Posts Tagged ‘reality-based community’
February 28 Links! All the Links You Need for February 28
* Science Fiction Film and Television 10.1 is out, with articles on the suburban fantastic, the work of art in the age of the superhero, utopian film, review essays on The Martian and Terminator: Genysis, and my article on apocalyptic children’s literature. At long last, the world can discover why The Lorax is actually bad…
* My Octavia Butler book was discussed on the most recent episode of GribCast, on Parable of the Sower. (They start talking about me about 59ish minutes in, and especially around 1:30.) Meanwhile, later this spring: Octavia E. Butler’s Archive on View for First Time.
* If you knew our friend Nina Riggs, here is the donation page for John and the boys. And here’s the Amazon page for her book, which comes out this June.
* Instrumentalizing Earthseed.
* Fast Forward #289 – Interview with Kim Stanley Robinson.
* CFP: “Crips In Space: Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Futurism.” And there’s still one day to submit to the SF exec group’s guaranteed MLA 2018 session on Satire and Science Fiction in Dystopian Times.
* Presenting the Nebula finalists.
* Inside the Brutal World of Comedy Open Mikes.
* The Melancholy of Don Bluth.
* Comics studies comes of age.
* Purging Iowa’s universities. The Campus Free Speech Battle You’re Not Seeing.
* How Trump’s campaign staffers tried to keep him off Twitter. In Trump’s Volleys, Echoes of Alex Jones’s Conspiracy Theories. Asylum seekers take a cold journey to Manitoba via Trump’s America. We Are Living In the Second Chapter of the Worst-Case Scenario. How to lose a constitutional democracy. Silence of the hacks. Trump’s Tlön. The Trumpocene. Untranslatable. Neurosyphilis?
* We can imagine a person slowly becoming aware that he is the subject of catastrophe.
* Hear Something About An Immigration Raid? Here’s How To Safely Report It. On ICE. Is ICE Out of Control? ICE detainee with brain tumor removed from hospital. Deportation ruses. What It’s Like to Be a Teen Living in an Immigration Detention Center. Ten Hours in Houston. Abolish ICE.
REPUBLICANS: Hi, we’re ethnic cleansers!
DEMOCRATS: And *we’re* the loyal opposition!
BOTH: And together we’re [INHUMAN SCREECHING]
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) February 22, 2017
* On the Milo Bus With the Lost Boys of America’s New Right. 4chan: The Skeleton Key to the Rise of Trump.
* On the deep state. Ditching the deep state. The Deep State, the Media, and the Crisis of Legitimacy.
Indeed, both sides are equally illegitimate on the popular level. Both sides are pushing agendas with no constituency. No one outside a small hardcore of party insiders and hack pundits wants either “smart” technocracy or nihilistic faux-libertarianism. The Democrats have been electorally devastated, but the Republicans are in the awkward position of being given the keys to the kingdom and yet realizing that they are advocating things that no one wants. They probably will push through more of their destructive idiocy, just because that’s who they are, but it’s mainly happening because they’ve set up the system so that it’s nearly impossible for them to get voted out — an interesting counterpoint to the other major institutional structures (the Deep State and news media) that we absolutely can’t vote out of office.
The only rallying point for genuine popular legitimacy right now is a desire to remove Trump and, in the meantime, humiliate and impede him as much as possible. And I’ll be clear: those are goals I share. The danger is settling for that goal, in such a way as to finally close the door on democratic accountability altogether.
* On North Carolina’s Moral Mondays.
* Space news! Nearby Star Hosts 7 Earth-Size Planets. SpaceX plans to send two people around the Moon. Mars needs lawyers!
* The Relevance of Biopunk Science Fiction.
* Like domesticity, segregation had to be invented.
* Do voter identification laws suppress minority voting? Yes. We did the research. The Trump Administration’s Lies About Voter Fraud Will Lead to Massive Voter Suppression.
* Income inequality and advertising. That link is probably the good news.
* Guys I think the FBI might be bad.
* Even Trump’s fake terror arrests are worse.
* Anyway we’re all going to die. And pretty soon!
* Rule by algorithm. An Algorithm Is Replacing Bail Hearings in New Jersey.
* Why facts don’t change our minds.
* Visiting the National Museum of African American History and Culture.
