Posts Tagged ‘the elderly’
suNDaY ReAdiNG
* College students want answers about fall, but schools may not have them for months. The Big ‘If.’ What If Colleges Don’t Reopen Until 2021? College Campuses Must Reopen in the Fall. Here’s How We Do It. Public Colleges Lose State Funding, Effective Immediately. I Teach at Rutgers and I Don’t Know If I’ll Have a Job This Fall. Rising expenses, falling revenues, budget cuts: Universities face looming financial crisis. ‘Pressure Is Turning Way Up’: College Presidents Plan Layoffs, Budget Cuts Due to Coronavirus, Says Survey. College Closures in the Wake of COVID-19: A Need for Forward-Looking Accountability. Pandemic Hits College Sports. Finding Real Life in Teaching Law Online. The New Tenured Radicals. For the recovery, we need to spend like our lives depend on it.
* And at home: Faculty express concerns over university furloughs, financial decisions.
* NYU is not kidding around. Stanford Health Care to cut workers’ wages by 20%.
realizing on reflection that this is intended as an advertisement for high-cost private colleges, the only places that could possibly provide this level of test, trace, and quarantine https://t.co/ziT7PYRbrl
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) April 26, 2020
anyway, I’m definitely sure our universities are definitely well-resourced and infrastructurally prepared enough to take on primary roles as stewards of public health this fall, no problems there!
— Jeffrey Moro (@jeffreymoro) April 26, 2020
* Young and middle-aged people, barely sick with covid-19, are dying of strokes. Life After Ventilators Can Be Hell for Coronavirus Survivors. Even Palliative Care Doctors Have Never Experienced Anything Like This Before.
* Zoom as “The Gift of the Magi.”
* Here are the unambiguous rules for what to do in this pandemic.
* ‘Immunity Passports’ Could Create a New Category of Privilege. These epidemiologists say let’s think about reopening daycares and elementary schools. After Coronavirus, Nearly Half Of The Day Care Centers In The U.S. Could Be Gone. You’re Not Homeschooling — You’re ‘Crisis Schooling.’ To Access Online Services, New Jersey Students With Disabilities Must Promise Not To Sue.
* America gets back to work: My Family Was Denied a Stimulus Check Because My Husband Is an Immigrant. My Restaurant Was My Life for 20 Years. Does the World Need It Anymore? The end of bars and restaurants. Trump Donor Hired Trump-Tied Lobbyists, Then Raked in Coronavirus Relief Cash. GOP Governors Will Push Workers off Unemployment by Reopening Early. A Step-by-Step Plan to Reopen California. Can We Really Make a Safe Vaccine in 18 Months? ‘No Evidence’ Yet That Recovered COVID-19 Patients Are Immune, WHO Says. Just 14% of Americans support ending social distancing in order to reopen the economy, according to a new poll. The Left Can’t Just Dismiss the Anti-Lockdown Protests. Coronavirus is spreading fast in states that may reopen soon, study finds. We Cannot “Reopen” America. What Reopening Georgia Might Really Be About. Reopening Has Begun. No One Is Sure What Happens Next.
“If the state narrowly defines suitable work and doesn’t include the implications of the virus and what that means for a workplace, then that might put those workers who are drawing unemployment insurance in a precarious position, where they would have to either lose their unemployment insurance or go back to work in an unsafe environment,” Camardelle says.
Everytime I see this I realize anew that the plan is for every small restaurant in the country to fail, with the space eventually taken by a new dent-financed restaurant venture, a national chain, or just nothing. https://t.co/DOJTeDaway
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) April 26, 2020
The longer the lockdown goes on, the more burden will be placed on the government to make it livable. "Opening the economy" is about forcing working people to put their health at risk to avoid that terrifying problem: https://t.co/yWanaHbNCD
— Aaron Bady (@zunguzungu) April 25, 2020
* The Media’s Coronavirus Coverage Exposes Its Ignorance About the Working Class. Understanding media bias.
Bret Stephens doesn't write "opinion columns"; he uses the leeway provided him by "opinion" to pass along the alternative facts that his ideological fixations would require to be to true to be valid.
— Aaron Bady (@zunguzungu) April 25, 2020
* American billionaires have gotten $280 billion richer since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. Small Business Rescue Earned Banks $10 Billion In Fees. With Millions Unable to Pay for Housing Next Month, Organizers Plan the Largest Rent Strike in Nearly a Century. 71 percent of jobless Americans did not receive their March unemployment benefits. Wheeeeeeeeee!
* Study: Elderly Trump voters dying of coronavirus could cost him in November. Most people dying from Covid-19 are old. Don’t treat them just as statistics.
* Internal Documents Reveal Team Trump’s Chloroquine Master Plan. Twitter names Trump the ‘Tide Pods’ president after he suggests disinfectant injections. Say It Loud, Say It Clear: Donald Trump Needs to Resign Over His Handling of the Coronavirus. And for the people in the back: The President Is Mentally Unwell — and Everyone Around Him Knows It.
* All the Reasons This Will Be a Bleak Summer for N.Y.C. All Children.
* Tread *very* carefully, Joe — there are a lot of perverts in swing states.
* Pelosi’s Playing Hardball, Charlie Brown.
Three problems:
1) Biden doesn't support doing those things.
2) Biden isn't getting an LBJ-sized mandate.
3) Even when Dems got the biggest mandate realistically possible in 2008, they fucked it up absolutely thoroughly with Joe Biden leading the damn way.We're fucked. https://t.co/BuOevwn2gt
— Chris Wachal (@notChrisWachal) April 24, 2020
* A Candidate in Isolation: Inside Joe Biden’s Cloistered Campaign. They didn’t even let him get interviewed for this!
It’s not because his politics are so far out of the mainstream—if they were, he wouldn’t be president. Rather, his personality clashes with what moderates stand for—the emotional register they operate on. This is an unwritten yet fundamental rule of American politics: Moderation is not a political persuasion but a mood.
* How the Supreme Court’s Progressive Minority Could Prevent a Stolen Election. Or the conservative majority could steal it! Who knows, really.
* We will not stand for the erasure of Wisconsin’s proud Confederate history. Or Michigan’s!
* Planet of the Humans pulled from Netflix.
* Amazon Scooped Up Data From Its Own Sellers to Launch Competing Products. This would be an open and shut case if we actually had a government.
* Parks and Rec is back, baby!
* This fall on Netflix: Man Who Died Ingesting Fish Tank Cleaner Remembered as Intelligent, Levelheaded Engineer. Stay till the twist!
* Great, one more thing to worry about.
