Posts Tagged ‘Scandal’
All Your Sunday Reading™
* Call for applications: Postdoctoral Scholar for Futures of Literary and Cultural Knowledge, UCSB.
* Call for Papers: “Binge-Watching and the Future of Television Research: A Workshop” Sept 13-14, 2018, at Anglia Ruskin University.
* Studying Tolkien fanzines at Marquette University.
* I make a by-the-way appearance on this massive roundup of Infinity War links.
* What is an English professor?
* The Enduring Anger of Joanna Russ.
* Bonkers Wisconsin tax policy error in my favor.
* Massive UC workers’ strike disrupts dining, classes and medical services. UC Workers on Strike. After 3-Day Strike, University Of California’s Service Workers Vow To Keep Fighting.
* A Duke University VP Walked Into the Campus Joe Van Gogh, Heard a Rap Song, Demanded That the Employees Be Fired. The icing on the cake. Well, actually, this is.
* If you’re worried about free speech on campus, don’t fear students — fear the Koch brothers.
* Why universities became big-time real estate developers.
* Stephen Kuusisto on ableism in the university.
* White student calls police on black student napping in Yale dorm. When Calling the Police Is a Privilege.
how sad for the student who called the cops on her neighbor for sleeping on the dorm couch that she did it just a few days too late to be a founding member of the intellectual dark web
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) May 10, 2018
* Academia’s #MeToo moment: Women accuse professors of sexual misconduct. 45 Stories of Consent on Campus. The #MeToo movement hit the literary world hard this week. It’s not the first time.
* (Another) progressive case against the progressive case for the SAT.
* Never-ending nightmare: why feminist dystopias must stop torturing women.
* In 2011, Minnesota got a liberal governor and Wisconsin got a conservative one. Who was better off?
* What genuine, no-bullshit ambition on climate change would look like.
* Your workplace is killing you.
* Intrigue and Drama on the Han Solo Set. Catch the fever!
* One of the most purely destructive things Trump has yet done. Early days though, early days. Evergreen.
* Taking parents from their children is a form of state terror. Black activist jailed for his Facebook posts speaks out about secret FBI surveillance. An upcoming Supreme Court ruling could force all workers into forced arbitration, deprived of the right to class lawsuits. Trump Administration Wants to Train Teens in ‘Hazardous’ Jobs. Mar-a-Lago isn’t the ‘Winter White House.’ It’s just an embarrassing cash grab. A taxonomy of Michael Cohen and potential Trump corruption. How Michael Cohen Cashed In. It’s harder to pay off foreign governments than the US one. Breaking Down Gina Haspel’s Tense Confirmation Hearing. Trumpism Is Having Its Best Week Ever. We know a lot about Trump’s misdeeds. But most of all we know there’s more to come.
* How bananas is this Schneiderman story going to get? Man.
* And isn’t it pretty to think so?
In a half-normal presidency, the main scandal right now would be about how a guy died in a fire at a cheaply built, run down, improperly sprinklered building that the president’s blind trust hadn’t been able to find a buyer for.
— southpaw (@nycsouthpaw) May 8, 2018
good morning, torture is both immoral and illegal and Obama should have prosecuted everyone in the Bush administration who was complicit
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) May 9, 2018
* ’We Can Make Him Disappear’: The Power of County Sheriffs.
* In One Year, 57,375 Years of Life Were Lost to Police Violence. Plainclothes NYPD Cops Are Involved in a Staggering Number of Killings.
* How to Survive the First Hour of a Nuclear Attack. Wow, a whole hour!
* The Story Behind FanCon’s Controversial Collapse.
* Social media copies gambling methods ‘to create psychological cravings.’
* Democrats against the gig economy. The Politics of Full Employment.
* It’s Not a Food Desert, It’s Food Apartheid.
* The Brooklyn Comedian Whose Joke About ICE Got Him a Visit From Homeland Security. ICE Breaking into Home: “We’ll Show You the Warrant When We’re Done.”
* The “Maddening Labyrinth” Aging NFL Players Face for Dementia Compensation.
* England revving up for a Corbyn prime ministership.