* The Secret Lives of Tumblr Teens.
* Checking in with SMBC: The Problem of Good. The Path of a Hero. How to Solve a Physics Problem. On the Etiology of Fuckers. Paging r/DaystromInstitute. Solving Sophie’s Choice. Gifts from God. And now to insult my core demographic. And that’s why I invented cancer. Don’t you dare stop scrolling, not now, not ever.
* The radical argument of the New Oxford Shakespeare.
* The Rise and Fall of the Socialist Party of America. After more than a half-century in the wilderness, the socialist left reemerges in America.
* Teen suicide attempts fell as same-sex marriage became legal.
* The ACLU sues Milwaukee over stop-and-frisk.
* The last days of Standing Rock.
* ‘Alternative’ Education: Using Charter Schools to Hide Dropouts and Game the System.
* Now Arizona has responded with a new — and some say bizarre — solution to this quandary: Death row inmates can bring their own execution drugs. The state’s manual for execution procedures, which was revised last month, says attorneys of death row inmates, or others acting on their behalf, can obtain pentobarbital or sodium Pentothal and give them to the state to ensure a smooth execution.
* And I say $100/day is too good for ’em!
* Scientists Say They’ve Discovered a Hidden Continent Under New Zealand. Probably ought to invade just to be on the safe side.
* Huge, if true: Millennials aren’t destroying society — they’re on the front lines against the forces that are.
* Fighting Gerrymandering With Geometry.
* Radical feminism finds a way.
* This is what Earth will look like if when we melt all the ice. Is It Okay to Enjoy the Warm Winters of Climate Change? Milwaukee temperature hits 66 degrees, shatters record. Wednesday marks 67 consecutive days since the City of Chicago logged an inch of snow.
* This interview with Peter Singer makes it very hard to see his work as anything but horrifyingly eugenic. What seemed to begin several decades ago as a thought experiment about animal intelligence has shifted into very disturbing ableism.
Republicans seek however many votes they need to relegalize slavery.
Democrats seek one vote less than they would need to ever do anything.
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) February 18, 2017
* In an age without heroes, there was the Boss.
* In search of Forrest Fenn’s treasure.
* I hate this more than the discovery that the Death Star flaw was engineered. I don’t like much of this either. Bring back the old EU!
* 20 Brutally Hilarious Comics For People Who Like Dark Humour. You had me at hello!
* What Are the Chances? Success in the Arts in the 21st Century.
* Zombie cities of the Chinese Rust Belt.
* The nation’s only deaf men’s college basketball team, on the verge of its first March Madness. Meanwhile, UVM is undefeated.
* And you can’t fool me: this one was already a Black Mirror episode.
Written by gerrycanavan
February 28, 2017 at 9:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with 4chan, a new life awaits you in the off-world colonies, ableism, academia, academia freedom, ACLU, actually existing media bias, advertising, Alex Jones, algorithms, America, Americorps, Andrew Cuomo, animal intelligence, animal liberation, animals, apocalypse, Arizona, arts, authoritarianism, authorship, autocracy, basketball, bees, Benjamin Kunkel, biopunk, Black Mirror, Borges, cancer, capitalism, Captain Planet, cartoons, catastrophe, CFPs, charter schools, Chicago, children's literature, China, class struggle, climate change, collapse, college basketball, comics, conspiracy theories, continents, crisis, cultural preservation, death penalty, Death Star, deep state, democracy, Democrats, deportation, disability, domesticity, Don Bluth, Donald Trump, dystopia, Earthseed, ecology, entrapment, equality, Expanded Universe, extrasolar planets, facts, fascism, FBI, feminism, Forrest Fenn, free speech, Gamergate, gay rights, general election 2020, gerrymandering, glitter, Hero's Journey, history, How the University Works, hydrofracking, ice, immigration, income inequality, intergenerational warfare, Iowa, Japanese, juking the stats, Kim Stanley Robinson, legitimacy, lies and lying liars, life finds a way, March Madness, marriage equality, Mars, medicine, melancholy, midterm election 2018, millennials, Milo Yiannopoulous, Milwaukee, Moral Mondays, museums, music, NASA, NCAA, NEA, Nebula Awards, NEH, neoliberalism, never tell me the odds, New Jersey, New Zealand, Nina Riggs, North Carolina, nuclear war, obituary, Octavia