Posts Tagged ‘juvenile detention’
Sunday Night Links!
* But trains loaded with millions of gallons of crude oil thread the thickly populated areas of some of the nation’s biggest cities. Including Milwaukee.
* Love Song for a Neoliberal University: StarbucksU.
* Corinthian Colleges Inc. shut down its remaining 28 for-profit career schools, ending classes for about 16,000 students, in the biggest collapse in U.S. higher education.
* I’m not anti-technology, or anti-innovation. And I think traditional colleges are deeply flawed. But I am very, very much against expanding the money-laundering side of our financial aid system. And that is the coal mine into which the ASU-EdX canary is being lowered.
* Surge Pricing for Your Entire Life.
* On the deep grammar of the White House Correspondents Association Dinner.
* Hell didn’t exist, so we built it: the Alcatraz of the Rockies.
* What It’s Like to Be a Girl in America’s Juvenile Justice System.
* This is the toxic tribalism that repeats itself over and over throughout the West. Western victims are mourned and humanized, while victims of Western violence are invisible and thus dehumanized. Aside from being repugnant in its own right, this formula, by design, is deeply deceptive as propaganda: It creates the impression among Western populations that we are the victims but not the perpetrators of heinous violence, that terrorism is something done to us but that we never commit ourselves, that “primitive, radical and inhumanely violent” describes the enemy tribe but not our own.
* When George Packer gets bored, I get worried. It means he’s in the mood for war.
* Tom DeLay: People keep forgetting that God ‘wrote the Constitution.’
* Can We Preserve the Ferguson QuikTrip? Ferguson’s Fortune 500 Company.
* Entire Treasury Department Competing For Same Goldman Sachs Job Opening.
* 23 maps and charts on language.
* Before And After: Earthquake Destroys Kathmandu’s Centuries-Old Landmarks.
* How Well Does ‘Daredevil’ Handle Disability Issues?
* Tetris: The Unauthorized Biography.
* An Abandoned Island in The Middle of NYC.
* Native Hawaiians are fighting off an invasion of astronomers. The Heart of the Hawaiian Peoples’ Arguments Against the Telescope on Mauna Kea.
* And some local interest from the Decolonial Atlas: The Great Lakes in Ojibwe.
Written by gerrycanavan
April 26, 2015 at 8:41 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, actually existing media bias, America, Arizona State University, Baltmore, Barack Obama, blindness, class struggle, cultural preservation, Daredevil, decolonization, decolonizing the mind, disability, drones, earthquakes, ecology, efficiency, elites, empire, Ferguson, financial aid, for-profit education, Freddie Gray, games, girls, God, Great Lakes, Hawaii, Hell, How the University Works, idolatry, indigenous peoples, islands, journalism, juvenile detention, Kathmandu, kids today, language, maps, Mauna Kea, Milwaukee, money, MOOCs, mourning, NBA, neoliberalism, Nepal, New York, New York City, no-knock warrants, oil, Ojibwe, Ozymandias, police brutality, police state, police violence, politics, precarious life, prison-industrial complex, prisons, race, racism, reform, reformism, ruin, science, solitary confinement, sports, Starbucks, student debt, student loans, supermax prisons, surge pricing, SWAT teams, telescopes, Tetris, the Constitution, Tom DeLay, torture, trains, tuition, Uber, war huh good god y'all what is it good for? absolutely nothing say it again, war on terror, White House Correspondents' Association Dinner, Wisconsin
Playing Monday Catch-Up Links
* Jaimee finally has a webpage! You can see all her online poems here.
* Announcing the Tobin Siebers Prize for Disability Studies in the Humanities.
* Reminder: Mullen fellowship applications are due April 1.
* Relativism: The spontaneous ideology of the undergraduate.
* The trolley and the psychopath.
* Tired of the same old dystopias? Randomized Dystopia suggests a right that your fictional tyranny could deny its citizens!
* What if we educated and designed for resistance, through iterative performance and play?
* A good start: The University of Phoenix has lost half its students in the last five years.
* I began pursuing a Ph.D. in English at the University of Michigan in the Fall of 2006. My incoming cohort had nine students–seven in English Language and Literature, two in English and Women’s Studies. When we entered the program, all of us aspired to the tenure-track. The last of us just defended her dissertation this January, making ours the first cohort in several years with a 100% completion rate. Nine years out, only one of us has a tenure track professorship.
* #altac: Northeastern University seeks an intellectually nimble, entrepreneurial, explode-the-boundaries thinker to join the Office of the President as Special Assistant for Presidential Strategy & Initiatives. This job ad truly is a transcendent parody of our age, down to the shameless sucking up to the president of the university that constitutes 2/3 of the text.
* Budget cuts kill The Dictionary of American Regional English.
* The Long, Ugly History of Racism at American Universities.
* I Saw My Admissions Files Before Yale Destroyed Them.
* Confessions of a Harvard Gatekeeper.
* The Unmanageable University.
* What NYU Pays Its Top Earners, And What Most Of Your Professors Make.
* “There is no point in having that chat as long as the system is mismanaged,” said Steven Cohen, president of the Congress of Connecticut Community Colleges, which represents most faculty. Cohen pointed to central office costs that are rising as faculty numbers decline.
* The war against humanities at Britain’s universities.
* On NYU and the future of graduate student unionism.
* I teach philosophy at Columbia. But some of my best students are inmates.
* Why Is So Much of Our Discussion of Higher Ed Driven by Elite Institutions?
* It’s Time to End Tuition at Public Universities—and Abolish Student Debt.
* Following up on the future of rhetoric and composition. I also liked this one from Freddie: “It’s that mass contigency– the dramatic rise of at-risk academic labor like adjuncts and grad students– that creates the conditions that Cooke laments on campus. In the past, when a far higher portion of college courses were taught by tenured professors, those who taught college courses had much less reason to fear reprisals from undergraduates.”
* There is certainly an important and urgent conversation to be had about academic freedom and whether that is being constrained by trigger warnings and the like, but the discourse of students’ self-infantilization misdirects us from the larger picture. That, I think, is definitely not a story of student-initiated “cocooning,” but rather the transformation of the category of “student” into “consumer” and “future donor.”
* How Sweet Briar’s Board Decided to Close the College. But don’t worry, there’s a plan: Faculty Propose Sweet Briar Shift Focus to STEM.
* Law School Dean Average Tenure Is 2.78 Years, An All-Time Low.
* #disrupt morality: “America’s business community recognized a long time ago that discrimination, in all its forms, is bad for business.”
* 3 Cops Caught On Tape Brutally Beating Unarmed Michigan Man With No Apparent Provocation. Private Prison Operator Set To Rake In $17 Million With New 400-Bed Detention Center. Teen Was Kept In Solitary Confinement For 143 Days Before Even Facing Trial. Inside America’s Toughest Federal Prison.
* What are your chances of going to prison?
* Dollars, Death and the LAPD.
The officers sued the LAPD for discrimination for keeping them in desk jobs. Last week a jury awarded them $4 million. In other words, the refusal to let them go back to the streets to shoot more people is, in the eyes of our court system, worth more than four times as much as the life of an innocent man. Much more than that when you consider that they drew and continue to draw near six figure salaries for sitting at a desk.
