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YubNub News
YubNub News
2 yrs

2 Nevada troopers fatally struck by vehicle on Vegas interstate
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2 Nevada troopers fatally struck by vehicle on Vegas interstate

Two Nevada state troopers died Thursday after they were struck by a vehicle while helping another driver‚ authorities said.Las Vegas police‚ who will be investigating the collision‚ planned to hold a…
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YubNub News
YubNub News
2 yrs

FBI releases photos of suspects wanted in agent vehicle carjacking
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FBI releases photos of suspects wanted in agent vehicle carjacking

The FBI has released photos of two suspects wanted in connection with the carjacking of an agent in Washington‚ D.C. on Wednesday. The FBI’s Washington Field Office and the D.C. Metropolitan Police…
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
2 yrs

Vera Rubin Will Generate a Mind-Boggling Amount of Data
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Vera Rubin Will Generate a Mind-Boggling Amount of Data

When the Vera C. Rubin Observatory comes online in 2025‚ it will be one of the most powerful tools available to astronomers‚ capturing huge portions of the sky every night with its 8.4-meter mirror and 3.2-gigapixel camera. Each image will be analyzed within 60 seconds‚ alerting astronomers to transient events like supernovae. An incredible five petabytes (5‚000 terabytes) of new raw images will be recorded each year and made available for astronomers to study. Not surprisingly‚ astronomers can’t wait to get their hands on the high-resolution data. A new paper outlines how the huge amounts of data will be processed‚ organized‚ and disseminated. The entire process will require several facilities on three continents over the course of the projected ten-year-long survey. Detailed cut-away render of the telescope model showing the inner workings. Credit: LSST Project/J. Andrew The Rubin Observatory is a ground-based telescope located high in the Chilean Andes. The observatory’s 8.4-meter Simonyi Survey Telescope will use the highest resolution digital camera in the world that also includes the world’s largest fish-eye lens. The camera is roughly the size of a small car and weighs almost 2‚800 kg (6‚200 lbs). This survey telescope is fast-moving and will be able to scan the entire visible sky in the southern hemisphere every four nights. “Automated detection and classification of celestial objects will be performed by sophisticated algorithms on high-resolution images to progressively produce an astronomical catalog eventually composed of 20 billion galaxies and 17 billion stars and their associated physical properties‚” write Fabio Hernandez‚ George Beckett‚ Peter Clark and several other astronomers in their preprint paper. The main project for Rubin Observatory is the Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST) and researchers anticipate this project will gather data on more than 5 million asteroid belt objects‚ 300‚000 Jupiter Trojans‚ 100‚000 near-Earth objects‚ and more than 40‚000 Kuiper belt objects. Since Rubin will be able to map the visible night sky every few days‚ many of these objects will be observed hundreds of times. Because of the telescope’s repeated observations‚ the enormous amount of data will help calculate the positions and orbits of all these objects. Images flow from the Summit Site‚ where the telescope is located in Chile‚ to the Base Site and then to the three Rubin Data Facilities which collectively provide the computational capacity for processing the images taken by the Observatory for the duration of the survey. Credit: Vera Rubin Observatory. Images and data will immediately flow from the telescope to the Base Facility and Chilean Data Access Center in La Serena‚ Chile and then go to the three Rubin data facilities on dedicated high-speed networks connecting the sites: the French Data Facility CC-IN2P3 in Lyon‚ France‚ the UK Data Facility‚ IRIS network‚ in the United Kingdom and the US Data Facility and Data Access Center at SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory in California‚ USA. There is also a Headquarters Site at the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy (AURA) in Tucson‚ Arizona‚ USA. Once images are taken‚ they will be processed according to three different timescales: prompt‚ daily‚ and annually. The Hernandez et al paper outlines how raw images collected each observing night will be quickly processed (within 60 seconds)‚ and objects that have changed brightness or position will generate and emit alerts for “transient detection.”  For this process known as Prompt Processing‚ there will be no proprietary period associated with alerts‚ and they will be available to the public immediately‚ since the goal is to quickly transmit nearly everything about any given event‚ to enable quick classification and decision making. Scientists estimate Prompt Processing could generate millions of alerts per night. Daily products‚ released within 24 hours of observation‚ will include the images from that night. The annual campaigns will reprocess the entire image dataset collected since the beginning of the survey. For each data release‚ there will be raw and calibration images in addition to science-ready images which have been processed with updated scientific algorithms. There will also be catalogs with the properties of all the astrophysical objects detected. “The volume of released data products generated by the annual processing of the accumulated set of raw images is on average 2.3 times the size of the input dataset for that year and is estimated to reach more than one hundred petabytes by the end of the survey‚” the astronomers wrote. They also said that over the ten year-long survey the volume of data released for science analysis is estimated to increase by one order of magnitude. Illustration of the conceptual design of the LSST Science Pipelines for image processing. Credit: Hernandez et al. The Rubin Observatory will utilize several kinds of data products and services for archiving and dissemination of the data to the various science collaborations. The paper says the Rubin LSST “Science Pipelines” are composed of about 80 different kinds of tasks‚ which are all implemented on top of a common algorithmic code base and specialized software. There is a feature called the Data Butler‚ which is the software system that abstracts the data access details (including data location‚ data format and access protocols). Each year a data release will be produced and made available to science collaborations for use in studies in four main science pillars: probing dark matter and dark energy‚ taking inventory of Solar System objects‚ exploring the transient optical sky and mapping the Milky Way. This annual release will allow all the survey images taken to date to be reprocessed‚ combined and automatically measured to yield an increasingly deep picture of the whole Southern sky‚ and a growing catalog of astronomical objects that captures how each one has changed over time. This annual data processing will be run at the three data facilities‚ with the final dataset assembled at SLAC and made available to astronomers and physicists via the Rubin Science Platform. Right now‚ it is expected that Rubin Observatory data will become fully public after two years. The issue of how the public data can be accessed and how this access could be funded is still in the works. For more details and information‚ see the Vera Rubin Observatory website. Paper: Overview of the distributed image processing infrastructure to produce the Legacy Survey of Space and Time The post Vera Rubin Will Generate a Mind-Boggling Amount of Data appeared first on Universe Today.
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
2 yrs

