A Space & astronomy forum. SpaceBanter.com

Go Back   Home » SpaceBanter.com forum » Astronomy and Astrophysics » Astronomy Misc
Site Map Home Authors List Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read Web Partners

2035 Eclipse



 
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old June 20th 17, 10:05 PM posted to sci.astro
Fritz Owl
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3
Default 2035 Eclipse



Even though it is 18 years away, the 2035 eclipse could present a problem
for some American travellers as Pyongyang will be in the path of totality,
and that one Congressman is currently pushing a bill to ban American travel
to North Korea.

If that ban is still in effect in 2035, it should be noted that Americans
who do not live in the United States will be not subject to the travel
restrictions, if they hold dual nationality and use their other passport to
travel to Pyongyang in 2035.

So for those Chinese citizens who hold USA/China dual citizenship (and there
are quite a few) who live in China, and decide to travel to Pyongyang in
2035, you can use your Chinese passport to enter and depart North Korea and
will be not subject to this ban, if it is still in place in the year 2035.

China/USA dual nationals who live in China, use money drawn on Chinese
banks, and use their Chinese passports to travel to Pyongyang in 2035 for
that eclipse will be not subject to any restrictionn on DPRK travel imposed
by the American government.




  #2  
Old June 21st 17, 08:04 AM posted to sci.astro
Mike Dworetsky
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 715
Default 2035 Eclipse

Fritz Owl wrote:
Even though it is 18 years away, the 2035 eclipse could present a
problem for some American travellers as Pyongyang will be in the path
of totality, and that one Congressman is currently pushing a bill to
ban American travel to North Korea.

If that ban is still in effect in 2035, it should be noted that
Americans who do not live in the United States will be not subject to
the travel restrictions, if they hold dual nationality and use their
other passport to travel to Pyongyang in 2035.

So for those Chinese citizens who hold USA/China dual citizenship
(and there are quite a few) who live in China, and decide to travel
to Pyongyang in 2035, you can use your Chinese passport to enter and
depart North Korea and will be not subject to this ban, if it is
still in place in the year 2035.
China/USA dual nationals who live in China, use money drawn on Chinese
banks, and use their Chinese passports to travel to Pyongyang in 2035
for that eclipse will be not subject to any restrictionn on DPRK
travel imposed by the American government.


Or, to simplify things greatly, one could note that the eclipse will also be
visible from NE China and Japan, for which these travel problems are
unlikely to be a factor.

--
Mike Dworetsky

(Remove pants sp*mbl*ck to reply)

  #3  
Old June 21st 17, 12:01 PM posted to sci.astro
John[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 30
Default 2035 Eclipse

On Wed, 21 Jun 2017 08:04:32 +0100, "Mike Dworetsky"
wrote:

Fritz Owl wrote:
Even though it is 18 years away, the 2035 eclipse could present a
problem for some American travellers as Pyongyang will be in the path
of totality, and that one Congressman is currently pushing a bill to
ban American travel to North Korea.

If that ban is still in effect in 2035, it should be noted that
Americans who do not live in the United States will be not subject to
the travel restrictions, if they hold dual nationality and use their
other passport to travel to Pyongyang in 2035.

So for those Chinese citizens who hold USA/China dual citizenship
(and there are quite a few) who live in China, and decide to travel
to Pyongyang in 2035, you can use your Chinese passport to enter and
depart North Korea and will be not subject to this ban, if it is
still in place in the year 2035.
China/USA dual nationals who live in China, use money drawn on Chinese
banks, and use their Chinese passports to travel to Pyongyang in 2035
for that eclipse will be not subject to any restrictionn on DPRK
travel imposed by the American government.


Or, to simplify things greatly, one could note that the eclipse will also be
visible from NE China and Japan, for which these travel problems are
unlikely to be a factor.


Unless Nurkreeyah has, by that time, initiated the last global
conflict, China and Japan have both been vitrified into trinitite and
what we so amusingly think of as our "civilisation" has degenerated
into a post-apocalyptic nuclear wasteland haunted by remnants and
relic species.
Then travel to the former isles of Japan may be a little onerous.
J.
  #4  
Old June 21st 17, 06:10 PM posted to sci.astro
Mike Dworetsky
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 715
Default 2035 Eclipse

John wrote:
On Wed, 21 Jun 2017 08:04:32 +0100, "Mike Dworetsky"
wrote:

Fritz Owl wrote:
Even though it is 18 years away, the 2035 eclipse could present a
problem for some American travellers as Pyongyang will be in the
path of totality, and that one Congressman is currently pushing a
bill to ban American travel to North Korea.

