“Drunks, liars and dropouts have been banned by Nasa from its space station,” Annanova reports. “The agency released its criteria for visitors to the International Space Station in a nine-page report.” The new rules were prompted by the growth in ‘space tourists’ wanting to go into orbit. Any visitors deemed undesirables will not be let in. The ruling from Nasa’s Cape Canaveral base states a candidate’s past and present conduct
February 1, 2002
Jonah and the Blow Hole
Jonah Goldberg rehashes an old column (on “Black History Month”) and continues to deny NRO’s “The Corner” is a weblog. Why? Jonah strains to explain: There are no editors, no rules, and no master plan. Yes, as many, many, many readers have pointed out, it’s very much like a blog along the lines of AndrewSullivan.com or Instapundit.com. The difference, however, is significant. Those guys run one-man operations. If you can’t
Adding the Signified
From a story in The Christian Science Monitor, here’s the take of lexicographer Anne Soukhanov on the term “minority” — currently a hotly debated signifier in Boston, where this summer Boston City Council president Charles Yancey introduced an ordinance to strike the word from the official city lexicon: Where the term lingers despite all demographic evidence to the contrary, says lexicographer Anne Soukhanov, it’s not just out of laziness, but
Letters from the Nannystate
Reason’s Jacob Sullum writes of a battle going on between the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) and Change the Climate, a drug policy reform group whose aim is to criticize current marijuana policies as excessively punitive and wasteful. Change the Climate wants to advertise on trains and buses in Boston. MBTA says no way. “As a government agency, forbidden by the First Amendment to pick and choose among viewpoints,” Sullum
Green with Envy 2: Attack of the Killer Regulations Reform
Greg Easterbrook, writing for The New Republic,” examines the two options being considered by the Bush administration to address problems with the “new source” standard of the Clean Air Act. “The rule essentially exempts from regulation some refineries and a large group of antiquated, high-pollution power plants in the Midwest, as long as they don’t undertake any significant improvements,” Easterbrook notes. “If they do, they must immediately abide by stricter