* There’s No Good Excuse For The Racist Impact Of Michigan’s Medicaid Proposal. Almost as if… there’s no excuse at all…
* From blood diamonds to blood healing crystals.
* It sounds like my dream of a Bill & Ted parody of the trend towards grimdark 80s revivals is gonna come true.
* What CBS found when it bought four random used photocopiers.
* How political and media elites legitimized torture.
* #Comicsgate: How an Anti-Diversity Harassment Campaign in Comics Got Ugly—and Profitable.
* You Won’t Like The Consequences Of Making Pluto A Planet Again.
* New York Court Says Chimps Aren’t People—But a Judge Is Not Happy About It.
* The dream of communism is the elimination of wage labor. If AI is bound to serve society instead of private capitalists, it promises to do so by freeing an overwhelming majority from such drudgery while creating wealth to sustain all.
* Imagine that it’s 2044, and everyone is still listening to Duran Duran.
* Sometimes you just need two men.
* And in the advanced Turing test, the machine convinces you that it is conscious and you aren’t.
Written by gerrycanavan
May 13, 2018 at 9:25 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with #MeToo, ableism, academia, accelerationism, addiction, Afrofuturism, America, anger, animal personhood, apes, artificial intelligence, Avengers, Bill and Ted, binge watching, Black Lives Matter, blood diamonds, bribes, CFPs, child care, child labor, chimps, Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy, CIA, class struggle, climate change, comedy, comics, communism, concussions football, conferences, conventions, corruption, coups, deportation, depression, diamonds, Donald Trump, Duke, dystopia, eating meat, English professors, Eric Schneiderman, fandom, fans, feminism, food deserts, free speech, full employment, futurity, gambling, Get Paid, gig economy, Gina Haspel, grimdark, Groot, healing crystals, How the University Works, ice, immigration, Infinity War, Iran, Jeremy Corbyn, Joanna Russ, Junot Díaz, Koch brothers, labor, literacy, Marquette, masculinity, MCU, meat, Medicaid, men, Michael Cohen, Michigan, Mike Pence, Minnesota, monkeys, New York, NFL, Nnedi Okorafor, nuclear war, nuclearity, NYPD, photocopiers, planets, Pluto, police, police brutality, police corruption, police state, politics, pork, postdocs, public health, race, racism, Ready Player One, Robert Mueller, SAT, Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal, Scandal, science fiction, Scott Walker, sheriffs, small-town corruption, social media, Solo, Speed Racer, standardized testing, Star Wars, Stephen Kuusisto, strikes, Syracuse University, taxes, television, terrorism, the 1980s, The Americans, the courts, the Democrats, The Handmaid's Tale, the law, Tolkien, torture, Trumpism, Turing Test, UCSB, unions, United Kingdom, University of California, Wachowski, welfare, Wisconsin, work, Yale, Young Dolph
Monday Afternoon Links!
* Call for Applications at the International Association for the Fantastic in the Arts: Division Heads of Children’s and Young Adult Literature (CYA) and International Fantastic Literatures (IF).
* In very broad strokes, colleges and universities have four main revenue streams: state appropriations, research funding, gifts and endowments, and student tuition. The first three come with serious restrictions regarding their use. Generally speaking, state appropriations can only be used for educational expenses, research funding is largely spent on specific research projects, and endowments go toward the pet projects of wealthy donors. Only student tuition can be used for anything university administrators want—construction projects, real estate, interest payments, administrative salaries, football coaches. In recent decades, university administrators have sought, like all entrepreneurial institutions, to maximize their revenues, but they have sought above all to maximize their unrestricted revenues—and have even been willing to sacrifice state funding in order to bring in more tuition. The Tuition Limit and the Coming Crisis of Higher Education.
* The University and the Pursuit of Happiness.
* Play is organized to prevent children from sorting themselves by gender. A gender-neutral pronoun, “hen,” was introduced in 2012 and was swiftly absorbed into mainstream Swedish culture, something that, linguists say, has never happened in another country.
* Hobbes, the Science Fiction Writer: Part I, Part II. Part II wades into Star Trek: Discovery and Black Panther…
* A Political History of the Future: Iain M. Banks.
* How White American Terrorists Are Radicalized.
