Gerry Canavan's Blog, page 25

June 10, 2018

Sunday! Morning! Links!

[image error]* CFP: “Hobgoblins of Fantasy: American Fantasy Fiction in Theory,” Special Feature in The New Americanist.


* CFP: Historical Fictions Research Network, “Radical Fictions.”


We are almost certainly underestimating the economic risks of climate change.


* I had suicidal depression. I got better. Here’s how.


My father’s was a textbook case: Depressed white male with gun offs himself in May.


* Manson bloggers and the world of murder fandom.


Nearly 1,800 families separated at U.S.-Mexico border in 17 months through February. 1,358 Children Separated at Border. Torture at the border. ‘The Worst Place Ever’ Is ICE’s Etowah County Detention Center in Alabama. ICE’s Rejection of Its Own Rules Is Placing LGBT Immigrants at Severe Risk of Sexual Abuse. A family was separated at the border, and this distraught father took his own life. Down on the border, a new trail of tears. ‘They just took them?’ Frantic parents separated from their kids fill courts on the border. ICE detainee commits suicide while in transit to home country. Restaurants Boycott Army Base That Called ICE on Pizza Delivery Man. Federal judge temporarily blocks deportation of pizza worker. ICE Deserves Every Bit Of Our Contempt.




Dear members of ICE: “just following orders” is what nazis said during the Nuremberg trials. It is YOU who are doing these things. YOU are ripping children from their parents & holding them in cages. History will see that YOU carried out these crimes against humanity. YOU.


— Sarah Silverman (@SarahKSilverman) June 8, 2018





How has there not been an ICE whistleblower who can tell us what is really going on inside, how decisions are being made, what bounties are being offered, etc? To a one, they’re fine with this?


— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) June 8, 2018





When you say "deport them all," you're saying you have no idea how this city, this country, works. You're saying you don't care to know.


— Angus Johnston (@studentactivism) June 8, 2018





A public defender in McAllen says some migrants are told their kids are going to be taken away briefly to bathe, and then it dawns on them hours later they aren't coming back


— Liz Goodwin (@lizcgoodwin) June 10, 2018





Parents have been given a flyer with the wrong number to call the government to find out where their kids are. Last week, the number was corrected on a scrawled, hand-written note


— Liz Goodwin (@lizcgoodwin) June 10, 2018



In Academia, Professors Coming On to You Is on the Syllabus. Be better than this.




There's some discussion on Twitter about male academics being unsure whether to mentor women because they're unclear what behavior is ok.


Let me try to break it down: pic.twitter.com/yRvNMFhqjc


— Dina D. Pomeranz (@DinaPomeranz) June 8, 2018



6 current, former MSU employees with ties to Nassar scandal under state licensing inquiries.


Mizzou’s Freshman Class Shrank by a Third Over 2 Years. Here’s How It’s Trying to Turn That Around.


The Rich Are Planning to Leave This Wretched Planet.


* Black Mirror was a documentary.


* Solo vs. The Force Awakens.


* Bold new horizons in cheating to win. Not that they need the help, with Democrats like these…




If you pretend that the passage of the civil rights acts was the actual end of segregation, full stop, the “American experiment in life, liberty, etc” is just passing fifty years old and seems to have brickwalled straight into fascism.


— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) June 9, 2018



* Lucky break: Cozy land deals meant big money for Trump family and friends.


* Great moments in government.


Some women “wouldn’t know what masculinity was if it hit them in the face.”


* Twilight of the bots.


White People Are More Likely to Get the Raises They Ask For.


* Stories like the one in this thread are so striking because we live in a society that prevents us from taking care of each other. Defying Prevention Efforts, Suicide Rates Are Climbing Across the Nation.


Mr. Rogers Had a Simple Set of Rules for Talking to Children.


* What is hope for?


The Next Pseudoscience Health Craze Is All About Genetics.


* From the archives: “Sum,” an afterlife fiction.



In the afterlife you relive all your experiences, but this time with the events reshuffled into a new order: all the moments that share a quality are grouped together.


You spend two months driving the street in front of your house, seven months having sex. You sleep for thirty years without opening your eyes. For five months straight you flip through magazines while sitting on a toilet.


You take all your pain at once, all twenty-seven intense hours of it. Bones break, cars crash, skin is cut, babies are born. Once you make it through, it’s agony-free for the rest of your afterlife.



* Despite this, Graeber has convincingly called “bullshit” the nature of work today and reveals how – in his words – “economies have become vast engines for producing nonsense”. To his ideological opponents, convinced of the efficiency of free markets, his most devastating attack is to reveal how inefficient these systems can be. I suspect millions of workers around the world will instantly recognise the nonsense and inefficiency he describes. Whether they do anything about it is another matter. A more lukewarm review at the New Yorker.


* Trump in Singapore.




Just as only Nixon could go to China, only Trump could get in a fight with Canada.


— Stavos Keniclius (@Keniclius5) June 10, 2018



Wisconsin reeling from tariffs coming from Mexico, Canada, Europe.


Golf is dying, many experts say. According to one study by the golf industry group Pellucid Corp., the number of regular golfers fell from 30 to 20.9 million between 2002 and 2016. Ratings are down, equipment sales are lagging, and the number of rounds played annually has fallen. Dead Golf Courses Are the New NIMBY Battlefield.


ZZZZzzzzZZzzzzzzzZzzz.


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Published on June 10, 2018 09:00

June 8, 2018

Just 300 or So of the Most Important Links for This Friday Morning

[image error]SFFTV 11.2 is out, a special issue on Mary Shelley, Frankenstein, and women and sf, guest-edited by up-and-comers Mark Bould and Sherryl Vint! Check it out.


CFP: Religious Practices and Ideology in the Works of Octavia Butler, Edited Volume.


* Spencer Ackerman explains Jay and Miles X-Plain the X-Men.


* Inside the (ultimately successful) campaign to recall the judge of the Brock Turner trial.


* Another report from the looting of Toys R Us.


Norman, the world’s first psychopath AI.


* Water missing opportunity not to be wet.


Mapping the Movement to Dismantle Public Education.


My research suggests that those concerns are real, and millennials really are building wealth more slowly than the other working generations. But they are not insurmountable—as long as millennials are willing and able to work longer than their parents and grandparents did. Great can’t wait.


A Professor Brought His Guns to Protect Protesters at White-Supremacist Rallies. Then His Troubles Started.


