Pixel Scroll 2/17/16 Grandstand on Zanzibar

(1) THAT’S WHO. Paul Cornell has a few paragraphs about Gallifrey One, the Doctor Who convention he attended in LA last weekend.

An edition of The Cornell Collective recorded there will be going live in a few days, but in the meantime, you can find me guesting on another podcast from the convention, Doctor Who: The Writers’ Room, where myself, Graeme Burk, Stephen Schapansky and regular host Kyle talk about the career of Robert Holmes.

I also appear in this edition of Doctor Who: The Fan Show, recorded on the convention floor, and providing a wonderful snapshot of everything that makes ‘gally’ special.

 

Conrunner Shaun Lyon, Fifth Doctor Peter Davison, Paul Cornell, Laura Sirikul (Nerd Reactor), Sarah Dollard, and Steven Schapansky (Radio Free Skaro), all appear.

(2) GWEN COOPER R.I.P. ScienceFiction.com says it’s over: “’Torchwood’: Eve Myles Lays Gwen Cooper To Rest”.

The actress took to Twitter to respond to fan inquiries regarding the nebulous status of ‘Torchwood’ which aired its last episode in 2011, after the show was picked up by Starz and relocated to the U.S.  Fans have held out hope that the show would revert back exclusively to the BBC, but Captain Jack, Gwen and whoever was still alive haven’t materialized on ‘Doctor Who’ or anywhere else.  It’s been five years and at least Myles has given up hope and said goodbye to Gwen.

(3) YOUR WRITE. Joseph Bentz has an outstanding post about writing – “Don’t Let Them Squash Your Creativity”.

Growing up, I always felt vaguely embarrassed about wanting to be a writer. I feared that if I said too much about it, I was simply opening myself up to mockery. It felt so pretentious to want to write a novel. Who was I?

So I hid it. I wrote my first novel almost secretly. When I would go off to write, I would be vague with family and friends about what I was doing, telling them simply that I had work to do. In college, I was so paranoid about my roommates reading over my shoulder that I developed a secret coded language in which I could write when others were around, which I then had to decode later.

Today I am still tempted to let my creativity be squashed, not so much by naysayers, but by other enemies such as procrastination, the pressures of life, fear of rejection, weariness.

Yet the words, the ideas, keep bubbling up. When the ideas come, I think, I have to write this. Why is no one else saying this? I find myself writing as fast as I can, letting the momentum carry me. In those great moments, the creativity blasts right through the doubts, tiredness, discouragement, and second-guessing. I write. I create.

(4) TOCK OF THE WALK. From UPI: “Harry Potter fan builds working GPS replica of Weasley clock”

Tbornottb used a gutted broken clock that he purchased from an antique store as the base and had a friend illustrate the new face of the clock, which featured locations such as on the way, home, work, holiday, forest and mortal peril.

He then used a Particle Photon that would communicate with an application known as “If This Then That” that would move the clock’s hand depending on each family members GPS location.

Each family member then set the parameters for what each geographical location would be represented by on the clock.

“Most of the rules are location-based (setting me to WORK if I enter my university library, HOME if I enter my dorm), but you can set other triggers too (set me to HOLIDAY if the forecast calls for snow, set me to MORTAL PERIL if the stock of the company I’ll be working for next year drops too low),” tbornottb wrote.

 

View post on imgur.com

(5) VR. Steven Spielberg tries The VOID and declares, “Woah, that was a great adventure!”

Steve Spielberg headed into The VOID’s unique brand of free-roaming, mixed-reality VR experience at TED 2016, and it seems he was pleasantly surprised.

“Woah, that was a great adventure!”, was Steven Spielberg’s exclamation after stepping out of the bespoke, made-for-TED mixed-reality, VR experience constructed by the team behind the VOID.

Spielberg, who recently co-founded the immersive production startup The Virtual Reality Company, stepped through the specially constructed, Raiders of the Lost Ark-style VR experience, which has players exploring ancient ruins, avoiding traps and snakes and, we understand, some clever heart-quickening physical stage manipulation to coincide with some worrying virtual events.