* “The Workplace Is Killing People and Nobody Cares.”
* Neoliberalism and the family.
* If Tim Kaine can keep John Bolton off the National Security Council, all is forgiven.
* Surely one of the most depraved things any politician has ever said.
* The United States is doomed.
Don’t know who made this but yes. pic.twitter.com/GloVXEpoIS
— howitzer of mercy 🌹🏴☠️ (@girlziplocked) March 25, 2018
* The Stormy Daniels scandal is not gossip. Why the Stormy Daniels story matters, in one paragraph. And everyone needs to face it: Stormy Daniels’ Legal Strategy Strongly Suggests She Has Photos of Donald Trump.
That no one seems to know for sure if the payment to Stormy Daniels violated campaign finance laws would seem to be a pretty damning indictment of campaign finance laws.
— Radley Balko (@radleybalko) March 26, 2018
* ‘Rick and Morty’ and The Rise of The ‘I’m a Piece of Shit’ Defense.
* From the archives! Superpowers and the ADA.
* Facebook: definitely bad.
Is there an argument that Facebook is almost entirely ‘negative externality’? It’s like an industry that just pumps crap into rivers and doesn’t make anything.
— Will Davies (@davies_will) March 25, 2018
* Borneo Lost More Than 100,000 Orangutans From 1999 to 2015.
* And here’s the robot future I’m worried about.
Written by gerrycanavan
March 26, 2018 at 1:27 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, administrative blight, America, apes, artificial intelligence, Black Panther, CFPs, children's literature, class struggle, Dan Harmon, depravity, disability, Donald Trump, extinction, Facebook, fantasy, gender, gender-neutral pronouns, government, guns, happiness, Hobbes, How the University Works, Iain M. Banks, ICFA, John Bolton, John Brown, kids today, labor, loneliness, mass shootings, neoliberalism, orangutans, play, politics, presentations, public health, Rick and Morty, Rick Santorum, robots, Scandal, science fiction, Star Trek, Star Trek: Discovery, Stormy Daniels, superheroes, superpowers, Sweden, terrorism, the Constitution, The Culture, the family, Tim Kaine, tuition, two-party system, white people, whiteness, work, xkcd
Easter Monday (Hardly Knew ‘Er)
* Marquette suspends McAdams through the fall 2016 semester. Marquette’s statement. McAdams has some interesting comments specifically with regard to the the apology requirement on his blog. What a mess.
* Alien vs. Predator: Connecticut Politicians Want to Tax Yale Endowment.
* Husband and wife HMS students seek treatment for her fatal disease. It isn’t Huntington’s, though it’s very similar, and Huntington’s research does play a minor role in the story.
* Good Friday in Middle-earth.
* Batman v. Superman: you know, for kids. But, honestly, at this point I almost feel bad.
* For 15 years, the superhero blockbuster has allowed American audiences to project an illusory dual image of its character, a fiction in which it’s at once helpless victim and benevolent savior, the damsel in distress and the hero coming to her aid. Where Batman vs. Superman and Captain America: Civil War strive and likely fail, Suicide Squad presents a much more honest, holistic image of America as superpower in the 21st century. It’s the conclusion to an argument whose articulation has been 15 years in the making. We’re neither the victims nor the heroes, it suggests. The resemblance isn’t passing. We simply are the villains.
Captain America: America and decency
Iron Man: the war machine and social progress
Hawkeye: archery and being coolhttps://t.co/hCS4ggdvte— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) March 27, 2016
* Sanders had a strong week, and this has been a crazy year in politics. But there’s nothing in the recent results to suggest that the overall trajectory of the Democratic race has changed. Clinton was and is a prohibitive favorite to win the nomination. The Long March of Bernie’s Army.
* For young voters, the foundational issues of our age have been the Iraq invasion, the financial crisis, free trade, mass incarceration, domestic surveillance, police brutality, debt and income inequality, among others. And to one degree or another, the modern Democratic Party, often including Hillary Clinton personally, has been on the wrong side of virtually all of these issues.
* These Are The Phrases That Sanders And Clinton Repeat Most.
* Sublime Photos of African Wildlife Roaming Their Lost Habitat. The links keep coming after the picture.
