Posts Tagged ‘Ross Douthat’
Wednesday Morning Links!
* I see this kind of entrapment everywhere in the neoliberal order. In my own field of academia, I think of how we tell students that college is the only path to a liveable life, leading them to ‘freely choose’ to take on impossible debt loads that they can never escape. We recognize that an injustice has happened here, but a lot of people find it hard to resist saying, essentially, ‘Well, you should have thought of that before you took out the loans….’ They chose it, therefore they should bear the consequences.
And that is one of the least sinister cases – for instance, think about how blacks are entrapped into criminality and then punished disproportionately. Again, we recognize an injustice, but in the mainstream discourse the instinctive reaction is: ‘Well, they had a choice.’ Under neoliberalism, our free choice doesn’t exist to give us room for creativity and exploration – we can seemingly only ever choose wrongly. Free will is a means to generate blameworthiness, to tell us that we deserve what we get.
* The Future of Work, at Wired.
* Common Good, Not Common Despair.
* We don’t often talk of the formative nature of debt in the same way we do in regard to other educational experiences. But just as education is about more than funneling information into students’ brains, indebtedness is about more than the transfer of money. Universities rarely address the aspect of higher education that may most powerfully shape students’ futures: the debt they take on to finance it. A Debt to Education: Universities can shape their students for life – in more ways than one.
* But we can do better. As educators, we need to lead the way and design our pedagogical approaches for the students we have, not the students we wish we had. This requires approaches that are responsive, inclusive, adaptive, challenging, and compassionate. And it requires that institutions find more creative ways to support teachers and prepare them for the work of teaching. This is not a theoretical exercise — it is a practical one.
* Universities watchdog threatens fines over grade inflation.
* Citizenship v. The Surveillance State.
* I now conceptualize the society I came from and the war to which I went as part of the same grotesque amusement park ride. If I have discovered anything since my homecoming, it is not that I never came home. It is not that my soul resides in Afghanistan. It is that my home has lost its peaceful veneer, stripped bare, like Twentynine Palms. An American who leaves for war never leaves America. The war that is America, rather, comes to the American. The war is the society and the society is the war, and one who sees that war sees America.
* Star Wars is Really a Cautionary Tale About Devoting All Technological Advancements to Death.
* What I Learned from Reading 1,182 Emergency Room Bills.
* A Father’s Version Of A Guatemalan Girl’s Trip To The US Raises Questions About The Border Patrol’s Account. Guatemalan girl likely died of ‘sepsis shock’ after crossing border, hospital officials said. Medical Help Was Hours Away for Migrant Girl Who Died in U.S. Custody. “I just left the tent city at Tornillo. It is a child prison camp. They refused our request to speak with the children who are held there.”
* “You are not mature enough to tell it like it is. Even that burden you leave to us children.”
* Mounting legal threats surround Trump as nearly every organization he has led is under investigation. Trump agrees to shut down his charity amid allegations that he used it for personal and political benefit. How Donald Trump Got Caught in a Legal Vise. Quick thread on the only recorded criminal arrest of a sitting U.S. president—made by a D.C. Police offering for speeding, a century and a half ago.
* The Future of Ultrahigh-End Space Travel.
* How Scandal and Severance Enrich Private-College Presidents.
* The New York Times Just Published an Unqualified Recommendation for an Insanely Anti-Semitic Book. A Brief, Depressing Compendium of Alice Walker’s Apparent Conspiratorial Beliefs.
* The Brexit Breaking Point. Government gives Britain’s 6 million businesses 101 days to prepare for a No Deal Brexit.
* Everything old is new again! Forever and ever amen.
* I’ve polled Twitter and it’s officially okay to take pleasure in the suffering of these Trump voters whose property is going to wind up on the wrong side of the wall.
* The rapper who allegedly received Dorsey’s facial hair, I’m very excited to share, was Azealia Banks. She tweeted about this exchange in 2016, writing that Dorsey “sent me his hair in an envelope because i was supposed to make him an amulet for protection.”
