Posts Tagged ‘job creators’
Sunday Night Links! Probably Too Many!
* Upcoming appearances: I’ll be speaking at the Environments & Societies workshop at UC Davis next Wednesday. And of course we’ll be debating whether Harry Potter is a dystopia (it is) this Wednesday here at Marquette.
* This is nice: Green Planets is a finalist for the ASLE book prize.
* CFP: The Contemporary: Culture in the Twenty-First Century.
* CFP: Jim Gordon as Batman is dumb.
* The Dolphin Trainer Who Loved Dolphins Too Much.
* The cult of the Ph.D. I suppose I’m a hopeless curmudgeon on this at this point, but I just don’t see how any attempt to reform graduate schools can ignore the fact that “the primary, overarching purpose of doctoral programs is to produce professors.” Alt-ac can save a few, but it can’t save everyone, or even most.
* Everything We Learned About The Force Awakens At Star Wars Celebration. Look, I’m not made of stone.
* And then there was (sigh) DC. Double sigh.
* There still aren’t any states where women earn as much as men.
* Did Yoda And Obi-Wan Screw Princess Leia Over?
But in choosing a hero to defeat Vader, they sent Luke to Dagobah, not Leia. They sent the whiny uneducated hick whose greatest ambition until very recently had been to *join the Empire* instead of the smart, sophisticated, and well-educated woman with the political connections and Rebel cred?
It was only the last time I watched Return of the Jedi that I finally realized “that boy is our last hope / no, there is another” refers to Anakin, not Leia. So I’m pretty on board with this, especially now that the possibly exculpatory Expanded Universe context has been retconned out of existence.
* Citi Economist Says It Might Be Time to Abolish Cash. This is a truly stunning document: the argument is that we need to abolish cash because otherwise bankers won’t be able to force everybody to accept negative interest rates.
* New from the new TNR: We’re Checking the Wrong Privilege.
* America’s wealth grew by 60 percent in the past six years, by over $30 trillion. In approximately the same time, the number of homeless children has also grown by 60 percent.
* 155,000 New York kids boycott standardized tests.
* Preserving the Ghastly Inventory of Auschwitz.
It is a moral stance with specific curatorial challenges. It means restoring the crumbling brick barracks where Jews and some others were interned without rebuilding those barracks, lest they take on the appearance of a historical replica. It means reinforcing the moss-covered pile of rubble that is the gas chamber at Birkenau, the extermination camp a few miles away, a structure that the Nazis blew up in their retreat. It means protecting that rubble from water seeping in from the adjacent ponds where the ashes of the dead were dumped.
And it means deploying conservators to preserve an inventory that includes more than a ton of human hair; 110,000 shoes; 3,800 suitcases; 470 prostheses and orthopedic braces; more than 88 pounds of eyeglasses; hundreds of empty canisters of Zyklon B poison pellets; patented metal piping and showerheads for the gas chambers; hundreds of hairbrushes and toothbrushes; 379 striped uniforms; 246 prayer shawls; more than 12,000 pots and pans carried by Jews who believed that they were simply bound for resettlement; and some 750 feet of SS documents — hygiene records, telegrams, architectural blueprints and other evidence of the bureaucracy of genocide — as well as thousands of memoirs by survivors.
* There’s jobs, there’s dirty jobs, and then there’s being Joseph Goebbels’s copyright lawyer.
* Ewald Engelen, a professor of finance and geography at UvA who spoke about the perils of the financialization of higher education at the Maagdenhuis occupation, explained in a coauthored article, published in 2014, how rendementsdenken became the ruling logic – and logic of rule – at his university. After a 1995 decision transferring public ownership of real estate to universities like UvA, he and colleagues argued, education and research considerations started taking a backseat to commercial concerns regarding real estate planning. The state’s retreat from management of real estate demanded tighter account of “costs, profits, assets and liabilities” at the university, setting “in motion a process of internal reorganization to produce the transparent cash flow metrics that were required to service the rapidly growing real estate debt,” the academics wrote.