* And for your consideration: another Bible as D&D thread.
Written by gerrycanavan
April 26, 2020 at 3:51 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, actually existing media bias, Amazon, America, Andrew Cuomo, bars, Bill de Blasio, Brown, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Charlie Brown, China, class struggle, college closures, coronavirus, COVID-19, crisis school, daycare, death, disability, documentary, Dolly Parton, Donald Trump, Dungeons and Dragons, epidemic, fall semester 2020, follow the rules, general election 2020, Georgia, Gift of the Magi, homeschool, How the University Works, hydrochloroquine, illness, immunity passports, Joe Biden, kids today, Kim Yo Jong, Lucille Ball, Marquette, medicine, Michigan, Milwaukee, misogyny, Monopoly, mortality, Mr. Meseeks, Nancy Pelosi, Netflix, New Jersey, New York, North Korea, NYU, O'Henry, pandemic, parenting, Parks and Recreation, penguins, Planet of the Humans, politics, recession, research, restaurants, rich people, Rick and Morty, Second Great Depression?, senior citizens, sexism, sexual harassment, Stanford, Star Trek, stimulus, stress, Supreme Court, Tara Reade, tenure, the bible, the Confederacy, the courts, the economy, the elderly, the law, the summer, the university in ruins, unemployment, vaccines, Wisconsin, working class, worst financial crisis since the last one, worst financial crisis since World War II, Zoom
Thursday Links!
* Call for Papers: Essays on Hootie & the Blowfish. Call for Papers: Reappraising Stephen King. Call for Papers: International Conference for the Fantastic in the Arts 41: Climate Change and the Anthropocene.
* Looking for a postdoc? Here’s one on the history of Viagra.
* Congrats to the Hugo winners! And here’s a special shoutout: Why Archive of Our Own’s Surprise Hugo Nomination Is Such a Big Deal. “John W. Campbell, for whom this award was named, was a fascist.” Jeannette Ng, John W. Campbell, and What Should Be Said By Whom and When.
* We Have Ruined Childhood. Wait a minute here, don’t you try to pin this on me!
* How Life Became an Endless, Terrible Competition.
* The notion that students have somehow been coddled is just 100% bullshit. It’s the opposite. They’ve been asked to run a gauntlet which is disengaged from a sense of community, family, even their own natures.
* Persistent Partisan Breakdown on Higher Ed. The partisan rift over college will haunt us.
* Life expectancy drops in Wisconsin due to alcohol, drugs.
* The 1619 Project. Who Got the Maddest About the New York Times’ Slavery Coverage? The 1619 Project made conservatives tell on themselves.
If what you’re saying is true, that would be really bad! So it must not be true. https://t.co/QoBpMh2TCq
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) August 18, 2019
* Very few of us, myself included, are Kant, but very many of us now must decide how and where to think as the academy contracts. We are losing a community of thinkers at the moment when all of our old modes of thinking are looking increasingly like diversions or repetitions of that which we know too well, while the broader culture dismisses humanists as idiots who forgot to get STEM degrees. At the same time, we are refusing to give those who remain the space to fail, to gawk, to marvel, to stagger in front of the arguments they don’t know how to make, and instead are rewarding the articles and arguments that look familiar in form, if not content. To succeed in academia we demand they fail at failing.
It may be that we fail (and I mean this “we” to include myself) to think anything new about climate change because there is nothing to be thought. Perhaps the danger of climate change is not so different from the threat of nuclear annihilation as the French philosopher Maurice Blanchot once put it in his essay “The Apocalypse is Disappointing”— “an event of enormous size but enormously empty, about which it can say nothing, save this banality: that it would be better to prevent it.”
* Columbia Had Little Success Placing English Ph.D.s on the Tenure Track. ‘Alarm’ Followed, and the University Responded. WHAT YEAR IS IT
* Can Starbucks Save the Middle Class? No. But It Might Ruin Higher Education.
* The Humanities in the Age of Loneliness.
* Alaska Regents Vote to Terminate Exigency Declaration.
* Jeffrey Epstein’s Intellectual Enabler.
If we restored public funding to the university system, then they'd only be linked to large abstract war machines instead of individual billionaire perverts
— Gavin Mueller (@gavinmuellerphd) August 21, 2019
* Scientists Have Been Underestimating the Pace of Climate Change. The Amazon Is on Fire and the Smoke Can Be Seen from Space. Brazil’s Amazon rainforest is burning at a record rate, research center says. Bolsonaro says his critics are setting the fires, to make him look bad. On the Front Lines of Bolsonaro’s War on the Amazon, Brazil’s Forest Communities Fight Against Climate Catastrophe. Scientists decry ‘ignorance’ of rolling back species protections in the midst of a mass extinction. We Can’t Confront Climate Change While Lavishly Funding the Pentagon. At the bottom of a glacier in Greenland, climate scientists find troubling signs. Greenland’s Deepening Ecological Grief. Don’t forget the Siberian forest fires. The guy whose sole platform was climate change never polled higher than 1%. The Case for Climate Rage.
Environmental activists warn that if the Amazon reaches a point of no return, the rainforest could become a dry savannah, no longer habitable for much of its wildlife. If this happens, it could start emitting carbon — the major driver of climate change. https://t.co/ZLX0PMcZls
— CNN (@CNN) August 21, 2019
When Notre Dame was burning, the world's media covered every moment of it and billionaires rushed to restore it. Right now the Amazon is burning, the lungs of our planet. It has been burning for 3 weeks now. No media. No billionaires. #PrayforAmazonas pic.twitter.com/RkBLS8SiE8
— charlotte 🖤 (@magicmadnesss) August 21, 2019
Jay Inslee drops out of presidential race to spend more time helplessly awaiting human extinction
— pixelatedboat aka “mr tweets” (@pixelatedboat) August 22, 2019
* Huge, if true: Golden age superheroes were shaped by the rise of fascism.
* Truth and Reconciliation and Science Fiction.
* On Representations of Disability: A Reading List.
These Nigerian teenagers are producing short sci-fi movies using a smart phone and other everyday items. pic.twitter.com/9dXhPGuD9z
— Al Jazeera English (@AJEnglish) August 16, 2019
* India’s military blockade of Kashmir is breathtaking in its brutality and violence. We can’t let them silence Kashmir’s dreams for freedom and justice.
* Militant Neo-Nazi Group Actively Recruiting Ahead of Alleged Training Camp. Militant Neo-Nazi now the acting director of US Citizenship and Immigration Services. Militant Neo-Nazis run the New York Times.
