Posts Tagged ‘Frederick Pohl’
Avoid Your Family with This Very Special Thanksgiving Edition of Thursday Links
* 100 New Debate Topics You and Your Uncle Can Turn into an Argument about Republicans.
* Ferguson. Ferguson. Ferguson. Ferguson. Ferguson. Ferguson. Police violence. Ferguson. America. Ferguson. Turkey pardons. Ferguson. New York. Cleveland. Cleveland. Utah. Everywhere. Everywhere.
* Winners are mad when winning lights the shadows.
* Nation Doesn’t Know If It Can Take Another Bullshit Speech About Healing.
* We should get rid of local policing. Ferguson shows why the system just doesn’t work.
* Rescind Cosby’s honorary doctorates?
* “Suicide Is My Retirement Plan.”
* An expert hired by the Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD) argued in court that a 9-year-old girl seeking damages after she was sexually assaulted would be protected from emotional stress by her low IQ.
* 41 men targeted but 1,147 people killed: US drone strikes.
* While Detroit contended with largest municipal bankruptcy, its lawyers were robbing it blind.
* Tyler Cowen, for one, welcomes the hyper-meritocracy.
* Anthropology as white public space.
* Here’s the guy who wants to run to Hillary Clinton’s left. Democrats! Catch the fever.
* While he wasn’t second in command of the United States nuclear arsenal, Rear Adm. Timothy M. Giardina not only had a 15 hour a week gambling habit he also may have had a one-man poker chip counterfeiting operation in which he used paint and stickers to make $1 poker chips into $500 poker chips. This led to repeated bans from local casinos, eventually a lifetime ban and finally his nuclear weapons were taken away.
* What is your research agenda for the coming year?
* Just another Afrofuturism megapost.
* Town Bans Winnie The Pooh For Lack of Genitals, “Dubious Sexuality.” Finally, someone said it.
* At some point this guy took a moment and smiled to himself, secure in the knowledge that he’d covered all his bases.
* SDSU suspends all frat activities after members wave dildos, throw eggs at rape protesters.
* UVA has expelled 183 students for honor code violations — and none for sexual assault.
* Alexey Pajitnov, hero, creator of Tetris.
* Frederik Pohl Made Doing Literally Everything Look Easy.
* Strange Horizons reprints Darko Suvin’s “Estrangement and Cognition,” with a 2014 postscript.
All of us on the planet Earth live in highly endangered times. Perhaps the richer among us, up to 5% globally but disproportionately concentrated in the trilateral U.S.A.-western Europe-Japan and its appendages, have been cushioned from realizing it by the power of money and the self-serving ideology it erects. But even those complain loudly of the “criminality” and in general “moral decay” of the desperately vicious outside their increasingly fortress-like neighbourhoods. We live morally in an almost complete dystopia—dystopia because anti-utopia—and materially (economically) on the razor’s edge of collapse, distributive and collective.
In a look backwards to my writing of the 1960s from this most endangered cusp of history, I see a main limitation to my “Poetics of SF” essay in its innocently and naively Formalist horizon. That is, I presupposed the tide of history was flowing, even if with regrettable eddies, towards socialism or democratic communism, and concentrated on the problems of understanding, pleasure, and form within that tide. Thus I seem to have felt I could freeze or even freeze out history, as all pursuits of aesthetics do: transcending the moment. I was wrong.
* The official SF short film of the Thanksgiving holiday: Survivors Of A Nuclear War Find A Secret Bunker—But There’s A Catch
* Maybe the most twenty-first-century artifact possible: ‘Sunburn!’, A Gravity-Based Puzzle Video Game Featuring a Doomed Spaceship Crew That Is Determined to Die Together.
* The good news: There is no substantial technical or economic barrier that would prevent the U.S. from reducing its greenhouse gas emissions 80 percent below 1990 levels by 2050, a target that would help put the world on track to limit global average temperature rise to 2 degrees Celsius. In fact, there are multiple pathways to that target, each involving a different mix of technologies. Achieving the goal would cost only around 1 percent of GDP a year out through 2050, and if we started now, we could allow infrastructure to turn over at its natural rate, avoiding stranded assets. The bad news: Pulling it off would require immediate, intelligent, coordinated, vigorously executed policies that sustain themselves over decades.
* LEGO is dead, long live LEGO.
* Guys, it’s not all bad news: After The Sun Incinerates Earth, Life Could Evolve On Titan.
* And this blog’s most sacred annual tradition: William S. Burroughs – A Thanksgiving Prayer.
