Posts Tagged ‘inequality’
Thursday Night Links!
- The local AAUP’s fundraiser for an independent audit at Marquette funded so quickly I barely even had a chance to promote it.
- Meanwhile, Marquette in the news! Demographic Realism and the Crisis of Higher Education.
- The attack on the humanities, especially at less selective universities, is a violation of some of the basic premises of undergraduate education, argue Mary Beth Norton and James Grossman.
- The Academic Concept Conservative Lawmakers Love to Hate.
- As Colleges Strive for a Return to Normal, Students With Disabilities Say, ‘No Thanks.’
- Why Doomsday Hasn’t Happened. Most colleges averted financial disaster. But the pandemic will still have a lasting impact.
- Alison Clark Efford describes the value of setting aside time in each class with her graduate students to discuss the humanities, careers and the good life.
- Look who’s being deprofessionalized now? Phylicia Rashad named dean at Howard University.
- Faculty Moral Distress about Pandemic Teaching.
this is a great blog post that also clarified for me why as a grad student I've always experienced teaching as something physically and emotionally draining: I have never been provided the material tools and space to do the job as well as I ethically feel obligated to https://t.co/vwwkpNU9ua
— Jeffrey Moro (@jeffreymoro) May 11, 2021
reverse tenure, administrators aren’t allowed to leave unless faculty and staff agree they did a good job https://t.co/Nlyi5wMgN3
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) May 12, 2021
some personal news: I’m leaving academia https://t.co/XGWSpnbCGG
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) May 12, 2021
- Journal of Posthumanism has launched. CFP for issue two!
- Failed state watch: Target to Halt Pokémon Card Sales ‘Out of an Abundance of Caution.’
Drastic as the decision may seem, particularly given that Pokémon cards aren’t the only things people wait in line for hours to buy, it comes days following a fight in a Brookfield, Wisconsin Target’s parking lot in which four people attacked a man, who then pulled his legally-owned gun on his assailants, prompting them to flee before later being arrested by the police. Target’s decision also comes just weeks after the company implemented new policies to curtail people camping out overnight at their stores. Beyond telling people not to line up like this, an alleged note to employees asked them to consider calling the police in order to force people to disperse.
- Elsewhere in my failed state: Wauwatosa PD’s high value target internal investigation.
- You and me both, kid. Bunny, the dog that can “talk,” starts asking existential questions.
- These days, he argues, most of Israel’s leadership falls into what he terms the “annexation” camp or the “control” camp. Israel’s Violence Shows Why Now Is the Time for BDS. The end of the green line.
- This is a land of peace, love, justice, and no mercy.
- Breaking. NBC News confirms: The CDC will announce that Americans who are fully vaccinated against COVID no longer need to wear masks or physically distance, indoors or outdoors in almost all circumstances. Elsewhere on the COVID beat: a hilarious troll.
- A century of research has demonstrated how poverty and discrimination drive disease. Can COVID push science to finally address the issue?
The pandemic is the pinnacle of social media content because petty differences of manners and judgment became not just “political” but a Matter of Life and Death — at the precise moment no one was allowed to do anything *but* sit in their house and doomscroll.
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) May 12, 2021
- The Real Reason Behind the Misinformation Epidemic in Online Moms’ Groups.
- A GOP Civil War? Don’t Bet On It.
- Joe Manchin’s surprisingly bold proposal to fix America’s voting rights problem. Reminds me a certain other Joe…
reminds me of when Joe Lieberman tried to scuttle Obamacare by cynically proposing a Medicare buy-in and then had to walk it back after the weekend after everyone agreed https://t.co/TcU0OuRrRv
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) May 13, 2021
- Humans Need to Create Interspecies Money to Save the Planet. Only if it turns out after a few years that it’s made up of ground-up animals and after a few more years of transactions will take up all the biomass of Planet Earth!
- The Intelligent Forest.
- 2050 Is Closer Than 1990.
- How the computer broke the human body.
- Once more for safety, the Problem of Susan.
- Untitled Earth Sim 64.
- Who Should John Mulaney Be Now?
- Dark Souls in the dark night of the soul.
- Cory Doctorow mega-thread on The Ministry for the Future.
- All of man’s dreams turn to ash: The Jenga sublime.
- The only CEO I trust.
- Even if You Think Discussing Aliens Is Ridiculous, Just Hear Me Out.

Written by gerrycanavan
May 13, 2021 at 3:13 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with 2050, AAUP, academia, academic jobs, adjunctification, aliens, America, animal intelligence, animal personhood, animal studies, animals, Are we living in a simulation?, bees, carbon coin, carbon coins, CDC, CEOs, CFPs, class struggle, computers, coronavirus, COVID-19, critical race theory, Dark Souls, demographic realism, deprofessionalization, Dogecoin, evolution, failed states, forensic audits, forests, games, graduate school in the humanities, How the University Works, inequality, Jenga, John Mulaney, Journal of Posthumanism, Kim Stanley Robinson, Marquette, misogyny, Muppets, Narnia, Nathan Grawe, Nintendo, pandemic, pedagogy, Pokémon, police corruption, police violence, politics, posthumanism, Republicans, reverse tenure, science fiction, standup comedy, Target, teaching, the economy, the humanities, The Ministry for the Future, The Problem of Susan, the truth is out there, UFOs, unemployment, Wisconsin, worst financial crisis since the last one
Tuesday Links!
* CFP: Fourth Wave Feminism in Science Fiction & Fantasy.
* CFP: Sexual Violence, Social Movements, and Social Media.
* Tonight! I’m talking at this event about Black Panther, oppression, and liberation for the MU Amnesty International chapter.
* The Revealer has an excerpt from Sexism Ed: Essays on Gender and Labor in Academia.
* Kim Stanley Robinson Makes the Socialist Case for Space Exploration.
Re-reading Infinity Gauntlet and honestly it looks like Thanos was just trying to help. pic.twitter.com/PCBlHZsNv9
— Hucky Barnes: The Twintter Soldier (@TylerHuckabee) April 24, 2018
* How neoliberalism shapes the global economy and limits the power of democracies.
* The Professor Who’s Warning the World About Facebook and Google.
* How Dual Enrollment Contributes to Inequality.
* Reading on the Chaos in the UW system.
* “Wisconsin Won’t Remove Names of KKK Affiliates From Buildings. It Will Build an Exhibit Instead.” Could do both, you know!
* Which Animal Kills the Most Humans?
* Woman condemned to live in hell forever.
* “James Cameron Compares His Avatar Sequels to The Godfather, But Admits That Could Be a Huge Mistake.” Oh, you think that could be a mistake, do you?
* The myth of an ending: why even removing Trump from office won’t save American democracy.
* The good news for Trump is that this is the last bit of embarrassing tape footage out there [pauses, touches finger to ear] I’m being told the pee tape is real.
* Woman fined $500 for taking her in-flight apple off the plane.
* Shock report: Man whose only qualification was physical proximity to Trump may not be qualified to run the VA.
* Unbelievable desecration on the Cinderella Blu-ray. Who signed off on this?
The Blu-ray of CINDERELLA (right) has been so scrubbed of grain that they've actually destroyed the linework in some scenes pic.twitter.com/TlqiVk5eY6
— Stephen Duignan (@stephen_duignan) April 23, 2018
* Walking Dead and Fringe Director Seith Mann Will Bring BLACK to the Big Screen.
* The Science of Making CS Gas “Safe.”
* She created a document to warn women of sexual harassers. It’s haunted her ever since.
* This App Can Tell You the Indigenous History of the Land You Live On.
* Your Next Job Interview Could Be with a Racist Bot.
* Here come the climate gentrifiers.
* It’s OK to Say if You Went Back in Time and Killed Baby Hitler.
This is like a painting from the Renaissance. pic.twitter.com/nhmxYxD0vC
— Frank Pallotta (@frankpallotta) April 22, 2018
* Husband-wife Gaffigan comedy team will be Marquette’s spring commencement speakers.
* I say teach the controversy.
