Posts Tagged ‘Lemony Snicket’
Trumpsday Reading
* Trump is targeting up to 8 million people for deportation. Making America Cruel Again. The triumph of cruelty. Inside the White House-Cabinet battle over Trump’s immigration order. 24 Hours at JFK. ‘Breathtaking violation of rights.’ Constitutional crisis. Hero Lawyers. Stop that plane: The frantic race to halt a deportation. A Q&A With the ACLU. Our New Itinerary. Travel ban causes high anxiety for Milwaukee’s international students. The little-noticed bombshell in Trump’s immigration order. Half Of World’s Refugees Are Running From U.S. Wars. Trump’s First Weeks Leave Washington— and the White House Staff—Panting. The leaks coming out of the Trump White House right now are totally bananas. Yes, all this happened. Gasp! Trust Records Show Trump Is Still Closely Tied to His Empire. Ivanka lied about the leaving the Trump organization too. Make War with Mexico Great Again. Trainwreck in Yemen. Even Australia. Onward to Iran! 14 Versions Of Trump’s Presidency, From #MAGA To Impeachment. Trump and the Republicans Are on a Suicide Mission Together. Editing Trump. Authoritarian Government Watch. We just let this one go without even making a big deal about it. And this one was crazy too! A Series of Unfortunate Events. This is fine. This is fine. This is fine. Seems legit. This is not normal. #TheResistance. A Reader for Trumplandia. Trump: A Resister’s Guide. SNL 1, 2, 3. Oh man. The law, in its majestic equality. 4 in 10. A whole year? Jesus. The numbers. A 3,900 percent increase. It takes 3.5% of a population engaged in sustained nonviolent resistance to topple brutal dictatorships. Here’s how much the anti-Trump protests cost, at Trump paid-turnout rates. Disobey.
* The worst, most terrible things that the United States has done have almost never happened through an assault on American institutions; they’ve always happened through American institutions and practices. These are the elements of the American polity that have offered especially potent tools and instruments of intimidation and coercion: federalism, the separation of powers, social pluralism, and the rule of law. All the elements of the American experience that liberals and conservatives have so cherished as bulwarks of American freedom have also been sources and instruments of political fear. In all the cases I looked at, coercion, intimidation, repression, and violence were leveraged through these mechanisms, not in spite of them.
* There is a style of political reasoning which the Trump moment lends itself to, which can be called conspiracism. Against omniscience.
* Everyday Authoritarianism is Boring and Tolerable.
* Screaming about Trump into a Well: A Text Adventure.
* The Democratic Response to Gorsuch Is Easy: Just Say No. Why Democrats Should Oppose Neil Gorsuch. Make Republicans Nuke the Filibuster to Confirm Neil Gorsuch.
* Football players at private institutions in college sports’ most competitive level are employees, the National Labor Relations Board’s general counsel stated this week, and will be treated as such if they seek protection against unfair labor practices.
* Chris Ware on George Herriman. A rebuttal.
* The African Speculative Fiction lecture series at the University of London.
* The Hot New Brand of Higher Education.
* Riot at Berkeley. #Milosexual and the Aesthetics of Fascism.
* After-the-Horse-Has-Left-the-Barn Department. Well at least you’re sorry.
* Who Cares If the Dow Jones Hit 20,000?
* Under A New System, Clinton Could Have Won The Popular Vote By 5 Points And Still Lost.
* The U.S. military’s stats on deadly airstrikes are wrong. Thousands have gone unreported.
* Academics boycotting the U.S.
* The end of Locked-In Syndrome… in the Twilight Zone.
Okay so this really *is* like a news story straight out of Black Mirror – right down to the ending. pic.twitter.com/RrFaQ4SH3W
— Charlie Brooker (@charltonbrooker) February 1, 2017
* Same.
* The new issue of the SFRA Review is up.
* The Youth Group That Launched a Movement at Standing Rock.
* Other Space, the best SF series no one but me watched.
* Against the Constitution. Against the Supreme Court.
* Video Game Voice Actor Strike Now Second-Longest In SAG History.
* How a Cult That Believes Cats Are Divine Beings Ended Up in Tennessee.
* Why the voting age should be lowered to 16.
* February 17 is the next time the general strike isn’t actually going to happen.
* In the Trump International Penal Colony and Golf Resort.
* Marquette in the ne — come on, again?
* Also they enslaved and tortured generations of animals, but that’s not important right now.
* If you want a vision of the future.
* Decolonizing Science Fiction.
* How an Interstellar Starship Could Actually Explore Alpha Centauri.
* How Astronauts’ Brains Are Changed By Spaceflight.
* In the future, everyone will be hated by thousands of strangers for 15 minutes.
* The Milwaukee Bucks Century.
* The war comes to Whitefish Bay.
* The richest society in human history.
* And like Nietzsche said: it is forgetting, not remembering, that makes life possible.
