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  • Anders Sandberg at Andart approves of entrepreneur Elon Musk's desire to use space travel to create offworld backups for our biosphere.
  • Burgh Diaspora's Jim Russell believes that the close links between Brazil and Boston--driven by migration, at first strictly economic but then driven by interest in Massachusetts' education institutes--could serve Boston quite well.

  • Two links from Centauri Dreams today, one describing the planetary system of HD 10180, a Sun-like star that supports nine planets to our eight, and the other describing hypothetical laser-based defenses for starships against interstellar dust.

  • At Extraordinary Observations, Rob Pitingolo describes the difficulties tourism planners in destination cities have with getting people to visit sites that aren't the most heavily trafficked.

  • Geocurrents' Asya Pereltsvaig deflates the myth that Chinese men (lacking spouses owing to a male-biased sex ratio at birth) will flood into Russia (especially Siberia) looking for Russian women (lacking spouses owing to a high male death rate). Among other things, there actually isn't much of a shortage of theoretically marriageable men in Siberia.

  • The Global Sociology Blog discusses what happens when celebrity culture and social networking sites like Twitter intersect. The answer? It's easier to get social capital than ever before.

  • At GNXP, Razib Khan notes that Argentina--unlike English-speaking countries also products of mass European immigration--still evidences the genetic trace of indigenous populations.

  • Open the Future's Jamais Cascio points out that, at long last, global climate change is kicking off (as expected as early as 1981).

  • Registan features a guest post from Uzbekistan commentator Azamat Seitov, who discusses the possibility that the Eurasian Economic Community--a Russia-centered bloc also including Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan--will take off. He's skeptical.

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