Solo: A Star Wars Story & The Problem With Prequels. We need to talk about the woke droid. I Have No Mouth and I Must Solo. ‘Solo’ gets one thing right: The droids in ‘Star Wars’ are basically slaves. What Solo could have learned from My Friend Dahmer. Disney manages to learn $50M on a Star Wars movie. Kelly Marie Tran has deleted all the posts off her Instagram due to months of harassment she has received for her character Rose in The Last Jedi. Racism, Misogyny & Death Threats: How Star Wars Fans Turned to the Dark Side. What if Star Wars never happened?




[whispering to date while watching Solo when Solo first appears on the screen] "movies exist to generate wealth for corporate shareholders."


— your friend john (@johnsemley3000) June 3, 2018



Colonial Hottie: Gal Gadot, Wonder Woman and Brand Israel.


Trump keeps making it harder for people to seek asylum legally. The Awful Spectacle of 200 Immigration Officers Raiding a Couple of Garden Stores. Former DACA recipient murdered in Mexico after deportation. The Heartache of a Migrant Boy Taken From His Father. Mom and 4 children forced to separate after seeking asylum in US. Cops are called when a senator tries to see kids taken from their immigrant parents. Yet another nightmare child separation story from the Chris Hayes podcast. ICE Agent Decides He Wants Kids After Seeing Incredible Love And Devotion Of Parents Begging Him Not To Take Their Child. Feds Deport Uncle of Six Orphans Whose Parents Died Fleeing ICE. UN office calls on US to stop separating families at border. U.S. sending 1,600 immigration detainees to federal prisons. Pizza Delivery Man Arrested By ICE Is Scheduled to Be Deported This Monday. A GoFundMe for Pablo and His Family.




In this case DOJ successfully argues a woman from El Salvador, who would otherwise be granted asylum, can be forcibly deported from the US for providing material support to terrorists.


Even though said material support came AFTER GUERILLAS KIDNAPPED AND FUNCTIONALLY ENSLAVED HER https://t.co/cmV00wqZuA


— Chris Hayes (@chrislhayes) June 6, 2018





Seeking asylum is not illegal; it is a right guaranteed under international law. It’s the Trump administration that is acting illegally — by their own admission — by enacting punishments against asylum seekers. Everyone who is a party to this action is a criminal.


— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) June 5, 2018





No American will ever have the right to pretend they didn’t know what ICE was doing.


— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) June 5, 2018





The US government chaotically shuffling thousands of children it has kidnapped from their parents through a series of inadequate temporary shelters has a small number of very predictable outcomes, all of them extremely terrible.


— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) June 5, 2018





@SenJeffMerkley was finally provided a tour of the kid jail.


Those are children in those cages. Ripped from their parents.


Many qualify to stay in the US. There is *no* reason to separate them from their parents.


Unless cruelty has become policy.#ThisIsUs #ThisIsAmerica pic.twitter.com/uQIsHojIoF


— Hassan Ahmad (@HMAesq) June 8, 2018



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* Jordan Peterson isn’t a good psychologist, either.


University tutor died after ‘silently struggling’ with workload. Content warning: suicide.


Taxi-Driver Suicides Are a Warning.


* How the media covers celebrity suicides can have life-or-death consequences.




Time for that sad reminder. After Robin Williams' suicide, sensational media coverage that violated the CDC guidelines resulted in a 10 PERCENT increase in suicides. Same effect applies to mass shootings. Newsrooms, please be considerate in your coverage. https://t.co/O5Gy81rSP0


— zeynep tufekci (@zeynep) February 14, 2018



* Death of a gig worker.


What gets muddled in this telling of the gig economy is the idea of control. An Uber driver can pick her hours, yes. But is she really her own boss, or is the boss the company’s algorithm? The algorithm, after all, determines where the driver will head next, who she’ll pick up, and how much she’ll be paid for that trip. In other words, many important features of the job are outside the driver’s control.


* Trump administration tells court it won’t defend key provisions of the Affordable Care Act. The Trump administration believes Obamacare’s preexisting conditions protections are now unconstitutional.


Down With the Copay.


Justice Department Secretly Accessed New York Times Reporter’s Email and Phone Records to Find Government Leaker.


* Literally just letting coal barons write the laws.


* Huge, if true: America Is a Spiraling Corporate Contract Dystopia.


* Trump’s Right-Hand Troll.


* Gaming it out: Would a Former President Get Secret Service Protection in Prison? Just kidding, Democrats are on the case. Meanwhile.




Republicans who claim the president can commit literally any crime without consequence either during (no indictments) or after (self-pardon) office are saying they do not consider this country a democracy + do not accept any limit other than their own will to power. Believe them!


— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) June 5, 2018



* David Hogg SWATted.


* Questions on Michigan’s Investment Tactics.




Recent scrutiny of investment practices by the University of Michigan is raising concerns about conflicts of interest and ethical lapses at colleges and universities seeking to increase their endowments.


Questions about Michigan’s investment practices were prompted by an investigation by the Detroit Free Press, which found that a large portion of the university’s nearly $11 billion endowment is invested in private equity, hedge and venture capital funds, and real estate investment firms run by top university donors and alumni investment advisers.




Dystopian Bodies: Barbara Ehrenreich Attacks the Epidemic of Wellness.


* Scott Pruitt, GOAT.


Poor road conditions cost Wisconsin drivers $637 each year.


The Post has mapped more than 52,000 homicides in major American cities over the past decade and found that across the country, there are areas where murder is common but arrests are rare.


‘Clear-sky’ flooding worsens across U.S. as sea levels rise, report says.


* Below are the two main written versions of Sojourner’s speech, the original, on the left, was delivered at the Woman’s Rights Convention in Akron, Ohio on May 29, 1851. The full text of each speech follows the synopsis below so you can see the differences line by line. I have highlighted overt similarities between the two versions. While Frances Gage changed most of the wording and added the southern slave dialect to her 1863 version, it is clear the origin of Gage’s speech comes from Sojourner’s original 1851 speech.


* Hard pass: Howard Schultz steps down at Starbucks, may consider run for president.


* Without Interpreters, California’s Deaf Prisoners Are Getting Stuck Behind Bars.


* A major physics experiment just detected a particle that shouldn’t exist.


The first hints these elusive particles turned up decades ago. But after years of dedicated searches, scientists have been unable to find any other evidence for them, with many experiments contradicting those old results. These new results now leave scientists with two robust experiments that seem to demonstrate the existence of sterile neutrinos, even as other experiments continue to suggest sterile neutrinos don’t exist at all.


The Enlightenment’s Dark Side.


[image error]Rebuilding the Antinuclear Movement. How a little “working group” stopped Oakland from becoming a mini-fusion center for the Department of Homeland Security. Tech Workers Versus the Pentagon.