Southern Illinois University is recruiting PhD grads for VOLUNTEER faculty positions. Duties include teaching undergrad and grad classes, committee service, and thesis supervision. https://t.co/i1y84exQFc
— Melissa Hubbard (@melissa_hubbard) April 23, 2018
Written by gerrycanavan
April 24, 2018 at 8:32 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with #MassMarkets, #MeToo, a new life awaits you in the off-world colonies, academia, adjuntification, Afrofuturism, air travel, America, animals, apps, artificial intelligence, Avatar, black, Black Panther, Black Panther 2, blackmail, books, CFPs, chemical weapons, childhood, Cinderella, class struggle, climate change, commencement speakers, democracy, Disney, don't mention the war, Donald Trump, fantasy, feminism, film, franchises, gender, gentrification, glitches, history, Hot Pockets, How the University Works, indigenous futurism, indigenous peoples, inequality, Infinity War, Iraq, James Cameron, Jim Gaffigan, kids today, Kim Stanley Robinson, KKK, labor, liberation, Marquette, Marvel, MCU, memory, mere genre, migoyny, misogyny, my scholarly empire, neoliberalism, oppression, outer space, over-educated literary theory PhDs, pee tape, politics, protest, race, racism, rape, rape culture, reading, Russia, Ryan Cooler, science fiction, sexism, social media, Stargate, superheroes, The Godfather, the past isn't over it isn't even past, the university in ruins, the VA, time travel, University of Wisconsin, University of Wisconsin Stevens Point, Wisconsin
Monday Morning Links!
* On Saturday night the SFRA announced its award winners. Congrats to all! And here’s a Storify of the weekend’s #SFRA2017 tweets.
* Civilizations in Crisis: Chinese Speculative Fiction. And at the New Yorker Radio Hour: The Cultural Revolution and the Alien Invasion.
* The Jobless Utopia of La Zarzuela.
* ‘Seat 14C’ short stories imagine a 20-year time warp – and now you can hop on board.
* As one of the four finalists for the Edward Said Chair, I returned from the campus interview to experience a prolonged waiting period. When the news was finally delivered, I did not learn whether I had gotten the position or not. Rather, the email informed me that the position had been cancelled altogether, due to unforeseen administrative issues.
* Constructing the cyber-troll: Psychopathy, sadism, and empathy.
* President Trump appears to have sourced his CNN wrestling tweet from a racist troll on Reddit.
During the election, CNN hired hacks just to shout on screen. You turn politics into pro wrestling, and a pro will wrestle it away from you.
— Zeynep Tufekci (@zeynep) July 2, 2017
This is truly the worst case scenario of teaching an old person how to use the Internet
— Aparna Nancherla (@aparnapkin) July 2, 2017
not sure how anyone thinks a president with content this fire could fail to be reelected
— traxus4420 (@traxus4420) July 2, 2017
* Proponents insist that the emails, as deranged as they might seem, work. Critics argue that the tactic has a short shelf life and is deceptive. But Their Emails.
* D.C. police are investigating whether patrol officers struck an 11-year-old bicyclist with their cruiser Thursday night in Northwest Washington’s Park View neighborhood and drove away without reporting the incident.
* Did Trump break the law over alleged Morning Joe National Enquirer blackmail threat? Oh honey. The Time I Got Recruited to Collude with the Russians. Trump’s CNN Tweet Linked To Reddit User HanAssholeSolo.
* Democrats completely around the bend.
* How handsome is Mike Pence? We asked the experts.
* Once we dispense with the pragmatic-compromise explanation for the MSPRA, it’s much easier to understand what CAP is doing. They are proposing a “bipartisan” patch on Obamacare, not because they think they can win through compromise, but because they largely agree with what Republicans want to do. They are promoting market-based healthcare instead of embracing popular support for single payer because they do not want to see single payer succeed. There’s no counter-intuitive chess game going on here; liberals are telling the left exactly what they want, and we would do well to take them at their word.
* Generation Catalano rebrands again, again.
University of Melbourne Associate Professor of Sociology Dan Woodman—who, probably not coincidentally, was born in 1980—says the “Xennial” label applies to those born between 1977 and 1983. It’s a unique demographic group, he argues, because Xennials spent a significant chunk of their childhoods without access to computers—and indeed, will someday be among the last people on Earth to remember a time before the internet—but experienced the internet revolution early enough to still become early adopters of new technologies. People who were actually college aged when Facebook came out, in other words.
* Another one: Generation Space.
Xennial (noun): a person who identifies this woman as Xena. pic.twitter.com/ZU89SFJdfr
— Eric Hittinger (@ElephantEating) July 2, 2017
* The forgotten cyberspace of the Neuromancer computer game.
* Iran’s temperature hit 127 degrees yesterday.
* Being James Thomas Hodgkinson’s widow.
* Methadone for social media addiction.
* How valuable is Stephen Curry?
How valuable is Stephen Curry? In 2010 Lacob bought Warriors for $450 million. Now worth $2.6 billion.
— Ann Killion (@annkillion) July 1, 2017
* Phone Sex Operators Say They Are Making Less Than Minimum Wage.
* Escaped elephant takes a stroll through Wisconsin neighborhood.
* Ancestry.com presents: Descendents of the Founding Fathers.
* disappointedspringsteen.gif. I mean really.
* McConnell’s nearing a deal. Don’t sugarcoat this. Trump just called for 32 million people to lose health coverage.
* A Muslim doctor in Trump country.
* New Florida law lets any resident challenge what’s taught in science classes.
* ‘Terrorism’ misspelled on bench at Indiana war memorial.
* Mass Grave Of Dozens Of Tortured Black Men Found In Deceased KKK Leaders Estate. UPDATE: This was a fake story.
* Personally, I think teaching is improv.
* Against Gorsuch. Against Gorsuch. Against Gorsuch.
* Fascinating analysis: The newspaper offered no definitive answer, but the question itself points to a broader issue that tends to be underexplored in the context of wrongful convictions: what typically happens with respect to the underlying crime—and, by implication, the cause of justice and of public safety—when the person found legally responsible for committing it later is determined not to be.
* A Brutal Intelligence: AI, Chess, and the Human Mind.
* In Honoring Enslaved Laborers, Colleges Seek to Blunt the Force of Their Pro-Slavery Icons.
* Wikipedia as Text Adventure.
* The Hardest Job in the World. I’m like an X-Man with psychic attack powers. Time Management: A Guide for Busy Moms.
* Factionalism / small talk. All things carry yin and embrace yang. Look for the helpers.
* Horror is the only film genre where women appear and speak as often as men.
* And I consider this a canonical part of Zefram Cochrane’s backstory.
Written by gerrycanavan
July 3, 2017 at 9:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, academic departments, academic jobs, actually existing media bias, addiction, AHCA, artificial intelligence, automation, basketball, bipartisanship is bunk, blackmail, body cameras, chess, China, Chinese science fiction, Chris Christie, circuses, Cixin Liu, class struggle, climate change, CNN, conferences, Congress, cultural preservation, debt, Democrats, diversity, drugs, ecology, Edward Said, elephants, espionage, exotic animals, First Amendment, Florida, Founding Fathers, games, Generation X, genre, Golden State Warriors, graduate school, guns, health care, horror, improv, Indiana, inequality, Iran, Iraq, Islamophobia, James Cromwell, Jersey, Joe Scarborough, Ken Liu, KKK, Korea, labor, Lenny and Carl, liberalism, look for the helpers, masculinity, mass shooting, men, meritocracy, Mika Brzezinski, Mike Pence, millennials, minimum wage, misogyny, Mitch McConnell, national greatness liberalism, NBA, Neil Gorsuch, Neuromancer, never met your heroes, Okja, opioids, parenting, pedagogy, police, police violence, politics, privilege, protest, Pulp Fiction, Putin, race, racism, rape culture, Reddit, religion, Russia, Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal, science, science fiction, science fiction studies, sex work, SFRA, slavery, social media, Springsteen, Star Trek, Stephen Curry, student debt, Supreme Court, takin' 'bout my generation, teaching, terrorism, text adventures, the courts, the Internet, the law, The Three-Body Problem, time management, time travel, trolling Donald Trump, true crime, Twitter, Utopia, Venn diagrams, war memorials, Wikipedia, William Gibson, Wisconsin, women, work, X-Men, Xena, yin and yang, Zefram Cochrane, Zork
Friday Morning!
