Posts Tagged ‘Iraq War’
Friday Links!
* CFP: A special issue of Science Fiction Film and Television on gaming.
* Happening today at Duke: Whose Crisis? Whose University? Abolitionist Study in and beyond Global Higher Education.
* You’ve heard of the gig economy, but what about the gig academy?
* While an economic downturn is on the horizon, this is happening *before* the recession has begun.
So far this year, the MLA job lists shows 518 jobs total, at all levels, in all languages. That amount would have to more than triple to reach the total, 1871, for the *worst* year on this chart, 2015-16, the last for which the MLA has released data. pic.twitter.com/wv9Jw2VzP9
— Gerard Holmes (@ihaventreadit) October 9, 2019
* One small victory: Update: UC Irvine Grants Lecturer Paid Leave.
* Drunk with power in Wisconsin: State Assembly Approves Gubernatorial Veto Change.
* The 2018 and 2019 Nobel Prizes in Literature go to Olga Tokarczuk and Peter Handke. 1 out of 2 ain’t bad…
STOCKHOLM —The Swedish Academy announced Wednesday that the 2027 Nobel Prize for Literature had been awarded to the anonymous writer known as Q “for genre defying work that transcends traditional literary media platforms and questions the nature of our reality.”
— Jacob Brogan (@Jacob_Brogan) October 10, 2019
* Phillip Pullman: Philip Pullman on Children’s Literature and the Critics Who Disdain It.
* Since the 2016 election, the American press has fixated on rural communities and created a dubious new genre: the Trump Country Safari.
* The moment of constitutional crisis always approaches but never arrives. This is the constitutional crisis we feared. The Final Demise of “Adults in the Room.” Two Giuliani Associates Who Helped Him on Ukraine Charged With Campaign-Finance Violations. Alas, Rudy!
Two of the president’s fixers arrested at the airport while trying to flee the country seems like it ought to be a bigger story
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) October 10, 2019
* Joe Biden’s Case for the Presidency Is Collapsing. Elizabeth Warren is now leading the 2020 polls.
* What if the world treated the U.S. like a rogue state?
* How a Jim Crow law still shapes Mississippi’s elections.
* The nightmare of class society is that it turns even the most generous human impulse — to find something common across difference — into a machine for reproducing hierarchy and injustice. Ruling Class Superfriends.
The idea that Bush has the relationship to young people today that Reagan had when I was coming up, and that I’m now the old person trying to explain to people that he was Actually Bad, is very upsetting to me.
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) October 9, 2019
Yes, the Iraq War is the headline, but Bush and his administration poisoned this country in almost every conceivable way, from cynically demogauging gay marriage to creating ICE, DHS, and a national surveillance state. Hell, he was whipping votes for Kavanuagh just last year.
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) October 9, 2019
it really is an amazing edit https://t.co/4VPKCHtkKM
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) October 9, 2019
[Hitler is on The Tonight Show]
LENO: Let me start with question number one…
[audience laughter]
LENO: What the hell were you thinking?
[audience loses it]
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) October 9, 2019
* The Radical Guidebook Embraced by Google Workers and Uber Drivers.
* The Making of the American Gulag.
* 10 Years with Hayao Miyazaki.
* The Day Our Galaxy Exploded.
* News from the Anthropocene: Massive power shut-off to hit 800,000 customers, could extend nearly a week. PG&E diverted safety money for profit, bonuses. PG&E power shut-offs leave ill and disabled struggling. Power Shutoffs Can’t Save California From Wildfire Hell. Fire breaks out anyway.
Me, when anyone blames PG&E for the situation: ah, you rube, let me explain climate change. You see, hot air flows off the high desert…
Me, whenever anyone blames it on climate change: wake up, you idiot, let me blow your mind about PG&E's deferred maintenance
— Aaron Bady (@zunguzungu) October 9, 2019
so far it’s a tweet pic.twitter.com/8nTvJsPLxC
— Laura Fisher (@termitetree) October 10, 2019
* Lonely, burned out, and depressed: The state of millennials’ mental health in 2019.
* Today in the nightmare society.
* How Antarctica is melting from above and below. Tornado Alley has moved 500 miles east in the last few decades. Temperatures in Denver dropped 64 degrees in less than 24 hours, setting a record.
* Beware the climate pragmatists.
Capitalism collapses every 10 or 15 years and has essentially summoned a climate meteor to wipe out all life on earth, and people are literally staring at the abyss of human extinction like "its the only system that works."
— Jeremiah Red🌹 (@_Floodlight) October 10, 2019
* Google’s core business is misinforming people, but sometimes they do it on a pro bono basis.
* A lost decade and $200,000: one dad’s crusade to save his daughters from addiction.
* Understanding the professional-managerial class.