* How Trump’s Policies Are Leaving Thousands of Asylum Seekers Waiting in Mexico. After ICE. An undocumented Chinese restaurant worker has been fighting for backpay to the tune of $200K. Then ICE arrested him while giving a deposition in a lawsuit. The Trump Administration Wants To Hold Undocumented Children In Detention Indefinitely. Trump admin weighs letting states, cities deny entry to refugees approved for resettlement in U.S. The US won’t provide flu vaccines to migrant families at border detention camps. How the US Exported Its Border Around the World.
Pia Klemp, the German ship captain who rescued migrants in the Mediterranean, as she refuses a medal from the mayor of Paris. pic.twitter.com/8vWXn28NaQ
— Jodi (@jodotcom) August 22, 2019
* Trump, QAnon and an impending judgment day: Behind the Facebook-fueled rise of The Epoch Times. Donald Trump Is Not the Messiah, He’s a Very Naughty Boy. Why Some White Liberals Will Probably Vote For Donald Trump. The President Is on Some Real Shit Right Now, Honestly. Trump draws another primary challenger. Meanwhile, I’ve laid my marker down.
Biden will spend eight months defending his kids from increasingly bizarre conspiracy theories and lose by three points https://t.co/Hcbn0gCET4
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) August 21, 2019
literally the slogan for Joe Biden https://t.co/IyITvSHCSa
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) August 20, 2019
* Buying Greenland isn’t a good idea — it’s a great idea.
hard to experience this period as anything other than a years-long psychotic break https://t.co/yZ9WS9BwHd
— the norms misser (@cd_hooks) August 22, 2019
* The more I look at it, the more this photograph is punctum, punctum, punctum. It barely holds together. It is all disturbance, all accident. Even the wallpaper starts to tremble: Who at the University of El Paso Medical Center violated the Hippocratic Oath by approving this particular photo-op?
* Not exactly a democracy, now, is it.
Your reminder that Democrats won a majority of votes for state legislative races in Wisconsin, Michigan and North Carolina in 2018 yet a broken political system awarded them a minority of seats. pic.twitter.com/NHhSWQrXSZ
— G. Elliott Morris (@gelliottmorris) August 19, 2019
* The boomers going bust: why elderly bankruptcy is rising in America.
* Their Mothers Chose Donor Sperm. The Doctors Used Their Own.
* In “How to Be an Antiracist,” Ibram X. Kendi argues that we should think of “racist” not as a pejorative but as a simple, widely encompassing term of description.
* NYPD fires officer who put Eric Garner in chokehold. I lost my job for keeping Charlottesville police accountable. I’d do it again. Fearing for his life, Cleveland cop…
* School reopens inquiry into teens giving Nazi salute as new clips emerge, reports say.
* “We’ve wasted all their fucking resources to make this rally,” Proud Boys leader Enrique Tarrio said in video captured during the latest extremist rally held Saturday in Portland. “We want them to waste $2 million and we’ll do it again in two months.”
* I was skeptical of unions. Then I joined one.
* Amazon’s Ring wants police to keep these surveillance details from you.
* Pressured To Spy On NYC Mosques For Two Years, An Immigrant FBI Informant Seeks A Way Out.
* To save the Church, Catholics must detach themselves from the clerical hierarchy—and take the faith back into their own hands. Abolish the Priesthood.
* A first grader who found his grandmother’s loaded gun at school this spring pointed it at another student, according to an email released Monday by Highland Local Schools in Morrow County.
* $48M Michigan high school has places to hide in case of mass shooting.
* What Would Happen If the Whole Internet Just Shut Down All of a Sudden?
* Designer babies are on the way. We’re not ready.
* In this way, the violent, cathartic fantasies of Tarantino’s recent historical-ish trilogy allegorize the very function of fiction itself. They intervene in matters of fact not to rewrite the record, but to remind us that stories are the spaces where we consider alternatives, rework our real-world mythologies, rethink history, and expand upon ideas.
* California’s Forgotten Confederate History. A History of White Nationalism in the Pacific Northwest.
* Who’s to Blame When Algorithms Discriminate? No one, silly, that’s the whole point!
* DoorDash is still pocketing workers’ tips, almost a month after it promised to stop.
* Dungeons and Dragons Rules for Progressives.
* Dr. Evil wants to refresh his moonbase.
* One Man’s Modernism: J. R. R. Tolkien.
* There is no Africa in African studies.
* The dialectic of enlightenment.
* My life as a background Slytherin. Legolas, what do your elf eyes see?
* Our favorite candid photographs of wild animals—taken via camera trap.
* Another good thread: What’s the fantasy or SF book that’s not some big famous award winning thing that you think I should read?
* The language of Mario Maker.
* Twilight of the MCU. Here comes Matrix 4, at least.
🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥 take on Sony-Disney https://t.co/XJ6DRPthEJ
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) August 20, 2019
* The arc of history is long, but Marquette has prohibited motorized scooter use on campus property.
* From the archives: 50 years later, Bob Dylan’s motorcycle crash remains mysterious.
Written by gerrycanavan
August 22, 2019 at 2:10 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with #NoBan, 1619, academia, academic jobs, accidents, actually existing media bias, Africa, African studies, Alaska, alcohol, algorithms, Amazon, America, and Kareem Abdul Jabbar, animals, apocalypse, arson, Art Spiegelman, asylum, Baby Boomers, Bob Dylan, Bojack Horseman, Bolsonaro, Brazil, Brexit, California, capitalism, Catholicism, CBP, CFPs, childhood, climate change, climate denialism, climate rage, Columbia, cruelty, debt, democracy, Democrats, denialism, deportation, designer babies genetic engineering, disability, discrimination, Disney, Donald Trump, donor sperm, DoorDash, drugs, Dungeons and Dragons, electric scooters, elves, Eric Garner, extraordinary popular delusions and the madness of crowds, fan fiction, fantasy, fascism, FBI, film, financial exigency, free speech, Gamergate, games, gerrymandering, glaciers, Golden Age, Greenland, guns, Heroes, Hippocratic oath, history, Hootie and the Blowfish, How the University Works, Hugo awards, I Can't Breathe, Ibram X. Kendi, ice, ice sheet collapse, ICFA, immigration, India, Islamophobia, Jay Inslee, Jeffrey Epstein, Joe Biden, John W. Campbell, Kashmir, Keanu Reeves, kids today, Legolas, liberalism, life expectancy, loneliness, Mario Maker, Marquette, mass shootings, Matrix 4, MCU, meritocracy, Mexico, modernism, Monopoly, monsters, Nazis, neoliberalism, New Gingrich, New York Times, Nigeria, Nintendo, Nintendo Switch, NYPD, Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, Oregon, ouch, over-educated literary theory PhDs, Pacific Northwest, parenting, photo ops, photographs, Pia Klemp, poetry, polls, Portland, postdocs, pregnancy, priesthood, Princeton, progressives, Proud Boys, QAnon, Quentin Tarantino, race, racism, reconciliationpunk, Republicans, riots, science fiction, science fiction studies, short stories, Siberia, slavery, Slytherin, socialism, Sony, Spider-Man, Starbucks, Stephen King, students, suicide, superheroes, tacos, the Amazon, the Anthropocene, the Confederacy, the dialectic of enlightenment, the elderly, the flu, the humanities, the Internet, The Matrix, the Moon, the past isn't over it isn't even past, the Wachowskis, tips, Tolkien, truth and reconciliation, undocumented workers, unions, University of Alaska, Viagra, wage theft, war huh good god y'all what is it good for? absolutely nothing say it again, war on education, white nationalism, whiteness, wildfires, Wisconsin
Tuesday Night Links!
