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#deputy joshua harris
jollybone · 2 years
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Felt like drawing my Deputy again. It has been a while.
Deputy Joshua Harris is my OC
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patwrites · 1 year
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Overall Body Count:
2001 Wakefield Massacre:
Harris Antonini
Joshua Aiken
Randall Martin
Christopher Cullen
Sarah Mills
Kate Seaver
2002-2008 Copycat Sprees:
Cody
Ashley
Peck
At least 5 additional people
2008 Wakefield-Dunn Massacre:
Ben Wellington
Marty Dunn
Reverend Fain
Kelly Seaver
Lucy Daramour
Hunter Jennings
Andrew Cullen
Sparky Mackle
Deputy Garrett
Joel Booth
Thomas Wellington
Richard Allen
Malcolm Ross
Cole Harkin
Brent Cyr
JD Dunn
Beth Barrington
Katherine Wellington
Darryl Riggens
Tyra Coulter
Maggie Krell
Charlie Mills
Nikki Bolton
Shane Pierce
Patrick Lillis
Cal Vandeusen
Chloe Carter
Danny Brooks
Trish Wellington
Chris Sullivan
John Wakefield
Henry Dunn
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rejected-beater · 2 years
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A belated Halloween post.
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There is something hunting, in the dead of the night
Deputy Joshua Harris belongs to @jollybone
Rai Anderson is my OC
-click on the picture for better quality-
❇ My Linktr.ee ❇
→ you like my work and wanna support me? Buy me a ko-fi or get yourself a commission
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bl-beater · 3 years
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I love the fact that:
@jollybone their OC Josh is younger as Rai but looks older and is a head taller as Rai-
My Boy is taller as John but needs to break his neck to look up to Josh xD
Joshua Harris is @jollybone their OC
Rai Anderson is my OC
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The Self Care Tag Game
Tagged by @strafethesesinners​ , Thank you! I haven’t done this yet ٩(⁎❛ᴗ❛⁎)۶
Favorite comfort food: Kraft Mac’n’cheese! With chopped up lil’smokies and a hint of sriracha sauce :9
Favorite drink: Dr. Pepper 
Favorite relaxing activity: Playing video games (Far Cry 5 at the moment) and writing fanfiction during my study breaks :3
Favorite fluffy/feel good fic: While I enjoy fics with a good dose of fluff and good feels, I also like heapfuls of angst, humor, action, with a dash smut where the romance was cooked slowly and lovingly! My faves that I highly recommend can be found on AO3:
Fallout New Vegas (Benny/Female Courier) “Heaven Can Wait” by moon_crater
Fallout New Vegas (Female Courier/Joshua Graham) “The path is always there” by snaildetective
Far Cry 5 (Jacob Seed/Female Deputy) “Come a little closer” by lowtides
Fire Emblem: Awakening AU (Female My Unit-Avatar/Sort-Stahl) “Unbreakable Glass Heart” by averageghost
Mass Effect Milky Way AU (Garrus/Female Shepard)  “Son of Palaven, Daughter of Earth” by miceenscene
Mass Effect AU (Garrus/Female Shepard) “Fibonacci” (Revamped) by squiggly_squid
Mass Effect Milky Way AU (Nihlus /Female Shepard - with Saren Father) “Sins of the Father” by MsWikit 
Mass Effect Milky Way (Original human female/original male turian) “Five Weeks On” by chockymousse
Mass Effect Milky Way (Original human female/original male turian) “In Bloom” by Wafflesrock
Mass Effect Andromeda (Jaal/Sara Ryder) “The problem with flirting” by Steinbjoern
Pokemon Sword & Shield (Raihan/Gloria) “Into the Wild” by writingnerd
Favorite calming scent: Soft lavender 
Favorite white noise: The gentle pitter patter of rain
Favorite relaxing (or uplifting) song: Oh boy, right now my ‘crush that exam anthem’ playlist includes: Doja Cat - ‘Say So’ and The Weeknd - ‘Starboy’,  ‘Can't Feel My Face’, ‘Blinding Lights’, ‘In Your Eyes’, and ‘Secrets’.
Favorite book to get lost in: Sabriel by Garth Nix and The Harry Potter series
Favorite TV show to chill-out: Community, Arrested Development, The Simpsons, Futurama, Disenchantment, and Eddie Izzard’s recorded stand ups.