* Historian Gavriel D. Rosenfeld’s new book, The Fourth Reich: The Specter of Nazism from World War II to the Present, presents the actual history of one of those possible branches. It traces the development of the idea of the Fourth Reich—a resurgent, Nazi-like regime based in apocalyptic visions and quasi-religious ethnonationalism. Though the Fourth Reich never actually took power in Germany or elsewhere, Rosenfeld shows how the idea itself has been influential. His account helps us to understand why the Fourth Reich never came to fruition—and what we can do to make sure it remains a counterfactual.
* From the archives: Tribal Map of America Shows Whose Land You’re Actually Living On.
* Research finds uranium in Navajo women, babies.
* Study: a nuclear war between India and Pakistan could lead to a mini-nuclear winter.
* Fairly certain that crude oil is a genuine eldritch horror.
Fairly certain that crude oil is a genuine eldritch horror.
• lied in wait in the Earth's crust for literally millions of years
• made from the dead bodies of creatures nobody in recorded history has ever seen alive
• almost immediately granted us advanced technology— ☁️ Peryton's Shadow 👤 (@YseultCeirw) October 9, 2019
• naturally occurring, yet has a scent incomparable to any other natural substance
• pitch black liquid
• kills anything it touches
• using it to make anything kills everything it DOESN'T touch, but very slowly
• inexplicably addictive to the money-poisoned— ☁️ Peryton's Shadow 👤 (@YseultCeirw) October 9, 2019
• Is the cause of the mass extinction event we're currently experiencing, and that 95% of people are completely unaware of or outright deny.
— ☁️ Peryton's Shadow 👤 (@YseultCeirw) October 9, 2019
* A tale of two Arthurs. Why We Shouldn’t Fear Joker.
* The Real Threat of ‘Joker’ Is Hiding in Plain Sight: What the film wants to say — about mental illness or class divisions in society — is not as interesting as what it accidentally says about whiteness.
* Rewatching Taxi Driver in the Age of Joker.
* So I do know what it’s like to be a bat.
Turns out bats talk and 60% of what they say is arguments, including a whole category of calls for “males making unwanted mating advances” and another for when “a bat argues with another bat sitting too close.“ https://t.co/DasX9Oo3Ah
— Celeste Ng (@pronounced_ing) October 8, 2019
Written by gerrycanavan
October 11, 2019 at 9:29 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with abolition, academic jobs, addition, adjunctification, adjuncts, America, animals, anime, Antarctica, apocalypse, bats, books, Bush, Californias, capitalism, CFPs, cheating to win, children's literature, class struggle, climate change, Constitutional crisis, Democratic primary 2020, Democrats, Denver, Donald Trump, drugs, Duke, dystopia, ecology, Elizabeth Warren, Ellen DeGeneres, Facebook, film, games, gig academy, gig economy, Google, Hayao Miyazaki, Hitler, How the University Works, impeachment, India, indigenous issues, Iraq War, Jim Crow, Joe Biden, Joker, labor, Lovecraft, millennials, Mississippi, MLA, my scholarly empire, Nobel Peace Prize, nuclear winter, oil, opioids, over-educated literary theory PhDs, Pakistan, PG&E, Phillip Pullman, politics, prison, prison-industrial complex, recession, Republicans, rogue states, Rudy Giuliani, San Francisco, Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal, science, science fiction, Science Fiction Film and Television, science fiction studies, Sesame Street, social media, something something Nobel Prize, the Anthropocene, the cosmos, the Southwest, the university in ruins, tornadoes, trauma, Uber, UC Irvine, Ukraine, unions, uranium, wildfires, Wisconsin, work, worst financial crisis since the last one
Memorial Day Links!
The worst part of my late thirties is the terrible recognition that somewhere deep down I *do* take pride in a mowed lawn.
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) May 28, 2017
* This weekend I got a chance to read an advance copy of Iain M. Banks, from the Modern Masters of Science Fiction series. It’s great! Highly recommended for fans of the Culture or of space opera more generally. Alfred Bester, which I also read this weekend, was great too!
* Anyway, who’s ready to be a walking blood-bag for an immortal tech lich?
* What Will Kill Neoliberalism? My money is on the managerial class one but with cash-for-sterilization and euthanasia payouts for the poors.
* 50 años de Cien años de soledad.
* Jared! Jared! Jared! Jared! Jared!
* In the United States, the Trump Organization took Mr. Davies’s coat of arms for its own, making one small adjustment — replacing the word “Integritas,” Latin for integrity, with “Trump.”
The best ones, of course, are the ones they don’t have to change at all. pic.twitter.com/WXz747czMm
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) May 28, 2017
* What Mr. Trump got was a pair of lawsuits: one filed by Ms. Nwanguma and the other by one of Candidate Trump’s most fervent young admirers among the white nationalist movement, Mr. Heimbach.
