#Transportation Challenges
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Challenges Facing the Rollout of CNG Vehicles: An Investigation
Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) vehicles have been promoted as a cleaner and more sustainable alternative to traditional gasoline and diesel-powered vehicles. As countries worldwide push for greener transportation solutions to address climate change, reduce air pollution, and decrease dependence on fossil fuels, CNG has emerged as a promising option. However, despite its potential, the widespreadâŚ
#air pollution reduction#alternative fuels#automotive industry#clean energy#CNG vehicles#fossil fuel alternatives#green transportation#sustainable mobility#Touchaheart.com.ng#transportation challenges#vehicle infrastructure
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Driving Through Corruption: Navigating South Africa's Dangerous Roads in a Broken System
Hello, my Freaky Darlings! When everything is broken, is it inevitable that everyone becomes a criminal? While driving to the day job on Thursday morning and avoiding another moron doing something stupid on the highway, I started thinking about why South Africaâs roads were considered the most dangerous in the world. Itâs a sad truth that over 14,000 people die on our roads every year. And itâsâŚ
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#Civil Disobedience#Corruption#Corruption and Survival#Corruption in South Africa#Crime and Society#Dangerous Roads#Driving Culture#Driving License#Law Enforcement#Public Transport#Road Infrastructure#Road Safety#South Africa Roads#Traffic Corruption#Transportation Challenges
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@amtrak-official i was working on my portfolio and i found this fontâŚpropaganda is everywhere
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new playlist!
#yuzumako#i love them!#did this for the evil art style challenge and had a lot of fun!#murashige yuzuki#kurume makoto#skip to loafer#skip and loafer#the only skip to loafer fanart i do is public transportation fanart#stl
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Space Shuttle Challenger being transported by road on a 38-mile journey from the Palmdale plant to Edwards Air Force Base. There, she'll be attached to the Boeing 747 Shuttle Carrier Aircraft for her journey to Kennedy Space Center.
Date: July 1, 1982
source, source
#Space Shuttle#Space Shuttle Challenger#Challenger#OV-099#Orbiter#NASA#Space Shuttle Program#California#July#1982#Overland Transport#my post
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Iris is very special to ART, it allows her curious cheek pats and she allows it to pick her up.
inspired by @rrainbowmagnet "I just want to stretch my arms out as far as I can to gently pat ART on its sparkly cheeks" don't we all
#the murderbot diaries#asshole research transport#perihelion#tmd iris#system collapse#tmd ART#my art#'humanoid' ART#digital art#murderbot#me stop drawing humongous beings interacting fondly with tiny humans challenge level IMPOSSIBLE#im happier with the colors and lighing in this one than the last few but i still didnt FULLY render it bc that would take fucking forever#i also draw all of its humans and MB in comfy clothes bc they deserve to be comfy
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Challenger 300 on static display at Vnukovo International Airport, Russia
#Bombardier#Challenger 300#BD-100#static display#aircraft#jet#plane#aviation#Bizjet#Business aviation#corporate jet#executive transport#airplane
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I watched all eight episodes of season 1 of Blue Eye Samurai over the weekend. I then went browsing because I wanted to read some online reviews of the show to see what people were thinking of it and also because I wanted to interact with gifs and art, as the series is visually stunning.