* Neither the Brostrom or the Campos side focuses on the fact that privatization increases expenses as well as revenues. In reality, privatization forces the mission creep of multiplying activities, “businesses,” funding streams, capital projects and other debt-funded investments, which increase all sorts of non-educational costs and also administration. Private partnerships, sponsors, vendor relations, and so on bring in new money but also cost money, require institutional subsidies, and in many cases lose money for the university.
* The Education Department Is Working On A Process For Forgiving Student Loans.
* Sweet Briar didn’t die, it was put down. If he puts his mind to it, Jamshed Bharucha has the ability to effectively destroy whatever future remains for Cooper Union.
* I really wish we could get famous people to stop talking this way about autism.
* Towards a disability version of the Bechdel Test.
1) There’s a disabled character visible2) Who wants something, and tries to get it,3) Other than a) Death, b) Cure, or c) Revenge.
* Cuomo’s master plan to turn SUNY into a startup factory has created 76 jobs.
* Large Pile Of Cash Announces US Presidency Bid.
* The BBC has adapted The Left Hand of Darkness.
* I’m very much in favor of “they” as a generic singular pronoun, but “they are,” please, not “they is.”
* Private Company Conspired With Police To Hold Poor People For Ransom, Lawsuit Charges.
* Ex-Drug Cop: Drug Squad Stole Cash And Planted Drugs Too Many Times To Count.
* Only for certain values of “justice”: The Justice Department and FBI have formally acknowledged that nearly every examiner in an elite FBI forensic unit gave flawed testimony in almost all trials in which they offered evidence against criminal defendants over more than a two-decade period before 2000.
* It seems like the deputy isn’t the person who should be charged with Eric Harris’s murder. This person never should have been working as a cop, for myriad reasons.
* The only way this can work: California Assembly panel approves legislation preventing police from viewing body camera footage.
* White parents in North Carolina are using charter schools to secede from the education system.
* Racism in schools is pushing more black families to homeschool their children.
* All 3 Oregon Basketball Players Suspended Over Sexual Assault Find New Teams.
* Shocked, shocked: Leaked videos suggest Chevron cover-up of Amazon pollution.
* The Atlantic covers graduate student unionization.
* Los Angeles school district demands multi-million dollar refund from Apple.
* Centuries of Italian History Are Unearthed in Quest to Fix Toilet.
* “All I know is the end is coming for all of us.”
* On not hate-watching, but hope-watching.
* George R. R. Martin: Once More, into the Kennels.
* The Atlanta teachers’ trial: A perfect example of America’s broken justice system.
* How Israel Hid Its Secret Nuclear Weapons Program.
* The Quest to Boot Old Hickory Off the $20.
* Why the Vatican’s crackdown on nuns ended happily. Pope Francis’s Populist War on the Devil.
* Latchkey children age restrictions by state. Wisconsin, you’re probably asleep at the switch here. But Illinois, you guys relax.
* A Scan Of 100,000 Galaxies Shows No Sign Of Alien Mega-Civilizations. Okay, but let’s scan the next 900,000 just to be sure.
* That aliens would have imperial ambitions is taken as natural. Far from being the historical outcome of a specific organization of capital in the latter half of the second millennium, these signatories assume that the ideology of capitalist imperialism is inevitable across the galaxy. To be fair, though, the Fermi Paradox is a “it just takes one” claim, not a “all societies are alike” claim.
* If you’re so smart, why aren’t you terrified all the time?
* Chase nightmares with behind-the-scenes photos from Return To Oz.
* The Photo Hitler Doesn’t Want You to See.
* More on how Game of Thrones deviates from the books. And a fun flashback: The first pilot for Game of Thrones was so bad HBO almost passed on the entire series.
* It’s almost like Batman didn’t think this thing through.
* Dumb, but maybe my favorite Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal of all time.
* And teach the controversy: Tim Goodman says the Waitress arc on Mad Men might not be stupid and pointless.
