lsanderson: (Default)
lsanderson ([personal profile] lsanderson) wrote2025-06-23 07:27 am

2025.06.23

'Swedes like generous, personal, lived-in spaces': The Scandi homeware style that Swedish people love
Dominic Lutyens
https://www.bbc.com/culture/article/20250620-the-true-scandi-style-that-swedes-love

How the Grateful Dead built the internet
Allegra Rosenberg
https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20250618-how-the-grateful-dead-shaped-social-media

Some beaches closed in Hennepin County after water test results
By Kilat Fitzgerald
https://www.fox9.com/news/beaches-closed-hennepin-county-water-test-results Read more... )
lsanderson: (Default)
lsanderson ([personal profile] lsanderson) wrote2025-06-22 08:10 am

2025.06.22

Suspect in Minnesota killings accused of being ‘prepper’ preparing ‘for war’
Vance Boelter texted family that they needed to flee their house before ‘people with guns’ showed up, filings allege
Nina Lakhani
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2025/jun/21/political-violence-online-murder-tradecraft

Recent US political violence aided by DIY murder tradecraft available on internet
People locators, 3D weapon blueprints, tactical planning – all accessible on the web for potential attackers or terrorists
Ben Makuch
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2025/jun/21/political-violence-online-murder-tradecraft

Thousands of Afghans face expulsion from US as Trump removes protections
‘Profound concern’ as administration says Afghanistan safe to return to despite dangers posed by Taliban regime
Justo Robles and Gloria Oladipo
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/jun/21/afghanistan-trump-deportation-threat

Brazil hot-air balloon crash kills at least eight people amid ‘desperate’ scenes
Witnesses say some of those onboard hurled themselves out to escape flames as reports say fire started from torch in balloon’s basket
Tom Phillips in Rio de Janeiro
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/jun/21/brazil-hot-air-balloon-crash

As a heatwave approaches, experts say US sunscreens are less effective than those abroad
Other countries have approved a wider range of UV-filtering ingredients, which allow for more advanced sunscreens
Anna Betts
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/jun/21/heatwave-us-sunscreens-climate

Key RFK Jr advisers stand to profit from a new federal health initiative
The Maha campaign seeks to warn Americans of the dangers of ultra-processed foods
Jessica Glenza
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/jun/21/rfk-maha-ultra-processed-foods

‘This presidency is a brand-franchise’: Trump has taken the commercialization of politics to a new level
Trump’s $499 gold phone is only the latest ask of the Maga faithful to show their commitment in dollar terms
Edward Helmore in New York
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/jun/21/trump-products-presidency-as-a-brand

She flew hazardous fighter planes for Britain during WW2. She just turned 106
Californian Nancy Miller Stratford’s fiance forbade her from going to join the war effort. But her dream was to fly – so she broke off the engagement and went anyway
Amanda Ulrich in Carlsbad, California
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/jun/21/woman-fighter-pilot-second-world-war

Pope commits to weeding out church sexual abuse, praises role of press in democracy
In first public comments on topic, Leo XIV has now signaled zero tolerance for sexual abuser priests
Ramon Antonio Vargas
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/jun/21/pope-leo-xiv-sexual-abuse-praises-press

Internet users advised to change passwords after 16bn logins exposed
Hacked credentials could give cybercriminals access to Facebook, Meta and Google accounts among others
Dan Milmo Global technology editor
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2025/jun/21/internet-users-advised-to-change-passwords-after-16bn-logins-exposed

I study the resistance against the Nazis. Here’s what the US left can learn from it
Luke Berryman
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/jun/22/democratic-resistance-trump

Three people killed in North Dakota after tornado hits upper midwest
Officials say two men and a woman killed around town of Enderlin as region experiences powerful winds and hail
Associated Press
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/jun/21/tornado-upper-midwest-north-dakota
sabotabby: (furiosa)
sabotabby ([personal profile] sabotabby) wrote2025-06-22 08:05 am

Dear Americans

Always remember that if they had the money to bomb Iran, they had the money for universal healthcare, affordable housing, USAID, even egg subsidies if y'all* were so hell-bent on cheap eggs that you'd elect a fascist.

cut for some impolite thoughts )

* Not you, obviously. Or you wouldn't be reading my blog, which has beaten the "don't invade other countries" drum since the early 2000s when I started it.
lsanderson: (Default)
lsanderson ([personal profile] lsanderson) wrote2025-06-21 06:42 am

