Posts Tagged ‘JFK’
Quittin’ Time Links
* Canamania 2016: Just another reminder that Metamorphoses of Science Fiction (out now!) and Octavia E. Butler (out this November!) appear this year.
* And speaking of Octavia: a previously lost interview from 1995 has resurfaced.
* Call for Papers: Disability and Superheroes.
* A landmark special issue of Extrapolation (if I do say so myself) on Indigenous Futurisms, ed. by Grace Dillon, Michael Levy, and John Rieder.
* The Managerial University: A Failed Experiment.
* How Janelle Monáe turned Harriet Tubman’s legacy into an Afrofuturist sci-fi epic.
* “Culturally and geographically, EMU football will simply never succeed from an attendance and financial standpoint,” faculty member Howard Bunsis, who helped prepare the report, said in a presentation to the Board of Regents on Friday. “It is a losing proposition – always has been, and always will be. We hardly raise any money for football, and our attendance is the lowest in the country. Some of you believe that we are close to succeeding, if we just throw more money at the situation. This proposition is insane.“
* Eleven Theses for the Bernie Sanders Generation.
* Wrongthink watch: The Tools of Campus Activists Are Being Turned Against Them. When Slogans Replace Arguments.
* “Literature about medicine may be all that can save us.”
* …but marketplace feminism has simply embraced a mediagenic vision of leadership, most notoriously in the new women’s conference industry, where, Zeisler writes, attendees can “access and sell a certain kind of female power at a comfortable distance from the less individualistic and far less glamorous reality of the majority of women.” These conferences come with a hefty price tag to hear inspiring celebrities and CEOs’ tales about bootstrapping their way to the top and kicking sexism in the rear in stiletto heels. It’s a vision that, she notes, “erases the presence of anyone who isn’t empowered in the most crucial sense of the word—financially…” Feminism, Inc. is big business.
* Global warming has made the weather better for most in U.S. — but don’t get used to it, study says. But it’s not all bad news: Chicago is better poised to survive climate change than New York or LA .
* Living Near A Highway Is Terrible For Your Health. 1 In 10 Americans Do It.
* Too good to check: Tabloid says it has proof: Ted Cruz’s father is mystery man in Lee Harvey Oswald photo.
* Suicide Rates Are Up, But the Most Obvious Explanations Are Probably All Wrong.
* The Arctic Suicides: It’s Not The Dark That Kills You. Milwaukee suicide rates lower than rest of US.
* Study of exceptionally healthy old people fails to trace their well-being to specific genes.
* The Rise of Pirate Libraries.
* A Scientific Guide to the Fantastical Predators in Game of Thrones.
* Abolish Neil deGrasse Tyson. But he’s got the right idea here.
* Is there God after Prince? The rejected Simpsons script Conan O’Brien wrote for Prince. Musician’s secret vault reportedly contains ‘thousands’ of unreleased songs. Prince and Springsteen duet, one night only. Springsteen covers “Purple Rain.”
Love this! "They should put Prince on the $20 bill and call it $19.99. It's "The bill formerly known as a twenty." pic.twitter.com/BdCFjg3ozR
— Ty Francis (@tyfrancis) April 24, 2016
* Companies are becoming adept at identifying wealthy customers and marketing to them, creating a money-based caste system. No! It can’t be! That’s impossible!
* EVE Online Could Become a Television Show. I’d watch at least a few!
* How does a porn parody get made? And elsewhere on the porn beat: Child Porn Is Being Hidden in Legal Porn Sites and It Could Land You in Trouble.
* The new Doctor Who companion has been announced and I’m already annoyed because [felled by assassin’s bullet]
* You Should All Be Reading These Criminally Underrated Comics Right Now.
* Twilight of the New York Times.
* Clean, safe, and too cheap to meter.
* Chernobyl as an Event: Thirty Years After.
* I never should have agreed to appear on the cover of American Legion Magazine.
* Will America’s Worst Wildfire Disaster Happen in New Jersey?
* Kurt Vonnegut, Our Reluctant, Agnostic, Hippy Guru. I taught Galápagos for the first time in years this month and fell in love with it all over again — and I’m presenting on it at a meeting of the Vonnegut Society at ALA in May.
* I’ve been saying it for years: Oxford Scientist Confirms Starting Work, School before 10 AM is Torture.
* Kids Play in Backyard While Mom Does Dishes. An Investigation Ensues.
* Marijuana is kosher for Passover, leading rabbi rules.
* Snitchr.
* Definitely evidence of galactic civilization watch: A Dozen Black Holes Are Mysteriously Spewing Energy In the Same Direction.
* But maybe everything dies someday comes back: Ecto Cooler returns.
