Wednesday Links!
* In case you missed it, a Twitter conversation inspired a post with actual content on this blog yesterday: Meritocracy, Lottery, Game: Notes on the Academic Job Market. Of course, I wasn’t first:
@gerrycanavan back in the day a berkeley grad student circulated a satirical "game theory" paper about the academic job market
— reclaim UC (@reclaimuc) October 1, 2014
@gerrycanavan the dominant strategy, it argued, was something called "the woodchipper strategy"
— reclaim UC (@reclaimuc) October 1, 2014
* Elsewhere in the academic job market genre: Not Lottery/Not Meritocracy, What Is It? From 2013! The Top 5 Mistakes Women Make in Academic Settings. Twelve Steps to Being a “Good Enough” Professor.
* And elsewhere in my media empire:
@mattfrost Yes. I sent that @gerrycanavan tweet to my staff yesterday saying it was the cornerstone of understanding contemp American gov.
— Christopher Hayes (@chrislhayes) October 1, 2014
The insightful tweet was this one:
The “policy” disjuncture between “domestic policy” (byzantine proceduralism) and “foreign policy” (half-cocked chaos) is really interesting.
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) September 30, 2014
One out of 63,000’s not bad!
* We were also riffing on Twitter yesterday about the possibility of TV shows about campus police, never stopping to realize that of course it’s all already happened years ago.
* Eight faculty members go on strike at the General Theological Seminary, which the administration says is tantamount to quitting. A big precedent could be set here if they get away with it.
* It will take nearly $34 million each year over a 20-year period to address deferred maintenance needs and capital improvements at four major Milwaukee cultural institutions and provide public financing for a new arena.
* Elon Musk explains how we’ll colonize Mars.
* A brief FAQ on Steven Salaita.
I have some other weird idiosyncratic justification for why he was fired that avoids the plain reality that he was fired for holding controversial political views.
* A critique of the Gotham programme: Marxism and superheroes.
* Brain disease found in 76 of 79 NFL players examined in study.
* Muslim NFL player penalized for praying after touchdown.
* Pa. Official Admits Errors In Investigation Of Whether Fracking Waste Spoiled Drinking Water. “Errors” undersells what seems to be pretty deliberate omissions and lies.
* Here’s What Happened The One Time When The U.S. Had Universal Childcare.
* Decadence watch: “A ‘Tetris’ Movie Is in the Works.”
* Resource curse watch: This Month the U.S. Could Pass Saudi Arabia as the World’s Biggest Petroleum Producer.
* I think I already linked to this one, but why not: A long medium post on the moneyless, post-scarcity economics of Star Trek.
* Netflix has reached a deal with The Weinstein Co. for its first original movie — a sequel to Ang Lee’s 2000 martial arts pic “Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon” — set to hit IMAX theaters and the streaming-video service simultaneously next summer. I am on board.
* And Community just can’t catch a break: now Yvette Nicole Brown is leaving, too.


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