Jun. 29th, 2018

shadowkat: (Default)
1. Why are so many political parties blowing up? -- interesting opinion piece in the NY Times about geopolitics.

If you haven’t already noticed, let me be the first on your block to point it out: The big mainstream political parties across the industrialized world are all blowing up at once. It’s quite extraordinary.

The U.S. Republican Party has blown up in all but name, going overnight from an internationalist, free-trade, deficit-hawk party to a protectionist, anti-immigrant, deficit-dove party — all to accommodate the instincts of Donald Trump and his base.

As the former House Speaker John Boehner noted: “There is no Republican Party. There’s a Trump party. The Republican Party is kind of taking a nap somewhere.” Actually, it’s dead, but it’s not alone in the cemetery.

Italy’s last election ended with its mainstream center-left getting crushed, bringing to power instead a coalition of far-left, far-right populists, whose focus ranges from guaranteeing minimum income for Italy’s 11 percent unemployed to rebuffing immigrants and the European Union.

Britain’s Labour Party has gone from center-left to quasi-Marxist. And the Brexit-loving Tories, having pushed Britain to exit the E.U. without any plan, are now divided and paralyzed over how to implement the economic suicide they’ve promised voters.

The U.S. Democrats are fractured between a Bernie Sanders quasi-socialist wing and a center-left wing, but are glued together for now — thank goodness — by the overriding need to defeat Trump. German Chancellor Angela Merkel took four months to form a barely coherent governing coalition, after her ruling party got hammered in the last election — and that fragile coalition may soon implode over immigration tensions. And French President Emmanuel Macron leads a centrist party that did not exist three years ago.

As Quartz noted, the French Socialist Party “went from running the country to receiving just 6 percent of the vote in the first round of presidential elections last year.” In the Netherlands, the Labor Party has been decimated, going from 25 percent of the vote in 2012, and governing in a coalition, to just 6 percent in last year’s general election.

What’s going on? My short answer: climate change — but not just the one you think. We’re actually going through three climate changes at once, and together they are reshaping the ecosystems of work, learning, geopolitics, ethics and community in ways that parties built on our old left-right binary choices can no longer easily contain.

How so? We’re going through a change in the climate of the climate: We’re going from later to now. When I was growing up in Minnesota, later was when I could clean that lake, save that forest or rescue that endangered owl. Today later is officially over. Later will now be too late, so whatever you’re going to save, save it now. That’s a climate change.
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We’re going through a change in the climate of globalization: We’re going from an interconnected world to an interdependent world. In an interdependent world your friends can kill you faster than your enemies. If banks in Greece or Italy — both NATO allies — go under tonight, your retirement fund will feel it. And in an interdependent world, your rivals falling becomes more dangerous than your rivals rising. If China takes six more islands in the South China Sea tonight, you won’t lose sleep; if China loses 6 percent growth tonight, you could lose your job.

Lastly, we’re going through a change in the climate of technology. Machines are acquiring most of the unique attributes of humans — particularly the ability to learn, analyze, reason, maneuver and drive on their own.

From 1960 to 2000, Quartz reported, U.S. manufacturing employment stayed roughly steady at around 17.5 million jobs. But between 2000 and 2010, thanks largely to digitization and automation, “manufacturing employment plummeted by more than a third,” which was “worse than any decade in U.S. manufacturing history.” And we’ve digitized only about 20 percent of the economy, meaning there’s tremendous technological climate change yet ahead.

These climate changes are reshaping the ecosystem of work — wiping out huge numbers of middle-skilled jobs — and this is reshaping the ecosystem of learning, making lifelong learning the new baseline for advancement.

These three climate changes are also reshaping geopolitics. They are like a hurricane that is blowing apart weak nations that were O.K. in the Cold War — when superpowers would shower them with foreign aid and arms, when China could not compete with them for low-skilled work and when climate change, deforestation and population explosions had not wiped out vast amounts of their small-scale agriculture.