* Trump White House finding a new bottom, day after day after… whoa. Turning Point? They’re not even pretending. The Biggest Political Story in Decades. In a Private Dinner, Trump Demanded Loyalty. Comey Demurred. Days Before Firing, Comey Asked for More Resources for Russia Inquiry. Inside Trump’s anger and impatience. Another inside story. Time to shut everything down. And then on the third day he threatened to blackmail Comey with secret White House tapes. Only the Rock can save us now.
* The primary takeaway of the last 18 months is that no one should ever use email for any reason.
DID YOU KNOW when Trump finally goes down in flames and brings half the country down with him your dad will say it was all Obama’s fault
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) May 10, 2017
A person who still supports Trump after this week probably can’t be reached. Sorry.
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) May 11, 2017
COMEY (2041)
COMEY, PART TWO (2043)
COMEY: THE COMPLETE SAGA (chronological re-edit for TV, 2044)
COMEY, PART THREE (2057; regrettable)— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) March 5, 2017
* Huge relief after only 11 million people vote for a fascist.
* Trump’s attacking the Census.
* Journalist arrested for trying to ask HHS Secretary Tom Price a question.
* What if populism is not the problem, but the solution?
* By refusing to negotiate with recently unionized graduate workers, Yale president Peter Salovey has announced in writing that the university will defy US labor law.
* Meanwhile, at the greatest public university in the world: Also included in the itemized spending was a dinner tab worth more than a year of tuition.
[concert]
SINGER: hows everyone doin tonight
CROWD: woo
ME (from the back in a normal speaking voice): it's actually been a tough few months— Bob Vulfov (@bobvulfov) May 9, 2017
* Locked Up for Being Poor. How Homeownership Became the Engine of American Inequality. U.S. life expectancy varies by more than 20 years from county to county. All the money’s gone, nowhere to go.
* Kristen Gillibrand, for and against. All this for someone who already ruled it out!
* Despite the confidence that the backlash to the healthcare bill will benefit Democrats, this doesn’t seem like good politics to be gleefully cheering on something you think is going to literally kill people. Especially, when you’re just singing over the supposed political benefits.
* History Will Remember These 217 House Republicans for Their Inhumanity.
* The Democratic Party Is a Ghost. Losing West Virginia. Priorities in Delaware. The Resistance, but not just as a joke. Stop promoting liberal conspiracy theories on Twitter.
* Trumpism is coming from the suburbs. Beyond Economics: Fears of Cultural Displacement Pushed the White Working Class to Trump.
* A study at Demos says voter suppression flipped Wisconsin. Some Words of Caution.
* I’m sure no one could find this objectionable: A top government official overseeing detentions and deportations is heading to a private prison company at the end of the month, according to a source with firsthand knowledge.
* The Little Known History of Black Women Using Soda Fountains as Contested Spaces.
* Fair Use Too Often Goes Unused.
* How a Utah county silenced Native American voters — and how Navajos are fighting back.
* The Higher-Education Crisis Is a Labor Crisis.
* How Marquette Is Becoming More Diverse.
* Everything We Know About Salt May Be Wrong.
* This is how SETI plans to find alien life by 2037.
* Chicago Approves Plan To Block Trump’s Name on His Tower With Giant, Flying Pigs.
* A Defense of the Tuvel Open Letter, at the Chronicle. And on the other side.
'In the XKCDification of political protest the demand has been replaced by the in joke, the threat to power by the witty signal to peers'
— Tim Maughan (@timmaughan) April 22, 2017
* How many Death Row prisoners are disabled? All of them.
* The length schools will go to cover up for bullies never ceases to amaze me.
* District: The Game of Gerrymandering for the Whole Family.
* Secret military space shuttle rattles Florida.
* Accelerationism: how a fringe philosophy predicted the future we live in.
* HIV life expectancy ‘near normal’ thanks to new drugs.
* Another neurological disease unexpectedly linked to gut bacteria.
* U.S. to Ban Laptops in All Cabins of Flights From Europe, Officials Say.
* Stephen Fry is being investigated for blasphemy. Amazing.
* That is not dead which can eternal lie: the aestivation hypothesis for resolving Fermi’s paradox.
* The Girls’ Soccer Team That Joined a Boys’ League, and Won It.
* Winners and losers of the recent nuclear holocaust.
* Write the book you needed to read when you were a child. Troubled Wisconsin man goes on 50 state killing spree. Guns and Roses tones it down. Our future in space. They fucking killed him. Top ten book rebrands, all-time. I hacked into Mike Pence’s email. Maybe I should give the Yankees another look. A new favorite metaphor. But it was alright, everything was alright, the struggle was finished. He had won the victory over himself. He loved Big Brother.
* And I don’t care how pretty or enigmatic it is, nothing will ever make Blade Runner 2049 a good idea.
Written by gerrycanavan
May 12, 2017 at 9:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with #TheResistance, 2020, a new life awaits you in the off-world colonies, academia, accelerationism, actually existing media bias, aestivation, air travel, airport security, alcohol, alcoholism, aliens, Are You There God? It's Me Margaret, bail, Big Brother, Black English, Blade Runner, Blade Runner 2049, blasphemy, books, bullies, Chicago, class struggle, college admissions, Comeygate, comics, conspiracy theories, copyright, cultural preservation, death penalty, death row, Delaware, delicious Girl Scout cookies, Democratic primary 2020, Democrats, deportation, disability, diversity, email, fair use, fascism, FBI, Fermi paradox, film, Florida, France, freedom of the press, games, general election 2016, general election 2020, Georgetown, gerrymandering, girls' sports, graduate student movements, Guns and Roses, Haiti, health, health care, Hillary Clinton, HIV, How the University Works, ice, immigration, inequality, Ireland, James Comey, Jefferson Davis, Judy Blume, Kristen Gillibrand, laptops, life expectancy, M&Ms, Marquette, medicine, Mike Pence, millennials, mortgage interest deduction, NASA, Native American issues, neurology, New Orleans, New York, Nixon, normalcy, nuclear holocaust, our brains work in interesting ways, outer space, Paul Ryan, pigs, politics, polls, populism, poverty, prison-industrial complex, protest, race, racism, real wages, Rebecca Tuvel, Russia, salt, science fiction, segregation, SETI, slavery, slaves, soccer, statues, Stephen Fry, suburbs, the Census, the Confederacy, the courts, the law, the Left, The Rock, Tom Price, trans* issues, true crime, Trump, TSA, Twitter, unions, University of California, Utah, Watergate, Welcome to the Jungle, West Virginia, White House, white people, Wisconsin, writing, xkcd, Yale, Yankee
Monday Morning
* In local news: Dangerous Levels of ‘Erin Brockovich’ Chemical Found in Local Drinking Water.
* Great little Wisconsin story about the hotel NFL teams stay at when they play the Packers.
* To understand Charlotte’s rage, you have to understand its roads. A Homegirl Reflecting on Charlotte Uprising.
* Homeless and in graduate school.
* The survey that Williams was part of, the Milwaukee Area Renters Study (MARS), may be the first rigorous, detailed look at eviction in a major city. Interviewers like Williams spoke to about 1,100 Milwaukee-area tenants between 2009 and 2011, asking them a battery of questions on their housing history. The survey has already fundamentally changed researchers’ understanding of eviction, revealing the problem to be far larger than previously understood.
* The rise and rise of tabletop gaming.
* Here’s Everything Donald Trump Has Promised to Do on His First Day as President. Seven Days of Donald Trump’s Lies. Scope of Trump’s falsehoods unprecedented for a modern presidential candidate. Donald Trump’s Week of Misrepresentations, Exaggerations and Half-Truths. The press takes him literally, but not seriously; his supporters take him seriously, but not literally. Bruce vs. Trump. Trump’s jet vs. the taxpayers. Intel Officials Investigating Trump Advisor’s Ties To Putin Allies. Virtual media blackout on emerging Trump campaign scandal with Russia. Pregaming the debate. And again. And again. And again.
