I don't like quote-tweeting for the purpose of argument, but I want to quickly push back against an apparently popular tweet saying people don't want to come to America. This is, of course, nonsense.
The US remains the most popular destination of choice for immigrants, though we take far fewer people per capita than e.g. Canada or Australia.

To use an overused word, it's a sign of privilege that you think there aren't people who'd love even a lower class American lifestyle.
The groups least likely to immigrate here are the ones with the least to gain. If you're a wealthy European, you've got to have a pretty good offer on the table to come. Or a loved one you want to be with. Or you really like American cheese, perhaps.
It's just another face of American exceptionalism to think this country is especially bad. We didn't invent corruption or bad leaders or prejudice. We've excelled at a few forms of evil no doubt, but do you think that really deters someone from wanting their income multiplied 5x?
Put it this way - suppose there's a Mars colony run by a crazy billionaire. You despise Martian politics, and you know some Martians would look down on you for your appearance and accent. But, by going there, you take your current income and add a zero to it.
How much do you care at that point about whether the leader is a dick, whether the culture is malign in some way, whether life is too consumerist, foreign policy too expansionist, whether there are many people who would like you to go away? Very little, I suspect.
And even if that puts you off, surely you can appreciate that immigrants throughout history have been willing to endure far worse to give themselves and their kids a better shot at health, wealth, and happiness.
This sort of thing strikes me the same way as hearing Americans complain about too much economic growth in the world. Try telling that to a Bangladeshi economist. It's like yelling from an infinity pool about how people need to appreciate the little things.
Anyway, this is turning into a rant, so let me just say: yes, many still want to enter past the Statue of Liberty, and land here to stay. It's different people, and they come by plane now, but they still want to come. And, we should be glad of the opportunity to welcome them.
PS: The least we could do right this second is welcome everyone fleeing Syrian, Rohingya, Uighur, Hong Konger, and Venezuelan. And everyone else too, but those are the no-brainers. Want a patriot? Give them a patria.

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More from @ZachWeiner

23 Jan
International law question:

I have only read a few books, but I get the impression big international law has been really hard for something like 40 years. Is that true, and if so, why? It feels like the UN, in trying to give everybody a seat, has perversely made law very hard.
Like, with Antarctic mineral rights - the UN doesn't want a regime just for nations that claim Antarctica, because other countries don't get anything. But claimants have no incentive to give up rights. It's basically unsolvable at that point, it seems to me.
Put another way, if you're, like... Switzerland... you have no incentive NOT to tell someone with a chunk of Antarctica that they have to share. Likewise, if you're Australia, with the largest claimed sector, why would you give up mineral rights for nothing?
Read 4 tweets
21 Jan
This isn't nearly the biggest deal, but something that excites me about having a boring president is that the news will stop screwing up life for authors. Bryan was going to have a TV spot for our Open Borders book (on Fox Business!) which got bumped for impeachment stuff.
It's selfish of me to care about this too much, but the environment that produced it should bother us all. In the longterm, how we view ideas like immigration matters more than almost any particular half hour of news. And it's not just my stuff at stake here.
I know plenty of authors who had to deploy brand new books into a world that had hardly any attention span held out for non-political content. This negatively impacted plenty of careers, but it's also indicative of something very bad in culture, I suspect.
Read 6 tweets
20 Dec 20
Let's talk about the space-tampon story. OK, so this is a story confirmed by Sally Ride and Kathy Sullivan, where a male engineer asks if 100 tampons is good for one week, and she politely tells him he can go a lot lower. Very often repeated, and true so far as it goes. BUT
In an interview by Weitekamp with Rhea Seddon, the only MD among the women in that class, she said she was actually consulted on the decision! She said they ended up with a big number out of concern about microgravity effects and due to the NASA approach to redundancy.
Microgravity concerns were not unreasonable. In Sally Ride's biography by Sherr, she discusses how the first woman who actually had to use the tampons in space had issues with "capillary action." Space is horrible.
Read 7 tweets
20 Dec 20
Another weird space history thing. The more I read the more I think Eisenhower was totally right about manned space. Not worth the cost, but if you're gonna do it, make it a public facing civilian agency.
The usual argument you see is that Ike didn't "get" human spaceflight, then JFK comes in and sees the light. But Eisenhower thought it was gonna be a huge boondoggle that would produce propaganda, but little science for the cost. That seems to me to be basically right.
Eisenhower also worried that you'd end up with a sort of permanent war-time economy by routing so much government money to missiles, even for peaceful purposes. That too seems to me to have been correct. Thoughts?
Read 5 tweets
20 Dec 20
I dunno if there are any reporters out there who'd be interested, but it seems like there's a story here: astronaut Shannon Lucid released a memoir of her record-breaking flight aboard Space Station Mir in 2020. As far as I can tell, she self-published, with no fanfare?
But what's really interesting is she appears to have also self-published a book the prior year about a very hard experience with her husband descending into dementia, and how she maintained her faith through that: amazon.com/NO-SUGAR-ADDED…
As far as I can find there hasn't been much serious reporting on Lucid since 1996 other than scattered interviews, even though she's probably the most accomplished astronaut from the original astronaut class that permitted women, along with Sally Ride and others, in 1978.
Read 6 tweets
20 Dec 20
So, in space psychology, a very often repeated story is that when the two Russians did a spacewalk, they taped over a bunch of switches so Lucid wouldn't touch them. I actually have this in a current draft of our Space Book. But... Lucid doesn't mention it ever happening?
In fact, the closest thing she mentions is that Yuri Onufriyenko said not to mess with the comm setup during the EVA, since it was set a certain way. She then JOKED about taping over it. In fact, the crew, according to her anyway had high morale, little/no acrimony.
In several places, she talks about not wanting to be left out because she's female. So, if the taped switches story were true, you'd think she'd mention it.
Read 4 tweets

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