David Doering says, “The Void’s scenarios will come from the pen of master storyteller Tracy Hickman, our own hometown hero of fantasy fame.”

(6) MORE VR. The New York Times has its own VR story — “Virtual Reality Companies Look to Science Fiction for Their Next Play”. Ready Player One’s Ernest Cline gets more ink, and so does Neal Stephenson –

Magic Leap, based in Dania Beach, Fla., and which counts Google as one of its big investors, has gone even further than most companies by hiring three science fiction and fantasy writers on staff. Its most famous sci-fi recruit is Neal Stephenson, who depicted the virtual world of the Metaverse in his seminal 1992 novel “Snow Crash.”

In an interview, Mr. Stephenson — whose title is chief futurist — declined to say what he was working on at Magic Leap, describing it as one of several “content projects” underway at the company.

More broadly, Mr. Stephenson said science fiction books and movies are often useful within tech companies for rallying employees around a shared vision.

“My theory is that science fiction can actually have some value in that it gets everyone on the same page without the kind of expensive and tedious process of PowerPoint,” he said. But the influence of the genre within tech companies is “surprising and mysterious to me as well,” he added.

(7) A MIGHTY OATH. George R.R. Martin pledged to a Not A Blog commenter yesterday:

I am not writing anything until I deliver WINDS OF WINTER. Teleplays, screenplays, short stories, introductions, forewords, nothing.

And I’ve dropped all my editing projects but Wild Cards.

(8) CON OR BUST DONATION. Crystal Huff, Worldcon 75 Co-Chair, announced —

Worldcon 75 [the 2017 World Science Fiction Convention, to be held in Helsinki, Finland] has donated 25 memberships and hotel room nights to Con or Bust to help People of Color attend our convention. We appreciate any assistance in spreading the news to interested fans. More details can be found at the Con or Bust website, including their application process: http://con-or-bust.org/2016/02/con-or-bust-now-accepting-requests-for-assistance-9/

(9) CREATIVITY DOESN’T WORK LIKE THAT. Jim C. Hines has a good post “My Mental Illness is Not Your Inspirational Post-it Note”  that doesn’t lend itself to out-of-context excerpts… so just go read it anyway.

(10) LAUNCHING MADE SIMPLE. How To Go To Space (with XKCD!) was posted last November but I don’t recall linking to it, and in any event, these things are always news to somebody!

(11) MARK JUSTICE OBIT. Horror author and radio host Mark Justice (1959-2016) passed away February 10 from a heart attack. Brian Keene discussed his writing in a memorial post.

Mark’s books included Looking at the World with Broken Glass in My Eye and (with David Wilbanks) the Dead Earth series. He also ran one of the first — and best — horror fiction-centric podcasts, Pod of Horror [with Nancy Kalanta].

He was also a long-time morning show disc jockey in Ashland, Kentucky. He occasionally used that morning show to promote horror fiction, featuring friends and peers like Richard Laymon, Jack Ketchum, F. Paul Wilson, Joe R. Lansdale, J.F. Gonzalez, and myself. I’ve signed in Ashland numerous times throughout the last twenty years, and Mark was always happy to have me on the show anytime…

He was generous and genuine, and very, very funny. He knew this genre’s history like few others. He will be missed.

(12) HELP BY BUYING BUD’S BOOKS. ReAnimus Press has a plan to benefit the late Bud Webster’s wife, Mary:

To help Mary with the financial burden, I wanted to announce that ReAnimus Press will be donating our publisher’s share of sales from all sales of Bud’s book back to Mary, so sales of those titles will be entirely to help Mary. We’ve published the ebook editions of Bud’s ANTHOPOLOGY 101 (http://reanimus.com/store/?i=1256 ) and THE JOY OF BOOKING ( www.reanimus.com/1409 ). We have PAST MASTERS in process.