The best advice you’ve ever had: Remembering that ->"This too, shall pass...”  ಥ_ಥ It applies to everything in life...
I’m tagging the following, but please only do if you would like to (no pressure!), plus anyone else who would like to join in on the fun! @rpgwarrior4824, @bitterestel, @squigglysquidd, @anavakarian, @angaranprincess
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bountyofbeads · 5 years
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We are African Americans, we are patriots, and we refuse to sit idly by
https://wapo.st/2ZfMStU
We Are African Americans, We Are Patriots, And We Refuse To Sit Idly By
By Clarence J. Fluker, C. Kinder, Jesse Moore and Khalilah M. Harris | Published July 26 at 6:09 PM ET | Washington Post | Posted July 28, 2019
This op-ed is co-signed by 149 African Americans who served in the Obama administration.
This post has been updated.
We’ve heard this before. Go back where you came from. Go back to Africa. And now, “send her back.” Black and brown people in America don’t hear these chants in a vacuum; for many of us, we’ve felt their full force being shouted in our faces, whispered behind our backs, scrawled across lockers, or hurled at us online. They are part of a pattern in our country designed to denigrate us as well as keep us separate and afraid.
As 149 African Americans who served in the last administration, we witnessed firsthand the relentless attacks on the legitimacy of President Barack Obama and his family from our front-row seats to America’s first black presidency. Witnessing racism surge in our country, both during and after Obama’s service and ours, has been a shattering reality, to say the least. But it has also provided jet-fuel for our activism, especially in moments such as these.
We stand with congresswomen Ilhan Omar, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Ayanna Pressley and Rashida Tlaib, as well as all those currently under attack by President Trump, along with his supporters and his enablers, who feel deputized to decide who belongs here — and who does not. There is truly nothing more un-American than calling on fellow citizens to leave our country — by citing their immigrant roots, or ancestry, or their unwillingness to sit in quiet obedience while democracy is being undermined.
We are proud descendants of immigrants, refugees and the enslaved Africans who built this country while enduring the horrors of its original sin. We stand on the soil they tilled, and march in the streets they helped to pave. We are red-blooded Americans, we are patriots, and we have plenty to say about the direction this country is headed. We decry voter suppression. We demand equitable access to health care, housing, quality schools and employment. We welcome new Americans with dignity and open arms. And we will never stop fighting for the overhaul of a criminal-justice system with racist foundations.
We come from Minnesota and Michigan. The Bronx and Baton Rouge. Florida and Philadelphia. Cleveland and the Carolinas. Atlanta and Nevada. Oak-town and the Chi. We understand our role in this democracy, and respect the promise of a nation built by, for and of immigrants. We are part of that tradition, and have the strength to both respect our ancestors from faraway lands and the country we all call home.
Our love of country lives in these demands, and our commitment to use our voices and our energy to build a more perfect union. We refuse to sit idly by as racism, sexism, homophobia and xenophobia are wielded by the president and any elected official complicit in the poisoning of our democracy. We call on local, state and congressional officials, as well as presidential candidates to articulate their policies and strategies for moving us forward as a strong democracy, through a racial-equity lens that prioritizes people over profit. We will continue to support candidates for local, state and federal office who add more diverse representation to the dialogue and those who understand the importance of such diversity when policymaking here in our country and around the world. We ask all Americans to be a good neighbor by demonstrating anti-racist, environmentally friendly, and inclusive behavior toward everyone in your everyday interactions.
The statesman Frederick Douglass warned, “The life of a nation is secure only while the nation is honest, truthful and virtuous.” This nation has neither grappled with nor healed from the horrors of its origins. It is time to advance that healing process now through our justice, economic, health and political systems.
Expect to hear more from us. We plan to leave this country better than we found it. This is our home.
