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#1
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Signatures needed on petition to evaluate and stabilize the Arecibo
radio telescope: "We urge emergency action to have the Army Corps of Engineers or another agency evaluate the telescope structure and search for a safe way to stabilize it," reads the petition to the White House, which had more than 28,000 signatures as of Friday. Space.com notes if the petition gets 100,000 signees by Dec. 21, the White House has to respond within two months. Jenniffer Gonzalez, Puerto Rico's resident commissioner, is also taking action, sending a letter to Congress last week to request funds to make repairs. The NSF maintains the structure is beyond safe renovation. "We understand the risk of going there and trying to fix it," Wilbert Ruperto-Hernandez, one of the organizers of the "Save the Arecibo Observatory" campaign, tells Space.com. "But not many people think that it should be an excuse to just demolish it." https://petitions.whitehouse.gov/petition/petition-emergency-action-evaluate-and-stabilize-arecibo-radio-telescope |
#2
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On Fri, 27 Nov 2020 14:59:12 -0500, Wayne B
wrote: Signatures needed on petition to evaluate and stabilize the Arecibo radio telescope: "We urge emergency action to have the Army Corps of Engineers or another agency evaluate the telescope structure and search for a safe way to stabilize it," reads the petition to the White House, which had more than 28,000 signatures as of Friday. Space.com notes if the petition gets 100,000 signees by Dec. 21, the White House has to respond within two months. Jenniffer Gonzalez, Puerto Rico's resident commissioner, is also taking action, sending a letter to Congress last week to request funds to make repairs. The NSF maintains the structure is beyond safe renovation. "We understand the risk of going there and trying to fix it," Wilbert Ruperto-Hernandez, one of the organizers of the "Save the Arecibo Observatory" campaign, tells Space.com. "But not many people think that it should be an excuse to just demolish it." https://petitions.whitehouse.gov/petition/petition-emergency-action-evaluate-and-stabilize-arecibo-radio-telescope You might have to try to get Elon Musk or Bill Gates to cough up $50-100 million. I doubt the government is going to do it. Since this is an international resource, where are the scientists from other countries who used it? |
#3
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On Friday, November 27, 2020 at 6:10:31 PM UTC-5, wrote:
On Fri, 27 Nov 2020 14:59:12 -0500, Wayne B wrote: Signatures needed on petition to evaluate and stabilize the Arecibo radio telescope: "We urge emergency action to have the Army Corps of Engineers or another agency evaluate the telescope structure and search for a safe way to stabilize it," reads the petition to the White House, which had more than 28,000 signatures as of Friday. Space.com notes if the petition gets 100,000 signees by Dec. 21, the White House has to respond within two months. Jenniffer Gonzalez, Puerto Rico's resident commissioner, is also taking action, sending a letter to Congress last week to request funds to make repairs. The NSF maintains the structure is beyond safe renovation. "We understand the risk of going there and trying to fix it," Wilbert Ruperto-Hernandez, one of the organizers of the "Save the Arecibo Observatory" campaign, tells Space.com. "But not many people think that it should be an excuse to just demolish it." https://petitions.whitehouse.gov/petition/petition-emergency-action-evaluate-and-stabilize-arecibo-radio-telescope You might have to try to get Elon Musk or Bill Gates to cough up $50-100 million. I doubt the government is going to do it. Since this is an international resource, where are the scientists from other countries who used it? Trump would have other countries pitch in their share to fix it. Biden will just bend over and ask how much. Oh, and make sure the Ukraine and China pays nothing. Don't want to hurt Hunter's job security. |
#4
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#6
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posted to rec.boats
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On Friday, November 27, 2020 at 7:26:26 PM UTC-5, Wayne B wrote:
On Fri, 27 Nov 2020 18:09:45 -0500, wrote: On Fri, 27 Nov 2020 14:59:12 -0500, Wayne B wrote: Signatures needed on petition to evaluate and stabilize the Arecibo radio telescope: "We urge emergency action to have the Army Corps of Engineers or another agency evaluate the telescope structure and search for a safe way to stabilize it," reads the petition to the White House, which had more than 28,000 signatures as of Friday. Space.com notes if the petition gets 100,000 signees by Dec. 21, the White House has to respond within two months. Jenniffer Gonzalez, Puerto Rico's resident commissioner, is also taking action, sending a letter to Congress last week to request funds to make repairs. The NSF maintains the structure is beyond safe renovation. "We understand the risk of going there and trying to fix it," Wilbert Ruperto-Hernandez, one of the organizers of the "Save the Arecibo Observatory" campaign, tells Space.com. "But not many people think that it should be an excuse to just demolish it." https://petitions.whitehouse.gov/petition/petition-emergency-action-evaluate-and-stabilize-arecibo-radio-telescope You might have to try to get Elon Musk or Bill Gates to cough up $50-100 million. I doubt the government is going to do it. Since this is an international resource, where are the scientists from other countries who used it? === I know nothing about the finances or international aspects. It just seems like a unique resource that is worth preserving. I was working on the technical staff in a research lab at Cornell University back in the 60s when the whole thing was coming online. In the middle of an upstate NY winter, most of us thought Puerto Rico would be a nice gig to have. It's unfortunate that so many jump to politicize the situation. More information he https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arecibo_Observatory But seriously, haven't you been politicizing things lately? Using statements like "a danger to our democracy", which is just liberal media BS? When it comes to governments, and their funding of all projects, it *IS* political. Are you OK with other countries using and reaping the benefits of this telescope without paying their fair share? At least Trump pushed back on the free-loading countries during his term. Why is that a bad thing? I suspect the midterms will tell the story. Hopefully the USA isn't that far gone. And we can get the other countries using this telescope to pay half, while we pay the other half. But that won't happen with Biden and Kammy. They'll give it away. |
#7
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posted to rec.boats
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On Fri, 27 Nov 2020 19:26:21 -0500, Wayne B
wrote: On Fri, 27 Nov 2020 18:09:45 -0500, wrote: On Fri, 27 Nov 2020 14:59:12 -0500, Wayne B wrote: Signatures needed on petition to evaluate and stabilize the Arecibo radio telescope: "We urge emergency action to have the Army Corps of Engineers or another agency evaluate the telescope structure and search for a safe way to stabilize it," reads the petition to the White House, which had more than 28,000 signatures as of Friday. Space.com notes if the petition gets 100,000 signees by Dec. 21, the White House has to respond within two months. Jenniffer Gonzalez, Puerto Rico's resident commissioner, is also taking action, sending a letter to Congress last week to request funds to make repairs. The NSF maintains the structure is beyond safe renovation. "We understand the risk of going there and trying to fix it," Wilbert Ruperto-Hernandez, one of the organizers of the "Save the Arecibo Observatory" campaign, tells Space.com. "But not many people think that it should be an excuse to just demolish it." https://petitions.whitehouse.gov/petition/petition-emergency-action-evaluate-and-stabilize-arecibo-radio-telescope You might have to try to get Elon Musk or Bill Gates to cough up $50-100 million. I doubt the government is going to do it. Since this is an international resource, where are the scientists from other countries who used it? === I know nothing about the finances or international aspects. It just seems like a unique resource that is worth preserving. I was working on the technical staff in a research lab at Cornell University back in the 60s when the whole thing was coming online. In the middle of an upstate NY winter, most of us thought Puerto Rico would be a nice gig to have. It's unfortunate that so many jump to politicize the situation. More information he https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arecibo_Observatory I have been reading a little about this and the consensus is, most of the infrastructure is EOL. Salt air and other ravages from the environment has damaged this so badly they might be better off salvaging anything they can and starting over. It might end up being pretty much rebuilding from scratch. They won't have any military connection this time and no DoD money so this might actually be best done by a consortium of private companies. To put it in perspective, if they could raise just 10% of what we spent on this last election (~$1.4 BILLION) they could build a 21st century replacement for a mid 20th century complex with far more capabilities. |