I would also note that, if you can, purchasing through those links is of almost 50% more benefit to Mary, since there’s no chunk being paid to Amazon. (FYI this is for the ebook editions only; another publisher, Merry Blacksmith, has the print editions.)

Also, anyone know who I can contact who’s handling the Marscon donations? I’d like to offer copies of the ebooks to donors to sweeten the pot, say, one ebook for a $25 donation, all three for $50, and all three plus any three other ebooks from the ReAnimus store for $100+. (Retroactive to anyone who’s already donated, so don’t wait to donate.)

(13) TODAY IN HISTORY

  • February 17, 1922 — Terrified audiences gaze upon FW Murnau’s Nosferatu for the very first time.

(14) TODAY’S BIRTHDAY GIRL

  • Born February 17, 1912 — Andre Norton

(15) THEY SWEAR THESE ARE GOOD IDEAS. In Comic Riffs at the Washington Post, Michael Cavna and David Betancourt attribute Deadpool’s huge success to its attracting both superhero fans and people who enjoy R-rated snark such as is found in Judd Apatow films. Then they say — “These are the ‘R-rated’ comics that Hollywood should put on the screen next”.

MICHAEL CAVNA: So you and I knew that “Deadpool” would do reasonably well, but these monster box-office numbers that practically rival “The Dark Knight’s” debut certainly speak to a thirst for R-rated comics adaptations that don’t feel like the same old tales of origin reboots and capes-vs.-urban apocalypses. So if you were a Hollywood executive, what’s the first “mature content” comic you’d now try to option and adapt?

DAVID BETANCOURT: The top two that come to my mind are American Vampire and Y: The Last Man. Last Man [which was adapted in 2011 in short form] has been in movie limbo for a while now, and I’m surprised someone hasn’t scooped up American Vampire. Fox has somewhat of a fun dilemma on their hands. “Deadpool” literally made twice what most folks were thinking it would for its opening weekend. So if you can spawn X-Force out of “Deadpool,” given Deadpool’s connection with Cable, do you continue the “R” momentum and make an X-Force movie rated R as well? If X-Force was in development [prior to “Deadpool’s” release], Fox must have been thinking PG-13 — just like the X-Men films. But now, seeing the success of “Deadpool,: maybe Fox executives have more than one R-rated franchise. They have to at least be thinking about it. And because of “Deadpool’s” success, if that character [now] appears in an X-film, does he [himself[ seem diluted if he’s in a PG-13 movie?

(16) HE WAS THERE. Matthew Surridge looks back on “The Great Hugo Wars of 2015”, and devotes many paragraphs to how he decided to decline his Hugo nomination.

Then the next night I opened my email to find a message from the Worldcon administrators congratulating me for being nominated for a Hugo. If I wouldn’t be at Worldcon, could I please select someone who’d be able to pick up the award for me if I won?

I emailed Black Gate editor John O’Neill, and asked him if he’d be in Spokane. He said he wouldn’t, and also mentioned that Black Gate had been nominated for a Fanzine Hugo. That meant I’d now heard of three Puppy picks who’d gotten nominations. I poked around some message boards and found speculation from various people plugged into the field guessing that the Puppies would do spectacularly well when the full list of nominees was made public. One (non-Puppy) editor said that he’d heard that the Puppies had three of the nominations for Best Novel—the most prestigious category. I began to wonder if I wanted to be nominated for an award that was being shaped by the Puppy tactics. If nothing else, what kind of backlash would this create?

Over the next few days I did more research on the Puppy program. Beyond politics, it was clear I didn’t share the Sad Puppy sense of what was good and bad in fiction. Beale only spoke about “the science fiction right,” but Torgersen was putting forward an aesthetic argument about the value of adventure writing over “message fiction.” I like good pulp fiction, but prefer experimental writing. More: it became clear to me that Torgersen and Beale knew that what they were doing was a slap in the face of the SF community—the people who attended events like Worldcon and administered the Hugos. As far as they were concerned, many of the existing institutions of science fiction fandom were not only dominated by liberals, but corrupt, and therefore had to be either reformed or burned down. The Puppies were looking for a fight.