Written by gerrycanavan
April 19, 2015 at 7:30 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, administrative blight, aliens, altac, Andrew Cuomo, Andrew Jackson, animal personhood, animal rights, Apple, ASLE, Atlanta, Auschwitz, austerity, autism, bankers, banks, Batman, BBC, Bechdel test, body cameras, books, capitalism, cash, Catholicism, CFPs, charter schools, Chevron, class struggle, college basketball, college sports, comics, Commissioner Gordon, Cooper Union, cultural preservation, David Chase, DC Comics, Department of Justice, desegregation, disability, Disney, dolphins, dystopia, ecology, English, entrepreneurs, environmentalism, Episode 7, Eric Harris, Expanded Universe, FBI, feminism, Fermi paradox, film, Game of Thrones, Gawker, general election 2016, George R. R. Martin, graduate school, graduate student unions, Green Planets, Harry Potter, hate-watching, HBO, history, Hitler, homelessness, homeschooling, hope-watching, How the University Works, Hugo awards, ideology, Illinois, intelligence, Israel, Italy, Jesus, job creators, kids today, Los Angeles, Mad Men, maps, Marquette, misogyny, money, my pedagogical empire, my scholarly empire, NCAA, negative interest rates, neoliberalism, New York, nightmares, North Carolina, nostalgia, nuclear weapons, nuclearity, nuns, Obi-Wan, Occupy Cal, oil, over-educated literary theory PhDs, parenting, PhDs, photography, Poland, police, police corruption, police state, police violence, politics, pop culture, Princess Leia, Princeton, prison-industrial complex, privatization, privatize everything, privilege, race, racism, radio, religion, rendementsdenken, Return to Oz, RFK Jr., Robert Heinlein, run it like a sandwich, Sad Puppies, Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal, science fiction, Sea World, SETI, sexism, Should I go to grad school?, Sopranos, standardized testing, Star Wars, student debt, SUNY, Superman, Sweet Briar, television, terror, the Amazon, the contemporary, the courts, the Force, The Force Awakens, the Holocaust, The Joker, the law, The Left Hand of Darkness, the past is another country, the Pope, they, toilets, trailers, tuition, UC Davis, unions, University of Amsterdam, University of Oregon, Ursula K. Le Guin, war on drugs, war on education, white people, Wisconsin, Won't somebody think of the children?, words, worrying, Yoda
Saturday Night Links!
* I’ve had a nice bit of professional good news: I’ve been asked to join Extrapolation as an editor beginning with their Spring 2015 issue.
* “Crutzen, who is not a geologist, but one of the modern great scientists, essentially launched a small hand grenade into the world of geological time scales,” Jan Zalasiewicz, chair of the ICS’s anthropocene working group, told the Guardian. “The word began to be used widely, well before geologists ever got involved.”
* That old-time religion: Now that science fiction is respectable, it’s lost almost all of the conceptual craziness and dubious sexual politics that made it both fanboy bait and of genuine interest.
* From AfricaIsACountry: Ebola and neo-imperialism. And from Jacobin: The Political Economy of Ebola.
* The arsenal of, well, let’s say democracy: The U.S. sold $66.3 billion in weapons last year –- more than three-fourths of the entire global arms market.
* Richest 1% of people own nearly half of global wealth, says report.
* Climate change: how to make the big polluters really pay.
* Of Collaborators and Careerists.
* Whites are more supportive of voter ID laws when shown photos of black people voting.
* Meritocracy watch: Poor kids who do everything right don’t do better than rich kids who do everything wrong.
* The 21st century university: women’s only colleges and trans identity.
* Since the sinking of the Titanic, there has been a widespread belief that the social norm of “women and children first” (WCF) gives women a survival advantage over men in maritime disasters, and that captains and crew members give priority to passengers. We analyze a database of 18 maritime disasters spanning three centuries, covering the fate of over 15,000 individuals of more than 30 nationalities. Our results provide a unique picture of maritime disasters. Women have a distinct survival disadvantage compared with men. Captains and crew survive at a significantly higher rate than passengers.
* The Milwaukee police officer who killed Dontre Hamilton in Red Arrow Park is believed to be the first officer in the city fired as a result of a fatal on-duty shooting in at least 45 years.
* More back-and-forth on carceral feminism from Amber A’Lee Frost and Freddie deBoer.
