which is why she's keeping silent.
honestly having read a significant chunk of her book a lot of it seems like poverty/violence porn to me. she went in (nominally) intending to write something about police abuse of underprivileged populations but (surprise surprise) ended up writing a study of habitual criminals. which is--or can be--valuable in itself but we shouldn't pretend that it isn't a distinct subgroup.
― he quipped with heat (amateurist), Monday, 8 June 2015 23:03 (eleven years ago)
you're such a drip.
― he quipped with heat (amateurist), Monday, June 8, 2015 7:00 PM Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
that's uncalled for
― got bent (mild cheezed off vibes) (s.clover), Tuesday, 9 June 2015 03:38 (eleven years ago)
this is the _internet_, let's not be rude on it
― got bent (mild cheezed off vibes) (s.clover), Tuesday, 9 June 2015 03:39 (eleven years ago)
I know what, let's kill him!
― Aimless, Tuesday, 9 June 2015 03:45 (eleven years ago)
what is happening here
― got bent (mild cheezed off vibes) (s.clover), Tuesday, 9 June 2015 05:06 (eleven years ago)
I'll drive.
― Three Word Username, Tuesday, 9 June 2015 07:12 (eleven years ago)
honestly having read a significant chunk of her book a lot of it seems like poverty/violence porn to me. she went in (nominally) intending to write something about police abuse of underprivileged populations but (surprise surprise) ended up writing a study of habitual criminals.
Did you read the part of the book where she talked about other poor people in the same neighborhood who weren't involved with the justice system at all, and their strategies for maintaining that, or poor people who lived in nearby neighborhoods for whom staying out of the justice system wasn't even a very big challenge? It's one of the things her book is about.
― Guayaquil (eephus!), Tuesday, 9 June 2015 14:34 (eleven years ago)
http://www.vox.com/2015/6/10/8753721/college-professor-fear
― got bent (mild cheezed off vibes) (s.clover), Wednesday, 10 June 2015 18:44 (eleven years ago)
http://www.newrepublic.com/article/122010/professors-do-live-fear-not-liberal-students
hadn't heard of the S.C. legislature's funding moves before
― j., Thursday, 11 June 2015 16:06 (eleven years ago)
this basically gets it right. Hostile state legislatures defunding scientists who work on climate change, poverty, policing, etc. are a real-world threat to academics 100x that posed by humorless radical feminists policing our tweets
― Guayaquil (eephus!), Thursday, 11 June 2015 16:56 (eleven years ago)
http://aaww.org/authenticity-obsession/
― supreme problematics (D-40), Thursday, 11 June 2015 21:19 (eleven years ago)
xpost -- yup!
― he quipped with heat (amateurist), Thursday, 11 June 2015 21:33 (eleven years ago)
deej that essay had me shifting from one foot to another ("come on it's a little rich to generalize about the crimes of the genre of conceptual poetry by choosing two recent terrible people who happen to write it") but then i got here
In the domain of fiction, for example, Dave Eggers’s second novel, You Should Know Our Velocity, centers on straight white men who feel an emptiness in their lives and try to find their social conscience in a foreign country. If this problem was autobiographical, Eggers solved it by situating his next two books around the traumas of men of color: Zeitoun, the story of Abdulrahman Zeitoun, a Syrian man who survives Hurricane Katrina only to find himself mistakenly targeted by the War on Terror; and What Is the What, a novel told from the point of view of Valentino Achak Deng, a man who fled the Civil War in Sudan to find freedom in America. If Eggers’s first few novels are primary documents of white feelings of insufficient soul and excessive privilege, these next two books showed the elixir: for the white author to vanish and achieve derivative authenticity by telling stories through the mask of a traumatized person of color.
and my dissent basically evaporated
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Friday, 12 June 2015 04:41 (eleven years ago)
idk much about ConPo but it can't all be about stuff like this, right?
