Posts Tagged ‘mutants’
Sunday Morning Links!
* Released yesterday: Grad School Vonnegut #11, Cat’s Cradle with Patrick Iber! We had some minor but annoying audio problems with this one, so the editing took a bit longer than usual — so please enjoy, and look forward to, well…
As @zunguzungu’s enthusiasm for the podcast wanes, the randomizer heroically gives us… JAILBIRD followed by DEADEYE DICK. 😢 #RIP
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) August 16, 2020
* Registration for the “Beyond Borders: Empires, Bodies, Science Fictions” conference is now open. Call for Papers: Journal of Posthumanism. And ICYMI: SFFTV’s Call for Reviewers.
* Polygraph has a new issue! Marxism and Climate Change.
* USPS changes blamed for deliveries of thousands of dead chicks: ‘We’ve never had a problem like this before.’ ‘Like Armageddon’: Rotting food, dead animals and chaos at postal facilities amid cutbacks. Washington Postal Workers Defy USPS Orders And Reinstall Mail Sorting Machines. How a viral photo of USPS collection boxes became a lesson in misinformation. The barn door will now be closed.
* Starting to regret my vote for Trump: In secretly recorded audio, President Trump’s sister says he has ‘no principles’ and ‘you can’t trust him.’ Senate committee made criminal referral of Trump Jr., Bannon, Kushner, two others to federal prosecutors. Inside the chaotic, desperate, last-minute Trump 2020 reboot. What happens if when Donald Trump fights the election results? We Shouldn’t Have to Remind People George W. Bush Was a Terrible President.
I think the fundamental thing Democrats don’t understand about Trump is that he isn’t an aberration and isn’t even really the final Big Bad — he is a stress test for a corrupt system that collapsed into completely lawless authoritarianism the first time someone tried it.
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) August 20, 2020
* The K-Shaped Recovery. Coronavirus stimulus: Loss of extra $600 unemployment benefits leads to 44% drop in spending. Economists foresee an unemployment “tsunami” coming. The COVID economy means millions of Americans are at risk of food insecurity. Nearly 30 million Americans told the Census Bureau they didn’t have enough to eat last week. Evictions are expected to skyrocket as pandemic protections come to an end.
* New York lays off hundreds of EMTs amidst historic budget crisis.
* Joe Biden’s Campaign Is Making It Very Clear: They Will Push Austerity in the White House. Biden to ABC’s Robin Roberts: ‘I don’t want to defund’ the police, but Trump does. Joe Biden: An Old Man Trying to Lead a Young Country. Prepare yourself for the Biden century.
There are three types of Democratic presidential candidates: I’m the Messiah (Obama); stay the course (HRC, Gore); I’m a Republican (Bill Clinton). Biden is the rare stay-the-course Messiah who is also a Republican.
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) August 21, 2020
* Wisconsin lacks ideal coronavirus testing capacity for reopening of college campuses, schools, top health official says. Trending the wrong way. Wisconsin unemployment rate drops, still double last year. ‘The system is not built for problems:’ Attorneys point to Gov. Walker reforms amid unemployment delays. Wisconsin Is a Microcosm of America’s Democratic Decline.
* But it’s not all bad news! Sculpture Milwaukee 2020 works now on display. A Brief History of Frozen Custard, Wisconsin’s Favorite Dessert.
* University Staff Are Worried Their Recorded Lectures Will Be Used Against Them. The Neoliberal University Is Failing on Coronavirus. How Covid-19 United the Higher-Ed Work Force. Company that builds and maintains student housing sent letters to public universities in at least two states in May as they weighed in-person fall classes, reminding them of hundreds of millions of debt. Deserted College Dorms Sow Trouble for $14 Billion in Muni Bonds. Records from before reopening show experts warned UNC of COVID-19 outbreaks. UNC fiasco reveals truth about reopening colleges. Early Movers to Online Don’t Regret Decision. Will Shame Make Students Stop Socializing? News from the Daily Tarheel. Don’t make us write obituaries. Blaming students at Syracuse, UNC, NC State. University of Michigan professors have ‘no confidence’ in administration’s plan to contain coronavirus. Michigan State, Notre Dame Back Off From Fall Reopening Plans. Detroit Teachers Authorize ‘Safety’ Strike Over School Reopening Fears. ‘I just can’t do this’: UI student who tested positive for COVID-19 recounts school response. Alabama goes from 1% positivity to as high as 29% in one week. NYU students use TikTok to expose the school’s bleak quarantine meal plan. Inside the Slow-Moving Disaster of Students Returning to College Campuses. ‘They put us all in danger.’ Georgia State QB Mikele Colasurdo diagnosed with heart condition linked to COVID-19. Marquette in-person class decision detrimental to non-tenure faculty, TAs. Marquette University’s reopening plan draws backlash. Faculty, Students Protest at MU President’s House. “Christian Colleges Ask: Would God Want Us to Reopen?” The New College Drop-Off. Remote learning: a poem. True shamelessness. This is everyone’s fault but mine.