* ST: TNG: TNG: Patrick Stewart to Return as Capt. Picard in New ‘Star Trek’ Series for CBS All Access. Well, that’s something! CBS All Access Is Laying the Groundwork for Non-Stop Star Trek.
#STLV Stewart says he may not be the captain anymore. He may be a very different individual. Setting is 20 years past Nemesis. There are no scripts yet. It will be something very, very different. It will be made with love for the material and the fans.
— TrekMovie.com (@TrekMovie) August 4, 2018
* Celebrating Black Panther, Afrofuturism, and black creativity at the first-ever Wakandacon.
* Draft schedule for the Worlding SF conference I’ll be keynoting at this December. Looking forward to it!
* Poem of the day: “A Metaphor.”
* Pedagogy flashback: Basic Needs Security and the Syllabus.
* How to Prepare for Class. Against the Grade. The Rise of the Promotional Intellectual.
* Another list of 10 of the best words in the world (that don’t translate into English).
* That rare thing, a good Twitter thread: What is the most interesting and revealing and hard-to-believe/understand statistic you know?
* Gasp, shock: Data shows a surprising campus free speech problem: left-wingers being fired for their opinions.
* What You Need To Know About Democratic Socialism.
* “But Tikopia is an *insanely abundant* place by the standards of space. You can breathe, for starters. The seas teem with fish. Throw a pawpaw seed in the ground and you’ll have a food tree in a few years.”
* Capitalism Killed Our Climate Momentum, Not “Human Nature.” How Not to Talk About Climate Change. No, we didn’t almost solve the climate crisis in the 1980s. When Will Capitalism Answer For Its Crimes?
* 2018 Was Probably Already Doomed, But We Might Have Saved 2030.
* ‘Many parts of Earth could become uninhabitable’: Study’s grim warning.
* These 360 Drone Photos of the California Wildfires Are Devastating.
* ‘Capitalism, The Sole Culprit of the Destructive Exploitation of Nature’ by Alain Badiou.
* Brexit continues to give Trump a run for his money in the deliberate-national-suicide-Olympics.
* Conspiracy theories are for losers. QAnon is no exception. The rise of QAnon Is a Sign That Trumpism Might Not Be Primarily About Trump at All. After mainstream exposure, QAnon is starting to fracture.
* Trump just keeps confessing to crimes and it just keeps not mattering.
* Alejandra ultimately decided to “self-deport” to Mexico, rather than turn herself in to be detained and then deported. After 20 years in the United States, she no longer has family or friends in the country, so she chose Merida, a city in the Yucatan where a small community of deported military spouses might help her. U.S. historians are rallying to stop federal immigration agencies from destroying records of their treatment towards immigrants. Worker Charged With Sexually Molesting Eight Children at Immigrant Shelter. Man Detained by ICE Claims He Went Blind in One Eye After Agent Didn’t Believe He Had Diabetes. How Trump Radicalized ICE. Border family separation isn’t “zero tolerance” – CBP looked for parents to charge so they could kidnap kids. New Jersey Jail is Holding Nearly Triple its Capacity in ICE Detainees. What happens after ICE tears your family apart: ‘The storm descended.’ Now the Trump administration wants to limit citizenship for legal immigrants. Judge upholds ruling that DACA must be restored. The Power of Abolish ICE.
* “We Need to Fight for Aloha”: Hawaii congressional candidate and democratic socialist Kaniela Ing on taking on Hawaii’s biggest corporations, a bold climate change agenda, and the necessity of opposing US imperialism.
* I’m a WNBA player. Men won’t stop challenging me to play one-on-one.
* Markets in everything: More Schools Are Buying ‘Active-Shooter’ Insurance Policies.
'Socialism or barbarism' is a bad slogan because 'barbarian' is just a term used by imperial extractors to denigrate the non-conforming nomadic & semi-pastoral populations outside their walls. Instead, I propose a dialectical synthesis: Barbarian Socialism
— 🌎 The 🚀 Cosmist 🌌 Insurrection ✊ 🏴 (@yungneocon) August 1, 2018
* The Great Pacific Garbage Patch Isn’t What You Think it Is: It’s not all bottles and straws—the patch is mostly abandoned fishing gear.
* Meanwhile, in serious environmentalism: Trump Accuses California Of Causing Wildfires By ‘Diverting’ Water To Pacific.
* Fields medal stolen moments after it was awarded.
* There’s so much corruption in the federal government at this point it’s impossible to keep track of.
* A mother orca’s dead calf and the grief felt around the world.
* The Trader Who Made a Massive Short Bet Against Nintendo.
* NRA Legal Strategy / Fundraising Appeal Goes Viral.
* A criminal justice expert says Avoyelles Parish law officers who wrestled a Marksville man off a tractor while serving an arrest warrant last year used too much force, needlessly escalating a confrontation that ended with the man’s death. A second expert said he doesn’t agree the officers used excessive force, but said they may have acted negligently by failing to administer aid once Armando Frank was unconscious. His crime was calmly asking what he was being charged with.
* How the NYPD recriminalized marijuana after the state decriminalized it. Internal documents reveal how Bronx prosecutors are taught to slow down cases.
* Democrats do the darnedest things.
* How the Cold War Created Astrobiology.
* A small-town couple left behind a stolen painting worth over $100 million — and a big mystery.
* These The Last Jedi Fans Put on a Mock Court Martial for Poe Dameron.
* Missing the point is the point: Pre-reading Young Aragorn.