* Pieces like this are enough to make you nostalgic for the quietly understated narcissism of “job creators.”
like Uber but for poor people to sell their organs to rich people
— Gritty Rebootavan (@gerrycanavan) October 19, 2014
So old I can remember when technological progress was going to increase human happiness instead of helping everyone hustle 24 hours a day.
— Gritty Rebootavan (@gerrycanavan) October 19, 2014
* An oral history of The Wonder Years.
* New Scrabble Dictionary Disrepects The Game.
* Stop worrying about mastermind hackers. Start worrying about the IT guy.
* And just for fun: How to die in the 18th century. Watch for for evil, and for the purples…
Written by gerrycanavan
October 18, 2014 at 9:50 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with abortion, academia, Africa, Airbnb, Always Be Closing, America, arms trade, carceral feminism, carceral liberalism, careerism, class struggle, climate change, collaborators, college, death, deep time, Ebola, ecology, everything is trying to kill you, evil, Extrapolation, games, geology, hackers, How the University Works, humanitarianism, imperialism, income inequality, job creators, meritocracy, military-industrial complex, Milwaukee, mortality, my media empire, neoliberalism, Paul Crutzen, police violence, politics, protest, race, racism, rich people, science fiction, Scrabble, sex, shipwrecks, technology, television, the Anthropocene, the hustle, the purples, The Wonder Years, trans* issues, Uber, voter ID, wealth, weird hobbies, what it is I think I'm doing, white people, women and children first, women's colleges
Thursday Morning Links!
* In Landmark Decision, U.S. Patent Office Cancels Trademark For Redskins Football Team. So the Redskins will be forced by lost revenue and unrestrained anti-Redskins bootlegs to change their name — at which time bitter Redskins dead-enders will be able to sell each other Redskins-branded merchandise in protest…
* We Have No Idea If Online Ads Work.
* That plan goes something like this: maximize constrained educational choices that are a function of labor market changes; commodify inequality by organizing for the highest need students; extract guaranteed funds from public coffers; call it access; wash and repeat.
* Guernica‘s special issue on class, including a report on adjuncts.
* BREAKING: The U.S. Has the Most Expensive, Least Effective Health Care System. BREAKING: Guns kill children. BREAKING: The American prison system is a nightmare. BREAKING: Capitalism is insanely corrupt. BREAKING: Uber is a scam.
* Self-plagiarism is a really weird concept to pin down.
* When innocent people are exonerated after wrongfully spending time in prison, some states pay money to the accused for their trouble. As data from NPR and the Innocence Project show, those payouts are often despicably low.
* This Is How Much More States Spend On Prisoners Than On Students.
* Does the alternatives-to-incarceration industry profit from injustice?
* The economics of nuclear war.
* Things instructional staff aren’t paid enough to do.
* The logic on display here shows the toxic self-justifying nature of American military adventures. If a war accomplishes its stated objectives, that goes to show that war is great. If a war fails to accomplish its stated objectives — as the Bush-era surge miserably failed to produce a durable political settlement in Iraq — then that simply proves that more war was called for.
* And they say America’s best years are behind it.
* Münchausen syndrome by proxy, mommy blog edition.
* The horror of postpartum psychosis.
* Against the simplicity of “born this way.”
* It seems that when you want to make a woman into a hero, you hurt her first. When you want to make a man into a hero, you hurt… also a woman first.
* Louie. Louie. Lou-eeeee. Louie. Louie. Lou-iiiiiii.
* You can kill anyone with your car, as long as you don’t really mean it.
* Walker said it was important to have a smooth-running highway system to avoid gridlock “that would choke off the ability of businesses to come in and out of Milwaukee.” “I think the last thing you want to do is have employers look to go bypass the city of Milwaukee when they’re talking about jobs and commerce here,” he said. “So you’ve got to make sure there’s a good transportation system.” And just wait until he finds out human beings use roads too!
* My brilliant wife has a poem in TAB.
* How to Catch a Chess Cheater.
* Elon Musk “Hopeful” First People Can Be Taken To Mars in 10-12 Years.
* And even Colbert Report writers have to form tech startups now.