As I keep saying: the administrators who made the decision to reopen put students, faculty, staff, and everyone connected to these people at risk of death. They should resign or be fired, and the board of governors dissolved. #CovidCampusOutbreak https://t.co/TBxkqUPvIk
— David M. Perry (@Lollardfish) August 22, 2020
And if the only way you can enforce compliance with your plan is by draconian punitive measures against the community you're ostensibly trying to serve, well, that's not good, either. https://t.co/DGKDLePKVs
— Angus Johnston (@studentactivism) August 21, 2020
Wellness check: My students are hurting following UNC’s experiment in pandemic f2f learning. As of 8/20, 6% have COVID. 31% have a known exposure. 83% are being forced to find a new housing situation. 78% report elevated stress & anxiety. I’m so sorry they are living this. pic.twitter.com/DvUWbUb9TN
— Angela Stuesse (@astuesse) August 21, 2020
every academic i know: *is unprecedentedly burnt out and anxiety-ridden*
universities: good morning fam 🤪 we trust you’ve been productive 🤓 and relaxed 🧘♀️ this summer ☀️ we’re pumped 💯 to get you back on campus 🏛 don’t forget to write your will 📃🙌
— Annabel LaBrecque (@labrcq) August 18, 2020
A bit lost in the great student enrollment debate of fall 2020 is the fact that their loans come due in sixth months if they disenroll.
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) August 22, 2020
Negligent college administrators, who live in the towns where they make six-figure salaries and who don’t need to go into classrooms or even onto campus at all, are inflicting massive harm on the parents and students who placed trust in them. https://t.co/QkE0vfdtOk
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) August 19, 2020
spotted on facebook, a poem by elise hu pic.twitter.com/4BA7hjBuXV
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) August 20, 2020
* Study suggests ‘horrifying’ rise in domestic violence during pandemic. Long-Haulers Are Redefining COVID-19.
* Evidence grows that children may play a larger role in transmission than previously believed.
* 9 reasons you can be optimistic that a vaccine for COVID-19 will be widely available in 2021.
* Are You Overpraising Your Child?
* America’s Terrible Internet Is Making Quarantine Worse. Blow up plans for the school year and get creative, you fools. Understatement of the year: Working parents face tough decisions as schools reopen. Scientists warn it may be years before students can return to school without masks, social distancing.
* The Lesson Americans Never Learn.
* What Happens If the 2020 Census Fails?
* “Fears about Peak Oil are gone. Now we plan for Peak Demand.”
* Millennial Futures Are Bleak. Incarceration Is to Blame.
* Looking for Solace and Solidarity in a Broken-Hearted World.
* Black newborns more likely to die when looked after by White doctors.
* California is burning, again. The state is suffering from a severe lack of firefighters due to the COVID-19 depleting the ranks of prisoners who normally do the work for $3/day (and then are barred from being firefighters after release). Severe inhumanity.
Bleak shit in California pic.twitter.com/yXnpRvNrSE
— Eoin Higgins (@EoinHiggins_) August 20, 2020
And if she could smell it with her heavy head cold, it must be a tremendous fire!
“We ought to call the brigade!” she exclaimed. “Is it a hayrick?”
“The brigade would have a long way to go,” the doctor told her curtly. “It’s from America. The wind’s blowing that way.” https://t.co/n9AFiltXDx
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) August 23, 2020
* The Mysterious Life of Birds Who Never Come Down.
* The Enduring, Pernicious Whiteness of True Crime.
* TOS FTW. ‘The Before Time’: A Sci-Fi Idea That Has Made Its Way to Real Life.
* The Evolution of Ransomware.
* This week’s thing we’re supposed to bicker about on Twitter is just absurd. I’m still not over last week’s thing.
* There’s friendship, and then there’s friendship.
* A new theory of historical fantasy from N.K. Jemisin.
* The QAnon Century. A Primer. How three conspiracy theorists took ‘Q’ and sparked Qanon. Trump’s Cloud of Gossip Has Poisoned America. The Republican Embrace of QAnon Goes Far Beyond Trump.
* How UFO culture took over America.
* Never a good thing to star in your own dystopian fiction.
* Twilight of DC Comics. But they’re bringing Milestone back!
* (Behold?) The Vision’s Penis: The Presence of Absence in Mutant Romance Tales.
* What about the bad job offers?
* ‘Watchmen’ Writer Cord Jefferson on Fresh Air.
* ‘The mystery is over’: Researchers say they know what happened to ‘Lost Colony.’
* I could listen to anything on eight cellos, it turns out.
* The latest in my recurring series of grad school advice tweets.
* J. G. Ballard’s book for children were not a success.
* And I believe America’s best days are still in front of it.
