@mouse excellent goal.
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Scott F commented on Not Your Rescue Project by Harsha Walia
eye-opening. some of the stories in here give a sense that "human trafficking" is used kind of like "terrorism," as a term that creates a state of exception where rights are suspended for anyone associated with the, in this case, sex worker who is automatically assumed to be a "victim" of "trafficking."
Scott F commented on Dead Cities by Mike Davis
A list of errors (mostly missing text) in the Haymarket edition:
Scott F quoted Super extra grande by Yoss
The only intelligent species in the Galactic Community that considers displaying the teeth to be an expression of friendly intentions is Homo sapiens. Must be because we don't have sixty or seventy canines, like the Laggorus, or a series of flexible chewing plates that bear a distant resemblance to the coronal cilia of our rotifers or the cylindrical millstones of our ancient mills, like the Cetians.
— Super extra grande by Yoss (Page 79)
rotifer, n. Any of a number of minute aquatic organisms of the phylum Rotifera, which have a ring of cilia resembling a wheel.
cilium, n. A short microscopic hairline organelle projecting from a eukaryotic cell.
Scott F quoted Dead Cities by Mike Davis
Here [in the United States] urban dereliction has become the moral and natural historical equivalent of war. In 1940-41, the Heinkel and Junkers bombers of the Luftwaffe destroyed 350,000 dwellings [sic] units and unhoused a million Londoners. In the 1970s, an equally savage "blitz" of landlord disinvestment, bank redlining, and federal "benign neglect" led to the destruction of 294,000 housing units in New York City alone.
— Dead Cities by Mike Davis (Page 386)
one of many holy-shit moments in this book (in this case, an aside in an essay about how bomb sites can play host to a surprising diversity of plant and insect species).
Scott F replied to Phil in SF's status
@kingrat@sfba.club I love the title
Scott F quoted Dead Cities by Mike Davis
When I dumbly asked Ricky what color the cop who hit him was, he looked right through me. "He was Latino, and that is neither more nor less important than the fact that the cop who beat Soltero was black. Thing you got to understand, partner, is that all cops are colored blue."
— Dead Cities by Mike Davis (Page 278)
Scott F commented on Exhalation by Ted Chiang
Scott F quoted Dead Cities by Mike Davis
From Crete and Cornwall to Montana and Hawai'i, the gentrification of wild places (like that of urban centers) is always a theft of tradition, an uprooting of community. Eventually all the world's ruggedly beautiful landscapes of toil and struggle seem destined to be repackaged as "heritage," wrenched from unemployed locals and sold off to scenery-loving burghers fleeing the cities.
— Dead Cities by Mike Davis (Page 116)
Experiments show that when two genetically identical seeds are put in identical settings, each one grows very differently; each one is a self, committed to its ongoing existence in a particular body embedded in, and interpreting, a particular place. ...
Art was thought to define humanity. Tolstoy saw it as the fundamental human activity... But for 50 million years, eons before humans first painted rocks, the bower bird had ground pigment from fruit seeds, painting bowers, and erecting maypole-like structures for mating dances.
— We Are ‘Nature’ Defending Itself by Isabelle Fremeaux, Jay Jordan (Page 121 - 127)
Sometimes it's eerie how much different books that I just happen to be reading at the same time, respond to one another. The first quote came to mind when I read this in a Ted Chiang story today ("The Truth of Fact, The Truth of Feeling," in Exhalation, 208):
People are made of stories. ...Which is why, even when we've experienced the same events as other individuals, we never constructed identical narratives: the criteria used for selecting moments were different for each of us, and a reflection of our personalities.
The second quote obviously name-checks Tolstoy, whose philosophical epilogue part 2 of War and Peace I was just reading, but there's a more direct connection (although not mentioning him by name) on page 79 where the activists talk about freedom and constraint, concluding, "Living beings create autonomy and freedom thanks to their engagement with constraints," a neat synthesis of …
Sometimes it's eerie how much different books that I just happen to be reading at the same time, respond to one another. The first quote came to mind when I read this in a Ted Chiang story today ("The Truth of Fact, The Truth of Feeling," in Exhalation, 208):
People are made of stories. ...Which is why, even when we've experienced the same events as other individuals, we never constructed identical narratives: the criteria used for selecting moments were different for each of us, and a reflection of our personalities.
The second quote obviously name-checks Tolstoy, whose philosophical epilogue part 2 of War and Peace I was just reading, but there's a more direct connection (although not mentioning him by name) on page 79 where the activists talk about freedom and constraint, concluding, "Living beings create autonomy and freedom thanks to their engagement with constraints," a neat synthesis of the dilemma between freedom and necessity that Tolstoy discusses at length in his epilogue.
Scott F quoted War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy
Pierre... felt that the sound of his words, regardless of the thought they contained, would be heard less than the sound of the animated nobleman's words. ... Pierre not only had not succeeded in speaking, he had been rudely interrupted, pushed aside, turned away from as a common enemy. This had happened not because they were displeased with the meaning of what he said—that had been forgotten, after the great number of speeches that followed it—but because, for inspiration, a crowd needs to have a tangible object of love and a tangible object of hatred. Pierre had become the latter.
— War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy, Richard Pevear, Larissa Volokhonsky (Page 679)
it's the 19th century version of being a Twitter main character
Scott F quoted War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy
The willingness or unwillingness of one French corporal to enlist for a second tour of duty appears to us as good a cause [of the Russo-French war of 1812] as Napoleon's refusal to withdraw his army beyond the Vistula and give back the duchy of Oldenburg; for if he had been unwilling to serve, and another had been unwilling, and a third, and a thousandth corporal and soldier, there would have been so many less men in Napoleon's army, and there could have been no war.
— War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy, Richard Pevear, Larissa Volokhonsky (Page 604)
Send this quote to everyone who stays in a job they know is morally wrong because "if it's not me, they'll just find someone else to do it."
@christa hope you like this! my favorite part was chapter 5, as it was the most concrete
Scott F replied to Divya Manian's status
@divya@sfba.club I read an interesting nonfiction book on the life of Larry Casuse, An Enemy Such As This by David Correia.
Scott F replied to Phil in SF's status
@kingrat@sfba.club almost every great mistake or injustice in history, there was someone calling it out at the time. just shows how little being right matters in itself.