THE LONELY LIVES OF SCIENTISTS: Scientists Are ‘Sniffing’ Ancient Egyptian Mummies. Here’s Why.
February 16, 2026
THIS IS IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE LAW AS IT HAS EXISTED FOR MANY YEARS: TSA officials will now be required to refer to non-US citizens as “aliens” under a change made on Friday.
“Aliens” is the statutory term, as is “illegal aliens.”
WHAT ARE THE DEEP SEVENS UP TO NOW? Stanford Researchers Chart Mysterious Earthquakes in Earth’s Mantle.
LEFTIST VICTIMHOOD NARRATIVES SELDOM ARE:
It's completely insane that basically none of this "grave" shite was true. https://t.co/l3P9ckwGgM
— Wilfred Reilly (@wil_da_beast630) February 16, 2026
Related:
In my opinion, this is deserved.
They've done a lot to demonstrate that they're not worthy of being trusted. This particularly applies to the newsmedia, academia, and politicians.
— Crémieux (@cremieuxrecueil) February 16, 2026
RIP: Expansive Actor Robert Duvall, Dead at 95.
Every Robert Duvall performance is an unexpected one. Unlike many actors who have had the length of a career as long as his, his performances are unique and nuanced, diverse and always revelatory. Duvall’s roles as Tom Hagen in The Godfather and The Godfather II, Major Frank Burns in M*A*S*H, Gus McCrae in Lonesome Dove, and Lt. Col. Kilgore in Apocalypse Now are the works that most people tend to reference as his most memorable performances. The ones that stick with me are Mac Sledge in Tender Mercies, Frank Hackett in Network, and Sonny Dewey in The Apostle.
Duvall said to American Cowboy magazine that Lonesome Dove’s Gus McCrae was the role that stuck with him the most. After he completed the 1989 television miniseries, Duvall said he was ready to retire.
I can retire now, I’ve done something I can be proud of. Playing Augustus McCrae was kind of like my Hamlet.
The world is grateful that he kept giving us Hamlet-level performances for another 30 years after that, until his last screen appearance in the 2022 period thriller, The Pale Blue Eye.
On Sunday, the Great Director called, and scene on his denouement. Robert Duvall has passed away at the age of 95.
One of the most versatile actors who ever lived:
Rest in peace Robert Duvall. A giant amongst actors.🙏 pic.twitter.com/swSL4weseb
— shane@mrbluesky99 (@mrbluesky99) February 16, 2026
EVERY BREATH YOU TAKE, EVERY STEP YOU MAKE: Toyota’s Driving Data Lawsuit Just Took a Major Turn.
SHUT UP, THEY EXPLAINED: Tenants in NYC public housing won’t be allowed to complain about city landlord at Mamdani’s ‘rental ripoff’ hearings.
NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s “rental ripoff” hearings will not allow those in publicly operated housing to provide testimony. This is despite the fact that the government agency running the units has consistently been called the “worst” landlord in the Big Apple.
The first “rental ripoff” hearing, a pillar of Mamdani’s campaign when he ran for mayor, will take place on February 26. However, only those who are in privately owned buildings are allowed to offer testimony about bad housing conditions. There are around 500,000 tenants that live in housing controlled by the New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA), but they won’t get to participate in the hearings, per the New York Post.
Private landlords were enraged about the city itself dodging questions about publicly-owned units while those renting out private units are encouraged to badmouth their landlords about such issues as “rental junk fees” for amenities and other concerns.
“The city’s own tenants — those living in public housing — are demanding a real plan to improve their living conditions,” said Humberto Lopes, CEO of Gotham Housing Alliance. “It appears the Mamdani administration woke up to their own hypocrisy.”
So much “gooder and harder” that I can hardly pop enough corn.