I had A LOT of requests for this one! X-Men: The Animated Series pic.twitter.com/D1W5TAAs0I
— Samara Ginsberg (@samaracello) August 18, 2020
Written by gerrycanavan
August 23, 2020 at 9:55 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with #BlackLivesMatter, academia, academic jobs, algorithms, America, Andrew Cuomo, apocalypse, art, austerity, birds, Bombadil, books, Bush, California, Cat's Cradle, cello, CFPs, class struggle, climate change, comics, conspiracy theory, Cord Jefferson, coronavirus, COVID-19, custard, DC Comics, Democrats, domestic violence, Donald Trump, dystopia, epidemic, evictions, friendship, games, general election 2020, ghouls, grad school, Grad School Vonnegut, historical fantasy, How the University Works, incarceration, Internet, J.G. Ballard, Joe Biden, K-shaped recovery, kids today, long-haulers, Lord of the Rings, Marquette, Marvel, Marxism, medicine, Milestone Comics, millennials, Milwaukee, Miri, MLA, mutants, my media empire, my scholarly empire, N.K. Jemisin, neoliberalism, New York, nursing homes, oil, pandemic, parenting, Peak Demand, Peak Oil, pedagogy, podcasts, politics, Polygraph, posthumanism, pregnancy, prison-industrial complex, QAnon, race, racism, ransomware, remote learning, Republicans, Roanoke, rule of law, school, Science Fiction Film and Television, science fiction studies, Second Great Depression?, Should I go to grad school?, social media, solace, solidarity, Star Trek, the Census, the courts, the economy, the law, The Sheep Look Up, The Vision, Tolkien, TOS, true crime, Twitter, UFOs, unemployment, Untitled Goose Game, USPS, Utopia, vaccines, Vonnegut, Watchmen, whiteness, wildfires, Wisconsin, worst financial crisis since the last one, worst financial crisis since World War II, X-Men, X-Men: The Animated Series
Tuesday Morning Links!
* The University of Wisconsin-Madison Mellon Postdoctoral Program invites recent PhDs to apply for its three two-year postdoctoral fellowships. The theme for 2017-2019 applicants is Translation, Adaptation, Transplantation.
* A message from the Marquette administration: Milwaukee, our home. And a letter from MUPD. Decades of grievances come to a head in Milwaukee after police shooting. The “unrest” in this city began decades ago. The Racial Segregation And Economic Devastation That Made Milwaukee A ‘Powder Keg.’ Powder keg. Decades in the making. Decades in the making. Ongoing tensions. Not a surprise. No one can deny. Outsider agitators! The radicalism of Black Lives Matter. “What can I do to help Milwaukee?” What It’s Like To Experience Black Pain In Milwaukee. Half of Wisconsin’s Black Neighborhoods Are Jails.
* Scientists say the US is facing the strongest hurricane season since Sandy hit the East Coast. California is in flames right now, with fires fueled by historic drought. A first-strike against climate change is the only solution.
* The 10 Most Overly-Specific Supervillains in Comics.
* The story no one asked for will finally become the series no one can watch. And when I made that joke on Facebook a friend reminded me of the goddamn forehead ridge thing that will be totally inescapable.
* I told you, Dad! New research from the Journal of Health Psychology seems to supports the theory that intelligent people spend more time being lazy than people who are more active.
* Racial Politics After Obama.
* Insurers say they’re losing money under the Affordable Care Act and are fighting for double-digit rate increases. This week Aetna announced it is pulling back from most exchanges.
for every problem there is a solution that is complex, market-based and far worse than the government just doing it https://t.co/lRJsJ72z5c
— sean. (@SeanMcElwee) August 16, 2016
* When the Hospital Is Covered but the Health Care Isn’t.
the hospital is in network, and the doctor is in network, ha ha very clever you caught that one! but that room is NOT part of the hospital
— Felix Gilman (@felixgilman) August 15, 2016
* Why the Next President Should Forgive All Student Loans.
* Area Man’s Wife Achieves Lifelong Dream Through Dedicated, Drive, and Incredible Physical Prowess. It gets worse, my friends. (It gets better too.)
* Juanita Broaddrick Wants To Be Believed. Right wing ratfucking though it may be, the cognitive dissonance required to simultaneously honor contemporary norms about sexual consent and the 90s-era “none of our business” defense of Bill Clinton’s predatory behavior seems increasingly difficult to sustain.
* The amount of effort this took was the most alarming thing given his history,” the guy told the Post. Anthony Weiner’s Back at It Again With the Saucy Twitter DMs. I’m still saying it:
I’d really love to see a documentary called ABEDIN just with the footage of Huma they cut from WEINER. She’s the enigma.
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) June 4, 2016
* This Andrew Cuomo fan fiction is now totally my head canon.
* Comedy Central Cancels Larry Wilmore’s Late-Night Show. Comedy Central’s decision this week to cancel “The Nightly Show With Larry Wilmore” was a surprise. The reason it was a surprise is that Wilmore isn’t the real problem with the cable channel’s late-night offerings. Wilmore gone, but Comedy Central’s late-night problem is Noah.
