Well, the bodyguards DID look away to not be
considered perverts. Also, it is my understanding
that Japanese are less puritanical than we
(mostly) American patrons of PC’s story. So, really,
we got the peek. They (mostly) didn’t.
I have no corroboration, but I’ve been told that
during the US occupation, artists (including
especially animators and filmmakers) were told
no pubic hair — which was intended to mean no
showing the area pubic hair grows — but the
Japanese shrugged and assumed it was some
weird fetish Americans had, and that’s why they
STILL show bodies as unnaturally hairless.
A single molecule. Not crystalline or metallic,
covalent bonds. And it holds it’s shape,
which can be determined by the creator as it
is being built and then it doesn’t change.
I admit my college chemistry was at the start
of buckyballs and before true fullerenes,
but this is definitely as far beyond my
understanding of chemistry as focused one-
dimensional gravity is beyond my understanding
of physics. But that’s how science fiction works.
I forget what sci-fi writer said that, sounds like
Asimov or Niven. Take one scientific “rule” we think
we have established, and break it, replace it with
something else, and follow the results out with the
best logic you can. In this case, I’m thinking
about what prions do to proteins.
I hope this stuff is immune to that nightmare.
so as too why i said 3d.. one of the labs released a
2d nanotori chainmail cloth,. that’s gossamer thin,
strong as light steel (as they have been able to test)
and is heat and electrical resistant…
There’s your holy grail of metallurgy! Light as a
feather, but dense enough to block up to 95%
of the radiation. A ship’s hull GROWN, rather
than welded…
… well thats gonna shock him.!
eyes
that sounds like 3d Graphene.
so a graphene base with a
buckminsterfullerene coating
to give rigidity…
so a noncovalent armor.
Well . . . Dayum!
PC -You did say once upon a
time that you can do nudes.
Yes. Yes, you can.
And tastefully so, as well.
Thank you.
When it’s necessary for the story,
I can and I will.
And I will do it as well as I can.
But that’s just me.
Biggest surprise was that the henchmen
(and we) got a peek.
But yes, both tasteful and beautiful.
Well, the bodyguards DID look away to not be
They (mostly) didn’t. 
considered perverts. Also, it is my understanding
that Japanese are less puritanical than we
(mostly) American patrons of PC’s story. So, really,
we got the peek.
yes.! only in the US.
back in the 80s while in Japan,
i recorded day time kids anime,.
i cant show it at cons, because
of nudity in the commercials,.
I have no corroboration, but I’ve been told that
during the US occupation, artists (including
especially animators and filmmakers) were told
no pubic hair — which was intended to mean no
showing the area pubic hair grows — but the
Japanese shrugged and assumed it was some
weird fetish Americans had, and that’s why they
STILL show bodies as unnaturally hairless.
actually way earlier, and made law in 1907.
in “Art” it’s for aesthetics,. IE: cute = no
body hair. (fyi,. armpits are considered a
no-no zone.)
P4 – if that doesn’t get a rise out
of the boy emperor, nothing will!
A single molecule. Not crystalline or metallic,
covalent bonds. And it holds it’s shape,
which can be determined by the creator as it
is being built and then it doesn’t change.
I admit my college chemistry was at the start
of buckyballs and before true fullerenes,
but this is definitely as far beyond my
understanding of chemistry as focused one-
dimensional gravity is beyond my understanding
of physics. But that’s how science fiction works.
I forget what sci-fi writer said that, sounds like
Asimov or Niven. Take one scientific “rule” we think
we have established, and break it, replace it with
something else, and follow the results out with the
best logic you can. In this case, I’m thinking
about what prions do to proteins.
I hope this stuff is immune to that nightmare.
Another wise science fiction writer also said,
“All good fiction, and especially science fiction,
starts with the question, “What if…?”
so as too why i said 3d.. one of the labs released a
2d nanotori chainmail cloth,. that’s gossamer thin,
strong as light steel (as they have been able to test)
and is heat and electrical resistant…
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PG5_(molecule)
There’s your holy grail of metallurgy! Light as a
feather, but dense enough to block up to 95%
of the radiation. A ship’s hull GROWN, rather
than welded…
Forgive me, but I ran across this:
https://www.youtube.com/shorts/yWaGj065GTU