- The Reciprocal Transit (aliens might be watching us) Caleb Scharf, Life, Unbounded
- No government, no problem Leonid Bershidsky, Bloomberg
- Syria and Arabia: The great divide Robert Carver, History Today
- The French Left catches up to our own Jacques Delacroix Andrew Hussey, New Statesman
alien civilizations
Nightcap
- The Fermi Paradox Tim Urban, Wait But Why
- The aliens among us Tyler Cowen, Bloomberg
- Yes, ownership matters Chris Dillow, Stumbling & Mumbling
- America’s Messiah complex Colin Dickey, New Republic
RCH: “10 Worst Space Disasters in History”
My latest at RealClearHistory:
When I think about space disasters, I am reminded of the space battle between Earth and Trisolaris in Liu Cixin’s fantastic sci-fi novel. Stay with me here. Liu Cixin’s Dark Forest novel needs to be read. In the novel, humans make contact with a nearby alien civilization, who proceed to make plans to invade earth, wipe out its human population, and re-populate it with themselves. The first battle between Earth’s space forces and the would-be invaders ends badly for Earth, as thousands of space warships are destroyed in a matter minutes by a Trisolaran probe. The novel brings up an uncomfortable theory that humans have been all-too-willing to neglect: what if the universe is a hostile, deadly place instead of a curious one?
Please, read the rest.
Nightcap
- The extraterrestrial next door Adam Hadhazy, Space.com
- Reporting reports: colonial medical institutions Jonathan Saha, Colonizing Animals
- The best way to defeat totalitarianism? Treat it as a joke Anna Aslanyan, Spectator
- Bureaucrats in the Defense Department: An ethnography Jonathan Wong, War on the Rocks
Nightcap
- Bruno Leoni and the search for certainty in law Alberto Mingardi, Law & Liberty
- The enduring legacy of Reagan’s drug war in Latin America Michelle Getchell, War on the Rocks
- Brexit, and the limits of empathy Chris Dillow, Stumbling & Mumbling
- The lucky earth hypothesis Nick Nielsen, Grand Strategy Annex
Nightcap
- Astrobiology highlights of 2018 Caleb Scharf, Life, Unbounded
- How the British constitution created the Brexit mess John McGinnis, Law & Liberty
- Government as a branch of culture Arnold Kling, askblog
- Russia moves to strangle Ukraine from the sea Christian Esch, Der Spiegel
Nightcap
- Trump still trying to squelch media’s left-wing slant Robbie Soave, Hit & Run
- People, there’a a whole wide world out there Scott Sumner, EconLog
- The painted towns of Rajasthan (India) John Butler, Asian Review of Books
- Beyond the SETI paradigm Nick Nielsen, Grand Strategy Annex
Nightcap
- Reclaiming Full-Throttle Luxury Space Communism Aaron Winslow, Los Angeles Review of Books
- Elves and Aliens Nick Richardson, London Review of Books
- Imperialism, American-style Michael Auslin, Claremont Review of Books
- The Congo reform project: Too dark altogether Angus Mitchell, Dublin Review of Books
Around the Web
- Athens on the Midway: Defending Leo Strauss
- Should Earth Shut the Hell Up?
- Space of Mediation: Why do international labor recruiters in China charge so much, and why are they difficult to regulate?
- The strange normality of life in the middle of Syria’s war
Christmas went well. I’ve got four books I have to read before the three books I ordered from amazon.com (thanks to a gift card) arrive.