* You Bet Your Life: ‘Death Bonds,’ the Investments That Want You Dead.
* Amazing arbitrage opportunity.
* Sexuality and gender in science fiction games.
* Somebody get me Michel Foucault on the phone: Open Office Plans Increase Employee Stress, Reduce Productivity.
* Ask your doctor if R’lhygrex is right for you.
* Facebook getting pretty brazen even by Facebook standards.
* Anti-Vaccine Activists Have Taken Vaccine Science Hostage.
* The Great Recession Never Ended.
* Well, if they’re really sorry.
* The end of the writers’ room.
* The next stage of the Tesla scam.
* Chilling Testimony in a Tennessee Trial Exposes Lethal Injection as Court-Sanctioned Torture.
* Women More Likely to Survive Heart Attacks If Treated by Female Doctors.
* And now they tell me! Why punishing your children doesn’t work.
Written by gerrycanavan
August 7, 2018 at 4:02 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with abolition, academia, academic jobs, Afrofuturism, Alex Jones, Amazon, antibiotic resistant bacteria, apocalypse, art, artificial intelligence, astrobiology, barbarism, Black Panther, Bob Menendez, bodies, Brexit, C-sections, California, capitalism, Captain Picard, CBP, CBS All-Access, children, climate change, Cold War, conspiracy theories, corruption, DACA, death penalty, democratic socialism, Democrats, deportation, Donald Trump, Dreamers, drones, drugs, ecology, Elon Musk, environmentalism, evil, Facebook, Fields medal, finance, fishing, foreclosure, Foucault, free speech, games, gender, grading, Great Pacific Garbage Patch, Great Recession, guns, Hawaii, How the University Works, human life, ice, immigration, Infowars, insurance, keynotes, kids today, lethal injection, Lord of the Rings, Lovecraft, Marvel, mass shootings, math, MCU, medicine, metaphor, Missouri, mortality, my scholarly empire, New Jersey, Nintendo, NRA, NYPD, panopticon, parenting, pedagogy, poems, police brutally, police violence, post-hospital syndrome, pregnancy, psychopharmacology, QAnon, reproductive futurity, Russia, schools, science, self-promotion, sexuality, social media, socialism, sports, Star Trek, Star Wars, statistics, surgery, syllabi, teaching, television, Tesla, the elderly, The Last Jedi, The Rock, the Senate, The Stand, the university in ruins, the wisdom of markets, TNG, true crime, Twitter, United Kingdom, vaccination, voter fraud, voter suppression, voting, Wakanda, water, Wells Fargo, whales, wildfires, WNBA, words, Worlding SF, writing, Young Aragorn
Christmas and/or Fascism Megapost Forever and Ever Links – Part Three!
(here’s part one and part two)
* The Changing Faces of Sci-Fi and Fantasy.
* I wonder if there is a line connecting nostalgia and the condition of our country. Stranger Things is really, after all, Reassuring Familiar Things, and nostalgia for a thing that never was is, apparently, good product.
* Isn’t it funny how the same investment firm always shows up at the White House?
* A Student Has Created A Gripping And NSFW Photo Series With Trump’s Quotes About Women.
* The very hottest Rogue One take of all: How ‘Rogue One’ Backs Up The Founders’ Approach To Slavery. Scorching.
* When Star Wars Killed a Universe to Save the Galaxy.
* The Politics of Nature in a Time of Political Fear.
* Self-driving cars turn in a way that will kill bicyclists.
* The surveillance state and racism.
* “Clinton Campaign May Have Been Too Smart to Win.” Sure, that’s one way to put it.
* Liberals’ belief in their superior ability to govern has never had the facts on its side. The Weimar Analogy.
* Why Are Detroit Cops Killing So Many Dogs?
* Three state lawmakers call for Sheriff Clarke’s removal or resignation.
* Alcohol-related problems are on the rise among older Americans.
* Cover Design in Dangerous Times: An Interview with Peter Mendelsund.
* Passengers sounds awful. I can’t believe this movie has been getting such good buzz for so long.
* Critical Inquiry‘s special issue on comedy.
* These Utopian City Maps Have Influenced Urban Planners for Over a Century.
* Why is medical training so insane?
* Robert Jensen has spent his career restoring order after mass fatalities: identifying remains, caring for families, and recovering personal effects. Here’s how he became the best at the worst job in the world.
* And after a whole day spent closing 300 tabs, don’t even try to cheer me up.
Written by gerrycanavan
December 20, 2016 at 3:44 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with Afrofuturism, alcoholism, America, asteroids, authoritarianism, autocracy, bicycles, books, Chana Porter, Cicero, city planning, class struggle, cleaning up, comedy, Critical Inquiry, death, deep state, Detroit, diversity, dogs, Donald Trump, ecology, Electoral College, Expanded Universe, fascism, fear, Goldman Sachs, Hillary Clinton, Hitler, lorem ipsum, medicine, Milwaukee, mortality, NASA, nature, nostalgia, Octavia Butler, Passengers, petrostates, politics, popular vote, post-truth, racism, rape, rape culture, Rogue One, science fiction, self-driving cars, Sheriff Clarke, slavery, Star Wars, Stranger Things, surveillance society, surveillance state, the Anthropocene, the elderly, The Octavia Project, the Third Reconstruction, typesetting, Utopia, Weimar, Wisconsin
Wednesday Links!
* The end of UW: Gov. Scott Walker to propose 13 percent cut, more freedom for UW System. UW System predicts layoffs, no campus closings under budget cuts. Layoffs, Building Closures, Slowdown on Admissions. But “few details.”
* But there’s always money in the banana stand.
* In praise of zombies. A response to yesterday’s anti-Canavanist IHE polemic.
Giving students access to an important, brilliant, historically significant corpus of art seems to be an entirely appropriate activity for the undergraduate classroom at a university. After you have taken a Zombie Course, you may discover you have actually just taken a Great Books (or in the case of Ware, a Great Box) course without realizing it, and you may also decide that any Great Books course worthy of its name cannot afford to ignore the recent surge of brilliant zombie art. If anything, we need more Zombie Courses than we have, and one hopes — in time — even full-blown Zombie Majors (or at the least Zombie Double-Majors).
* Multiple Choice and Testing Machines: A History.
* “What I would say about the university today,” he says, “is that we’re living through an absolutely historic moment – namely the effective end of universities as centres of humane critique, an almost complete capitulation to the philistine and sometimes barbaric values of neo-capitalism.”
* National Adjunct Walkout Day is coming soon.
* Higher Education Is Not a Mixtape.