#8
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#9
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On 11/27/20 10:51 PM, wrote:
On Fri, 27 Nov 2020 19:26:21 -0500, Wayne B wrote: On Fri, 27 Nov 2020 18:09:45 -0500, wrote: On Fri, 27 Nov 2020 14:59:12 -0500, Wayne B wrote: Signatures needed on petition to evaluate and stabilize the Arecibo radio telescope: "We urge emergency action to have the Army Corps of Engineers or another agency evaluate the telescope structure and search for a safe way to stabilize it," reads the petition to the White House, which had more than 28,000 signatures as of Friday. Space.com notes if the petition gets 100,000 signees by Dec. 21, the White House has to respond within two months. Jenniffer Gonzalez, Puerto Rico's resident commissioner, is also taking action, sending a letter to Congress last week to request funds to make repairs. The NSF maintains the structure is beyond safe renovation. "We understand the risk of going there and trying to fix it," Wilbert Ruperto-Hernandez, one of the organizers of the "Save the Arecibo Observatory" campaign, tells Space.com. "But not many people think that it should be an excuse to just demolish it." https://petitions.whitehouse.gov/petition/petition-emergency-action-evaluate-and-stabilize-arecibo-radio-telescope You might have to try to get Elon Musk or Bill Gates to cough up $50-100 million. I doubt the government is going to do it. Since this is an international resource, where are the scientists from other countries who used it? === I know nothing about the finances or international aspects. It just seems like a unique resource that is worth preserving. I was working on the technical staff in a research lab at Cornell University back in the 60s when the whole thing was coming online. In the middle of an upstate NY winter, most of us thought Puerto Rico would be a nice gig to have. It's unfortunate that so many jump to politicize the situation. More information he https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arecibo_Observatory I have been reading a little about this and the consensus is, most of the infrastructure is EOL. Salt air and other ravages from the environment has damaged this so badly they might be better off salvaging anything they can and starting over. It might end up being pretty much rebuilding from scratch. They won't have any military connection this time and no DoD money so this might actually be best done by a consortium of private companies. To put it in perspective, if they could raise just 10% of what we spent on this last election (~$1.4 BILLION) they could build a 21st century replacement for a mid 20th century complex with far more capabilities. I agree a new system is a better solution than repairing an out of date system, but it should be built by the government as a government facility using private sector subcontractors. This is the sort of facility that should be used for the public good. Let's not turn it into a damned toll road that profits private enterprise at the expense of the public. -- Bozo Bin resuscitated...John Herring in there, along with Bert Robbins, 452471atgmail.com, Just-AN-Asshole, Evangelical Tim, and Gunboy Alex. Oh, if you are in the Bozo Bin, it is because you are only here to insult or your posts lack wit or you are deadly dull, or a combination. In Just-AN-Asshole's case, it is all three. |
#10
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posted to rec.boats
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On Fri, 27 Nov 2020 14:59:12 -0500, Wayne B
wrote: Signatures needed on petition to evaluate and stabilize the Arecibo radio telescope: "We urge emergency action to have the Army Corps of Engineers or another agency evaluate the telescope structure and search for a safe way to stabilize it," reads the petition to the White House, which had more than 28,000 signatures as of Friday. Space.com notes if the petition gets 100,000 signees by Dec. 21, the White House has to respond within two months. Jenniffer Gonzalez, Puerto Rico's resident commissioner, is also taking action, sending a letter to Congress last week to request funds to make repairs. The NSF maintains the structure is beyond safe renovation. "We understand the risk of going there and trying to fix it," Wilbert Ruperto-Hernandez, one of the organizers of the "Save the Arecibo Observatory" campaign, tells Space.com. "But not many people think that it should be an excuse to just demolish it." https://petitions.whitehouse.gov/petition/petition-emergency-action-evaluate-and-stabilize-arecibo-radio-telescope A little more info: https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-020-03270-9 -- Freedom Isn't Free! |
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