* The Radical Humaneness of Norway’s Halden Prison.
* UN erects memorial to victims of transatlantic slave trade.
* World’s most honest headline watch: Wall Street welcomes expected Chuck Schumer promotion.
* Antarctica Recorded Hotter Temperatures Than They’ve Ever Seen This Week.
* Framing China as an environmental villain only serves to excuse American inaction.
* Even with California deep in drought, the federal agency hasn’t assessed the impacts of the bottled water business on springs and streams in two watersheds that sustain sensitive habitats in the national forest. The lack of oversight is symptomatic of a Forest Service limited by tight budgets and focused on other issues, and of a regulatory system in California that allows the bottled water industry to operate with little independent tracking of the potential toll on the environment.
* Too Bad, That Rumor About A New Star Trek TV Show Is Absolutely False. But it’s not all bad news: they may have tricked Idris Elba into playing a Klingon.
* The True Story of Pretty Woman’s Original Dark Ending.
* The Deadly Global War for Sand.
* SMBC vs. the Rebus. And vs. modernity.
* I Started Milwaukee’s Epic Bloody Mary Garnish Wars.
* Photographer Johan Bävman documents the world of dads and their babies in a country where fathers are encouraged to take a generous amount of paternity leave.
* Dean Smith Willed $200 to Each of His Former Players to ‘Enjoy a Dinner Out.’ You’ll never believe what happened next. But!
Contrary to inaccurate media reports, Dean Smith’s generous gift to former student-athletes is NOT an NCAA violation.
— Inside the NCAA (@InsidetheNCAA) March 29, 2015
* Teaching human evolution at the University of Kentucky.
* We Should Be Able To Detect Spaceships Moving Near The Speed Of Light.
* Snowpiercer forever: Russia unveils plan for superhighway from London to Alaska.
* Kapow! Attack of the feminist superheroes.
* The future is now: Miles Morales and Kamala Khan join the female Thor and Captain “The Falcon” America as Avengers post-Secret Wars.
* Things Marvel Needs to Think About for the Black Panther Movie.
* Marxists Internet Archive: Subjects: Arts: Literature: Children’s Literature.
* Ruins found in remote Argentinian jungle ‘may be secret Nazi hideout.’
* 15 Secrets Hiding in the World of Game of Thrones.
* Listen to part of Carlin’s Summerfest 1972 show — before he got arrested.
* This 19th Century ‘Stench Map’ Shows How Smells Reshaped New York City.
* The ethics of playing to lose.
* And make mine del Toro:
You say horror is inherently political. How so?
Much like fairy tales, there are two facets of horror. One is pro-institution, which is the most reprehensible type of fairy tale: Don’t wander into the woods, and always obey your parents. The other type of fairy tale is completely anarchic and antiestablishment.
Written by gerrycanavan
March 30, 2015 at 8:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with #dads, academia, adjunctification, administrative blight, airport security, aliens, amateurism, America, Amsterdam, Antarctica, Apple, Argentina, art, austerity, Black Panther, Bloody Marys, books, California, child care, children's literature, China, Chuck Schumer, college admissions, college basketball, comics, Connecticut, corruption we can believe in, Dean Smith, disability studies, discrimination, donors, drought, dystopia, ecology, environmentalism, equality, ethics, evolution, fairy tales, faster than light travel, fathers, female Thor, feminism, Firefly, flexible, food, for-profit schools, games, gay rights, George Carlin, graduate student life, Guillermo del Toro, Harvard, horror, How the University Works, How to Avoid Speaking, ideology, Idris Elba, Indian food, Indiana, Ivy League, Jaimee, Jason Shiga, Joss Whedon, juvenile detention, Kamala Khan, Kentucky, kids today, LAPD, law school, management, maps, Marvel, Marvel Cinematic Universe, Marxism, Michigan, Miles Morales, Milwaukee, modernity, morality, Nazis, NCAA, neoliberalism, New York, nimble, Norway, NYU, Orwell, parental leave, pedagogy, playing to lose, poetry, police brutality, police violence, Pretty Woman, prison, prison-industrial complex, privilege, R.D. Mullen fellowship, race, racism, rebus puzzles, relativism, resistance, rhetoric and composition, ruins, Russia, sand, Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal, science, science fiction, science fiction studies, selfies, seven dirty words, slave trade, slavery, smells, Snowpiercer, solitary confinement, Star Trek, STEM, students as consumers, Summerfest, superheroes, surveillance, surveillance society, surveillance state, Sweet Briar, taste, teaching, tenure, The Falcon, the humanities, the Senate, Tolkien, trigger warnings, TSA, tuition, UNC, undergraduates, unions, United Kingdom, University of Phoenix, University of Wisconsin, Wall Street, war, water, words, Yale
Rise and Shine, It’s 2015! Links
* 2014 Kinda Sucked: A Look at Our Slow Descent Into Dystopia. I didn’t think it was all that slow.
* That annual tradition: What Could Have Entered the Public Domain on January 1, 2015?
* B^F: “Ryan North reviews George Gipe’s insane novelization of Back to the Future, published before the book was released.”
* Keywords for the Age of Austerity 14.5: “Errors in Judgment.”
* This City Eliminated Poverty, And Nearly Everyone Forgot About It.
* How to be politically optimistic in Wisconsin.
* In an alternate universe, the New York Police might have just solved the national community-policing controversy. Routine harassment of citizens is down as much as 94%!
* I say teach the controversy: No matter what vernacular is employed, the time has come for other alternatives to the handcuffs, leg irons and waist chains routinely used on incarcerated youth in the District.
* Carcetti for President: Maryland Governor Will Commute All Remaining Death Sentences To Life Without Parole.
* “DA Who Failed to Indict Killer Cop Now GOP Front Runner for Congress.” 2015 starting out great!
* “Girls from a variety of backgrounds were featured within the campaign, reflecting that anyone can embody the spirit and character of Annie.” Oh, Target.
* Look, I get that the football players are angry. I even get that all the boosters who hadn’t stepped up before are now swearing that they would have donated millions of dollars to keep the program alive if only Watts had asked them. But the Faculty Senate? At a bare minimum, shouldn’t they have had the back of a president who wanted to stop draining money from academics into football, even if no one else did? Yeesh.
* “This book review by 13-year-old Eve Kosofsky (later Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, known for her brilliant work on queer theory) appeared in the January 1964 issue of Seventeen. You’re welcome.”
* Researcher: Sony Hack Was Likely an Inside Job by a Woman Named “Lena.”
* U.S. Solar Is 59 Percent Cheaper Than We Thought It Would Be Back In 2010.
* Salon’s charter school scam roundup for January 1.
* White Flint isn’t completely dead, but the outlook is not good. The only stores still in operation are a Lord & Taylor and a P.F. Chang’s. On Jan. 4, the P.F. Chang’s will close. Why I’m Mourning The Death Of A Mall.
* And Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal rings in the New Year right with the Uncomfortable Truthasaurus.