Fermi has Found More than 300 Gamma-Ray Pulsars
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Fermi has Found More than 300 Gamma-Ray Pulsars

In June 2008‚ the Gamma-ray Large Area Space Telescope began surveying the cosmos to study some of the most energetic phenomena in the Universe. Shortly after that‚ NASA renamed the observatory in the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope in honor of Professor Enrico Fermi (1901-1954)‚ a pioneer in high-energy physics. During its mission‚ Fermi has addressed questions regarding some of the most mysterious and energetic phenomena in the Universe – like gamma-ray bursts (GRBs)‚ cosmic rays‚ and extremely dense stellar remnants like pulsars. Since it began operations‚ Fermi has discovered more than 300 gamma-ray pulsars‚ which have provided new insights into the life cycle of stars‚ our galaxy‚ and the nature of the Universe. This week‚ a new catalog compiled by an international team contains the more than 300 pulsars discovered by the Fermi mission – which includes 294 confirmed gamma-ray-emitting pulsars and another 34 candidates awaiting confirmation. This is 27 times the number of pulsars known to astronomers before the Fermi mission launched in 2008. The international team is made up of 170 scientists from institutions across the globe‚ including the French National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS)‚ the Netherlands Institute for Radio Astronomy (ASTRON)‚ the Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare (INFN)‚ the Kavli Institute for Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology‚ the National Institute for Astrophysics (INAF)‚ the South African Radio Astronomy Observatory (SARAO)‚ the Italian Space Agency (ASI)‚ the Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics and Radio Astronomy (MPIFR)‚ the ARC Centre of Excellence for Gravitational Wave Discovery (OzGrav)‚ NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center‚ and more. The catalog‚ “The Third Fermi Large Area Telescope Catalog of Gamma-Ray Pulsars‚” appeared on Monday‚ Nov. 27th‚ in The Astrophysical Journal Supplement. Pulsars are a type of neutron star‚ which are what remains when stars undergo gravitational collapse near the end of their lives and go supernova. These and other neutron stars are the densest objects that astronomers can study directly (as opposed to black holes‚ which can only be studied indirectly). Pulsars are so-named because they possess strong magnetic fields that force their radiation into narrow beams emitted from their poles. Combined with how they spin rapidly on their axis‚ this produces a lighthouse-like effect that astronomers can detect light-years away. A dozen radio telescopes worldwide monitor thousands of pulsars regularly‚ and astronomers are constantly looking for new candidates within gamma-ray sources discovered by Fermi. Of the 3‚400 known pulsars‚ most were detected via radio waves and located within our Milky Way galaxy. Only about 10% of pulsars also emit gamma rays‚ while others have been identified that emit gamma rays but not radio emissions. David Smith‚ research director at the Bordeaux Astrophysics Laboratory in Gironde (part of CNRS)‚ was the study coordinator. As he explained in a NASA press release: “Pulsars touch on a wide range of astrophysics research‚ from cosmic rays and stellar evolution to the search for gravitational waves and dark matter. This new catalog compiles full information on all known gamma-ray pulsars in an effort to promote new avenues of exploration.” As Smith and his colleagues indicate in the catalog‚ fewer than a dozen gamma-ray pulsars were known when Fermi launched