Today, though, without those props, the most fragile nations are fracturing, like El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras south of us and in sub-Saharan Africa and the Middle East south of Europe. There is not enough order, sustainable land or industry to hold people on their farms or big cities. And this is creating the most relevant geopolitical divide in the world today: the divide between the World of Order and the World of Disorder. In Europe the boundary is the Mediterranean, and in the Americas it’s the Rio Grande.

And the number of people — now armed with cellphone pictures and directions from human traffickers — trying to get out of the World of Disorder into the World of Order is at all-time highs, producing nationalist/populist backlashes in America and Europe.

This is all new and accelerating. But the big Western parties that dominated politics since World War II tended to be built around a set of rather stable left-right binary choices: the interests of capital versus labor; big government, high regulation versus small government, low regulation; a more closed national outlook hostile to free trade and immigration versus a more open internationalist outlook open to free trade and immigration; social norms to be embraced and social norms to be banned, like gay marriage and abortion; and economic growth versus environmental protection.

Ruling and opposition parties tended to be combinations of these big binary choices. But nowadays they just can’t contain and balance many of the new choices that parties, citizens, companies and communities have to make to thrive amid all these climate changes.


2. Hmm...one of the former ministers from my church is running for Congress in Michigan, to unset a long-term Republican.

Fred Wooden for Congress -- he's a good egg. I heard him preach and I know people who were close to him. He's the first Unitarian Unversialist running for Congress.
shadowkat: (work/reading)
1. Here we go again..Round two of Fandom vs. the World Internet Copyright Police:

EU Copyright Developments and Fans

As if World Copyright Law wasn't confusing enough on its own, enter the digital age and the internet, making it even more convoluted. Honestly, this is what happens when software engineers and lawyers have too much time on their hands.

The whole thing reminds me of Napster and Digital Copyright Act, neither of which made a lot of sense either and gave me a headache.

So you too...can have a headache:
Read more... )
The bit about prohibiting linkages annoys me. I get prohibiting sharing entire articles, but links to the articles or websites sharing them? Really? Frak you, EU and the greedy paranoid folks who came up with this new rule. I'm sorry, I published a book. I made it available on Kindle. I know people are downloading it for free on other sites and there's zip I can do about it. I DO NOT CARE. Why? At least they are reading it. If someone wrote fanfic based on my story or book, I'd be flattered. Go at it! I'm not writing a sequel to it. Have a blast. I really don't understand the rigid restrictions of copyright law -- hence the reason I ran screaming from copyright law and went into something far more honorable and a lot more lucrative entitled contract and administrative law.

Half to state -- I was on two list-serves in the 1990s and early 00s while working as a Rights and Permissions Manager, and over time, I found myself agreeing more with the pesky Librarians who argued for expanded fair use, over the paranoid and greedy publishers who argued for restricted use.


2. Controversial Author Harlan Ellison Remade Sci-Fi While Battling Movie Stuidos Publishers and Frank Sintra

Whoa..Frank Sinatra??? LOL!

Excerpts...which probably violate the European view of copyright law, but I am paralyzed by not caring all that much.

In regards to the episode "City on the Edge of Forever" -- fan favorite episode of Star Trek.

But what ran on television was different from the writer’s original idea. Ellison’s script for the “Star Trek” episode presented a harsher concept — including a more overt antiwar theme, illegal drug use among the crew, and an execution. Roddenberry and his team drastically watered down the writer’s idea, sparking a bitter spat between the show’s famous creator and Ellison. Decades later, in 2009, Ellison filed a lawsuit against CBS Paramount over merchandising and publishing fees from the episode, Wired reported.

“It ain’t about the ‘principle,’ friend, it’s about the money!” Ellison bombastically said in a statement when the suit was filed. “Pay me! I’m doing it for the 35-year-long disrespect and the money!”

That was also pure Ellison.


I actually agree with Ellison -- and am curious as to what his original non-watered down script would have looked like. The version I saw on-screen, was good, but disappointing. (Joan Collins played the role of the main female character in the episode.) Part of the reason it was disappointing was all the hype. I saw it after everyone told me it was the best thing ever. And long after I'd watched at least two seasons of Star Trek Next Generation and seen far better sci-fi.