Saba Abebe, former special assistant, Office of Economic Impact and Diversity, Energy Department
Tsehaynesh Abebe, former adviser, U.S. Agency for International Development
David Adeleye, former policy specialist, White House
Bunmi Akinnusotu, former special assistant, Office of Land and Emergency Management, Environmental Protection Agency
Trista Allen, former senior adviser to the regional administrator, General Services Administration
Maria Anderson, former operations assistant, White House
Karen Andre, former White House liaison, Department of Housing and Urban Development
Caya Lewis Atkins, former counselor for science and public health, Department of Health and Human Services
Roy L. Austin Jr., former deputy assistant to the president, White House Domestic Policy Council
Kevin Bailey, former special assistant, White House; senior policy adviser, Treasury Department
Jumoke Balogun, former adviser to the secretary, Labor Department
Diana Banks, former deputy assistant secretary, Defense Department
Desiree N. Barnes, former adviser to the press secretary, White House
Kevin F. Beckford, former special adviser, Department of Housing and Urban Development
Alaina Beverly, former associate director, Office of Urban Affairs, White House
Saba Bireda, former senior counsel, Office for Civil Rights, Education Department
Vincent H. Bish Jr., former special assistant to the assistant secretary of strategic program management, Department of Health and Human Services
Michael Blake, former director for African American, minority and women business enterprises and county and statewide elected officials, White House
Tenicka Boyd, former special assistant, Office of Faith Based and Neighborhood Partnerships, Education Department
Tanya Bradsher, former assistant secretary for public affairs, Department of Homeland Security
Stacey Brayboy, former chief of staff, Office of the Chief Financial Officer, Agriculture Department
Allyn Brooks-LaSure, former deputy associate administrator for external affairs, Environmental Protection Agency
Chiquita Brooks-LaSure, former director of coverage policy, Office of Health Reform, Department of Health and Human Services
Quincy K. Brown, former senior policy adviser, Office of Science and Technology Policy, White House
Taylor Campbell, former director of correspondence systems innovation, White House
Crystal Carson, former chief of staff to the director of communications, White House
Genger Charles, former general deputy assistant secretary for the Office of Housing, Federal Housing Administration, Department of Housing and Urban Development
Glorie Chiza, former associate director, Office of Public Engagement and Intergovernmental Affairs, White House
Sarah Haile Coombs, special assistant, Department of Health and Human Services
Michael Cox, former special assistant to the assistant secretary for intergovernmental affairs, Commerce Department
Adria Crutchfield, former director of external affairs, Federal Hurricane Sandy Rebuilding Task Force, Department of Housing and Urban Development
Joiselle Cunningham, former special adviser, Office of the Secretary, Education Department
Charlotte Flemmings Curtis, former special adviser for White House initiatives, Corporation for National and Community Service
Kareem Dale, former special assistant to the president for disability policy, White House
Ashlee Davis, former White House liaison, Agriculture Department
Marco A. Davis, former deputy director, White House Initiative on Educational Excellence for Hispanics
Russella L. Davis-Rogers, former chief of staff, Office of Strategic Partnerships, Department of Education
Tequia Hicks Delgado, former senior adviser for congressional engagement and legislative relations, Office of Legislative Affairs, White House
Kalisha Dessources Figures, former policy adviser, White House Council on Women and Girls
Leek Deng, former special assistant, Bureau for Global Health, U.S. Agency for International Development
Tene Dolphin, former chief of staff, Economic Development Administration, Commerce Department
Monique Dorsainvil, former deputy chief of staff, Office of Public Engagement and Intergovernmental Affairs, White House
Joshua DuBois, former executive director, Office of Faith-based and Neighborhood Partnerships; former special assistant to the president, White House
Dru Ealons, former director, Office of Public Engagement, Environmental Protection Agency
Rosemary Enobakhare, former deputy associate administrator for public engagement and environmental education, Environmental Protection Agency
Karen Evans, former assistant director and policy adviser, Office of Cabinet Affairs, White House
Clarence J. Fluker, former deputy associate director for national parks and youth engagement, White House Council on Environmental Quality
Heather Foster, former public engagement adviser and director of African American affairs, White House
Kalina Francis, former special adviser, Office of Public Affairs, Treasury Department
Matthew “Van” Buren Freeman, former senior adviser, Minority Business Development Agency, Commerce Department
Cameron French, former deputy assistant secretary for public affairs, Department of Housing and Urban Development
Jocelyn Frye, former deputy assistant to the president and director of policy and special projects for the first lady, White House
Bernard Fulton, former deputy assistant secretary for congressional relations, Department of Housing and Urban Development