* The Climate Science Behind New England’s Historic Blizzard. Massive Blizzard Exposes How Decrepit New York City’s Infrastructure Is.
* All Our Grievances Are Connected.
* Forget immoral; the latest legal challenge to Obamacare is still nonsense.
* Punch-Drunk Jonathan Chait Takes On the Entire Internet. It’s a terrible op-ed that makes an important point badly in the midst of saying a bunch of incorrect things, all in the service of a fundamentally bad framing — so of course it’s all we can talk about.
* To Collect Debts, Nursing Homes Are Seizing Control Over Patients.
It was a guardianship petition filed by the nursing home, Mary Manning Walsh, asking the court to give a stranger full legal power over Mrs. Palermo, now 90, and complete control of her money.
Few people are aware that a nursing home can take such a step.
* Drone, Too Small for Radar to Detect, Rattles the White House.
* Defending those accused of unthinkable crimes.
* One aspect of that danger is the “abstract authority” of astrologers, now mirrored by the black-box algorithms of the cloud. The opacity of the analytic method lends forecasts their appearance of authoritative objectivity. In “Astrological Forecasts”, Adorno notes “the mechanics of the astrological system are never divulged and the readers are presented only with the alleged results of astrological reasoning.” “Treated as impersonal and thing-like,” stars appear “entirely abstract, unapproachable, and anonymous” and thus more objective than mere fallible human reason. Similarly, as Kate Crawford pointed out in an essay about fitness trackers for the Atlantic, “analytics companies aren’t required to reveal which data sets they are using and how they are being analyzed.” The inaccessible logic of their proprietary algorithms is imposed on us, and their inscrutability masquerades as proof of their objectivity. As Crawford argues, “Prioritizing data—irregular, unreliable data—over human reporting, means putting power in the hands of an algorithm.” As Adorno puts it, “The cult of God has been replaced by the cult of facts.”
* America and fractal inequality.
* 100% of the women of color interviewed in STEM study experienced gender bias.
* Gender Bias in Academe: An Annotated Bibliography of Important Recent Studies.
* Reasons You Were Not Promoted That Are Totally Unrelated to Gender.
* Today, more U.S. women die in childbirth and from pregnancy-related causes than at almost any point in the last 25 years. The United States is the one of only seven countries in the entire world that has experienced an increase in maternal mortality over the past decade.
* Marissa Alexander is out of jail after three years.
* What has happened before will happen again, subprime auto edition.
* Huckabee Complains That Women Can Cuss In The Workplace: ‘That’s Just Trashy.’
* Oklahoma GOP wants to restrict marriage to people of faith.
* Corey Robin, against public intellectuals.
* I linked to a story about this the other day, but here’s the resolution: Vanderbilt Football Players Found Guilty of Raping Unconscious Student. Of course the next horrifying story in this wretched, endless series is already queued up.
* American Sniper focuses in tight on one man’s story of trauma, leaving out the complex questions of why Kyle was in Iraq being traumatized in the first place. The Iraqis in the film are villains, caricatures, and targets, and the only real opinion on them the film offers is Kyle’s. The Iraqis are all “savages” who threaten American lives and need to be killed. There’s some truth in this representation, insofar as this is how a lot of American soldiers thought. Yet the film obviates the questions of why any American soldiers were in Iraq, why they stayed there for eight years, why they had to kill thousands upon thousands of Iraqi civilians, and how we are to understand the long and ongoing bloodbath once called the “war on terror.” It does that precisely by turning a killer into a victim, a war hero into a trauma hero.
* Freakishly Old System Of Planets Hint At Ancient Alien Civilizations. Okay, I’m in for three films with an option on a television reboot.
* Vulture says Jason Segel is good as David Foster Wallace in The End of the Tour, but I’ll never accept it.
* The Psychology of Flow: What Game Design Reveals about the Deliberate Tensions of Great Writing.
* The Politics Of The Next Dimension: Do Ghosts Have Civil Rights?
* It’s finally happening, and of course it’s starting in Florida: ‘Zombie cat’ crawls out of grave.
* And while this may be of interest only to those whose children have made them watch untold hours of Dora the Explorer, it’s certainly of interest to me: Swiper the Fox has a totally bananas backstory.
Written by gerrycanavan
January 28, 2015 at 10:08 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with "Is Health Care Reform Constitutional?", academia, adjunctification, adjuncts, administrative blight, Adorno, America, American Sniper, apocalypse, astrology, atheism, austerity, Barack Obama, Big Data, blizzards, childbirth, Chris Hayes, civil rights, class struggle, climate change, comics, Corey Robin, David Foster Wallace, debt, defense attorneys, Dora the Explorer, drones, ecology, eldercare, English majors, extrasolar planets, facts, film, Florida, fractal inequality, free speech, games, gender, Ghostbusters, ghosts, Great Books, Greece, guns, health care, How the University Works, Huckabee, income inequality, infrastructure, Jason Segel, Jonathan Chait, kids today, Marissa Alexander, marriage, marriage equality, McSweeney's, medicine, Milwaukee, misogyny, MOOCs, multiple choice, narrative, neoliberalism, New York, nursing homes, Oklahoma, outer space, pedagogy, political correctness, politics, public intellectuals, race, racism, rape, rape culture, religion, scams, science fiction, Scott Walker, sexism, single payer, speech codes, sportsball, stadiums, stand your ground, standardized testing, Stanford, statistics, subprime loans, Supreme Court, Swiper no swiping, Terry Eagleton, the courts, the elderly, The End of the Tour, the law, the Left, trauma, University of Wisconsin, UWM, violence, war, war huh good god y'all what is it good for? absolutely nothing say it again, what it is I think I'm doing, White House, Wisconsin, writing, zombies
Sunday! Sunday! Sunday!
* The Cambridge Companion to American Science Fiction has a pre-order page! Open your wallets! Contact your local librarian! Get your Hugo nomination ballots ready!
* It’s a shame about Joan Rivers. The documentary about her is great. She was good on the Nerdist podcast too.
* Amazing, astounding: The Eaton Collection just got a $3.5 million gift.
* Through its increasing corporatization in the last two decades, the university in the United States has implemented an organizational ideology that has created a climate unfavorable for women faculty. By overvaluing and intensifying managerial principles, the university in the United States has strengthened discursive masculinity and has worsened women faculty’s likelihood of professional advancement. Consequently, the adoption and implementation of managerialism in higher education in the United States is a question of gender equity for the academic profession. Feminist educational scholars have been relatively quiet on the growth of managerialism in the university and its impact on gender equity. In particular, feminist scrutiny of managerialism’s discursive masculinity and its effects on gender equity in the university has been lacking. This conceptual article presents a feminist analysis of managerialism and its implications for women faculty in the United States; it examines how managerial culture and practices adopted by universities have revived, reinforced, and deepened the discourse of masculinity.
