Posts Tagged ‘Empire Strikes Back’
Friday! Night! Links!
* Obama’s new education policy neatly showcases the spectrum of choice we now have in our political system: to be ground down a bit at a time by technocrats who either won’t admit to or do not understand the ultimate consequences of the policy infrastructures they so busily construct or to be demolished by fundamentalists who want to dissolve the modern nation-state into a panoptic enforcer of their privileged morality, a massive security and military colossus and an enfeebled social actor that occasionally says nice things about how it would be nice if no one died from tainted food and everyone had a chance to get an education but hey, that’s why you have lawyers and businesses.
* These 11 Colleges Just Hit The Jackpot In Obama’s New Education Plan.
* To take a plan that is not working in K-12 and apply it to 12-16 is asinine.
* One weird trick to lose 15 pounds in 15 minutes.
* In May, Duke University announced plans to adopt one of the most extreme college sexual assault policies in history, changing the recommended sanction for perpetrators from suspension to expulsion. That means that whenever a student is found guilty of committing a sexual assault, expulsion is the first punishment the Duke disciplinary committee will consider.
* UConn Considering Ban On Student-Faculty Sexual Relationships. Again: Considering?
* Towards a new understanding of the Amish: Amish Hackers.
* A Long List of What We Know Thanks to Private Manning.
* The tax subsidy to religion is about 83 billion dollars a year.
* Joss Whedon attacks both Twilight and Empire. He doesn’t care who he hurts.
* Earnings and Job Satisfaction of Humanities Majors.
* N.F.L. Pressure Said to Lead ESPN to Quit Film Project.
* Prince George enters the Veldt.
* What went wrong on Enterprise? The cast and crew fess up.
* And Fukushima continues to be a nightmare. That things were as bad as they were in the immediate aftermath of the earthquake is one thing — but it’s been years and the news only gets worse.
Written by gerrycanavan
August 23, 2013 at 5:47 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, administrative blight, Africa, austerity, Barack Obama, bullshit jobs, charter schools, Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy, class struggle, concussions, David Graeber, Duke, ecology, Empire Strikes Back, Enterprise, Fukushima, How the University Works, imperialism, Joss Whedon, MOOCs, neoliberalism, NFL, No Child Left Behind, nuclearity, Pell grants, photography, politics, Race to the Top, radiation, rankings, rape, rape culture, religion, sex, Star Trek, student debt, taxes, technology, the Amish, the humanities, The Veldt, tuition, Twilight, UConn, United Kingdom, war on education, Wikileaks
Weekend Links!
* Big fair use decision: specific commentary on the original work is not required for a fair use defense.
* Finding common ground with Senator Coburn: To amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to exclude major professional sports leagues from qualifying as tax-exempt organizations.
* Gasp! Many students stay away from online courses in subjects they deem especially difficult or interesting, according to a study released this month by the Community College Research Center at Columbia University’s Teachers College. The finding comes just as many highly selective colleges are embracing online learning and as massive open online courses are gaining popularity and standing.
* “What we’re saying is that bargain-basement (clothing) is automatically leading towards these types of disasters,” John Hilary, executive director at British charity War on Want, told Reuters.
* Bad Robot will adapt 11/22/63.
* Canada gets it right: “The legal test for a true volunteer arrangement looks at several factors, but merely agreeing to work without pay does not in itself make you a volunteer,” Ministry of Labour spokesperson Jonathon Rose wrote in an email. See also Natalia Cecire:
Like the hypothetical minimum-wage high schooler whose income serves as pocket money, non-essential and destined for “fun,” the youthful volunteer, who may very well intrinsically enjoy the work, authorizes a category of labor exploitation that is not only okay but also okay to take as the norm for the labor of cultural preservation. “I can get you a twenty-year-old!” is, in that sense, not a labor solution but its opposite: a commitment to the norm that this work will be unpaid.
* Whitewashing and manwashing cinema.
* Mother Jones profiles the great Tig Notaro.
* What BP Doesn’t Want You to Know About the 2010 Gulf Spill.
* And 66 behind-the-scenes photos from the filming of The Empire Strikes Back.
Written by gerrycanavan
April 27, 2013 at 11:42 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with 11/22/63, academia, art, Bangladesh, BP, Canada, clothes, comedy, copyright, Deepwater Horizon, Empire Strikes Back, exploitation, fair use, film, gender, globalization, How the University Works, internships, IRS, J.J. Abrams, kids today, labor, manwashing, MLB, MOOCs, NBA, NFL, NHL, nonprofit-industrial complex, oil, oil spills, pedagogy, race, science fiction, sports, Star Wars, Stephen King, superexploitation, sweatshops, taxes, teaching, Tig Notaro, time travels, Tom Coburn, whitewashing, workplace safety
Wednesday! Night! Links!
