August 31, 2005
Katrina Aid Agencies
Glenn Reynolds has an
extensive list of charities that will be helping with relief efforts along the Gulf Coast in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.
Glenn is also planning to use that post as the repository for the charity blogburst scheduled for tomorrow. If you post recommending a charity, or some other action to help, link back to the post referenced in the previous paragraph. He will use that post to list both bloggers and charities. That way, readers of any blog will have ready access to recommendations on all the blogs.
Posted by: JohnL at
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August 25, 2005
Wise Protein
Has anyone (
other than Stephen Green) noticed that
Jeff Goldstein has been on frakkin' fire recently?
He had a brief existential crisis a few months ago, but his writing over the past few months has really sharpened, becoming even more insightful and provocative.
Take these excerpts, for example:
Yesterday, to my horror, I watched as Bill O’Reilly argued what is increasingly the standard populist postition that the government needs to get involved in policing “self-destructive” behavior, if only to save “the taxpayer” down the road from the (largely illusory) set of epidemics professional nannystatists, disguised as concerned scientists, are always warning against. O’Reilly cited such behavior as over-eating (leading to obesity) and drug use (leading to addiction)—though to be fair, he was careful to point out that he wasn’t so concerned with curbing personal freedoms per se as he was with having to pay for the longterm effects of not having curbed them in some way, a distinction with a (minor) difference.
-
25 August 2005
and
Me, IÂ’m willing to make the following offer: I will accept as valid the chickenhawk argument from any person who agrees to support a Constitutional Amendment making military service a prerequisite for all who presume to shape foreign policy, up to and including the President, members of both the House and Senate, and all Federal Court justices. Either that, or from those who push to pass a Constitutional Amendment disbanding the military, which makes the question moot.
Short of that, I’d ask you to save your anti-democratic impulses for, say, campus speech codes or social engineering programs driven by the idea of proportionality—and allow the grownups to make the difficult choices that arise in the course of protecting the interests of our nation. Please.
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22 August 2005
All while remaining
reliably surreal and
funny.
Will someone give this man a book deal already? Or at least an opinion column at the
New York Times?
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1
Goldstein is one of the very best in blogging, if you ask me. He can manage off-the-wall insanity and eloquent reasoning better than I can manage hot and cold water faucets.
Posted by: Gunner at August 25, 2005 11:03 PM (R+5On)
2
I agree, he has been quite good. Wordy, maybe, but good. And he's been doing more political stuff than humor recently.
Posted by: owlish at August 26, 2005 10:10 AM (w/D+Z)
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August 22, 2005
Blog Facelifts
Be sure to check out
Lynn's new look (she substituted
Palatino Book Antiqua for Times New Roman
, it seems).
Also, SciFi Ranter Girl has an awesome new banner featuring the green Orion Slave Girls of Star Trek.

Enjoy the new looks!
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August 16, 2005
Writer's Bleg
In case you forgot, in about a month and a half,
John Scalzi will begin to accept manuscripts for potential publication in the Spring 2006 edition of
Subterranean magazine.
As special guest editor of this edition, he has laid out some interesting ground rules. Namely, he wants stories of 5000 words or less that skillfully employ classic SF cliches.
I am thinking about submitting a short story or two, just for the fun of it. I have a couple of ideas for some cliches to work around. But I would also like to quiz the only non-captive audience I have yet found for my writing: what SF cliches annoy you the most, and why?
Please don't send me any plot suggestions or story ideas (write your own story for submission instead). But if there is a traditional plot device, stereotypical setting, or some other element of SF (whether in movies, TV, or written word) that annoys you through its overuse, please let me know about it.
Thanks.
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1
People on other planets speaking nearly-perfect American English (or even worse, nearly-perfect American English with a British or other European accent... can you tell I sometimes have issues with shows like
Stargate SG-1?...)
Posted by: LDH at August 17, 2005 11:10 AM (bqPDz)
2
I've always had a problem with technologically AND morally superior aliens who suddenly appear to warn us that we'd better support the liberal cause du jour: (anti Nuclear War, anti Nuclear Power, Save the Whales, the United Nations as one world government, Rent Control in NYC, etc.) or we will destroy ourselves and our planet.
Who asked them to butt in and run our planet?
Frackin Interstellar Limousine Liberals...
Posted by: Ishy at August 17, 2005 02:45 PM (WIFkt)
3
The cliche from the Military SF genre is that no matter how outnumbered or outgunned we are, the anti-social monkey-boys from Terra are way more ruthless, deadly, innovative, or adaptable than the aliens and end up winning easily despite overwhelming odds. Fun to read but, like cotton candy, it does not stay with you for long.
Posted by: Ishy at August 17, 2005 03:02 PM (WIFkt)
4
Thanks for your input. Ishy, your second comment is actually one of my favorite cliches in SF, of which I will never tire. It would be too depressing I think to write in a universe where that weren't true. I'm sure there's an award-winning novel somewhere in that idea.
Posted by: JohnL at August 17, 2005 10:23 PM (gplif)
5
In that case, have you read Alan Dean Foster's The Damned trilogy [A Call to Arms, The False Mirror, The Spoils of War]? Two sides of an intergalactic war are looking for allies, and find humanity. Humanity kicks butt.
Posted by: owlish at August 18, 2005 11:33 AM (QiOeU)
6
As far as cliches, the "last man alive" thing often bugs me.
Posted by: owlish at August 18, 2005 11:34 AM (QiOeU)
7
Owlish, thanks for the feedback. I haven't read that Alan Dean Foster trilogy, but will have to check it out. I agree on the "last man alive" cliche, but don't mind "last people alive rebuilding civilization" a la The Stand or Lucifer's Hammer.
Posted by: JohnL at August 18, 2005 11:54 AM (Hs4rn)
8
The big cliche that annoys me is killing off un-known charecters on well-known shows. Countless away missions on any number of Star Trek shows did it. I just dislike a charecter created so they can be killed off in the most absurd manner possible, while the well known cast members miraciously escape harm. Eye-rolling ensues every time.
I also favor Ishy's first problem with nosy-asss 'superior' alien races and wanting to come down here and start some shiite.

You consider
The Stand to be SF? Never thought of it that way myself.
Posted by: Rhianna at August 18, 2005 06:32 PM (W1iQw)
9
Rhianna,
First, welcome back to the 'net.
Agreed on your comments. And I don't really consider The Stand to be SF.
Posted by: JohnL at August 18, 2005 06:57 PM (dYzx6)
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