in 2008. Moreover‚ the extent and diversity of the population and its role in Galactic dynamics were subject to debate. But thanks to the mission and its primary instrument‚ the Large Area Telescope (LAT)‚ scientists quickly learned that the gamma-ray population is large and varied and that these pulsars are the dominant gamma-ray source in the billion-electronvolt (GeV) class in the Milky Way. Fermi also detected the first gamma-ray pulsar beyond the Milky Way in 2015‚ located in the neighboring Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC). This effectively demonstrated that flares from supermagnetized neutron stars can be detected in distant galaxies. In addition‚ its measurements have provided important limits on new theories of gravity and the nature of Dark Matter. They also revealed a previously-unknown component in our galaxy known as the Fermi Bubbles‚ a structure spanning 50‚000 light-years that is likely the result of radiation outbursts from the supermassive black hole (SMBH) at the center of our galaxy (Sagitarrius A*). The First FERMI LAT Catalog (LAT-1)‚ released in 2010‚ contained 46 pulsars based on six months of data. The second catalog‚ based on the first three years of data‚ grew that number to 132. This third installment is based on 12 years of data that characterizes the 294 confirmed gamma-ray pulsars and 33 millisecond pulsars (MSPs)‚ which have not yet shown gamma-ray pulsations but likely will once accurate rotation ephemerides are established. Before Fermi‚ astronomers did not know if MSPs were visible at high energies‚ but these now account for about half of the overall catalog. “More than 15 years after its launch‚ Fermi remains an incredible discovery machine‚ and pulsars and their neutron star kin are leading the way‚” said Elizabeth Hays‚ the mission’s project scientist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center. And be sure to check out the pulsar catalog on WorldWide Telescope. Further Reading: NASA The post Fermi has Found More than 300 Gamma-Ray Pulsars appeared first on Universe Today.
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
2 yrs

Key Ingredient For Life Discovered in The Last Place Astronomers Expected
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Key Ingredient For Life Discovered in The Last Place Astronomers Expected

"You need some kind of violent event."
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Classic Rock Lovers
Classic Rock Lovers  
2 yrs

Geddy Lee Names Only Major Concert That Had No Competition or Ego
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Geddy Lee Names Only Major Concert That Had No Competition or Ego

'It was really one of the greatest memories of my entire life‚' says Lee. Continue reading…
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Classic Rock Lovers
Classic Rock Lovers  
2 yrs

How Roger Waters Fired His Own Son
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How Roger Waters Fired His Own Son

Roger fired him just before Christmas in 2016. Continue reading…
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Classic Rock Lovers
Classic Rock Lovers  
2 yrs

Bruce Dickinson Debuts Heavy Solo Song 'Afterglow of Ragnarok'
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Bruce Dickinson Debuts Heavy Solo Song 'Afterglow of Ragnarok'

Listen now! Continue reading…
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NewsBusters Feed
NewsBusters Feed
2 yrs

NBC’s Kotb‚ CNBC’s Sorkin on Elon Musk Interview: We Saw His ‘Demonic Side’ Come Out
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NBC’s Kotb‚ CNBC’s Sorkin on Elon Musk Interview: We Saw His ‘Demonic Side’ Come Out