2025.06.21

Harvard hired a researcher to uncover its ties to slavery. He says the results cost him his job: ‘We found too many slaves’
When the extent of the university’s involvement with slavery was unearthed, a scholar tracking descendants of enslaved workers was suddenly fired
Michela Moscufo
https://www.theguardian.com/news/2025/jun/21/harvard-slavery-decendants-of-the-enslaved

The Minnesota shootings illuminate the character of the Trump era
Sidney Blumenthal
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/jun/21/minnesota-shootings-trump-mike-lee-vance-boelter

Social success not about who you know – it’s about knowing who knows whom
Knowledge trumps popularity in the long haul of trying to be influential, researchers say
Nicola Davis Science Correspondent
https://www.theguardian.com/society/2025/jun/20/social-climbing-stanford-university-research

Why the summer solstice is a ‘celestial starting gun’ for trees
Research suggests longest day is a cue for beeches and other species to launch their growth strategies
Linda Geddes
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2025/jun/21/trees-summer-solstice-celestial-starting-gun

Week in wildlife: acrobatic dolphins, a lost baby raccoon and a pair of Bambis
The best of this week’s wildlife photographs from around the world
Joanna Ruck
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/gallery/2025/jun/20/week-in-wildlife-acrobatic-dolphins-a-lost-baby-raccoon-and-a-pair-of-bambis

Summer reading: the 50 hottest books to read now
From dazzling debuts to unmissable memoirs, prize-winning novels to page-turning histories … Plus our pick of paperbacks and children’s fiction
Justine Jordan, David Shariatmadari, Imogen Russell Williams and Guardian staff
https://www.theguardian.com/books/ng-interactive/2025/jun/21/summer-reading-the-50-hottest-books-to-read-now

Ghibli’s midlife crisis: as beloved Japanese studio turns 40 will the magic fade?
Much of Studio Ghibli’s success is down to one man: 84-year-old Hayao Miyazaki, a master animator whose presence towers over the studio’s output
Justin McCurry in Tokyo
https://www.theguardian.com/film/2025/jun/21/ghiblis-midlife-crisis-as-beloved-japanese-studio-turns-40-will-the-magic-fade

'In every theatre, people would leave': How 'gay cowboy movie' Brokeback Mountain challenged Hollywood – and the US
Nick Levine
https://www.bbc.com/culture/article/20250620-how-gay-cowboy-movie-brokeback-mountain-challenged-hollywood-and-the-us

'Miners showing solidarity at Pride 40 years ago was significant'
Miriam Barker
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cpqnzp278lvo

China has millions of single men - could dating camp help them find love?
Helen Bushby
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c1e0p9eg6gyo

Parties, pyres and pharaohs: Africa's top shots
Natasha Booty
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cly2r4lnwgwo
frandroid: A key enters the map of Palestine (palestine)
frandroid ([personal profile] frandroid) wrote2025-06-20 05:11 pm

(no subject)

The Electronic Intifada:
- Ceasefire Day 5: Bringing genocide perpetrators to justice
This is from the end of January but it’s still very interesting. The EI podcast is pretty insufferable (Nora Barrows-Friedman and Jon Elmer manage to be even more obsequious towards Hamas than Ali Abunimah, which is quite something) but it’s still quite informative. They bring on Dyab Abou Jahjah, co-founder of the Hind Rajab Foundation, to discuss the legal strategies that they will try to use to make IDF soldiers accountable abroad for war crimes and crimes against humanity committed in Gaza. They have a three-pronged approach, one of which has already freaked out Israel and forced them to smuggle citizens out of the countries they were visiting so they could save face, but the other tactics have a longer time horizon and will probably challenge how far justice systems can go on these questions in many countries.

- My imprisonment in Switzerland, with Ali Abunimah
Abunimah went to Switzerland in January, after having managed to get the Schengen ban that Germany had stuck on him last year lifted. He entered the country with no problem, but then Switzerland retroactively revoked his entry, kidnapped him on the street, and then kept him imprisoned for a few days. He recounts the whole tale. He was treated relatively well other than the detention, but it's still a chilling event.

