Posts Tagged ‘Catholic education’
Trapped Inside of LAX with the MKE Blues Again
* A great Storify from the great @moyabz of the great Octavia Butler conference at the Huntington this weekend. By universal acclamation, one of the best-loved moments. Check out the exhibit of her papers if you’re able to get near there! It’s gorgeous.
* You are living in a death cult.
* Every lie Trump has told as president, a very long list by the New York Times.
* Obama’s secret struggle to punish Russia for Putin’s election assault.
Republicans, 2026: “Democrats knew Trump was dangerous, Obama never should have allowed him to take over.”
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) November 23, 2016
* Union-busting for God: Catholic colleges and adjunct organizing.
* Student Evaluations at Center of American University Tenure Fight. Given the research on the implicit bias of student evaluations and the obvious perverse incentives involved it is incredible to me that any college administration in the country feels empowered to use them for anything.
* When the Dean Quashes Your Class: An Interview with Jay Smith.
* Major medical groups call for rejection of Senate health bill. This is the biggest pure giveaway to the rich in the Republican health bill. Can’t wait to hear from the centrist Dems why it’s wrong for Bernie to do this. No single payer in Communist-run California, of course.
Names for yachts billionaires will buy with tax cuts from Medicaid being gutted:
– Lucy's Kidney
– Mom's Insulin
– 10 thousand wheel chairs— Adam McKay (@GhostPanther) June 24, 2017
Trumpcare would reduce the price of insurance the same way removing the doors and the engine would reduce the price of a car
— Judd Legum (@JuddLegum) June 24, 2017
also it’s not clear that they’ll actually charge less, just that the service you must buy or die will have more ways to kill you anyway https://t.co/jOC509VdaC
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) June 24, 2017
* Trump’s election integrity commission needs to redress voter suppression, not fraud. Counterpoint: it’s a voter suppression commission, that is literally the entire point of it.
* Trump says pretending to have Comey tapes “wasn’t very stupid.” The video is stunning even by Trump standards. Still, after this, I’ll probably vote for him.
* Once more with feeling: Never Trump is not a thing.
* Forced into debt. Worked past exhaustion. Left with nothing. Indentured servitude in the transportation industry in California.
* Mountain lions have better politics than just about every human being.
* Science isn’t an exact science with these clowns.
* Surely the best ending of any New York Times column ever.
[setting fire to orphanage] the quality of the feedback, frankly, has been disappointing
— Felix Gilman (@felixgilman) June 24, 2017
* From the archives! No one goes dark like children’s literature goes dark.
“Personally I am very pessimistic,” Miyazaki says. “But when, for instance, one of my staff has a baby you can’t help but bless them for a good future. Because I can’t tell that child, ‘Oh, you shouldn’t have come into this life.’ And yet I know the world is heading in a bad direction. So with those conflicting thoughts in mind, I think about what kind of films I should be making.”
* Every generation gets the folk-hero bandits it deserves: Canada police investigate theft of mummified human toe served in drinks.
* And a great Tumblr mashup: The Weird Adventures of Tin-Tin, by H.P. Lovecraft.
Written by gerrycanavan
June 24, 2017 at 8:48 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with #NeverTrump, academia, actually existing academic bias, adjunctification, adjuncts, Anthony Kennedy, Barack Obama, Bernie Sanders, Bret Stephens, California, Canada, Catholic education, children's literature, class struggle, cold drinks, college sports, Comeygate, comics, conferences, cults, debt, democracy, Democrats, Donald Trump, espionage, folk heroes, H.P. Lovecraft, Hayao Miyazaki, health care, health insurance, How the University Works, Huntington Library, indentured servitude, James Comey, Jesuits, Johnny Depp, Koch brothers, lies and lying liars, Marquette, mountain lions, mummies, my scholarly empire, NCAA, neoliberalism, New York Times, Octavia Butler, pedagogy, pessimism, politics, Putin, Republicans, rich people, Russia, science, science fiction, single payer, social media, student evaluations, Supreme Court, talk radio, taxes, teaching, tenure, the Senate, Tin-Tin, trucking, true crime, Twitter, unions, voter suppression, voting
Weekend Links!
* I have a short essay in the New Orleans Review‘s science fiction issue. Check it out! (Sorry, it’s not online.)
* CFP: Special Issue of American Literature: “Queer about Comics.”
* Academics of color experience an enervating visibility, but it’s not simply that we’re part of a very small minority. We are also a desired minority, at least for appearance’s sake. University life demands that academics of color commodify themselves as symbols of diversity—in fact, as diversity itself, since diversity, in this context, is located entirely in the realm of the symbolic. There’s a wound in the rupture between the diversity manifested in the body of the professor of color and the realities affecting that person’s community or communities. I, for example, am a black professor in the era of mass incarceration of black people through the War on Drugs; I am a Somali American professor in the era of surveillance and drone strikes perpetuated through the War on Terror.
* Cornell Grad Students Form Unrecognized Union.
* The Irony of Catholic Colleges.