If that ban is still in effect in 2035, it should be noted that
Americans who do not live in the United States will be not subject
to the travel restrictions, if they hold dual nationality and use
their other passport to travel to Pyongyang in 2035.

So for those Chinese citizens who hold USA/China dual citizenship
(and there are quite a few) who live in China, and decide to travel
to Pyongyang in 2035, you can use your Chinese passport to enter and
depart North Korea and will be not subject to this ban, if it is
still in place in the year 2035.
China/USA dual nationals who live in China, use money drawn on
Chinese banks, and use their Chinese passports to travel to
Pyongyang in 2035 for that eclipse will be not subject to any
restrictionn on DPRK travel imposed by the American government.


Or, to simplify things greatly, one could note that the eclipse will
also be visible from NE China and Japan, for which these travel
problems are unlikely to be a factor.


Unless Nurkreeyah has, by that time, initiated the last global
conflict, China and Japan have both been vitrified into trinitite and
what we so amusingly think of as our "civilisation" has degenerated
into a post-apocalyptic nuclear wasteland haunted by remnants and
relic species.
Then travel to the former isles of Japan may be a little onerous.
J.


In which case, we will have more pressing problems to solve.

--
Mike Dworetsky

(Remove pants sp*mbl*ck to reply)
  #5  
Old June 30th 17, 11:38 AM posted to sci.astro
Fritz Owl
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3
Default 2035 Eclipse


"Mike Dworetsky" wrote in message
m...
Fritz Owl wrote:
Even though it is 18 years away, the 2035 eclipse could present a
problem for some American travellers as Pyongyang will be in the path
of totality, and that one Congressman is currently pushing a bill to
ban American travel to North Korea.

If that ban is still in effect in 2035, it should be noted that
Americans who do not live in the United States will be not subject to
the travel restrictions, if they hold dual nationality and use their
other passport to travel to Pyongyang in 2035.

So for those Chinese citizens who hold USA/China dual citizenship
(and there are quite a few) who live in China, and decide to travel
to Pyongyang in 2035, you can use your Chinese passport to enter and
depart North Korea and will be not subject to this ban, if it is
still in place in the year 2035.
China/USA dual nationals who live in China, use money drawn on Chinese
banks, and use their Chinese passports to travel to Pyongyang in 2035
for that eclipse will be not subject to any restrictionn on DPRK
travel imposed by the American government.


Or, to simplify things greatly, one could note that the eclipse will also
be visible from NE China and Japan, for which these travel problems are
unlikely to be a factor.



There is some good news about this. The latest version of the bill has a
sunset provision where the law will expire 5 years after it takes effect. So
unless Congress renews it at sometime in the future, the North Korea travel
ban will expire long before 2035.

  #6  
Old June 30th 17, 05:43 PM posted to sci.astro
Thomas[_7_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 17
Default 2035 Eclipse

On Friday, June 30, 2017 at 6:39:14 AM UTC-4, Fritz Owl wrote:

There is some good news about this. The latest version of the bill has a
sunset provision where the law will expire 5 years after it takes effect.


My bet is there will be a hundredthousand American visitors soon.
  #7  
Old July 8th 17, 12:41 AM posted to sci.astro
Mike Van Pelt
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 6
Default 2035 Eclipse

In article om,
Fritz Owl wrote:
China/USA dual nationals who live in China, use money drawn on Chinese
banks, and use their Chinese passports to travel to Pyongyang in 2035 for
that eclipse will be not subject to any restrictionn on DPRK travel imposed
by the American government.


But it's kind of hard to see the eclipse from inside the
torture chamber in Kim Jong Unspeakable's dungeon.

--
"The urge to save humanity is almost | Mike Van Pelt
always a false front for the urge to rule." | mvp at calweb.com
-- H.L. Mencken | KE6BVH
 




Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Photonic Laser Propulsion to send a 100 kg vehicle to Mars in 3days and to get to wafercraft to 30% of the speed of light by 2035 William Mook[_2_] Policy 0 March 22nd 16 01:12 PM
NGC 2035 - Southern jewel Uncarollo2 Amateur Astronomy 6 December 29th 14 10:51 PM
NASA's New Goal, Asteroid by 2025, Mars by 2035....Huh! Jonathan History 51 November 12th 11 02:00 PM
The oppositions of the Mars planet until year 2035 Galeazzo Arcibalbo di Romagna Solar 0 August 29th 03 03:22 AM
The oppositions of the Mars planet until year 2035 Galeazzo Arcibalbo di Romagna Misc 0 August 29th 03 03:18 AM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 01:25 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 SpaceBanter.com.
The comments are property of their posters.