Reacting Thursday morning to Wednesday night’s bombshell Elon Musk interview at The New York Times DealBook Summit‚ NBC’s Today co-host Hoda Kotb and CNBC’s Squawk Box co-host Andrew Ross Sorkin‚ The Times columnist who interviewed Musk‚ described it as an illustration of Musk’s “demonic side” and “version” as Musk blasted corporations who’ve pulled advertising from X. The blowback came after a November 15 X post by Musk in which he responded favorably to an anti-Semitic trope (despite his apologies).     Sorkin was teed up by co-host Savannah Guthrie‚ who remarked that Musk is “in the middle of this fire” of controversy‚ but didn’t “mince words‚ shall we say.” Sorkin obviously agreed‚ calling the interview “fascinating” and confirming he “was speechless when” Musk dropped multiple f-bombs in telling off (liberal) corporations. “I do encourage people to see the whole thing because‚ in many ways‚ I think you got to see the full Elon Musk. I think you saw that Elon Musk is many people. You can see the Einstein and sort of Steve Jobs version of Elon Musk‚” Sorkin added. On the other hand‚ Sorkin opined‚ viewers saw “almost a demonic version of Elon Musk. And the idea is — the question is: Can people hold all of these ideas in their head and can they be in the same person? What’s so interesting to me he sent saying‚ I don’t care if I am loved or I am hated‚ but what I kept trying to get back to‚ do you care about being trusted?” Moments later‚ Kotb doubled down on this label: “You talked about demonic — the demonic side. He talked about his own demons. Like‚ what did you glean about that part of him?” Sorkin explained why Musk has this side to him: [A] lot of what drives him‚ in very good ways and bad ways‚ is a childhood‚ I mean‚ there was a moment he was almost crying during this interview‚ where you could really see the demons that power a lot of this. And it was — it’s sad. There is a depression under it...[T]here is something that is driving him and I think it’s‚ in many ways. it’s productive and‚ in other ways‚ it’s less productive. Sorkin later called out Musk’s insistence that “he doesn’t care” what people think‚ arguing he not only “cares‚” but “[h]e cares a lot” and “[y]ou can physically see” it. “[M]aybe X will ultimately fail‚ I don’t know‚ but I think he’s going to try his heart to get this thing to work‚” he continued. Earlier in the show‚ Kotb teased coverage of Musk’s “[d]efiant” and “stunning message” in the “combative interview” and there was a report from correspondent Emilie Ikeda on what she called a “defiant‚” “long‚ and remarkably candid interview”. She did at least note Musk’s apologies and his trip this week to Israel (click “expand”): IKEDA: The richest man in the world speaking out in an interview with CNBC’s Andrew Ross Sorkin at The New York Times DealBook summit amid a firestorm of criticism over his inflammatory comments on social media. Earlier this month‚ Musk appeared to endorse an anti-Semitic post on X that accused Jewish communities pushing hatred against white people‚ writing “the actual truth”‚ a response that released a barrage of backlash from the White House to a wave of companies‚ including NBC’s parent company Comcast‚ pulling advertising from X‚ which reportedly could cost the social media platform up to $75 million. And Musk potentially adding fuel to the fire last night‚ emphatically scoffing at the advertising boycott. MUSK: If somebody is going to try to blackmail with advertising or money‚ go [EXPLETIVE] Yourself. ANDREW ROSS SORKIN: But — MUSK: Go [EXPLETIVE] yourself. Is that clear? I hope it is. Hey‚ Bob. IKEDA: Musk appearing to specifically call out Disney’s CEO Bob Iger‚ who was also interviewed earlier. (....) IKEDA: Last night‚ Musk did later admit an advertising boycott could kill the company and apologized for his original inflammatory tweet. MUSK: I’m sorry for that — that tweet or post. It was foolish of me. [SCREEN WIPE] I tried my best to clarify it six ways to Sunday. IKEDA: He also recently traveled to Israel to meet with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and toured a kibbutz ravaged in Hamas’s attack. Musk insisting it was not an apology tour. And‚ separately in the interview‚ Musk voiced concerns about artificial intelligence‚ saying the developing tech is more dangerous than nuclear bombs and calling for more regulation. Just one of many head-turning comments last night. Not surprisingly‚ this story didn’t just receive attention on NBC‚ but the other two broadcast