his mother to her death. She understood her mission and my duty. Will he?
When I'm comrade general secretary of the United Earth Soviet Union, I'm going to gulag everyone even remotely connected to the 501st legion.
I used to recommend Ubuntu for newcomers, but the Snap nonsense makes for a poor experience with many major packages, such as Firefox. For the past few years I've been recommending stock Mint instead. I feel that it's what Ubuntu used to be in terms of a frustration-free experience. A very gentle learning curve and extensive hardware support.
They make sure to keep their slavery and colonialism in Africa, outside of France's nominal borders.
I could never be mad at a puppy.
Hurricane Milton from space.