* The Harvard Library That Protects The World’s Rarest Colors: The most unusual colors from Harvard’s storied pigment library include beetle extracts, poisonous metals, and human mummies.
* The woman who can see 100 times more colors than you can.
* Here comes pseudolaw, a weird little cousin of pseudoscience.
* The emergency managers Snyder imposed on Detroit and Flint had no chance of restoring those cities to solvency. Forced austerity can’t solve financial problems caused by a low tax base and a lack of revenue sharing. Meanwhile, in Illinois: How to destroy a state.
* Civic leaders in Portland, Oregon, want to start busing homeless people out of town. The city council there quietly set aside $30,000 to buy one-way tickets for certain homeless individuals last week, the Portland Mercury reports.
* Fighting over my vote: Who’s the Most UFO-Friendly Presidential Candidate? Related: Hillary Clinton Is Serious About UFOs. And in local news: Aaron Rogers Describes Seeing a UFO in New Jersey in 2005.
* Sample Questions from the Trump University Final Exam.
* N.F.L.’s Flawed Concussion Research and Ties to Tobacco Industry. Jerry Jones: Absurd to Link Football to CTE. Absurd!
* The True Story Behind the Legendary “Lost Ending” of The Shining.
* How 4chan and 8chan turned that chatbot racist. How Not to Make a Racist Bot.
* 10 Rules for Students, Teachers, and Life.
* Happily ever after? Advice for mid-career academics.
* About 3200 years ago, two armies clashed at a river crossing near the Baltic Sea. The confrontation can’t be found in any history books—the written word didn’t become common in these parts for another 2000 years—but this was no skirmish between local clans. Thousands of warriors came together in a brutal struggle, perhaps fought on a single day, using weapons crafted from wood, flint, and bronze, a metal that was then the height of military technology.
* Somehow I’d forgotten Netflix is actually doing Voltron, and that wasn’t just a joke about the creative bankruptcy of our times.
* This, however, I’m 100% in favor of.
* Mr. Speaker, this is not a perfect bill. I never said it was. I saw Hamilton, so now I’m going to orphan my son.
* With The Cursed Child, J.K. Rowling Shows Us Harry Potter’s Future Isn’t What You Expected.
* Tycoons plan base on moon by 2026.
* Harrowing tales of true crime.
* Secret history of the Clinton email scandal.
* They stole Shakespeare’s skull!
* To Boldly Go Provides a Rare Look Behind the Scenes of Star Trek.
* Bedrock City in Ruins: The rise and fall of the Flintstone empire.
* Just the thought every parent wants in their mind on the happy occasion of their daughter’s fourth birthday: I had a baby in my 40s. Part of my job is preparing my daughter for life without me.
* And there’s nothing sweet in life: Red Mars TV Series Now On Hold After Showrunner Suddenly Departs.
Written by gerrycanavan
March 28, 2016 at 9:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with 1992, 4chan, 8chan, academia, academic freedom, Africa, America, animals, austerity, Batman v. Superman, Ben Affleck, Bernie Sanders, chatbots, Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy, class struggle, college, color, colors, comics, Comics Code, concussions, Connecticut, conservation, cryonics, Democratic primary 2016, Democrats, Detroit, disease, Donald Trump, Easter, ecology, email, endowments, Fast Nein, Flint, Flintstones, football, Freddy Got Fingered, futurity, Good Friday, Hamilton, Harry Potter, Harry Potter and the Cursed Child, Harvard, Hillary Clinton, homelessness, How the University Works, Hugos, Huntington's disease, Illinois, J.K. Rowling, John McAdams, Kim Stanley Robinson, Kubrick, Lord of the Rings, lost endings, Marquette, McSweeney's, medicine, Middle-Earth, military-industrial complex, millennials, mortality, Nazis, neoliberalism, Netflix, NFL, Oregon, Ozymandias, parenting, pedagogy, Perot, photography, politics, Portland, prion disease, pseudolaw, pseudoscience, race, racism, Red Mars, Republicans, ruins, Scandal, science, science fiction, Shakespeare, Shakespeare's skull, social media, Star Trek, Suicide Squad, superheroes, superpowers, taxes, teaching, technology, television, tenure, The Fast and The Furious, the law, the Moon, The Return of the King, The Shining, Tolkien, true crime, Twitter, UFOs, VHS, vigilante justice, Voltron, war huh good god y'all what is it good for? absolutely nothing say it again, words, Yale, Zoey
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
Wednesday Night!
