Post *All* the Links
A big post, catching up from most of last week:
* Science fiction on the BBC: A brief history of all-women societies.
* Top Five Most Destroyed Canadian Cities in the Marvel Universe.
* News from MLA! Dissing the Dissertation. Anguish Trumps Activism at the MLA.
* News from my childhood: Another new version of Dungeons & Dragons is on the way. MetaFilter agonizes.
* News from the Montana Supreme Court: “Corporations are not persons. Human beings are persons, and it is an affront to the inviolable dignity of our species that courts have created a legal fiction which forces people — human beings — to share fundamental, natural rights with soulless creatures of government…”
* News from the future right now: Record Heat Floods America With Temperatures 40 Degrees Above Normal.
* How College Football Bowls Earn Millions In Profits But Pay Almost Nothing In Taxes.
And what ends up happening there is that the candidate with the big stack of donor money always somehow manages to survive the inevitable scandals and tawdry revelations, while the one who’s depending on checks from grandma and $25 internet donations from college students always winds up mysteriously wiped out.
* Learning From The Masters: Level Design In The Legend Of Zelda.
* How The Cave of Time taught us to love interactive entertainment.
* Inside the Shel Silverstein archive.
* While genomic research on the super-old is in its very early stages, what’s fascinating is what the researchers are not finding. These people’s genomes are fundamentally the same as other people’s. They are clearly very special, but not in ways that are obvious.
* What Could Have Entered the Public Domain on January 1, 2012? Under the law that existed until 1978 . . . Works from 1955.
* The headline reads, “Quadriplegic Undocumented Immigrant Dies In Mexico After Being Deported From His Hospital Bed.”
* Dallas teen missing since 2010 was mistakenly deported.
* A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to Arkham Asylum.
* Pepsi Says Mountain Dew Can Dissolve Mouse Carcasses. Keep in mind: that’s their defense.
* Obama Openly Asks Nation Why On Earth He Would Want To Serve For Another Term.
* Romney: Elected office is for the rich.
* How banks and debt collectors are bringing dead debt back to life.
People who stop paying bills earn lousy credit ratings but eventually are freed of old debt under statutes of limitations that vary by state and range from three years to 10 years from the last loan payment.
But if a debtor agrees to make even a single payment on an expired debt, the clock starts anew on some part of the old obligation, a process called “re-aging.”
So if borrowers again fall behind on their payments, debt collectors can turn to their usual tools: letters, phone calls and lawsuits. By restarting a debt’s statute of limitations, the collectors have years to retrieve payments.
* Wells Tower: In Gold We Trust.
* Epic Doctor Who Timeline. More here.
* Battlestar Galactica: Totally planned. See also.
* The cast of Community plays pop culture trivia.
* “White House Denies CIA Teleported Obama to Mars.”
* Classified docs reveal why Tolkien failed to win ’61 Nobel Prize!
* Solve the Fermi Paradox the Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal way.
* And you probably already saw Paypal’s latest outrage, but man, it’s a doozy.
Written by gerrycanavan
January 9, 2012 at 9:36 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, adjuncts, Africa, aliens, all-women societies, America, Apple, banking, Barack Obama, Batman, Battlestar Galactica, BBC, Canada, cave of time, childhood, Choose Your Own Adventure, CIA, climate change, Colbert, college football, comics, community, copyright, corporate personhood, debt, delicious Coca-Cola, democracy, deportation, dissertations, District 9, Doctor Who, Dr. Seuss, Dungeons & Dragons, ecology, Fermi paradox, film, games, genetics, genomics, gold, Herland, How the University Works, immigration, Iowa, iPads, Kant, literature, longevity, Louis C.K., Mars, Marvel, Matt Taibbi, Mitt Romney, MLA, money in politics, Montana, morally odious monsters, Nobel Prize, nostalgia, nuclear proliferation, nuclear war, nuclearity, only the super-rich can save us now, Paypal, Pepsi, poetry, politics, Portlandia, priceless violins, public domain, science fiction, Shel Silverstein, Steve Jobs, taxes, teleportation, the courts, The Joker, the law, the rich are different from you and me, the truth is out there, Tolkien, trivia, Zelda, zombies
2 Responses
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Going through these may have led to my best work Tuesday ever.
EMG
January 10, 2012 at 12:21 pm
[…] Last week: While genomic research on the super-old is in its very early stages, what’s fascinating is what the researchers are not finding. These people’s genomes are fundamentally the same as other people’s. They are clearly very special, but not in ways that are obvious. […]
Who Wants to Live Forever? « Gerry Canavan
January 19, 2012 at 12:08 pm