Black Gate put up a link to the post as well, which led to an exchange of comments between Surridge and his former admirer, Wild Ape.

(17) GRAPHIC ARTS. Camestros Felapton in “SP4 Book Families” proves Hugo voters and Sad Puppies 4 recommenders are equally innocent. Or equally guilty. Never mind, look at the pretty graph.

Another stray observation from SP4 Best Novel data partly inspired by an odd claim at Mad Genius that ‘weak correlations’ in Hugo2015 nomination data was evidence of secret-slate/cabals/whatever (um, nope it is what you’d expect).

I looked at which books had nominators in common and how many nominators in common they had. I then tabulated those books with more than 2 in common and drew a pretty picture.

(18) NEBULA PREDICTION. Chaos Horizon looked at the SFWA Recommended Reading List data from 2011-2014.

3/4 times, the top vote getter from the Recommended List went on to win the Nebula. Schoen must be dancing right now for Barsk, which topped the 2015 list with 35 votes (Gannon did get 33, and Wilde 29, so Schoen shouldn’t start celebrating yet). The only exception to this rule was Kim Stanley Robinson in 2012. Maybe KSR, who had 11 prior Nebula nominations and 2 prior wins, was just so much better known to the voting audience than his fellow nominees, although that’s just speculation. That KSR win from the #4 spot does stand out as a real outlier to the other years.

The Top 6 recommended works got nominated 19/24 times, for a staggering 79.1% nomination rate. If you’re predicting the Nebulas, are you going to find any better correlation than this? Just pick the top 6, and bask in your 80% success rate.

(19) LEGO. This year Lego will release 25 Star Wars-themed sets. The “Assault on Hoth” set, coming May 1, has 2,144 pieces and costs $250.

the-assault-on-hoth-set-will-be-available-may-1

(20) MONOPOLY UPDATE. No paper money in Hasbro’s “Ultimate Banking” version of the Monopoly game – bank cards only, fortunes are tracked electronically, and that’s not all —

The latest version of Monopoly adds a new spin to the debate over who gets to be the banker. The decades-old board game, a Hasbro Inc. brand, is getting a modern upgrade this fall with an “Ultimate Banking” version that does away with the game’s iconic paper money in favor of bank cards.

Transactions, including purchasing property and paying rent, will be handled as they are in modern-day real life, with the tap of a card on the “ultimate banking unit.”

And for the real-estate mogul in the making, the bank cards also track wealth and property values, which can rise and fall. Rents for properties on the board also fluctuate, according to Jonathan Berkowitz, senior vice president of the gaming division of Hasbro

(21) OVER THE TRANSOM. Alan Baumler sent this in email – a bit long to use as a Scroll title, so I’ll quote it here:

In place of a pixel, you would have a scroll!

Not dark, but beautiful and terrible as the dawn!

Treacherous as the sea!

Stronger than the foundations of the earth!

All shall love me, and despair!

(22) KYLO REN’S TEEN ANGST. Mamalaz has a whole series of ridiculous “Modern Solo Adventures”.

[Thanks to John King Tarpinian, Andrew Porter, Martin Morse Wooster, Mark-kitteh, and Dave Doering for some of these stories. Title credit goes to File 770 contributing editor of the day Brian Z.]


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419 thoughts on “Pixel Scroll 2/17/16 Grandstand on Zanzibar

  1. When visited by a member of the trolletariat,
    the scrolletariat
    becomes the LOLetariat.

  2. Do you people realized you are asserting that holding the belief that discrimination on the basic of skin pigmentation is wrong makes me a racist?

    Asserting an equivalence between a fund to send people to cons and the KKK is what’s racist.

  3. RedWombat:

    Man, you’re all thinking small. You reap the whirlwind, grind the whirlwind, ferment the whirlwind, ideally distill the whirlwind, and then you’ve got whirlshine.