“Trump looked like a president tonight” will be the media’s mantra tomorrow night barring anything short of a stroke on stage.
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) September 26, 2016
* Obama legacy project, take one.
* From the right: “Against democracy.”
* Democrats don’t actually want to win, exhibit 37,000.
* If you want a vision of the future:
The Democrats have become the party, not of some specific ideological agenda, but of the traditional system as such. One of Obama’s major goals has been to rehabilitate the Republicans and force them to act as a worthy opponent rather than an implacable foe. This approach was naive and in many ways dangerous, as shown most vividly when Obama tried to “leverage” the Republicans’ unprecedented brinksmanship on the debt ceiling to engineer a “grand bargain” on the deficit, but it fits with the view that the system only works if there are two worthy opponents locked in an eternal struggle with no final victories. We can see something similar in Clinton’s controversial decision to treat Trump as an outlier rather than letting him tar the Republican brand as such. It works to her political disadvantage — showing that her centrist opportunism is weirdly principled in its own way — but from within her worldview, the most important thing is to restore the traditional balance of forces.
The situation we are in shows the intrinsic instability of party democracy. An eternal struggle between worthy opponents is not possible in practice. Eventually, one of the two teams is going to decide that they want to win in the strong sense, to defeat the opponent once and for all. And if that desire cannot be achieved immediately, it will inevitably lead to a long period where the old enemy is treated as a foe — as intrinsically evil and illegitimate. Within the American system, with its baroque structure of constraints and veto points, that will lead to a period where government is barely functional, because the natural tendency will be for the radicalized party to refuse to go along with the system until they have full control over it.
* This would be a better story if they were going to dive in to how creepy this would be: Geordi La Forge Has a Ship Full of Datas in This First Look at Star Trek: Waypoint.
* Tonight in Jungeland: Chris Christie’s Chances For Impeachment Just Went Way Up.
* On the Popular Acceptance of Inequality Due to Brute Luck.
* Scientists have found a better version of the Dyson Sphere. Meet the Dyson Swarm, a vast mega-structure comprised of a plethora of solar panels.
* A walking tour of New York’s surveillance network.
* The Stolen War: How corruption and fraud created a failed state in Iraq—and led directly to the rise of ISIS.
* The Fallacies Of Neoliberal Protest.
* Please be true, please be true: Arrival Is a Scifi Masterpiece You Won’t Stop Thinking About.
* “The Battle of Algiers” at 50: From 1960s Radicalism to the Classrooms of West Point.
* Professor Donald W. Schaffner, a food microbiologist at Rutgers University in New Jersey, said a two-year study he led concluded that no matter how fast you pick up food that falls on the floor, you will pick up bacteria with it. Challenge accepted.
* Cats sailed with Vikings to conquer the world, genetic study reveals. Trade between China and Rome in the ancient world, as tokened by a pair of corpses found in a London cemetery. (On that second one others say not so fast.)
* “…Adding to the tragedy, is that this disaster went almost completely unnoticed by the public as later that day another, more “newsworthy” tragedy would befall the nation when beloved President John Fitzgerald Kennedy was assassinated. The Staten Island Ferry Disaster Museum hopes to correct this oversight by preserving the memory of those lost in this tragedy and educating the public about the truth behind the only known giant octopus-ferry attack in the tri-state area.”
* Breaking Bad at a Bronx charter.
* The Three-Body Problem in, well, China.
* A Law Professor Explains Why You Should Never Talk to Police.
* A History of Native Americans Protesting the Dakota Access Pipeline.
* The book in question is The Total Rush – or, to use its superior English title, Blitzed – which reveals the astonishing and hitherto largely untold story of the Third Reich’s relationship with drugs, including cocaine, heroin, morphine and, above all, methamphetamines (aka crystal meth), and of their effect not only on Hitler’s final days – the Führer, by Ohler’s account, was an absolute junkie with ruined veins by the time he retreated to the last of his bunkers – but on the Wehrmacht’s successful invasion of France in 1940. Published in Germany last year, where it became a bestseller, it has since been translated into 18 languages, a fact that delights Ohler, but also amazes him.
* A brief history of gang violence in Chicago.
* Colin Kaepernick’s silent protest is a start, but what if pro athletes refused to play? Students Are Pulling a Kaepernick All Over America — and Being Threatened for It.
* And if you want a vision of the future: They’re gonna be submerging this dude in water and taking photos every 5 years until he dies.
They're gonna be submerging this dude in water and taking photos every 5 years until he dies https://t.co/Ms9H5T61Te
— Eric Harvey (@ericdharvey) September 24, 2016
Written by gerrycanavan
September 26, 2016 at 9:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with actually existing media bias, America, apocalypse, Arrival, bacteria, Barack Obama, Battle of Algiers, board games, Breaking Bad, cats, Charlotte, charter schools, Chicago, China, Chris Christie, class struggle, Colin Kaepernick, collapse, comics, computers, Dakota Access Pipeline, data, debates, democracy, Democrats, don't talk to the cops, Donald Trump, drugs, Dyson Sphere, Dyson Swarm, Electoral College, epistocracy, Erin Brockovich, eviction, ferries, film, five-second rule, food, football, futurity, games, gangs, general election 2016, Geordi LaForge, giant octopuses, graft, graveyards, guns, Hillary Clinton, history, Hitler, I grow old, inequality, lies and lying liars, luck, Mars, Milwaukee, NASA, Native Americans, Nazis, Nevermind, New Jersey, NFL, Nirvana, North Carolina, outer space, Packers, police, police brutality, policy, politics, polls, pollution, protest, Putin, race, racism, Republicans, rich people, riots, Rome, Russia, Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal, scams, science fiction, SETI, sports, Springsteen, Star Trek, Story of Your Life, Ted Chiang, Tetris, the Bronx, the circle of life, the courts, the law, The Three-Body Problem, TNG, total system failure, Tressie McMillan Cottom, Viking, violence, voting, water, white people, Wisconsin, word processing, worthy opponents
Sunday Morning Links!
* One might, it’s true, wonder how cultural capital has survived the last half century’s apotheosis of pop, the rollback of the old patrician-bourgeois culture of the West, postmodernism’s putative muddling of low and high. But the sociologists have gone and checked, and the answers are not hard to find: Fancy people are now more likely to consume culture indiscriminately, that is, to congratulate themselves on the expansiveness of their tastes; indistinction has become distinction. They are more likely to prefer foreign culture to their own, at least in some who-wants-takeout? kind of way. And they are more likely to enjoy culture analytically and ironically, belligerently positing a naïve consumer whose imagined immersion in the object will set off everything in their own approach that is suavely arms-length and slaunchwise. Such, point for point, is the ethos of the new-model English department: of cultural studies, new media, the expanded canon, of theory-courses-without-objects. To bring new types of artifacts into literature departments is not to destroy cultural capital. It is merely to allow new things to start functioning as wealth. Even here, the claim to novelty can be overstated, since it is enough to read Bourdieu to know that the claim to interpret and demystify has always been an especially heady form of symbolic power. The ingenious reading confers distinction, as do sundry bids to fix the meanings of the social. Critical theory is cultural capital. Citing Judith Butler is one of the ways in which professional people outside the academy understand and justify their own elevation. Bickering recreationally about the politics of zombie movies is just what lawyers and engineers now do.
* The Kindle edition of The Best of Kim Stanley Robinson is (still) on sale for $1.99. Here’s the LARoB review!
* Meanwhile, LARoB also reviews Paradoxa 26, which has my essay on Snowpiercer in it.
* Extrapolation 56.1 is now available.
Sherryl Vint, “Skin Deep: Alienation in Under the Skin”
Isiah Lavender, “Reframing Heart of Darkness as Science Fiction”
Sharon DeGraw, “Tobias S. Buckell’s Galactic Caribbean Future”
Karen May and David Upton, “‘Ser Piggy’: Identifying an Intertextual Relationship between William Golding’s Lord of the Flies and George R. R. Martin’s A Game of Thrones
Lee Braver, “Coin-Operated Doors and God: A Gnostic Reading of Philip K. Dick’s Ubik”
* Baltimore after Freddie Gray.