Written by gerrycanavan
April 25, 2016 at 5:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, academia freedom, activism, administrative blight, Afrofuturism, ALA, animals, apocalypse, Bernie Sanders, black holes, books, capitalism, cars, CEOs, Chernobyl, Chicago, class struggle, climate change, college football, college sports, comics, communism, cryptozoology, disability, Division I, Doctor Who, dolphins, ecology, Ecto Cooler, EVE Online, Extrapolation, feminism, football, galactic empires, Galápagos, Game of Thrones, George R. R. Martin, Google Reader, Harriet Tubman, HBO, How the University Works, indigenous futurism, Janelle Monae, JFK, Judaism, kids today, kosher, language, Lee Harvey Oswald, libraries, literature, longevity, managerialism, marijuana, maybe everything that dies someday comes back, medical humanities, Melissa Click, Metamorphoses of Science Fiction, millennials, Milwaukee, moral panics, music, my media empire, NCAA, Neil deGrasse Tyson, neoliberalism, New Jersey, New York Times, nuclear energy, nuclear power, nuclearity, Octavia Butler, old people, parenting, pedagogy, pirate libraries, police, police state, politics, porn, porn parodies, Prince, public health, reality, reality is a hoax, science, science fiction, Simpsons, sleep, Springsteen, stop snitchin', student movements, suicide, superheroes, Superman, survivalism, teaching, Ted Cruz, television, tenure, the Arctic, the courts, the kids are all right, the law, The Lives of Animals, torture, Uber, Vonnegut, what it is I think I'm doing, wildfires, winter, Won't somebody think of the children?, wrongthink, you don't exist
Tuesday Links!
* CLIR-DLF Postdoctoral Fellow in Data Curation for Medieval Studies at UWM.
* David Bowie’s New Video Is 10 Minutes of Sci-Fi Creep.
* Mœbius & Jodorowsky’s Sci-Fi Masterpiece, The Incal, Brought to Life in a Tantalizing Animation.
* Why science fiction matters to life in the post colony.
* MTA: kind of overdoing a bit, don’t you think?
* A people’s history of yoga. But maybe this story isn’t being reported properly.
* From the Wisconsin files: Teen dressed as clown raises concerns in Waukesha.
* OK, it’s out of control now. When a major-party presidential frontrunner says this kind of bone-chilling stuff, the joke is over. Friends, I have some terrible news. Trump Tweeted Fabricated Murder Stats From A Neo-Nazi And This Is How The Media Reported It. The media has no idea how to deal with Donald Trump’s constant lying. PS: Trump Built a Monument to a Fake Civil War Battle on His Golf Course. This is all burying the lede, though: Donald Trump has superpowers.
* Five people shot near Black Lives Matter protest in Minneapolis.
* Pakistanis target drones with giant posters of child victims.
* Thomas Jefferson is next. I’m amazed he’s emerged unscathed thus far.
* How to escape a dying universe.
* Seems legit: The US Government is Being Sued for Losing a Critical JFK Assassination Film.
* Yet no group is more impressed with Edward Snowden than American college students. Even skeptical or indifferent students change their opinions of him when they hear him speak — by Skype — in packed college auditoriums.
* And the new MST3K is trying really hard to be good. I agree with the commenter who suggested that she should have the Joel/Mike role — and Jonah Ray would be better off as the Mad…
Written by gerrycanavan
November 24, 2015 at 12:21 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with 9/11, advertising, Alejandro Jodorowsky, America, animation, Black Lives Matter, Bowie, Civil War, clowns, conspiracy, disability, Donald Trump, drones, Edward Snowden, empathy, Felicia Day, golf courses, guns, history, housing, Islamophobia, JFK, kids today, lies and lying liars, memory, millennials, Milwaukee, Minneapolis, Mystery Science Theater 3000, Nazis, postdocs, protest, science fiction, suicide, survival, teenagers, the heat death of the universe, The Man in the High Castle, the post-colony, Thomas Jefferson, UWM, Waukesha, Wisconsin, yoga
Weekend Links Absolutely Positively Guaranteed to Help You Find Love This Valentine’s Day
* Was this a luxury? Sure. But it was also the steppingstone to a more aware, thoughtful existence. College was the quarry where I found it.
* Move over, Wisconsin, North Carolina wants in: Tea Party Legislature Targets University of North Carolina In Major Assault On Higher Learning.
* Walker aide: UW System cuts are flexible, complaints unwarranted. Oh, okay.
* The UW: Update from the Struggle.
* How is it anything more than laughable that an otherwise reasonable person could believe that this shooting had more to do with a parking space than skin color and religion? How could it be that there is not only silence but active efforts to complicate and explain away something as utterly predictable as white man plays God? Any single instance of white supremacy, whether it is this shooting or the maintenance of de facto segregation in my city, is over-determined. There are dozens of “just so” arguments that stand ready to supplant a direct identification of racial violence at work. White supremacy itself is a coward who hides behind historic contingencies.
* The study, published this week in Science Advances, is based on hand-curated data about placements of 19,000 tenure-line faculty members in history, business and computer science at 461 North American institutions with doctoral programs. Using a computer-aided, network-style analysis, the authors determined that just 25 percent of those institutions produced 71 to 86 percent of tenure-line professors, depending on discipline. Here’s a link to the full article, which has a definition of “merit” (as/against “prestige”) I can’t make heads or tails of.
* The grievously neglected American poet Winfield Townley Scott, who had once loved Lovecraft’s work and written beautifully about it, eventually came to feel that Lovecraft’s fiction was “finicky,” “childish,” and “antagonistic to reality.” But its very childishness and hatred of reality are central to it. If, as Thornton Wilder once claimed, no true adult is ever really shocked, that being “shocked” is always a pose, then Lovecraft never achieved adult status. But he held on tightly to the truths of adolescence: that the universe does not wish us well; that love is not to be found anywhere; and resurrection, if it ever truly occurs, would be a catastrophe.
