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The caption: The Earth and Moon as seen by the Cassini probe from Saturn’s orbit. All of humanity in one small dot in space.

A reminder of what Carl Sagan said about a photo of Earth from space he called the “pale blue dot,” which begins:

Look again at that dot. That’s here. That’s home. That’s us. On it everyone you love, everyone you know, everyone you ever heard of, every human being who ever was, lived out their lives. The aggregate of our joy and suffering, thousands of confident religions, ideologies, and economic doctrines, every hunter and forager, every hero and coward, every creator and destroyer of civilization, every king and peasant, every young couple in love, every mother and father, hopeful child, inventor and explorer, every teacher of morals, every corrupt politician, every “superstar,” every “supreme leader,” every saint and sinner in the history of our species lived there–on a mote of dust suspended in a sunbeam.

It continues here.

Our Earth Is an Insignificant Dot in Space

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On the Passing of Grateful Dead Co-founder Bob Weir

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A reader notes: I’d like to think virtually no musician has lived a better life than Bob Weir. More than 60 years touring and doing what he loved. We should all strive for that much joy in our lives.

This rings completely true in the world of rock/blues music.

And in classical music, the situation is notable worse, as many of our heroes like Mozart, Beethoven, and Chopin lived brief and/or disease-ridden lives.

There were exceptions, however.

Gioacchino Rossini (pictured), known mostly for his operas, loved fine food and drink and lived to be 76 years old.

Louie Moreau Gottschalk, the first American musical celebrity, who was, I’m told, as popular in the mid-19th Century as Elvis Presley was in the mid-20th, traveled the world, playing his intricate piano pieces, and “hanging out” (shall we say) with beautiful ladies.

On the Passing of Grateful Dead Co-founder Bob Weir

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Ørsted Loses €1.5M Daily, Equinor Sets Empire Wind Deadline

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Weather Guard Lightning Tech

Ørsted Loses €1.5M Daily, Equinor Sets Empire Wind Deadline

Allen covers the deepening US offshore wind crisis as Ørsted reports losing €1.5 million daily on American projects and Equinor sets a January 16 deadline to resume or cancel Empire Wind. Meanwhile, onshore wind thrives with Invenergy’s 2GW Oklahoma project and AES repowering Buffalo Gap in Texas with Vestas turbines.

Sign up now for Uptime Tech News, our weekly newsletter on all things wind technology. This episode is sponsored by Weather Guard Lightning Tech. Learn more about Weather Guard’s StrikeTape Wind Turbine LPS retrofit. Follow the show on YouTube, Linkedin and visit Weather Guard on the web. And subscribe to Rosemary’s “Engineering with Rosie” YouTube channel here. Have a question we can answer on the show? Email us!

Danish energy giant Ørsted said it is losing one and a half million euros on US offshore projects. Every. Single. Day. Norwegian company Equinor has drawn a line in the sand. January sixteenth. Resume construction on Empire Wind… or cancel the whole thing. 3.5 billion euros invested. Sixty percent complete. And now… a deadline. As we all know, the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management issued stop-work orders on December twenty-second. Just before Christmas. A gift nobody wanted. Ørsted has filed complaints. First on Revolution Wind. Then Sunrise Wind. Court documents reveal the Danish company stands to lose more than 5 billion euros if forced to abandon both projects. Meanwhile… President Trump signed an executive order withdrawing America from sixty-six international organizations. Many focused on energy cooperation. On climate. Ole Rydahl Svensson of Green Power Denmark calls it a sad development. But not surprising. Ole says America is abdicating from renewable energy… in favor of energy forms of the past. The empty seats will be filled quickly, he predicts. By China. By Europe. I personally get asked every week by my European friends, is US onshore wind also under attack?? I think the answer is not yet. While offshore wind projects sit paralyzed by federal orders… Out in the Oklahoma Panhandle… something different is happening. Invenergy is planning a three hundred wind turbine wind farm. Two gigawatts of power. Enough electricity for eight hundred fifty thousand American homes. According to recent filings the turbines will be supplied by GE Vernova. Invenergy already operates wind farms in ten Oklahoma counties. They’ve already built the largest single-phase wind park in North America outside of Oklahoma City. Four billion dollars of investment. Five hundred construction jobs. Thirty permanent positions. No stop-work orders. No court battles. No international incidents. And down near Abilene Texas, AES is repowering its Buffalo Gap wind farm – the existing 282 turbines will be replaced with 117 new Vestas V150 4.5MW turbines. $94 million in tax revenue for local counties and schools over its lifetime. It will also create 300 jobs during peak construction and 17 long-term operations jobs. So while the US oceans remain off-limits… While billions evaporate in legal fees and idle vessels… The wind industry continues to move forward. And that’s the state of the wind industry for January 12, 2026. Join us for the Uptime Wind Energy Podcast tomorrow.