* The good inequality. Policy debate in the age of neoliberalism.
* Gene Wolfe, sci-fi’s difficult genius.
* The slow apocalypse and fiction.
* In the meantime, we will all have to cope with the fact that education technology has just become weaponized. Arizona State is now the first predator university. They are willing to re-define what education is so that they can get more students from anywhere. If they don’t kill other universities by taking all their students with a cheap freshmen year, they’ll just steal their fish food by underselling 25% of the education that those schools provide and leaving them a quarter malnourished. The result is that schools which stick to reasonable standards with respect to the frequency and possibility of teacher/student interaction now have to fear for their very existence.
* The Invented History of ‘The Factory Model of Education.’
* I’m seeing it mostly mocked and dismissed, but I think the Columbia case (K.C. Johnson summary at Minding the Campus) will be important flashpoint in Title IX law. My sense is that the wind on this is really changing strongly against the feminist left; we’re going to see many of the received truths of campus anti-rape policies coming under serious challenge. It’s going to be difficult, and it’s going to require some unpleasant reconsideration of the way we talk about this issue.
* New Simulation Shows How The Pacific Islands May Have Been Colonized.
* Incredibly, the percentage of parents throughout the state who engaged in the civil disobedience of refusing the test for their kids is higher than the 15 percent of eligible voters who cast a ballot for Andrew Cuomo in the low-turnout election last year.
* All of the juniors at Nathan Hale High School refused to show up for state testing this week.
* Against the creative economy.
* What if Man of Steel was in color?
* Gasp! The Apple Watch May Have a Human Rights Problem.
* Microsoft Word Spells the Names of Game of Thrones Characters Better Than You Can.
* Yes please: Telltale is making some kind of Marvel game.
* The Feds Say One Schmuck Trading From His Parents’ House Caused a Market Crash. Here’s the Problem.
* See, Dad? I knew you could survive on girl scout cookies.
* There’s always money in the banana stand: The Fed’s Cold War Bunker Had $4 Billion Cash For After The Apocalypse.
* Won’t you give? What you can? Today? Poetry is going extinct, government data show.
* I believe any crazy story with China in the headline. That’s my policy.
* Kid, I’ve flown from one side of this galaxy to the other, and I’ve seen a lot of strange stuff, but I’ve never seen anything to make me believe that there’s one all-powerful Force controlling everything.
Written by gerrycanavan
April 26, 2015 at 8:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, ADHD, adjunctification, adjuncts, adminsitrative blight, algorithms, Andrew Cuomo, apocalypse, Arizona State University, Baltimore, body cameras, books, bunkers, childhood, China, class struggle, climate change, Columbia, comics, contingency, Cornel West, creative economy, cultural capital, DC Comics, delicious Girl Scout cookies, disasters, do what you love, earthquakes, ecology, English departments, Eric Garner, Extrapolation, finance capital, flash crashes, Frank Miller, Freddie Gray, funerals, Game of Thrones, games, gender, Gene Wolfe, George R. R. Martin, high-frequency trading, How the University Works, inequality, Jedi, journals, kids today, Kim Stanley Robinson, Man of Steel, Marquette, Marvel, medicine, meritocracy, Microsoft Word, money, MOOCs, my scholarly empire, NBA, necrofuturism, neoliberalism, Nepal, New York, nuclear war, nuclearity, NYPD, over-educated literary theory PhDs, Pacific Ocean, pedagogy, poetry, police, police brutality, police violence, Polynesia, protest, race, racism, rape, rape culture, science fiction, Seattle, slow violence, Snowpiercer, sports, standardized testing, strippers, student movements, Superman, Telltale Games, The Dark Knight Returns, the Force, the wisdom of markets, theory, there's always money in the banana stand, Title IX, Won't somebody think of the children?, Yoda, Zack Snyder, zombies
Spring! Break! Forever! Links!
* The Department of Special Collections and University Archives will host an upcoming talk by Tolkien scholar Janet Brennan Croft March 26, at 4:30 p.m. in the Raynor Memorial Libraries Beaumier Suites. Croft is the author of “Barrel Rides and She-Elves: Audience and ‘Anticipation’ in Peter Jackson’s Hobbit Trilogy,” and has written on film adaptions of J.R.R. Tolkien’s works. The talk will explore Tolkien’s “Hobbit Trilogy” in regards to audience expectations, the difficulties of filming a prequel after a sequel, and issues of anticipation in relation to character development.
* The death of writing – if James Joyce were alive today he’d be working for Google.
* In Amsterdam, a revolt against the neoliberal university.
* The persistence of inequality.
* How A Traveling Consultant Helps America Hide The Homeless.
* Working-Class Women at the MLA Interview.
* Checking flights now: Kim Stanley Robinson Week at Ralahine.
* Using Science Fiction to Re-Envision Justice.
* Arab Sci-Fi: The future is here.
* ‘House of Cards’ is the worst show about American politics. Ever. On the perfunctoriness of House of Cards.
* Unarmed teenager shot by police in Madison. Students march.
* Meanwhile, Milwaukee’s sheriff wants attention.
* The Unfortunate Fate of Sweet Briar’s Professors. This headline really buries the lede:
Of course, faculty members aren’t the only employees who are taking a hit. Rainville suggested that nearly a third of the college’s hourly workers are descendants of the Fletcher plantation’s original slave community. Some of the staff members have worked at Sweet Briar their entire adult lives.
* Detenuring and its discontents.
* Marina Warner on the disfiguring of higher education.
* What Obama’s ‘Student Aid Bill of Rights’ Will — and Won’t — Do. Student Loans Viewed Differently Than Other Debt, Study Finds.
* Fear of a Muslim Planet. From TNI #38: “Futures.”
* Islamophobic Bus Ads In San Francisco Are Being Defaced With Kamala Khan.
* Finally, a technological solution to the problem of taking attendance!
* LARPing Hamlet at Castle Elsinore.
* These Photos Beautifully Capture the Complex Relationship Between Mothers and Daughters. These are really amazing. Many more links after the photo.
* Austerity won’t collapse under its own contradictions. We’ll need a movement for that.
* It’s a mistake to ask whether this is wealthy people defending their financial interests or wealthy people expressing their ideology, or which motivation is reallyin the driver’s seat. The triumph of modern conservatism is that it has collapsed the distinction. The interests of the wealthy are the ideology. Fossil fuels are the ideology. They’re bubbling in the same ethno-nationalist stew as anti-immigrant sentiment, hawkish foreign policy, hostility toward the social safety net, and fetishism of guns, suburbs, and small towns. It’s all one identity now. The Kochs (and their peers) are convinced that their unfettered freedom is in the best interests of the country. There’s no tension.
* What happens when Queen Elizabeth dies?
* Native language study at UWM.
* Judge Says University Failed to Shield Professor From Colleagues’ Retaliation. Yeah, sure sounds like it.
* It is now twelve months to the day that I set myself the task of, for one full year, reading books only by straight, white, middle-class, Anglopone, cis male authors. During that time I read 144 books. The things I learned in my year of selective reading made me pretty glad to have persevered.
Ph.D. students will receive 4 percent more in total compensation for their work as teaching assistants, bringing the average annual compensation up to approximately $36,600. The agreement also guarantees yearly minimum wage increases of 2.25 to 2.50 percent through 2020. For graduate employees at NYU’s Polytechnic School of Engineering, some of whom currently make only $10 an hour, hourly wages will increase to $15 next fall and reach $20 by 2020. Those employees will also receive a $1,500 bonus for work done over the past three semesters.
* Diving into the weeds: Is University of Oklahoma frat’s racist chant protected by 1st Amendment? 5 Ways Fraternities Are Wielding Major Influence Over University Administrations. A decade of bad press hasn’t hurt fraternity membership numbers. A Brief and Recent History of Bigotry at Fraternities.
* Flexible online education can never fail, it can only be failed.