Across his incredibly prolific career — he penned 50 novels and more than 1,700 short stories, as well as scripts for classic television shows like “The Outer Limits” and “The Man from U.N.C.L.E.,” according to the Verge — he was as well-known for his spats and public battles as for his groundbreaking imagination. Ellison tussled with Frank Sinatra over a pair of boots, scrapped with publishers about his creative vision, and even took on Hollywood studios when they lifted his ideas of big budget movies.

Whether you know it or not, if you've watched any genre television series, you've probably run across him at some point.

Part of the only Jewish family in the area, Ellison had to defend himself physically against bullies, Variety reported. That same spark carried over into adulthood. Ellison was booted out of Ohio State University after punching a professor who said Ellison had no talent for the written word, according to the AP.

Hmmm...my brother was almost booted out of Ohio State too, but for another reason. Also, he was told that he'd never make it as a professional artist or a graphic artist. My brother had the last laugh and ended up teaching graphic arts at Yale and Rhode Island School of Design.

“It is the game of ‘What if?’ ” he said explaining his writing process in a 2013 Guardian interview. “You take that which is known, and you extrapolate — and you keep it within the bounds of logic, otherwise it becomes fantasy — and you say, ‘Well, what if?’ That’s what speculative fiction is, and at its very best, it is classic literature, on a level with ‘Moby Dick’ and Colette and Edgar Allan Poe.”

Yeah, sort of do that myself. I guess. I thought everyone did? Except I like happy endings. The world is dark enough, why make it darker?

As the journalist Gay Talese recounted in his 1966 New Journalism classic “ Frank Sinatra Has a Cold,” an argument between the writer and the famed crooner in a Los Angeles nightclub almost came to blows. Sinatra took issue with Ellison’s boots.

“I don’t like the way you’re dressed,” Sinatra told Ellison, Talese wrote.

“Hate to shake you up,” the writer shot back, “but I dress to suit myself.”


LOL! This actually reminds me of my favorite post to date on Ellison, by spikewriter. RIP Harlan Ellison -- where she recounts guiding him through the crowd at an LA Comic Con to find J. Michael Straczynski, while people are attempting flag him down for autographs. He'd been on the Babylon 5 panel.

[See, if you've watched ANY sci-fi in the last 20-30 years on television, you've run across Ellison. He was that prolific. Although I think I liked Bab 5 better than the original Star Trek.]

Then John Scalzi's post which explains his comment in the post article about how controversial Ellison was.

I was in the audience at the 2006 Hugos when Harlan groped Connie Willis, and laughed because I thought it was a set piece between them. I later learned it was not and was embarrassed I had laughed. I have a pretty good idea why Harlan did it and why he thought it was harmless, but he was wrong to have done it and deserved the anger sent his way for it. I liked talking to him and admired his work immensely, and appreciated the complicated human he was. I just wish the first time I had seen him in person, he hadn’t have humiliated a colleague, a woman and a great writer. It stays with me even now.

Hmmm...

Ellison settled his lawsuit with CBS Paramount over the classic “City on the Edge of Forever.” The writer later released his own uncensored version of the original script as a book.

So, I can just go and read it, if I want to.

Oh...And... cjlasky7 wrote a funny piece about Harlan Ellison going to heaven which is interesting, except I didn't know Jews believed in Heaven?? I don't. Or rather I have a different take on it, but I'm also not Jewish. Unitarian Universalist at the moment. We don't believe in hell or heaven really, so much as everyone rejoins the source at some point, being energy beings in organic matter -- the organic matter dies, we go back to the source. (Or at least that's what I believe, I'm not clear on UU's -- their beliefs seem to go all over the map.)

Goodbye Harlan.

Sigh. You couldn't have taken the Doofus with you? Actually, I've decided the Doofus isn't killable by natural causes on account of the fact that he is a soulless vampire. I'm nicknaming him Vlad.
And please, someone, stake him already...and while you're at it, all his cronies.

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