Yet, in my search for opinions on the show, I came across several points I'd like to address in my own words:
Mizuâs history and identity are revealed piece-by-piece and the âpeachesâ scene with Mizu and Ringo at the lake is intended to be a major character reveal. I think itâs weird that some viewers got angry over other viewers intentionally not gendering Mizu until that reveal, rather than immediately jumping to gender the character as the other characters in the show do. The creators intentionally left Mizuâs gender and sexuality ambiguous (and quite literally wrote in lines to lead audiences to question both) to challenge the viewerâs gut assumption that this lone wolf samurai is a man. That intentional ambiguity will lead to wide and ambiguous interpretations of where Mizu fits in, if Mizu fits in at all. But don't just take my word for this:
Re: above. I also think itâs weird that some viewers got upset over other viewers continuing to acknowledge that Mizu has a very complicated relationship with her gender, even after that reveal. Canonically, she has a very complicated relationship with her identity. The character is intended to represent liminality in identity, where sheâs often between identities in a world of forced binaries that arenât (widely) socially recognized as binaries. But, again, donât just take my word for this:
Mizu is both white and Japanese, but she is also not white and not Japanese simultaneously (too white to be Japanese and too Japanese to be white). Sheâs a woman and a man. Sheâs a man whoâs a woman. Sheâs also a woman whoâs not a woman (yet also not quite a man). But sheâs also a woman; the creators said so. Mizu was raised as a boy and grew into a man, yet she was born a girl, and boyhood was imposed upon her. Sheâs a woman when sheâs a man, a man when sheâs a man, and a woman when sheâs a woman.
Additionally, Mizu straddles the line between human and demon. Sheâs a human in the sense sheâs mortal but a demon in the sense sheâs not. She's human yet otherworldly. She's fallible yet greatness. She's both the ronin and the bride, the samurai and the onryĹ. In short, itâs complicated, and thatâs the point. Ignoring that ignores a large part of her internal character struggle and development.
Mizu is intended to represent an âother,â someone who stands outside her society in every way and goes to lengths to hide this âothernessâ to get by. Gender is a mask; a tool. She either hides behind a wide-brimmed hat, glasses, and laconic anger, or she hides behind makeup, her dress, and a frown. She fits in nowhere, no matter the identity she assumes. Mizu lives in a very different time period within a very different sociocultural & political system where the concept of gender and the language surrounding it is unlike what we are familiar with in our every-day lives. But, again, donât just take my word for this:
Itâs also weird that some viewers have gotten upset over the fact women and queer people (and especially queer women) see themselves in Mizu. Given her complicated relationship with identity under the patriarchy and colonial violence, I think Mizu is a great character for cis-het women and queer folks alike to relate to. Her character is also great for how she breaks the mold on the role of a biracial character in narratives about identity (sheâs not some great bridge who will unite everyone). It does not hurt anyone that gender-fluid and nonbinary people see themselves in Mizu's identity and struggle with identity. It does not hurt anyone that lesbians see themselves in the way Mizu expresses her gender. It does not hurt anyone that trans men see themselves in Mizu's relationship with manhood or that trans women can see themselves in Mizu when Mama forces her to be a boy. It's also really cool that cis-het women see themselves in Mizu's struggles to find herself. Those upset over these things are missing critical aspects of Mizu's character and are no different from the other characters in the story. The only time Mizu is herself is when sheâs just Mizu (ââŚher gender was Mizuâ), and many of the other characters are unwilling to accept "just Mizu." Accepting her means accepting the complicatedness of her gender.
Being a woman under the patriarchy is complicated and gives women a complicated relationship with their gender and identity. It is dangerous to be a woman. Women face violence for being women. Being someone who challenges sex-prescribed norms and roles under patriarchy also gives someone a complicated relationship with their identity. It is dangerous to usurp gender norms and roles (then combine that with being a woman...). People who challenge the strict boxes they're assigned face violence for existing, too. Being a racial or ethnic minority in a racially homogeneous political system additionally gives someone a complicated relationship with their identity. It is dangerous to be an ethnic minority when the political system is reproduced on your exclusion and otherness. They, too, face violence for the circumstances of their birth. All of these things are true. None of them take away from the other.
Mizu is young-- in her early 20s-- and she has been hurt in deeply affecting ways. She's angry because she's been hurt in so many different ways. She's been hurt by gender violence, like "mama's" misogyny and the situation of her birth (her mother's rape and her near murder as a child), not to mention the violent and dehumanizing treatment of the women around her. She's been hurt by racial violence, like the way she has been tormented and abused since childhood for the way she looks (with people twice trying to kill her for this before adulthood). She's been hurt by state-sanctioned violence as she faces off against the opium, flesh, and black market traders working with white men in contravention of the Shogun's very policies, yet with sanction from the Shogun. She's been hurt by colonial violence, like the circumstances of her birth and the flood of human trafficking and weapons and drug trafficking in her country. She's had men break her bones and knock her down before, but only Fowler sexually differentiated her based on bone density and fracture.