* This country is officially a global laughing stock. Or worse.
* That third bill, the “Michael Davis, Jr. and Danny Oliver in Honor of State and Local Law Enforcement Act,” which appeared in a tweeted photo of White House strategist Steve Bannon’s policy agenda, would see immigration violations traditionally treated as civil infractions transformed into criminal violations, punishable by up to 20 years in prison. Speaking before judiciary committee members Thursday, Rep. Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., said the provision would “turn millions of Americans into criminals overnight.” Nadler added that the legislation was “straight out of the Donald Trump mass deportation playbook.”
* I’m Cory Booker, for #TheResistance.
* How low do you have to sink to lose an election in this country? Republicans have been trying to answer that question for years. But they’ve been unable to find out, because Democrats somehow keep failing to beat them.
HRC PEOPLE: No more white guys!
BERNIE PEOPLE: No, power to the working man!
ZUCKERBERG: Would you accept literally the worst solution— Sady Doyle (@sadydoyle) May 29, 2017
* Sheriff’s Clarke Definitely Real Medals. Washington Post breaks down Milwaukee County Sheriff David A. Clarke Jr.’s pins, to Clarke’s ire.
* “Solar power delivers cheapest unsubsidised electricity ever, anywhere, by any technology.”
* The night before the University of California Board of Regents voted to raise student tuition to help cash-strapped campuses, they threw themselves a party at the luxury Intercontinental Hotel in San Francisco and billed the university. The tab for the Jan. 25 banquet: $17,600 for 65 people, or $270 a head.
but the "kernel of truth" to all anti-academic, anti-humanist tirades is that knowledge should be free & scholarship should serve the public
— traxus4420 (@traxus4420) May 29, 2017
* In the richest country in human history.
* Three trillion and counting.
* “11 Years Old, a Mom, and Pushed to Marry Her Rapist in Florida.”
* Threads thinking about slavery, history, and ethical reasoning from @zunguzungu and @BigMeanInternet.
* It looks like Trump somehow managed to ruin even Fargo.
* Science fiction, the future that failed. I would buy this self-help book. The law, in its majestic equality. When you’re sad. Social media is ruining everything. White people, no! Shades of Satan!
* *This* is how you issue a heartfelt and meaningful apology.
* And Nintendo says I may, someday, have a Switch.
Happy Memorial Day, destroy all memorials to the confederacy!
— Aaron Bady (@zunguzungu) May 29, 2017
I would like to wish everyone, including all haters and losers (of which, sadly, there are many) a truly happy and enjoyable Memorial Day!
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) May 24, 2015
Written by gerrycanavan
May 29, 2017 at 12:51 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with #TheResistance, academia, administrative blight, Alfred Bester, America, austerity, capitalism, cash for sterilization, child marriages, class struggle, Cory Booker, Democratic primary 2020, Democrats, deportation, depression, Don't mention the war, Donald Trump, euthanasia, Fargo, Florida, futurity, Germany, Gul Dukat, history, homelessness, How the University Works, Iain M. Banks, immigration, immortality, Information wants to be free, integrity, Iraq War, Jared Kushner, kids today, lawns, liches, Lois Lane, Mark Zuckerberg, Memorial Day, Milwaukee, misogyny, Modern Masters of Science Fiction, neoliberalism, New Hampshire, Nintendo, Nintendo Switch, Oklahoma, One Hundred Years of Solitude, parenting, politics, rape, rape culture, Republicans, Russia, Satan, science fiction, self-help, Sheriff Clarke, Silicon Valley, slavery, social media, solar power, Superman, the courts, The Culture, the inadequacy of apology, the law, The New York Post, the Singularity, transhumanism, University of California, vasectomies, war on education, white nationalism, white people, white supremacy, Wisconsin
Friday Links!
* I’ll be speaking at this event on June 4th in DC: Resolved: Technology Will Take All Our Jobs.
* SF-flavored art exhibit at the Racine Art Museum.
* I think it’s fair to say Marquette has had a pretty rough year.
* Mass contingency is not compatible with shared governance.
* How Austerity Killed the Humanities.
* “If Students Are Smart, They’ll Major in What They Love.”
* Why Technology Will Never Fix Education.
* Alex Rivera on Hollywood and the War Machine. See also!
* Games Without Wages. The video game industry has long relied on the unpaid labor of “modders.” Is it ready to finally pay up?
* Nice work if you can get it: Yale Gives Former President $8 Million Retirement Gift.
* Professors Face Long Odds in Court Battles Over Speech Rights.
* Everybody Calm Down About Breastfeeding.