network morning shows‚ ABC’s Good Morning America and CBS Mornings. ABC‚ naturally‚ repeatedly invoked its parent company‚ Disney‚ as a major focus of Musk’s ire. “Elon Musk lashes out at advertisers‚ including Disney‚ who abandoned X after he endorsed an anti-Semitic posts as he apologizes for responding to the conspiracy theory‚” said co-host and former Clinton flack George Stephanopoulos in a tease. Stephanopoulos later cued up senior investigative correpsondent Aaron Katersky by huffing that Musk dared to take the step of “unload[ing] on advertisers‚ including our parent company Disney‚ who left his social media company X after Musk endorsed an anti-Semitic conspiracy theory in a post.” Katersky took it from there (click “expand”): KATERSKY: Elon Musk apologized for the anti-Semitic post but he quickly lashed out at advertisers that have pulled out from X. ELON MUSK: I did clarify almost immediately what I meant. KATERSKY: This morning‚ Elon Musk’s regret at the annual New York Times DealBook summit‚ he said he should not have responded to a post on his social media network X that spouted an anti-Semitic conspiracy theory. MUSK: You know‚ if I could go back and say‚ I should — in retrospect‚ not have replied and I should have written in greater length as to what I meant. KATERSKY: Musk then apologized. MUSK: Essentially‚ I handed a loaded gun to those who hate me and‚ arguably‚ to those who are anti-Semitic. To — you know‚ for that‚ I’m quite sorry. That was not — that was not my intention. KATERSKY: Musk wrote‚ “you have said the actual truth” after a user posted that‚ “Jewish communities have been pushing the exact kind of dialectical hatred against whites that they claim to want people to stop using against them.” Advertisers bolted‚ big companies like IBM‚ Apple‚ and ABC News parent Disney pulled their advertising from X. Musk‚ using an expletive to describe what he called “blackmail”‚ included criticizing Disney’s CEO‚ who attended the same summit. (....) NEW YORK TIMES REPORTER RYAN MAC: The thing everyone will remember from today is Elon Musk telling advertisers who have left the platform‚ left X‚ to do a profane act to themselves. You know‚ he has insulted them and he’s telling them they’ve ruined the company by no longer advertising on the platform. CBS Mornings put its pressure on Musk‚ framing him as someone who “endorses anti-Semitism” despite his apologies (click “expand”): NATE BURLESON [in tease]: A message for advertisers jumping ship from X after Elon Musk endorses anti-Semitism. MUSK: Go [EXPLETIVE] Yourself. Is that clear? (....) KING [in tease]: Ahead‚ some extremely blunt language from Elon Musk and blunt is the word here. How the billionaire lashed out at his critics in a blistering tirade in the controversy over his endorsement of an anti-Semitic post.  (....) BURLESON: Elon Musk‚ the world’s wealthiest man‚ has a message for companies who don’t want to advertise on X‚ and I can’t repeat it on morning television or else this will be my last day. Now‚ it all came out in a conversation with The New York Times when asked about companies who dropped advertising after Musk endorsed an anti-Semitic post.  (....) JO LING KENT: Right after Elon Musk expressed regret for endorsing an anti-Semitic tweet‚ he then stunned the audience with his answer to a question about fleeing advertisers. (....) MUSK: Don’t advertise. SORKIN: You don’t want them to advertise? MUSK: No. SORKIN: What do you mean? MUSK: If somebody’s going to try to blackmail me with advertising‚ blackmail me with money‚ go [EXPLETIVE] yourself. SORKIN: But — MUSK: Go [EXPLETIVE] yourself. KENT: The billionaire not holding back on Wednesday about companies leaving his social media platform in response to his endorsing an anti-Semitic post on X[.] (....) MUSK: I should‚ in retrospect‚ not have replied to that particular person. Might be literally the worst and dumbest post that I’ve ever done. It — essentially‚ I handed a loaded gun to those who hate me and‚ arguably‚ to those who are anti-Semitic. To — and‚ for that‚ I’m quite sorry. That is not — that was not my intention. KENT: Dozens of companies have already stopped advertising on X‚ including IBM‚ Apple‚ Paramount‚ the parent company of CBS News‚ and Disney whose CEO‚ Bob Iger Musk directly chose to call out yesterday[.] To see the relevant transcript from November 30‚ click here (for ABC)‚ here (for CBS)‚ and here (for NBC).
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NewsBusters Feed
2 yrs