― Is It Any Wonder I'm Not the (President Keyes), Friday, 12 June 2015 13:54 (eleven years ago)
I guess maybe people find the whole enterprise gross, or pointless, or anti-art (this is the argument I see on FB about VP--someone calling her GOTW twitter "basic bitch poetry")
― Is It Any Wonder I'm Not the (President Keyes), Friday, 12 June 2015 13:57 (eleven years ago)
there's also printing out giant piles of garbage from the internet and putting it all in a bit stack in a museum
and a 200-page motion-by-motion description of goldsmith getting up to piss one day
lotta angles
― j., Friday, 12 June 2015 13:59 (eleven years ago)
gone on that wind
― example (crüt), Friday, 12 June 2015 14:00 (eleven years ago)
idk much about ConPo but it can't all be about stuff like this, right?― Is It Any Wonder I'm Not the (President Keyes), Friday, June 12, 2015 1:54 PM (43 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― Is It Any Wonder I'm Not the (President Keyes), Friday, June 12, 2015 1:54 PM (43 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
you're right, it definitely isn't, that's what i was getting at.
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Friday, 12 June 2015 14:38 (eleven years ago)
I'm only part way through reading it ... really captivatingly well-written. I got to the Eliot part, which felt inevitable.
― let he who has not approved of the ronaldinho bottle opener cast the (sarahell), Friday, 12 June 2015 18:30 (eleven years ago)
http://www.inkedmag.com/cant-get-fucking-neck-tattoo-jane-marie/
― j., Sunday, 14 June 2015 14:04 (eleven years ago)
http://slatestarcodex.com/2015/06/14/fearful-symmetry/
― Mordy, Monday, 15 June 2015 00:22 (eleven years ago)
http://alicedreger.com/Hunt
so fuckin boss
― j., Monday, 15 June 2015 01:41 (eleven years ago)
http://www.theguardian.com/education/2015/jun/15/suicide-dropped-sociology-exam-a-level
― j., Monday, 15 June 2015 15:32 (eleven years ago)
The narratives share a surprising number of other similarities. Both, for example, identify their enemy with the spirit of a discredited mid-twentieth century genocidal philosophy of government; fascists on the one side, communists on the other.
this isn't really true; people who don't like "sjws" call them fascists too. everyone is a fascist.
― goole, Monday, 15 June 2015 15:57 (eleven years ago)
yes, it misunderstands that the right these days believes that fascists were leftists
― Is It Any Wonder I'm Not the (President Keyes), Monday, 15 June 2015 16:04 (eleven years ago)
that's a little nitpicky imo. yes there are jonah goldberg acolytes maybe who totally buy into that whole Nazi = leftism meme but I think as a general statement it's fair to say that the left is perceived as identifying w/ communism. 'fascism' as a derogatory term has come to mean something so broad that you could call someone a fascist and mean that they're a Soviet-style totalitarian
― Mordy, Monday, 15 June 2015 16:34 (eleven years ago)
is that because they were, like, the successful totalitarians?
― j., Monday, 15 June 2015 16:38 (eleven years ago)
is what because
― Mordy, Monday, 15 June 2015 16:40 (eleven years ago)
'has come to mean something so broad…', what you just said
― j., Monday, 15 June 2015 16:41 (eleven years ago)
like if u haven't noticed that right-wing critics of sj are framing their opponents as PC communist ideologues trying to censor any POV they deem insufficiently left-wing, and not as volk/land white supremacists that want to maintain conservative systems of exploitation then i guess now you know.
― Mordy, Monday, 15 June 2015 16:42 (eleven years ago)
i think it's bc ppl like the way 'fascist' sounds as an insult
here are some arguments i came across just this weekend
https://twitter.com/JonathanDBrown/status/610163252610269184https://twitter.com/JonathanDBrown/status/610170977989689345
https://twitter.com/Chriss_m/status/610311001653837825
― goole, Monday, 15 June 2015 16:45 (eleven years ago)
yeah so i don't think these tweeters are using fascism to mean the political movement associated w/ Hitler/Mussolini/Franco, they're using the term a lot looser than that
― Mordy, Monday, 15 June 2015 16:49 (eleven years ago)
like he's not accusing SJWs of using mob shaming in order to protect the volk. if he had any real historical knowledge he would probably sooner draw a comparison to struggle sessions, but he doesn't and the term 'fascist' in american society just means 'something bad that forces ppl to do/act/think X'
― Mordy, Monday, 15 June 2015 16:50 (eleven years ago)
Does the social justice internet actually use the term "fascist" a lot, as that article states? I don't feel like I've seen the term used that much in what I've read.