The District of Columbia is considering legislation to lower the voting age to 16 (something some localities already allow for local elections only). Bills are pending in California, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island and Puerto Rico to lower the voting age to 17 for primary or general elections.


Your schedule could be killing you.


Nazis brauchen keinen Badespaß.


* Schopenhauer, come on. You promised to keep it together.


Time’s Up, Bill.


Volkswagen Vows to End Experiments on Animals.


Marvel’s Women Problem: Not A Single MCU Film Has Female Characters on Screen for More Than 40 Percent of Runtime.


* Drones taught to spot violent behavior in crowds using AI. “The work has questionable accuracy rates, but it shows how AI is being used to automate surveillance.”


* Ways brands can celebrate Pride Month.


Hacked: 92 Million Account Details for DNA Testing Service MyHeritage.


It’s Ulysses! No, it’s Finnegans Wake! Who Can Tell?!


* Books Just for Grownups.


The Art and Activism of the Anthropocene, Part II: A Conversation with Jeff VanderMeer, Zaria Forman, and Gleb Raygorodetsky.


* Lovely Twitter thread on Dr. Apgar, who probably saved my daughter’s life, and maybe yours too.


Body Positivity Is a Scam. “How a movement intended to lift up women really just limits their acceptable emotions. Again.”


* It’s something unpredictable, but in the end it’s right; I hope you had the time of your life.


And these recently declassified NSA posters make our authoritarian dystopia seem fun.


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Published on June 08, 2018 08:58

June 3, 2018

Sunday Morning Links!

[image error]Because Saturday Night Links just weren’t enough.


Catching Up With the Next Generation of Sci-Fi Writers at the Village Voice.



*


“We’re 100 percent committed to diversity…Marvel is the world outside your window and we want not only our characters but our creative talent to reflect that world and it hasn’t been an easy road to be honest with you. Going back to the 60s when Marvel were created it was created by a number of white men here in New York City who were working in our studio… But now, we do not have any artists that work in Marvel. All our writers and artists work — are freelancers that live around the world so our talent base has diversified almost more quickly than our character base has.”


Accountancy used to be boring – and safe. But today it’s neither. Have the ‘big four’ firms become too cosy with the system they’re supposed to be keeping in check? The financial scandal no one is talking about.


The implications of this authority are breathtaking. Trump, in their view, has unlimited control to open or close any federal investigation. Meanwhile, they keep openly admitting obstruction, and nothing matters.


During one December 2013 hearing, still available online, Scott questioned an applicant about illegally voting after his release from prison. When the man replied he voted for Scott, the governor chuckled and, seconds later, granted his voting rights.




we talk a lot about fascism on here, but a system where a small group of rich media personalities faint over the insults one member of the ruling class calls another while thousands of people in a colony die of deliberate neglect is just straight-up, like, Bourbon France


— dr. robert “west” world, phd (@JayHClay) May 31, 2018



* I used to be a 911 dispatcher. I had to respond to racist calls every day.


Families of Four of Eight Students Killed in Santa Fe Shooting Are Suing Gunman’s Parents.


* Hacking the mosquito.


* “The most common complaint I receive from students and faculty members is that we don’t have enough administrators.”




All of the essential admin at universities are engaged in some form of instructional work (student/faculty services, technology, libraries, etc.), or skilled technical and infrastructure work (cleaning, communication, maintenance). It's the presidents like this guy no one needs.


— M.P. (@OmanReagan) June 3, 2018



“All of the theoretical work that’s been done since the 1970s has not produced a single successful prediction,” says Neil Turok, director of the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics in Waterloo, Canada. “That’s a very shocking state of affairs.” Say what you will about critical theory in the humanities, it’s predicted just about everything that’s happened since…


The one thing that we can I think be sure of is that if we get a signal, we will know it’s an artificial signal [and not from an astronomical source]. And then we’ll know that we are not alone. Will we ever be able to understand it? I don’t know. The researchers who study alien linguistics.


The Soviets’ secret map of Seattle tells a lot about us.


* Itsa me!


* And I’d at least give it a watch.




Dan: “Your mother is dead, Darleen.”


Darleen: “No dad. I can bring her back. As a Robotic Online Synthetic Empathic Android Neural Network Entity.”


Dan: “You mean a—“


[opening titles]


R.O.S.E.A.N.N.E.


— Daniel Kibblesmith ☃ (@kibblesmith) June 2, 2018



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Published on June 03, 2018 07:09

June 2, 2018

Saturday Night Links!

[image error]* CFP: Religious Practices and Ideology in the Works of Octavia Butler, Edited Volume.


* CFP: Darkness.


Never Tell Them Your True Name: Remembering Ursula K. Le Guin.


The Demanding, Essential Work of Samuel Delany: The Atheist in the Attic.


* Games for a Fallen World: On the Legend of Zelda in the Anthropocene.


Why we march: a then and now look at Marquette student’s involvement in protests.


Capital’s Share of Income Is Way Higher than You Think. Amid wage stagnation, corporate leaders declare the end of annual raises triggered by increased profitability. The 9.9 Percent Is the New American Aristocracy.


* A grim new angle on the intergenerational struggle: Seniors Are More Conservative Because the Poor Don’t Survive to Become Seniors.


Harvard study estimates thousands died in Puerto Rico because of Hurricane Maria.


Is Your University Racist?


Living Homeless in California: The University of Hunger.


The Criminalization of Knowledge.


* A conservative Stanford professor plotted to dig up dirt on a liberal student. Niall Ferguson, amazingly. Niall Ferguson quits Stanford free speech role over leaked emails.


It’s Not Liberal Arts And Literature Majors Who Are Most Underemployed.


Inside the NCAA’s years-long, twisting investigation into Mississippi football.


Colleges Are No Match for American Poverty.


Here’s every Star Wars movie, ranked by female screen time. Should Donald Glover Have Played Han Solo? Disney and Star Wars: An Empire in Peril? The growing emptiness of the Star Wars universe. ‘Solo’ gets one thing right: The droids in ‘Star Wars’ are basically slaves.


* Isaac Cates on Infinity War‘s False Conclusions.


* How Tolkien created Middle-earth.


Inside the Pro-Trump Effort to Keep Black Voters From the Polls. White Americans abandoned democracy and embraced authoritarianism when they realized brown people would soon outvote them. TMZ Goes MAGA. Can the Rule of Law Survive Trump?


* Three tweets on impeachment from Corey Robin.


thread re: how NYT has now basically locked out Congressional Dems from commenting on Trump news. 


Trump’s ‘Forced Separation’ of Migrant Families Is Both Illegal and Immoral. Separated at the border: A mother’s story.