Written by gerrycanavan
February 5, 2017 at 9:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with #NoBan, #NoDAPL, 1984, A Series of Unfortunate Events, academia, academic boycotts, academic freedom, ACLU, Adam Kotsko, Afrofuturism, Alpha Centauri, alt right, America, Andy Warhol, animal rights, animals, animation, artificial intelligence, Australia, authoritarianism, basketball, Ben Shapiro, Berkeley, Black Mirror, brands, canon, cats, Charlie Brooker, Chris Ware, circuses, class strugle, cockroaches, college football, college sports, comics, conservativism, conspiracy theory, cults, decolonization, deforestation, Delaware, democracy, Disney, disobey, Donald Trump, dreams, drones, Electoral College, Facebook, fascism, FedEx, forgetting, free speech, games, general election 2020, general strike, George Herriman, George Orwell, guns, How the University Works, immigration, impeachment, infrastructure, intergenerational struggle, Iran, Islamophobia, JCC, Kafka, Kellyanne Conway, kids today, Krazy Kat, labor, Lemony Snicket, Locked-In Syndrome, maps, Marquette, Mars, Mexico, military-industrial complex, Milo Yiannopoulous, Milwaukee, Milwaukee Bucks, Minnesota, Mountain Goats, Nazis, NBA, NCAA, Neil Gorsuch, Nietzsche, Nintendo, NLRB, Other Space, our brains work in interesting ways, outer space, Paul Feig, Phobos, poker, politics, protest, Reddit, refugees, resistance, Ringling Brothers, riots, Saturday Night Live, science, science fiction, SFRA, sleep, social media, spaceships, Standing Rock, Star Wars, stress, strikes, Supreme Court, Tennessee, text adventures, the Cabinet, the Constitution, the courts, the filibuster, the Holocaust, the Jedi, the kids are all right, the law, the Senate, the stock market, this is why we can't have nice things, TIAA-CREF, Twitter, UWM, Vaughn Prison, Venn diagrams, Virginia, voting, war huh good god y'all what is it good for? absolutely nothing say it again, white nationalism, white supremacy, Whitefish Bay, Wisconsin, Won't somebody think of the children?, Yemen, Zelda
All the Weekend Links!
* Ursula Le Guin gave a great speech at the National Book Awards this week.
I think hard times are coming when we will be wanting the voices of writers who can see alternatives to how we live now and can see through our fear-stricken society and its obsessive technologies to other ways of being, and even imagine some real grounds for hope. We will need writers who can remember freedom. Poets, visionaries—the realists of a larger reality.
* It’s quite a bit better than the other thing that happened that night, though Handler is trying to making amends.
* Kirkus Reviews on the radical Joanna Russ.
* A Sokal hoax we can all believe in.
* Roofs are caving in in Buffalo after a week of truly insane November storms. The temperature is projected to be 60 degrees on Monday, which means this could all melt in one day and cause a whole new set of problems.
* CFP: Hostile Intelligences and The General Antagonism.
The purpose of this conference is to organize and proliferate the material heresies that are the basis for what Matteo Pasquinelli has called “hostile intelligences” and what Fred Moten and Stefano Harney have described as “the general antagonism.” Pasquinelli writes, in “The Labour of Abstraction,” “Marx’s tendency of the rate of profit to fall has to find eventually its epistemic twin.” For him, forms of knowledge and subjectivity play a prominent role in his theory of anti-capitalist revolution. Hostile intelligence is one imaginary in which the recently formed Accelerationists conceive such an epistemic twin. Moten and Harney’s category, “the general antagonism,” is no doubt the epistemic twin of “the general intellect”, and powerfully indicates a generalized disidentification with white-supremacist, capitalist culture that is an extant part of the fugitive practices of what they eloquently call “The Undercommons.”
* Program of the 2015 MLA Subconference.
* While the Regents claim to negotiate on behalf of those who use the university–students, staff and faculty–their new gambit instead shows the difference between the Regents and higher Administration, on one hand, and “those who use” the university on the other. UCOP’s Failed Funding Model.
* A Communiqué from the UCSC Occupation of Humanities 2.
* What the students were doing in 2010, and what they’re doing today, is defending art, science and philosophy against a regime that believes none of these things are of any value except as a means to wealth and power. They are quite literally defending the values of civilisation from those who have abandoned them.
* Jacobin: Higher education should be free. But we can’t just copy the flawed European model.
* Do you want to be responsible for something that’s gonna paint UVA in a bad light? Horrifying report in Rolling Stone about a young woman’s experience being attacked at a UVA fraternity and then reporting it. Please note that the description of what happened to her is quite graphic and very disturbing.
* Bill Cosby and the rape accusers: stop looking away and start believing women.
The repository would need some kind of physical marker that, foremost, could last 10,000 years, so the task force’s report considers the relative merits of different materials like metal, concrete, and plastic. Yet the marker would also need to repel rather than attract humans—setting it apart from Stonehenge, the Great Pyramids, or any other monument that has remained standing for thousands of years. To do that, the marker would need warnings. But how do you warn future humans whose cultures and languages will have evolved in unknown ways?
* Public officials once operated for profit. Now that system has returned with a vengeance. Mike Konczal reviews The Teacher Wars and Rise of the Warrior Cop.
* Academics sometimes seek to make the world a better place, and the Chronicle is ON IT.
* Seven years in, Twitter finally puts in what you’d think would be one of its most basic features.