* If you aren’t reading Jason Shiga’s Demon, you really should start; chapter 11 just went out to subscribers and it’s great.
* The social network’s ideal model is for ads to make up about one in 20 tweets that the average user sees — the same level that Facebook strives for. “We’re well below that now,” he said. I’m sure if you keep up what you’re doing you’ll get there faster than you think.
* Also on the comics beat: The few that have been able to reach him believe him to be a deity – one who turned the scorched desert into a lush oasis. They say he can bend matter, space, and even time to his will. Earth is about to meet a new god. And he’s a communist.
* Universities are struggling to determine when intoxicated sex becomes sexual assault.
* An undergraduate student was found responsible for sexually assaulting Camila Quarta, CC ’16, in April 2013. Since then, 481 undergraduate students have taken courses in which he has served as a teaching assistant. I have mixed feelings about the desire to use employment as a proxy for justice, but preventing this sort of thing from happening does seem to me to fall well within the requirements of Title IX.
* At LARoB, the deeply unpleasant task of historicizing incest.
* To Restore Academic Integrity in Sports, Hold Head Coaches Accountable. “Restore.” You keep using that word, I do not think it means what you think it means…
* Shocked, shocked to find out admissions are being manipulated at a university.
* I’m Brianna Wu, And I’m Risking My Life Standing Up To Gamergate.
* When Girls of Color Are Policed Out of School.
* MetaFilter post on the Coup in Yemen.
* Why Jon Stewart Was Bad for the Liberals Who Loved Him. I’ve come around to the inevitable conclusion that this is all just a very clever viral marketing campaign for Hot Tub Time Machine 2.
* Do humans need air to live? Look, I’m not a scientist.
* Tricknology is the word she used to describe how the AHA got its way. Hightower and her neighbors wanted to see an end to the stigma associated with living in public housing. They wanted the projects to become as they once were: stable family neighborhoods where “you didn’t know you were poor.” But the AHA had other plans. It had chosen to view public housing as unfixable.
* Good Magazine has your guide to the legendary Saved by the Bell Hooks Tumblr.
* Hey, gadgets: stop snitchin’.
* The Weird Specifics Of Marvel And Sony’s Secret Spider-Man Deal.
* The FBI is targeting tar-sands activists.
* By Age 40, Your Income Is Probably as Good as It’s Going to Get. I’ve had a lot of interesting conversations on Twitter and Facebook in the last few days about the extent to which this applies to (a) academics in general (b) tenure-track academics (c) tenure-track academics in the humanities (d) tenure-track academics in the humanities today as opposed to a generation ago. But I’ve resolved to go ahead and be completely depressed by this fact simply in the interest of precaution and due diligence.
* Uber and Airbnb monetize the desperation of people in the post-crisis economy while sounding generous—and evoke a fantasy of community in an atomized population.
* South Carolina Inmate Receives 37 Years In Solitary Confinement For Updating Facebook.
“If a South Carolina inmate caused a riot, took three hostages, murdered them, stole their clothes, and then escaped, he could still wind up with fewer Level 1 offenses than an inmate who updated Facebook every day for two weeks,” the EFF said in its report.
*Chief backs up officer who shot at suspect, failed to report incident.
The police officer was wearing a body camera during the incident but it was not turned on.
Oh, what terrible luck!
* NYPD Beat the Shit Out of a Brooklyn Street Vendor, Then Lied About It.
* Mother Has Miscarriage After Cop Beats Her Because He Didn’t ‘Appreciate Her Tone.’
* The arc of history is long, but: Putin Banned From ‘Mighty Taco’ Restaurant.
* Also the arc of history is long, etc., Little League Team Stripped of Title.
* Arc of history etc. etc. Montana GOP Legislator Wants to Ban Yoga Pants.
* Oh, I give up: Internet Neo-Nazis Are Trying to Build a White Supremacist Utopia in Namibia.
* All-time classic Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereals, Hitler edition.
* An oral history of that scene on last week’s The Americans. Standard rules apply, do not click, pretend it never happened.
* The Lincoln Memorial could have been a pyramid. See all the forgotten proposals. Wash that “good Vox” taste out of your mouth with this “bad Vox” chaser: The best hope for federal prison reform: a bill that could disproportionately help white prisoners.
* Amazing Photo Of An Intoxicated Gorilla About To Punch A Photographer. Exactly what it says on the tin.
* Somber news this Valentine’s Day.
* And the premiere for the improbably effective Better Call Saul is up on YouTube, if you missed it and want to hop aboard the think piece train before it leaves the station.