#TheResistance becoming preoccupied with completely made-up fantasies about Melania while all reporting about Puerto Rico continues to be buried and ICE kidnaps children at the border sure feels like a metaphor for something.


— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) June 1, 2018



Why Dictators Write.


* After pointlessly groping countless Americans, the TSA is keeping a secret watchlist of those who fight back. Customs stole a US citizen’s life savings when he boarded a domestic flight, now he’s suing to get it back. Southwest wouldn’t let mixed-race family fly until mom “proved” parenthood. This AI Knows Who You Are by the Way You Walk.


Internal company emails obtained by The Intercept tell a different story. The September emails show that Google’s business development arm expected the military drone artificial intelligence revenue to ramp up from an initial $15 million to an eventual $250 million per year. How a Pentagon Contract Became an Identity Crisis for Google.


Symbolic Threats.


American flag-waving obfuscates these and other abuses of power; reveals the state’s protection and definition of a white, hetero socioeconomic class as the legitimate citizen class at the expense of black, brown, Muslim, trans, disabled, or immigrant lives; and is our traditional response to a sense of foreign impingement on “normal American life” (white suburban families). The message goes: Don’t think about the President’s baseless claims about weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, don’t think about the imprisonment of Chelsea Manning and, now, Reality Winner, don’t think about the dependence of all power on a disenfranchised, exploited class. Think instead of the firefighters at ground zero, who were certain that America would endure. Think of ordinary citizens, like those depicted in the “Main Street USA” ad, and their faith in this city on a hill. Think instead, “Make America Great Again!” Don’t ask: Who suffers in this society when the state makes better security and freedom for its populace a goal? Freedom for whom? Who does a Muslim ban serve? Who do police serve? On which caskets do we lay the flag?


* In the richest country in the history of the world: Nine year old raises thousands of dollars at lemonade stand to help pay brother’s medical bills.


* Die a hero or live long enough to see yourself agreeing with David Brooks.


Bear’s Dairy Queen ice cream treat earns zoo $500 fine.


Archaeologists uncover remains of man crushed as he fled Pompeii.


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* Why Isn’t Asbestos Banned in the US?


Choose-Your-Own-Security-Disclosure-Adventure.


* Tax-funded charter schools textbooks deny evolution, teach human-dinosaur cohabitation, endorse slavery and indigenous genocide.


Meet the Rising New Housing Movement That Wants to Create Homes for All. Tenant and Squatters’ Rights in Oakland.


* We compared Milwaukee police reports on Sterling Brown’s arrest with the video. They don’t match.


Jury Leaves $4 to Family of Man Killed by Sheriff’s Deputy, Along With Many Questions.


* LARB reviews Dirty Computer.


How to Tell a Realistic Fictional Language From a Terrible One. How to Build a World.


Humans will have to leave the Earth and the planet will become just a “residential” zone, according to Amazon boss Jeff Bezos. It’s not the worst idea I’ve heard, but I assume the rivers of meat blood come later.


[image error]* A weather report from an alternate universe, in which science is real and people aren’t idiots.


* Climate grief in the classroom.


* Banning straws won’t save the oceans.


* Bet this won’t either: Trump Prepares Lifeline for Money-Losing Coal Plants.


* Summah. Don’t kill your wife with work. If these trends continue. Teach the controversy. Dads & grads. When you’re almost forty.


I Am A Recently Divorced And Laid-Off Middle-Aged Man With A Lot Of Health Problems, And Everything I Say Is Incredibly Depressing. Ask Questions At Me.


* “Says he had to stage his own murder in order to capture someone, apologises to his wife.”


How #MeToo Impacts Viewers’ Decisions on What to Watch.


In 1975, Gary Gygax revealed the Tomb of Horrors module at the first Origins convention, presenting it as a campaign that would specifically challenge overpowered characters who would have to rely on their wits to outsmart incredibly lethal, subtle traps, rather than using their almighty THACOs to fell trash-mobs of orcs or other low-level monsters.


How 1960s Film Pirates Sold Movies Before the FBI Came Knocking.


* The art of the grift in 21st century Manhattan.


* Google jury nullification.


* Shockingly, ‘impossible’ EM drive doesn’t seem to work after all.


* Best travel photos 2018.


* New podcast watch: Why Is This Happening? with Chris Hayes. The Good Place: The Podcast.


* An oral history of the Muppets.


A research question I’ve been pondering for awhile: When, exactly, did the idea that the President — and only the President — was in charge of the decision to use nuclear weapons get turned into real policy? Answer seems to be September 1948, with NSC-30.


* We’re not prepared for the genetic revolution that’s coming.


* And you can’t argue with the facts: Wearing glasses may really mean you’re smarter, major study finds.


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Published on June 02, 2018 14:50

May 28, 2018

Monday Morning Links! All of Them! ALL OF THEM

* Of course you had me at Zelda propaganda posters.


* Special issue of Deletion: Punking Science Fiction.


* Editorial: We Should Create a Honors College to Propagandize on Behalf of the People Who Already Control Everything.


* Victory in Ireland.


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* A surprisingly large number of Obama-era ICE and HHS horrors got rediscovered as if they were new to Trump this weekend. This is a case where Trump’s horror truly is as much continuity as break.




My grandfather prosecuted Dachau war criminals. Later he wrote a book called “After Fifteen Years.” Its premise was that Nazism can happen anywhere, once good people start believing lies while not believing that those who are different from them are human beings.


— Robert Draper (@DraperRobert) May 26, 2018





I think “abolish ICE” is the moderate position and “arrest ICE’s leaders and put them on trial” is the progressive position, but that’s me.


— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) March 10, 2018





by the time the 2020 primary arrives (like next month) the squishy centrist position should be "not ALL ICE employees should serve life sentences"


— Atrios (@Atrios) May 27, 2018



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* Even despite that continuity, though, we seem to be moving to a new energy state: Taking Children from Their Parents Is A Form of State Terror.




“My son was crying as I put him in the seat. I did not even have a chance to try to comfort my son, because the officers slammed the door shut as soon as he was in his seat. I was cry, too. I cry even now when I think about that moment when the border officers took my son away.” pic.twitter.com/2EmdndFIKo


— Chris Hayes (@chrislhayes) May 25, 2018





Man. I reread the Parable books recently. First time I read them, I thought Butler was going too hard on the predation of children. But she was right in this, too. We are a nation that devours children screaming, then blames them for making too much noise in their pain.


— N. K. Jemisin (@nkjemisin) May 25, 2018



* Fighting spectacle with snores, or why Trump could easily win a second term.


* Is America heading for a new kind of civil war?




extremely healthy society that has absolutely nothing to worry about pic.twitter.com/VOyqESV6To


— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) May 28, 2018



* Fascism is back; blame the Internet.