69% NTT faculty already (https://t.co/r9iXfWWbZL) | State College of FL eliminates tenure http://t.co/I2KZo9ToEk via @miriamkp @gerrycanavan
— Andrew Goldstone (@goldstoneandrew) September 24, 2015
* Fake traffic is rotting the Internet.
* So weird: John Boehner, House Speaker, Will Resign From Congress.
* The College President-to-Adjunct Pay Ratio.
* The Journal of Academic Freedom has a special section devoted to Steven Salaita.
* Science proves you like being ripped off by airlines.
* Fordham, Marquette rescind honorary degrees they gave Cosby.
* Here’s More Evidence That Galactic Super-Civilizations Don’t Exist. Yet!
* What a massive sexual assault survey found at 27 top U.S. universities. Counterpoint: The latest big sexual assault survey is (like others) more hype than science. Counter-counterpoint: The University of Chicago’s message to the Class of 2019: Don’t be a rapist.
* Speech and the campus newspaper at Wesleyan. And from the Southern Poverty Law Center: Campus Newspaper Thefts since 2000.
* Today in the apocalypse: Why some scientists are worried about a surprisingly cold ‘blob’ in the North Atlantic Ocean.
* Ahmed’s Clock, Banneker’s Clock, and the Racial Surveillance of Invention in America.
* “Declining Student Resilience: A Serious Problem for Colleges.”
* A recent study suggests that acetaminophen—found in Tylenol, Excedrin and a host of other medications—is an all-purpose damper, stifling a range of strong feelings. Throbbing pain, the sting of rejection, paralyzing indecision—along with euphoria and delight—all appear to be taken down a notch by the drug.
* Volkswagen and the Era of Cheating Software. Volkswagen hires BP’s Deepwater defense team as the lawsuits start. But it’s not all bad news.
* Stojcevski was sent to the Macomb County Jail in Mt. Clemens, Mich., on June 11, 2014, to serve a 30-day sentence after failing to appear in court over a ticket for careless driving, according to the lawsuit. During the 16 days between his imprisonment and his death, the lawsuit alleges, staff at the jail knowingly allowed him to suffer through “excruciating” acute withdrawal without treatment.
* Inside the collapse of Scott Walker’s presidential bid.
* Inside Salvador Dali’s Lewis Carroll’s Alice in Wonderland.
* Rather than fighting for more and better work, we should fight for more time to use as we please. Proposals like a universal basic income may well lead to this. Most importantly, in thinking about the time bind, we should keep in mind what it would mean to be really free from it. We should keep in mind the full possibilities of liberation: what we want is not to be allowed to work more or in better conditions, but to be allowed to live as we see fit.
* Counterpoint: Against UBI.
* I had nightmares like this: What If the Answer Isn’t College, but Longer High School?
* A Urine Collection Bag from Apollo 11 marked with the initials “NA.”
* The Bowe Bergdahl case is a weird choice for Serial season two, but I suppose nearly anything would be.
* Netflix Data Reveals Exactly When TV Shows Hook Viewers — And It’s Not the Pilot.
* …the digital apocalypse never arrived, or at least not on schedule. While analysts once predicted that e-books would overtake print by 2015, digital sales have instead slowed sharply.
* Honestly this would work pretty well for academics too.
* Listen, this is just getting silly now.
* We have burned all the furniture for fuel and we’re starting to chop away at the deck. We are a terrible, dispirited society and we finally have the terrible, dispirited Muppets we deserve.
* What Can ‘Star Trek’ Teach Us About American Exceptionalism?
* Rude hand gestures from around the world.
* And I’m devoting the rest of my career to the Mysteries of the Unknown books, now that I’ve been reminded they exist.
Written by gerrycanavan
September 26, 2015 at 9:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, academic freedom, adjunctification, adjuncts, affirmative action, Afrofuturism, Ahmed Mohamed, airlines, Alice in Wonderland, aliens, American exceptionalism, American literature, apocalypse, architecture, austerity, Benjamin Banneker, Bowe Begddahl, campus newspapers, cars, Catholic education, Catholicism, CEOs, CFPs, climate change, college, comics, content, copyright, Cornell, corpocracy, DC Comics, digitally, diversity, eBooks, galactic empires, golden parachutes, graduate student life, graduate student unions, Gulf Stream, happy birthday, Harry Potter, high school, House of Representatives, How the University Works, I want to believe, Jesuits, John Boehner, journamalism, kids today, Kindle, kleptocracy, Lewis Carroll, lies and lying liars, medicine, millennials, Muppets, my media empire, Mysteries of the Unknown, neoliberalism, Netflix, outer space, pedagogy, podcasts, prison-industrial complex, queer theory, race, racism, rape, rape culture, religion, Republican primary 2016, resignations, resilience, Retraction Watch, rude hand gestures from around the world, Salvador Dali, Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal, science, science fiction, Scott Walker, Serial, Star Trek, State College of Florida, Steven Salaita, television, tenure, the Internet, the Spectre, the truth is out there, Tylenol, UIUC, unions, universal basic income, University of Chicago, Volkswagen, Wesleyan, what it is I think I'm doing