Written by gerrycanavan
January 1, 2015 at 9:08 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with 2014, 2015, academia, America, Annie, austerity, Back to the Future, books, charter schools, class struggle, college football, college sports, copyright, death penalty, dystopia, Eric Garner, Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, film, hacking, headbrick, How the University Works, juvenile detention, juvenilia, malls, Manitoba, Martin O'Malley, Maryland, Mincome, mistakes were made, North Korea, novelizations, NYPD, optimism, police, police brutality, police state, police violence, politics, poverty, prison, public domain, queer theory, Quvenzhané Wallis, race, racism, Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal, scam, Seventeen, solar power, Sony, Target, the courts, the law, the more you know, The Wire, Tommy Carcetti, Uncomfortable Truthasaurus, universal basic income, war on education, Washington DC, Wisconsin, words
NYE Links!
* Finally, my moment has arrived: Smuggling LEGO is the new smuggling diamonds.
* The New Brand of Jesuit Universities.
* On Optimism: Looking Ahead to 2015.
* From climate denialism to climate cashing-in with nothing in between. Are We Approaching the End of Human History?
* Thanks to energy drilling operations, northern New Mexico is now covered by “a permanent, Delaware-sized methane cloud.”
* Serial, episode thirteen: 1, 2, 3 coming today or tomorrow I think. A sort-of out-there blog post on what it could all mean: The Serial Podcast: The Possible Legal Implications of Jay’s Interview for Jay & Adnan.
* UI Chancellor Responds To Salaita Report. This is actually a fairly significant walk-back of Wise’s position — I think she’s actually more progressive on academic freedom than Cary Nelson now — though since she’s still pretending Salaita wasn’t actually hired it doesn’t do much good for him.
* Professors are teaching less while administrators proliferate. Let’s find out how all that tuition is being spent. Colleges Need a Business Productivity Audit. Of course the actual text of the article zeroes in on instruction first, which is not the source of the problem…
* It’s the original sin of college football, and you’ll never guess what it is. In Harbaugh hire, excessive pay would send wrong message. How one former coach perpetuated a cheating scheme that benefited hundreds of college athletes. Shut down middling college football programs and shift the money back to instruction.
* The arc of history is long, but: New Michigan Law Bars College Athletes From Unionizing.
* Another angle on the growing Title IX mess: Mothers of accused college rapists fight back.
* Rise of the Simulations: Why We Play At Hard Work.
* Brent Bellamy reviews Naomi Oreskes and Erik M. Conway’s The Collapse of Western Civilization.
* 538 profiles the best damn board game on the planet, Twilight Struggle.
* Really interesting idea from Bleeding Cool about what might be happening with Marvel’s sliding timescale. I could honestly see them doing this, or something like it, at least until they start getting some rights back.
* Profit from Crisis: Why capitalists do not want recovery, and what that means for America.
* Anthropology and the rise of the professional-managerial class.
* Is Wisconsin destined to be a Rust Belt backwater?
* Why Idris Elba Can’t Play James Bond.
* Seriously, though, sometimes you can’t just switch the skin tones and have the story turn out the same.
* Seven ‘great’ teaching methods not backed up by evidence.
.* BREAKING: Twitter Reaction to Events Often at Odds with Overall Public Opinion.
* Counterpoint: Black and African writers don’t need instructions from Ben Okri.
* To Discipline and Punish: Milwaukee Police Make Late Night Visits.
* I say teach the controversy: Kids and Jails, a Bad Combination.
* High School Basketball Team Banned From Tournament Over ‘I Can’t Breathe’ Shirts.
* This Deadspin piece has really made me regret softening my anti-Vox stance in recent months.
* Sounds like the Afghanistan war has ended again. This is #3 or #4 at least, right?
* How to destroy a city: just build a highway.
* The CDC is saying we’re all going to get the flu.
* And as if the IMF wasn’t bad enough.
* “Why should the legality of a sale of secrecy depend entirely upon who initiates the transaction? Why is bribery legal but blackmail not?”
* Stop Kidding Yourself: The Police Were Created to Control Working Class and Poor People.
* No Charges for Police Chief Who Used Badge to Try and Intimidate Teen into Posing Nude.
* …but believe it or not it is possible for a cop to get fired over a fatal shooting.
* LAPD Launches Investigation Into ‘Dead, Dead Michael Brown’ Song Sung at Retired Cop’s Party.
* The labor movement should rally against police violence, whether police unions like it or not. I think we should let this whole work stoppage thing play out personally.
* Emails and Racist Chats Show How Cops and GOP Are Teaming Up to Undermine de Blasio. The headline actually undersells the severity of a story where they talk about planting drugs on his daughter.
* Horrifying civil liberties predictions for 2015.
* Elsewhere in the richest city in the richest nation ever in the history of the world.
* Military Turns To Prison Labor For $100 Million In Uniforms — At $2-Per-Hour Wages.
* What Stalled the Gender Revolution? Child Care That Costs More Than College Tuition.
* North Dakota to eliminate taxes because fracking fracking fracking forever fracking. What could go wrong?
* Real life Alien vs. Predator: Cuomo vs. the New York State Legislature.
But Cuomo has insisted he would agree to a pay hike only if the Legislature addressed a long series of criminal and ethical charges against many of its members by passing several reforms, such as a limit on outside incomes earned by lawmakers and a system of publicly financed campaigns.
The legislative leaders, however, responded that Cuomo was making demands he knew were unacceptable in a politically motivated effort to appear as a reformer because he’s under federal investigation for dismantling his anti-corruption Moreland Commission panel.
* “Before we did this study, it was certainly my view that the dark net is a good thing.”
* Streetcars, maybe not so great?
* Heartbreaking story of a trans teen’s suicide, based on a suicide note that went viral. Now go hug your kid.
* Exciting new pioneers in research:
A Few Goodmen: Surname-Sharing Economist Coauthors
ALLEN C. GOODMAN (Wayne State University)
JOSHUA GOODMAN (Harvard University)
LUCAS GOODMAN (University of Maryland)
SARENA GOODMAN (Federal Reserve Board)We explore the phenomenon of coauthorship by economists who share a surname. Prior research has included at most three economist coauthors who share a surname. Ours is the first paper to have four economist coauthors who share a surname, as well as the first where such coauthors are unrelated by marriage, blood or current campus.
* Bat-Kierkegaard: The Dark Knight of Faith.
* Want to feel old? This Is What the Cast of Doug Looks Like Now.
* For its first Star Wars spinoff Disney has selected the impossible task of recasting Harrison Ford. They chose… poorly.
* Austerity in everything: Science proves once-in-a-lifetime moments will just make you more depressed.
* And there’s more! You’re more likely to die on your birthday.
* Living at a high altitude may make people 30% more likely to commit suicide.
* “Deputies said the shooting appears accidental”: Idaho toddler shoots and kills his mother inside Walmart.
* Wake up, sheeple! Back to the Future predicted 9/11.
* From io9: Physics students at the University of Leicester claim to have calculated the amount of energy required to transform water into wine.
* Celebrities That Look Like Mattresses.
