Daily Shaarli

All links of one day in a single page.

July 29, 2023

Hunter’s Power Lawyer Abbe Lowell Threatened Weiss Team: ‘Now, I Am Involved’ – RedState
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“I think the objective was ensuring that DOJ would not prosecute Hunter Biden now, or in the future, for a wide swath of offenses relating to what I consider to be, you know, a broad international criminal conspiracy,” Scharf said.

“That’s FARA, influence peddling, the money laundering, the whole story,” he said. “It appears that they were trying to shoehorn that non-prosecution or immunity agreement into this case.”

Scharf said he executed hundreds of diversion agreements as a federal prosecutor. Yet, in his experience, training, or education, he had never heard of an agreement structured as Biden’s was.

The Biden agreement included language that gave Biden broad immunities from future prosecutions—language typically found in the plea deal, the graduate of Harvard Law School said.

While plea deals are public and approved by judges, diversion agreements are private and outside the purview of the courts, he said.

Both Weiss and the defense team had to understand there was a public perception problem, so they buried the non-prosecution language into the diversion agreement and then referred to the diversion agreement in the plea agreement, he said.

He said that by linking the two agreements, they attempted to get the judge’s backdoor approval of the non-public non-prosecution language.

“In the diversion agreement, they refer back to all the facts in the plea such that prosecuting Hunter would be impossible as long as he didn’t break the conditions of his probation in that diversion agreement,” Scharf said.

“If I’m not explaining it well, I apologize. It’s the strangest thing I’ve ever seen,” he said.

This is why Noreika balked at a constitutional problem because the linkage made the judge the arbiter of Biden’s conduct, not the Justice Department, he said. In that way, the judiciary branch would assume an executive branch function—an innovation the judge was not ready to validate. //

anon-adwq
38 minutes ago
Judge Noreika performed masterfully at the hearing. She was presented at the last minute with a "pardon for anything and everything" clause buried in a diversion agreement she was not allowed to reject. First of all, she found it. Second, her questioning at the hearing maneuvered Weiss into a statement the Biden team could not accept. This nullified the agreement in fact, so Judge Noreika could send them back to the drawing board. Game, set, match. Brilliant!

As for "Legendary Lowell", have fun! He is dealing with a judge that is thoroughly PO'd at the Biden team of shysters after they lied to her clerk and then tried to blame the grift on the clerk. He is just icing on the cake, particularly after attacking the prosecutor in open court. Some "Legendary Lawyer". Alligator mouth and hummingbird brain. Judge Noreika has already shut down all communication between her court and the "Legendary" Biden team except through her in person. That will speed things up! It will also mean that the person on the other end of the phone when the Biden team calls is on to their game and her attitude will range the full span from ticked off to p**sed off. I just wish I could be an observer in the corner - I would pay admission.

European satellite plunges back to Earth in first-of-its-kind assisted re-entry | Ars Technica
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paw Ars Tribunus Militum 21y 1,984

dj__jg said:
I guess ESA has a shot at being a role model at de-orbiting stuff, since they sure aren't being a role model at putting stuff into orbit considering the delays and expendable nature of Ariane 6.

Let's not dump on ESA too much re being a role model. Ariane 5's outstanding launch of JWST, doubling its lifetime, should not be overlooked.

Honest question: have any NASA launches exceeded expectations by that much? //

Cloudgazer Ars Tribunus Angusticlavius 8y 15,517

paw said:
Let's not dump on ESA too much re being a role model. Ariane 5's outstanding launch of JWST, doubling its lifetime, should not be overlooked.

Honest question: have any NASA launches exceeded expectations by that much?

I'd love to know what the private opinion of the NASA team was about that launch. One way to view it is that ESA doubled the lifespan of JWST. Another is that they came within 30 m/s of disaster. //

Cloudgazer Ars Tribunus Angusticlavius 8y 15,517

Shiranui said:
How do you mean? How do you turn overdelivering on estimates into pessimistic relief?

Either I'm missing something about Arianespace having taken unnecessary risks to achieve this feat (which I have not heard of so far), or that's a very "glass half empty" perspective.

NASA had an estimated life based on ESA delivering JWST into the expected trajectory, JWST would then need to use its on board thrusters to get the perfect insertion into L2. There was never any doubt that Ariane had the grunt to get JWST into that orbit, or indeed beyond that orbit, but it was imperative that they not overshoot, because if they did JWST was lost.

The targeted trajectory NASA requested from Ariane left room at the top because of that. ESA ate into that margin which delivered a 'better' outcome, but the final adjustments by the JWST were a mere 23 m/s. Had they 'over delivered' by another 23m/s which they were quite capable of doing there would be no JWST.

Publically this was all praised as a great success, but I can't imagine it was quite the same story behind the scenes.

Think of it like shooting the proverbial apple off your wife's head. More points if you hit lower on the apple. This doesn't mean if you aimed for the middle and hit right at the bottom then your wife is going to be entirely happy, because a little lower and you're not a hero - you're William S Burroughs. //

Cloudgazer Ars Tribunus Angusticlavius 8y 15,517

Dan Homerick said:
While reading this, I was thinking "But couldn't JWST have rotated around and burned retrograde to correct a small overshoot?" And to answer that thought, I presume the answer is no, because then it'd be flying through it's own thruster plume, which would fog up the mirrors.

That right?

Kinda, that's half the story ..

More Than You Wanted to Know About Webb’s Mid-Course Corrections! – James Webb Space Telescope
https://blogs.nasa.gov/webb/2021/12/27/more-than-you-wanted-to-know-about-webbs-mid-course-corrections/

Webb has thrusters only on the warm, Sun-facing side of the observatory. We would not want the hot thrusters to contaminate the cold side of the observatory with unwanted heat or with rocket exhaust that could condense on the cold optics

So you're right about not wanting to fly through the plume, and that (along with other considerations) resulted in thrusters only on one side of the vehicle. But as a result of that design decision it's even worse than just contaminating the instrument

Webb’s Journey to L2 Is Nearly Complete – James Webb Space Telescope
https://blogs.nasa.gov/webb/2022/01/21/webbs-journey-to-l2-is-nearly-complete/

“So, why did the Ariane not give Webb more energy and why did Webb need course correction? If the Ariane had given Webb even a little bit too much energy than needed to get it to L2, it would be going too fast when it got there and would overshoot its desired science orbit. Webb would have to do a significant braking maneuver by thrusting toward the Sun to slow down. Not only would that big burn cost a lot of propellant, it would be impossible because it would require Webb to turn 180 degrees in order to thrust toward the Sun, which would have exposed its telescope optics and instruments directly to the Sun, thus overheating their structures and literally melting the glue that holds them together.

Like the enterprise in star trekkin the JWST is always going forwards 'cause they can't find reverse.

NASA: Uranus has “never looked better” in spectacular Webb Telescope image | Ars Technica
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Saturn might be the planet in our Solar System best known for its spectacular rings, but the icy giant Uranus also has a system of 13 nested rings. Eleven of those rings—nine main rings and two fainter dusty rings—are clearly visible in the latest spectacular image from NASA's Webb Space Telescope. Future images should reveal the remaining two faint outer rings discovered with the Hubble Space Telescope in 2007.

"Uranus has never looked better. Really," NASA tweeted. "Only Voyager 2 and Keck (with adaptive optics) have imaged the planet's faintest rings before, and never as clearly as Webb’s first glimpse at this ice giant, which also highlights bright atmospheric features."