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Wednesday, October 07, 2009
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
4:19 PM
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Labels: Barack Obama, Bill Ayers, politics, The truth is out there, wingnuts
Monday, October 05, 2009
Late Sunday links.
* Rachel Maddow kicks ass on another visit to Meet the Press. They should just give Rachel Meet the Press; I hope eventually they do. It's the only version of the show I could imagine actually watching.
* The networks are apparently afraid of SF; Day One has apparently been downgraded to a miniseries and the V remake is rumored to be forbidden to use the world "alien."
* Octavia Butler's papers will go to the Huntington Library in San Marino, CA, joining Christopher Isherwood's, Charles Bukowski's, and Jack London's.
* Playgrounds of the 1970s. A version of the Officer Big Mac at right was active in Ledgewood, NJ, well into the 2000s. (Is it still there?)
* Judith Butler: Save California's universities. My only quibble is that she appears to be writing in the wrong country's newspaper.
* More Nate Silver: That the conservative intelligentsia reacted giddily to news of the Americans losing is telling. It's telling of a movement that was long ago knocked off its intellectual moorings and has lost the capacity to think about what people outside the room think about. Flagged by Bitter Laughter. More thoughts along the same lines from Cogitamus and Contrary Brin.
* My happiest time was after Mao came into power. Our social status improved. People were allowed to express their views. Before, people had no right to speak out. After the founding of new China, the first parade, I was on the front row during the first parade. Foreign journalists from America and the Soviet Union took lots pictures of me. I was carrying a flower basket, walking down Huaihai road, it was very festive, and there was much excitement. I went out during the parade every year for many years, rain or shine. Why the Chinese support the Communist party.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
12:34 AM
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Labels: 1970s, academia, aliens, California, China, communism, Judith Butler, Mao, McDonald's, Nate Silver, New Jersey, nostalgia, Octavia Butler, Olympics, playgrounds, politics, Rachel Maddow, science fiction, television, wingnuts, WTFRepublicans?
Wednesday, September 30, 2009
Post-exam link catchup.
* Today's abolish-the-Senate factoid: The 10 Senators on the Senate Finance Committee who voted for the public option yesterday represent millions more people than the 13 who voted against it. Dramatically depowering or outright eliminating the Senate should be near the top of any long-term political agenda for progressives. Also in Senate health care news: Tom Harkin says the public option has the votes to pass, while Ben Nelson thinks it's 2008.
* I don't usually play look-at-the-wingnut, but John Derbyshire says women shouldn't have the right to vote because we "got along like that for 130 years." Also, we should repeal civil rights legislation because it's wrong to "try to force people to be good." Well done, sir.
* Okay, a second round of look-at-the-wingnut: Newsmax ran a column yesterday advocating a military coup to solve "the Obama problem." Remember, conservatives love America and progressives hate America.
* Corzine continues to gain in New Jersey, with independent Chris Daggett now polling at 12%.
* Background ephemera from the new Red Dawn remake. It sounds like the Commies may have a point in this one.
* Where Superman gets his powers. At MeFi.
* New Scientist is having a flash fiction contest.
* Another entry in Jonathan Lethem's ten-million-part series on why he loves Philip K. Dick.
* People think torture works because it works in movies.
* New favorite song: Zork rock. (You know where I found it.)
* Also from Boing Boing: Trotsky: The Graphic Biography.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
2:31 PM
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Labels: Barack Obama, Chris Christie, comics, communists, contests, coups, douchebags of liberty, health care, Jon Corzine, Jonathan Lethem, New Jersey, Philip K. Dick, politics, public option, Red Dawn, Superman, the Senate, torture, Trotsky, wingnuts, women's suffrage, writing, Zork
Wednesday, September 02, 2009
Wednesday!
* Reports that Justice John Paul Stevens has hired fewer-than-usual clerks for the 2010 Supreme Court term are now confirmed: he's only hired one clerk, signaling a likely retirement in the near future.
* Seinfeld nostalgia is in full effect; FlowingData has your map of character connections.
* How to Talk to a Wingnut: Decoding Glenn Beck and Sarah Palin.
* Today's must-read op-ed: Bob Hebert on Texas's apparent execution of an innocent man. Even more striking than the fact of the terrible error is the look at the basic cognitive biases at work in the criminal justice system:
When official suspicion fell on Willingham, eyewitness testimony began to change. Whereas initially he was described by neighbors as screaming and hysterical — “My babies are burning up!” — and desperate to have the children saved, he now was described as behaving oddly, and not having made enough of an effort to get to the girls.In short: "If he were innocent, they wouldn't have arrested him."