Stephanie Gaither, former confidential assistant to the deputy director, Office of Management and Budget, White House
Demetria A. Gallagher, former senior adviser for policy and inclusive innovation, Commerce Department
Lateisha Garrett, former White House liaison, National Endowment for the Humanities
W. Cyrus Garrett, former special adviser to the director of counternarcotics enforcement, Department of Homeland Security
Bishop M. Garrison, former science and technology directorate adviser, Department of Homeland Security
Lisa Gelobter, former chief digital service officer, Education Department
A’shanti F. Gholar, former special assistant to the secretary, Labor Department
Jay R. Gilliam, former special assistant, U.S. Agency for International Development
Artealia Gilliard, former deputy assistant secretary for transportation policy, Transportation Department
Brenda Girton-Mitchell, former director, Center for Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships, Education Department
Jason Green, former associate counsel and special assistant to the president, White House
Corey Arnez Griffin, former associate director, Peace Corps
Kyla F. Griffith, former special adviser to the secretary, Commerce Department
Simone L. Hardeman-Jones, former deputy assistant secretary, Office of Legislative and Congressional Affairs, Education Department
Thamar Harrigan, former senior intergovernmental relations adviser, Department of Housing and Urban Development
Dalen Harris, former director, Office of Intergovernmental and Public Liaison, Office of National Drug Control Policy, White House
Khalilah M. Harris, former deputy director, White House Initiative on Educational Excellence for African Americans; former senior adviser, Office of Personnel Management
Adam Hodge, former deputy assistant secretary for public affairs, Treasury Department
Valerie Jarrett, former senior adviser, White House
Will Yemi Jawando, former associate director, Office of Public Engagement, White House
Karine Jean-Pierre, former northeast political director, Office of Political Affairs, White House
A. Jenkins, former director, Center for Faith Based and Neighborhood Partnerships, Commerce Department
Adora Jenkins, former press secretary, Justice Department; former deputy associate administrator for external affairs, Environmental Protection Agency
W. Nate Jenkins, former chief of staff and senior adviser to the budget director, Office of Management and Budget, White House
David J. Johns, former executive director, White House Initiative on Educational Excellence for African Americans
Brent Johnson, former special adviser to the secretary, Commerce Department
Broderick Johnson, former White House assistant to the president and Cabinet secretary for My Brother’s Keeper Task Force
Carmen Daniels Jones, former director, Office of Small and Disadvantaged Business Utilization, Agriculture Department
Gregory K. Joseph II, former special assistant, Office of the Executive Secretariat, Energy Department
Jamia Jowers, former special assistant, National Security Council
Charmion N. Kinder, former associate, Press Office of the First Lady, White House; former assistant press secretary, Department of Housing and Urban Development
Elise Nelson Leary, former international affairs adviser, National Aeronautics and Space Administration
Kimberlyn Leary, former adviser, White House Council on Women and Girls
Daniella Gibbs Léger, former special assistant to the president and director of message events, White House
Georgette Lewis, former policy adviser, Department of Health and Human Services
Kevin Lewis, former director of African American media, White House; former principal deputy director of public affairs, Justice Department
Catherine E. Lhamon, former assistant secretary for civil rights, Education Department
Tiffani Long, former special adviser, Economic Development Administration
Latifa Lyles, former director, Women’s Bureau, Labor Department
Brenda Mallory, former general counsel, White House Council on Environmental Quality
Dominique Mann, former media affairs manager, White House
Shelly Marc, former policy adviser, Office of Public Engagement and Intergovernmental Affairs, White House
Tyra A. Mariani, former chief of staff to the deputy secretary, Education Department
Lawrence Mason III, former domestic policy analyst, Office of Presidential Correspondence, White House
Dexter L. McCoy, former special assistant, Office of the Secretary, Education Department
Matthew McGuire, former U.S. executive director, The World Bank Group
Tyrik McKeiver, former senior adviser, State Department
Tjada D’Oyen McKenna, former assistant to the administrator, U.S. Agency for International Development
Solianna Meaza, former special assistant to associate administrator, U.S. Agency for International Development
Mahlet Mesfin, former assistant director for international science and technology, Office of Science and Technology Policy, White House
Ricardo Michel, former director, Center for Transformational Partnerships, U.S. Agency for International Development Global Development Lab
Paul Monteiro, former associate director, Office of Public Engagement, White House
Jesse Moore, former associate director, Office of Public Engagement, White House
Shannon Myricks, former specialist, Office of Management and Administration Information Services, White House
Melanie Newman, former director of public affairs, Justice Department