Written by gerrycanavan
February 14, 2015 at 8:18 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with 11/22/63, academia, academic jobs, actually existing media bias, admissions, Africa, Airbnb, alcohol, always historicize, amateurism, America, animals, austerity, Austin, Avengers, bell hooks, Better Call Saul, binge drinking, Breaking Bad, Brianna Wu, Brooklyn, capitalism, Chapel Hill, class struggle, college, college sports, Columbia, comics, coups, Cthulhu, cultural preservation, Daily Show, Demon, desperate, digital economy, digitality, embodiment, English majors, evolution, FBI, Gamergate, gorillas, Greece, guns, H.P. Lovecraft, historicize everything, Hitler, Hot Tub Time Machine 2, How the University Works, Hulu, if you want a vision of the future, incest, Islamophobia, Jason Shiga, Jessica Williams, JFK, Jon Stewart, kids today, Lincoln Memorial, Little League, male privilege, Marvel, memorials, miscarriage, money, Montana, monuments, murder, Namibia, Nazis, neocolonialism, neoliberalism, North Carolina, NYPD, photography, police brutality, police state, police violence, politics, prestige economy, prison, prison-industrial complex, privatize everything, public housing, Putin, pyramids, race, racism, rape, rape culture, Ray Cross, Republicans, Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal, Saved by the Bell, school-to-prison pipeline, science, Scott Walker, sex, sharing economy, social media, Sony, South Carolina, Spider-Man, Stephen King, stop snitchin', tacos, tar sands, Tea Party, teeth, television, tenure, the adolescent fear that justice does not exist, the adolescent passion for justice, The Americans, the arc of history is long but it bends towards justice, The Avengers, the dark side of the digital, the humanities, the Left, time travel, Title IX, Tumblr, Twitter, Uber, University of Texas, University of Wisconsin, Vince Gilligan, war on education, white people, white privilege, white supremacy, Wisconsin, Yanis Varoufakis, Yemen, yoga pants, you keep using that word
Thank God It’s Thanksgiving Week Links – 2
* For the propaganda vault: Why English Majors are the Hot New Hires.
* I’ve already asked on Facebook and Twitter, but does anyone know what “Psychological Test: BC” means on Kennedy’s Harvard application? I assume it means “extremely deluded narcissist, do not give any power,” but I’m curious about the precise scale involved. PS: Stick around for a bold “letter of recommendation from my dad” choice at the end.
* Tensions rise at Kean U. as officials recommend denying tenure to 2/3 of eligible professors.
* The wisdom of markets: Eight months ago, Snapchat was valued at $70 million. Today, it is valued at $4 billion, even though it has zero revenue. Six months ago, Pinterest was valued at $2.5 billion. Today, it is valued at $3.8 billion — and no revenue there, either. And last week news broke that Dropbox was said to be seeking a new round of funding that would value the company at $8 billion, up from $4 billion a year ago.
* Great line from Boing Boing on this Washington Post elite zip code article: “what money looks like from space.”
* My Idea for Higher Ed Reform: Do Nothing.
* In oh-sure-I-guess-that-show-is-still-on-the-air news: Family Guy kills off Brian for what looks like an episode and a half or so.
* I’m no expert, but I bet you could get better results innovating new schooling forms than medicating so many kids.
* Meanwhile: What happens if enough New York parents say they don’t want their kids to take tests?
Written by gerrycanavan
November 25, 2013 at 9:39 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, ADHD, bullying, class struggle, college, college admissions, economic bubbles, English majors, Family Guy, Harvard, How the University Works, JFK, kids today, letters of recommendation, medicine, narcissism, politics, standardized testing, tenure, the kids are all right, the wisdom of markets, war on education, what money looks like from space, ZIP codes
Saturday Links
* “Cochran, if we’re gonna write a story about the burial of Lee Harvey Oswald, we’re gonna have to bury the son of a bitch ourselves.”
* Time profiles Marquette’s own John McAdams, JFK conspiracy debunker. All my other comments on this subject are currently classified, to be released one hundred years in the future after all the principals are dead.
* No, College Isn’t Just for Rich Kids. Free Education for All. Here’s The 5-Sentence Personal Essay That Helped JFK Get Into Harvard.
* Gasp! Patenting Their Discoveries Does Not Pay Off for Most Universities, a Study Says.
* The executive council American Studies Association is currently considering passing a BDS resolution against Israeli cultural institutions. Steven Salaita argues they should. AAUP says they shouldn’t.
* Genocide in the Central African Republic.
* Climate Change Is Messing Up Butterfly’s Flight Seasons.
* The kids are all right: ‘Catch an Illegal’ Game Thwarted, Becomes Immigration Reform Rally.
* The worst news you have ever heard or contemplated: U.S. to Consider Cellphone Use on Planes.
* The only version of the afterlife I’ve ever been able to believe in.
* And thank goodness Obama finally has a free hand on appointments. Nine reasons the filibuster change is a huge deal. What a F*ing Scandal the Senate Is.
Written by gerrycanavan
November 23, 2013 at 8:33 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, academic boycotts, afterlife, airplanes, American Studies, Barack Obama, BDS, butterflies, cellphones, Central African Republic, class struggle, climate change, college, ecology, executive appointments, genocide, Harvard, How the University Works, immigration, Israel, JFK, judges, Kiribati, Marquette, Oswald, Palestine, patents, politics, Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal, Texas, the courts, the filibuster, the kids are all right, the law, the Senate, tuition, ugh
Monday Links!
* From Sherryl Vint, in LARoB: “Men Behaving Badly: White Masculinity in Science Fiction Television.”
* The report reveals a sense of ideological, demographic and cultural siege, on the American right, from which there is no obvious escape. Unable to comprehend or process last year’s election defeat, they feel the nation has become unmoored from its founding principles and is on a full-scale, unrelenting descent into chaos.
* That’ll solve it! White House Orders “Tech Surge” to Fix Obamacare Website. Weeks to fix, just in time for the insurance to not take effect on January 1.
* Nothing beside remains: With U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan, American military gear sold as scrap.