Mizu also straddles the line between victim and murderer.
It seems like Mizu finding her 'feminine' and coming to terms with her 'female side' may be a part of her future character development. Women who feel caged by modern patriarchal systems and alienated from their bodies due to the patriarchy will see themselves in Mizu. They understand a desire for freedom that the narrow archetypes of the patriarchy do not afford them as women, and they see their anger and their desire for freedom in Mizu. This, especially considering that Mizu's development was driven by one of the creators' own experiences with womanhood:
No, Mizu does not pass as a man because she "hates women" or because she hates herself as a woman or being a woman. There are actual on-screen depictions of Mizu's misogyny, like her interactions with Akemi, and dressing like a man is not an instance of this. Mizu shows no discomfort with being a woman or being seen as a woman, especially when she intends to pass herself as and present as a woman. Mizu also shows the women in the series more grace and consideration than any man in the show, in whatever capacity available to her socially and politically, without revealing herself; many of the women have remarked that she is quite unlike other men, and she's okay with that, too.
When she lives on the farm with Mama and Mikio, Mizu shows no discomfort once she acclimates to the new life. But people take this as conclusive evidence of the "only time" she was happy. She was not. This life was also a dance, a performance. The story of her being both the ronin and the onryĹ revealed to the audience that this lifestyle also requires her to wear a mask and dance, just as the bride does. This mask is makeup, a wedding dress, and submission, and this performance is her gender as a wife. She still understands that she cannot fully be herself and only begins to express happiness and shed her reservation when she believes she is finally safe to be herself. Only to be betrayed. Being a man is her safety, and it is familiar. Being a boy protected her from the white men as a child, and it might protect her heart now.
Mizu shows no discomfort with being known as a woman, except when it potentially threatens her goals (see Ringo and the "peaches" scene). She also shows no discomfort with being known as, seen as, or referred to as a man. As an adult, she seems okay- even familiar- with people assuming she's a man and placing her into the role of a man. Yet, being born a girl who has boyhood violently imposed upon her (she did not choose what mama did to her) is also an incredibly important part of her lived experience. Being forced into boyhood, but growing into a man anyway became part of who she is. But, being a man isnât just a part of who she became; itâs also expedient for her goals because men and women are ontologically different in her world and the system she lives under.
She's both because she's neither, because- ontologically- she fits nowhere. When other characters point out how "unlike" a man she is, she just shrugs it off, but not in a "well, yeah, because I'm NOT a man" sort of way, but in an "I'm unlike anyone, period," sort of way. She also does not seem offended by Madam Kaji saying that Mizuâs more man than any who have walked through her door.
(Mizu doesnât even see herself as human, let alone a woman, as so defined by her society. And knowing that creators have stated her future arc is about coming into her âfeminine eraâ or energy, I am actually scared that this show might fall into the trope of âdomesticatingâ/âtamingâ the independent woman, complete with an allegory that her anger and lack of human-ness [in Mizuâs mind] is a result of a woman having too much âmasculine energyâ or being masculine in contravention of womanness.)
Some also seem to forget that once Mama and Mikio are dead, no one knows who she is or where she came from. They do not have her background, and they do not know about the bounty on her (who levied the bounty and why has not yet been explained). After their deaths, she could have gone free and started anew somehow. But in that moment, she chose to go back to life as a man and chose to pursue revenge for the circumstances of her birth. Going forward, this identity is no longer imposed upon her by Mama, or a result of erroneous conclusions from local kids and Master Eiji; it was because she wanted people to see her as a man and she was familiar with navigating her world, and thus her future, as a man. And it was because she was angry, too, and only men can act on their anger.
I do think it important to note that Mizu really began to allow herself to be vulnerable and open as a woman, until she was betrayed. The question I've been rattling around is: is this because she began to feel safe for the first time in her life, or is this part of how she sees women ontologically? Because she immediately returns to being a man and emotionally hard following her betrayal. But, she does seem willing to confide in Master Eiji, seek his advice, and convey her anxieties to him.