* Behind the scenes of Fantastic Mr. Fox.
* Harlan Ellison and Terminator.
* And the Hartford Courant has your photo of the day. Our public servants hard at work.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
11:14 AM
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Labels: death penalty, Fantastic Mr. Fox, Glenn Beck, Harlan Ellison, John Paul Stevens, maps, Sarah Palin, Seinfeld, solitaire, Supreme Court, Terminator, Texas, Wes Anderson, wingnuts
Monday, August 17, 2009
Great moments in American civil discourse: About a dozen people carrying guns, including one with an AR-15 assault rifle, milled among protesters outside an event where President Barack Obama was giving a speech Monday in Phoenix. How can it possibly be legal to bring assault rifles to presidential speeches? Holy hell.
Sunday, August 16, 2009
In America, crazy is a preexisting condition.
In the early 1950s, Republicans referred to the presidencies of Franklin Roosevelt and Harry Truman as "20 years of treason" and accused the men who led the fight against fascism of deliberately surrendering the free world to communism. Mainline Protestants published a new translation of the Bible in the 1950s that properly rendered the Greek as connoting a more ambiguous theological status for the Virgin Mary; right-wingers attributed that to, yes, the hand of Soviet agents. And Vice President Richard Nixon claimed that the new Republicans arriving in the White House "found in the files a blueprint for socializing America."
When John F. Kennedy entered the White House, his proposals to anchor America's nuclear defense in intercontinental ballistic missiles -- instead of long-range bombers -- and form closer ties with Eastern Bloc outliers such as Yugoslavia were taken as evidence that the young president was secretly disarming the United States. Thousands of delegates from 90 cities packed a National Indignation Convention in Dallas, a 1961 version of today's tea parties; a keynote speaker turned to the master of ceremonies after his introduction and remarked as the audience roared: "Tom Anderson here has turned moderate! All he wants to do is impeach [Supreme Court Chief Justice Earl] Warren. I'm for hanging him!"
Before the "black helicopters" of the 1990s, there were right-wingers claiming access to secret documents from the 1920s proving that the entire concept of a "civil rights movement" had been hatched in the Soviet Union; when the landmark 1964 Civil Rights Act was introduced, one frequently read in the South that it would "enslave" whites. And back before there were Bolsheviks to blame, paranoids didn't lack for subversives -- anti-Catholic conspiracy theorists even had their own powerful political party in the 1840s and '50s.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
2:27 PM
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Labels: America, conspiracies, extraordinary popular delusions and the madness of crowds, politics, wingnuts
Friday, July 17, 2009
Friday morning and one week down!
* David Sedaris delivers a pizza.
* Stephen Colbert rightly demands that he be named worst person in the world. I certainly hope a Special Comment™ is forthcoming on this travesty.
* Confidential to climate change deniers: A headline that reads "Global Warming: Scientists' Best Predictions May Be Wrong" doesn't necessarily help your argument. See also. (Via Atrios.)
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
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7:30 AM
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Labels: climate change, Colbert, David Sedaris, denial, Keith Olbermann, science, Special Comments, wingnuts, worst persons in the world
Friday, June 12, 2009
Krugman: There is, however, one important thing that the D.H.S. report didn’t say: Today, as in the early years of the Clinton administration but to an even greater extent, right-wing extremism is being systematically fed by the conservative media and political establishment.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
6:26 PM
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Labels: domestic terrorism, eliminationism, Fox News, homeland security, Krugman, politics, Rush Limbaugh, wingnuts
Monday, June 01, 2009
Due to various academic commitments, this blog has been very Blogspot Nights lately. I'm not happy about it but it may not change soon—once my comics class is over I have a few weeks off before work at [Undisclosed Location] starts up again.
Let's struggle onward together.
* Daily Kos has a compilation of the obsessive hate directed from Bill O'Reilly towards Dr. George Tiller for the crime of practicing medicine. O'Reilly's response tonight on the air was essentially that Tiller had it coming.
* Birthers overrun government transparency program.
* Petraeus says the U.S. violated the Geneva Conventions, while General Ricardo Sanchez calls for a Truth Commission. More from Attackerman.
