Using Technology to Deepen Democracy, Using Democracy to Ensure Technology Benefits Us All
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Using Technology to Deepen Democracy, Using Democracy to Ensure Technology Benefits Us All
"LOVE LOVE LOVE your futorological brickbats! Love them! You are in fine company with Ambrose Bierce's Devil's Dictionary with these." -- Paulina Borsook
"Devoted to highly rhetorical nitpicking, but it is fun to read." -- Chris Mooney
"Rather close but correct reading." -- Evgeny Morozov
"Mean, but true." -- Annalee Newitz
"Dale Carrico's skewering of the salvific pretensions of Silicon Valley's soi disant savior/founders never disappoints." -- Frank Pasquale
"Pretty breathless, but I guess it had to be said." -- Bruce Sterling
"An essential reality check for those who are too entranced by transhumanism to notice the sordid reality behind the curtain." -- Charlie Stross
10 comments:
It is curious, I suppose, to realize that as a kid I never wanted to be a comic book hero in a cape but a Vulcan or one of the Istari (to whom I had also assimilated Mary Stewart's Merlin figure) or a Bene Gesserit in a robe...
I think the true path to tenure might involve you showing up to class in robes and some kind of headdress.
I will try and get into grad school and TA if that becomes a plan.
I am pretty sure I became a socialist because of the Red Mars triology by Kim Stanley Robinson. I mean not the only thing but still important. Or it could be my undying love for Superman. I really can't decide.
Chad, the old joke "Does the Pope wear a dress?" comes to mind.
Elias, the Mars books made my socialism much more confident. I had found the theory compelling long before, but Robinson gave socialist common sense such a contemporary rhythm and rhetoric. I will admit (what a curiously confessional blog day this has turned out to be!) I have long dreamed of either Ronald Moore or Aaron Sorkin doing the Mars Trilogy in three seasons on SF or HBO. Re-reading the books I can viscerally envision the scenes...
Yeah! I agree that it would be much better as a series rather than film. Spike Tv currently has the rights which makes me afraid but I do not know maybe they will try to become like HBO and actually produce quality rather than quantity . For me, I just happen to have read them at the perfect time when I was 17 years old and interested in (to my shame now, but I loved Heinlein before I discovered Michael Moorcock and the more complex genre writers)libertarianism. But his story with compelling characters and intelligent political argument made me realise that the values I had could never be achieved by capitalism, patriarchy and plutocracy.
> I'm pretty sure I became a rhetorician because I always wanted to be a Bene Gesserit witch.
Using the Voice on us, are you?
;->
I don't use Voice, gurl, I use Face.
I still read Heinlein. Number of the Beast was and remains my favorite (I first read it the year it was published!), but obviously that's not because of but in spite of the libertopian corporate-militarist nonsense.
I still love Stranger in a Strange land and especially Time Enough for Love. I love the idea of immortals who lived alongside other humans for centuries. And yes for all the cheese in the world I love Highlander (especially the tv series)
The best part of Highlander (TV) was when it finally realized it was a bodice ripping romance novel come to life.
The episode with Sandra Bernhard was pure gold.
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