Being a man also confines Mizu to strict social boxes, and passing herself as a man is also dangerous.
Mizu doesn't suddenly get to do everything and anything she wants because she passes as a man. She has to consider her safety and the danger of her sex being "found out." She must also consider what will draw unnecessary attention to her and distract her from her goals. Many viewers, for example, were indignant that she did not offer to chaperone the mother and daughter and, instead, left them to the cold, only to drop some money at their feet later. The indignity fails consider that while she could bribe herself inside while passing as a man, she could not bribe in two strangers. Mizu is a strange man to that woman and does not necessarily have the social position to advocate for the mother and daughter. She also must consider that causing small social stirs would distract from her goals and draw certain attention to her. Mizu is also on a dangerous and violent quest.
Edo Japan was governed by strict class, age, and gender rules. Those rules applied to men as well as women. Mizu is still expected to act within these strict rules when she's a man. Being a man might allow her to pursue revenge, but she's still expected to put herself forward as a man, and that means following all the specific rules that apply to her class as a samurai, an artisan (or artist), and a man. That wide-brimmed hat, those orange-tinted glasses, and her laconic tendencies are also part of a performance. Being a boy is the first mask she wore and dance she performed, and she was originally (and tragically) forced into it.
Challenging the normative identities of her society does not guarantee her safety. She has limitations because of her "otherness," and the transgression of sex-prescribed roles has often landed people in hot water as opposed to saving them from boiling. Mizu is passing herself off as a man every day of her life at great risk to her. If her sex is "found out" on a larger scale, society wonât resort to or just start treating her as a woman. There are far worse fates than being perceived as a woman, and hers would not simply be a tsk-tsk, slap on the wrist; now you have to wear makeup. Let's not treat being a woman-- even with all the pressures, standards, fears, and risks that come with existing as a woman-- as the worst consequence for being âfound outâ for transgressing normative identity.
The violence Mizu would face upon being "found out" wonât only be a consequence of being a "girl." Consider not just the fact she is female and âcross-dressingâ (outside of theater), but also that she is a racial minority.
I also feel like many cis-het people either ignore or just cannot see the queerness in challenging gender roles (and thus also in stories that revolve around a subversion of sex-prescribed gender). They may not know how queerness-- or "otherness"-- leads to challenging strict social stratifications and binaries nor how challenging them is seen by the larger society as queer ("strange," "suspicious," "unconventional," even "dishonorable," and "fraudulent"), even when "queerness" (as in LGBTQ+) was not yet a concept as we understand it today.
Gender and sexuality- and the language we use to communicate who we are- varies greatly across time and culture. Edo Japan was governed by strict rules on what hairstyles, clothes, and weapons could be worn by which gender, age, and social group, and this was often enshrined in law. There were specific rules about who could have sex with whom and how. These values and rules were distinctly Japanese and would not incorporate Western influences until the late 1800s. Class was one of the most consequential features to define a person's fate in feudal Japan, and gender was quite stratified. This does not mean it's inappropriate for genderqueer people to see themselves in Mizu, nor does this mean that gender-variant identities didnât exist in Edo Japan.
People in the past did not use the same language we do today to refer to themselves. Example: Alexander The Great did not call himself a "bisexual." We all understand this. However, there is a very weird trend of people using these differences in language and cultures across time to deny aspects of a historical person's life that societies today consider taboo, whether these aspects were considered taboo during that historical time period or not. Same example: people on Twitter complaining that Netflix "made" Alexander The Great "gay," and after people push back and point out that the man did, in fact, love and fuck men, hitting back with "homosexuality wasn't even a word back then" or "modern identity didn't exist back then." Sure, that word did not exist in 300s BCE Macedonia, but that doesn't mean the man didn't love men, nor does that mean that we can't recognize that he'd be considered "queer" by today's standards and language.