* Bangkok cinema chain cancels Hunger Games screenings over salute protest.
* 400 Things Cops Know Is the New Bible for Crime Writers. By MU English Alum Plantinga!
* The Singularity Is Here: 5-foot-tall ‘Robocops’ start patrolling Silicon Valley.
* NYPD Officer ‘Accidentally’ Shoots and Kills Unarmed Man in Brooklyn. Why would police officers have their guns drawn as a matter of course? How can that be protocol?
* Late capitalism and the viral imagination.
* Surprise: Humanities Degrees Provide Great Return On Investment.
* Exhibit A? U. of Colorado Will Pay Philosophy Professor $185,000 to Resign.
* Mass hysteria at the Department of Education.
* Now we see the violence etc: In a blow to schoolchildren statewide, the Michigan Court of Appeals ruled on Nov. 7 the State of Michigan has no legal obligation to provide a quality public education to students in the struggling Highland Park School District. The law, in its majestic equality…
* First Grader Was Told ‘Guess What, You Can’t Have Lunch’ Because His Family Was In Debt.
* Being bullied physically changes kids’ brains.
* The Horrific Sand Creek Massacre Will Be Forgotten No More.
* When My Mom Was an Astronaut.
* Often they have rich back stories. A motivational mantra, a swipe at the boss, a hidden shrine to a lost love, an inside joke with ourselves, a defining emotional scar — these keepsake passwords, as I came to call them, are like tchotchkes of our inner lives. Passwords are the new poetry.
* Accrediting commission says UNC ‘not diligent’ in exposing academic scandal. Let the stern finger-wagging commence!
* Lunatic: Keystone Pipeline Will Teach Men “What it Is to Be a Man.” Literally toxic masculinity.
* It’s one reason we’re poorer than our parents. And Obama could fix it—without Congress. Whatever Happened to Overtime? I’m sure he’ll get right on it.
* ‘Text neck’ is becoming an ‘epidemic’ and could wreck your spine.
* A new analysis by PunditFact found that of every statement made by a Fox News host or guest, over half of them were flat-out false. What’s more, only a measly 8% could be considered completely “true.”
* In a Shift, Obama Extends U.S. Role in Afghan Combat.
* No, Your Ancestors Didn’t Come Here Legally.
* Neuroscience Is Ruining the Humanities.
* The enduring legacy of the Buffy the Vampire Slayer writers’ room.
* The Ghostbusters 3 we’ll never see.
* The Empire Strikes Back we’ll never see.
* This One-Page Comic Explains Why Batman Never Seems To Die.
* From this vantage, the efficient society that terrorizes and comforts Codemus, and enfolds him in the straitjacket of a diffused, technologized fascism, resembles the experience of many workers today. Increasing numbers of people receive their instructions from, and report back to, software and smartphones.
* Flatland, at last, is truly two-dimensional.
* And this Deceptively Cute Animation Illustrates The Horrors Of My Addiction to Coca-Cola.Won’t you give what you can, please, today? The case for treating sugar like a drug.
Written by gerrycanavan
November 22, 2014 at 10:44 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, academic freedom, academic publishing, accreditation, activism, actually existing media bias, addiction, adoption, Afghanistan, algorithms, austerity, Barack Obama, Batman, Berkeley, Bill Cosby, Boulder, Buffalo, Buffy, bullying, capitalism, CFPs, charter schools, class struggle, climate change, cognitive science, comics, conferences, Cops, cultural preservation, David Graeber, debt, delicious Coca-Cola, Department of Education, diversity, Don't mention the war, Ebola, ecology, fascism, feminist science fiction, film, Flatland, flexible accumulation, Fox News, fraud, Fred Moten, freedom, futurity, Ghostbusters 3, grad student nightmares, guns, hoaxes, hostile intelligences, How the University Works, human rights, Hunger Games, Joanna Russ, Keystone XL, kids today, Lemony Snicket, many worlds and alternate universes, Marquette, Michigan, MLA, museums, neoliberalism, neuroscience, nuclear waste, nuclearity, NYPD, our brains work in interesting but ultimately depressing ways, overtime, podcasts, police brutality, police state, police violence, politics, post-Fordism, protest, race, racism, rape, rape culture, resitance, Robocop, Sand Creek Massacre, science fiction, Serial, Silicon Velley, smartphones, snow, Sokal hoax, Star Wars, Stefano Harney, strikes, student occupations, subconferences, sugar, tech economy, text neck, texting, Thailand, the courts, The Empire Strikes Back, the general antagonism, the humanities, the law, the long now, the Singularity, toxic masculinity, tuition, Twitter, Uber, UNC, undercommons, University of California, University of Colorado, University of Oregon, Ursula K. Le Guin, UVA, viral imagination, war on education, Won't somebody think of the children?, work, Yucca Mountain
‘Historically, A Story about People Inside Impressive Buildings Ignoring or Even Taunting People Standing Outside Shouting at Them Turns Out to Be a Story with an Unhappy Ending’
Written by gerrycanavan
October 18, 2011 at 11:03 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with history, Lemony Snicket, Occupy Wall Street, politics