* George Washington University “admitted publicly for the first time Friday that it puts hundreds of undergraduate applicants on its waitlist each year because they cannot pay GW’s tuition.” Many Colleges Bend Rules To Admit Rich Applicants. Harvard’s Committee on University Resources.
* Science isn’t exactly an exact science.
With this in mind, consider 1,000 hypotheses being tested of which just 100 are true (see chart). Studies with a power of 0.8 will find 80 of them, missing 20 because of false negatives. Of the 900 hypotheses that are wrong, 5%—that is, 45 of them—will look right because of type I errors. Add the false positives to the 80 true positives and you have 125 positive results, fully a third of which are specious. If you dropped the statistical power from 0.8 to 0.4, which would seem realistic for many fields, you would still have 45 false positives but only 40 true positives. More than half your positive results would be wrong.
* Furthermore, even to its most practical and well-meaning critics, the actual relationship between gender and capitalist social relations remains an enigma. This is not simply because, as Marxists, we are reluctant to reproach the old man, but rather as a consequence of the fact that reproductive work – still performed primarily by those assigned the fate “woman” – is extremely difficult to comprehend in the terms provided by the critique of political economy. Of course, gender is fundamentally defined by capitalism, and it should not be concluded that Marx’s critique was “wrong”; buthe left women out of the story, and we need to find where he is hiding them. The Gendered Circuit: Reading The Arcane of Reproduction.
* The conspiracy goes deeper than you ever imagined: Author claims Robert Kennedy stole John F. Kennedy’s brain from National Archives.
* Meanwhile, another longstanding conspiracy theory gets validation: Fox really was using paid shills to manipulate comment threads.
* Seven Things You Might Not Know about Calvin & Hobbes.
* Traumatic Life Events, Not Genetics or Chemical Imbalance Cause Depression and Anxiety.
* To Fix Climate Change, Scientists Turn To Hacking The Earth.
* City College closed the Guillermo Morales-Assata Shakur Community and Student Center, an educational and organizing space founded on 1989 by leftist student groups, on Sunday morning without alerting the students and activists who work inside.
* Gasp! Jeb Bush ed reform group accused of abusing non-profit status to help corporations.
* American Horror Story and Abjection.
* Thus it has happened that, in the name of preventing invaders, the NSA has itself invaded.
* It begins: 870,000 Toyotas Recalled Due to “Spider-Related Problem.”
* And five points for Slytherin: Christie withdraws challenge to same-sex marriage ruling in New Jersey, which means it’s the law for good.
Written by gerrycanavan
October 21, 2013 at 12:41 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with abjection, academia, Afghanistan, American Horror Story, austerity, Barack Obama, brains, Calvin and Hobbes, cars, Chris Christie, class struggle, climate change, college, college admissions, conspiracy theories, CUNY, depression, development admits, Duke, ecology, five points for Slytherin, Fox News, games, gay rights, gender, geoengineering, George Washington University, guns, Harvard, health care, homelessness, horror, How the University Works, Jeb Bush, JFK, kids today, legacy admissions, marriage equality, masculinity, neoliberalism, New Jersey, New York, NSA, politics, race, reproduction, RFK, science, science fiction, spiders, student debt, student movements, Tea Party, Tic-Tac-Toe, tuition, war on education, war on terror, white privilege, Won't somebody think of the children?
Exactly 100% of the Sunday Links
* All Watched Over by Machines of Loving Grace. The Sound of Terror: Phenomenology of a Drone Strike. Give Skynet a Chance. Forever War Turns Its Hungry Gaze to Africa.
* The Counterreformation in Higher Education.
* Another review of Ebony & Ivy, on the connection between slavery and the university. Study faults UCLA’s handling of faculty’s racial bias complaints.
* Were Brutalist Buildings Really Designed to Thwart Student Riots? I’ve been to UWM; you’ll never convince me otherwise.
* The New York Times says it will slowly, laboriously, exhaustively roll out a simple and obvious change to dramatically improve their reporting.
Apple’s email to Molleindustria apparently claimed that four such lines were crossed: two lines related to “charities and contributions,” and two further “crossed lines” that suggested the game had depicted “violence or abuse of children” and “excessively objectionable or crude content.” With a curious bit of irony, the letter from Apple focuses on the very trendy discourse of protecting children from the moral hazards of the Web — a trend also picked up by the current Tory government in the UK, which promotes various protective methods to ensure kids are safe from/in the online world. Indeed, one is tempted to connect such a moral panic discourse to a wider neglect of other types of surely more direct abuse of children, as well as other vulnerable groups of workers worldwide. Protect the kids, if they get online — but not if their labor helps you get online and support the digital economy slightly further away from the actual cognitive work.
* Scenes from the BART strike: two workers killed by management-driven train.
* I think one of the most damaging effects America’s omnipresent racism has on a person’s psyche isn’t the brief pang of hurt that comes from being called a slur, or seeing a picture of Barack Obama portrayed by a chimpanzee. Those things are common and old-fashioned, and when they happen I tend to feel sadder than angry, because I’m seeing someone who engages with the world like a wall instead of a human being. Rather, I think what’s far more corrosive and insidious, the thing that lingers in the back of my mind the most, is the framework of plausible deniability built up around racism, and how insane that plausible deniability can make a person feel when wielded. How unsure of oneself. How worried that you might be overreacting, oversensitive, irrational.