Written by gerrycanavan
June 19, 2014 at 8:17 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, adjunctification, adjuncts, advertising, America, Arizona State University, austerity, Barack Obama, boredom, born this way, Bush, capitalism, cars, chess, children, class struggle, Colbert, corruption, Diplomacy, Don't mention the war, economics, Elon Musk, football, for-profit schools, games, gay rights, general election 2016, genetics, Google, graduate school, graduate students, GREs, guns, health care, Heroes, Hillary Clinton, How the University Works, innocence, Iraq, Jaimee, job creators, Louie, Louis C.K., maps, Mars, Münchausen syndrome by proxy, mental illness, military-industrial complex, Milwaukee, misogyny, mommy bloggers, mothers, murder, Native American issues, neoliberalism, NFL, nuclear war, nuclearity, outer space, pedagogy, places to invade next, poetry, politics, postpartum psychosis, prison, prison-industrial complex, race, Redskins, roads, schools, self-plagiarism, sexism, slurs, Space X, Starbucks, startups, teaching, television, the hustle, the Internet, the West, trademarks, true crime, Twitter, Uber, war on rducation, Won't somebody think of the children?, writing
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
Wednesday Links
* The hunger for crisis: All of this literature is the product of what the philosopher John Gray has described as “a culture transfixed by the spectacle of its own fragility.” Call it dystopian narcissism: the conviction that our anxieties are uniquely awful; that the crises of our age will be the ones that finally do civilization in; that we are privileged to witness the beginning of the end. I like the term, but I’d maybe push further on it — our true dystopian narcissism is our willingness, even eagerness, to bring about the final collapse.
* Bradley Manning Sentenced To 35 Years In Prison For Leaking U.S. Secrets To WikiLeaks. I wonder if the decision to let war crimes slide, while maximally prosecuting those who reveal the existence of war crimes, could have any bad consequences down the line.
* In every society, democratic or totalitarian, the sensible, grown-up thing to do is to commit to the long haul of sleazy conformity. The rewards are mostly guaranteed: if not freedom or happiness, then respectability and degree of security. What spoils it is the obstinate few who do otherwise – those, absurdly, who actually believe in the necessary fictions; enough to be moved and angered by the difference between what an organisation does in reality and what it says in public.
* The camp is the nomos of the modern: South Carolina City Approves Plan To Exile Its Homeless.
In order to accommodate all the homeless people who will now be banned from downtown, the city will partner with a local charity to keep an emergency shelter on the outskirts of town open 24 hours a day. However, it’s unlikely the shelter, which can handle 240 guests, will be enough to handle the local homeless population, which numbers more than six times the available beds.
To see how this all turns out, consult Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, “Past Tense” Parts 1&2.
* How Detroit Can Help Solve America’s Student-Loan Crisis. Spoiler alert: Detroit just needs some heroic Job Creators™!
* And can You Solve Slate’s Gerrymandering Jigsaw Puzzle? Pretty good demonstration of how absurd representation has become.
Written by gerrycanavan
August 21, 2013 at 10:03 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with Agamben, America, apocalypse, conformity, Deep Space Nine, democracy, Detroit, dystopian narcissism, empire, gerrymandering, homelessness, job creators, military-industrial complex, politics, South Carolina, Star Trek, student debt, the camp, The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas, voting, war crimes, whistleblowing, Wikileaks
Saturday Night Links
* Austerity: not all bad? Meat Industry May Shut Down For Weeks Due To U.S. Spending Cuts.
* The Journal-Sentinel profiles Einstein Productions, a Milwaukee non-profit founded with the help of the Marquette University College of Communications providing job training assistance to people on the autism spectrum.
* The Myth of “Saudi America.”
* Natural gas and oil production is the second-biggest source of U.S. greenhouse gases, the government said, emboldening environmentalists who say tighter measures are needed to curb the emissions from hydraulic fracturing.
* Winter in an era of climate change: “We will see a shorter snow season, but more intense individual snowfall events.”
* Boston University student tasered for throwing a snowball at a cop. Seems proportional.