LOL, JAKE TAPPER:
2/16/26 – On Dogs And Those Who Hate Them
Some of us have lived in Muslim countries and understand how they treat dogs, @jaketapper. During one of my deployments, we had to inform the locals, in no uncertain terms, that no, they would not conduct their annual dog cull. In other… https://t.co/eVWowrKwkH
— Kurt Schlichter (@KurtSchlichter) February 16, 2026
IT WOULD TAKE A HEART OF STONE NOT TO LAUGH: There’s No Meltdown Like a Hillary Meltdown. This Is Her ‘Best Of’ Album.
ERAYAK 4500W Portable Inverter Generator for Home Use. #CommmissionEarend
READER FAVORITE: BAMBOO COOL Men’s Ultra Breathable Underwear. #CommissionEarned
THE NEW SPACE RACE: NASA has a new problem to fix before the next Artemis II countdown test.
On Thursday, NASA’s launch team tested the seals by partially filling the core stage with liquid hydrogen. This “confidence test” ended earlier than planned when the launch team encountered a new problem that reduced the flow of fuel into the rocket. In a statement released Friday night, NASA said workers will replace a filter suspected to be the cause of the reduced flow before proceeding into the next WDR.
The confidence test ended as the launch team transitioned to “fast fill” mode for liquid hydrogen, when pressures and flow rates put the finicky seals through the most stress. However, NASA said engineers achieved several key objectives of the confidence test.
Isaacman wrote Saturday that the test “provided a great deal of data, and we observed materially lower leak rates compared to prior observations during WDR-1.”
Here’s the core problem, and it isn’t the hydrogen: NASA finally acknowledges the elephant in the room with the SLS rocket.
During the news conference, I asked about this low flight rate and the challenge of managing a complex rocket that will never be more than anything but an experimental system. The answer from NASA’s top civil servant, Amit Kshatriya, was eye-opening.
“You know, you’re right, the flight rate—three years is a long time between the first and second,” NASA’s associate administrator said. “It is going to be experimental, because of going to the Moon in this configuration, with the energies we’re dealing with. And every time we do it these are very bespoke components, they’re in many cases made by incredible craftsmen. … It’s the first time this particular machine has borne witness to cryogens, and how it breathes, and how it vents, and how it wants to leak is something we have to characterize. And so every time we do it, we’re going to have to do that separately.”
So there you have it. Every SLS rocket is a work of art, every launch campaign an adventure, every mission subject to excessive delays. It’s definitely not ideal.
It’s a hot mess that costs $4 billion per launch, not including substantial development costs.
LIMITED TIME DEAL: True Classic Mens T-Shirts. #CommissionEarned
SOME PEOPLE CERTAINLY SURVIVE WITHOUT THEM: Humans really don’t need chins: Homo sapiens are the only primates that have them, but they don’t make us special.
Also without spines.
Hero for the day. Thank you Macinka for laughing right in the Witches face. Too bad he did not have a pail of water.💦 pic.twitter.com/XfePdclZAB
— Lisa (@lalalainsd) February 16, 2026
COLLEGE FOOTBALL BUYOUT MADNESS. There is too much money sloshing around in college football. I think it’s time for a minor league, and a return to “students who happen to play football.”
MAKE AMERICA AFFORDABLE AGAIN: Trump Admin: $2,400 Savings From Ending Start-Stop Car Feature
I’D LIKE A WHOLE NEW SET OF TEETH ABOUT NOW: Humans Have a Third Set of Teeth. New Medicine May Help Them Grow. They could be ready by 2030.
18 MONTHS SEEMS A LITTLE OPTIMISTIC… ER, PESSIMISTIC? Microsoft AI Head: Most White Collar Jobs Automated In 18 Months. “There are places where where AI might replace experts, namely those that use wide but highly structured datasets for narrow decision points, like some areas of regulatory law. But are decision makers really going to remove the ability to blame underlings for mistakes?’“Sure we lost $100 million, but the AI told me it was OK!’ is probably not going to wash as an adequate ass-covering maneuver. And, as I noted before, who is going to put an AI in charge of Accounts Payable when a single glitch could drain your entire bank account?”
THE SIBERIA JOB: How to Avoid Getting Killed While Making a Killing in Post-Soviet Russia.
My latest, over at Ed Driscoll.com.