* The Insidious Power of Not-Quite-Harassment.
* The Messy Link Between Slave Owners And Modern Management.
* A Field Guide to the North American Responsibility Troll.
* LSD is good for you, say Norway researchers.
* Breathing ruled more dangerous than passive smoking, with risk highest in places like China.
* Cheney Had Heart Device Disabled To Prevent Terrorists From Sending Fatal Shock.
* A brief history of the Washington Racial Slurs.
* Masculinity, patriarchy, violence.
* Woman’s Abortion Used As ‘Proof’ She’s Unfit To Raise Kids. Female DUI Suspects in Washington Were Made to Strip for Their Jailers.
* A Song of Ice and Fire as feminist epic? That may be overstating it.
* In retrospect, even though I have no reason to doubt Yanomamo ferocity, at least under certain circumstances, I seriously question the penchant of observers (scientific and lay alike) to generalize from small samples of our unquestionably diverse species, especially about something as complex as war. On just-so stories and evolutionary explanations of history.
* The ne plus ultra of Americans’ irrational free speech absolutism: Revenge Porn Is Awful, But The Law Against It Is Worse.
* At the rate things are going, tens of millions of us could end up as temps, contract employees, call-center operators, and the like: The Task Rabbit Economy.
* Moral panics we can believe in: Salsa Overtakes Ketchup as Most Popular Condiment. I don’t think this is even the first time this happened.
* “The 1979 conclusion by the House Select Committee on Assassinations is wrong,” Sabato said.
* The perfect rationality of markets: why don’t restaurants have dynamic, constant readjusting pricing schemes? What could possibly explain it?
* Two Rich People Hate Health Care for the Normals, Won’t Ever Drop It.
* And a Rich Person Says You Should Major in the Liberal Arts. There you have it! Go!
Written by gerrycanavan
October 20, 2013 at 8:25 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, Africa, air pollution, Apple, apps, architecture, assassination, austerity, Barack Obama, BART, Brutalism, bullshit jobs, Cheney, class struggle, climate change, condiments, discrimination, drone art, drones, drugs, ecology, efficiency, evolutionary biology, football, forever war, Game of Thrones, George R. R. Martin, guns, health care, How the University Works, iPhone, JFK, just so stories, ketchup, Koch brothers, labor, liberal arts, LSD, management, masculinity, mass shootings, Native American issues, neoliberalism, Oswald, patriarchy, Phone Story, plausible deniability, police corruption, politics, protest, race, racism, rape, rape culture, restaurants, riots, salsa, San Francisco, science, sexual harassment, Skynet, slavery, student movements, teaching, Teju Cole, temp jobs, terrorism, the economy, the humanities, the wisdom of markets, trolls, UCLA, underemployment, unions, United Kingdom, violence, war crimes, war huh good god y'all what is it good for? absolutely nothing say it again, war on education, Washington Racial Slurs, Won't somebody think of the children?
Saturday Morning Breakfast Links
* The new issue of Science Fiction Studies is dedicated to Chinese science fiction.
* Breaking: Liberal arts majors didn’t kill the economy.
* Judith Butler’s Remarks to Brooklyn College on BDS.
* In the beginning, God created the wealth and the jobs. Now the wealth was a formless void and darkness covered the sources of value, while the spirit of capitalism hovered over the depths. And then God said, “Let there be jobs,” and there were jobs. And God saw that the jobs were not very good; and God separated the jobs from the surplus-value. God called the surplus-value Wealth, and the jobs he called Generosity. And there was evening and there was morning, the first day. Genesis 1: A Neoliberal Account.
* SMBC tackles the unholy nexus of predestination and time travel.
* Janet Stephens, amateur hairdressing historian. Fun story, despite the classist overtones.
* The real Cuban missile crisis. So, both JFK and RFK were insane, I guess? Perhaps we should give this quantum immortality theory some serious consideration.
* Fox News screws up every day, but this one is pretty classic.
* There’s obviously some sort of long-term plan here that I don’t yet understand, like the time-bombs hidden in No Child Left Behind: North Carolina to formalize two “tracks” of high school diplomas, “job-ready” and “college-ready.”
* The Talmudic solution to the drone crisis: invent (another) secret, unaccountable court system in lieu of actual due process.
* And George Bush, painter.
Written by gerrycanavan
February 9, 2013 at 9:30 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, academic freedom, America, art, BDS, Bush, China, classism, college, Cuba, Cuban Missile Crisis, drones, due process, Fox News, future shock, gay rights, Genesis, hairdressing, high school, How did we survive the Cold War?, JFK, job creators, Judith Butler, Mark Dery, marriage equality, military-industrial complex, neoliberalism, North Carolina, nuclearity, painting, Palestine, politics, predestination, quantum immortality, RFK, scholarship, science fiction, the courts, the economy, the future is now, the humanities, theory, time travel, unemployment, war on education
Midweek Links
* Erik Loomis is being targeted by prominent figures on the right in what has to be the most ludicriously unfair, bad-faith attack I have ever seen.
* Walker declares state of emergency in Wisconsin due to snowstorm.
* Guide to Answering Academic Job Interview Questions.