* Genocide in Yemen.


* I was Jordan Peterson’s strongest supporter. Now I think he’s dangerous.


* After a white supremacist killed a protester in Charlottesville in 2017, Facebook pushed to re-educate its moderators about hate speech groups in the US, and spell out the distinction from nationalism and separatism, documents obtained by Motherboard show.


* Wisconsin Prisons Incarcerate Most Black Men In U.S. Milwaukee PD Misconduct Has Cost the City $22 Million Since 2015.


* When a Nashville man named Matthew Charles was released from prison early in 2016 after a sentence reduction, he’d spent almost half his life behind bars. But in a rare move, a federal court ruled his term was reduced in error and ordered him back behind bars to finish his sentence.


* Man, 79, sentenced to 90 days of house arrest in 5-year-old girl’s rape.


* She Went to Interview Morgan Freeman. Her Story Became Much Bigger.


* This has created a problem that has not been seen before: voluntary, intentional, migrating, mobile, functional, litter. The bikes and scooters are disruptive to the locations where they are abandoned and, because they are constantly moving, the issues of abandonment and refuse are constantly cycling (sorry) throughout an urban region. Yesterday’s bike or scooter blight might be around today, or it might move for a few days and then return. In short, the bikes and scooters share a civic pattern similar to that of homelessness. Thus, in an unexpected way, the dockless bikes and scooters are also competing with the homeless for pieces of urban space upon which to temporarily rest.


* Mike Meru, a 37-year-old orthodontist, made a big investment in his education. As of Thursday, he owed $1,060,945.42 in student loans.


* Executives of big U.S. companies suggest that the days of most people getting a pay raise are over, and that they also plan to reduce their work forces further. Also, rich people are going to be needing your blood so they can stay young forever, just FYI.


* Be more like Chipotle, Jerry Brown tells California universities.


* Report Says Rising CO2 Levels Are Ruining Rice. Allergy Explosion Linked to Climate Change.


* For Women of Color, the Child-Welfare System Functions Like the Criminal-Justice System.


Now that’s what I call ideological state apparatus™.


* A new front in the drug war.


* HUGE IF TRUE: Hollywood isn’t on the side of the resistance.


* Teen Vogue and woke capital.


* Antonin Scalia was wrong about the meaning of ‘bear arms.’ I think a better description here is “not even wrong”; originalism is a rhetorical style, not a claim of fact.


* Sexpat Journalists Are Ruining Asia Coverage.


* A People’s History of Superstar Limo, Disney’s “worst attraction ever.”


* Solo crashes and burns, even underperforming Justice League. I haven’t seen it yet, but it certainly sounds like it had it coming. Relatedly: The Ringer takes a deep dive into the now-decanonized Han Solo prequels from the EU.




The Force Awakens: Female lead, $247M opening weekend
Rogue One: Female lead, $155M opening weekend
The Last Jedi: Female lead, $220M opening weekend
Solo: Male lead, $83M opening weekend (3-day)


Thus, the obvious conclusion:


LEIA: A Star Wars Story, December 2020 pic.twitter.com/QJdjW1nZva


— John Scalzi (@scalzi) May 27, 2018



* Wakanda fans might be interested in the very odd turn the comics have taken. Relatedly: ‘Black Panther’ meets history, and things get complicated.


* Janelle Monáe for President.


* Conducting a posthumous interview with science-fiction author Octavia E. Butler. Your People Will Find You: A Podcast with the Octavia E. Butler Legacy Network. And Ayana Jamieson’s authorized biography of Butler has a Patreon.


* This LARB review of Neal Stephenson and Nicole Galland’s The Rise and Fall of D.O.D.O. made me very interested in reading it.


* Built in 718 AD, Hōshi is the second oldest ryokan (hotel or inn) in the world and, with 46 consecutive generations of the same family running it, is hands down the longest running known family business in history.




With the passing of Alan Bean, eight of the twelve humans who have walked on the moon are dead. The youngest survivor, Charles Duke, is 82.


— Angus Johnston (@studentactivism) May 26, 2018



* Wendy Brown at UC: What Kind of World Do You Want to Live In?


* Interesting Twitter thread on emergency and the suspension of the law.


* Half the budget, half the fun: A Star Trek World May Be Coming to Universal Studios.


* Power vs. responsibleness. Politics y’all. Existence is objectively good.


* This is an urgent reminder: Mindflayers are not sympathetic.


* As Kip Manley said, this is the flag of the Anthropocene.




Earth's average temperature since 1850 — the most beautiful representation of a terrifying trend I've ever seen.


Image by the inimitable @ed_hawkins
Raw data and other visualizations: https://t.co/WZLJXRjvv6 pic.twitter.com/vuUPvASbsv


— Eric Holthaus (@EricHolthaus) May 25, 2018



* And I want to believe! US aircraft carrier was stalked for days by a UFO travelling at ‘ballistic missile speed’ which could hover above the sea for six days, leaked Pentagon report reveals.


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Published on May 28, 2018 06:15

May 25, 2018

Just a Few for Friday

* The draft program for SFRA 2018 is available. See you in July!


But that promise is part of what makes the movie’s sins so egregious. In the course of illuminating some of Han’s most famous exploits, including his record-setting Kessel Run and his acquisition of the Millennium Falcon, “Solo” turns into one of the most frenetic “Star Wars” movies. It whips us around so fast, though, that it’s impossible to see much; it’s less storytelling or world-building than the shallowest kind of tourism. Most disappointing of all is the trip that “Solo” takes into its hero’s head. Instead of making that journey and emerging with something rich and complicated that explains how Han became one of the great characters of the blockbuster era, and one of the most intriguing men in modern movies, “Solo” comes back mostly with treacle.


* But nevermind all that! The Boba Fett movie will solve everything!


Under The Skin: Why That ‘Arrested Development’ Interview Is So Bad. Jason Bateman Showed How “Family” Is Used To Excuse The Inexcusable.


Anguish at Southwest border as more immigrant children are separated from parents. Even more here. ‘We’re closed!’: Trump vents his anger over immigration at Homeland Security secretary. The feds lost – yes, lost – 1,475 migrant children. 




Man comforts his son before being deported to Mexico after 16 years in the US pic.twitter.com/eYcgaJ5Z9l


— People of Earth (@StoriesOfPeopIe) July 23, 2017



* Keeping climate change to 1.5°C relative to 2°C could cost $300 billion but save $20 trillion. Of course we’re not going to do it, but.


* SDS serves as a warning about the fragility of political ideas in the abstract, and how quickly they can be remade when history comes knocking.