* The dangerous trick here goes like this: someone fantasizes about a world in which rape frequently occurs and consistently goes unpunished; to explore this emotional fantasy, they set it in a premodern narrative fantasy world where they can displace their own desire onto “history.” The dark impulse or desire isn’t theirs, then; it’s the world’s. It’s history’s. And once a dark personal fantasy becomes “realism,” gazing upon this dark thought or idea isn’t a kind of humiliating or dangerous self-reflection, it’s laudable: it’s an honest engagement with truth.
* I suspect even Notre Dame can’t really explain why it’s suing the federal government over contraception anymore.
* The New Mexico Law Review just published an issue dedicated entirely to Breaking Bad.
* Canadian Aboriginal Group Rejects $1 Billion Fee for Natural Gas Project.
* Study Links Record Dolphin Die-Off In The Gulf Of Mexico To Deepwater Horizon Spill.
* They paved built an oil rig in paradise.
* The $10 Hedge Fund Supercomputer That’s Sweeping Wall Street.
* Nearly one in four financial services employees say it’s likely their co-workers have acted outside of the law. Dismaying as that statistic may be, it is nearly double the 12 percent who said the same in 2012.
* This senior level position is responsible for developing and implementing best practices in fostering the development and launch of companies based on innovations generated from University faculty. Percent Effort: 100.
* We Are Spending Quite a Bit of Money on Jails.
* A Dishonest History of the Last War. Jeb Bush Says His Brother Was Misled Into War by Faulty Intelligence. That’s Not What Happened. Bush and Cheney Falsely Presented WMD Intelligence to Public.
* Here’s how much of your life the United States has been at war.
* America Has Half as Many Hypersegregated Metros as It Did in 1970. Somehow, Milwaukee soldiers on.
* Scrabble adds even more garbage words to its dictionary.
* U.S. Releases Contents Of Bin Laden’s English-Language “Bookshelf.”
* Is there anyone who won’t run for the Republican nomination in 2016?
* Why Have So Many People Never Heard Of The MOVE Bombing?
* “We do not think anyone is going to dispute this at all,” he said.
* Uber, but for putting gas in your car.
* I can’t understand why on Earth Marvel wants to emulate the New 52.
* Not the E.T. sequel we need, but the one we deserve.
* Great moments in “our bad”: Norway’s ‘We’re Sorry’ Monument to 91 Dead Witches.
* You say “equality” like it’s a bad thing.
* How The Soviet Union Tracked People With “Spy Dust.”
* A Professor Tries to Beat Back a News Spoof That Won’t Go Away.
* The health insurance regime: still the worst.
* Israel knew all along that settlements, home demolitions were illegal.
* Very surprising, given the lawsuit: Emma Sulkowicz allowed to bring mattress into Class Day ceremony.
* These numbers are horrifying.
* Irregularities in LaCour (2014). Amazing story.
* An oral history of Industrial Light & Magic.
* Western canon, meet trigger warning.
* 9. Should a nuclear apocalypse happen, The Sound of Music will be played on a loop.
* I wish to outlive all my enemies.
* Everything about this pedagogical model is insane.
* Study Suggests Intelligent Aliens Will Probably Be The Size Of Bears.
* Does Shakespeare pass the Bechdel Test?
* Monkey Day Care: Growing Up as a Child Research Subject.
* “Keep Foreskin and State Separate.”
* And Matt Weiner is sick of your bullshit misinterpretations of his genius. Do you hear that, Limbaugh?
Written by gerrycanavan
May 22, 2015 at 8:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with 2012 or never, abortion, academia, academic fraud, academic freedom, adjunctification, adjuncts, administrative blight, administrative bloat, Alex Rivera, aliens, America, art, artificial intelligence, Assata Shakur, austerity, Battle: Los Angeles, Bechdel test, books, Breaking Bad, breastfeeding, Bush, California, Canada, capital, cheese, Cheney, circumcision, class struggle, color, Columbia, contraception, corruption, DC Comics, Deepwater Horizon, do what you love, dolphins, Don't mention the war, E.T., English majors, entrepeneurs, entrepeneurs in residence, espionage, fantasy, film, First Nations, flexible online education, Game of Thrones, games, genies, George Lucas, Gulf of Mexico, health insurance, hedge funds, high-speed trading, history, Hollywood, How the University Works, hypersegregation, IL&M, indigenous peoples, international law, Iraq, Iraq War, Israel, Jeb Bush, labor, lies and lying liars, Mad Men, mad science, Marquette, Marvel, mass contingency, Matt Weiner, military-industrial complex, Milwaukee, monkeys, monkeys' paws, MOOCs, MOVE bombing, museums, my scholarly empire, Norway, Notre Dame, nuclear holocaust, nuclear war, nuclearity, oil, oil spills, Osama bin Laden, our brains work in interesting ways, Palestine, parody, pedagogy, Philadelphia, politics, prison labor, prison-industrial complex, race, Racine, racism, rape, rape culture, realism, Republican primary 2016, Republicans, research, Rush Limbaugh, Santa Barbara, satire, Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal, science fiction, Scrabble, segregation, sequels, series finales, Shakespeare, shared governance, single payer, spy dust, spy stuff, Star Wars, teaching, technology, technopositivity, tenure, the canon, the courts, the humanities, the law, the past isn't over it isn't even past, the Singularity, The Sound of Music, the wisdom of markets, trigger warnings, true crime, Uber, USSR, war huh good god y'all what is it good for? absolutely nothing say it again, war machines, war on terror, We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves, Whole Foods, Wisconsin, wishes, witches, words, work, Yale
Sunday Morning Links!