Tech Won't Save Us - How Cloud Giants Cement Their Power w/ Cecilia Rikap
The show’s own synopsis: “Paris Marx is joined by Cecilia Rikap to discuss the ways Amazon, Microsoft, and Google gain power from companies becoming dependent on their cloud services and how generative AI exacerbates that problem.” There are vertical and horizontal leverage opportunities for the cloud infrastructure and AI providers, and that includes Facebook to a certain degree as well, even though it’s not in the cloud business.


---
#PodcastFriday is a tag where people recommend a particularly good episode from a podcast. The point of this tag is NOT to recommend entire podcasts--there are too many podcasts out there, and our queues are already too long, so don't do that. Let's just recommend the cream of the crop, the episodes that made you *brainsplode* or laugh like crazy. Copy this footer so people don't start recommending whole podcasts. :P
lsanderson: (Default)
lsanderson ([personal profile] lsanderson) wrote2025-06-20 09:18 am

2025.06.20

Pandemic preparedness ‘dramatically eroding’ under Trump, experts say
With misinformation and murky details on bird flu and measles outbreaks, experts worry about the next pandemic
Melody Schreiber
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/jun/20/us-pandemic-preparedness-dramatically-eroding-trump

Judge blocks Trump plan to tie states’ transportation funds to immigration enforcement
States argued US transportation secretary lacks authority to impose conditions on funding appropriated by Congress
Reuters
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/jun/19/transportation-funds-immigration-enforcement-trump-lawsuit

Fuel firms can challenge California’s emission limits, supreme court rules
Court votes to back challenge to state waiver that allows it to set tougher car emission standards than federal limits
Oliver Milman
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/jun/20/supreme-court-ruling-california-emission-limits

‘My grandmother never used yuzu’: global gastronomy is out as Catalan chefs celebrate tradition
Top chefs in this year’s World Region of Gastronomy are looking back as they shift from avant-garde cuisine to something more homespun
Stephen Burgen in Barcelona
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/jun/20/catalan-traditional-food-world-region-gastronomy

America made a catastrophic mistake with the Iraq war. Is it about to repeat it in Iran?
Stephen Wertheim
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/jun/20/america-made-a-catastrophic-mistake-with-the-iraq-war-is-it-about-to-repeat-it-in-iran

‘True model of humility’: hundreds pay tribute to victims of Minnesota killings
Candlelight vigil honoring Melissa Hortman and husband at state capitol was attended by Tim Walz and couple’s son
Victoria Bekiempis
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/jun/19/minnesota-capitol-vigil-killings-melissa-hortman

The 12 best books of 2025 so far
Rebecca Laurence and Lindsay Baker
https://www.bbc.com/culture/article/20250619-the-best-books-of-2025

'I swapped nursing for erotic fiction - but I won't let mum read my books'
Steven McKenzie
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c1dewy56n04o

The science behind brewing tastier non-alcoholic beer
https://www.bbc.com/reel/video/p0ljxvlq/the-science-behind-brewing-tastier-non-alcoholic-beer
sabotabby: plain text icon that says first as shitpost, second as farce (shitpost)
sabotabby ([personal profile] sabotabby) wrote2025-06-20 06:49 am
Entry tags:

podcast friday

 Listen this is the best episode of a podcast you'll listen to all week. Maybe ever. In this podcast lies the seed of all other podcasts.

The Aurora-nominated podcast Wizards & Spaceships episode "The Ur-Pisode: The Queer Heart of The Epic of Gilgamesh, ft. Julian Gunn" is about the Epic of Gilgamesh (obviously), why it still matters after 4000 years, and most importantly, why Tablet XII is canon despite what homophobic translators have done with it over the past century or so. It's so good you guys. It makes me happy every time I listen to it. [personal profile] radiantfracture is just one of the most brilliant people I know and hearing him geek out about this is a delight you won't want to miss.
lsanderson: (Default)
lsanderson ([personal profile] lsanderson) wrote2025-06-19 08:18 am

2025.06.19

‘He’s moving at a truly alarming speed’: Trump propels US into authoritarianism
A senator handcuffed, people snatched in public, military deployed – Trump’s slide towards autocracy has come quicker than critics feared
Robert Tait in Washington
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/jun/19/trump-us-autocracy-authoritarianism

Ice’s ‘inhumane’ arrest of well-known vineyard manager shakes Oregon wine industry
Friends and family of Moises Sotelo ‘disappointed and disgusted’ after respected industry fixture detained outside church
Cy Neff
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/jun/19/oregon-vineyard-manager-arrest-ice