In-Law Love: Scarborough Lauds Resolute Zbigniew Brzezinski vs. 'Shape-Shifter' Kissinger
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In-Law Love: Scarborough Lauds Resolute Zbigniew Brzezinski vs. 'Shape-Shifter' Kissinger

Joe Scarborough can anticipate an aura of connubial bliss this evening. Because on today's Morning Joe‚ Scarborough took shots at Henry Kissinger on the occasion of his death‚ while at the same time painting a much more positive picture of Zbigniew Brzezinski‚ who just happens to be the late father of Joe's wife and co-host‚ Mika. He didn't disclose the connection‚ maybe because it's obvious to most news junkies. Scarborough prefaced his invidious comparison by disingenously claiming that he was not doing so for purposes of "legacy building or smashing." Riiiight. Why did Scarborough feel obliged to make this disclaimer if it weren't for the obvious fact that that was exactly what he was doing? Scarborough portrayed Kissinger as a "shape-shifter‚" who for purposes of retaining influence‚ excelled at "ingratiating" himself with powerful leaders. Indeed‚ Scarborough said that Kissinger retained influence "because" of his skill at ingratiating himself. Scarborough usually hates rigid Republican ideologues‚ but he knows Democrats over 60 still hate the man. Kissinger ran a consulting business. As the Washington Post obit described it‚ he "used his name‚ his fame and his network to solve problems and make contacts around the world for banks‚ insurance companies‚ pharmaceutical manufacturers and automakers" In contrast‚ Scarborough depicted his father-in law Zbig as intellectually honest: "he told you what he thought‚ whether you liked it or not. He was extraordinarily blunt." He also proclaimed he was correct in foreseeing the fall of the Soviet Union‚ with Zbig being the optimist and Kissinger the pessimist. But Zbig worked for President Carter‚ whose dovishness led to the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan‚ as well as the Islamist revolution in Iran‚ leading to the American hostages being stuck in Iran for 444 days. Touting this man's foreign-policy intellect is like hailing the chief inflation-fighter in the Carter White House.  Throughout the show's discussion on the death of Kissinger‚ there was inordinate‚ if inevitable‚ time devoted to mentions of Brzezinski‚ which should be seen as gauche. Scarborough tried to add weight to his opinion‚ calling himself someone who "has studied Dr. Brzezinski's legacy." Fine. But still‚ a brief disclaimer by Scarborough‚ acknowledging his inherent bias when it came to evaluating his late father-in-law‚ would have been in order. Note: Scarborough somehow failed to opine whether Brzezinski "got it right" when he suggested that the US shoot down Israeli aircraft if they overflew Iraqi airspace on their way to attacking Iranian nuclear facilities.  Here's the transcript. MSNBC Morning Joe 11/30/23 6:36 am ET JOE SCARBOROUGH: You know‚ David Ignatius‚ Andrea [Mitchell] was talking about‚ and you talked about‚ about Kissinger as well as Dr. Brzezinski. I thought it was fascinating‚ looking at Lester Holt's package‚ just fascinating that you had Henry Kissinger‚ Madeleine Albright‚ and Dr. Brzezinski‚ all three of their families chased out of Europe by the rise of Adolf Hitler.  All three came to America just‚ just achieving -- MIKA BRZEZINSKI: Acclaim. SCARBOROUGH: -- towering heights in American foreign policy.  I do want to draw a distinction‚ though‚ not for purposes of‚ of legacy building or legacy [chuckles] smashing‚ but just draw some real distinctions to get more of an insight into who Henry Kissinger was. The great contrast between Kissinger and Brzezinski. Kissinger was a shape-shifter‚ constantly. He could be what Nixon wanted him to be‚ and often was‚ behind the scenes. He could be what‚ if he was talking to Hillary Clinton or Bill Clinton. Again‚ changed in the Iraq war. He supported the Iraq war at the beginning and then moved in another direction. And then‚ of course‚ he was -- Jared Kushner talked to him constantly -- the Trump administration. So‚ he‚ he‚ he could‚ he could move politically. He was a master tactician‚ politically. Whereas Dr. Brzezinski was‚ well‚ Dr. Brzezinski. He told you what he thought‚ whether you liked it or not. He was‚ he was extraordinarily blunt. But I will just say‚ and I will say‚ perhaps this is because I've studied Dr. Brzezinski's legacy. I think on the big question‚ about the Soviet Union falling‚ I think‚ you know‚ and others have said this‚ Kissinger was the pessimist‚ Brzezinski was the optimist. And Brzezinski got that right. The big question of their time‚ he got right. But Kissinger‚ again‚ Kissinger continued‚ continued in public service on the sidelines for 50 years after he left the White House because‚ again‚ he just was very skilled at ingratiating himself with‚ with‚ with leaders.
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