Closing some tabs.
* Terrible news, everyone: International Science Fiction Reshelving Day has been canceled.
* Still mad at SIGG for lying about the BPA content in its canteens? Don't worry; there's BPA in everything.
* Having solved all the world's ills, the Catholic Church paid $500,000 to see marriage equality go down in Maine.
* I was hoping Ned Lamont would make another run against Joe Lieberman. Too bad.
* And Neil sends in a fun Flash application about scale.
Wednesday, November 04, 2009
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
10:42 PM
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Labels: BPA, Catholicism, chemicals, Joe Lieberman, Maine, marriage equality, Ned Lamont, plastic, scale, science fiction, SIGG
Sunday, August 23, 2009
As promised, some Sunday links.
* Jon Stewart had odious liar Betsy McCaughey on his show Thursday night, and you should watch it; video at Crooks & Liars. Kevin Drum says Stewart shouldn't have had her on at all; I think the video made McCaughey look terrible and in that sense was an important public service.
* Atlas Obscura: A Compendium of the World's Wonders, Curiosities, and Esoterica.
* Mandatory pre-Mad-Men reading: Pandagon's defense of Betty Draper.
* Have we reached Peak Crazy? Fox forces Glenn Beck to take a vacation.
* Responding to Krugman, Glenn Greenwald considers whether Obama has lost the trust of progressives. More on the latest polls showing progressives' loss of faith from Steve Benen, while Matt Yglesias ponders the meaning of GOP approval numbers that "appear to be stuck near some kind of theoretical minimum" and TPM reports Sarah Palin winning the all-important Birther primary.
* Margaret Atwood blogs her book tour.
* Cynical-C has the trailer for Michael Moore's next film, Capitalism: A Love Story.
* Lt. William Calley has apologized for the My Lai massacre, though the MetaFilter thread suggests there may be significantly less here than meets the eye.
"In October 2007, Calley agreed to be interviewed by the UK newspaper the Daily Mail to discuss the massacre, saying, "Meet me in the lobby of the nearest bank at opening time tomorrow, and give me a certified cheque for $25,000, then I'll talk to you for precisely one hour." When the journalist "showed up at the appointed hour, armed not with a cheque but a list of pertinent questions", Calley left."* Also at MetaFilter: SIGG admits to misleading the public about its water bottles and BPA.
* Inglourious Basterds as alternate history.
* Game of the night: Max Damage.
* And the Smart Set looks at The Martian Chronicles in the context of 1960s optimism and the New Frontier. My Writing 20 for the spring ("Writing the Future") begins there as well (though with Star Trek instead of Bradbury) before veering off into The Dispossessed and, later, Dollhouse.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
6:16 PM
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Labels: alternate history, Barack Obama, Betsy McCaughey, blogs, BPA, capitalism, Daily Show, Dollhouse, Fox News, games, Glenn Beck, health care, Inglourious Basterds, Mad Men, maps, Margaret Atwood, Mars, Michael Moore, My Lai, Peak Crazy, plastic, politics, polls, Ray Bradbury, science fiction, SIGG, Star Trek, The Dispossessed, the inadequacy of apology, Ursula K. Le Guin, what it is I think I'm doing
Friday, June 12, 2009
Friday politics roundup.
* Early returns from the Iranian elections suggest things could get heated, with both sides declaring victory.
* On the day Jon Kyl threatened a Republican boycott of the Sonia Sotomayor confirmation hearing, George H. W. Bush cautioned his party not to go overboard.
"I don't know her that well but I think she's had a distinguished record on the bench and she should be entitled to fair hearings. Not - [it's] like the senator John Cornyn said it," [the elder former President Bush] told CNN. "He may vote for it, he may not. But he's been backing away from these...backing off from those radical statements to describe her, to attribute things to her that may or may not be true.* Kos analyzes party ID, empathy, and the generation gap.
"And she was called by somebody a racist once. That's not right. I mean that's not fair. It doesn't help the process. You're out there name-calling. So let them decide who they want to vote for and get on with it."
* High-school student discovers plastic-eating microbe. We're saved!
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
4:25 PM
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Labels: empathy, George H. W. Bush, Iran, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, party politics, plastic, polls, Republicans, Sonia Sotomayor, trash, We're saved, What could possibly go wrong?
Wednesday, January 16, 2008
Was 2007 the year we all finally realized how unbelievably stupid it is to be making all these plastic bags? MetaFilter investigates.
Friday, August 10, 2007
The Earth is choking on our plastic bags.
The problem with plastic bags isn't just where they end up, it's that they never seem to end. "All the plastic that has been made is still around in smaller and smaller pieces," says Stephanie Barger, executive director of the Earth Resource Foundation, which has undertaken a Campaign Against the Plastic Plague. Plastic doesn't biodegrade. That means unless they've been incinerated -- a noxious proposition -- every plastic bag you've ever used in your entire life, including all those bags that the newspaper arrives in on your doorstep, even on cloudless days when there isn't a sliver of a chance of rain, still exists in some form, even fragmented bits, and will exist long after you're dead.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
12:00 AM
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Labels: ecology, how we're killing the planet, plastic