* I used to say of apartheid that it dehumanized its perpetrators as much as, if not more than, its victims. Your response as a society to Osama bin Laden and his followers threatens to undermine your moral standards and your humanity.
* Ambivalent campus benchmarks watch: Today is “Tuition Runs Out Day” at Marquette.
* The MOOC Revolution: A Sketchy Deal for Higher Education.
The promoters of MOOCs claim to see universities as dinosaurs, but their business model is parasitic upon the very institutions they claim to be rendering obsolete. Udacity designs its own curricula rather than aggregating pre-existing university courses like Coursera and EdX, but without the Stanford credentials and backgrounds of its founders it is highly unlikely it would have gone anywhere. The affiliation provides startup companies with a highly desirable brand: the “top tier” of higher education, according to the U.S. News and World Report (which always rates the wealthiest and most selective schools as the best). A similar motive drives the colleges themselves: much like encouraging over-application to enhance their selectivity and thereby their U.S. News ranking, or establishing campuses in Abu Dhabi, China, and Singapore, the promotion of MOOCs is a way for highly competitive university administrators to enhance global brand visibility and give themselves an aura of cutting-edge innovation. The media’s celebratory response confirms the initial success of the strategy.
* From Cal’s student regent: “Online education: proceed with caution.”
* CUNY Loses Landmark Discrimination Lawsuit.
* It’s a curiosity of literary history that Corelli’s fantasy virgin, unwrinkled and slim waisted, would give rise to one of its most grotesque, tragically despoiled characters. But without Corelli’s Thelma, there would be no Gollum.
* Secrets of a Feminist Icon: The Anti-Union History of Rosie the Riveter.
* The Malware-Industrial Complex.
No law directly regulates the sale of zero-days in the United States or elsewhere, so some traders pursue it quite openly. A Bangkok-based security researcher who goes by the name The Grugq tweets about acting as a middleman and has spoken to the press about negotiating deals worth hundreds of thousands of dollars with government buyers from the United States and western Europe. In an argument on Twitter last month, he denied that his business is equivalent to arms dealing, as critics within and outside the computer security community have charged. “An exploit is a component of a toolchain,” he tweeted. “The team that produces & maintains the toolchain is the weapon.”
* Judge Rules White Girl Will Be Tried As Black Adult.
* Climate Hawk Obama: ‘If Congress Won’t Act Soon To Protect Future Generations, I Will.’
* Unpaid Internships Are a Rich-Girl Problem—and Also a Real Problem.
* The famous 1996 Election Day crossword puzzle.
* The blue eyes / brown eyes experiment, 1968.
* The rich are different from you and me: they’ve captured 121% of income gains during the recovery. You read that right, more than 100%.
* “You could safely say that Iceland holds the world record in household debt relief,” said Lars Christensen, chief emerging markets economist at Danske Bank A/S in Copenhagen. “Iceland followed the textbook example of what is required in a crisis. Any economist would agree with that.”
* Zounds! Credit agencies ripping everybody off. I’m shocked, shocked…
* In the largest false memory study to date, 5,269 participants were asked about their memories for three true and one of five fabricated political events. Each fabricated event was accompanied by a photographic image purportedly depicting that event. Approximately half the participants falsely remembered that the false event happened, with 27% remembering that they saw the events happen on the news.
* Defense Nerds Strike Back: A Symposium on the Battle of Hoth. gerrycanavan.wordpress.com will be tracking this important story as far as it goes.
* Proved: Wertham fudged his data for Seduction of the Innocent.
* An ‘Autopsy’ Of Detroit Finds Resilience In A Struggling City.
* Car gets stuck at 125 mph for over an hour.
Lecerf, frantic, called the police from his car — and they sent an escort that The Guardian describes as “a platoon of police cars” to help him navigate a highway full of fellow cars and get them to swerve out of the way of the speeding car. (Lecerf stayed, appropriately, in the fast lane.) What resulted was a small miracle of technological coordination: Responding to emergency services’ advance warnings, three different toll booths raised their barriers as Lecerf approached. A police convoy ensured that roads were kept clear for the speeding car. Fellow drivers, obligingly, got out of the way. Emergency services patched Lecerf through to a Renault engineer who tried — though failed — to help Lecerf get the speeding car to slow down.
* And the reason for the season: Wes Anderson valentines.