Written by gerrycanavan
December 31, 2014 at 7:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with 2015, 9/11, academia, academic freedom, Afghanistan, Africa, alcohol, Alien vs. Predator, Andrew Cuomo, anthropology, apocalypse, austerity, Back to the Future, bae, Barack Obama, Batman, Bill de Blasio, birthdays, blackmail, books, brands, bribery, capitalism, Cary Nelson, CDC, celebrity culture, cheating, child abuse, child care, child pornography, cities, civil liberties, civility, class struggle, climate change, climate trials, collapse, college football, college sports, comics, Cornell, crisis, dark Internet, David Duke, David Graeber, denialism, depression, Disney, Don't mention the war, Doug, drunk driving, Ebola, ecology, ethics, euthanasia, faith, feminism, games, gender, great moments in academic presentations, guns, Han Solo, Harrison Ford, high school sports, homelessness, How did we survive the Cold War?, how I'm going to die, How the University Works, hydrofracking, Idris Elba, IMF, it's finally happening, James Bond, Jesuits, Jesus Christ, juvenile detention, kids today, Kierkegaard, LAPD, LEGO, literature, Louisiana, Marquette, Marvel, mattresses, methane, Michigan, Milwaukee, money, mortality, names, NCAA, neoliberalism, New Mexico, New Year's, New York, North Dakota, nuclearity, NYPD, optimism, pedagogy, physics, police, police brutality, police state, police violence, politics, polls, prison, prison labor, prison-industrial complex, protest, race, racism, rape, rape culture, rare corrections, roller coasters, Rust Belt, Serial, shock doctrine, simulations, smuggling, Steven Salaita, street cars, student athletes, suicide, teach the controversy, teaching, tenure, the Anthropocene, the arc of history is long but it bends towards justice, the courts, the flu, the law, This American Life, time travel, Title IX, Tor, trans* issues, true crime, Twilight Struggle, Twitter, UIUC, unions, urban renewal, Vox, white supremacy, Wisconsin, Won't somebody think of the children?, writing
For His Unwavering Devotion to Weekend Links, Gerry Canavan Has Been Awarded the Nobel Prize for Linkblogging
* Every so often the Nobel Committee accidentally picks a genuinely deserving, genuinely inspiring recipient of the Peace Prize. This year was one. A 2013 profile of Malala Yousafzai. A speech to Pakistani Marxists. What did one Nobel laureate say to the other?
Obama: Look at this brave, strong woman. Malala: Stop drone attacks. Obama: Look at this cute little girl.
— Kumail Nanjiani (@kumailn) October 17, 2013
* Every so often the Supreme Court accidentally makes a good decision. Last night’s overturning of Wisconsin’s voter suppression law was one.
* What would the twentieth-century history of English studies look like if we had thought to preserve the records of our teaching? How could that history be different if we had institutional archives of syllabi, student notes, lecture drafts, handouts and seminar papers, just as we have archives of journal articles, drafts of novels, recordings of performances, and committee meeting minutes? What if universities had collected classroom documents alongside other records and traces of the knowledge they create and culture that they value?
* Another lovely Chomsky rant on the university.
So the university imposes costs on students and on faculty who are not only untenured but are maintained on a path that guarantees that they will have no security. All of this is perfectly natural within corporate business models. It’s harmful to education, but education is not their goal.
* Recent cuts have unfortunately made future cuts inevitable: The University of Wisconsin System is about to do some wholesale, strategic belt-tightening, according to its president. But it’s not all absolutely miserable news:
Regent Janice Mueller noted that of the $1.6 billion total paid to unclassified staff on UW campuses, faculty accounted for $550 million, leaving more than $1 billion going to non-faculty. “That seemed a little out of whack to me,” Mueller said. “I would think faculty salaries would be the larger share.”
I didn’t think Regents were allowed to notice things that like.
* The Excessive Political Power Of White Men In The United States, In One Chart.
* Phil Maciak on the greatness of Transparent.
* Why we need academic freedom: On Being Sued.
* Neoliberalism is the triumph of the state, not its retreat. The case of Mexico.
* On the cultural ideology of Big Data.
* It Would Actually Be Very Simple To End Homelessness Forever.
* It seems that all of Pearson’s critical foundational research and proven classroom results in the world couldn’t get the question 3 x 7 x 26 correct.
* Federal spending was lower this year than Paul Ryan originally asked for. Ha, take that Republicans! Another Obama-led triumph for the left!
* But things will be different once Obama finally becomes president. Obama Plans to Close Guantanamo Whether Congress Likes It Or Not.
* Nightmares: Could Enterovirus D68 Be Causing Polio-Like Paralysis in Kids?
* NYC airport workers walk off job, protesting lack of protection from Ebola risks.
* SF in everything: Malware needs to know if it’s in the Matrix.
* Lady Ghostbusters will be a reboot, almost assuredly a terrible one.
I love origin stories. That’s my favorite thing. I love the first one so much I don’t want to do anything to ruin the memory of that. So it just felt like, let’s just restart it because then we can have new dynamics. I want the technology to be even cooler. I want it to be really scary, and I want it to happen in our world today that hasn’t gone through it so it’s like, oh my God what’s going on?
* It’s happening again: Vastly Different Stories Emerging In Police Shooting Of St. Louis Teen. The Associated Press is On It:
Angry protesters yell abuse, accusations of racial profiling at stoic police in south St. Louis: http://t.co/Q3GFc12WzL
— The Associated Press (@AP) October 10, 2014
* Teenagers in prison have a shockingly high suicide rate.
* Roger Ebert: The Collected Wikipedia Edits.
* The many faces of capitalism.
* The University of Wisconsin at Madison Police Department issued an apology Wednesday after a list of safety tips posted to the department’s website was criticized for appearing to blame victims of campus crimes, particularly survivors of sexual assault.
* What We Talk About When We Talk About Trigger Warnings.
* Today in theology: Europe’s history of penis worship was cast aside when the Catholic Church decided Jesus’s foreskin was too potent to control.
By the 15th century, the Holy Prepuce had become the desirous object of many mystics’ visions. Bridget of Sweden recorded the revelations she received from the Virgin Mary, who told the saint that she saved the foreskin of her son and carried it with her until her death. Catherine of Siena, the patron saint of Italy, imagined that her wedding ring—exchanged with the Savior in a mystical marriage—had been transmuted into the foreskin. In her Revelationes (c. 1310), Saint Agnes Blannbekin recounts the hours she spent contemplating the loss of blood the infant Christ must have suffered during the circumcision, and during one of her contemplative moments, while idly wondering what had become of the foreskin, she felt the prepuce pressed upon her tongue. Blannbekin recounted the sweet, intoxicating taste, and she attempted to swallow it. The saint found herself unable to digest the Holy Prepuce; every time she swallowed, it immediately reappeared on her tongue. Again and again she repeated the ritual until after a hundred gulps she managed to down the baby Jesus’ cover.
* Two Bad Tastes That Taste Bad Together: The US Doesn’t Have Enough Railroads to Keep Up With the Oil Boom.
* For some unfathomable reason somebody handed Cary Nelson another shovel: A Civility Manifesto.
* Another piece on the law and Tommy the Chimp.
* And maybe there are some doors we just shouldn’t open: I’m Slavoj Žižek, AMA.