‘This isn’t a gimmick’: the New Yorkers trying to restore the American chestnut
More than 120 years after billions of the trees were wiped out, blight-proof seeds are being planted
Oliver Milman in Highbridge Park, New York City
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2025/jun/19/chestnuts-new-yorkers Read more... )
frandroid: A key enters the map of Palestine (Default)
frandroid ([personal profile] frandroid) wrote2025-06-19 07:50 am
Entry tags:

"Fuckin Free Palestine or we ain't fucking"

I am happy to report that Palestine is one of the most salient litmus tests on the dating apps these days. People with explicitly political profiles will obviously mention it, but amongst people who have profiles which otherwise just mention their personal interests, it's either explicitly named or referred to by 🍉. Conversely, though in numbers 10 times smaller, some people will mention not being of the watermelon persuasion.
lsanderson: (Default)
lsanderson ([personal profile] lsanderson) wrote2025-06-18 08:23 am

2025.06.17

New York City mayoral candidate Brad Lander arrested by Ice agents
Lander, who has been released, was arrested at courthouse, where he said he intended to ‘accompany’ immigrants out of the building
Jenna Amatulli
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/jun/17/brad-lander-arrested-new-york-city-comptroller

‘Ice raids while the wealthy party next door’: the migrants living in the shadow of Mar-a-Lago
Five residents of Lake Worth Beach – just 10 miles from Trump’s Maga fortress – share their stories of survival as an immigration crackdown takes its toll
Clare Considine
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/jun/18/lake-worth-beach-immigration-crackdown-trump

Tough, whip-smart and selfless: Melissa Hortman, ‘singular force for democracy’, remembered
Colleagues speak of Hortman’s legislative accomplishments, a ‘steely negotiator’ who went into politics ‘to do something, not to be something’
Rachel Leingang in Minneapolis
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/jun/18/melissa-hortman-remembered Read more... )
sabotabby: (books!)
sabotabby ([personal profile] sabotabby) wrote2025-06-18 06:47 am
Entry tags:

Reading Wednesday

 Just finished: Service Model by Adrian Tchaikovsky. This one was really fun. I have three more Hugo nominees to read but so far this is on top. There's something weirdly quaint about it—it's a girl and her robot story, or rather, a robot and his girl story, these two absolute oddballs wandering a post-human wasteland on a quest for meaning, and I can read like a thousand stories with this concept and not get bored if the author pulls it off. Which I think Tchaikovsky does. IMO his stuff either floats your boat or it doesn't but I find him incredibly fun and humanist and this was a delight.

UpRising by Kelly Rose Pflug-Back (ed.). This is an ARC and I don't know when it's coming out, but when it does, you should read it. It's an anthology, mostly poetry, about mad pride/mad liberation and most of the writing is stunning. It's dark stuff—besides the mental illness, there's addiction, homelessness, police brutality, and so on—but written with unbridled passion and compassion. Interestingly enough, there's a story by A.G.A. Wilmot in it (the author of Withered, which I went on a big rant about last week). As with that book, the protagonist is asexual and has an eating disorder but there's nothing cozy about the story and it was actually one of the highlights for me.

How To Write a Fantasy Battle by Suzannah Rowntree. Another ARC, this is a short little book that is exactly what it says on the package. For reasons, this is pretty relevant to my interests right now, though it focuses more on medieval-style warfare than, say, urban guerrilla fighting but with wizards. That said, it is an accessible walk through the big concepts that apply to a number of different settings, using examples from the Crusades to the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Super useful, well-written, and even entertaining.

Currently reading: A Sorceress Comes To Call by T. Kingfisher. I just started this one. It's about a girl named Cordelia who grows up with a, shall we say overbearing?? mother. Who is able to make her "obedient"—basically paralyzed, mute, and silent at will. She's not allowed to close her door, and her only joy in life is riding her horse, which her mother approves of because it'll help her get a suitor. She befriends a girl in town who also likes riding. That's about as far as I've gotten. Very creepy so far, though, I'm intrigued.
frandroid: Library of Celsus at Ephesus, Turkey (books)
frandroid ([personal profile] frandroid) wrote2025-06-17 04:41 pm

