fighterace00
fighterace00 t1_j90ft5j wrote
Reply to comment by HolyGig in Where does space really begin? Chinese spy balloon highlights legal fuzziness of ‘near space’ by HarpuasGhost
You have a good argument there
fighterace00 t1_j90ceq8 wrote
Reply to comment by HolyGig in Where does space really begin? Chinese spy balloon highlights legal fuzziness of ‘near space’ by HarpuasGhost
So your argument is national boundaries should be completely dependent on surveillance methods.
Why not make overflights valid in that case? Orbital or not has no bearing on surveillance ability. Why did it be different monitoring at 50 feet or 60,000 feet or 400,000 feet?
Because of the ability to shoot it down? Russians couldn't touch our U2's for 5 years and could probably fly over Cuba to this day. We've shot a missile from an F15. The only thing stopping satellites from shooting each other is a weak treaty and the definition of space. Maybe that's the crux of the issue then, the definition of space where we can uphold a treaty, not what distances are technically unlikely to be used force against. Once we start shooting satellites down the new definition of political space would be Lagrange points and solar orbits.
The point isn't to define boundaries based on current tech but to draw a line in the sand internationally where we will no longer engage in violence. China and Russia have already made it clear multiple times they have little respect for "international" agreements.
fighterace00 t1_j9032pv wrote
Reply to comment by HolyGig in Where does space really begin? Chinese spy balloon highlights legal fuzziness of ‘near space’ by HarpuasGhost
Title:
> Where does space really begin? Chinese spy balloon highlights legal fuzziness of 'near space'
You:
> Its not fuzzy at all. You are either in orbit, or you are not.
Also you:
> When were we trying to define space? We are talking about valid surveillance tactics.
Tell me again how you can be suborbital beyond the karman line and it be fuzzy if you're legally in space because the megapixels of the camera in the tourists hands is low.
fighterace00 t1_j8zp6zy wrote
Reply to comment by HolyGig in Where does space really begin? Chinese spy balloon highlights legal fuzziness of ‘near space’ by HarpuasGhost
What does smashing into us territory have to do with how we define space? In fact suborbital means you're going to smash anyway. In fact, altitude has 0 to do with where you land if there's no horizontal vector.
fighterace00 t1_j8znnu0 wrote
Reply to comment by HolyGig in Where does space really begin? Chinese spy balloon highlights legal fuzziness of ‘near space’ by HarpuasGhost
I could throw a go pro over a prison yard and get surveillance capability. Suborbital apogee can be any altitude.
fighterace00 t1_j8z3kty wrote
Reply to comment by HolyGig in Where does space really begin? Chinese spy balloon highlights legal fuzziness of ‘near space’ by HarpuasGhost
Being in orbit has no impact on your location in space when suborbital exists
fighterace00 t1_j8z26ah wrote
Reply to comment by HolyGig in Where does space really begin? Chinese spy balloon highlights legal fuzziness of ‘near space’ by HarpuasGhost
Rutan's Space Ship 1 went to space in a suborbital hop. FAA hands out space wings for suborbital flight
fighterace00 t1_j8z1x71 wrote
Reply to comment by NotAHamsterAtAll in Where does space really begin? Chinese spy balloon highlights legal fuzziness of ‘near space’ by HarpuasGhost
That would be a function of technology as SSTO ramjets are developed
fighterace00 t1_izi0xtc wrote
Reply to comment by Bentresh in Conflict in Central Europe leading to Bronze Age Collapse by Gideonn1021
Meta research is an enormous field.
We're generating more science than we have the capacity to decipher as a whole nor dispense in practical nor culturally significant ways. Someone recently made an ai to read thousands of studies and offer a way to access the data on human terms but it wasn't quite successful.
fighterace00 t1_jczxt5z wrote
Reply to comment by whywoulditellyou in Saudi Arabia stone ruins were pilgrimage sites, where an ancient cult gathered to sacrifice animals about 7,000 years ago by marketrent
The word cult is not even mentioned in the article at all.