Sep 072019
 

Author Walter Mosley Quits ‘Star Trek: Discovery’ After Using N-Word in Writers Room

If you’re like me, your first thought on reading that headline is “Walter Who???” So I looked him up on Wikipedia and, much to my surprise, he actually has a *few* science fiction titles under his belt. However, the great bulk of his writing is crime fiction. Maybe he was supposed to write Dixon Hill holodeck scenarios or something.

His trouble sounds, at first glance, like the sort of nonsense we’ve come to roll our eyes at… he was called up by HR and told that his repeated use of the “N-Word” in the workplace was a firable offence. But he claims that he did not use it to refer to other people there, but instead while describing what he said were autobiographical tales of Los Angeles cops using that word on *him.*  At that level, it certainly sounds like he is in the “if this was a rational world” clear. But there are other factors to consider. Look at his Wikipedia writeup. It certainly *seems* like he may have a bit of an obsession on the subject of race; while he’s publishing books, getting paid for movie rights and working on Star Trek, he’s doubtless also complaining about how he’s oppressed by white privilege at the same time I can’t find a publisher to even look at my work and I’m pulling books off my shelf to sell. My sympathy for him declines somewhat. So it may well be that what annoyed whoever it was ho snitched on him to HR wasn’t his use of the “N-Word,” but his incessant, nonstop harping on on the subject

What’s better: when called  on the phone by HR, he promptly quit. Didn’t fight it. Now, if *I* was working on a Star Trek series that I truly believed in and someone tried farkin’ with my job there, I’d fight it tooth and nail. This guy? “Meh, I’m out.” Says much about not only his devotion to crafting quality Star Trek, but also about everyone else there as well if he is the kind of guy they bring in to write.

Even betterer:

Mosley ended his op-ed by saying, “The worst thing you can do to citizens of a democratic nation is to silence them.” He elaborated, “And the easiest way to silence a woman or a man is to threaten his or her livelihood. Let’s not accept the McCarthyism of secret condemnation. Instead let’s delve a little deeper, limiting the power that can be exerted over our citizens, their attempts to express their hearts and horrors, and their desire to speak their truths. Only this can open the dialogue of change.”

BWAHAHAHAHAHA!!!! yeah, good luck with that, bucko. Your pals are trying to “cancel” Dave Chappelle for saying things that hurt their feelings. The outrage mafia is taking down comedians for stuff they did  *years* ago.  Entire fire departments are getting shut down because one volunteer had gone to a few Proud Boy meetings. So don’t act shocked when you get a call from HR for saying The Naughty Word repeatedly in the workplace.

And this pretty much defines the problem with Star Trek today:

It’s worth noting that Discovery has a particularly inclusive writers room that includes three African American scribes, two Asian American writers, a Native American and Latinx woman, among others.

Inclusivity in modern Star Trek covers ethnicity, but not, it seems, a diversity of *quality* science fiction authoring experience.

 Posted by at 12:39 am
Sep 052019
 

A little while ago, CNN had a reporter at the Grand Bahama airport showing damage from hurricane Dorian. The terminal appeared to have been virtually cleaned out; the external walls seemed to still be there, the ceiling and roof were still there, but the windows were blown out and all the internal structures and furnishings appeared to have been utterly blown out. it looked like a warehouse with a bit of rubbish scattered about.

This is of course bad, but the “journalist” desribing the situation decided thatn hyperbole was the order of the day: he claimed that the *airport* was destroyed and that aircraft would not be able to get in to provide relief, and that they’d have to rely on ships and such.

Ummm… I’m *pretty* sure that the US Marines would look at an airport with a trashed terminal and non-blown-up runways as a virtual paradise for cargo helicopters. I’m *pretty* sure that C-130’s would be able to land and take off from those runways with no trouble whatsoever. Maybe it would be nice if the Marines could get some V-22’s to drop off some combat engineers to, I dunno, run a sweeper over the runways to get sharp pointy bits of metal off the runway, but once that’s done, the C-130’s and C-17’s should be able to land just fine. Planes like those, *pilots* like those, don’t need terminals or towers. Jut a few hundred feet of concrete.

I suppose it’s possible that the runways themselves *are* trashed. Strong enough winds can rip up surfaces; tornadoes have from time to time been known to rip asphalt roads from the ground and send slabs flying. But tornadoes are a different order of wind speed than hurricanes; it’ll take more than sustained hurricane force winds to yoink slabs of concrete a foot or more thick out of the ground.

ᛞᚩᚾ’ᛏ ᛒᛖ ᚪ ᛞᚪᛗᛒᚪᛋᛋ

 Posted by at 10:03 am
Aug 312019
 

As a followup to my previous post about masterfully crated puppet monsters, here’s a story about a haphazardly crafted monstrous puppet.