As Marquette’s faculty gathers in the basement of the Bradley Center for commencement, some links…
* I have sat in philosophy seminars where it was asserted that I should be left to die on a desert island if the choice was between saving me and saving an arbitrary non-disabled person. I have been told it would be wrong for me to have my biological children because of my disability. I have been told that, while it isn’t bad for me to exist, it would’ve been better if my mother could’ve had a non-disabled child instead. I’ve even been told that it would’ve been better, had she known, for my mother to have an abortion and try again in hopes of conceiving a non-disabled child. I have been told that it is obvious that my life is less valuable when compared to the lives of arbitrary non-disabled people. And these things weren’t said as the conclusions of careful, extended argument. They were casual assertions. They were the kind of thing you skip over without pause because it’s the uncontroversial part of your talk.
* There’s tons of great stuff in issue 17 of Jacobin, from the Peter Frase editorial on automation to a call to democratize the universe to ruminations on edutopia and the smartphone society.
* Mad Max: Fury Road Is the Feminist Action Flick You’ve Been Waiting For. 3 Brief Points on Mad Max: Fury Road.
* Alastair Reynolds Says What It’ll Take To Colonize Other Planets.
* University of Wisconsin flunks the financial transparency test.
* Juxtaposition watch: Maryland governor vetoes $11 million for schools, approves $30 million for jails.
* The awful truth about climate change no one wants to admit.
* Hillary Clinton personally took money from companies that sought to influence her. The next couple years are going to be a bottomless exercise in humiliation for Democrats.
* People Who Opposed The Iraq War From The Beginning Are The Best Americans.
* History is a nightmare for which I’m trying to hit the snooze: NJ Republican Introduces Resolution Condemning ‘Negative’ AP History Exam.
* City leaders approve plan for National Slave Ship Museum.
* Let the Kids Learn Through Play.
* Why Are Palo Alto’s Kids Killing Themselves?
* I also won’t accept that Someone Did a Shit So Bad On a British Airways Plane That It Had to Turn Around and Come Back Again.
* When Sandy Bem found out she had Alzheimer’s, she resolved that before the disease stole her mind, she would kill herself. The question was, when?
* If Catch-22 appeared a few years before Americans were ready to read it, Something Happened jumped the gun by decades, and the novel was already forgotten when its comically bleak take on upper-middle-class life became a staple of fiction.
* Jurors In The Boston Bombing Case Had To Agree To Consider The Death Penalty Before Being Selected. This is a very strange requirement of the law that seems to strongly interfere with the “jury of your peers” ideal.
* Deleted scene from Infinite Jest. So bizarre.
* Dibs on the young-adult dystopia: Teenagers who show too much leg face being sent into an “isolation room” for breaching the new uniform code.
* New Zealand Legally Recognises Animals as ‘Sentient’ Beings.
* Schools are failing boys because lessons have become “feminised”, says a leading academic who wants to see outdoor adventure given greater emphasis in the curriculum. That’ll solve it!
* What Even Can You Even Say About The Princess-Man of North Sudan?
* What Would You Do If You Could Censor Your Past? A Visit to the UK’s Secret Archives.
* The Ecotourism Industry Is Saving Tanzania’s Animals and Threatening Its Indigenous People.
* “On the occasion of David Letterman’s retirement after 33 years of hosting a late-night talk show, Jason Snell presents his take on Letterman’s significance, told with the help of a few friends.”