* “There’s a reason Uber would tune its system to be less cautious about objects around the car,” Efrati added. “It is trying to develop a self-driving car that is comfortable to ride in.”


* And today in unprecedented shocking developments: N.J. Democrats loved the idea of taxing the rich — until they actually could do it.


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Published on May 25, 2018 07:00

May 24, 2018

Thursday Links!

[image error]* The gritty reality of this world: Marquette University student commencement address from Ben Zellmer, MU Health Sciences ’18.


* The people who buy into the idea of eugenics and racial supremacy—the alt-right and their fellow travellers—will sooner or later have to come to terms with the inevitability of anthropogenic climate change. Right now climate denialism is a touchstone of the American right, but the evidence is almost impossible to argue against right now and it’s increasingly obvious that many of the people who espouse disbelief are faking it—virtue signalling on the hard right. Sooner or later they’ll flip. When they do so, they will inevitably come to the sincere, deeply held belief that culling the bottom 50% to 90% of the planetary population will give them a shot at survival in the post-greenhouse world. Charlie Stross predicts the 21st century.


* My colleague C.J. Hribal’s essay “Do I Look Sick To You? (Notes on How to Make Love to a Cancer Patient)” has won a Pushcart Prize.


* Sure! Why not.


* We did it! Eighties Babies Are Officially the Brokest Generation, Federal Reserve Study Concludes.


* CFP: Indiana Jones and the Edited Collection. CFP: Blackness and Disability. CFP: Essays on Transmedia Storytelling, Tabletop Role-Playing, and Fandom.


WISCON 42! “Doing Justice To The Archive: The Octavia E. Butler Papers.”


* There is only one Trump scandal.


* Stolen election pays big dividends.


* No one could have predicted this shocking turn of events.


* I’ll belabor a few other issues that reduce philanthropy’s net returns to the University.  Fund-raising cost indices suggest that the overhead for raising a dollar is about 20 cents, so initial net is perhaps 80 percent of the gross figures we publish.  Many gifts leverage matching funds from the University, so the true net after costs is quite a bit less than that, or even negative (UCLA’s Luskin Center received a generous donation of $40 million for a project with overall costs of $162 million).   There are other subtractions: the doubling of UC fundraising needs to cover nearly 30 percent more students with inflation lowering the take another 20 percent over that ten year period.   There are institutional burdens: the donor model has spawned hundreds of school, program, and department-level fundraising programs across the UC system, whose costs in time, money, and loss of resources for the educational core have not been calculated.  More indirectly, talking up private funding may encourage the state not to rebuild public funding to 21st century requirements.  (This is a feedback loop that, given years of inadequate annual general fund increases, UC officials should consider seriously.)  And this is not an exhaustive list of issues.


* Profession: The Sky Is Falling.


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Scandal after scandal focuses scrutiny on USC leadership, culture.


* Against teaching evals.


This Professor Was Accused Of Sexual Harassment For Years. Then An Anonymous Online Letter Did What Whispers Couldn’t.


The Best Question To Ask on the Last Day of Class.


* Why does the head of a NY labor studies center get no job protections? SUNY has some explaining to do.


‘Jesus never charged a leper a co-pay’: the rise of the religious left.


* Traditional Disobedience: Renewing the Legacy of Catholic Activism.


After decades of dwarfs and elves, writers of color redefine fantasy.


* Magic: The Gathering and capitalism.


* Killing All Humans: A Flowchart.




"So you know the climate change denier who's running NASA?"
"…Can we talk about how that's even a sentence?"
"The good news is, he did a complete 180 & now thinks climate change as real & man-made."
"What's the bad news?"
"Whatever the fuck they showed him to change his mind!"


— Jenni Polodna (Not Microwave Safe) (@horsewizrd) May 18, 2018



David Foster Wallace was terrible to women.


The Two Crucial Filmmaking Elements Causing All Your Movie Feuds.


* Arrested Development season five has been managed so badly by Hurwitz and Netflix that it’s practically begging to be boycotted. More here.




very late to this object lesson in how we normalize men screaming at women and encourage women to blame themselves for not getting over it quickly enough by calling the dynamic "family" and the screaming "art" and the whole package "love" https://t.co/fiV50tqQ4C


— Lili Loofbourow (@Millicentsomer) May 24, 2018



* Marvel and the End of Counterprogramming.


* HBO’s Watchmen series sounds worse than I imagined.


What Deadpool 2’s fridging controversy says about comics culture’s gender gap.


* Two Americans were detained by a Border Patrol agent after he heard them speaking Spanish. Gay Army chaplain struggles to save husband from deportation. Trump Gang Dragnet Caught a Teen Who ICE Said Looked Like He Was in MS-13. He Wasn’t. “They look so innocent. They’re not innocent.”


* Breaking #MAGA: A man posed for months as an ICE agent. A traffic stop led his girlfriend to unravel the truth.


* Jordan Peterson, The Intellectual We Deserve.


* Shock: 2013 Chicago School Closings Failed To Help Students.


The Privacy Scandal That Should Be Bigger Than Cambridge Analytica. Amazon is selling police departments a real-time facial recognition system.


* Milwaukee cops abuse NBA star Sterling Brown. New York Jets chairman, brother of Trump ambassador, says he’ll pay fines for team players who protest during anthem.




the nfl votes to fine players protesting social injustices on the same day that a police department releases footage of officers harassing and tasing an nba player who wasn't resisting arrest and there are still people who swear there's no problem


— Shea Serrano (@SheaSerrano) May 24, 2018



He went to an in-network emergency room. He still ended up with a $7,924 bill.


* Immortality. Statement of teaching philosophy. Can YOU hit the bullseye?


* And huge, if true: America’s Version of Capitalism Is Incompatible With Democracy.


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Published on May 24, 2018 07:00

May 20, 2018

Sunday Morning Links!

Announcing the 2017 Nebula Awards Winners!


* Austerity is a discipline. Conform, or be disciplined.


* This is relatable content.


* Star Trek: The Next Generation: Reimagined.



The Voyager and the TOS ones are also inspired.


* Is it weird for conservatives to like Star Trek?


Janelle Monáe’s body of work is a masterpiece of modern science fiction.


The Dark Forest and Its Discontents: Cixin Liu’s “Death’s End.”


But no matter what, this happened to Gamora. A lifetime of torment and victimhood, all leading up to the horror of her final moments—her horrified realization that her tormentor is able to use her broken body as the gateway to his ultimate desire because what he feels for her is truly love. The film accepts this, never questions it, even creates its own tortured reasoning for it, and asks you to trust that reasoning. It’s Time to Talk About Marvel’s Gamora Problem.