* The Life Aquatic’s Seu Jorge Announces David Bowie Covers Tour. Chicago on (the day after) my birthday!
* NeverEnding Story Returns To Movie Theaters For Limited Run. I wish my kids were just a little bit older so we could do this.
* The Election Won’t Be Rigged. But It Could Be Hacked.
* How Cuba’s greatest cartoonist fled from Castro and created ‘Spy vs. Spy.’
* Their goal: Meet the Beatles on tour in 1966. Their solution: Impersonate the opening act.
* Hidden Figures really does look good.
* Suicide Squad and the bitter future of the DC Cinematic Universe.
* Why Colleges Still Scarcely Track Ph.D.s.
* How to make your office gun-free. Why, it couldn’t be simpler!
in order to make my office a gun-free zone, i have to tell every person they can't bring a gun in, every time pic.twitter.com/muJ5KUmrxF
— Gavin (@gavinsaywhat) August 15, 2016
* “People think a computer could run index funds—and they’re so wrong,” says Brian Bruce, a former index fund manager who’s now chief executive officer of Hillcrest Asset Management in Plano, Texas, and editor-in-chief of the Journal of Index Investing. Five years, tops.
* The rise of neuroprosthetics.
* Augmented reality games and ethics. And just for instance: Mich. couple suing Pokémon Go for ruining their quality of life.
* It is easier to imagine the end of dads than the end of capitalism.
* How legroom on major airlines compare to one another.
* “People don’t realize there is effectively no regulation of cosmetics.” Their Hair Fell Out. Should the F.D.A. Have the Power to Act?
* Don’t Bring Your Dog to Work.
* Donald Once Turned Down a Million-Dollar Bet on “Trump: The Game.” Trump Could Sweep Toss Up States And Still Lose The Election. Right now polls show Donald Trump losing every single swing state. The kids are all right. Hell, even their parents are all right. The Great GOP Divide.
The good news is
1) Trump is unpopular
2) His positions are unpopular
3) He's a nutcase
4) His party hates him
5) He has no infrastructure— HR-Compliant Freddie (@freddiedeboer) August 15, 2016
* Technology and Liberty in French Utopian Fiction.
* Taken in cumulative, these data suggest two unusual possibilities:
A. Karl Marx is the single most important, influential, and far-reaching thinker who ever lived, and his empirically attested syllabus presence accurately reflects this extreme degree of influence that he has over virtually all aspects of human knowledge.
-or-
B. Karl Marx enjoys a grossly outsized presence on college syllabi relative to his importance as a thinker, owing to a similarly disproportionate affinity for his thought among university faculty and particularly those faculty outside of the economics profession.
I really think you could make a halfway legitimate case for some version of (A) — bracketing religious figures like Christ or the Buddha, and limiting the scope of influence to the mid- and post-20C milieu — but the later observations about the Manifesto as a kindergarten lesson probably poison that possibility.
* A genetic mutation that has been found to cause people to act outrageously when they’re drunk also appears to lower the risk of certain metabolic disorders such as diabetes and obesity. Peculiarly, the mutation has so far only been found in Finnish people, and is thought to affect around 100,000 people in the Nordic country.
* You’ll Get to See the Documentary About Roger Corman’s Fantastic Four This Fall. And keep your eye out for For the Love of Spock.
* Why I’m loving No Man’s Sky.
* Weird futurism watch: in the future, should everyone be a twin?
* And this is basically just a panel from The Flash.
Written by gerrycanavan
August 16, 2016 at 9:09 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with #BlackLivesMatter, #dads, academia, adaptation, Aetna, Affordable Care Act, air travel, airplanes, alcohol, Andrew Cuomo, animals, Anthony Weiner, artificial intelligence, Barack Obama, Big Shampoo, Bill Clinton, black box voting, books, California, class struggle, classics, climate change, cognitive dissonance, Comedy Central, comics, computing, consent, cosmetics, Cuba, David Bowie, DC Comics, decolonizing the mind, democracy, diabetes, dogs, Donald Trump, elections, fan fiction, Fantastic Four, FDA, feminism, film, Finland, France, futurism, futurity, games, general election 2016, genetics, guns, hacking, head canons, health care, Hidden Figures, Hillary Clinton, hoaxes, How the University Works, Huma Abedin, hurricanes, index funds, insurance, intellectual history, intelligence, Juanita Broderick, Karl Marx, Klingons, Larry Wilmore, laziness, legroom, Leonard Nimoy, literature, Madison, maps, Marquette, Marx, Marxism, military-industrial complex, Milwaukee, misogyny, mutants, NASA, neoliberalism, neuroprosthetics, New York, nostalgia, Olympics, outer space, outside agitators, over-educated literary theory PhDs, pedagogy, photographs, Pokémon Go, police violence, politics, polls, postdocs, pranks, prison-industrial complex, protest, race, racism, rape, rape culture, regulation, Republicans, riots, Roger Corman, RPGs, running, Seu Jorge, sexism, sociology, Spock, sports, Spy vs. Spy, Star Trek, Star Trek: Discovery, stock market, strength, student debt, students fans, Suicide Squad, superheroes, supervillains, syllabi, teaching, television, the Beatles, the courts, The Daily Show, the Flash, the kids are all right, the law, The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou, The Neverending Story, The Nightly Show, the suburbs, the wisdom of markets, time travel, translation, Trevor Noah, twins, University of Wisconsin, Usain Bolt, Utopia, wildfires
Weekend Links! Catch Them All!