Reading Wednesday - Paying for it

Chester Brown’s Paying For It, his autobiographical account of being a john, is a bit of a Canadian comics classic, and I had wanted to read it for a while. Sook-Yin Lee (former VJ, eclectic Canadian artist/personality), who was his girlfriend at the beginning of the book and has remained an indefatigable supporter, decided to bring the comic to the screen. The film came out this spring, and I wanted to read the comic before seeing it. Finally it came through the holds queue recently.

it's long, sorry )

Oh yeah and I think I forgot to write, regarding romantic relationships, that Brown doesn't address polyamory at all. Not surprising, but his thing about marriage being a liberty-infringing contract is blown up by ENM. Anyway...
lsanderson: (Default)
lsanderson ([personal profile] lsanderson) wrote2025-06-17 08:16 am

2025.06.17

Sen. Klobuchar condemns Utah rep for misleading social posts
Plus: Killer had ‘hit list’; political violence on the rise; photos of makeshift memorial; and more.
by Peter Majerle
https://www.minnpost.com/glean/2025/06/sen-klobuchar-condemns-utah-rep-for-misleading-social-posts/

MyPillow’s Mike Lindell ordered to pay $2.3m in voting machine defamation trial
Eric Coomer, who worked at Dominion, sued Mike Lindell for spreading conspiracy theories that upended his life
Rachel Leingang
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/jun/16/mypillow-mike-lindell-defamation-trial

'He's a mess': Trump says he won’t call Tim Walz after Minnesota shootings
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/live/2025/jun/17/donald-trump-g7-iran-israel-ceasefire-us-politics-live-updates?CMP=share_btn_url&page=with%3Ablock-685166618f08a82a824fa17d#block-685166618f08a82a824fa17d Read more... )
sabotabby: plain text icon that says first as shitpost, second as farce (shitpost)
sabotabby ([personal profile] sabotabby) wrote2025-06-16 05:35 pm
Entry tags:

Tactics talk!

Standard disclaimer: I am not involved in any of this. Discussions of protest tactics are purely speculative; this is not legal advice, and if you commit an actual crime, don't post about it.
 
Courtesy of a friend who may identify themselves if they choose (thank you!) I read this article in Mother Jones about the No Sleep For ICE movement and can't help constrasting it with the #NoKings protest. Not that I'd want to disparage the latter—I think it's awesome that people did it!—but the former is an example of the kinds of tactics that we increasingly need to see.

I have a number of issues with protest marches, especially in North America. We on the left tend towards reification of historical protest movements without ever analyzing what made them effective (or not). A good example locally is the Days of Action, a series of rolling one-day strikes against the extremist right-wing government of Mike Harris in 1996. These were a resounding failure. Mike Harris and his regime steamrolled over the labour movement in Ontario, which never recovered, and despite being directly responsible for a number of deaths, continues to enrich himself by running gulags for seniors. However, these protests were loud, colourful, and most importantly, made people feel like they were Doing Something. Again—it's important to make people feel like they are Doing Something, that is how movements get built. But when a new far-right regime was elected in Ontario, the entire strategy of the labour movement pivoted to re-enact a protest movement that had been an abject failure, and so we lost again, repeatedly and even harder. 

I had the same issue with Occupy, where what had been a successful tactic in Egypt and New York was exported around the world, without regard to local conditions. It resulted in one baffling morning spent wandering the Toronto encampment, where a lone speaker used the People's Mic to communicate with five comrades. The aesthetics of protest triumphed over the old-fashioned idea that protest ought to accomplish something.

Now we are seeing LARPing of the kind of mass demos that have been happening since the 1960s, most of them failures, as the authorities are quite competent in curtailing this kind of activism, either by assassinating political opponents, kettling demonstrators, or conducting mass surveillance to be used in future disappearances. The great success of #NoKings is the theoretical embarrassment for Trump of seeing his own sad, empty birthday parade dwarfed by crowds in nearly every American city and town. To be clear—this is a success, as Trump cares a great deal about crowd numbers. But this is a regime immune to reality and shame, and entirely capable of generating AI slop to convince the death cult members that what they saw with their own eyes wasn't true.

Which is to say: It's good, it's useful, but now the tactics need to change.

To contrast, No Sleep is very targeted in its strategy and goals. Let's be clear: Every employee of ICE is a human trafficker. They should not be allowed to return to their homes and communities after a day's work, because that day's work is Nazi shit. Targeting them where they live and sleep is critical. It reminds us that these are not normal people who are doing a job, but instruments of a police state who are conducting activities that are unreservedly evil and socially unacceptable. It is a reminder both to them and anyone who cooperates with the Trump regime that, in fact, "just following orders" is famously not a defence at the Hague. Most importantly, though, it introduces friction between the regime's aims and its outcomes, rendering it less effective in kidnapping and disappearing people.