Fatima Noor, former policy assistant, Domestic Policy Council
Bianca Oden, former deputy chief of staff, Agriculture Department
Funmi Olorunnipa, former ethics counsel, White House Counsel’s Office
Elizabeth Ogunwo, former White House liaison, Peace Corps
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jollybone · 2 years
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thank you so much @bl-beater for this absolutely amazing birthday gift drawn by the super talented and awesome @nihildep !! I love it so so much 🥺🥺💕
Look at them go- thank you so so so so much @bl-beater for this amazing gift! I love it to pieces qwq thank you, love!🥺💕💕
also thank you so much @nihildep for drawing my boy Josh so perfectly and those two dorks so cute 💕 I’m so in love with this gorgeous art piece
Deputy Joshua Harris is my OC click for better quality
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rejected-beater · 3 years
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Fwoggie time
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OCs in that picture are:
Rai Anderson mine
Piper Vasquez @derelictheretic
Joshua Harris @jollybone
Elizabeth Parker @spicevalleys
Hope you all like those smoll beans- I got some more pland :D no one actually knows which OCs I use-
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sciencespies · 3 years
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Biden likely to stay course on Space Force and defense investments
https://sciencespies.com/space/biden-likely-to-stay-course-on-space-force-and-defense-investments/
Biden likely to stay course on Space Force and defense investments
President-elect Joe Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris have vowed to take the United States in a sharply different direction on issues like the coronavirus pandemic and climate change.
But with regard to space and its importance to national security, analysts and industry insiders believe the Biden administration will largely stay the course.
The arrival of a new administration “does not portend any immediate abrupt changes to U.S. national security or civil space programs. Space continues to be a bipartisan policy area and Joe Biden’s campaign has articulated their belief in the importance of the domain,” the Washington aerospace and defense-focused consulting firm Velos said in an email to clients.
Biden has “expressed no plans for structural changes to U.S. space programs,” Velos noted. “The Democratic Party national platform supports continuity within NASA and the Space Force.”
This outlook suggests Biden will not undo President Donald Trump’s major reorganization of national security space. Trump in August 2019 reactivated U.S. Space Command as the military’s 11th unified combatant command and worked with Congress to establish the U.S. Space Force in December 2019.
The Space Force, the nation’s first new military branch since the Air Force was established in 1947, became one of Trump’s priorities early in his administration. But the Space Force is not as partisan an issue as some would believe, noted Joshua Huminski, director of the Mike Rogers Center for Intelligence and Global Affairs’ National Security Space Program.
U.S. Space Force Lt. Gen. Stephen Whiting receives his first solute as commander of the newly re-designated Space Operations Command during an Oct. 21 ceremony at Peterson Air Force Base, Colorado. Credit: U.S. Air Force Photo by Staff Sgt. J.T. Armstrong
Although Trump championed the Space Force, the initial effort to form a new service grew out of a bipartisan push from the House Armed Services Committee going back to late 2016. That was when then-chairman and ranking member of the HASC strategic forces subcommittee Rep. Mike Rogers (R-Ala.) and Rep. Jim Cooper (D-Tenn.) started advocating for a separate space branch.
Rogers and Cooper wrote language to establish a Space Corps under the Department of the Air Force. The provision was passed by the House in the 2018 National Defense Authorization Act but was defeated in the House-Senate conference.
The only difference between the Space Corps of 2017 and the Space Force of 2019 is “just one word,” Cooper told reporters last December just days before Congress passed the 2020 National Defense Authorization Act that established the U.S. Space Force.
“I think the important thing to consider is that the intellectual foundation of the Space Force existed well before President Trump,” said Huminski.
The rationale for a military space service — that U.S. access to space and the safe operations of satellites are threatened by Russia and China — has been accepted on both sides, he said. “And the mission and threat will continue on, and perhaps accelerate into President Biden’s administration.”
Many Democrats — and several of Trump’s Pentagon appointees — opposed creating a separate space service rather than elevating its standing within the Air Force. But a majority of lawmakers voted for it because they believed the Pentagon needed to do more to protect U.S. space assets critical to the military and to the civilian economy, said David Burbach, associate professor of national security affairs at the U.S. Naval War College in Newport, Rhode Island.
If the Space Force didn’t already exist, Biden probably would not advocate to create one, Burbach said. “But given that it’s been done, I think the focus will be on trying to make it work effectively,” he added.