* Americans first learn about slavery as children, before adults are willing to explain finance capital or rape. By high school, young adults are ready to hear about sexual violence as an element of slavery and about how owners valued their property, but there’s no level of developmental maturity that prepares someone to grasp systemized monstrosity on this scale. Forced labor we can understand—maybe it’s even a historical constant so far. Mass murder too. But an entire economy built on imprisoning and raping children? One that enslaved near 40 percent of the population? Even for the secular, only religious words seem to carry enough weight: unholy, abomination, evil.
* Plan C: The top secret Cold War plan for martial law in the USA.
* The Huntington honors Octavia Butler. And from the archives! My writeup on the Butler papers at the Huntington.
* The first issue of the MOSF Journal of Science Fiction.
* Feeding English Majors in the 21st Century.
* Chicago State University in danger of closing: Alumni speak out.
* CFP: Fantasies of Contemporary Culture. Paradoxa 29: “Small Screen Fictions.” MUHuCon 2016. Feminist Review: Dystopias and Utopias.
* Melissa Click has now been suspended, after being charged with third degree assault.
* A University Softens a Plan to Cut Tenured Faculty, but Professors Remain Wary.
* Prominent Medieval Scholar’s Blog on ‘Feminist Fog’ Sparks an Uproar.
* How startling, unique cuts have transformed Louisiana’s universities.
* Is It Discriminatory to Require Peer Review?
* 2.5 million men ‘have no close friends.’
* Sanders and the Theory of Change: Radical Politics for Grown-Ups.
* Bernie Sanders and the Liberal Imagination.
* How to pair wine with your favorite Girl Scout cookies.
* How Intellectuals Create a Public.
* Long Before Helping Flint, Michigan Officials Were Shipping Clean Water to Their Own Workers. Flint’s Bottom Line. What went wrong in Flint. Flint Residents Told That Their Children Could Be Taken Away If They Don’t Pay For City’s Poison Water. Report: ‘Every Major US City East of the Mississippi’ Is Underreporting Heavy Metals In Its Water. It’s everywhere. “Milwaukee taking steps to prevent lead from getting in water.”
* And elsewhere on the Milwaukee beat: FBI arrests suspect who allegedly wanted to cause mass terrorism in Milwaukee. MPS as “national disgrace.” ‘Back in time 60 years’: America’s most segregated city. Milwaukee leaders speak out against deadly rise in car thefts. Have I mentioned we’re hiring?
* Chicago Police Hid Mics, Destroyed Dashcams To Block Audio, Records Show.
* What Happened to Jane Mayer When She Wrote About the Koch Brothers.
* The Difference a Mutant Makes.
* See? It’s good that I’m like this.
* Suggested Amazon warning labels.
* Richard Feynman, “Personal observations on the reliability of the Shuttle.”
* Rhode Island: Children Under 10 Shall Not Be Left Home Alone, Even Briefly.
* Sea level rise from ocean warming underestimated, scientists say.
* Climate dystopia is here: Zika virus prompts calls for women to stop having babies.
* Why science-fiction writers find it so hard to discuss climate tech.
* Racial harmony in a Marxist utopia: how the Soviet Union capitalised on US discrimination.
* Linguists Analyze Every Disney Princess Movie, to Somewhat Depressing Results.
* List of animals with fraudulent diplomas.
* Everything’s fine: Hillary’s team copied intel off top-secret server to email.
* Constitutional Convention 2016.
* Today in Doctor Who fandom: The Season of River Song. And then there was Chibnall.
* Fictional Games From Epic Fantasy Books. A People’s History of Board Games.
* Here’s why we’re attracted to people of a similar height, scientists say.
* Former NFL Player Tyler Sash Had CTE When He Died At Age 27.
* A dark, gritty Hanna-Barbera reboot.
* Airbnb makes half its SF money with illegal listings.
* Trailer with $70,000 worth of cheese stolen in Wisconsin. And that’s only the second-largest cheese heist in the state this week.
* Nearly $50,000 In Bull Semen Stolen From Turlock Truck.
* The final days of Al Jazeera America.
* Twilight of the sleazy professor.
* The FBI Claims Not to Have a File on David Bowie.
* Meet the Americans Who Moved to Europe and Went AWOL on Their Student Loans.