Written by gerrycanavan
October 10, 2014 at 12:18 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, academic freedom, adjunctification, animal personhood, ask me anything, austerity, Barack Obama, Big Data, capitalism, Cary Nelson, Catholicism, cats, circumcision, civility, class struggle, cultural preservation, drones, Ebola, English departments, enterovirus, feminism, Ferguson, foreskins, Ghostbusters, graduate student life, Guantánamo, Halloween, homelessness, How the University Works, Jesus Christ, juvenile detention, Kailash Satyarthi, Kumail Nanjani, LEGO, Malala Yousafzai, male privilege, malware, Marxism, men, Mexico, neoliberalism, New York, Noam Chomsky, Nobel Peace Prize, oil, Paul Ryan, Pearson, pedagogy, police brutality, police riots, police violence, polio, politics, precarity, pregnancy, prison-industrial complex, privatization, railroads, rape, rape culture, religion, Roger Ebert, Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal, science fiction, sexism, socialism, St. Louis, Steven Salaita, suicide, Supreme Court, syllabi, teaching, television, the courts, the law, The Matrix, theology, they say time is the fire in which we burn, Tommy the Chimp, Transparent, trigger warnings, University of Wisconsin, violence, voter ID, voter suppression, war huh good god y'all what is it good for? absolutely nothing say it again, war on education, war on terror, white privilege, Wikipedia, Wisconsin, Žižek
Wednesday Links! Seriously a Lot!
* Like C.P. Snow’s two cultures of the humanities and the sciences, a new bimodal view of higher education is becoming increasingly important at the start of the twenty-first century: one that sees the goal of universities as developing “the whole person” and another that sees it as largely or even exclusively in terms of job training. The Two Cultures of Higher Education in the Twenty-First Century and Their Impact on Academic Freedom.
* Academic search season watch: How To Tailor a Job Letter (Without Flattering, Pandering, or Begging).
* Episode 21 of Rachel and Miles X-Plain the X-Men (with Kurt Busiek) is a great look at how Marvel’s sausage is made. Give it a listen if you’re a fan of the comics…
* Time for the Libya mea culpas.
* TNI Syllabus: Gaming and Feminism.
* What Happened To Jennifer Lawrence Was Sexual Assault.
* The Police Tool That Pervs Use to Steal Nude Pics From Apple’s iCloud.
* Steve Shaviro: Twenty-Two Theses on Nature.
* Even the Department of Education thinks their rating system will be a mess.
* Yale’s tax exempt New Haven property worth $2.5 billion.
* Thirty-two teens escaped from a Nashville youth detention center by crawling under a weak spot in a fence late Monday, and nine of them were still on the run Tuesday, a spokesman said.
* Change Of Habit: How Seattle Cops Fought An Addiction To Locking Up Drug Users.
* Three Myths About Police Body Cams.
* Jeff Mizanskey Is Serving Life in Prison for Marijuana.
* Scientists Find ‘Alarming’ Amount Of Arsenic In Groundwater Near Texas Fracking Sites.
* Can journalistic ethics include nonhuman perspectives?
* Better Identification of Viking Corpses Reveals: Half of the Warriors Were Female.
* All The Game Of Thrones Fan Theories You Absolutely Need To Know.
* NIH finally makes good with Henrietta Lacks’ family.
* Twenty Days of Harassment and Racism as an American Apparel Employee.
* Durham Public Schools dumps Teach for America.
* The Four-Year-Old’s Workday.
* Rape culture and Title IX at the University of Kansas.
* “Duke University seeks a talented, engaged student body that embodies the wide range of human experience; we believe that the diversity of our students makes our community stronger. If you’d like to share a perspective you bring or experiences you’ve had to help us understand you better — perhaps related to a community you belong to, your sexual orientation or gender identity, or your family or cultural background — we encourage you to do so. Real people are reading your application, and we want to do our best to understand and appreciate the real people applying to Duke.”
* Twitter has an algorithm that assigns gender to its users.
* Why top tech CEOs want employees with liberal arts degrees.
* In Virginia, thousands of day-care providers receive no oversight. After a child’s death, parents grapple with second guesses.
* Unlike most other states, Wisconsin does not recognize prisoners’ good behavior with credits toward accelerated release. Wisconsin had such a “good time” program for well over a century, but eliminated it as part of the policy changes in the 1980s and 1990s that collectively left the state unusually — perhaps even uniquely — inflexible in its terms of imprisonment. Why No “Good Time” in Wisconsin?
* Now we see the violence inherent in the system: Meet The Guy Who Spent Seven Months Killing Everyone In Fallout 3.
* When Disney forbade Stan Lee’s original cameo in Guardians of the Galaxy. When they cut Hawkeye’s bit from Captain America 2.
* Rule of law watch: The Dumb Line In New York’s Constitution That Could Elect A Governor Most Of The State Doesn’t Want.
* For the geeks: How Randall “xkcd” Munroe wrote What If?
* Time Travel Simulation Resolves “Grandfather Paradox.” Bah! We need to go back in time and prevent this simulation from ever being devised!
* The arc of history is long, but: HBO has commissioned some sort of new Flight Of The Conchords show.
* The Most Compelling Athlete In America Right Now Is Here To Play Chess.
* And just because it’s gerrycanavan.wordpress.com: Limits to Growth was right. New research shows we’re nearing collapse.
Written by gerrycanavan
September 3, 2014 at 9:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, academic jobs, alcohol, algorithms, America, animal personhood, animals, apocalypse, Apple, books, C.P. Snow, cameos, Captain America 2, chess, class struggle, climate change, college rankings, comics, communism, competency-based degrees, consumption, cura personalis, day care, Department of Education, diversity, Don't mention the war, drug addiction, Duke, Durham, ecology, ethics, Fallout 3, Fanon, federalism, feminism, Flight of the Conchords, Game of Thrones, games, gaming, gender, genetically modified organisms, get a haircut hippie, grandfather paradox, Guardians of the Galaxy, Hawaii, Hawkeye, HBO, Henrietta Lacks, how the sausage is made, How the University Drinks, How the University Works, hydrofracking, Jennifer Lawrence, journalism, juvenile detention, kids today, Kurt Busiek, Libya, limits to growth, local control, marijuana, Marquette, Marvel, military-industrial complex, misogyny, Nashville, Native American issues, nature, New Haven, New York, NIH, nonprofit-industrial complex, North Carolina, now we see the violence inherent in the system, police cameras, police state, politics, preschool, prison, prison-industrial complex, protest, quantum mechanics, Rachel and Miles X-Plain the X-Men, racism, rape culture, rule of law, Seattle, Stan Lee, stem cells, Steve Shaviro, student movements, taxes, Teach for America, televsion, Texas, the humanities, the kids are all right, theory, time travel, Title IX, Twitter, two cultures, Vikings, violence, Virginia, voting, war on drugs, war on education, water, We're screwed, what if, Wisconsin, Won't somebody think of the children?, X-Men, xkcd, Yale
Thursday Links
* Call for Applications: The Le Guin Feminist Science Fiction Fellowship.
* American SF and the Other. Ursula K. Le Guin, 1975.
This tendency has been remarkably strong in American SF. The only social change presented by most SF has been towards authoritarianism, the domination of ignorant masses by a powerful elite—sometimes presented as a warning, but often quite complacently. Socialism is never considered as an alternative, and democracy is quite forgotten. Military virtues are taken as ethical ones. Wealth is assumed to be a righteous goal and a personal virtue. Competitive free-enterprise capitalism is the economic destiny of the entire Galaxy. In general, American SF has assumed a permanent hierarchy of superiors and inferiors, with rich, ambitious, aggressive males at the top, then a great gap, and then at the bottom the poor, the uneducated, the faceless masses, and all the women. The whole picture is, if I may say so, curiously “un-American.” It is a perfect baboon patriarchy, with the Alpha Male on top, being respectfully groomed, from time to time, by his inferiors.