Written by gerrycanavan
May 17, 2015 at 8:45 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with a new life awaits you in the off-world colonies, abortion, academia, accelerationism, airplanes, Alastair Reynolds, Alzheimer's, animal rights, animals, AP exams, apocalypse, assisted suicide, austerity, Avengers, Avengers 2, books, Boston, boxing, boys, Catch-22, class struggle, climate change, Colonization, conservation, Crystal Pepsi, cultural preservation, David Letterman, David Lynch, death penalty, Democrats, dibs on the screenplay, disability, disability studies, Disney, domestic terrorism, Don't mention the war, dystopia, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, ecology, education, eugenics, fake weddings, feminism, film, Fury Road, futurity, general election 2016, hacking, Hillary Clinton, history, How the University Works, indigenous peoples, Infinite Jest, Iraq, Iraq War, Islamophobia, Jacobin, Joseph Heller, kids today, Mad Max, Man of Steel, Maryland, misogyny, Mitt Romney, neoliberalism, New Jersey, New Orleans, New Zealand, North Sudan, outdoor adventure, outer space, Palo Alto, pedagogy, Peter Frase, Peter Singer, philosophy, play, podcasts, police, politcs, post-scarcity, princesses, prison-industrial complex, prisons, reality is satire, Republicans, science fiction, sentience, sexism, shit, skirts, slavery, smartphones, Something Happened, spectacle, suicide, superheroes, Superman, Tanzania, teaching, television, terrorism, the archives, the court, The Incomparable, the law, transparency, Twin Peaks, United Kingdom, University of Wisconsin, utilitarianism, war on drugs, Wisconsin
Friday Links!
* CFP: In More’s Footsteps: Utopia and Science Fiction.
* CFP: The Comics of Art Spiegelman.
* In case you missed it: the syllabus for my summer science fiction course.
* Your official Mad Men finale odds sheet.
* Stop sanitizing the history of the run-up to Iraq War.
* In this small suburb outside Milwaukee, no one in the Menomonee Falls School District escapes the rigorous demands of data.
* Academic Freedom and Tenure: University of Southern Maine.
* Bérubé and Ruth (and Bousquet) on their plan to convert adjunct positions to teaching tenure.
* Everything But The Burden: Publics, Public Scholarship, And Institutions.
* Obama’s Catastrophic Climate-Change Denial.
* Honeybees (still) dying, situation ‘unheard of.’
* A brief history of the freeway.
* Britain is too tolerant and should interfere more in people’s lives, says David Cameron.
* Free market watch: Having everyone’s account at a single, central institution allows the authorities to either encourage or discourage people to spend. To boost spending, the bank imposes a negative interest rate on the money in everyone’s account – in effect, a tax on saving.
* In the last academic year, Rutgers athletics generated $40.3 million in revenue, but spent $76.7 million, leaving a deficit of more than $36 million. In other words, revenue barely covered half the department’s expenses.
* The crazy idea was this: The United States Army would design a “deception unit”: a unit that would appear to the enemy as a large armored division with tanks, trucks, artillery, and thousands of soldiers. But this unit would actually be equipped only with fake tanks, fake trucks, fake artillery and manned by just a handful of soldiers.
* The top 25 hedge fund managers earn more than all kindergarten teachers in U.S. combined.
* I honestly found this a pretty devastating brief, though not everyone on Facebook found it as useful or persuasive as I did: The Progressive Case Against Public Schools, or, What Bleeding Heart Libertarians Should Say.
* Disney Spent $15 Billion To Limit Their Audience. But the news gets worse, friends: Disney under fire for fairytale film based on true story of American dad who claimed African land to make daughter a princess.
* Here’s Which Humanities Major Makes the Most Money After College.
* Jury Acquits Six Philly Narcotics Cops On All Corruption Charges. Wow.
* The Texas Prison Rape Problem.
* Honolulu Mayor Learns The Hard Way That Criminalization Isn’t The Answer To Homelessness.
* First Supergirl Trailer Really Does Feel Like An SNL Parody.
* The last of the renegade Nazis living in a self-sufficient lunar colony has died, aged 95.
* “It’s about this little girl who finds a little kitten”: Mark Z. Danielewski is back. Did Mark Z. Danielewski just reinvent the novel?
* The arc of history is long, but Harry Shearer is quitting The Simpsons.
* Same joke but Alex Garland confirms zombie sequel 28 Months Later is in the works.
* Not since Jewel’s A Night without Armor have we seen a poet like James Franco.
* The Agony of Taking a Standardized Test on a Computer.
* Bill O’Reilly: America will fall like Rome if the secular “rap industry” has its way.
* Georgia Man Arrested for Trespassing After Saving Dog From Hot Car.
* Group petitions White House to add Harriet Tubman on the $20 bill.
* Dean Featured in ‘Rolling Stone’ Article Sues Magazine for $7.5 Million.
* And it’s not all bad news: Telltale Promise Something ‘Major’ From The Walking Dead Franchise This Year.