Written by gerrycanavan
January 29, 2016 at 12:09 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academic journals, adjunctification, adjuncts, Airbnb, Al Jazeera, alcohol, Amazon, America, animals, anti-feminism, anxiety, apocalypse, artificial intelligence, austerity, Bernie Sanders, blizzards, books, bull semen, capitalism, car thefts, cartoons, CFPs, Challenger, change, cheese, Chicago, Chicago State University, Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy, cities, class struggle, climate change, concussions, conferences, Constitutional conventions, Daily Show, David Bowie, DC Comics, Deadwood, delicious Girl Scout cookies, diploma mills, discrimination, Disney, Disney princesses, Doctor Who, dystopia, education, emails, English departments, English majors, evil, fantasy, FBI, feminism, film, Flint, games, gender, geoengineering, Go, graphs, Hanna-Barbara, HBO, Hillary Clinton, history, How did we survive the Cold War?, How the University Works, Huntington Library, ice sheet collapse, Illuminatus, intelligence, kids today, Kim Stanley Robinson, Koch brothers, lead, lead poisoning, LEGO, Louisiana, love, maps, Marquette, martial law, Marx, Marxism, masculinity, mass shootings, medievalism, Melissa Click, men, men's rights activism, Michigan, military-industrial complex, Milwaukee, Milwaukee Public Schools, misogyny, Mizzou, mutants, my scholarly empire, NASA, Native studies, neoliberalism, NFL, Octavia Butler, Paradoxa, parenting, peer review, pinball, police, police corruption, police-industrial complex, politics, Ponzi schemes, post capitalism, pregnancy, public intellectuals, race, racism, Ramzi Fawaz, revolution, Rhone Island, Richard Feynman, River Song, Rob Latham, romance, science fiction, science fiction studies, sea level rise, segregation, sexism, slavery, sleaze, social networks, space shuttle, Star Wars, student loans, surveillance society, teaching evaluations, television, tenure, terrorism, the 1930s, the Arctic, the past isn't over it isn't even past, the SNAFU principle, the university in ruins, Trevor Noah, trigger warnings, true crime, UC Riverside, United Kingdom, Utopia, warning labels, water, Western Illinois University, wine, Wisconsin, X-Men, Zika virus
Wednesday Morning Links!
* The names of the five professors who rank lowest on their institution’s evaluation for the semester, but who scored above the minimum threshold of performance, shall be published on the institution’s internet site and the student body shall be offered an opportunity to vote on the question of whether any of the five professors will be retained as employees of the institution. The employment of the professor receiving the fewest votes approving retention shall be terminated by the institution regardless of tenure status or contract.
* In terms of depression levels, results from the 790 graduate students who responded to the survey showed that 47 percent of Ph.D. students reached the 10 of 30 points on the scale to be considered depressed. Only 37 percent of master’s students did so.
* Guided by the Beauty of Their Weapons: An Analysis of Theodore Beale and his Supporters. Maybe the last word on Puppygate.
* Cool project from Marquette students: Free Shakespeare in Wisconsin State Parks This Summer.
* A New York court has (at least implicitly) recognized chimpanzees as persons under the law.
* 1.5 Million Missing Black Men.
* At the Supreme Court, where the limits of police power are established, Mr. Holder’s Justice Department has supported police officers every time an excessive-force case has made its way to arguments. Even as it has opened more than 20 civil rights investigations into local law enforcement practices, the Justice Department has staked out positions that make it harder for people to sue the police and that give officers more discretion about when to fire their guns.
* Dr. Irwin Schatz, the first, lonely voice against infamous Tuskegee study, dies at 83.
* What’s lost in the immigration debate.
* Inside St. Louis County’s Predatory Night Courts.
* Ten Celebrities Who Did Time in Milwaukee.
* Declassified CIA Document Reveals Iraq War Had Zero Justification.
* Twitter announces crackdown on abuse with new filter and tighter rules.
* Ms. Marvel may be coming to TV.
* So might — no, listen, I just can’t.
* Because you demanded it! We’ll finally get to see some Bothans die.
* Even more lesser-known trolley problems.
The Time Traveler
There’s an out of control trolley speeding towards a worker. You have the ability to pull a lever and change the trolley’s path so it hits a different worker. The different worker is actually the first worker ten minutes from now.
* Fifty years ago, this prosperous Pennsylvania coal town was ripped apart by a devastating subterranean mine fire. Today, the flames still burn in Centralia.
* John Deere says they really only sell an implied license to use the tractor.
* The New York Times loves Fun Home: The Musical.
* In court that day, the judge asked the boy, “Are you afraid?” No, the boy said.
Pipes says the judge seemed surprised, and asked, “Why not?”
The boy glanced at Pipes and the other bikers sitting in the front row, two more standing on each side of the courtroom door, and told the judge, “Because my friends are scarier than he is.”
* Warning, infected inside, do not enter: zombies and the liberal arts.
* This company’s greatest asset is people.
* The next tech bubble is about to burst.
* It’s the little things: Agoraphobic Grandma Finally Leaves Home, Immediately Falls Down Manhole.