* Pentagon preparing for mass civil breakdown. Gee, you don’t say.
Spending priorities of US police agencies suggest they think they’re going to have to kill large numbers of civilians in the near future.
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) August 12, 2014
* Who rules America? The answer may surprise you!
* Abolishing the Broken US Juvenile Justice System.
* Pentagon weaponry in St. Louis County. Those sound cannons were supposed to be for speeders. The Militarization of the Police. These Photos Prove Just How Chaotic The Situation In Ferguson Has Become. Ferguson, Missouri, August 13, 2014. There’s a police coup going on right now in Ferguson, Mo. Even the liberal Matt Yglesias. Even CNN’s pro-police witness describes an execution. They even arrested an alderman. “The Obamas danced nearly every song. A good time was had by all.” In Defense of the Ferguson Riots. “Hands up, don’t shoot” spreads beyond Missouri. The Death of Michael Brown and the Search for Justice in Black America. You have a right to record the police.
#thecopsaretheonesrioting #thecopsaretheonesrioting #thecopsaretheonesrioting #thecopsaretheonesrioting #thecopsaretheonesrioting
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) August 14, 2014
* Editorial: Governor must let Ferguson be where better begins.
When you have an organized criminal conspiracy like Ferguson PD you arrest them all + then have the lower-ranked guys turn state’s evidence.
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) August 14, 2014
At this point they ought to treat this like a mob trial.
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) August 14, 2014
Step One: St. Louis County Police To Be Withdrawn From Duty After Ferguson Protests.
* 4 Unarmed Black Men Have Been Killed By Police in the Last Month. LAPD shooting of mentally ill man stirs criticism, questions.
* 5 Issues (Among Many) on Which Libertarians Are On Your Side.
* America Is Not For Black People.
* Climate change is here: Cataclysmic flooding in Detroit and Baltimore. Meanwhile: Democrats are attacking Mitch McConnell for not liking coal enough.
* How discounting tuition drives college admissions. Really eye-opening.
When Noel-Levitz takes on a client, it takes the school’s admissions and retention data, scrubs it clean and uses the results to tell the school who’s coming, who’s going and who might be enticed to stay with a few more aid dollars or certain enhancements to student life. Their formulas might show the benefits of giving four well-heeled applicants with high SAT scores a 10% discount from its $50,000 tuition–rather than give one high-achieving, lower-income applicant the $20,000 scholarship she needs. The award of an extra $5,000 to rich kids might provide an ego boost that moves the needle–and bring in four students sure to pay the remaining $45,000 each year. That same $20,000 generated an additional $150,000 in relatively stable net tuition revenue. “One of the things that’s a hallmark of this company is we don’t fly around and give our opinion,” Crockett notes. “We always will back that opinion with data points.”
* Reading Salaita in Illinois—by Way of Cary Nelson. Nearly 300 Scholars Declare They Will Not Engage With the University of Illinois.
* In fact, gender was one of the best predictors of whether an article would be cited or not. Walter writes that women authors received “0.7 cites for every 1 cite that a male author would receive.” Untenured women were the least likely to be cited.
* IHE blog post argues that basically all academic hiring is illegal on age discrimination grounds. Talking about this on Twitter yesterday I was directed to this brief indicating such claims would be unlikely to prevail in court, though in each of the named cases the college settled rather than let it go that far.
* Another great post in Adam’s continuing exegesis of Star Trek: Why a Star Trek film would never work.
The deepest irony here, of course, is that the “messianic” blockbuster plot is ultimately a story about white privilege, a fantasy set up to present it as deserved. No matter how hard anyone else works, the white hero always has that “special something” everyone else lacks — and his close friendship with the meritocratic rival always turns crucially on that rival’s acknowledgment of the white messiah’s right to be in charge and save the day. In contrast to this overtly white-centered paradigm, the Star Trek franchise has always been marked by diversity in casting, and over the years, it showed a profound interest in imagining alien cultures, sometimes in great depth (Klingons above all, but also Ferengi, Vulcans, Trill, and even the Borg). To start the reboot by actually destroying the alien culture most important to Star Trek, and in the process making Spock more human, is a profound betrayal on this level.
* Also from Adam: Genocide vs. War.
* Atomic Tests Were a Tourist Draw in 1950s Las Vegas.
* 10 Of The Most Bizarre Books Ever Written.
* A woman has won the Fields medal for the first time. Meanwhile: “Local Mom Decides Important Sports Case.”
* BPA-Free Plastics are probably poison too.
* First Nation Will Evict Mining Company After Massive Spill Contaminated Area Water.
* The Martian, but on Earth: Antarctic Halley Station lost power and heat at -32C.
* Scenes from the class struggle at Columbia University.
* Can the state legitimately force you to give your children food? Opinions differ!
* NYCABC has a list of Amazon wish lists for American political prisoners, which includes a name that might be familiar to you if you went to Randolph High School in the late 1990s.
* The 1979 “Rockford Files” Episode that Inspired “The Sopranos.”
* Some people just see further and farther: Comcast put customer on hold until they closed.
* RNC Condemns AP Exam’s ‘Radically Revisionist View’ Of U.S. History.
“Instead of striving to build a ‘City upon a Hill,’ as generations of students have been taught, the colonists are portrayed as bigots who developed ‘a rigid racial hierarchy’ that was in turn derived from ‘a strong belief in British racial and cultural superiority,'” the letter reads. “The new Framework continues its theme of oppression and conflict by reinterpreting Manifest Destiny from a belief that America had a mission to spread democracy and new technologies across the continent to something that ‘was built on a belief in white racial superiority and a sense of American cultural superiority.'”
* BREAKING: 2016 is going to be a real bummer. But don’t worry: there’s definitely no hope.
Campaigning against Obama in 2008, Hillary Clinton insisted that hope was unrealistic — and by god in 2016 she’s going to prove it.
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) August 12, 2014
* Evolution proves there’s no such thing as ghosts. QED.
* Ice-T’s Dungeons & Dragons Audiobook is Out, and it’s Free!
* Are the kids all right? Are Millennials Compatible With U.S. Military Culture?
* Twitter vows to “improve our policies” after Robin Williams’ daughter is bullied off the network.
* Speaking my language: Multiversity Turns the DC Universe Into a Quantum-Theory Freakfest.
* And everything you want, in the worst way possible: Veronica Mars will return as an in-universe, Ryan-Hansen-scriped sequel for The-Comeback-style web series Play It Again, Dick.