Ørsted Loses €1.5M Daily, Equinor Sets Empire Wind Deadline

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Parallels Between Nazi Germany and American Life Today

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Below are the words of world-renowned poet Kalen Dion on what the typical German was thinking when Hitler came to power in the early 1930s.

I know it’s impertinent to compare the United States under Trump to the Third Reich, but I challenge the reader to deny that there are legitimate parallels here. Below Dion’s piece I have made a few comments.

Nazis didn’t realize that they were “Nazis.” Of course, they were aware that they were affiliated with the Nazi party. But they did not see themselves as the genocidal extremists that they were. They saw themselves as patriots. Defenders of their nation. Acting out of love of country. Rather than a hatred of others. Loyalty was considered a moral duty.

They believed they were restoring order. Not dismantling democracy. The takeovers of the institutions. The loyalty tests as a barrier to entrance for military and government jobs. Exclusively appointing judges aligned with party values. These were all seen as necessary corrections to chaos. Corruption. And moral decay.

They saw their country as besieged by internal conflict. They believed that their greatest threat came from within. Political opponents. Intellectuals. Journalists. Cultural figures undermining the nation. These were seen as their greatest enemies.

They saw themselves as the victims. Despite holding and seeking ultimate power. They understood themselves as persecuted. Silenced. And unfairly targeted by elites. Courts. The media. And cultural institutions.

They saw immigrants as an existential threat. They framed immigration as an invasion. Lawless. A destabilizing force. And part of an international conspiracy to destroy the German way of life.

Joeseph Goebbels, Hitler’s minister of propaganda, created a moral inversion of exclusionary policies. Discrimination. Deportation. And repression was seen as protective. Defensive. And ethically justified.

They saw alignment with the party as alignment with the nation itself. Party loyalty was national loyalty. Opposing the party was seen as treasonous.

They believed in a coordinated leftist conspiracy. A vast interconnected plot involving leftists. Universities. Cultural institutions. Media. And political elites. They thought the left intended to seize power and corrupt society.

They were obsessed with cultural degeneracy narratives. Sexuality. Gender non-conformity. And changing social norms were framed as evidence of moral decay. Something they believed was engineered by the left.

They saw themselves as truth tellers. That they alone were willing to say what everyone knew but was afraid to speak out loud. It reinforced their sense of courage and moral clarity. Even as they used their sense of morality to marginalize and oppress.

They believed time was running out. That the decisive action was immediately necessary to prevent national collapse.

They believed the law was corrupted and weaponized by their enemies. Vigilante action was therefore justified. This belief was used to justify events like the night of long knives and the night of broken glass.

There was a fusion of personal and political identity. An attack on the movement was an attack on them personally. Their values. Their families. Their way of life.

They believed that social institutions had been captured. Courts. Schools. The media. Civil service. These were supposedly controlled by ideological opponents. And made them illegitimate and corrupted. The Lügenpresse… the “lying press”… was treated as “fake news”. The state was the only source of authority. Everything else was seen as non-credible.

They framed themselves as the protectors of the youth. Children were said to be under attack by immigrants. Left us. Educators. And gender ideology. This made their extreme measures feel necessary. One of Hitler’s first actions when he took office was to burn down Berlin’s Institut für Sexualwissenschaft (Institute for Sexual Science), an LGBTQ+ and transgender rights research center.

The idea of meritocracy was used to elevate loyalty over competence. This directly led to Hitler’s downfall.

Competent military officials were dismissed. Party loyalists were installed. This was all treated as merit-based.

And lastly, they believed that history would vindicate them. They saw themselves as misunderstood. Victimized. Persecuted. And they believed that the future would see them as heroes. And that any action was justified, no matter how atrocious, as a means to an end.

Indeed, there are a great number of parallels here.

Trump supporters do believe that they are oppressed by immigrants, liberal judges, schoolteachers bringing politics into the classroom, wokeness, the acceptance LGBTQs, elites, mainstream media, etc.

Trump has surrounded himself with people whose only qualification is their loyalty.  In many cases, it would be impossible to find more incompetent people to head key government positions, e.g. Pete Hegseth, RFK, Jr. and the people who lead the DoE and the EPA.

As I was taught as a child, I continue to believe that, although many of German citizens felt this way, most were interested only in living their lives: doing their jobs and raising their children.  If I’m correct, this differs greatly from today’s U.S., where there are virtually zero apolitical Americans.  If you’re not a Trump supporter, you understand that our president is a criminal sociopath, and you want him gone.

I’m not a historian, and I can’t swear this true, but since Trump appeals to the meanest and least intelligent Americans (and some rich greedy bastards), I’m willing to bet that the demographics of Hitler supporters are similar, if not identical.  I would be shocked to learn that Germany’s doctors, authors, scientists, philanthropists, and college professors stood behind den Fuhrer.

Parallels Between Nazi Germany and American Life Today

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