* Argument Over Sandy Hook Shooting Ends in Gunfire. Why Won’t We Talk About Violence and Masculinity in America? Gun Violence In American Schools Is Nothing New. Top Conservative Publication: Shooting Occurred Because Women Ran The School. Weaponize the husky twelve-year-olds. Virginia Republican Legislator Actually Wants To Require Concealed Weapons In Schools. The Arms Race of Stupid.
* I can’t help wondering if the bullets of Sandy Hook Elementary will be for Obama what the snarling dogs and high-pressure fire hoses of Birmingham, Alabama, were for John F. Kennedy in 1963: the human tragedy that will force him to take a political risk, simply because it is right.
* Conservative Historian Warns Obama and Democrats are ‘Much More Radical’ than Marxists. So much more radical. So much more.
* Best Astronomy Images of 2012. (Keep scrolling past the image for more links.)
* Wayne State faculty gives OK to union leadership to call strike if necessary.
* Terrible person to teach terrible class at terrible university.
* News from Nerdistan: What Frodo would have looked like as Gollum. Joss Whedon wanted the Wasp and an extra villain in The Avengers. Tolkien vs. technology. Someone at Disney is already trying to lay the groundwork for a second sequel trilogy after Star Wars 7-9. Nearby Tau Ceti may host two planets suited to life. Netflix Instant Adds a Bunch of Fake ‘Arrested Development’ Shows and Movies. LEGOs run the world now.
* It’s time to start asking serious questions about the safety of lube.
* Here: an exercise in choice. Your choice. One of these tales is true.
* Petraeus Scandal 2.0. Nothing about sex, so no one will care.
* Matt Yglesias has the most logical incoherent “think piece” you’ll read on Society Security today. Money doesn’t magically become not-money when it’s spent by retirees.
* Plans to avoid the fiscal cliff cut government more than the fiscal cliff. Why, it’s almost as if this whole debate is total bullshit!
* Shale Oil Might Be Less Awesome Than We Think. From a personal perspective, I doubt that’s possible.
* Top 20 most valuable college football programs all made at least $24 million in profit last year, according to Forbes. $200K Average Salary for Asst. Football Coaches in Major Programs. Bill Introduced for IRS to Collect Student Loan Payments.
Justin Draeger, president of the National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators, said he supported the bill, arguing it could “nearly eliminate student loan default.”
* But the reinvention conversation has not produced the panacea that people seem to yearn for. “The whole MOOC thing is mass psychosis,” a case of people “just throwing spaghetti against the wall” to see what sticks, says Peter J. Stokes, executive director for postsecondary innovation at Northeastern’s College of Professional Studies. His job is to study the effectiveness of ideas that are emerging or already in practice.
* The Wreckage of the Deepwater Horizon is Emitting a Mysterious Substance Into the Gulf of Mexico.
* Quentin Tarantino Says Drug War, Justice System Are Modern Day Slavery.
* Apocalypse and Revelation Are the Same Word.
* And life’s not all an endless series of miserable atrocities: Found: Whale Thought Extinct for 2 Million Years.
Written by gerrycanavan
December 19, 2012 at 9:34 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, academic freedom, academic jobs, aliens, apocalypse, Arrested Development, astronomy, austerity, Avengers, bad faith, Barack Obama, big pictures, blizzards, bullshit, college football, David Brooks, Deepwater Horizon, Disney, energy, Episode 7, fiscal cliff, Gollum, Gulf of Mexico, guns, How the University Works, humility, husky twelve-year-olds, JFK, Joss Whedon, LEGO, Lord of the Rings, lube, Marxism, masculinity, MLA, MOOCs, narrative, NCAA, Neil Gaiman, Netflix, Newtown, NRA, oil, pedagogy, Petraeus, photographs, places to invade next, politics, race, sex, shale oil, slavery, Social Security, Star Wars, story, strikes, student debt, Tarantino, Tau Ceti, technology, tenure, The Hobbit, Tolkien, violence, war on drugs, Wayne State, whales, Wisconsin, Yale
Media Empire Watch
Jaimee and I both wrote short capsule reviews for the Independent‘s holiday book roundup this week, me on Debt and 11/22/63 and her on Don DeLillo and Tomas Tranströmer.
Written by gerrycanavan
December 23, 2011 at 12:40 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with books, David Graeber, debt, Don DeLillo, Jaimee, JFK, my media empire, Oswald, Stephen King, time travel, Tomas Tranströmer
The Umbrella Man
Written by gerrycanavan
November 22, 2011 at 10:23 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with assassination, conspiracy theories, documentary, Errol Morris, JFK, Umbrella Man
Lots and Lots of Monday Night Links
* ThinkProgress reports solar is surging. We’re saved! Krugman has more, and so does Steve Benen.
* Via my dad: Soviet Bus Stops.
* Occupy my dad: Class war is intergenerational war.
* Rortybomb: Two Steps Toward Tackling Our Current Student Loan Problems. Robert Cruickshank: …any student loan reform proposal that does not include some form of principal writedowns is not likely to be very effective.
* Tor reviews Stephen King’s 11/22/63. I’m much more interested in his pitch for what sounds like a truly horrifying next novel: Occupy Bangor.
* A new AAUW study shows there’s an easy way for young women to avoid sexual harassment in schools: just avoid being either pretty or not pretty.