    Depending on your skill, may make you whirlblind though.

    I think you have the plot for a Grandma Harken story there.

  4. The phrase “discrimination is bad” is really short for “discrimination that creates or exacerbates an undesired imbalance is bad”. Yes, “positive discrimination” is a kind of discrimination – but it’s discrimination explicitly to reduce or eliminate an undesired imbalance, and thus does not fall into the same category as the bad discrimination; in fact quite the contrary: it may be an explicitly good thing.

    There are also many things that are technically discrimination that are not a problem because any relevant balance isn’t affected, or there isn’t a balance that can be reasonably expected.

    For example, a man who is heterosexual is almost certainly going to discriminate against men in the sense that they are going to be discarding men as potential sexual partners. However, there’s no expectation or desire for any kind of “balance” in someone’s personal choice of sexual partners (nobody would expect a heterosexual person to have to take occasional homosexual partners to “balance” anything), so that is an example of discrimination that is not “bad” under any reasonable theory.

  5. Let us remember the lesson of the Little Red Hen, if you won’t work on the whirlwind then you do not get to eat the whirlwind.

    (Or in the case of the MIT Servomechanisms Laboratory, if you do not work on the Whirlwind, you do not get to participate in the SAGE Project.)

  6. Pingback: NEWS FROM FANDOM: 2/21/16 - Amazing Stories

  7. Christian writes:

    “The phrase ‘discrimination is bad’ is really short for ‘discrimination that creates or exacerbates an undesired imbalance is bad'”.

    So you can look into peoples’ minds and see what they really mean? What a wonderful superpower!

    Seriously, to be precise, “discrimination” based on relevant things is not necessarily “bad” but it is stupid. And when you get the state to sanction and enforce some kinds of discrimination for the benefit of some of its citizens at the expense of other citizens, it will not lead to the Brotherhood of Man.

    I don’t buy your assertion that discrimination that creates or exacerbates and undesired imbalance is “bad.” As the great historian Will Durant noted:

    “Nature smiles at the union of freedom and equality in our utopias. For freedom and equality are sworn and everlasting enemies, and when one prevails the other dies. Leave men free, and their natural inequalities will multiply almost geometrically, as in England and America in the nineteenth century under laissez-faire. To check the growth of inequality, liberty must be sacrificed, as in Russia after 1917. Even when repressed, inequality grows; only the man who is below the average in economic ability desires equality; those who are conscious of superior ability desire freedom, and in the end superior ability has its way.”

    As experience has proven to me, those minorities that will benefit from your racist, discriminatory policies will be those who would have succeeded anyway in a free market economy. Those who don’t benefit get to blame racist White Supremacist America for their failure. And, knowing they received preferential treatment and still failed, their resentment and bitterness will be all the greater.

  8. What’s blowin’ down the hives of the wicked,
    Blightin’ the lives of all who scroll sin?
    What’s sweepin’ in with terrible justice?
    Everyone knows it’s Whirlwind!

  9. The Whirlwind has gusts that howl
    And screech like a hellish owl,
    And levels the vile and fowl
    Downs to the ground (down to the ground…)

    What do you get from sowing harsh breezes,
    Smug and aloof, and sure that you’ll win?
    What’s your reward for meanness and evil?
    Everyone knows it’s Whirlwind!

  10. I assume the attacks on Con or Bust are merely a sideline from your main activity, in which you explain why universities that practice positive discrimination are unworthy of donations? Or is that discrimination okay, because legacy admissions to schools that used to exclude blacks and Jews still favor white Christians?

    (Donations to Ivy League colleges are tax-deductible.)

  11. And when you get the state to sanction and enforce some kinds of discrimination for the benefit of some of its citizens at the expense of other citizens, it will not lead to the Brotherhood of Man.

    Luckily, we’ve already been blessed with the music of Brotherhood of Man:

    So you can probably take that off your list of goals.