Written by gerrycanavan
February 13, 2013 at 6:33 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, adjuncts, apartheid, Archbishop Desmond Tutu, Barack Obama, Berkeley, blue eyes, brown eyes, capitalism, cars, class struggle, climate change, college, comics, credit agencies, crossword puzzles, CUNY, data, debt forgiveness, Detroit, discrimination, drones, ecology, Empire Strikes Back, false memories, Fanon, financialize everything, Fredric Wertham, general election 1996, Gollum, Great Recession, Hoth, How the University Works, hydrofracking, Iceland, internships, justice, kleptocracy, labor, malware-industrial complex, Marquette, military strategy, MOOCs, neoliberalism, our brains don't work, politics, race, real wages, Rosie the Riveter, Royal Tenenbaums, Seduction of the Innocent, software, the law, the rich are different from you and me, the wisdom of markets, tuition, unions, valentines, war on terror, Wes Anderson
Five for Tuesday
* Democrats just come right out and admit it. Pretty stunning.
* For of all sad words of tongue or pen, the saddest are these: “It might have been! Community Almost Did a Nicolas Cage Episode.
* Gawker has all your top Pope conspiracy theories.
* And the Ben & Jerry’s discontinued flavors graveyard. I’m almost certain I’ve purchased Coffee Coffee Buzz Buzz Buzz in a supermarket since 1999, so I really question the accuracy of this. Where are you, Gawker?
Written by gerrycanavan
February 12, 2013 at 11:47 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with America, Barack Obama, Ben and Jerry, Catholicism, Coffee Coffee Buzz Buzz Buzz, community, conspiracy theories, Democrats, drones, empire, Empire Strikes Back, forever war, Glenn Greenwald, Hoth, ice cream, military-industrial complex, Nicholas Cage, Star Wars, the Pope, the truth is out there, war on terror
All the Tuesday Links
* Mars.
* “For Unpaid College Loans,Feds Dock Social Security.”
* Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism Advisory Board member and University of Nebraska at Omaha Criminology professor Pete Simi had extensive long term contact with alleged Wisconsin mass killer Wade Michael Page when he was conducting a multi-year study of the hate rock music scene in Southern California.
* The wisdom of markets: ‘Crude-oil futures bounced up over $1 at one point Monday after a false Twitter rumor exposed the oil market’s knee-jerk fear of Mideast turmoil.’
* Romney v. Reid, part 1000: “I don’t really believe that he’s got any kind of a credible source.” They’re his tax returns; if it’s within the realm of possibility that Reid has “any kind of a credible source,” isn’t that logically a concession the claim is true? TPM explains how it could be, though I still think it probably isn’t.
* Louisiana School Forces Students to Take Pregnancy Tests, Kicks Out Girls Who Refuse Or Test Positive. Naturally, the school also forces any young man suspecting of fathering a child to let’s not ruin a young man’s life over one mistake.
* The brightest timeline: New Arrested Development Season Starts Shooting Today.
* The darkest timeline: Papa John Warns: Pizza Prices Will Rise Under Obamacare.
* Joss Whedon will write and direct both Avengers Reaveng’d and help develop the Marvel TV series. This is reasonably promising, and yet I can’t help but agree with @HitFixDaniel: “I’d rather have Joss Whedon direct *literally* anything original than do an “Avengers” sequel. *ducks*”
* Save the arcade industry the barcade way.
* For my SF academics: UC Riverside’s Eaton Lifetime Achievement Award to recognize Ursula Le Guin, Ray Harryhausen and Stan Lee. As if you need another reason to go!
* The last alignment chart you’ll ever need: all Gary Oldman edition.
* The last missing piece of the puzzle: Witness claims there were actually two UFO crashes at Roswell in 1947.
* Science Proves Luke Skywalker Should Have Died In The Tauntaun’s Belly.
* And don’t say it unless you mean it: speaking on Attack of the Show about Doctor Who’s 50th anniversary, David Tennant says he’s still got the costume.
Written by gerrycanavan
August 7, 2012 at 10:00 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with aliens, alignment charts, arcades, Arrested Development, Avengers, charter schools, Chevron, curiosity, Dark Knight, David Tennant, Doctor Who, Empire Strikes Back, Gary Oldman, general election 2012, Harry Reid, hate rock, health care, Joss Whedon, Louisiana, Mars, Marvel, Massachusetts, misogyny, Mitt Romney, NASA, oil, outer space, Papa John, pizza, Roswell, sexism, Sikh community, Social Security, Stan Lee, Star Wars, student debt, Tauntauns, taxes, teen pregnancy, television, The Avengers 2, the brightest timeline, the darkest timeline, the truth is out there, the wisdom of markets, UC Riverside, UFOs, Ursula K. Le Guin, Wisconsin, zunguzungu