Butler, oil spills, open mikes, our brains don't work, our brains work in interesting but ultimately depressing ways, outer space, Parable of the Sower, Parable of the Talents, Parable of the Tricksters, parenting, Peter Singer, philosophy, podcasts, police state, political parties, politics, polls, prosthetics, protest, race, racism, reality-based community, refugees, religion, Republicans, resistance, Rust Belt, Sally Hemings, satire, Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal, science, science fiction, Science Fiction Film and Television, segregation, Shakespeare, sharks, sitting, slavery, snow, socialism, Sophie's Choice, space law, SpaceX, Springsteen, Standing Rock, standup comedy, Star Trek, Star Wars, Steven Spielberg, success, suicide, superheroes, syphilis, teaching, Terminator: Genisys, the Anthropocene, the archives, The Butter Battle Book, the Capitalocene, the courts, the law, The Lorax, The Martian, the Moon, the Rockies, the suburbs, Thomas Jefferson, Trappist-1, treasure, trolls, Tumblr, Uber, Upper Midwest, UVM, video games, voter ID, voter suppression, Wall-E, Walt Whitman, war huh good god y'all what is it good for? absolutely nothing say it again, war on education, war on terror, we're all gonna die, winter, zombies
Sunday, Sunday
(some links via Aaron’s Sunday Reading, which as always has so much more)
* The greatest nation in the world: A few nights a year, Tennessee holds a health care lottery of sorts, giving the medically desperate a chance to get help.
* A Truly Devastating Graph on State Higher Education Spending.
* In sentencing the boys to a minimum of one year in juvenile jail, Judge Thomas Lipps doled out some advice to their peers on how to avoid the same fate. He urged them “to have discussions about how you talk to your friends; how you record things on the social media so prevalent today; and how you conduct yourself when drinking is put upon you by your friends.” Tweeting wasn’t exactly the problem in Steubenville, though, now was it.
* Stunning narrative of decades-long abuse (of all kinds) in a New York City high school. The level of administrative incompetence (shading into malice) is just one of the shocking parts of this story; I finally watched Bully last night and couldn’t believe this was how school administrators would act in general, much less when they knew they were being filmed.
* March Madness as class struggle.
* Do Corporations Enjoy a 2nd Amendment Right to Drones?
* So what exactly was in all those old fallout shelters?
* The Iraq war is notable not only for journalistic weakness, but for journalistic futility: the futility of fact itself. Fact could not match the fabrications of power. Eventually, our reality shifted to become what they conceived. “I could have set myself on fire in protest on the White House lawn and the war would have proceeded without me,” wrote Bush speechwriter David Frum. That was the message of the Iraq war: There is no point in speaking truth to power when power is the only truth.
* Rand Paul Is Right On Marijuana, And That Should Scare Democrats Into Action.
* University of Wisconsin professor warns of dangers of reintroducing extinct animals. Spoilsport!
* The world’s first LEGO museum is coming.
* And all about the next board game I’d like to learn to play, Twilight Struggle.
Written by gerrycanavan
March 24, 2013 at 4:41 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, animals, austerity, bullying, charts, child abuse, class struggle, college basketball, college sports, corporate personhood, documentary, drones, empire, extinction, Facebook, facts are stupid things, fallout shelters, games, health care, How the University Works, income inequality, Iraq War, LEGO, lottery, March Madness, marijuana, military-industrial complex, museums, NCAA, New York, nuclearity, politics, power, Rand Paul, rape, rape culture, reality-based community, Second Amendment, Shirley Jackson, Steubenville, Tennessee, Twilight Struggle, Twitter, war on drugs, Wisconsin
Friday Night Links, Special ‘Jesus Year’ Edition
* Reality is a hoax: If you’re 27 or younger, you’ve never experienced a colder-than-average month. That’s right; there hasn’t been a colder-than-average month in twenty-seven years.
* “We Would Never Propose A Carbon Tax,” Says White House Spokesman. I’m so glad the pro-science, reality-based candidate won!
* Aaron Bady vs. the excluded middle.
* Federal Court Rules that Banning Affirmative Action Is Unconstitutional.