I think we are all thinking: "I am exhausted. I can't fight everything all at once. Where are my energies best spent?" At least, I'm thinking that. This is deliberate; this is flooding the zone, making the laundry list of bad things come so fast and furious that opponents don't have time to recover from one fight before we're thrown into another. It's very tempting to get enmeshed in weekend street demos—for one thing, for those of us who work, they can be done on the weekend—but I would encourage everyone to participate in them with an eye to what they're useful for and what they're not useful for. Remember that surveillance will be gathered on you no matter how careful you are. If you or your comrades get arrested, movement resources will need to be directed towards your defence (and you will be dragged through hell because even if you did nothing wrong, the point of charges is to destroy your employment, finances, and relationships). Stay on the lookout for smaller, more agile actions that can add friction, rather than big showy events. Don't get caught up in violence vs. nonviolence discourse, or crowd numbers.

The answer to "where are my energies best spent" is always, "whatever you can do," which for me tends to be above-ground, legal actions on the weekends. This has different significance locally because our supposedly socialist mayor who used to go to protests passed a protest ban, so imo all protest energies in Toronto ought to at least focus a little on breaking this ban so that we can all get our Charter rights back. But this may not be the conditions where you are.

Also stop using the Hey Ho chant. It reminds me of Snow White and the Seven Dwarves but instead of marching over a log, they're walking headfirst into a police baton.
lsanderson: (Default)
lsanderson ([personal profile] lsanderson) wrote2025-06-16 07:35 am

2025.06.16

The Glean
More on the Hortman assasination
For this morning’s Glean, I’m sharing a few headlines that add depth to our coverage of this weekend’s shootings.
https://www.minnpost.com/glean/2025/06/more-depth-on-the-hortman-assasination/

Violence is coming to define American political life
Stephen Marche
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/jun/16/us-politics-violence-trump-parade-protests

‘Extremely disturbing and unethical’: new rules allow VA doctors to refuse to treat Democrats, unmarried veterans
Department of Veterans Affairs says the changes come in response to a Trump executive order ‘defending women’
Aaron Glantz
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/jun/16/va-doctors-refuse-treat-patients
Read more... )
frandroid: Lotte Ritter from Babylon Berlin (lotte)
frandroid ([personal profile] frandroid) wrote2025-06-15 11:53 pm
Entry tags:

plenty of fish

It thinks I might want to go date in the suburbs. Or even the greater Toronto area. What's wrong with this app. It even asked me if I own a car and said no. I can't go there, and the people are scary.
lsanderson: (Default)
lsanderson ([personal profile] lsanderson) wrote2025-06-15 09:59 pm

2025.06.15 Breaking News

Suspect in shootings of Minnesota lawmakers apprehended – reports
Vance Boelter accused of killing legislator Melissa Hortman and her husband, and wounding John Hoffman and his wife
Victoria Bekiempis
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/jun/16/minnesota-shooting-suspect-arrest-reports
lsanderson: (Default)
lsanderson ([personal profile] lsanderson) wrote2025-06-15 09:43 am

2025.06.15

‘Her mirthful eyes, her sharp humor’: Colleagues remember Melissa Hortman, assassinated at age 55
Hortman reshaped education, environment and health care through years in Minnesota House leadership.
by Matthew Blake
https://www.minnpost.com/state-government/2025/06/her-mirthful-eyes-her-sharp-humor-colleagues-remember-melissa-hortman-assassinated-at-age-55/

Flood of tributes for Minnesota Democrat killed in ‘targeted violence’
Governor Tim Walz calls Melissa Hortman, state speaker shot dead along with husband Mark, ‘dearest of friends’
Edward Helmore in New York and Rachel Leingang in Minneapolis
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/jun/14/minnesota-democrat-melissa-hortman-tribute

Manhunt continues for suspect in shootings of Minnesota lawmakers
Gunman believed to have left Minneapolis region after killing one legislator and wounding another
Victoria Bekiempis and agencies
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/jun/15/minnesota-shooting-suspect-manhunt