  12. And when you get the state to sanction and enforce some kinds of discrimination for the benefit of some of its citizens at the expense of other citizens, it will not lead to the Brotherhood of Man.

    The goal of such actions is not to lead to the brotherhood of man. The goal is to redress wrongs that have been perpetuated and which shaped our society in its present form. The goal is to seek justice, not to make you feel all happy inside, and it must be done on an institutional basis because the harm was committed on an institutional basis.

  13. @Aaron The goal of such actions is not to lead to the brotherhood of man. The goal is to redress wrongs that have been perpetuated and which shaped our society in its present form. The goal is to seek justice, not to make you feel all happy inside, and it must be done on an institutional basis because the harm was committed on an institutional basis.

    This. It seems so obvious to me that I’m constantly baffled by the number of people who don’t get it or are against it. It makes my brain hurt when I try to see it from the other side.

  14. All together now, Aaron and Tasha!

    WAR IS PEACE

    FREEDOM IS SLAVERY

    IGNORANCE IS STRENGTH

    RACISM IS JUSTICE

  15. KT, I was going to say that you wouldn’t know racism if it bit you in the ass, but considering how you’re going nuts about efforts to address past racism, I think you know it quite well.

  16. @KT: Does it hurt to be as clueless as you are? It looks painful.

    You should educate yourself about the world before you continue talking. It will make the world into a much less difficult place for you to navigate.

  17. Erroron writes:

    “Does it hurt to be as clueless as you are? It looks painful.”

    Your command of the dialectic is masterful.

    The Infantile Pretender writes:

    “KT, I was going to say that you wouldn’t know racism if it bit you in the ass,”

    Is that your argument? Impressive.

  18. KT, my argument is the record here. The thought of a charity helping people who don’t normally get to cons get to cons sent you off into a berserker rage bordering on threats of physical violence.

    I’m drawing the logical inference here. A starched, bleached, and pointy hood of a logical inference; a bad anger management of an inference; likely an all caps description of all the guns you own kind of an inference. And perhaps another inference here about you, a small inference.

  19. Erroron . . . The Infantile Pretender

    Inventing silly insult names for people is the last stop a troll makes when they have absolutely run out of anything to say. You have managed, in just a few short days, to drain yourself of any credibility on any subject by demonstrating comprehensively that you are, in fact, a blithering idiot. I’ll retract my earlier suggestion that you educate yourself, because you have demonstrated such poor intellectual capabilities that no amount of studying could help you. You should simply stop talking, because you are too dim to contribute meaningfully to any conversation.

  20. KT,

    You don’t get to use people as shields when they are the sort of person you elsewhere say aren’t real. I think M. Erin is a far better adornment to any Con, (absent of course a Klan Kleagle) than you shall ever be.

  21. Here’s an example of a disadvantaged Person of Color Con-or-Bust helped with your donations.

    Do you have an actual cite for that? Because all I found was Erin helping raise money for Con or Bust with her parody of Beale’s offerings. Perhaps your addled brain confused raising money for an organization with receiving money from an organization.

  22. Aaron on February 22, 2016 at 12:14 pm said:

    Do you have an actual cite for that? Because all I found was Erin helping raise money for Con or Bust with her parody of Beale’s offerings. Perhaps your addled brain confused raising money for an organization with receiving money from an organization.

    Raising money for a charity, receiving money from a charity… it’s a difficult distinction.

  23. Aaron, the respelling of your name was a snide calling out the utter childishness of your post:

    “Does it hurt to be as clueless as you are? It looks painful.

    Really, do you hold that up as anything but witless name-calling? Look back over the posts. You will find I haven’t called anybody names while receiving typical and dreary SJW snark instead of reasoned rebuttal.

    The Young Pretender calls me a friend of the Klan, unhinged gun nut, and insinuates my sincerely held views are all because I have a small penis. Yeah, real mature and adult argument, eh?

    As for the lovely but pale Ms (?) Erin being a beneficiary of your Con-or-Bust donations, just ask her.