* Small Private College Shuts Down, Donates Campus to the University of Iowa.
* Mass Firings in History at Boise State.
* The U.S. is being overrun by a wave of anti-science, anti-intellectual thinking. Has the most powerful nation on Earth lost its mind?
* Florida Officials Ban The Term ‘Climate Change.’
* Climate Change Is Altering Everything About The Way Water Is Provided In Salt Lake City.
* The Desertification of Mongolia. Still not done, more links below.
* Introducing the Gawker Media SecureDrop.
* Buffy is old enough to go through that weird test they make Slayers go through when they turn 18.
* Is Scott Walker the most dangerous man in America?
* The troubled history of the foreskin.
* I’m honestly amazed the insurers were letting Harrison Ford fly small planes to begin with.
* In the U.S., a notary public does unglamorous legal drudge work. But in many Latin American countries, a notario is an ill-defined but powerful figure with broad legal authority, often someone with the connections needed to navigate bureaucracies that, while arcane, are also flexible. Unscrupulous notarios in the U.S. exploit these facts to con immigrants into believing that all it takes to finally get legal is the right person to file the paperwork.
* Emily Yoffe has another piece at Slate arguing against the current approach to sexual assault at colleges, this time framed around The Hunting Ground.
* English Has a New Preposition, Because Internet.
* Dystopia in our time: “Why Buzzfeed Is The Most Important News Organization in the World.”
* The end of cable: HBO is coming to Apple TV.
* I have altered the Expanded Universe. Pray I do not alter it further. But at least progress marches on.
* Gasp! Airbnb Is Making Things Worse for LA Renters.
* Meritocracy watch: Chelsea Clinton Absolutely Open to Running for Office.
* How Reddit Became a Worse Black Hole of Violent Racism than Stormfront.
* “A simple design fluke and marketing are afoot here. When Gard accidentally increased her breast size by 150 percent, the creative team insisted it was maintained. The parent company’s marketing team found this to be a boon to breaking through the noise that would buoy their success.”
* Porntopia: A trip to the Adult Video News Awards.
* In 1923, Daylight Saving Time Was Actually Illegal In Some States. It’s time to make daylight saving time year-round. PFT speaks.
* The salary you need to buy a home in 27 U.S. cities.
* These maps show where the world’s youngest and oldest people live.
* Ottawa doctors behind breakthrough multiple sclerosis study. This sounds amazing. I hope it’s true.
* Coming this October: Back in Time: The Back to the Future documentary.
* You know, like Ghostbusters, but Ph-balanced for a man.
* Scenes from the class struggle at NBC News.
* Day-in, day-out, Calvin keeps running into evidence that the world isn’t built to his (and our) specifications. All humor is, in one way or another, about our resistance to that evidence. The Moral Philosophy of Calvin and Hobbes.
* Men make their own brackets, but they do not make them as they please. Marx Madness. Via MarxFi.
* And they say our culture is no longer capable of producing great things.
Written by gerrycanavan
March 11, 2015 at 2:12 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with politics, books, science fiction, optimism, Utopia, ecology, film, Calvin and Hobbes, climate change, writing, television, education, Marxism, Star Wars, protest, language, time travel, academia, academic jobs, maps, Tolkien, America, documentary, San Francisco, science, words, race, torture, moral panic, philosophy, Iowa, Marx, Buffy, unions, police brutality, dystopia, slavery, water, pornography, HBO, ideology, aging, Joss Whedon, immigration, English, James Joyce, United Kingdom, Kim Stanley Robinson, Native American issues, democracy, Back to the Future, futurity, Ghostbusters, Florida, Wisconsin, desertification, Harrison Ford, Hamlet, March Madness, class struggle, free speech, student movements, How the University Works, Google, anti-intellectualism, puns, exploitation, social justice, actually existing media bias, Gawker, MLA, neoliberalism, Utah, rape culture, inequality, meritocracy, Oklahoma, homelessness, insurance, Islam, NBC, Islamophobia, denialism, cable, wealth, Daylight Savings Time, white privilege, Milwaukee, photography, NYU, austerity, the past isn't over it isn't even past, Amsterdam, foreskins, student debt, Middle East, Scott Walker, war on education, fraternities, racism, Reddit, income inequality, Marquette, whiteness, Tomb Raider, rape, MOOCs, Big Sugar, The New Inquiry, UWM, flexible online education, Madison, police violence, Ms. Marvel, home ownership, House of Cards, the rich are different, Airbnb, Boise State, Buzzfeed, cost of living, Chelsea Clinton, Expanded Universe, prison abolition, the Netherlands, Brian Williams, teeth, Sweet Briar, detenuring, Kamala Khan, attendance, LARPing, mothers and daughters, Queen Elizabeth, graduate student movements, Mongolia, Salt Lake City, small planes, notary publics, Lara Croft, porntopia, intergenerational struggle, multiple sclerosis, Back in Time
Spring Break Monday Links
* Reaching My Autistic Son Through Disney. What a story. I bawled.
* Apocalyptic flooding scheduled for Wisconsin.
* Hampton, Florida, the little town so corrupt even the rest of Florida thinks it’s gone too far.
* Women run just a quarter of the biggest art museums in the United States and Canada, and they earn about a third less than their male counterparts, according to a report released on Friday by the Association of Art Museum Directors, a professional organization.
* The greatest secret of American manhood is: We are afraid of other men. Masculinity as Homophobia.
* Union research document says Obamacare will hasten income inequality. When job creators create lousy jobs.
* At best, job creation is merely an inadequate palliative for years of deep recession. At worst, it’s an active strategy for redirecting wealth upwards and further immiserating the working class. Quantify that.
* Not even climate change will kill off capitalism.
* Millennials in adulthood. Millennials and college degrees. The Self(ie) Generation. College Grads Taking Low-Wage Posts Displace Less Educated. Are Millennials different?
* Annals of Obama negotiating with himself.
* A theory of neoliberalism: Wages versus Assets.
* Democrats are really starting in with the surrender-to-hopelessness blitz EARLY this cycle. Meanwhile.
* A rare sociological analysis of Federal Reserve policy confirms what many economists already knew: top central bank officials missed the oncoming crisis because they failed to make the connection between housing, the banking industry and the economy. I don’t know; my rule is never attribute to incompetence what can be adequately explained by soulless millionaires cynically cashing out.
* If you pirate a digital copy of The Triple Package, use the find and replace function. Find “successful cultural group” replace with “bourgeoisie” and then the book will become a coherent and honest provocation, rather than the triple package of neurosis, projection, and obfuscation that it really is.
* Maternal mortality rates are falling in every industrialised nation – except for the United States.
* The latest for the “every cop is a criminal” file.
* The latest for the “lolz you didn’t write the laws right” file.
* Do I read this right? An off-duty cop shot somebody and the other guy got charged with assault?
* The unrelenting gaze of the police never wavers in Milwaukee.
* Detroit Scam City: How The Red Wings Took Hockeytown For All It Had.
* de Blasio vs charters in NYC. How charter schools get students they want. In the great efforts they are expending to exclude the students that are the most difficult to educate, charter schools are lending more credence to my argument about the arrow of causation in our perception of school quality than I could ever generate.
* Mother Canada? Is that a thing? Displays of Canadian nationalism always seem off to me. Letting down the side, Canada.
* South by Southwest’s unpaid labor problem: Why it’s risking a class action lawsuit.
* Cartoonist Chris Ware on outsider art, reading aloud and the Common Core.
* I had no idea just disintegrating in midair was something that could just happen to planes. I wish I didn’t know it now.
* Wages for Sea World animals: Yes, California Can Really Ban Shamu, Legal Experts Say. Can’t they just argue exploiting whales and making their lives miserable is free speech? That’s how it works with humans.
* I was saying this weekend (1, 2, 3) that voting for Rand Paul is not as irrational as it might seem at first glance, given the unilateral powers the executive branch has in the U.S. and his stated opposition to the war on drugs and the war on terror. What’s interesting is that Rand Paul himself absolutely does not want me to hold this opinion.
* Can We Learn About Privacy From Porn Stars?