Written by gerrycanavan
April 22, 2015 at 7:30 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with #disrupt, #innovate, abuse, academia, Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., agoraphobia, aliens, animal personhood, animal rights, bikers, bubble economies, canon, capitalism, child abuse, chimpanzees, CIA, coal, comics, continuity, cyberbullying, cyrogenics, Department of Justice, depression, Don't mention the war, drama, ecology, Expanded Universe, Fun Home, Galaxy Quest, games, gay rights, graduate student life, grandmas, homelessness, How the University Works, Hugo awards, Hunger Games, Iceman, immigration, Iowa, Iraq, John Deere, manholes, Mara Jade, Marquette, Marvel, millennials, Milwaukee, Ms. Marvel, musicals, mutants, New York, Pennsylvania, police brutality, police state, police violence, prequels, prison-industrial complex, race, racism, Rogue One, Sad Puppies, Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal, science, science fiction, SETI, Shakespeare, Should I go to grad school?, Silicon Valley, Star Wars, student evaluations, superheroes, tech economy, tenure, the courts, The Last of Us, the law, time travel, trolley problems, Tuskegee, Twitter, Vox Day, Wisconsin, Won't somebody think of the children?, X-Men, zombies
Spring Break Is Over and All Our Accomplishments Turn to Ash Links
* The best news: Jaimee’s book has won the Anthony Hecht Prize at Waywiser Press.
* Median Salaries of Tenured and Tenure-Track Professors at 4-Year Colleges, 2014-15.
* Russian Witch Baba Yaga’s Guide To Feminism.
* Get ready for Margaret Atwood’s next.
* Kim Stanley Robinson Says Colonizing Mars Won’t Be As Easy As He Thought. But it’s not all bad news: Suddenly, It Seems, Water Is Everywhere in Solar System.
* Time, Space, and Memory at Whitney Plantation.
* They found Cervantes’s tomb.
* The Concussion Crisis Reaches a New Level.
* Choctaws helped starving Irish in 1847.
* Ian Bogost: Video Games Are Better Without Characters.
* But in 2014, the financial year that appears to have been the final straw for Sweet Briar, total operating revenues were $34.8 million and total operating expenditures were $35.4 million, which means that the deficit the school is running is actually smaller than the cost of any of the bad deals it’s gotten itself into with banks.
* The United Arab Emirates, where New York University opened a new campus last year, has barred an N.Y.U. professor from traveling to the monarchy after his criticism of the exploitation of migrant construction workers there.
* If one arbitrary, designed-by-committee college ranking system is good, two must be…
* What is Star Trek’s vision of politics?
* The Uncensored, Epic, Never-Told Story Behind ‘Mad Men.’
* The Secret History of the Hardy Boys.
* A household name to black audiences yet completely unknown to white audiences, Gary Owen, a blond, blue-eyed stand-up from Ohio, has a career wholly unlike that of any comedian before him.
* Almost seven years ago, a troubled 11-year-old girl reported that she had been raped — twice — in her Northwest Washington neighborhood. Despite medical evidence of sexual assault, records show that no suspects were arrested and the cases were given only sporadic attention by the police . Instead, in the second case, the police had the girl, Danielle Hicks-Best, charged with filing a false report.
* People who lose their jobs are less willing to trust others for up to a decade after being laid-off, according to new research from The University of Manchester.
* Bruce Springsteen’s Reading List: 28 Favorite Books That Shaped His Mind and Music.
* The Disturbing Puzzle Game That Nobody Can Solve.
* What would happen if an 800-kiloton nuclear warhead detonated above midtown Manhattan?
* The two Wisconsin tween girls accused of stabbing a friend 19 times and leaving her in a park—because they believed doing so would protect their families from the mythical internet horror known as Slender Man—will be tried as adults for first-degree attempted homicide, a judge ruled Friday.
* Ohio Secretary of State Jon Husted has been on a mission to weed out purported voter fraud in the state since he took office in 2011. After launching an investigation into what he called an “expanding loophole” allowing non-citizens to vote in Ohio and potentially decide elections, he announced Thursday that 145 non-citizens were registered to vote illegally in 2014, amounting to just .0002 percent of the 7.7 million registered voters in the state.
* Nihilism watch, Washington Post edition.
* How to Build a $400 Billion F-35 that Doesn’t Fly.
* This is the best version of Star Wars — and watching it is a crime.
* Before Star Wars: Rogue One Takes Off, a History of the X-Wing Series.
* What could possibly go wrong? In South Africa, Ranchers Are Breeding Mutant Animals to Be Hunted. Have to say I’m really pulling for the mutant animals here.
* And now comes another, increasingly prevalent way to show appreciation for those who’ve served in the military: exempting them from taxes. Would you like to know more?
* Guess Who’s Editing the Wiki Pages of Police Brutality Victims.
* California has about one year of water left.
* That gum you like may actually not be coming back into style.
* How did they manage to screw up Powers?
* Four years after Fukushima, just one man lives in the exclusion zone – to look after the animals.