Darkness on the Edge of Town Incident on 57thStreet Something in the Night Spirit in the Night Human Touch @unrealfred #LovecraftSpringsteen
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) May 12, 2015
Written by gerrycanavan
May 15, 2015 at 7:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with 28 Months Later, academia, academic freedom, adjunctification, adjuncts, America, animals, armies, Art Spiegelman, Avengers, Baltimore, banking, Barack Obama, bees, Berkeley, Big Data, Bill O'Reilly, Black Widow, boys, Britain, Bush, cars, cash, CFPs, climate change, college sports, comics, David Cameron, DC Comics, deception units, denialism, Disney, dogs, Don't mention the war, education, English majors, fantasy, film, free markets, games, Georgia, girls, H.P. Lovecraft, Harriet Tubman, Harry Shearer, Hawaii, highways, homelessness, Honolulu, House of Leaves, How the University Works, Iraq War, James Franco, kindergarten, leave me the birds and the bees, liberalism, Mad Men, maps, Marc Bousquet, Mark Z. Danielewski, Martin O'Malley, Michael Bérubé, military-industrial complex, Milwaukee, money, morally odious morons, Nazis, NCAA, negative interest rates, neoliberalism, pedagogy, Philadelphia, poetry, pranks, prison rape, progressives, public education, public intellectuals, race, rape culture, Rolling Stone, Rome, Rutgers, science fiction, secular rap industry, series finales, SNL, Springsteen, standardized testing, Supergirl, teaching, teaching tenure, television, Telltale Games, tenure, the arc of history is long but it bends towards justice, the courts, the humanities, the law, the Moon, The Simpsons, The Walking Dead, The Wire, Tommy Carcetti, toys, United Kingdom, University of Southern Maine, Utopia, UVA, war on drugs, war on education, Wisconsin, World War II, zombies
Friday Morning Links!
* Candyland and the nature of the absurd. #academicjobmarket
* Why some studies make campus rape look like an epidemic while others say it’s rare. ‘1 in 5’: how a study of 2 colleges became the most cited campus sexual assault statistic. Study Challenges Notion That Risk of Sexual Assault Is Greater at College. Justice Dept.: 20% of Campus Rapes Reported to Police.
* University Of Missouri-St. Louis Says Ferguson Shooting Caused Enrollment Drop.
* Greenpeace sorry for Nazca lines stunt in Peru. Oh, okay then.
* 21st-Century Postdocs: (Still) Underpaid and Overworked.
* We asked a legal evidence expert if Serial’s Adnan Syed has a chance to get out of prison. Meanwhile, allow Matt Thompson to tell you how Serial is going to end a week in advance.
* Good news from Rome: “All Animals Go to Heaven.” I’m really glad we settled this.
* My new sabbatical plan: NASA Will Pay You $170 Per Day To Lie In Bed.
* UC Berkeley Lecturer Threatened For Offering Injured Student Protesters Extra Time On Papers. On university administrations and the surveillance state.
* CIA defenders are out in force now that a historic report has exposed a decade of horrific American shame. Torture didn’t work, but why aren’t the architects of torture in jail? Every discussion of this question begins from the false premise that the torturers were well-intentioned truth-seekers who “went too far.” The CIA knew, like everybody knows, that the point of torture is to extract confessions regardless of their truth. That’s why they did it.
* First, do no harm: Medical profession aided CIA torture.
* “Late in life, Michel Foucault developed a curious sympathy for neoliberalism.” A response from Peter Frase: Beyond the Welfare State.
* Also at Jacobin: Interstellar and reactionaries in space.
* Behold the nightmare Manhattan would become if everyone commuted by car.
* Why James Cameron’s Aliens is the best movie about technology.
* Why we can’t have nice things: Marvel Wanted Spider-Man For Captain America 3, But Sony Said No. But the next 21 Jump Street movie can cross over with Men in Black because life is suffering.
* 7 Terrible Lightsaber Designs From the Star Wars Expanded Universe. I love the guy who is just covered in lightsabers from head to toe.
* Censorship (Pasadena, California).
* The nation’s millionaires are #Ready4Hillary.
* Student athletes at public universities in Michigan would be prohibited from joining labor unions to negotiate for compensation and benefits under legislation the state House approved Tuesday.
* Meet The Oldest Living Things in the World.
* And this used to be a free country: One of two concealed gun permit holders involved in a rolling shootout down Milwaukee streets and freeways last year was turned down Thursday when he asked a judge to order the return of the gun seized after the incident.