To be sure, even if Biden wanted to fold the Space Force back into the Air Force, he could not do that by executive order, Burbach pointed out. The Space Force is now cemented in law as the sixth branch of the U.S. armed services so changing its status would require Congress to enact new legislation.
With Republicans favored to keep the majority in the Senate, there is no chance Congress would pass legislation to roll back the Space Force, Burbach said. “No way would the Republican Senate go along with undoing that accomplishment for Trump.”
Even if Democrats eke out a narrow majority following a Jan. 5 runoff election for Georgia’s two Senate seats, lawmakers who championed the original legislation are poised to retain leadership positions on the House and Senate Armed Services Committees in the next Congress.
DOD INVESTMENTS IN SPACE TECHNOLOGY
Trump’s final budget proposal — which is still before Congress — seeks more than $15 billion for the Space Force, with about $12 billion of that amount set aside for research, development and procurement of new systems.
“We don’t see those budgets changing, at least not immediately,” said Eric Stallmer, executive vice president of government affairs and public policy at Voyager Space Holdings.
“Of course the administration will take a hard look at what we’re spending,” he said. “At some point everybody is going to have to take a little bit of a haircut.”
But space might fare better than other portions of the defense budget, said Stallmer. “Space has been bipartisan and it’s a critical asset to the security of the nation.”
Biden has identified space as one category of military spending that will be emphasized. “We have to make smart investments in technologies and innovations — including in cyber, space, unmanned systems, and artificial intelligence — that will be necessary to meet the threats of the future,” Biden told the Military Officers Association of America in a Q&A published in September.
“We have to move away from investments in legacy systems that won’t be relevant for tomorrow’s wars, and we have to rethink the contributions we and our allies make to our collective security,” Biden said.
“We have to make smart investments in technologies and innovations — including in cyber, space, unmanned systems, and artificial intelligence — that will be necessary to meet the threats of the future,” U.S. President-elect Joe Biden said in a Q&A published in September. Credit: Adam Schultz/Biden for President
Many predict Biden will come under political pressure from the progressive wing of his party to cut military spending to pay for domestic priorities.
“Obviously there will be trade-offs,” said Clementine Starling, deputy director of Forward Defense at the Atlantic Council. “But in the long run I think we will start to see more of a focus and investment in new technologies including cyber, space, directed energy, artificial intelligence and quantum computing.”
Huminski suggested that budgets for defense and space are “a big open question, especially in light of a COVID-19-driven, resource-constrained environment.” This would be bad news for the Space Force, he said. “No bucks, no Buck Rogers.”
Despite bipartisan congressional support for the Space Force, committees have been critical of space acquisition programs for being too slow compared to the pace of technological innovation in the private sector, Huminski noted. “Acquisition reform remains unfinished.”
Among the members of Biden’s presidential transition teams for the Department of Defense is Andrew Hunter, a senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies who focuses on defense acquisition and industrial policy. The selection of Hunter, a former Pentagon procurement official during the Obama presidency, hints at the new administration’s intent to examine Pentagon acquisitions.
SPACE SECURITY CONCERNS
Foreign policy experts, meanwhile, wonder how Biden might use other tools of statecraft beyond the military to deal with spacefaring rivals like Russia and China.
“This is the essential balance that the United States will need to strike regarding outer space: finding a way to work with states like Russia and China on space sustainability and safety issues, while at the same time pushing back on security issues when necessary,” commented Frank Rose, a foreign policy and arms control expert who provided informal counsel to the Biden campaign for president.
China’s growing anti-satellite capabilities will be a challenge for the coming administration, Rose wrote in a paper published in April by the Brookings Institution.
The United States will need to develop a strategy that deters China’s increasing anti-satellite capabilities, said Rose. But the U.S. government, he added, also should try to work with China cooperatively on sustainability and safety issues like orbital debris, space traffic management, and the rise of satellite megaconstellations.
Military solutions like standing up U.S. Space Command and the U.S. Space Force will not be enough to address the rise of China and other challenges to space security, said Rose. “Bilateral diplomatic engagements with China also need to be part of the strategy.”
This article originally appeared in the Nov. 16, 2020 issue of SpaceNews magazine.