Written by gerrycanavan
March 17, 2015 at 9:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with a new life awaits you in the off-world colonies, academia, academic freedom, administrative blight, America, animals, Anthony Hecht Prize, Baba Yaga, Black Mirror, California, capitalism, Cervantes, Choctaws, Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy, class struggle, climate change, college rankings, college sports, community, concussions, cultural preservation, Dan Harmon, Department of Education, Don Quixote, drought, ecology, feminism, Florida Man, football, Fukushima, futurity, games, Hardy Boys, How the University Works, How to Avoid Speaking, hunting, Ian Bogost, Iran, Ireland, Jaimee, Japan, Kim Stanley Robinson, Mad Men, maps, Margaret Atwood, Mars, Mars trilogy, Matthew Weiner, megaregions, military-industrial complex, mismanagement, mutants, Native American issues, NCAA, neoliberalism, New York, NFL, nihilism, nuclear weapons, nuclearity, NYPD, NYU, Ohio, organ transplants, outer space, penises, Peter Frase, poetry, police brutality, police violence, politics, potato famine, Powers, puzzles, rape, rape culture, Rogue One, science fiction, science is magic, SimCity, Slender Man, South Africa, Springsteen, standup comedy, Star Trek, Star Wars, Starship Troopers, Sweet Briar, taxes, television, tenure, The Heart Goes Last, the most dangerous game, true crime, Twin Peaks, Twitter, UNC, unemployment, United Arab Emirates, veterans, voter fraud, voter suppression, war huh good god y'all what is it good for? absolutely nothing say it again, water, Whitney Plantation, Wikipedia, Wisconsin, Would you like to know more?, Yahoo
No One Ever Expects Wednesday Links
with one comment
* Nearly one-third of public college presidents serve on corporate boards. Most of those companies exist in far-flung industries, and the issues at play are different: Why should college presidents involve themselves with shipping, with search engines, with banking?
* Capitalism excels at innovation but is failing at maintenance, and for most lives it is maintenance that matters more.
* President of Ireland Affirms Value of the Humanities. Ireland, you’re not so bad yourself!
* Management Bloat at UC.
* Against gainful employment.
* Reprints and British Comics.
* This crazy space-age Satellite Hotel could’ve put Milwaukee on the map.
* “I am on the Kill List. This is what it feels like to be hunted by drones.”
* Cincinnatus watch: Paul Ryan just said he would not accept the GOP presidential nomination at the convention.
* The First Year of Teaching Can Feel Like a Fraternity Hazing.
* Liberalism and fracking.
* Guns on campus; adjuncts hardest hit.
* 4 big questions about the race to Mars. Under Obama, NASA finds itself in a familiar place: Big goals but inadequate funds.
* Stephen Hawking’s Starshot.
* Ladies and gentlemen, Doctor Strange. Some commentary.
* LARoB reviews The New Mutants : Superheroes and the Radical Imagination of American Comics.
* Music to my ears: Why Story of Your Life May Be the Year’s Breakout Sci-fi Movie.
* Torchwood is back!
* Television without Pity is coming back!
* Homestuck is over!
* A list of games that Buddha would not play.
* Bloc by Bloc: A cooperative board game of revolutionary strategy, hidden agendas & 21st century urban rebellion.
* The sheep look up: Salt-Water Fish Extinction Seen By 2048.
* Perpetual Present: The Strange Case of the Woman Who Can’t Remember Her Past—Or Imagine Her Future.
* Any sufficiently advanced non-Newtonian fluid pool is indistinguishable from magic.
* The Guardian read the comments.
* Navy Officer Rescued 3 From Remote Pacific Island After Seeing Sign For Help.
This photo provided by U.S. Navy released April 7, 2016 shows two men waving life jackets and look on as a U.S. Navy P-8A maritime surveillance aircraft discovers them on the uninhabited island of Fanadik. The three men were back to safety on Thursday, April 7, 2016, three days after going missing. (U.S. Navy/Ensign John Knight via AP)
Written by gerrycanavan
April 13, 2016 at 1:41 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, administrative blight, Alpha Centauri, architecture, Barack Obama, Buddha, capitalism, CEOs, Cincinnatus, comics, copyright, corpocracy, Doctor Strange, don't read the comments, drones, film, fish, for-profit colleges, gainful employment, games, guns, help, Homstuck, hotels, How the University Works, hydrofracking, Ireland, kleptocracy, liberalism, Mars, Marvel, mass extinction, memory, Milwaukee, mutants, NASA, non-Newtonian fluids, ocean acidification, outer space, Paul Ryan, pedagogy, Ramzi Fawaz, remote islands, Republican primary 2016, Republicans, science, space age, Stephen Hawking, Story of Your Life, student loans, teaching, Ted Chiang, Television without Pity, The Guardian, the humanities, they say time is the fire in which we burn, time travel, Torchwood, United Kingdom, University of California, war on terror, water, what it is I think I'm doing, X-Men