* Kinsey gaffe from the Times re: CUNY: Mr. Milliken, 56, the president of the University of Nebraska since 2004, will take over a school system that has undergone a spate of recent expansion but is still troubled by large pockets of impoverished and academically lagging students, the overwhelming majority of whom come from the city’s public schools. Still troubled by existence of the students the school was established to serve. Must be a real nightmare over there.
* Women Destroy Science Fiction!
* First as tragedy… Žižek’s Jokes contains every joke cited, paraphrased, or narrated in Žižek’s work in English (including some in unpublished manuscripts), including different versions of the same joke that make different points in different contexts.
* Oliva Pope fixes Chris Christie.
* Stutzer and Frey found that a person with a one-hour commute has to earn 40% more money to be as satisfied with life as someone who walks to the office. On the other hand, for a single person, exchanging a long commute for a short walk to work has the same effect on happiness as finding a new love.
* Disband West Virginia. I’m From West Virginia and I’ve Got Something to Say About the Chemical Spill. Why So Many West Virginians Relied on Water from the Elk River: Industry Already Polluted the Others.
* Do You Really Want to Use a Commercial Learning-Management System?
* The colonization counterfactual. “What if Africa had never been colonized but was still re-formed into the kinds of political bodies which colonialism sought to create.”
* The university is dead. The question to ask now is not, how do we bring it back. That’s impossible and quite undesirable. The question is what new forms of genuinely democratic self-organization might rise from its ashes? To even begin to ask this question we must first of all get rid of the police.
* Cultural Preservation: Preserving Greystone Park Psychiatric Hospital. This is where Dylan hitchhiked to see Woody Guthrie, right at the border of my hometown.
* BREAKING: Fox Only Talks About Climate Change When It’s Cold.
* RT @wewatchwatchers: In whiteness news: Man found with pipe bomb at Edmonton airport allowed to fly.
* Bruce v. Christie: I’ll allow it.
* Schweitzer tacks against Obama: The inside story of how Obamacare became an insurance-industry bailout.
* NLRB finds that Wal-Mart illegally intimidated and retaliated against organizers. I assume that means the corporation is dissolved and becomes a worker’s collective.
* Studies Confirm: Kids Ruin Your Life. Now they tell me?
* And three years ago it cost me $1000 to sequence one gene. Now that’s what it costs to sequence an entire genome.
Written by gerrycanavan
January 15, 2014 at 9:02 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, Africa, Barack Obama, Blackboard, Brian Schweitzer, cars, Chris Christie, class struggle, colonialism, Colonization, comedy, commuting, counterfactuals, cultural preservation, CUNY, D2L, Dylan, ecology, feminism, gaffes, genetics, genomics, Greystone Park, health care, history, How the University Works, imperialism, jokes, Kickstarter, kids, labor, nations, New Jersey, parenting, pedagogy, police, politics, pollution, Randolph, Scandal, science fiction, single payer, Springsteen, teaching, terrorism, the future is now, theory, tuition, unions, Wal-Mart, West Virginia, white privilege, Woody Guthrie, Žižek
Supersized Post-Computer-Crash Weekend Feel-Good Happy Links
Sorry I’ve been MIA. John Siracusa’s OS Mavericks review didn’t tell me the update would completely nuke my computer for three days. Fairly big omission, JS.
* Only by the grace of God did I not wind up on Senator Session’s anti-NEH hit list.
* “If part-time is so good, why don’t we have part-time administration?”
* Against student evaluations. UPDATE: Of course the natural form for discuss this is a Twitter fight.
.@criener @_EdwardK_ The goal should be an evaluation process whose results are so personalized and idiosyncratic they can’t be generalized.
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) October 26, 2013
* Rape culture at UConn. Really stunning report.