* The Cities Where The Cops See No Hate.
* A method for creating extremely convincing fake faces.
* Trans Teenager Claims Teacher Demanded He ‘Prove’ He Was a Boy In Bathroom.
* As an intellectual historian, I’ve found it puzzling that no one has scanned Ross Douthat’s writings from the Harvard Salient, 1998-2002. So I checked out as much of it as I could and there’s some pretty good stuff.
* “We have six people on board,” one pilot said a few minutes later, according to an audio recording available via LiveATC.net. “Airplane is completely uncontrollable.”
* Metroid’s Samus Aran is a Transgender Woman. Deal With It.
* Are we living with the Chickenocene?
* When you fit the description.
* Well you tell me how you’d make baby powder without asbestos.
* Wild story from the animal beat: An Officer Placed a Retired Police Dog in a Shelter. Now He’s Been Demoted.
* An Atlas of American Gun Violence.
* Today in the best $____ I ever spent: top surgery.
* What’s the greenest way to travel? We built a sim of world’s climate battle – here’s what happened when delegates played it at COP24. Inside the most destructive fire in American history—and why the West’s cities and towns will keep on burning. Weather 2050.
* Starting to think Woody Allen might be a bad guy.
* Springsteen on Broadway on Netflix: The Interview.
* Why We Still Don’t Know How Many NFL Players Have CTE.
* The Artful Propaganda of Soviet Children’s Literature.
* How To Make Beer With Only What You Can Grow On A Generation Ship.
* The ‘Weird Events’ That Make Machines Hallucinate.
* Journey of an American Bomb.
* DC must have heard about my Graz talk: they’re making a Swamp Thing show. Meanwhile, another followup from Graz: Aquaman, From Super Friend To Surfer Dude: The Bro-Ification Of A Hero.
Written by gerrycanavan
December 19, 2018 at 9:09 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with "Is Health Care Reform Constitutional?", academia, academic jobs, actresses, actually existing media bias, adjunctification, administrative blight, advising, Affordable Care Act, Afghanistan, air travel, airplanes, Alice Walker, America, animals, Anthropocene, anti-Semitism, apocalypse, Aquaman, artificial intelligence, asbestos, baby powder, BDS, bombs, Brett Kavanaugh, Brexit, CBP, Chickenocene, children's literature, Chris Hayes, Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy, citizenship, class struggle, climate change, comedy, concussions, corruption, cruelty, Death Star, department rotation, Donald Trump, double entendres, ecology, emergency rooms, Facebook, fake news, fakery, freedom, games, grade inflation, grading, Graz, Greta Thunberg, gun violence, guns, hate crimes, health insurance, Hollywood, How the University Works, ice, immigration, Iraq, ISIS, Israel, Jack Dorsey, just world hypothesis, kids today, labor, lizard people, machine learning, malls, Metroid, Mexico, misogyny, neoliberalism, Netflix, NFL, Nintendo, outer space, Palestine, pedagogy, PewDiePie, police, politics, price dogs, race, racism, Ross Douthat, Rudy Giuliani, scam, science fiction, Sears, sexism, Silent Sam, social media, Soviet Union, Springsteen, Star Wars, student debt, supernatural, Supreme Court, surveillance state, Swamp Thing, Sweden, teaching, technology, the university in ruins, the wall, Tolkien, trans* issues, true crime, Twitter, UNC, United Kingdom, war huh good god y'all what is it good for? absolutely nothing say it again, Woody Allen, work, YouTube
Thursday Links!
* Marquette English’s course descriptions are up for Summer and Fall 2018! I’m teaching in both, including a new graduate course devoted to twenty-first-century literature…
* Palantir Has Been Secretly Using New Orleans to Test Its Predictive Policing Technology.
* A trip to the hospital that leads to a prison suicide is just the tip of the iceberg of this sickening story about the richest country in human history.