* Barack Obama has declared June LGBT Pride Month. Hey, how great! It's like he's almost actually taking action! Call me when you're repealed DADT.
* Oprah and pseudoscience. Via Kevin Drum.
* The accusation that Sonia Sotomayor has—as The New York Times uncritically put it—a "race-based approach to the law" is turning out to be one of the most reality-detached arguments to make it into the mainstream since Saddam’s mushroom clouds. All the relevant evidence—all of it—proves how false that accusation is.
* Franken and Coleman went to the Minnesota Supreme Court today, and Coleman got smacked.
* And atheist children will kill you for candy.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
8:41 PM
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Labels: abortion, actually existing media bias, Al Franken, atheists, Barack Obama, Bill O'Reilly, domestic terrorism, don't ask don't tell, Fox News, gay rights, Minnesota, Norm Coleman, Oprah, politics, pseudoscience, race, Sonia Sotomayor, Sweden, the Senate, torture, truth and reconciliation commissions, wingnuts
Thursday, April 23, 2009
Thursday links part two.
* The headline reads, "Civil War Raging in Right-Wing Blogosphere." It is simple impossible for me to believe that the founder of Little Green Footballs has become a leading voice for calm and reasoned discourse among the wingnuts. That's a perfect demonstration of just how crazy things have gotten over there.
* Crooked Timber talks about neoliberalism and the euphemism treadmill.
* There's a lot to be said for this article at the Valve arguing that a first book no longer be considered the "gold standard" for tenure—but all the same admitting that most of what your discipline produces not only isn't being read but isn't worth reading in the first place seems like something of a bad strategy for academics.
* The film version of Isaac Asimov's deeply underappreciated time travel story, The End of Eternity, has a director.
* And the Guardian has your quiz on literary apocalypses.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
8:46 AM
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Labels: academia, apocalypse, blogs, euphemism treadmill, Isaac Asimov, jobs, neoliberalism, science fiction, tenure, time travel, welcome to my future, wingnuts
Sunday, April 19, 2009
I have a ton of tabs open representing the blogging I intended to do this week but never did. Let us begin with the ongoing implosion of the Republican Party.
* Secession! It's everyone's favorite new fantasy. Polls show a quarter of Texans like Gov. Crazy's crazy idea, though said governor is now backpeddling. And if Texas does secede, some people are saying this time we should just let them go.
It would be the world's thirteenth largest economy -- bigger than South Korea, Sweden, and Saudi Arabia. But its worth would crater precipitously, after NAFTA rejected it and the United States slapped it with an embargo that would make Cuba look like a free-trade zone. Indeed, Texas would quick become the next North Korea, relying on foreign aid due to its insistence on relying on itself.* In less hilarious eliminationist wingnuttery, an Illinois state senator has repeatedly suggested that "Illinois residents 'are ready to shoot anyone who is going to raise taxes' as much as Gov. Pat Quinn is proposing." This talk never should have started back during the election, and really needs to stop.
* The ante's likely been upped for forthcoming Republican antics because the teabagging parties were such a bust while Obama's popularity remains consistently high, no matter what sort of shit they fling at the wall.
* How to become the Republican candidate for vice president. It's easier than you think!
A.B. Culvahouse, a powerful Washington lawyer and former counsel to President Reagan, told an audience of Republican lawyers that for McCain, selecting a vice president came down to three questions: Why do you want to be vice president? Are you prepared to use nuclear weapons? And the CIA has identified Osama bin Laden, but if you take the shot there will be multiple civilian casualties. Do you take the shot?
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
12:17 AM
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Labels: assassination, Barack Obama, Republicans, Sarah Palin, schadenfreudelicious, secession, taxes, teabaggers, Texas, veepstakes, wingnuts
Thursday, October 30, 2008

One of Ezra Klein's readers has too much fun with the craziest yet of the wingnut Obama Birth Certificate conspiracy theories: that Obama is really and secretly the son of (get this) Malcolm X.
Want proof? Here's your evidence.

Case closed.
I'm pretty sure the 'nuts got the idea for this from this post on Blind Item claiming that Usher is secretly the illegitimate son of Ben Vereen.
I read Gawker too, wingnuts.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
11:04 AM
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Labels: Barack Obama, Ben Vereen, birthers, comics, conspiracies, crazy crazy, Gawker, it's all true, Malcolm X, music, politics, Usher, wingnuts, X-Men