Carolyn Luby, a student who organized the complaint, said the university failed to stop harassment she faced for criticizing the school’s new “powerful and aggressive” Husky logo in an open letter to UConn president, Susan Herbst. Luby saw the redesigned logo as “glorifying intimidation with an already prevalent rape culture.”
In reaction, commenters on Barstool Sports posted links to her Facebook page. Rush Limbaugh did a segment criticizing Luby in which he stated, “I, El Rushbo, have amplified it and made it even bigger. Let’s see what happens.”
Luby subsequently received rape and death threats. People walked by her on campus and called her “a bitch,” she said. One email she received told her, “I hope you get raped by a husky,” and another said, “I wish you would’ve run in the Boston marathon.” Fraternity members sexually harassed her, Luby said, making statements like, “Don’t worry, we won’t rape you,” as they drove by.
“[The university] would send campus-wide emails about picking up trash, but no warning about hate speech and harassment,” Luby said.
Unlike Georgetown University’s president, who sent a campus-wide email defending Sandra Fluke after Limbaugh and others made her a target in 2012, UConn did nothing, Luby said. Herbst remained silent, and Luby said one school official told her, “That’s kind of the risk you run when you publish something on the Internet.”
University police suggested she keep a low profile and wear a hat on campus, Luby said.
* I ranted about this one enough on Twitter, but this story about the University of Iowa TA who accidentally emailed nude photos to her class (which I feel dirty even linking to at all) is also rape culture in action.
The Iowa TA story is a national story because someone forwarded the pics and someone else published them, both knowing they were private.
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) October 24, 2013
So it's as much a story about rape culture and revenge porn as it is about an embarrassing mistake. And only one is a story about a system.
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) October 24, 2013
We should be asking what social forces have given people the idea that images (almost always of women) should be passed around like this.
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) October 24, 2013
* 62% of higher education professionals report experiencing workplace bullying.
* Talking with Students about Being an Adjunct. Totally insanely, CUNY hasn’t been paying its adjuncts for months.
* The UC Davis Pepper-Spraying Cop Gets a $38,000 Settlement, $8000 more than his victims.
* City College of S.F. outlines closing plan.
* Thinking (only) like an administration: Faculty Couples, for Better or Worse.
* We have the rare opportunity to chronicle a labor movement’s development in real time from its infancy as we watch the organization of college football players.
* Confessions of a Drone Warrior.
* Flood Insurance Jumping Sevenfold Depresses U.S. Home Values. I wonder if even “the market speaking” could pull us out of the death spiral now.
* Climate change cost you the McDonald’s dollar menu. Greenland Has Melted So Much That We Can Mine It for Uranium Now. Arctic Temperatures Reach Highest Levels In 44,000 Years. Gambling with Civilization.
* The men’s rights movement is a nightmare from which we are trying to awake.
* Rortybomb on striking fast food workers and the neoliberal failings of Obamacare. From the second:
Conservatives in particular think this website has broad implications for liberalism as a philosophical and political project. I think it does, but for the exact opposite reasons: it highlights the problems inherent in the move to a neoliberal form of governance and social insurance, while demonstrating the superiorities in the older, New Deal form of liberalism.
Yet Wikipedia and its stated ambition to “compile the sum of all human knowledge” are in trouble. The volunteer workforce that built the project’s flagship, the English-language Wikipedia—and must defend it against vandalism, hoaxes, and manipulation—has shrunk by more than a third since 2007 and is still shrinking. Those participants left seem incapable of fixing the flaws that keep Wikipedia from becoming a high-quality encyclopedia by any standard, including the project’s own. Among the significant problems that aren’t getting resolved is the site’s skewed coverage: its entries on Pokemon and female porn stars are comprehensive, but its pages on female novelists or places in sub-Saharan Africa are sketchy. Authoritative entries remain elusive. Of the 1,000 articles that the project’s own volunteers have tagged as forming the core of a good encyclopedia, most don’t earn even Wikipedia’s own middle-ranking quality scores.
The main source of those problems is not mysterious. The loose collective running the site today, estimated to be 90 percent male, operates a crushing bureaucracy with an often abrasive atmosphere that deters newcomers who might increase participation in Wikipedia and broaden its coverage.
* Mitch Hurwitz at the New York Television Festival.