* inconsequential research kills don’t inconsequential research today
* The future’s just a little bit janky: Awesome Home-Built Elysium Exoskeleton Lifts 170 Pounds Like Nothing.
* The Freedom to Starve: The New Job Economy.
* California is the state of sunshine, movie stars— and Supermax prisons.
* This 3D-rendered Spider-Woman will haunt your dreams.
* People don’t like Spider-Woman’s butt because of Islam, says illustrator.
* The coming student debt apocalypse.
* The arc of history is long, but: Rams Cut Sam, First Drafted Openly Gay Player.
* In four federal lawsuits, including one that is on appeal, and more than a half-dozen investigations over the past decade, colleagues of Darren Wilson’s have separately contested a variety of allegations, including killing a mentally ill man with a Taser, pistol-whipping a child, choking and hog-tying a child and beating a man who was later charged with destroying city property because his blood spilled on officers’ clothes.
* When police catch “contagious shooting.” Even When Police Do Wear Cameras, Don’t Count on Seeing the Footage. Police Body Cameras Don’t Address the Real Problem: Police.
* Cop Charged With Sexually Assaulting Eight Women Under Threat of Arrest.
* All about how airlines cancel flights. Okay, but listen, I’m still mad.
* Headlines from the Anthropocene: Drought-Stricken California Makes Historic Move To Regulate Underground Water For The First Time. Are You Ready for a 35-Year Drought?
* Cataclysm in suburbia: The dark, twisted history of America’s oil-addicted middle class.
* The Moon Landing Went Far Better Than the Practice Landing.
* A previously unpublished chapter of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.
* Astronomers Discover A Planetary Impact Outside Our Own Solar System.
* And a radical communist provocation to shake your delicate sensibilities to the core: Shaking Down the Elderly for Student Loan Debt Should Not Be Allowed.
Written by gerrycanavan
August 31, 2014 at 7:48 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, adjunctification, air travel, airplanes, America, apocalypse, astronomy, California, Cambridge Companion to American Science Fiction, capitalism, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, charts, comics, communism, contagious shooting, cosmology, documentary, drought, Elysium, empire, exoplanets, exoskeletons, feminism, football, freedom, freelancing, futurity, gay rights, gig economy, guns, How the University Works, Islamophobia, J. Lloyd Eaton Collection, Joan Rivers, managerialism, megadrought, misogyny, my media empire, neoliberalism, Nerdist, Netflix, oil, physics, podcasts, police brutality, police state, prison-industrial complex, rape, rape culture, research, Roald Dahl, Robot Lincoln, science, science fiction, sexism, Spider-Woman, student debt, suburbia, the arc of history is long but it bends towards justice, the elderly, toxic masculinity, UC Riverside, violence, water
What Day Is It? Tuesday?
* Update: Computers really stink at Jeopardy. Or so I keep telling myself.
* In Yeskov’s retelling, the wizard Gandalf is a war-monger intent on crushing the scientific and technological initiative of Mordor and its southern allies because science “destroys the harmony of the world and dries up the souls of men!” He’s in cahoots with the elves, who aim to become “masters of the world,” and turn Middle-earth into a “bad copy” of their magical homeland across the sea. Barad-dur, also known as the Dark Tower and Sauron’s citadel, is, by contrast, described as “that amazing city of alchemists and poets, mechanics and astronomers, philosophers and physicians, the heart of the only civilization in Middle-earth to bet on rational knowledge and bravely pitch its barely adolescent technology against ancient magic.”
* Matt Yglesias is making sense:
Right now we have conservatives simultaneously calling for huge spending cuts and also getting the line’s share of old people’s votes even while the vast majority of non-security spending is on old people. In essence, by first separating the domestic budget into “discretionary” and “entitlement” portions and then dividing the entitlement programs up into “what today’s old people get” versus “what tomorrow’s old people will get” the political class has created a large and vociferously right-wing class of people who are completely immune from the impact of their own calls for fiscal austerity.
* Statistic of the day: 51% of Republicans claim they don’t believe Obama was born in the U.S.
* Curveball: How US was duped by Iraqi fantasist looking to topple Saddam.
* But the only story anyone seems to care about is whether This American Life really has Coca-Cola’s secret formula.
Written by gerrycanavan
February 15, 2011 at 11:20 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with austerity, Barack Obama, birthers, Bush, class struggle, computers, delicious Coca-Cola, extraordinary popular delusions and the madness of crowds, fan fiction, Gandalf, intergenerational warfare, Iraq, Jeopardy, labor, lies and lying liars, Lord of the Rings, Middle-Earth, national debt, perspective flips, politics, protest, Republicans, Scott Walker, secret formulae, statistics, the elderly, This American Life, Tolkien, unions, war, Wisconsin
Say Yes to Thursday
* More Americans who identify themselves as struggling economically are worried about the affordability of higher education than about any other financial stress, according to a report, “Struggling in America,” released Thursday by Public Agenda.
* 300 Years of Fossil Fuels in 300 Seconds.
* Michael Hardt in the Guardian.
* Neal Stephenson: What the strange persistence of rockets can teach us about innovation.
Biz Dev Guy: We could make a preposterous amount of money from communications satellites.
Engineer: It will be expensive to build those, but even so, nothing compared to the cost of building the machines needed to launch them into orbit.
Biz Dev Guy: Funny you should mention that. It so happens that our government has already put $4 trillion into building the rockets and supporting technology we need. There’s only one catch.
Engineer: OK, I’ll bite. What is the catch?
Biz Dev Guy: Your communications satellite has to be the size, shape, and weight of a hydrogen bomb.
* Why Your Grandparents Don’t Find The Office Funny.
* Why Nielsen Ratings Are Inaccurate, and Why They’ll Stay That Way. I actually missed becoming a Nielsen family by just a few months; my old apartment recently received an invitation. Alas, alas…
Written by gerrycanavan
February 3, 2011 at 8:05 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, capitalism, college, communism, fossil fuels, history, How the University Works, Michael Hardt, mistakes I have made, Neal Stephenson, Nielsens, nuclearity, oil, outer space, politics, rockets, student debt, television, the elderly, The Office
Frivolous Tuesday
* LEGO, you know I trust you, but I’m not sure about this.
* What is Japan doing with its super-old people?