Arrested Development’s Mitch Hurwitz addresses why Jeffrey Tambor is staying on the show. Well that should lay all questions to rest. And elsewhere in apologetics for things that probably can’t be defended: Deadpool 2 Writers Defend Treatment of Female Characters.


Michigan State Just Agreed to Pay $500 Million to Settle Sexual-Abuse Claims. Where Will It Find the Money? Meanwhile they’re using the settlements to bully survivors into silence.


The current situation of the United States is obscene, insane, and incredible. If someone had pitched it for a thriller novel or film a few years ago, they would’ve been laughed out of whatever office their proposal made it to because fiction ought to be plausible. It isn’t plausible that a solipsistic buffoon and his retinue of petty crooks made it to the White House, but they did and there they are, wreaking more havoc than anyone would have imagined possible, from environmental laws to Iran nuclear deals. It is not plausible that the party in control of the federal government is for the most part a kleptomaniac criminal syndicate. The Coup Has Already Happened.


* It’s never going to end.


Yes, Donald Trump Is Making White People More Hateful.


A bug in cell phone tracking firm’s website leaked millions of Americans’ real-time locations.


* Seems about right.


The Most Popular Board Game the Year You Were Born.


What Stories Could An Aragorn-Driven Amazon Series Tell?




And it’d be fun to see Gandalf arriving as a young wizard and getting into scrapes, maybe a story or two set in other campaigns during the War of the Ring. But we saw the main story already, there isn’t a ton of narrative space for another epic.


— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) May 17, 2018



* The Handmaid’s Tale was a documentary.




I guess I've lived long enough to see sexist stereotypes of women go from "desperate to trap commitment-phobic men into marriage" to "shallow sluts who need enforced monogamy."


— Rebecca Cohen (@GynoStar) May 19, 2018



* Just imagine how unwatchable the Marvel Cinematic Universe would have been in the 1990s.


* Everything you ever wanted to know about Donkey Kong. Everything.


How Onscreen Sex Sounds Are Made, From Kissing to Hand Jobs.


* “The iconic scent of Play-Doh is now an officially registered trademark.”




Cmon put him in the game pic.twitter.com/ggrPZgRQKM


— Nick Wiger (@nickwiger) May 20, 2018



What Explains U.S. Mass Shootings? International Comparisons Suggest an Answer. The problem is guns. It’s the Guns. This Is School in America Now. 2018 has been deadlier for schoolchildren than service members. Siri, summarize a failed state in three sentences.




why don't young people trust the institutions and processes that have exclusively brutalized them every waking moment of their lived reality? opinions differ


— abolish ice. send homan to the hague. (@SeanMcElwee) May 19, 2018





TFW the country with more guns and people in prison than any other nation in the planet, and that's been at war on "terror" for two decades, builds schools that look like prisons and still is terrorized by kids on rampages with infantry rifles


— Patrick Blanchfield (@PatBlanchfield) May 18, 2018



* That this executive is being charged with fraud rather than attempted murder just says so much.


The Greensboro Massacre of 1979, Explained.


* Being Frank R. Paul.


By late next year, bitcoin could be consuming more electricity than all the world’s solar panels currently produce — about 1.8 percent of global electricity, according to a simple extrapolation of the study’s predictions. That would effectively erase decades of progress on renewable energy.


* A mere 400 months in a row.


* And on the pedestal these words appear.


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Published on May 20, 2018 07:00

May 17, 2018

Thursday Links!

* Call for papers: Auscultations | Occultations, Listening to the Occult


On the Architecture of the Folk Game: The Case of ‘The Floor is Lava.’


* Antifascism and the left.


* There were like 15 separate Trump bribery scandals just yesterday. This one could be the biggest.


* Happy anniversary, Robert Mueller.


* None dare call it fascism: Trump administration preparing to hold immigrant children on military bases. “These aren’t people. These are animals.”  ICE arrested a dreamer, revoked his DACA status, placed him in detention, and attempted to deport him, claiming he was a gang member. A federal judge just ruled that ICE was lying—brazenly, intentionally, repeatedly, and illegally. Abolish the ICE Prison Complex.




“These aren’t people. They’re animals.” — Donald Trumphttps://t.co/Ycln6f5PTQ pic.twitter.com/gycKkv7PB5


— Jeffrey Vagle (@jvagle) May 16, 2018





Inflammatory liberal rhetoric isn't why there isn't a conservative-liberal alliance against authoritarianism. The refusal of conservatives to enter into an alliance with liberals against authoritarianism is the reason contemporary liberal rhetoric is inflammatory.


— Angus Johnston (@studentactivism) May 17, 2018





America's near-future hard-border weapons-saturated climate-catastrophe is going to call for some really impressive perversions of empathy and the concept of humanity – and let me just say, my friends, we're on track to Bring It


— Patrick Blanchfield (@PatBlanchfield) May 15, 2018



If men gave birth, the question of whether or not to have children would have been the central question of philosophy from the beginning of time.


The Left Hand of Darkness in Light of #MeToo.


The worst -preneurs.


The meritocratic class has mastered the old trick of consolidating wealth and passing privilege along at the expense of other people’s children.


* The Solo reviews are rolling in. Disney has already moved on.




SOLO Is Bad, But Editorial Policy and Our Fear of Online Creeps Prevents Us from Saying So Outright


— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) May 16, 2018



* Revisiting Springsteen’s worst decade.


Michigan State University Reaches $500 Million Settlement With Larry Nassar’s Victims. Report: USC Ignored Gynecologist’s Alleged Misconduct.


Is Chicago Experiencing a Historic Preservation Crisis?


Can Artificial Intelligence Help Find Alien Intelligence?


* The story you don’t care about, in the format you don’t want, in the series you’ll forget about while it’s still airing: ‘Lord Of The Rings’ Series Will Focus On Young Aragorn.


* Same thing but Young Alfred.


The Wrath of Khan Director Reveals He Was Making a Star Trek Trilogy for CBS, But It’s Been Delayed.


* How can you make Arrested Development season five even less promising? Netflix’s top scientists are hard at work.


* Elsewhere in entertainment news: Hippos Poop So Much That Sometimes All the Fish Die.


[image error]* Scenes from the Anthropocene: Scientists Match Pollution in Greenland’s Ice Sheet to Events from Ancient Greece and Rome.


Someone, somewhere, is making a banned chemical that destroys the ozone layer, scientists suspect.


We can now see how humans have altered Earth’s water resources.


The secret, unaccountable location-tracking tool favored by dirty cops has been hacked (and it wasn’t hard).


* Researchers uncovered 2 pages of ‘dirty jokes’ in Anne Frank’s diary.