Manhunt after two Minnesota state politicians targeted, one of them killed
Mike Wendling in Brooklyn Park and Danai Nesta Kupemba
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cgj83q2e562o

Millions across US turn out for ‘No Kings’ protests against Donald Trump
Protesters demonstrate at about 2,000 sites nationwide on day US president holds military parade in Washington
Rachel Leingang in Minneapolis, Andrew Gumbel in Los Angeles and Melissa Hellmann in Philadelphia
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/jun/14/no-kings-protests-trump-military-parade

Trump, Netanyahu and Khamenei – three angry old men who could get us all killed
Simon Tisdall
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/jun/15/trump-netanyahu-khamenei-three-angry-old-men

A £2.5m dud? Fresh doubt cast on authenticity of National Gallery Rubens
Former curator’s comments, later withdrawn, reignite debate over attribution of Samson and Delilah painting
Dalya Alberge
https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2025/jun/15/claim-casts-doubt-on-origin-of-national-gallery-rubnes

It's Estimated Tax Day, well, almost. Due Tomorrow.

Last night the valet at Orchestra Hall could drive a stick and was excited at the chance. There went my private parking! They tried to pawn off a new car on me when I went to pick it up, but I resisted.
frandroid: Drawing of sabotabby in revolutionary attire: beret, tight green top, keffiyeh, flowing red hair (revolution)
frandroid ([personal profile] frandroid) wrote2025-06-15 12:45 am

Revolutions Podcast - Beating that old drum

Mike Duncan has finished telling his Martian Revolution volume. [personal profile] sabotabby I don't know if you listened to his interview on It Could Happen Here, but if you were worried about events in your writing happening in real life before publishing your story, imagine publishing a weekly speculative historical fiction podcast where events in real life catch up with your narrative week by week... :P

Duncan has switched to Patreon as his publishing platform, and now there is a discussion thread where he mingles with listeners/fans. He revealed that he was thinking about writing this Martian Revolution fiction throughout the 10 years he spent doing the Revolutions podcast. So that kind of explains why he was able to write the damn thing week by week as he did, (I mean he did plan the big lines of it ahead of time) but holy cow. That was a magnificent story, especially if you have been a listener of the podcast, or if you have good revolutionary history knowledge in general, because you can pick up many references to other revolutions, and I probably didn't even catch two thirds of them. But there was a LOT of the Russian Revolution infused in this story.

For all of you holdouts who haven't ever listened to the podcast, just listen to one episode per week... Start at 3.1 as even Duncan himself recommends, and even though the French Revolution is too many damn episodes, it's worth stretching the pleasure over time. I think I was consuming about 2-3 episodes a week for a long time, so I only caught up to its weekly release a year or two ago, in the middle of his 10th volume (the Russian Revolution) and I was also catching up on his seven years of History of Rome as well, though I did not pay as much attention to that one.

Maybe I should start a Révolution Weeklé, like Whale Weekly, to get more people to tackle it... *cough*

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A friend is planning on starting a Capital vol. 1 reading group, and he asked me if I would read it in French so I could provide a different perspective... Weee! (I first turned him down because I think in English these days, but Marx personally supervised the French translation, rewrote some bits of it, and eventually told Russian translators that they should use the French translation rather than the original German to base their own translation on! So I will read it in French after all.

David Harvey has a course (a recording of which I have as a podcast) teaching Capital... In an interview, he was discussing how he has taught Capital for like 30 years, but not always at the same school, and even in the same school, the cohort of students he would get would change in terms of personal interests and areas of study, so every time he has taught the course, students have been picking up on different parts of the book and/or had different perspectives to bring to it. Imagine how interesting that must be.

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After listening to 10 years of podcasting on 10 different Revolutions, I do wonder though why revolutionaries (and many of their arm-chair wannabes) still focus so much on Marx. I mean I understand that he's a phenomenal writer and the finest analyst of capitalism and all that, but in the end, revolutions, even the Russian one, didn't quite happen because of a good grasp of Marxist theory. Marx /followed/ the French revolution, the mother of all the other modern ones. The Cuban Revolution didn't have much of a Marxist character until the U.S. started opposing Castro and forced them in the hands of the Soviets, along with Ché's own inclinations. I mean the end of the Cold War means that there's a lot fewer people focusing on Marx today, but he's still a big deal in many university revolutionary/activist circles, one of which I am somewhat adjacent to thanks to F.