Written by gerrycanavan
November 27, 2014 at 8:08 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with a new life awaits you in the off-world colonies, academia, adjuncts, Afrofuturism, America, anthropology, austerity, bankruptcy, Barack Obama, Bill Cosby, class struggle, Cleveland, climate change, cognitive estrangement, communism, Darko Suvin, Detroit, Do they know it's Christmas?, Don't mention the war, drones, ecology, epigrams for my research agenda, evolution, Ferguson, fraternities, Frederick Pohl, games, genocide, Great Recession, guns, H.P. Lovecraft, honorary doctorates, How the University Works, hydrofracking, hyper-meritocracy, ideology, IMF, LEGO, lockouts, Los Angeles, maps, Marquette, Martin O'Malley, Maryland, meritocracy, Michael Brown, Missouri, morally odious monsters, neoliberalism, New York, North Dakota, nuclear war, nuclear weapons, nuclearity, oil, outer space, pardons, pedagogy, police brutality, police violence, politics, race, racism, rape, rape culture, robots, science fiction, SDSU, socialism, St. Louis, strikes, suicide, Tetris, Thanksgiving, the courts, the law, The Onion, the Singularity, Titan, turkeys, unions, Utah, UVA, war on education, whiteness, William S. Burroughs, Winnie the Pooh, Woody Allen, worst financial crisis since the last one, would you rather
Wednesday Links!
* America’s Lawless, Unaccountable Shadow Government: Opinions Differ.
* Q. and A. on the Disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370. The latest.
* Ghostbusters and the New York Public Library.
* Huge, interactive map of objects police have mistaken for guns.
* The Civil Rights Act Was Not as Important as You Think.
* The greatest trick the devil ever pulled.
* How a seemingly simple message to students brought digital-age disaster for a Wisconsin professor.
* Why Cosmos Can’t Save Public Support for Science.
* The Department of Education’s scoring system for ranking the financial health of universities makes no sense.
* College admissions as socio-economic sorting.
* MOOCtastic: Harvard students told: No questions, please, we’re filming.
* Should you lose your job for failing to raise 80 percent of your salary in outside grants?
* Graduate Students at Cornell Push for Workers’ Compensation. The only question is: why don’t they already have this?
* Jacob Remes introduces the CLASSE Manifesto.
* Patrick Iber on life as a long-term adjunct.
* Dialectics of whether you should let your students call you by your first name.
* If the Founding Fathers were alive today, what do you think they would say?
* There’s ideology at its purest, and then there’s Barack Obama being interviewed by Zach Galifianakis on Between Two Ferns.
* Guantánamo forever, I guess.
* During the first month of recreational marijuana sales, Colorado’s licensed dispensaries generated a total of more than $14 million, putting about $2 million of tax revenue into state coffers in the process.
* Vulture profiles Benjamin Kunkel.
* Two sentence horror stories.
* Public Transit Use In U.S. Is At a 57-Year High, Report Finds. Spraying Toxic Coal Ash Is A Cheap And Popular Way To De-Ice Roads. Bitcoin is Not a Currency.
* What’s making you so fat today: antibiotics.
* “You can’t mourn for the little boy he once was. You can’t fool yourself.”
* Dan Harmon: The Rolling Stone Interview. Mystery project!
* Next year on SyFy: Man Calls 911 After “Hostile” 22-Pound Cat Traps Family in Bedroom.
* BBC America gathers HUGE all-star cast for history of sci-fi documentary.
* That’s cheery: Drones will cause an upheaval of society like we haven’t seen in 700 years.
* Study: Nuclear Reactors Are Toxic to Surrounding Areas, Especially With Age. No one could have predicted!
* Now human activity makes it rain on the weekends. God, we’re the worst.
* Gasp! Center For American Progress Takes Direction From Obama White House.
* The Supreme Court: as always, why we can’t have nice things.
* Milwaukee homicides rose 15% last year.
* The Almighty Star Trek Lit-verse Reading Order Flowchart.
* The Exquisite Wistfulness of 19th-Century Vegetarian Personal Ads.
* And they say there’s never any good news, but Sbarro’s has filed for bankruptcy.
Written by gerrycanavan
March 11, 2014 at 9:23 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, academic freedom, academic jobs, actually existing media bias, adjuncts, America, antibiotics, Arrested Development, Barack Obama, Benjamin Kunkel, Between Two Ferns, Bitcoin, CIA, Civil Rights Act, class struggle, CLASSE Manifesto, climate change, coal, college admissions, Colorado, community, Cornell, Cosmos, Dan Harmon, Deadwood, Department of Education, Disney, documentary, domestic surveillance, drones, ecology, film, Flight MH370, forever war, Founding Fathers, Frederick Pohl, Frozen, games, Ghostbusters, giant cats, graduate student life, Guantánamo, guns, Harvard, horror, How the University Works, ideology, legalize it, maps, marijuana, Marxism, Milwaukee, Mitch Hurwitz, money, MOOCs, murder, New York Public Library, nuclear energy, nuclearity, parenting, pedagogy, pizza, police state, politics, public transportation, race, racism, rails to trails, Sandy Hook, Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal, Sbarro's, science, science fiction, shadow government, space opera, Star Trek, student loans, Supreme Court, surveillance state, teaching, television, tenure, the Constitution, the Devil, the law, the weather, true crime, vegetarianism, war huh good god y'all what is it good for? absolutely nothing say it again, war on drugs, war on terror, why we can't have nice things, why you're fat, Wisconsin, workers' compensation, Zach Galifianakis