* The new normal: Missouri police foil mass murder plot at ‘Twilight’ screening, Walmart.
* Hostess successfully looted, crime pinned on unions.
* Meanwhile people in Miami are looking to prosecute the owners of the Marlins for racketeering.
* Walmart Strike Spreads to Texas as Organizers Promise Massive Black Friday Protest.
* Patriot Coal agrees to stop using mountaintop removal mining.
* The age of the password is over. We just haven’t realized it yet.
* And the frame giveth, and the frame taketh away: after the insanity of the last year, Americans describe themselves as pro-choice again.
Written by gerrycanavan
November 16, 2012 at 3:30 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with abortion, academia, affirmative action, Barack Obama, baseball, capitalism, carbon tax, class struggle, climate change, coal, crimes against the future, despair, framing, Gaza, guns, Hostess, How the University Works, Israel, kleptocracy, mountaintop removal, Palestine, passwords, photographs, politics, race, rape, rape culture, reality is a hoax, reality-based community, science, strikes, Texas, theft, Twilight, unions, Vietnam, Wal-Mart, war, zunguzungu
Friday Afternoon About-to-Go-See-Harry-Potter Links
* Erick Erickson, cheering on apocalypse: Obama has a legacy to worry about. Should the United States lose its bond rating, it will be called the “Obama Depression”. Congress does not get pinned with this stuff. See also. Steven Benen on the reality gap. Ezra Klein: How default would harm homeowners, cities, businesses and everyone else.
* And then there’s Rick Perry.
I tell people, that “personal property” and the ownership of that personal property is crucial to our way of life.
Our founding fathers understood that it was a very important part of the pursuit of happiness. Being able to own things that are your own is one of the things that makes America unique. But I happen to think that it’s in jeopardy.
It’s in jeopardy because of taxes; it’s in jeopardy because of regulation; it’s in jeopardy because of a legal system that’s run amok. And I think it’s time for us to just hand it over to God and say, “God, You’re going to have to fix this.” […]
I think it’s time for us to use our wisdom and our influence and really put it in God’s hands. That’s what I’m going to do, and I hope you’ll join me.
* Osama bin Laden was working to assemble a team of militants to attack the U.S. on the 10th anniversary of 9/11, according to communications Navy SEALs seized from his Pakistani hideout when they killed the al Qaeda leader this spring. The article claims that the planned attack targeted the U.S. train system.
* Fox News is comparing the News Corp. hacking scandal to companies that were hacked. The only suitable reaction is awe.
* And local news now: Lawsuit filed over Duke basketball tickets.
A woman filed a lawsuit Friday against her sister, her sister’s husband and Duke University regarding the transfer of two tickets that once belonged to her father for games at Cameron Indoor Stadium. Katina Dorton is seeking unspecified damages and asking the court to invalidate the “fraudulent transfer” to Gordon and Sophia Caudle that occurred without the knowledge or consent of her father or other family members, according to the complaint.
“This is important and it’s valuable,” said Randall M. Roden, an attorney for Dorton. “She’s a graduate. She genuinely wants to support the Blue Devils and go to the games. But she was shocked by the way Duke handled this.”
Written by gerrycanavan
July 15, 2011 at 4:01 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with 9/11, apocalypse, Barack Obama, basketball, debt ceiling, Duke, Erik Erickson, Fox News, lies and lying liars, morally odious morons, national default, Osama bin Laden, politics, reality gap, reality is a hoax, reality's well-known liberal bias, reality-based community, Rick Perry, Rupert Murdoch, terrorism, the economy, the law
Guantánamo and the Reality-Based Community
On Guantánamo: Matt Yglesias has a great post summing up the various absurd turns the Guantánamo debate has taken since Obama has taken office. For me it begins and ends with the new ‘supervillain’ line, the notion that the people currently imprisoned at Guantánamo Bay are so cunning and all-powerful that we dare not trust them to any domestic prison for fear that they will somehow escape, Joker-like, and run amuck.
I think it’s time to start bringing that “reality-based community” line back.
Written by gerrycanavan
January 25, 2009 at 10:20 pm
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged with Arkham Asylum, Batman, cartoonish supervillainy, crazy crazy, Guantánamo, politics, reality-based community, Republicans, The Joker