* Inside the largest comic book collection in the world.


* In a time without heroes…


Traumatic License: An Oral History of Action Park.


* Poverty and the brain.


* Rage and the incels.


It is sometimes said that a generous basic income could empower workers to better resist their capitalist bosses. This familiar claim regarding the emancipatory potential of basic income has things almost exactly backwards. A universal basic income high enough to be genuinely liberating would require enormous expropriation of businesses and wealthy people. Consequently, there is no chance of its passage until there is an organized working class already powerful enough to extract it. This fact should inform the Left’s political strategy.


* The arc of history is long, but Uber and Lyft agree to stop forcing driver sexual assault victims into arbitration, confidentiality agreements.


* Batman and Eve.


* Kid, you got the job.


* And I always knew: Octopuses came to Earth from space as frozen eggs millions of years ago.




This cosplay at Salt Lake Comic Con pic.twitter.com/hF91aQM6BN


— Eric Alper (@ThatEricAlper) May 12, 2018


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Published on May 17, 2018 07:00

May 15, 2018

Tuesday Morning Links

[image error]A new documentary will explore the life and legacy of Ursula K. Le Guin.


* Janelle Monáe on Octavia Butler and Afrofuturism at Spotify.


How copyright law hides work like Zora Neale Hurston’s new book from the public.


But now, a humanities education—designed to inculcate intellectual curiosity and humanistic empathy—serves no purpose, especially beside such plainly better-compensated and culturally respectable real-world pursuits as vocational and managerial training. In other words today’s neoliberal order is fine with revised canons, and with more inclusive, multicultural understandings of the world—but not with public money supporting something so seemingly useless as the humanities. In the age of neoliberalism, conservatives have briskly abandoned their traditionalist defense of the Western canon in favor of no canon at all. Culture warriors on both sides have been overtaken by events. A bipartisan neoliberal consensus that emphasizes job training as education’s sine qua non now dominates the landscape. The Culture Wars Are Dead! Long Live the Culture Wars.


* Among the Hottest Job Markets on Campus: Police Officer.


* Call for papers: Call for Papers: Capitalism, Social Science and the Platform University.


* Massacre in Gaza.




To be a member in good standing of the establishment, in either party, for any length of time, requires you to utterly sell your soul. It’s forbidden to even accurately describe the violence America and its allies perpetuate on the world stage, much less oppose it. https://t.co/u9cUhV3fAc


— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) May 14, 2018





poo-tee-weet


— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) May 14, 2018





Everything about most Dems’ and MSM’s response to Gaza yesterday suggests that if Trump wants to start WWIII over Iran, no one is prepared to stop him, and no one has the moral credibility to rally the public against him. Nothing about the world in 2018 feels any safer than 1914.


— David Klion (@DavidKlion) May 15, 2018





The future is resource wars and climate refugees; it will only get worse, and it’s already so bad. Our current course points somewhere very frightening. Our leaders are morons and sociopaths who cannot be reasoned with, almost without exception.


— David Klion (@DavidKlion) May 15, 2018



A mother and child fled Congo fearing death. ICE has held them separately for months, lawsuit says.


A DACA Recipient Graduates Amid Deportation Fears.


* The drug war is (still) a race war.


* Black Panther and the Black Panthers, at NYRoB.


* Sweet Briar Milkshake Ducked awfully fast.


* Social media has come under increasing scrutiny for reinforcing people’s pre-existing viewpoints which, it is argued, can create information “echo chambers.” We investigate whether social media motivates real-life action, with a focus on hate crimes in the United States. We show that the rise in anti-Muslim hate crimes since Donald Trump’s presidential campaign has been concentrated in counties with high Twitter usage. Consistent with a role for social media, Trump’s Tweets on Islam-related topics are highly correlated with anti-Muslim hate crime after, but not before the start of his presidential campaign, and are uncorrelated with other types of hate crimes. These patterns stand out in historical comparison: counties with many Twitter users today did not consistently experience more anti-Muslim hate crimes during previous presidencies.


Carceral Capitalism: A Conversation with Jackie Wang.


* Indigenous Canadians sue the Canadian government over decades of secret, involuntary, inhumane medical experiments.


* If people on food stamps made Jared Kushner’s paperwork mistakes, they might starve.


* Not even 18 months in and they’ve completely dropped all pretense.


* There could be life on Europa, and they only have water cannons.


* Video games as archive.


[image error]Cobbled together in America by Americans, and inspired by contractual obligations and market demands, nothing about the Hey Jude album was “authentic.” 


Two X-Men fan letters from 1976, one who thinks Chris Claremont’s new run can only be saved by jettisoning the diverse cast, the other from a woman of color glad to see herself represented in the pages of her favorite comic. The more things change, the more they stay the same.


* Jim Starlin vs. Marvel.


* Westworld against libertarianism.


Workfare for the Private Equity Crew.


* In Praise of Alien3. I heard from a lot of these folks when I compared Infinity War to Alien3 the other week.


The misassigned voters lived in a predominantly African American precinct that heavily favored Democrats in the fall, raising the possibility that they would have delivered the district to Simonds had they voted in the proper race.


A Jury Acquitted The First Group To Stand Trial On Inauguration Rioting Charges. Prosecutors Are Trying Again.


* So inspiring: Disgraced congressman gets a second chance.


For Peterson, the purpose of our politics and books and films and TV is to protect us from the feminine, which is a crazy and destabilizing energy. Certain culture is good for the brain and certain culture is bad, making you antisocial and destructive. Peterson loves both Snow White and Sleeping Beauty, stories in which men save sleeping women with a kiss, and hates Frozen, a film in which Prince Hans turns out to be the bad guy. Frozen has “no understanding whatsoever of the underlying archetypal dynamics,” he explained in Time this year. We must tell the same ancient story over and over, Peterson says, or we will all go insane.


* Literally no one could have predicted: Arrested Development’s Season 4 “Remix” Is an Experiment Gone Horribly Wrong.


* There’s nothing the human race can’t achieve.


* Retirement policy is basically alchemy.




What I’m basically saying is that most “retirement experts” have data that is derived from, at most, one full generation, tops, from a unique moment in US economic history, whose economic climate has changed dramatically in the last fifty years.


— ted, always tired (@teioh) May 15, 2018



* Self-driving cars are human experimentation.


* Defending the indefensible: What Isle of Dogs Gets Right About Japan.


* How you’re gonna die, by the numbers.


* The past isn’t over, it isn’t even past.


* Spoiler alert.


* And nothing gold can stay: goodbye, Peppa Pig.


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Published on May 15, 2018 07:00

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