Kind of agree, but, as far as I know, the FAA isn't avoiding clearance for SpaceX because of the infrastructures not being ready, but because of other stuff which SpaceX recently denounced:IDK, TBH I think there's an element of self-martyrdom here.
He wants to fly one of, if not the, largest rocket boosters ever flown, then return it to the launch site and catch it with some really rather sketchy looking chopsticks. Given the video I've seen over the past months, and the way SX are frantically welding more metal to those arms, I think even they aren't confident that this isn't going to end in tonnes of stainless steel being where it wasn't intended to be.
The launch site is in a nature reserve that he knew was there when he decided to build his thing there. But tax breaks are a powerful drug.
Given his company's very recent track record of scattering bits of rocket over the nature reserve (and if they fuck this up badly enough a foreign country) it's not beyond the wit of an non-Ketamine-addled brain to figure out that some people might ask questions.
Now he is playing the persecuted billionaire who everybody hates because of his genius, his only interest is the survival of the human race, Mars, blah, blah, blah.
Hush Noel.
So have you probed Uranus?I'm a professional astronomer FFS
So have you probed Uranus?
One of the guys in the band is actually a professional astronomer is it nutball?
It was superamazing.
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/if-planet-nine-exists-well-find-it-soon/We May Be on the Brink of Finding the Real Planet Nine
If there’s a hidden world in the solar system, a new telescope should find it
By Robin George Andrews edited by Clara Moskowitz
Ron Miller
January 2025 Issue
Planetary Science
Most astronomers would love to find a planet, but Mike Brown may be the only one proud of having killed one. Thanks to his research, Pluto, the solar system’s ninth planet, was removed from the pantheon—and the public cried foul. How can you revise our childhoods? How can you mess around with our planetariums?
About 10 years ago Brown’s daughter—then around 10 years old—suggested one way he could seek redemption: go find another planet. “When she said that, I kind of laughed,” Brown says. “In my head, I was like, ‘That’s never happening.’”
Yet Brown may now be on the brink of fulfilling his daughter’s wish. Evidence he and others have gathered over the past decade suggests something strange is happening in the outer solar system: distant subplanetary objects are being found on orbits that look sculpted, arranged by an unseen gravitational force. According to Brown, that force is coming from a ninth planet—one bigger than Earth but smaller than Neptune.