Written by gerrycanavan
August 14, 2014 at 11:08 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, academic boycotts, academic freedom, academic jobs, Adam Kotsko, adjunctification, adjuncts, ageism, Amazon, America, Antarctica, apocalypse, Aquaman, audiobooks, Baltimore, Barack Obama, books, BPA, Cary Nelson, CFPs, citation, civil unrest, class struggle, climate change, coal, college admissions, college sports, Columbia, Comcast, customer service, cyberbullying, David Chase, DC Comics, Democrats, Detroit, Dungeons & Dragons, ecology, evolution, Ferguson, Field Medal, film, First Nations, Gaza, general election 2016, genocide, ghosts, graduate students, Grant Morrison, Hillary Clinton, history, How the University Works, hydrofracking, Ice-T, Israel, juvenile detention, Katrina, LAPD, libertarianism, male privilege, math, messiahs, Michael Brown, military-industrial complex, millennials, misogyny, Missouri, Multiversity, NCAA, nuclear tourism, nuclear weapons, nuclearity, oligarchy, Palestine, parenting, Pentagon, plastic, police brutality, police coups, police riots, police state, police violence, political prisoners, politics, prison, protest, race, racism, Randolph, rape culture, Republicans, resistance, revolution, riots, Robin Williams, Rockford Files, Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal, science fiction, science fiction studies, sexism, Sopranos, St. Louis, Star Trek, Steven Salaita, television, tenure, The Comeback, the courts, the humanities, the kids are all right, the law, The Martian, the Other, the past is not another country, the past isn't over it isn't even past, tuition, Twitter, UIUC, Ursula K. Le Guin, Veronica Mars, violence, war, We're screwed, webisodes, white privilege
Monday Night Links!
* CFP for every online academic I know but me: Race, Gender, and the Politics of Representation in Scandal.
* I think this problem goes beyond just academia, though academic life is a particularly hypertrophic version of it. Basically every professional career left in America requires you to completely reboot your life at least three times between high school and your first job.
.@adamkotsko Appropriate to era where middle-class success now means completely burning down your life every 4-5 years, for over a decade.
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) April 20, 2014
* Dana Carvey on Harmontown is an amazing episode, but honestly I’d turn it off after Carvey leaves unless you’re a real Harmontown diehard. It’s a pretty big bummer of an episode otherwise.
* BREAKING: Coca-Cola is delicious poison.
* This is what Pangaea would look like with modern borders.
* This article takes as its starting point the observation that neoliberalism is a concept thatis ‘oft-invoked but ill-defined’. It provides a taxonomy of uses of the term neoliberalismto include: (1) an all-purpose denunciatory category; (2) ‘the way things are’; (3) an insti-tutional framework characterizing particular forms of national capitalism, most notablythe Anglo-American ones; (4) a dominant ideology of global capitalism; (5) a form of gov-ernmentality and hegemony; and (6) a variant within the broad framework of liberalismas both theory and policy discourse. It is argued that this sprawling set of definitions arenot mutually compatible, and that uses of the term need to bedramatically narrowed fromits current association with anything and everything that a particular author may findobjectionable.
* Is our bloated, monstrous prison system failing its teenage inmates? The New York Times is on it.
* Could a Single Marine Unit Destroy the Roman Empire? Popular Mechanics is on it.
* The American Studies Association’s executive committee has called on the United States government to withdraw all support from the state of Israel, citing attacks on Palestinian universities, including a recent strike on the Islamic University in Gaza City.
* Too much power for any one man: Scientists reconstruct speech through soundproof glass by watching a bag of potato chips.
* First, they came for consumers of child pornography, and I said nothing because a Google bot passively uncovering child pornography on its email server didn’t seem like all that serious a privacy violation to me…
* Are fish far more intelligent than we realize?
* Who’s the richest person in your state?
* What Real-Life Plants Could Groot Have Evolved From?
* There Is A “Bomb Gaza” Game On The Google Play Store And It’s Pretty Awful.
* Athletics Is Said to Drive Culture of Rape, Drug Use at Air Force Academy.
* They’re trying so hard to ruin the new Spider-Man franchise but test audiences keep saving us.
* 5000 words have been added to the Official Scrabble Players Dictionary, because ours is an age of weaklings.
* They Benghazi’d the Benghazi inquiry, now we’ll never know who Benghazied the Benghazi at Benghazi.
* Getting a bit ahead of ourselves, perhaps.
* But what was the Mad Hatter doing before he met Alice?
* Cruel optimism, part two: Chronicle scribe Max Landis to bring Douglas Adams’ Dirk Gently novels to TV.
* Kickstarter: Designers & Dragons is a four volume book series of RPG industry awesomeness, meticulously researched and prettily packaged. Author Shannon Appelcline guides you company by company through the history of tabletop starting in the 1970s all the way up to present day. This series is chock full of fascinating insider tidbits, company profiles, and yes—enough drama to fuel a hundred campaigns.
* This computer program can predict 7 out of 10 Supreme Court decisions. Sadly, the model still can’t identify who has more money in the remaining 30% of cases.
* And my thinkpiece on Guardians of the Galaxy has been scooped. Alas.
Written by gerrycanavan
August 4, 2014 at 9:08 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, Alice in Wonderland, America, American Studies, Barack Obama, Benghazi, CFPs, Chronicle, class struggle, college sports, comics, cruel optimism, Dan Harmon, Dana Carvey, delicious Coca-Cola, Dirk Gently, Douglas Adams, Dungeons & Dragons, edited collections, Episode 7, film, fish, friendship, Gaza, gender, Google, Groot, Guardians of the Galaxy, Harmontown, Hillary Clinton, How the University Works, humanitarianism, humanitarianism of a particular sort, impeachment, Israel, juvenile detention, kids today, maps, Max Landis, medicine, medieval manuscripts, neoliberalism, Palestine, Pangea, plants, podcasts, politics, pornography, prison, prison-industrial complex, privacy, race, rape culture, rich people, Roman Empire, sadness, Scandal, science, Scrabble, Spider-Man, Star Wars, success, Supreme Court, surveillance society, texting, the courts, the Internet, the law, The Mad Hatter, the truth is out there, thinkpieces, time travel, vegetarianism, violence, what it is I think you're doing, Won't somebody think of the children?, words
Saturday!
* Today, Trina is one of approximately 470 prisoners in Pennsylvania serving life without parole for crimes they committed as teenagers. I was pretty cranky about this the other day on Twitter with respect to the Mitt Romney bullying story (on which subject fellow UNCG MFA alum Steve Almond gets biblical here).
* Brazilian politicians and journalists were not placated. “We’re going to show this gang that they can’t come down here and create whatever environmental mess they want,” Carlos Minc, a co-founder of Brazil’s Green Party and environmental secretary of Rio state, told the newspaper O Globo. “I want to see the CEO of Chevron swim in that oil.” Great!
* The free market as more efficient than central planning, case 751.
* All of the current administrative solutions are perverse and/or unsustainable. Public universities cannot solve their financial problems by raising tuition even more quickly in the face of the tuition bubble, the student debt bubble, public anger after decades of similar annual increases at 3-4 times inflation, a pro-education president who is campaigning to punish tuition increases with further funding cuts, and mounting damage to an entire academic generation symbolized by the recent tripling of the number of PhDs on food stamps.
* Funny how this works: Saying he had no discretion under state law, a judge sentenced a Jacksonville, Florida, woman to 20 years in prison Friday for firing a warning shot in an effort to scare off her abusive husband.
Marissa Alexander unsuccessfully tried to use Florida’s controversial “stand your ground” law to derail the prosecution, but a jury in March convicted her of aggravated assault after just 12 minutes of deliberation.
* A quick note from Jameson about base and superstructure.
* The Lego Lord of the Rings Videogame Is Really Happening. I’ll take one of each applicable video game system, please.