* Psychologists use the term “irrational antagonism” to describe what happens between people isolated together for more than about six weeks… IN SPACE!
* Oregon Trail: The Movie: The Trailer. Related: No Son of Mine Plays Oregon Trail Like That.
* One cannot grow a beard in a moment of passion: an illustrated guide to beards. Via Pharyngula.
* What have you learned from your many years of monkey torture? They hate it. Monkeys hate flying squirrels, report monkey-annoyance experts.
Written by gerrycanavan
August 3, 2010 at 1:40 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with beards, irrational antagonism, Japan, LEGO, Mars, McSweeney's, monkeys, Oregon Trail, outer space, science, squirrels, the elderly, The State, Toy Story
Behold, the Mother of All Saturday Linkdumps!
* Polish President Lech Kaczynski has apparently been killed in a plane crash in western Russia, alongside much of the leadership of the country. Updates at MeFi.
* Yesterday Stevens made it official. The timeline. A shortlist. The politics of shortlists. An offbeat shortlist. How about Cory Booker? Why Obama shouldn’t shy away from a confirmation fight. Why Glenn Greenwald is lukewarm on frontrunner Elena Kagan. Why the GOP may use the SCOTUS hearings as another excuse to freak out about health care. Or maybe just another excuse to flip out period. Still more at MeFi.
* Totally independent of anything anyone anywhere has said or done, threats against members of Congress have increased threefold in recent months. It’s a funny coincidence that means absolutely nothing.
* George W. Bush, Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld covered up that hundreds of innocent men were sent to the Guantánamo Bay prison camp because they feared that releasing them would harm the push for war in Iraq and the broader War on Terror, according to a new document obtained by The Times.
* Everything old is new again: Gingrich says Republicans will shut down the government if they take over.
* Tony Judt on crisis, neoliberalism, greed, the end of history, and the need for a new New Left.
For thirty years students have been complaining to me that “it was easy for you”: your generation had ideals and ideas, you believed in something, you were able to change things. “We” (the children of the Eighties, the Nineties, the “Aughts”) have nothing. In many respects my students are right. It was easy for us—just as it was easy, at least in this sense, for the generations who came before us. The last time a cohort of young people expressed comparable frustration at the emptiness of their lives and the dispiriting purposelessness of their world was in the 1920s: it is not by chance that historians speak of a “lost generation.”
If young people today are at a loss, it is not for want of targets. Any conversation with students or schoolchildren will produce a startling checklist of anxieties. Indeed, the rising generation is acutely worried about the world it is to inherit. But accompanying these fears there is a general sentiment of frustration: “we” know something is wrong and there are many things we don’t like. But what can we believe in? What should we do?
* Full with polls: The IRS is more popular than the tea partiers.
* “Kind of a Glenn Beck approach”: On male studies. More at Salon.
* Another great segment from the Daily Show about blatant Fox News dishonesty, this one on the lies they’re telling about the START treaty. But the quote of the day on this comes from who else but Michele Bachmann, who calls for the U.S. to commit to nuclear retaliation in the event of a devastating cyber attack.
* Matt Yglesias on Treme‘s battle between realism and sentimentality.
* Comic book cartography. Their link to the principles of Kirbytech from my friends at Satisfactory Comics is pretty great too.
* Could our universe be located within the interior of a wormhole which itself is part of a black hole that lies within a much larger universe? I’m surprised there’s even debate about something that is so trivially true.
* Negative Twenty Questions, John Wheeler’s analogy for quantum mechanics.
* Of all the people in human history who ever reached the age of 65, half are alive now. Welcome to the elderly age.
* Multicellular life found that can live entirely without oxygen.
* xkcd’s version of hell is now fully playable.
* Chris Christie working overtime to destroy public universities in New Jersey.
* In Washington, D.C., you’re not a rape victim unless police say so. Via Feministe.
* HIV-positive Michigan man to be tried as bioweapon.
* Are we still waiting for the other shoe to drop on Greece?
* The Texas miracle? Wind power in an oil state.
* Two from Krugman: Building a Green Economy and Al Gore Derangement Syndrome.
* Somewhat related: Tim Morton on hyperobjects.
Hyperobjects are phenomena such as radioactive materials and global warming. Hyperobjects stretch our ideas of time and space, since they far outlast most human time scales, or they’re massively distributed in terrestrial space and so are unavailable to immediate experience. In this sense, hyperobjects are like those tubes of toothpaste that say they contain 10% extra: there’s more to hyperobjects than ordinary objects.
* The Illinois Poison Control Center has a blog. MetaFilter has highlights.
* And Gizmodo has your periodic table of imaginary elements.
Written by gerrycanavan
April 10, 2010 at 1:34 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, airplanes, Al Gore, anti-feminism, Barack Obama, biology, blogs, Chris Christie, climate change, comics, Cory Booker, crisis, cyberterrorism, Daily Show, David Simon, disaster, ecology, Elena Kagan, eliminationism, end of history, energy, Fox News, Greece, greed, Green Recovery, Guantánamo, health care, Hell, HIV and AIDS, How did we survive the 1990s?, How the University Works, hyperobjects, Jack Kirby, John Paul Stevens, Krugman, Krypton, lies and lying liars, male studies, many worlds and alternate universes, maps, Michele Bachmann, neoliberalism, New Jersey, New New Left, New Orleans, Newt Gingrich, nuclearity, oil, periodic tables, poison control, Poland, politics, polls, quantum mechanics, rape culture, realism, Republicans, Satisfactory Comics, science fiction, sentimentality, student debt, Superman, Supreme Court, taxes, Tea Party, television, Tetris, Texas, the cosmos, the elderly, Tim Morton, Tony Judt, Treme, violence, war on terror, Washington D.C., when you stare too long into the abyss the abyss stares back into you, wind power, xkcd
Happy Birthday Bruce 2
The MetaFilter thread for Bruce’s birthday has some pretty great stuff.
Written by gerrycanavan
September 24, 2009 at 1:38 am
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged with Springsteen, the elderly
Old Enough to Move Down the Shore
Old enough to move down the shore: Chris Hayes’s Twitter reminds me that it’s Bruce Springsteen’s 60th birthday today. Here’s my all-time favorite rarity, the “Wings for Wheels” “Thunder Road” variant.
Written by gerrycanavan
September 23, 2009 at 5:19 pm
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged with New Jersey, Springsteen, the elderly
Bruuuuuuuuuce
Bruce’s 60th birthday earns him a spot on the cover of AARP Magazine.
Written by gerrycanavan
September 9, 2009 at 10:59 pm
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged with music, Springsteen, the elderly