Genderqueer, as a word and as the concept is understood today, did not exist in feudal Japan, but the people did and feudal Japan had its own terms and concepts that referred to gender variance. But while the show takes place in Edo Japan, it is a modern adult animation series made by a French studio and two Americans (nationality). Mizu is additionally a fictional character, not a historical figure. She was not created in a vacuum. She was created in the 21st century and co-written by a man who got his start writing for Sex in the City and hails from a country that is in the midst of a giant moral panic about genderqueer/gender-variant people and gender non-conforming people.
This series was created by two Americans (nationality) for an American company. In some parts of that country, there are laws on the book strictly defining the bounds of men and women and dictating what clothes men and women could be prosecuted for wearing. Changes in language and identity over time mean that we can recognize that if Mizu lived in modern Texas, the law would consider her a drag performer, and modern political movements in the show creators' home country would include her under the queer umbrella.
So, yeah, there will also be genderqueer people who see themselves in Mizu, and there will be genderqueer fans who are firm about Mizu being queer to them and in their âheadcanons.â The scene setting being Edo Japan, does not negate the modern ideas that influence the show. "Nonbinary didn't exist in Edo Japan" completely ignores that this show was created to explore the liminality of modern racial, gender, class, and normative identities. One of the creators was literally inspired by her own relationship with her biracial identity.
Ultimately, the fact Mizu, at this point in her journey, chooses to present and pass as a man and the fact her presented gender affects relationship dynamics with other characters (see: Taigen) gives this story a queer undertone. And this may have been largely unintentional: "Sheâs a girl, and heâs a guy, so, of course, they get together," < ignoring how said guy thinks sheâs a guy and that she intentionally passes herself as a guy. Audiences ARE going to interpret this as queer because WE donât live in Edo-era Japan. And I feel like people forget that Mizu can be a woman and the story can still have queer undertones to it at the same time.
#Blue Eye Samurai#âIf I was transported back in time⌠Iâd try to pass myself off as a man for greater freedom.â#^^^ does not consider the intersection of historically queer existence across time with other identities (& the limitations those include)#nor does it consider the danger of such an action#I get it. some come to this conclusion simply because they know how dangerous it is to be a woman throughout history.#but rebuking the normative identities of that time period also puts you at great risk of violence#challenging norms and rules and social & political hierarchies does not make you safer#and it has always been those who exist in the margins of society who have challenged sociocultural systems#it has always been those at greatest risk and who've faced great violence already. like Mizu#Anyway... Mizu is just Mizu#she is gender queer (or gender-variant)#because her relationship with her gender is queer. because she is gender-variant#âqueerâ as a social/political class did not exist. but people WE understand as queer existed in different historical eras#and under different cultural systems#sheâs a woman because queer did not exist & âwomanâ was the sex caste she was born into#sheâs also a woman because she conceptualizes herself as so#she is a woman AND she is gender-variant#she quite literally challenges normative identity and is a clear example of what sex non-conforming means#Before the actual. historic Tokugawa shogunate banned women from theater#there were women in the theater who cross-dressed for the theater and played male roles#so Iâm also really tired of seeing takes along the lines of: âEdo Japan was backwards so cross dressers didât exist then!â#like. please. be more transparent wonât you?
