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Read more about Dysfunction Junction: Where Weird Works
Read more about Dysfunction Junction: Where Weird Works
Dysfunction Junction: Where Weird Works A new ad-free stream on Notd, where I share notes—news, opinions, poems—on any topic. Readers get free excerpts, then subscribe for as low as $0.02/month or buy single notes via transact.io ($3.00 free credit for early users). Writers keep 90% of revenue; Notd’s $0.01 minimum cut funds fast, ad-free pages—no data sales, no spam. Comment on streams you join, with troll protection. Sign up to create or explore—support literary misfits affordably!...
Read more about A Comprehensive Examination of Military Insubordination in Canadian History
Read more about A Comprehensive Examination of Military Insubordination in Canadian History

A Comprehensive Examination of Military Insubordination in Canadian History

John MacLellan Mar 03, 2025
Read more about A Comprehensive Examination of Military Insubordination in Canadian History
Read more about A Comprehensive Examination of Military Insubordination in Canadian History
The narrative of Canadian military history is often one of dutiful service and unwavering loyalty. However, beneath this surface lies a complex tapestry of dissent, resistance, and outright mutiny. These acts of insubordination, though often suppressed or minimized, provide crucial insights into the social, political, and economic forces that shaped Canada. This thesis aims to move beyond the commonly cited mutinies at Kinmel Park and Terrace, offering a comprehensive examination of military insubordination within Canadian borders and among Canadian forces abroad. It will explore the diverse motivations behind these actions, the varying degrees of severity, and the historical contexts that fostered them. Furthermore, it will address the challenges of historical interpretation, recognizing that the term "mutiny" is not always applied consistently and that records may be incomplete or biased.
Read more about Lost in Space: Earth’s Limits, Lunar Lessons, and Robotic Frontiers To Mars
Read more about Lost in Space: Earth’s Limits, Lunar Lessons, and Robotic Frontiers To Mars

Lost in Space: Earth’s Limits, Lunar Lessons, and Robotic Frontiers To Mars

John MacLellan Mar 01, 2025
Read more about Lost in Space: Earth’s Limits, Lunar Lessons, and Robotic Frontiers To Mars
Read more about Lost in Space: Earth’s Limits, Lunar Lessons, and Robotic Frontiers To Mars
The explorers of tomorrow face a reckoning: the tools that guide us on Earth falter beyond its borders. In April 2023, Japan’s Hakuto-R lander smashed into the Moon, a victim of navigation gone awry, while in February 2024, Intuitive Machines’ Odysseus tilted dangerously on touchdown, barely clinging to success. Tomorrow, March 2, 2025, Firefly’s Blue Ghost descends toward the lunar surface, its fate hinging on sensors alone, with no GPS to steady its path. Farther out, Mars’ red wastes confound NASA’s Perseverance rover, dust storms blinding its trail as it stumbles through a navigation nightmare. Earth’s Global Positioning System—our trusty shepherd through cities and skies—stops short where the cosmos begins, its signals fading into irrelevance past low orbit.
Read more about The Future of Space Tourism
Read more about The Future of Space Tourism

The Future of Space Tourism

John MacLellan Mar 01, 2025
Read more about The Future of Space Tourism
Read more about The Future of Space Tourism
As of February 28, 2025, space tourism is booming, driven by tech advances, private investment, and public excitement. Companies like SpaceX, Blue Origin, and Virgin Galactic cut costs with reusable rockets, making suborbital flights ($250,000–$450,000) and orbital trips (millions) more accessible. Options include lunar flybys (Starship) and emerging space hotels (Axiom, Orbital Assembly). Reusable rockets address sustainability, but carbon concerns linger. Social media fuels demand, though elitism is debated. NASA and global players like China and India boost growth. By 2030, space tourism could be a multibillion-dollar industry, despite costs, risks, and ethical challenges.