Every time a Russian television network or pro-Kremlin newspaper reaches a new low, it was once commonplace among independent thinkers to say that the Western media giants never allowed themselves such mistakes. Throughout Russian journalismβs post-Soviet history, faith in CNN as a kind of celestial constellation has been an essential factor. The archetype has been necessary as a model to strive toward or turn away from, and it will remain a key element in Russian journalismβs coordinate system.It is the height of insanity that leftists packing the news organizations here would rather engage in this mass deception than admit they lost. Despite it causing irrevocable harm to their reputations abroad, and how obviously they've hoist upon their own petard.
Thereβs a thoroughly naive misperception that the people working for propaganda outlets are all hard-nose cynics ready to say that black is white just so they can make their mortgage payments. In fact, anyone whoβs talked with just one of these people knows that any cynicism that might guide them is something entirely different: itβs not βI lie because of my mortgage,β but βI say what serves the stateβs interests because thatβs how it works everywhere β we serve Russia, CNN serves the U.S., and the BBC is itself a state organization.β
Hearing this kind of talk, Russians from the independent media of course always laughed, but time has shown that the ones who said βitβs like this everywhereβ were right. At the very least, over the past year and a half, the Western press with its highest standards has gifted us too many outrageous stories to ignore.
It made me smarter and more handsome than my brother Mark [laughs]. With the twin study, particularly, there was a bunch of experiments that were genetic-based. And there are these things called telomeres, which are the ends of our chromosomes, and the length and quality of them are indications of our physical age. The hypothesis was that with me being in space, and the radiation, and the microgravity, maybe the stress of living there for a long period of time, my telomeres would get shorter and basically older compared to Markβs. What they found is that mine got better. So physically I got a little younger than he is, and then once I got back they kind of went back to their normal, preflight condition.So, basically the guy didn't age while on the ISS. Amazing. Interesting clue:
So when the CO2 is at our normal low levels on the space station, itβs 10 times what it is on Earth. ...The Russians say that it should be high because it helps protect you from radiationInteresting, reducing oxidative stress may give one time to recover.