* Davis Sedaris writes about the suicide of his sister Tiffany.
* We should put hyper-efficient rich people in charge of everything: How to lose $172,222 a second for 45 minutes. That’s why they earn the big bucks, I guess.
* Condé Nast Discontinuing Internship Program. The first of many, I’d bet.
* After all this time I’m completely amazed that people still talk to the Daily Show at all. “They made all those other people look like total idiots! I’d better be super-careful as I make my wise and reasoned argument!”
* From the archives: How They Made Bottle Rocket. 1995.
* Wisconsin conservatives file challenge against state’s same-sex partnership law. Special Prosecutor Looking At Wisconsin Recall Elections. Milwaukee has still not enrolled anyone for ACA.
* What Good Wife Storyline Did CBS Kill to Avoid Pissing Off the NFL?
* They said it: Fox News: Anti-Bullying Policies Limit Conservatives’ Free Speech.
* America’s Most Popular Boys’ Names Since 1960, in 1 Spectacular GIF.
* The Harvard Crimson says don’t teach for America.
* American Schools Are Missing 389,000 Teachers. Study: Charters Pose a Financial Threat to Already-Struggling School Districts.
* The Duke Chronicle says walk out on Charles Murray.
A man is stealing your home, poisoning your food and burning the forests around you, all the while explaining why you should thank him. Maybe you are allowed to question his genius, and maybe he answers. Some nod; others frown.
And you watch the flames rise, knowing at least you have engaged in “discourse.”
* Mayor Bloomberg grants Metropolitan Museum of Art right to charge mandatory entrance fee.
* List of reasons for admission to an insane asylum from the late 1800s, supposedly.
* California Deputies Shoot and Kill Boy Carrying a Fake Gun. Black Teen Detained by NYPD for Buying an Expensive Belt.
* Zombie Simpsons: How the best show ever became the broadcasting undead.
* It’s handled: Scandal has its own scandal after popular fan blogger turns out to be ABC executive. UPDATE: Followup!
* Old villains never die, they just fade away: Diebold charged with bribing officials, falsifying records in China, Russia, Indonesia; fined nearly $50 million.
* We’ve all been there: Groom Who Called in Bomb Hoax to Own Wedding Sentenced to Year in Jail.
* Facebook OKs Decapitation Videos (But No Breastfeeding).
* And today’s apocalypse: “We’ve Reached ‘The End of Antibiotics, Period.’”
Written by gerrycanavan
October 25, 2013 at 9:32 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, actually existing media bias, adjuncts, administrative blight, antibiotic resistant bacteria, apocalypse, Apple, Arrested Development, asylums, austerity, Barack Obama, Bloomberg, bomb threats, Bottle Rocket, breastfeeding, bullying, capitalism, CEOs, Charles Murray, Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy, Chronicle of Higher Education, City College of San Francisco, class struggle, climate change, college football, concussions, conservatives, cultural preservation, CUNY, Daily Show, David Sedaris, decapitation, Diebold, dollar menu, drones, Duke, ecology, enduring questions, Facebook, fandom, fast food, film, flexible accumulation, flood insurance, football, Fox News, gay rights, Greenland, guns, Harvard, health care, homelessness, How the University Works, ice sheet collapse, internships, Iowa, iPads, Islamophobia, Jeff Sessions, journamalism, labor, Macs, male privilege, marriage equality, mavericks, McDonald's, men's rights activism, mental illness, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Milwaukee, Mitch Hurwitz, my teaching empire, names, NCAA, NEH, neoliberalism, obsolescence, pedagogy, pepper spray, politics, protest, race, racism, rape culture, recalls, revenge porn, rich people, Scandal, security state, stop-and-frisk, strikes, student evaluations, student movements, suicide, surveillance society, Teach for America, television, the Arctic, The Good WIfe, The Simpsons, the wisdom of markets, TSA, two-body problem, UC Davis, UConn, unions, Virginia, war huh good god y'all what is it good for? absolutely nothing say it again, war on education, We're screwed, Wes Anderson, what it is I think I'm doing, white privilege, Wikipedia, Wisconsin, Won't somebody think of the children?, zombies