Racist troll explains how her former friends would do anything for her but give up their whiteness

One Saira Rao, famous in her little niche for reasons that escape me, recently went on a Twitter tirade about how she’d lecture and cajole and preach at her white female friends about how they have inherently evil whiteness in their DNA, then she was all kinds of shocked that they all decided that they’d be happier with her not being in their lives.

 Posted by at 7:13 pm
Aug 302019
 

The forthcoming movie “Ad Astra” is, so far, pretty mysterious. It has looked pretty interesting, dare I say intriguing. And then…

Brad Pitt: Space movie ‘Ad Astra’ also about toxic masculinity

For frak’s sake. “Ad Astra” is, to all appearances, a serious, science fiction/adventure/action movie. Who the frak do you think your audience is? My guess: exactly the sort of people who are quite sufficiently sick and damn tired of hearing about the supposed evils of “toxic masculinity.”

The article itself does not read as horrible as the headline suggests. But as”First Man” showed, it doesn’t take much to irritate the potential viewers. In a story where the hero has to save the world, where if he fails everybody dies, “emotional vulnerability” is a weakness you can’t afford. It may well be fine to have a main character who has the character flaw of emotional troubles, but he has to overcome, bypass, defeat that weakness and get the damn job done. Luke Skywalker? Just lost his family, left the only home he ever knew, just saw his mentor disappear in a puff of logic. So what does he do? Sucks it up, straps on a starfighter and blows up a few million Imperial noncombatants. James T. kirk was upset from time to time, but he’d die before displaying emotional weakness.

 Posted by at 1:20 pm
Aug 292019
 

From Ol’ Blighted, the latest innovation in political correctness: banning depictions of people being people.

Volkswagen and Philadelphia cream cheese ads banned over gender stereotypes

A lot of Americans think of Britain as a slightly eccentric yet still free country. But… it’s not, really. They do not have a written constitution as such; the government can basically do whatever they feel like doing, and they’ve made the ultimately suicidal mistake of assuming that Parliament will always come down on the side of sense and reason. But Britain has themselves an “Advertising Standards Agency” that feels it can ban commercials that show stereotypically (i.e. historically and biologically and culturally accurate) gendered activities. In this case, a commercial that shows a woman in a park with a baby carriage “engaged in a stereotypical care-giving role.”

One would hope that this sort of thing, like the despicable Canadian “Human Rights Tribunals” would be impossible in the United States. But don’t bet on it. The Chinese “social credit” system would be illegal for the government to enact, but it’s something definitely to watch out for among major financial and communications companies. I can see American broadcasters enacting such restrictions themselves just to keep the shrieking harpies of social justice conformity off their backs for ten seconds until the next outrage.

 Posted by at 2:46 am
Aug 262019
 

It may be after the garbage fires that “Last Jedi” and “Solo” were, Disney has just stopped giving a damn about Star Wars. Heck, they don’t even have Star Wars toys at WalMart, a sure sign of franchise malaise.

But they’re still going through the motions, and recently released the first official poster for “Rise of Skywalker.” Behold the lameness:

Judgement: Meh.

But it gets even better: See that Emperor Palpatine there int he background? It seems that they didn’t paint Palpatine from the actual actor in makeup, but from a frakin’ toy.

Star Wars 9’s Palpatine Is A TOY, Not From The Movie

 

Sigh.

 

 

 Posted by at 12:39 am
Aug 252019
 

Oy.

Stanford pushes separate physics course for minority students

From a brief reading, this appears to be less “minorities need to be taught F=MA in a separate space from white people because F=MA varies from race to race” and more “due to quota requirements and affirmative action, we’re bringing in minority students who are simply not prepared for Stanford-level physics and need to be trained up on the rudiments that other students already have.”

This should hardly be surprising. Affirmative action has long been demonstrated to generally be harmful to those it purports to help. Consider:

Option A: you’re from a  financially well-off family, race unimportant. Your grade/middle/high school education was top-notch, possibly private. When it comes time for college, you are prepared educationally and financially. You can basically pick your school (or, as recently shown, your limousine liberal parents can simply buy your way in, even if you, the student, don’t care about said school, or even schooling at all). If you find that you are scholastically in trouble, you can buy mentors and tutors and whatnot and plow your way through.

Option B: You’re from a financially middlin’ family, and you are not from a politically favored ethnicity. Consequently, you know well in advance that your college options are to either earn those scholarships (scholastic or athletic) or to set your college goals realistically. The South Houston Institute of Technology rather than Stanford, say. You thus enter a college that you can (more or less) afford, with students who, like you, are not the cream of the crop academically. You are with your academic peers.

Option C: Your family finances suck, but you’re ethnically popular. Since you come from poor finances, you likely went to a financially dubious set of primary schools, and possibly got an education that’s not worth the paper the diploma was photocopied onto. But you win the political lottery and through the magic of Affirmative Action not only get into college, you get into a *high* *end* college. Huzzah! But… a high end college means high end students and a high end grading curve. You are not prepared for Stanford. You are at the bottom of the class and failing hard. You drop out. You are depressed and demoralized and turned off the higher education system. History has shown that rather than licking your wounds and taking your failure at Stanford as an important lesson and then setting your sights more realistically and applying at the South Houston Institute of Technology, you say “screw it” to college and never go back But… huzzah! Your family took out a bankload of loans to get you into Stanford. You were only there for a year or two, but it was long enough to put them into debt for the rest of their lives, and since you have no college degree… suck to be you.