* Your work is cut out for you, Ta-Nehisi.
Worshippers clutching AR-15 rifles and some wearing bullet crowns, participated in a commitment ceremony today at World Peace and Unification Sanctuary, in Newfoundland, Pa. The event led a nearby school to cancel classes for the day. Photos @jacquelinelarma pic.twitter.com/GXzrZeK41z
— AP Images (@AP_Images) February 28, 2018
* Wife of 7th Special Forces Group vet faces deportation under tighter immigration rules.
* After handing them their suicide capsules, Norwegian Royal Army Colonel Leif Tronstad informed his soldiers, “I cannot tell you why this mission is so important, but if you succeed, it will live in Norway’s memory for a hundred years.” Operation Gunnerside: The Norwegian attack on heavy water that deprived the Nazis of the atomic bomb.
* The Strange and Twisted Life of Frankenstein.
* The Grim Box Office Fate Of ‘Annihilation’ Was An Inevitable Tragedy.
* “After watching my mother die, I read her notebooks.” Aaron Bady remembers his mom.
* Supreme Court Ruling Means Immigrants Could Continue To Be Detained Indefinitely. Don’t forget to thank Obama for appealing this decision in the first place.
* The sheer level of clownishness from this White House is impossible to keep track of. I mean honestly.
* Bias and algorithmic culture, search engines edition.
* “They aren’t really going to arm teachers. It’s just a distraction.” Inserting guns into classrooms with the stipulation that they be used for only one purpose and against only one (very rare) target — active school shooters — is delusional.
* Doesn’t this seem like an exemplary topic for a course? I’d love a smart, extended look at the history of impeachment and its application to the current situation. What’s outrageous to me is that SDSU openly sells credits in this absurd format.
* My next course is on a topic nearly as controversial: Are Groot and Baby Groot the same person?
* Bad news for Zefram Cochrane: Proxima Centauri probably a no-go.
* We thought George Lucas created Star Wars. The truth was more complicated.
* Profile of Ryan Coogler at 21. Unreal that this was just ten years ago.
* A hundred years ago, the United States adopted daylight savings time in order to extract more profit from labor. How would we organize time differently if we were free from the demands of capitalism? The latest from Mika Tokumitsu at Jacobin.
* I was bashing Ross Douthat on Twitter just yesterday, but I like this one: The Rise of Woke Capital.
But of course so long as this same Republican Party remains itself pro-corporate in its economic ideology — as the Trumpified G.O.P., despite his populist forays, has determinedly remained — the corporate interests themselves stand to lose little from these polarizing trends. Their wokeness buys them cover when liberalism is in power, and any backlash only helps prop up a G.O.P. that has their back when it comes time to write our tax laws.
* The Silence of Sherman Alexie.
* And what happens if you give an AI control over a corporation? Exactly what happens when you put a person in charge, it looks like…
Written by gerrycanavan
March 1, 2018 at 7:23 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with #MeToo, #woke, a new life awaits you in the off-world colonies, abuse of power, algorithmic trading, Alpha Centauri, America, Annihilation, artificial intelligence, Baton Rouge, bias, Black Panther, capitalism, Captain America, class struggle, climate change, comics, corpocracy, corporations, debt, debtors prison, deportation, Donald Trump, English, Frankenstein, George Lucas, Groot, Guardians of the Galaxy, guns, health care, ice sheet collapse, idolatry, immigration, impeachment, J.J. Abrams, Jacobin, Jeff Vandermeer, Marquette, Marvel, Mary Shelley, mass shootings, my scholarly empire, Nazis, New Orleans, Norway, nuclear weapons, obituary, outer space, Palantir, pedagogy, police corruption, police violence, politics, predictive policing, Ross Douthat, Ryan Coogler, San Diego State University, science fiction, Sherman Alexie, socialism, Star Trek, Star Wars, suicide, Supreme Court, Ta-Nehisi Coates, teaching, the Arctic, the courts, the law, time