* According to the new survey, 54 percent of Americans approve of using drones to kill high-level terrorism suspects, while 18 percent disapprove and 28 percent are undecided. … But support for drone strikes in the new HuffPost/YouGov survey dropped to 43 percent if the terrorism suspects are U.S. citizens, with 27 percent disapproving and 31 percent saying they’re not sure. If innocent civilians may also be killed in the process of targeting terrorism suspects, only 29 percent approve of using them and 42 percent disapprove. I’m amazed the numbers are that low, to be honest. Perhaps there’s an opportunity here to leverage Republicans’ knee-jerk hatred of Obama for anti-imperialist ends.
* The surfeit of attention paid to the figure of the entrepreneur in the present moment reveals it to be an object of impossible longing, a fiction riven by ideological contradictions. He—it is usually a he as portrayed in media—is an abstraction but also manifest as a Mark Zuckerberg or a Peter Thiel. He is both an idea and a real person. The distance between the two—mirrored in the gulf between what he is meant to stand for and what we are supposed to do in emulating flesh-and-blood entrepreneurs—reveals some of the deep contradictions in how we live our lives and how we think.
* Ruth Fowler reads Christopher Dorner’s manifesto in light of his rampage.
“I am a man who has lost complete faith in the system, when the system betrayed, slandered and libeled me,” Dorner writes, who identifies throughout his manifesto as a patriot whose core beliefs have been shattered. He realizes that he has, as we might say, ‘lost the plot’. He’s happy to tell you why that is, and why he believes he has to divert his killing skills away from the people they were intended for, and against those who trained him. His manifesto or letter, titled simply, ‘Last Resort’. is addressed to America, in a final plea, perhaps, that they address the heart of darkness that lies at its core. The heart of darkness which turned Christopher Dorner from a man who believed that he could best serve his country by working as a navy reservist and LAPD officer, to a man who believed he could best serve his country by destroying the LAPD entirely using the skills he learned in the navy.
* And you’ve always wondered: how does AOL make money? The Atlantic reports.
Written by gerrycanavan
February 9, 2013 at 8:31 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academic freedom, America, AOL, austerity, autism, Barack Obama, BDS, carbon, cars, Christopher Dorner, climate change, drones, ecology, entrepreneurs, feminism, food, graffiti, guns, hydrofracking, ideology, Israel, job creators, LAPD, Lena Dunham, Marquette, meat, military-industrial complex, Milwaukee, natural gas, nudity, oil, Palestine, police brutality, politics, snow, tasers, vegetarians, war huh good god y'all what is it good for? absolutely nothing say it again, winter, Wisconsin
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
Wednesday!
* Local news: A major donation at Duke will rebrand the Rare Books, Manuscript, and Special Collections Library.
* Neofeudalism at Verizon from Pandagon and Feministe.
* Taibbi:
For the past two decades, according to a whistle-blower at the SEC who recently came forward to Congress, the agency has been systematically destroying records of its preliminary investigations once they are closed. By whitewashing the files of some of the nation’s worst financial criminals, the SEC has kept an entire generation of federal investigators in the dark about past inquiries into insider trading, fraud and market manipulation against companies like Goldman Sachs, Deutsche Bank and AIG.
There’s a little more here.
* Debunking the Texas miracle: turns out the whole thing was on the back of government jobs. Socialism!
* With Rick Perry already going up in flames, there was a surge of interest today around Chris Christie amid rumors that he was focus-testing a 2012 run. Then New Jersey got downgraded. Now people are talking about Paul Ryan again. Who will be tomorrow’s savior?
* Of course they might not need one. Gallup has Obama’s approval rating on the economy down to 26%, and his disapproval rating up to 71%.
* Also in GOP primary news: Why is Jon Huntsman even a Republican? It seems like the guy is just in the wrong place.
* And your obscene atrocity of the day: Missouri School Sued For Allegedly Making Special Ed Student Write Apology Letter To Her Rapist.
Written by gerrycanavan
August 17, 2011 at 6:00 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, Barack Obama, Chris Christie, climate change, corruption, Duke, general election 2012, job creators, Jon Huntsman, Matt Taibbi, Missouri, neofeudalism, New Jersey, Paul Ryan, polls, rape culture, Republican primary 2012, Rick Perry, science, SEC, Texas, the economy, ugh, unemployment, Verizon