― intheblanks, Monday, 15 June 2015 16:52 (eleven years ago)
i've been hearing leftists (including myself in one embarrassing situation as a teenager that i'd love to forget) calling ppl further to the right fascists for years and years
― Mordy, Monday, 15 June 2015 16:54 (eleven years ago)
Book Burnings are pretty heavily associated in American society with fascists--also misguided critique of art. We learned about that in high school and not a thing about Mao.
― Is It Any Wonder I'm Not the (President Keyes), Monday, 15 June 2015 16:56 (eleven years ago)
savonarolist doesn't roll off the tongue so well
― goole, Monday, 15 June 2015 16:57 (eleven years ago)
also we've all seen the last crusade
― Mordy, Monday, 15 June 2015 16:58 (eleven years ago)
Here’s another strong term: “hatred”. The activist who got Mencius Moldbug banned from Strange Loop reassured us that he would never want someone banned merely for having unusual political views, but Moldbug went beyond that into “hatred”, which means his speech is “hate speech”, which is of course intolerable. This is a bit strange to anybody who’s read any of his essays, which seem to have trouble with any emotion beyond smugness. I call him a bloodless and analytical thinker; the idea of his veins suddenly bulging out when he thinks about black people is too silly to even talk about. The same is true of the idea that people should feel “unsafe” around him; his entire shtick is that no one except the state should be able to initiate violence!
i don't think scott alexander 'gets' moldbug
why am i even reading this
― goole, Monday, 15 June 2015 17:26 (eleven years ago)
Do you 'get' moldbug? Bc he's right that mb is super dispassionate
― Mordy, Monday, 15 June 2015 17:27 (eleven years ago)
https://twitter.com/roastfacekilla/status/436514007382372354
― Vasco da Gama, Monday, 15 June 2015 17:30 (eleven years ago)
I call him a bloodless and analytical thinker; the idea of his veins suddenly bulging out when he thinks about black people is too silly to even talk about.
can't find it now but there was twitter chatter from bay area tech types about running into him socially and having him slowly bring out the edgy casual racism after about a half hour.
anyway, here's a poem mencius moldbug wrote, about seeing some young black men on a pedestrian bridge, and how it made him want to kill all black people:
http://unqualified-reservations.blogspot.com/2011/09/demons.html
― goole, Monday, 15 June 2015 17:38 (eleven years ago)
i can't attest to any bulging veins
― goole, Monday, 15 June 2015 17:39 (eleven years ago)
it's like when you're chilling with a new friend and after a couple beers they start talking about who _really_ runs everything
― Upright Mammal (mh), Monday, 15 June 2015 17:48 (eleven years ago)
kinda disturbed that I live right by the freeway overpass described in that poem
― Οὖτις, Monday, 15 June 2015 17:49 (eleven years ago)
I don't feel comfortable defending that poem which imo fails on aesthetic merits and betrays a racist mindset but to claim that it's an example of hate speech when he clearly struggles w these ideas in the very poem is a misreading. I've read lots of hate speech in my life and whatever this is (racist) it isn't that (hate speech).
― Mordy, Monday, 15 June 2015 17:57 (eleven years ago)
Fascism term maybe appropriated by 70s conservatives from overuse by 60s liberals/hippies/revolutionaries and 80s conservatives by 70s punks/political nihilists? Like, as a word with shock value and all the marketing power that adds a la "Network".
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Monday, 15 June 2015 17:59 (eleven years ago)
Campion acknowledges that suicide can be a sensitive topic. But she’s confident that strong pastoral care and an emphasis on sociology as a rigorous, academic discipline lessens the risk of any distress.
I think this is probably true but the combination of sociology being perceived as one of the easiest A Levels and AQA being perceived as the least challenging exam board makes me wonder whether that's easier said than done. Most schools would only have one sociology teacher, with the variable quality you'd expect, and there is probably a case for saying you want to be pretty careful who you put in the position of talking about suicide to a bunch of seventeen year olds.
― Petite Lamela (ShariVari), Monday, 15 June 2015 18:37 (eleven years ago)
this article predates this thread by a few months
http://www.technologyreview.com/featuredstory/511276/free-speech-in-the-era-of-its-technological-amplification/
i haven't read it yet, but how could it not be included here (if it hasn't been already)
― goole, Monday, 15 June 2015 19:05 (eleven years ago)