#Space
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tabloidtoc · 4 years
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People, January 6
Cover: Friends Forever -- Courteney Cox and Jennifer Aniston and Lisa Kudrow -- Inside Their Lives Now 
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Page 3: Chatter -- Harry Hamlin on Lisa Rinna, Jamie Foxx, Charlize Theron, Jason Derulo, Kate Beckinsale, Joe Alwyn on Taylor Swift 
Page 4: 5 Things We’re Talking About This Week -- Mariah Carey rules Christmas, Wakanda is open for business, LaCroix adds a sweet new flavor, Kim Kardashian West had to photoshop her holiday card, Kumail Nanjiani got ripped 
Page 6: Contents 
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Page 8: StarTracks -- Kelly Clarkson and The Voice winner Jake Hoot, Kelly and husband Brandon Blackstock and John Legend and Chrissy Teigen and Blake Shelton and Gwen Stefani 
Page 9: Jennifer Lawrence and Cooke Maroney visit the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Josh Duhamel on the beach in Hawaii, John Boyega and Daisy Ridley at the London premiere of Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker, President Barack Obama plays golf in Hawaii 
Page 10: Inside the palace Christmas lunch -- Prince William and Princess Kate and Prince George and Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis, Prince Harry as Santa 
Page 11: Stars on Set -- Milo Ventimiglia and Lonnie Chavis shoot This Is Us, Scott Eastwood filming Cash Truck, Kaley Cuoco on the set of The Flight Attendant, Anna Kendrick and Scoot McNairy film Love Life 
Page 12: Spreading Holiday Cheer -- Celine Dion, Kate Hudson and boyfriend Danny Fujikawa and kids Rani Rose and Ryder and Bingham, Rebel Wilson in Aspen, Christopher Mintz-Plasse and Josh Peck and James Corden and Charlie Puth and Zach Braff form Boyz II Menorah 
Page 13: Family Time -- Malin Akerman and mom Pia in Stockholm, Pete Wentz and son Bronx, StyleTracks -- sequins -- Kelly Marie Tran, Olivia Wilde, Elizabeth Hurley, Carrie Underwood, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Kelsea Ballerini 
Page 15: Inside Princess Beatrice’s wedding plans amid her dad Prince Andrew’s scandal 
Page 16: Teresa and Joe Giudice split after 20 years 
Page 18: Heart Monitor -- Kevin and Danielle Jonas happy anniversary, Miley Cyrus and Cody Simpson heating up, Lana Del Ray and Sean Larkin going public, Jodie Turner-Smith and Joshua Jackson married 
Page 21: Ryan Seacrest gets ready for New Year’s Eve, Susan Sarandon -- my life as a grandma 
Page 23: Channing Tatum is single again, Jenna Dewan gets ready for baby 
Page 24: Pierce Brosnan’s sons Dylan and Paris take center stage 
Page 27: Stories to Make You Smile -- Gary Sinise treats more than 1000 kids of fallen soldiers to five days at Disney World 
Page 31: Passages, Why I Care -- Katy Perry joined forces with Amazon and Boys & Girls Clubs to fulfill Christmas wishes 
Page 33: People Picks -- Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker 
Page 34: Clemency, One to Watch -- You’s Victoria Pedretti 
Page 35: The Golden Globes, Dare Me 
Page 36: Uncut Gems, Deputy, Taylor Swift -- Beautiful Ghosts, Q&A -- Madeleine Stowe 
Page 39: Books, Star Picks: What We’re Reading -- Matthew Rhys, Olivia Culpo, Justin Hartley 
Page 40: Cover Story -- Friends Forever 
Page 46: New mom Heidi Broussard murdered and her best friend Magen Fieramusca arrested 
Page 50: Billy Dee Williams proves he’s just as suave as ever 
Page 52: Next Generation Leaders -- hero kids to the rescue 
Page 57: The Bachelorette’s J.P. Rosenbaum’s terrifying health crisis
Page 60: Double Talk -- Steve Martin and Martin Short 
Page 65: Instagram stars Ava and Leah Clements fighting to save their dad 
Page 66: Taron Egerton rocket to stardom 
Page 69: Winter TV Preview -- Dan Levy readies for farewell of Schitt’s Creek 
Page 72: Jane Levy’s musical awakening in Zoey’s Extraordinary Playlist 
Page 87: Second Look -- Ken Jeong and Rick Schwartz and Jenny Slate and Kristen Schaal 
Page 88: One Last Thing -- Rashida Jones
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