* 11 of the Weirdest Solutions to the Fermi Paradox.
* A brief history of nonsense.
* Too late! We already designed modern cities around it.
* Great walls to end tornadoes in our time? What could possibly go wrong?
* Truth and reconciliation in Guatemala.
* Towards White History Month.
In 2007, Gary Younge (he is an ally) suggested that what we all needed is a White History Month. Gary reminded us: “So much of Black History Month takes place in the passive voice. Leaders ‘get assassinated,’ patrons ‘are refused’ service, women ‘are ejected’ from public transport. So the objects of racism are many but the subjects few. In removing the instigators, the historians remove the agency and, in the final reckoning, the historical responsibility … There is no month when we get to talk about [James] Blake [the white busdriver challenged by Rosa Parks]; no opportunity to learn the fates of J.W. Milam and Roy Bryant, who murdered Emmett Till; no time set aside to keep track of Victoria Price and Ruby Bates, whose false accusations of rape against the Scottsboro Boys sent five innocent young black men to jail. Wouldn’t everyone–particularly white people–benefit from becoming better acquainted with these histories?”
* And Rebecca Onion has a 1940s Board Game for French Kids Taught Tactics for Successful Colonialism.
Written by gerrycanavan
March 10, 2014 at 8:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, Airbnb, airplanes, aliens, animal rights, animals, apocalypse, austerity, autism, aviation, Barack Obama, Blackfish, California, Canada, cars, charter schools, Chris Ware, CIA, class action lawsuits, class struggle, climate change, college, colonialism, comics, common core, concealed carry, corruption, cultural preservation, Detroit, Dinosaur Comics, Disney, drill baby drill, drones, ecology, education-industrial complex, ethnicity, every cop is a criminal, extraordinary popular delusions and the madness of crowds, Fermi paradox, flooding, Florida, forever war, France, games, gender, general election 2016, geoengineering, Great Recession, Guatemala, guns, Hampton, health care, Hillary Clinton, history, hockey, homophobia, hopelessness, How the University Works, Idaho, inequality, job creators, kids, labor work, masculinity, memorials, midterm election 2014, millennials, Milwaukee, misogyny, modernity, mortality, Mother Canada, museums, nationalism, neoliberalism, New York, nonsense, our brains work in interesting ways, parenting, police, politics, pornography, post-employment economy, pregnancy, privacy, race, racism, Rand Paul, scams, scholarship, Sea World, sexism, sharing economy, stadiums, surveillance society, taxes, the courts, the economy, the law, tornadoes, truth and reconciliation commissions, Uber, unemployment, war on drugs, war on education, war on terror, What could possibly go wrong?, White History Month, Wisconsin, women, Won't somebody think of the children?, worst financial crisis since the last one, Zipcar
Thursday Night Bummerwatch
* With all the bad news today, this is the one that really breaks my brain: Texas Says It’s OK to Shoot an Escort If She Won’t Have Sex With You. That’s completely lunatic. I just can’t believe it’s a real event that happened.
* My friend Brent Bellamy has a working bibliography of U.S. post-apocalyptic fiction.
* Inequality, MOOCs and The Predator Elite.
Think about the writing-for-free model that has taken over journalism. His point can be supported by the millions made by Arianna Huffington, while many of her writers worked for little or nothing. Yes, writing is one of what Lanier is calling the “pleasant” jobs — as is teaching (I didn’t say easy. But dedicated writers and educators alike see what they do as rewarding and important work.) Why should journalists or educators be working for little to no money, living at the edge of poverty, while the people at the top of this sort of economic structure are reaping enormous fortune? According to Lanier, this is a conscious breach of the all-important social contract that not only provides what he calls the “hump” of middle class citizens — that middle area surge on the economic chart where the majority of people fall — but that large, sustained middle class keeps the rest of the system going. Without it, the economy fails, as does democracy itself.
* A Dangerous Supplement: Speculative Realism, Academic Blogging, and the Future of Philosophy.
* Silicon Valley’s Awful Race and Gender Problem in 3 Mind-Blowing Charts.
* And MetaFilter goes inside World War Z, a film “already being called the biggest flop in film history.” So at least there’s that.
Written by gerrycanavan
June 6, 2013 at 9:59 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, America, apocalypse, blogging, capitalism, charts, class struggle, dangerous supplement, don't work for free, elites, gender, guns, How the University Works, inequality, misogyny, MOOCs, neoliberalism, oligarchy, OOO, philosophy, prostitution, race, rape, rape culture, science fiction, sexism, Silicon Valley, speculative realism, stand your ground, Texas, theory, true crime, World War Z, zombies
Thursday!
* At last we have it in English. Summa Technologiae, originally published in Polish in 1964, is the cornerstone of Stanislaw Lem’s oeuvre, his consummate work of speculative nonfiction. Trained in medicine and biology, Lem synthesizes the current science of the day in ways far ahead of most science fiction of the time.
* Compassion and Hubris: The Dalai Lama Speaks to the Wisconsin Legislature.
According to one observer, “the ones who fell asleep (or at least appeared to be asleep) [were] Tranel, Marklein, Pridemore, Tittl, Hutton, Bies, Nass, Tiffany, and Knodl. It was hard to tell with some of them, but Tranel was definitely asleep. Nerison, who sits next to him, shook him awake at one point.”
* Tressie McMillan Cottom on MOOCs.
I think we have to accept that traditional colleges like ours have benefited from inequality. That’s biting us in the ass now because it’s being used to say we’re elitist as if we weren’t designed to do precisely what we’re doing. I mean c’mon. So let’s accept that part of our own story and say yeah we’ve got other stories too.
Jonathan Rees has been pounding the MOOC beat for weeks; here’s his latest roundup.
* Yale fined $165,000 for underreporting sex offenses. Is that a lot of money? You might very well think so.
* The Freud Museum announced earlier this week that it needed £5000 to restore Freud’s couch, the centerpiece of a study crammed with other relics, a cluttered cabinet of antique curiosities that Freud called his ‘old and dirty gods’.
* Jennie Runk: My life as a ‘plus-size’ model.
* Dzhokhar Tsarnaev left a note.
* And the headline reads, “Venezuela Has Run Out of Toilet Paper.”
Written by gerrycanavan
May 16, 2013 at 9:47 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, adjuncts, body image, Boston, Boston marathon, class struggle, crisis, Dalai Lama, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, feminism, Freud, Freud's couch, How the University Works, inequality, misogyny, MOOCs, morally odious morons, plus-size modeling, politics, rape, rape culture, science fiction, sexism, Stanislaw Lem, terrorism, toilet paper, Venezuela, Wisconsin, Yale
Tuesday Afternoon!
* PSA from Charlie Stross: Ignore the news.
Just a brief reminder that news is bad for you. No, seriously: publicly available news media in the 21st century exist solely to get eyeballs on advertisements. That is its only real purpose. The real news consists of dull but informative reports circulated by consultancies giving in-depth insight into what’s going on. The sort of stuff you find digested in the inside pages of The Economist. All else is comics. As there’s an arms race going on between advertising sales departments, the major news outlets are constantly trying to make their product more addictive. And like most other addictive substance, news is a depressant, one fine-tuned to make you keep coming back for more.
* As if you needed a reason: Tetris may treat PTSD.
* Inequality and the New York City subway.
* Why you can’t have nice things: pro-austerity economicists are liars or incompetents (take your pick). How Much Unemployment Was Caused by Reinhart and Rogoff’s Arithmetic Mistake? It’s great that when challenged they retreat to the more defensible claim that their work is actually irrelevant, but many policymakers and pundits seem to feel otherwise.
* “What companies like is just-in-time learning that gives somebody a skill they need at the time they need it,” says Mark Allen, a Pepperdine University business professor and author of The Next Generation of Corporate Universities. “What traditional universities do to a large extent is just-in-case learning.”
* Our bubble-headed, zombie-creating reliance on high-stakes testing.
And contrary to the claims of test-makers, the tests aren’t getting better. Despite hundreds of millions of dollars in taxpayer funds, they’re getting worse.
* Universities Need to Innovate, But Put Down the Sledgehammer.
