Top 25 censored stories of the year. Don't miss:
2. US Schools are More Segregated Today than in the 1950s
3. Toxic Waste Behind Somali Pirates
4. Nuclear Waste Pools in North Carolina
10. Ecuador Declares Foreign Debt Illegitimate
15. World Bank’s Carbon Trade Fiasco
18. Ecuador’s Constitutional Rights of Nature
Thursday, October 15, 2009
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
8:23 AM
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Labels: actually existing media bias, America, capitalism, carbon, climate change, debt, ecology, Ecuador, education, North Carolina, nuclear energy, pirates, race, segregation, World Bank
Monday, April 13, 2009
Getting everything together for the big roundtable this Friday is keeping me fairly busy, so it's just links tonight.
* Sad news: Eve Sedgwick has died.
* Matt Yglesias luxuriates in the deliciousness of Richard Burr's low approval ratings. So say we all.
* 'Pentagon Prioritizes Pursuit Of Alternative Fuel Sources.' With the military-industrial complex at our back, we can't fail!
* St. Augustine vs. the pirates.
In the "City of God," St. Augustine tells the story of a pirate captured by Alexander the Great. The Emperor angrily demanded of him, "How dare you molest the seas?" To which the pirate replied, "How dare you molest the whole world? Because I do it with a small boat, I am called a pirate and a thief. You, with a great navy, molest the world and are called an emperor." St. Augustine thought the pirate's answer was "elegant and excellent."* The mutants walk among us: 'Woman has developed an imaginary, but useful, third arm.'
* New fiction on the way from the late, great Kurt Vonnegut.
* 7 (Crazy) Civilian Uses for Nuclear Bombs. What could possibly go wrong?
* Can poetry save the Earth?
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
6:25 PM
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Labels: Alexander the Great, ecology, energy, Eve Sedgwick, military-industrial complex, neuroscience, North Carolina, nuclearity, phantom limbs, pirates, poetry, politics, queer theory, Richard Burr, St. Augustine, the Senate, Vonnegut, We're saved, What could possibly go wrong?
Wednesday, May 21, 2008
You know what these are. They're links.
* Pirates: the key to understanding the world.
* Inside Joss Whedon's next project. No, not Dollhouse: Dr. Horrible Singalong Blog, a Web musical starring Neil Patrick Harris, Felicia Day, and Nathan Fillion.
* We've reached the end of the remake express: they're remaking Highlander. Not only are there no more ideas in Hollywood, there aren't even any more movies to be remade.
* Film School Rejects has the Top Ten Indiana Jones moments. This is actually a pretty terrible list, as the Grail challenges from Last Crusade are foolishly clumped together—"The penitent man shall kneel before God" and "You have chosen... wisely" both easily make the cut—as is one of the best lines from the whole series, "We named the dog 'Indiana,'" which along with four horses in the desert for two decades served as the capstone for the trilogy. But you know a list like this doesn't know what it's talking about when it excludes the single best shot of either Lucas's or Spielberg's career:
Via Cyn-C.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
12:33 PM
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Labels: Dr. Horrible's Sing-Along Blog, film, Freakonomics, Highlander, Indiana Jones, Joss Whedon, pirates, remakes