 

Yeah, life ain’t fair. But it does few people any favors to drop them into an environment that they are unprepared for. It may well be that it’s not their fault that they are unprepared. They may not have had the opportunity to become prepared. They may have even been held back from becoming prepared. But the fact remains… they’re not prepared.

Me, I managed to get an aerospace engineering degree. It was more difficult than it should have been, for two simple reasons: Calculus 1 and Calculus 3. I was a *disaster* with those. Calculus 2 and Differential Equations? Blew right through them, no sweat. But 1 and 3? Kicked my ass, *hard.* But… I still manged to get through it.

Now… instead of college-age me going for that Aero E degree, assume I had somehow obtained entry in, say, the ninth grade, several years earlier. It still would have been me… but it would have been a me substantially less prepared. The chances of success would have been probably nonexistent.

So what Stanford is doing makes a certain amount of sense. But it would make more sense for Stanford to do this *away* from Stanford. If these students are found to have the natural talent for the education they’ve signed up for but not yet the skills, rather than putting them into Stanford and giving them separate training alongside the other students, give them a year of “Year Five Of High School” somewhere *then* bring them to Stanford. I’m sure there are more than enough community colleges around the country that can do this.

And then put all the students into the same classrooms without discrimination, shame or the taint of forced diversity.

But not all of what Stanford is doing is aimed at the betterment of their students. Behold:

A similar course, titled “Physics 93SI: Beyond the Laboratory: Physics, Identity and Society,” is led by students, rather than professors. In this course, physics majors can earn academic credit by generally exploring “issues of diversity and culture in physics,” by applying concepts such as “critical race theory.”

Anyone who pushes “critical race theory” is working to ruin students as productive members of society.

 Posted by at 1:48 pm
Aug 232019
 

A few days ago I posted about a model on ebay of an “XF-108” that gave every appearance of being a modern half-assed Asian sweatshop copy of an old model kit. A few days ago I was irked that it had racked up bids over $140. The auction just ended… with a max bid of $985.

Feh. It’s enough to make a feller doubt the wisdom of his fellow man.

 

 Posted by at 9:35 pm
Aug 232019
 

It’s a common refrain among politicians and celebrities who want to disarm the public that it is too easy for  regular people to buy mundane firearms with which to defend themselves. Every now a journalist will actually put that to the test… mostly to prove the claim correct and feed the narrative that America needs to make sure that civilians are disarmed in the face of the criminal element. But sometimes it doesn’t go according to plan:

I tried to buy a gun at Walmart twice, and roadblocks left me empty-handed both times

The short form of the story here is “gee whiz, WalMart *doesn’t* make buying a gun as simple as just picking one up off the shelf.”

There’s lots to chuckle at here for anyone who actually knows anything about the process of legally buying a firearm. but the thing that caught me off guard right up front: the journalist started the process by trying to find a nearby WalMart that sells firarms. Fair enough. But when she finally finds one, a mere thirty minutes drive away, she makes a point of discussing how she put the destination into her nav system in order to get there. Ummm… WalMarts aren’t that hard to find. It comes across like “I’ve never been to WalMart before,” which smacks of the sort of snootiness that makes regular folk laugh at these goobers who are ignorant about how the bulk of the nation actually lives.

 

 Posted by at 3:25 pm
Aug 192019
 

There is currently an item on ebay that the *title* of had me very interested, but the actual photos fire off my BS alarms:

North American XF-108 Rapier Aircraft Contractor Model / Topping Precise / Allyn

A vintage F-108 display model made by the NAA model shop or by an official contractor for NAA would be a very interesting item. But… that’s not what we’ve got here. Observe:

This is not a North American Aviation design. It is, in fact, copied from the 1960 ITC “F-108 Rapier” model kit. This was designed before the F-108 design was revealed to the public, and was basically a fictional concept based on the North American “Navaho” intercontinental cruise missile.

The model is not actually an assembled ITC Rapier kit. It looks like one of the Asian specially-made “genuine Philippine mahogany” models that you can have made. Which is fine if that’s what you want, but that’s not what the ebay listing says it is. Quote: “For sale is a rare XF-108 Rapier contractor style model. I am unsure of the manufacturer -possibly Topping/Precise. ” Note: “style.”

As of this writing there are 15 bids, up to $140. This seems a bit much for a meh-quality modern replica of a meh-quality model kit. If this is something you’re interested in bidding on, keep in mind that this is *not* a North American Aviation design, but a design by a short-lived (1957-64) model kit company that had no special insight.

 Posted by at 8:48 am