Written by gerrycanavan
December 12, 2014 at 9:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with #readyforhillary, 21 Jump Street, academia, academic job market, Adnan Syed, aliens, Amazon, animal personhood, animals, Avengers, Barack Obama, Berkeley, California, Camus, Candyland, capitalism, Captain America 3, cars, Catholicism, censorship, CIA, class struggle, college, college sports, comics, Democrats, Don't mention the war, fellowships, Ferguson, first do no harm, Foucault, futurity, games, general election 2016, Greenpeace, guns, H.P. Lovecraft, Hillary Clinton, Hippocratic oath, How the University Works, identity theft, Interstellar, Iraq, Iraq War, lightsabers, longevity, Marvel, Men in Black, Michigan, millionaires, Milwaukee, NASA, Nazca lines, NCAA, neoliberalism, New York, Pasadena, Pell grants, Peru, Peter Frase, philosophy, podcasts, politics, postdocs, protest, rape, rape culture, religion, research, Sartre, science fiction, Serial, sleep, socialism, Sony, Spider-Man, St. Louis, Star Wars, student athletes, student debt, Supreme Court, surveillance society, surveillance state, the archives, the closing of the frontier, the Pope, they say time is the fire in which we burn, This American Life, this used to be a free country, torture, traffic, unions, very old things, wage theft, war on terror, welfare state, yes we can
Wednesday Links
* College Men: Stop Getting Drunk. In response to this.
* How Young Is Too Young for Multiple-Choice Tests? (A) 5 (B) Never.
The image of 4- and 5-year-olds struggling to figure out how to take a multiple-choice test is heartbreaking enough, but the image that stuck with me was that of the children trying to help one another with the test and being told that they’re not allowed to do so.
* Paul Campos and Matt Leichter crunch some numbers on the law school bubble.
* Graduate Students Urge Changes in Comprehensive Exams.
* Sold Out: Privatizing the university in the UK.
* North Carolina Suspends Welfare Program Thanks To The Shutdown.
* The Handmaid’s Tale debuts as ballet in Winnipeg. Judging from the picture attached to the article I have some questions about the accuracy of this adaptation.
* How can anyone say this is anything but an utter debacle? Delaware health officials celebrate first health exchange enrollee.
* Once-A-Decade Typhoon Threatens Already-Leaking Fukushima Nuclear Plant.
* And a new study claims the Iraq war claimed half a million lives. Down the memory hole, you!
Written by gerrycanavan
October 16, 2013 at 12:42 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, alcohol, America, Barack Obama, binge drinking, Bush, class struggle, college, Delaware, Don't mention the war, Fukushima, government shutdowns, health care, How the University Works, Iraq War, Japan, kids today, law school, Margaret Atwood, military-industrial complex, neoliberalism, North Carolina, nuclearity, politics, privatize everything, radiation, rape, rape culture, standardized testing, student debt, The Handmaid's Tale, war on education, Winnipeg
Sunday, Sunday
(some links via Aaron’s Sunday Reading, which as always has so much more)
* The greatest nation in the world: A few nights a year, Tennessee holds a health care lottery of sorts, giving the medically desperate a chance to get help.
* A Truly Devastating Graph on State Higher Education Spending.
* In sentencing the boys to a minimum of one year in juvenile jail, Judge Thomas Lipps doled out some advice to their peers on how to avoid the same fate. He urged them “to have discussions about how you talk to your friends; how you record things on the social media so prevalent today; and how you conduct yourself when drinking is put upon you by your friends.” Tweeting wasn’t exactly the problem in Steubenville, though, now was it.
* Stunning narrative of decades-long abuse (of all kinds) in a New York City high school. The level of administrative incompetence (shading into malice) is just one of the shocking parts of this story; I finally watched Bully last night and couldn’t believe this was how school administrators would act in general, much less when they knew they were being filmed.
* March Madness as class struggle.
* Do Corporations Enjoy a 2nd Amendment Right to Drones?
* So what exactly was in all those old fallout shelters?
* The Iraq war is notable not only for journalistic weakness, but for journalistic futility: the futility of fact itself. Fact could not match the fabrications of power. Eventually, our reality shifted to become what they conceived. “I could have set myself on fire in protest on the White House lawn and the war would have proceeded without me,” wrote Bush speechwriter David Frum. That was the message of the Iraq war: There is no point in speaking truth to power when power is the only truth.
* Rand Paul Is Right On Marijuana, And That Should Scare Democrats Into Action.
* University of Wisconsin professor warns of dangers of reintroducing extinct animals. Spoilsport!
* The world’s first LEGO museum is coming.
* And all about the next board game I’d like to learn to play, Twilight Struggle.
Written by gerrycanavan
March 24, 2013 at 4:41 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, animals, austerity, bullying, charts, child abuse, class struggle, college basketball, college sports, corporate personhood, documentary, drones, empire, extinction, Facebook, facts are stupid things, fallout shelters, games, health care, How the University Works, income inequality, Iraq War, LEGO, lottery, March Madness, marijuana, military-industrial complex, museums, NCAA, New York, nuclearity, politics, power, Rand Paul, rape, rape culture, reality-based community, Second Amendment, Shirley Jackson, Steubenville, Tennessee, Twilight Struggle, Twitter, war on drugs, Wisconsin