* Polling shows Americans have begun to realize Republicans are intentionally sabotaging the economy.
* Anti-vaccination fever just got a little more crazy. Via MeFi.
* Marriage equality increases property values. Is that a good enough reason?
* Also on the equality front: Dan Harmon kind-of, sort-of apologizes for the way Community treats gay and trans people.
* Everybody still hates Romney. Poor guy.
* And Bors memorializes one of the windows broken during the Occupy Oakland protests last week.
Written by gerrycanavan
November 7, 2011 at 6:41 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with 11/23/63, academia, broken windows, chicken pox, class struggle, community, Dan Harmon, debt forgiveness, ecology, energy, extraordinary popular delusions and the madness of crowds, gay rights, homeland security, How the University Works, intergenerational warfare, JFK, kids today, Krugman, marriage equality, military-industrial complex, Mitt Romney, moral panic, Oakland, Occupy Bangor, Occupy Everywhere, Oswald, politics, polls, property values, Republicans, riots, sexual harassment, shock doctrine, solar power, Soviet Union, Stephen King, student debt, the economy, time travel, transgender issues, vaccines, violence, We're saved, web comics, Won't somebody think of the children?
Wednesday, Right?
* Save the Bottle Rocket Motel.
* 40 Senate Republicans just voted to kill Medicare. And now the GOP wants to cut Medicaid by 25%, too. More here, here, and here.
Keep in mind that Medicaid pays for 40 percent of all births and that children comprise half its beneficiaries. But the real cost drivers are older Americans. Medicaid provides financing for 60 percent of nursing-home residents and pays 43 percent of America’s long-term care bill. Ryan’s reform would stick states with the bill and would likely leave many of the most vulnerable without coverage.
* Now even Floridians realize Rick Scott is horrible. And Wisconsin hates Scott Walker.
* The New Jersey Supreme Court just spanked Chris Christie on education.
* There’s so much Prozac in the Great Lakes it’s killing off the bacteria.
* China rips off Cory Doctorow and then does him one better: they’re forcing prisoners to gold farm.
* MSNBC really should just give Chris Hayes Ed Schultz’s timeslot, especially after this. One week’s suspension hardly seems sufficient punishment. But then I’ve always found his show unwatchable.
* And MetaFilter’s starting up another Nomic game. Get in on the ground floor!
Written by gerrycanavan
May 25, 2011 at 8:28 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with 1960s, alternate history, austerity, Bottle Rocket, China, Chris Christie, Chris Hayes, class struggle, Cory Doctorow, Ed Schultz, film, Florida, games, gold farming, health care, JFK, Medicaid, Medicare, MetaFilter, MSNBC, New Jersey, Nomic, politics, pollution, Prozac, Republicans, Rick Scott, science fiction, Scott Walker, Soviet Union, Space Race, the courts, the Moon, the Senate, war on education, water, Wes Anderson, Wisconsin
Monday Night
Monday night.
* Nathan Fillion says Dr. Horrible 2 is moving ahead.
* The History News Network has your first JFK post of the season.
What McHugh claimed to have witnessed next was shocking. “I walked in the toilet, in the powder room, and there he was hiding, with the curtain closed,” McHugh recalled. He claimed that LBJ was crying, “They’re going to get us all. It’s a plot. It’s a plot. It’s going to get us all.'” According to the General, Johnson “was hysterical, sitting down on the john there alone in this thing.”
Of course, opinions on LBJ differ.
* And speaking of the Kennedy assassination: how great was last night’s Mad Men? Knowing they would eventually have to do an assassination episode, I worried they wouldn’t find the right approach—but I think they pretty much nailed it. I like too that it came an episode early; like most people I was thinking it would be next week. Pandagon and Ta-Nehisi Coates have their usual Mad Men posts up, if you’re interested; I usually read the Television without Pity forums too.
* Rep. Virginia Foxx (R-NC): Everywhere I go in my district, people tell me they are frightened. … I share that fear, and I believe they should be fearful. And I believe the greatest fear that we all should have to our freedom comes from this room — this very room — and what may happen later this week in terms of a tax increase bill masquerading as a health care bill. I believe we have more to fear from the potential of that bill passing than we do from any terrorist right now in any country.
* And Steve Benen has your chart of the day: filibusters since the 1960s. That last spike is since Democrats recovered control of Congress in 2007.
Written by gerrycanavan
November 2, 2009 at 10:18 pm
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged with assassination, Dr. Horrible's Sing-Along Blog, health care, JFK, LBJ, Mad Men, North Carolina, politics, the filibuster, the Senate
More Monday Links
More Monday links! More!
* Jacob directs my attention to the Spider-Man lizard. As Jacob says, you won’t be disappointed.
* Amanda Marcotte says last night’s explosive office hijinx on Mad Men were a quiet reference to the Kennedy assassination. I think she may be right.
* Japan’s real-life Dollhouse.
* The mother of all Infinite Jest ending theories. (Thanks, kate!)
* Last words of the executed in Texas. Found poetry.
Cathy, you know I never meant to hurt you.
All my life I have been locked up.
I am tired.
I’m ready, Warden.
Written by gerrycanavan
September 21, 2009 at 10:42 pm
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged with assassination, death penalty, Dollhouse, endings, found poetry, Infinite Jest, JFK, lizards, Mad Men, Spider-Man, Texas