* Wes Anderson Tumblr blogs. It’s early going, but “Directed by Wes Anderson” may eventually be your winner here.
* And I’d have paid good money to see a Maurice Sendak Avengers.
Written by gerrycanavan
May 12, 2012 at 9:54 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with a billion here and a billion there and pretty soon you're talking about real money, academia, Argentina, Barack Obama, base, Brazil, bullying, capitalism, Chevron, class struggle, domestic violence, Florida, games, gay rights, general election 2012, guns, homophobia, How the University Works, ideology, J.P. Morgan, Jameson, juvenile detention, LEGO, Lord of the Rings, Marxism, Matt Taibbi, Maurice Sendak, misogyny, Mitt Romney, Occupy Cal, oil, Pennsylvania, politics, reality TV, stand your ground, superstructure, The Avengers, the courts, the wisdom of markets, theory, transgender issues, true crime, tuition, Tumblr, UNCG, Wes Anderson
Tons of Weekend Links
* “Austerity is not inevitable”: France falls to the Red Menace.
* Podcast of the weekend: Global science fiction on WorldCanvass, with Brooks Landon, Rob Latham, Istvan Csicsery-Ronay, and others.
* Charlie Stross prophesies the death of science fiction.
But anyway, to summarize: my point is that our genre sits uneasily within boundaries delineated by the machinery of sales. And that creaking steam-age machinery is currently in the process of being swapped out for some kind of irridescent, gleaming post-modern intrusion from the planet internet. New marketing strategies become possible, indeed, become essential. And the utility of the old signifiers—the rocket ship logo on the spine of the paperback—diminish in the face of the new (tagging, reader recommendations, “if you liked X you’ll love Y” cross-product correlations by sales engines, custom genre-specific cover illustrations, and so on).
* Tom Hayden remembers the Port Huron Statement (or at least the compromise second draft).
* Joe Biden endorses marriage equality for about fifteen minutes.
* Black Studies Hitpiece Leads to Chronicle of Higher Ed Twitter Trainwreck. Why Is the Chronicle of Higher Education Publishing A Racist Hack? Grad Students Respond to Riley Post on African-American Studies. The Inferiority of Blackness as a Subject. Anti-intellectualism, déjà vu.
* When copyright term-extension meets infinite life-extension.
* A tribute to Disneyland’s secret restroom.
* Connecticut continues its recent spate of being decent its citizens, legalizes medical medicine.
* Stand for your ground: A Florida woman faces prison after firing a warning shot to scare off an abusive husband.
* Nerds assemble! Joss Whedon finally made something everybody likes. An interview. Another. Whedon on Batman. Whedon on Wonder Woman.
* The Avengers: Will superhero movies never end?
What I see in “The Avengers,” unfortunately, is a diminished film despite its huge scale, and kind of a bore. It’s a diminishment of Whedon’s talents, as he squeezes himself into an ill-fitting narrative straitjacket, and it’s a diminished form that has become formula, that depends entirely on minor technical innovations and leaves virtually no room for drama or tragedy or anything else that might make the story actually interesting. To praise the movie lavishly, as so many people have done and will continue to do, basically requires making endless allowances. It’s really good (for being a comic-book movie). It’s really good (for being almost exactly like dozens of other things). It’s really good (for being utterly inconsequential).
* Today’s single chart that explains everything.
* The football suicides. More players file concussion lawsuits against the NFL. Will the NFL still exist in 20 years?
* How the Blind Are Reinventing the iPhone.
* Save the Holocene! Why “the Anthropocene” might not be a useful construct.
* Do you remember Frank Kunkel? How about Frank Nowarczyk? John Marsh or Robert Erdman? Johann Zazka? Martin Jankowiak? Not even Michael Ruchalski? Do you remember the call “Eight hours for labor, eight hours for rest, eight hours for recreation?” The names are those of the seven of the nine people killed in 1886 in Bay View, Wisconsin for demanding eight hour work days.
* On Colorado’s policy of sending kids to adult court.
* Consider the case of Toby Groves.
* New Police Strategy in New York: Sexual Assault Against Peaceful Protesters.
* North Carolina’s Ban on Gay Marriage Appears Likely to Pass.
* Since Mexico’s legislative body passed sweeping climate change legislation on April 19, Mexico joins the UK as the only two countries in the world with legally binding emissions goals to combat climate change.
* http://thebiblein100days.tumblr.com/
* American Airlines channels Darth Vader: We are altering the deal. Pray we do not alter it further.
* And Stephen Colbert’s employment of the comedic stylings of German Ambassador Hans Beinholtz continues to be my absolute favorite thing of all time.
Written by gerrycanavan
May 6, 2012 at 7:58 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, airplanes, Amendment One, American Airlines, austerity, Batman, Charlie Stross, charts, climate change, Colbert, Colorado, communism, concussions, Connecticut, copyright, David Graeber, disability, Disneyland, dissertations, domestic violence, ecology, eight-hour work day, ethics, European-style communofascism, Florida, football, France, gay rights, genre, Hans Beinholtz, head injury, Holocene, internships, iPhones, Joe Biden, Joss Whedon, juvenile detention, labor, law school, life extension, longevity, marijuana, marriage equality, Mexico, monocausotaxophilia, Muppets, NFL, North Carolina, NYPD, Occupy Wall Street, police brutality, Port Huron Statement, postcoloniality, productivity, race, racism, religion, scams, science fiction, socialism, stand your ground, the Anthropocene, The Avengers, the bible, the courts, the law, Tom Hayden, true crime, ugh, United Kingdom, Wisconsin, Wonder Woman
Wednesday Night Links
* George Zimmerman in custody, charged with second degree murder.
* Dinosaur Times: probably a lot less fun than you think.
* Neal Kirby remembers his father, Jack.
* The Port Huron Statement at 50. Warning: this is primarily about the compromised second draft.
* The Fraiser theme song explained. Finally.
* Bad polling news for Romney in North Carolina, Colorado, and pretty much everywhere else. Who could have predicted that aggressively alienating 51% of the voting population would have turned out so badly?
* Tough primary season for God: Every candidate he encouraged to run has dropped out.
* Chris Christie lied about the Hudson Tunnel project he unilaterally canceled? Say it ain’t so!
* The headline reads, “National Review Fires Another Racist Writer.”
* Uncompromising Photos Expose Juvenile Detention in America. Just heartwrenching. Below: A 12-year-old in his cell at the Harrison County Juvenile Detention Center in Biloxi, Mississippi. The window has been boarded up from the outside. The facility is operated by Mississippi Security Police, a private company. In 1982, a fire killed 27 prisoners and an ensuing lawsuit against the authorities forced them to reduce their population to maintain an 8:1 inmate to staff ratio.
Written by gerrycanavan
April 11, 2012 at 10:59 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with Big Lebowski, Chris Christie, Colorado, comics, dinosaurs, Florida, Fraiser, general election 2012, George Zimmerman, God, gun, infrastructure, Jack Kirby, juvenile detention, lies and lying liars, Mitt Romney, murder, National Review, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, photographs, polls, Port Huron Statement, prison-industrial complex, race, racism, religion, stand your ground, the Cretaceous, the ladies, Trayvon Martin, Won't somebody think of the children?