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If you can drive or afford a car, you may not understand what itâs like to rely on walking, rolling, transit and asking for rides. But for nearly a third of people living in the United States â people with disabilities, young people, seniors and people who canât afford cars or gas â this is our every day. We created the Week Without Driving challenge so that those who have the option to drive can learn firsthand about the barriers and challenges that nondrivers face and work with nondrivers to create more accessible communities for all. How Does The Challenge Work? Every Trip Counts You can get around however you want, but the challenge is not to drive yourself in any car. This applies to all your activities â not just your work commute. If you normally transport other family members or friends, it applies to those trips too. Asking or Paying for Rides You can ask someone else to drive you, but make a note of how much you âoweâ this person in their time, and if you felt obligated to support them in other ways (ie, doing all the dishes). You can ride hail or taxis if they exist where you need to go, but again, think about how the cost could impact your decision to take this trip if this was regularly your only option. Who Has Choices, What Are Your Choices? This isnât a disability simulation or a test of how easily you can find alternatives. We know that it is far easier to give up your keys if you can afford to live in a walkable area well served by transit, or can outsource your driving and other transport and delivery needs to other people. Itâs Okay to Drive â But Reflect What That Means for Nondrivers Having to drive during the challenge does not signify failure. Sometimes the best reflection comes when someone participating in the challenge has to drive. The point is to consider how someone without that option would have coped, and what choices they might have made. IMPACT âThis week was a reminder that mobility is a human right. And itâs also a reminder that so many people in our region are excluded from this right, simply because driving for them is not an option.â â Girmay Zahilay, King County Councilmember, Washington State Where Did The Challenge Come from? The #WeekWithoutDriving challenge was launched in 2021 by Anna Zivarts at Disability Rights Washington. After two successful years, in 2023 in partnership with America Walks we took the Week Without Driving national. More than 142 organizations across 41 states and the District of Columbia joined the challenge in 2023 and weâre already organizing so the 2024 challenge will be even bigger!
And here is a survey by the Sierra Club to say how you'd like your local transportation options improved!
#week without driving#week without driving challenge#public transportation#transportation#walkable cities#personal#sierra club#accessibility
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it makes me so emotional oh my god
#Y AHORA QUĂ#a dĂłnde irĂĄn los que conocimos#violetta#iâm graduating from high school in a week and ugh we literally crecimos juntos đ#y ahora quĂŠ.#QUĂ#mara donât start crying on public transport rn challenge
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HEY NETFLIX PHYSICAL 100 HOW ABOUT HAVE MORE DIVERSE QUESTS CHALLENGE GIVE ME A BALANCE CHALLENGE OR SOMETHING GOD WHY IS IT ALL STRENGTH CHALLENGES đ
#physical 100#netflix physical 100 season 2#Netflix physical 100#physical 100 season 2#p100s2#like 2 endurance challenges then the rest strength#the only one Iâd consider other might be the intra team air transport challenge#bc of the monkey bars#but still#they are so creative but they channel it all into strength test#or if itâs and endurance challenge they add a strength part to it#monkey bars/infinite squats
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Death glaring at the bus tracker HURRY UP
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I dunno what the general consensus on Challengers is, but I will say that Trent Reznor did his thing on the soundtrack. I'm always taken by how inspired he was by the sounds of tennis. Some of the beats sound like balls hitting the court. The techno glaze of it adds to that sort of heart pounding feeling from a match, the outwardly no-contact, no chaos game that is really the bloodiest spar you've ever seen.
And the Yeah Yeah Yeah song fucks.
#challengers#trent reznor#he transports me with the music#he makes mundane things feel cool and frantic#and the remixes go even harder its impressive#rach rants
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guys what if i was a Large Entity and you were a Much Smaller Entity and you were Inside Me. and then we kissed.
#glados#chell portal#portal 2#murderbot#asshole research transport#art murderbot#moe shut up challenge#i just really like robots and human robots and robots that are human in some way#and also humans that arenât human#and robots that want to kill everyone#and also women. i like women
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My Chinese class is cancelled because my teacher's scooter got hit by a BUS?????? She is ok/at hosp now but what is with the energy in my general orbit this week ????? WHAT GOES ON
#Like there isn't rly public transport in this city so it's quite a big challenge to be hit by a bus ??????#emery 2k24
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After a 38 mile trip from Rockwell International's Palmdale facility, Challenger (OV-099) is delivered to the Dryden Flight Research Center at Edwards Air Force Base, California.
Photographed by E.C. Harrison
Date: July 1, 1982
AFFTC History Office: link
NASA ID: EC82-20081 extra, EC82-20195, EC82-20195 extra, EC82-20200 extra, EC82-18988
source, source
#Space Shuttle#Space Shuttle Challenger#Challenger#OV-099#Orbiter#NASA#Space Shuttle Program#Dryden Flight Research Center#Edwards Air Force Base#California#July#1982#Overland Transport#my post
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