* The birth of critical university studies.
* The Chronicle profiles David Graeber as academic in exile.
* Software to detect student plagiarism is faced with renewed criticism from the faculty members who may confront more plagiarism than do most of their colleagues – college writing professors.
* Lost Generation: The Terrifying Reality of Long-Term Unemployment.
* Is nothing sacred? NC governor takes aim at addiction on campus.
* New App Prevents Icelanders from Sleeping With their Relatives.
* And your 2012 tax receipt. Enjoy those fighter jets!
Written by gerrycanavan
April 16, 2013 at 4:31 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, actually existing media bias, alcoholism, austerity, Charlie Stross, charts, class struggle, critical university studies, David Graeber, economics, games, Great Recession, How the University Works, Iceland, inequality, journamalism, just-in-time learning, lies and lying liars, lost generations, military-industrial complex, MOOCs, neoliberalism, New York, news is bad for you, North Carolina, pedagogy, plagiarism, politics, PTSD, sex, standardized testing, subway maps, taxes, teaching, Tetris, the subway, UNC, unemployment, war on education, worst financial crisis since the last one
Links from Thursday
* I’m traversing a landscape under endless gray cloud cover, the ground softened to the consistency of flesh by a long night of rain. I pass through areas that look like small cities, sprawls of gray buildings groped by the fingers of decay, but almost deserted – whatever people I see are glazed over, lurking in doorways and around corners. The rest of the journey is through light woods, among leafless trees… or over swamps, the endless texture of jaundiced reeds broken up by stagnant brown streams. Occasionally, I pass a hulking structure of brick and iron, falling apart from the inside, begging to be demolished so people can stop asking what it was ever for. Is this Castlevania? Or is it New Jersey? How 8- and 16-bit Games Taught Me the Power of Dread.
* Andrew Hickey reviews Before Watchmen.
Keith Giffen and J. M. DeMatteis are both people who understand comics storytelling in a way that Didio can only dream of. And they realised, reading Watchmen, what any quarter-literate person would. They realised that no-one *actually* wanted a new story about Rorshach. (The fact that plenty of people now *do* want new stories about Rorshach tells us more about comics fans than we would really like to know)…
* Roseanne’s not-at-all-a-stunt-why-would-you-say-that campaign for the White House kicks off.
As it happens, legalization of marijuana is the first issue in the political platform posted on Ms. Barr’s website. She said she has a prescription to use the drug for glaucoma in California and vowed to smoke a joint at a public press conference if she is victorious in the Golden State’s Green Party primary this week.“I don’t really smoke it, but I have a salve of it, you know, and if you rub it into your wrists, you don’t get high,” Ms. Barr said. “You’re not getting high but you feel release. I have salve and I have cookies.”
Other issues on Ms. Barr’s platform include ending the Federal Reserve, stopping “debt slavery” by “forgiving all school loans,” withdrawing military support for Israel and making war “obsolete.”
But will she cancel Terror Tuesdays?
* Nate Silver’s election model, which is always right except when it isn’t, puts Obama’s chances of reelection at 60%.
* Matt Yglesias writes the “life choices” rant I threatened to write the other day. The War on Women by the Ridiculous Numbers.
* UNC-Greensboro’s Own™ Natasha Trethewey is the new Poet Laureate.
* And Jason Jones with a super-helpful ProfHacker: Track Changes on an iPad with Office2.
Written by gerrycanavan
June 7, 2012 at 8:04 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, Barack Obama, Before Watchmen, Castlevania, eco-terrorism, ecology, ELF, FBI, feminism, games, general election 2012, Green Party, How the University Works, inequality, iPad, misogyny, Natasha Trethewey, Nate Silver, New Jersey, Nintendo, Occupy Cal, pedagogy, poetry, police brutality, politics, Roseanne Barr, violence, Watchmen
‘Universities Will Not Survive as Research Institutions unless University Leadership Realises That the Working Conditions They Offer Dramatically Reduce the Size of the Pool from which They Recruit’
Written by gerrycanavan
May 25, 2012 at 2:30 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, academic jobs, feminism, inequality, tenure
Tuesday Night Quick Links
* Michael Bérubé introduces the MLA’s new Academic Workforce Data Center.
* If the Court does declare the act unconstitutional, it would have ruled that Congress lacks the power to adopt what it thought the most effective, efficient, fair, and politically workable remedy—not because that national remedy would violate anyone’s rights, or limit anyone’s liberty in ways a state government could not, or be otherwise unfair, but for the sole reason that in the Court’s opinion our constitution is a strict and arbitrary document that denies our national legislature the power to enact the only politically possible national program. If that opinion were right, we would have to accept that our eighteenth- century constitution is not the enduring marvel of statesmanship we suppose but an anachronistic, crippling burden we cannot escape, a straitjacket that makes it impossible for us to achieve a just national society.
* Guantanamo Lawyers: Obama Gets Away With Legal Moves Bush Wouldn’t Have.
* A Woman’s Lifetime Earnings Lost To Pay Gap Could Feed A Family Of Four For 37 Years.
* Justice Department officials have known for years that flawed forensic work might have led to the convictions of potentially innocent people, but prosecutors failed to notify defendants or their attorneys even in many cases they knew were troubled.
* If global warming weren’t a myth I might actually be a little nervous.
Written by gerrycanavan
April 17, 2012 at 10:30 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with "Is Health Care Reform Constitutional?", academia, academic jobs, adjuncts, Barack Obama, Bush, California, Department of Justice, Duke, global warming, Guantánamo, health care, How the University Works, inequality, Michael Bérubé, MLA, police corruption, police state, politics, reality is a hoax, rule of law, Supreme Court, the Constitution, true crime, war on education
Thursday Links
* The Committee on Climate Change report, with the hairy-sounding title “Statutory Advice on Inclusion of International Aviation and Shipping,” says that in 2050, the UK’s emissions reductions across the whole economy will cost 1-2 percent of the total GDP. THE PRICE IS TOO HIGH LET THE PLANET BURN
* It’s come to this: raising taxes and cutting defense spending are so unthinkable that they literally don’t even count as policy proposals.
* This op-ed on the difficulty of a career in academia honestly only scratches the surface of how bad it can get. In the U.S. academy, for instance, the heteronormative perspective that is usually taken up as exemplary deeply obscures the costs of the job search on gay and lesbian academics, for whom movement between states and between institutions can mean radical shifts in their basic rights.
Kathleen Lynch, professor of equality studies at University College Dublin, has argued that the idealised academic has no ties or responsibilities to limit their capacity to work. “To be a successful academic is to be unencumbered by caring,” she says.
It’s a terrible way to force people to live.
* Lukas Neville, a doctoral student at Queen’s University in Ontario, reports in the latest issue of Psychological Science that there’s more evidence of academic dishonesty in U.S. states with bigger gaps between the rich and the poor. Those gaps, he speculates, erode trust among people—something that’s been found by other researchers—and less trust means more cheating.
* Some lovely anti-education agitprop in the Atlantic that, as is typical, bears absolutely no relationship to how the academic job market actually works:
After finishing their dissertations, PhDs are hired by a college, based on publication records, the reputations of their references, and the name of their graduate programs. If they happen to have picked up a little classroom experience through a temporary position, it is rarely considered by hiring committees.
Right, that’s totally how it goes.
* Detroit photography beyond ruin porn: Dennis Maitland.
* From the archives: Vice Visits the Great Pacific Garbage Patch. Via Longform.org.
* 15 writers’ bedrooms. They’re just like us!
* And 45 to go: Connecticut may be latest state to repeal death penalty.
Written by gerrycanavan
April 5, 2012 at 1:07 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, academic jobs, America, cheating, class struggle, climate change, Connecticut, corporations, death penalty, defense spending, Detroit, ecology, garbage, gay rights, Great Pacific Garbage Patch, How the University Works, inequality, just raise taxes, marriage equality, McCarthyism, my particular demographic, pedagogy, photography, plagiarism, politics, pollution, ruins, Steve King, the budget, the debt, the deficit, vegetarians, war on education, writers, writing