  24. Really, do you hold that up as anything but witless name-calling?

    I call it pointing out reality, which appears to be a foreign land for you.

    The Young Pretender calls me a friend of the Klan

    Because you’ve amply demonstrated through your posts here that you are.

    As for the lovely but pale Ms (?) Erin being a beneficiary of your Con-or-Bust donations, just ask her.

    You made the claim. You back it up. Are you unable to substantiate your assertion that Con or Bust sent Erin to a convention? Are you going to engage in the time-honored troll maneuver of dodging, weaving, evading, dissembling, and lying?

  25. rob_matic: Raising money for a charity, receiving money from a charity… it’s a difficult distinction.

    And I can’t imagine that anyone would object if Alexandra Erin was a recipient of Con or Bust subsidies, anyway.

    Anyone who’s mature and reasonable, that is.

  26. As for the lovely but pale Ms (?) Erin being a beneficiary of your Con-or-Bust donations, just ask her.

    Tell the truth, but tell it slant, because lies will have to limbo.

  27. And I can’t imagine that anyone would object if Alexandra Erin was a recipient of Con or Bust subsidies, anyway.

    I certainly wouldn’t object, but it is funny to see our resident troll demonstrate their utter inability to deal with facts.

  28. Are you unable to substantiate your assertion that Con or Bust sent Erin to a convention?

    Did he even make an assertion? All he did was link a tweet! Who knows what he meant to say, not I, not you, not he, not they. Who are we all in the end to tell what must be told? I’m on a horse.

  29. Aaron, are you like about 12-years-old? Really, that last post was just pathetic.

    “Because you’ve amply demonstrated through your posts here that you are [a friend of the Klan].”

    Oh yeah? Well, your mother wears combat boots – so there!

    You will understand why I will not respond to you again unless you at least try to make a logical argument.

    “You made the claim. You back it up.”

    I’m waiting for one of you numbskulls to ask her so I will have his/her/it’s denial on record.

    Hey, I’m glad Con-or-Bust helped out Alexandra. It shows they don’t really discriminate on skin color but instead give to charity mental cases whatever their race. Just as it should be.

  30. KT

    I said nothing of the sort – I just made those small inferences, that your berserker rage and threats at the thought of a charity that helps people of color go to cons allowed me to infer your attitudes about said people. You’re the one who went there.

  31. KT: Hey, I’m glad Con-or-Bust helped out Alexandra.

    And you know this how? You haven’t provided any substantiation for this claim of yours.

  32. I’m waiting for one of you numbskulls to ask her so I will have his/her/it’s denial on record.

    Oooh, have we been blocked on twitter for behaving in a harassing and abusive manner? I’m only asking so we can have your/ure/yoor denial on record.

  33. Oh yeah? Well, your mother wears combat boots – so there!

    Do you have evidence for that? Because we have the evidence of your posts that amply demonstrates your racism. Or is evidence too difficult for you to deal with?

    I’m waiting for one of you numbskulls to ask her so I will have his/her/it’s denial on record.

    So are you going to provide evidence to back up your claim or not? I’m guessing not, since you seem to be simply unable to deal with such concerns. Why would Erin’s denial matter one way or the other? If you have evidence she received money from Con or Bust, provide it. Otherwise, we’ll have to conclude you are simply lying. So now you’ve outed yourself as not only a racist, but also someone who blusters and lies, and when caught, blusters and lies some more. At this point the only thing you are doing is making yourself look really pathetic.

    Also, nice transphobic dig you threw in there. I’m sure that will help your credibility as much as your racism and lying have.

  34. Aaron, please provide evidence of my racism or apologize for the slur.

    Nigel, I don’t twitter. But if you do, please feel free to ask Alexandra if she is a Person of Color and if she has received help from Con-or-Bust. I really want that denial.

    Hard to imagine such a thing but the level of discourse from you guys is sub-Scalzi.

  35. Honestly, I’m scratching my head over KT implying that saying someone’s mother wears combat boots is an insult.

    Me, I’d be saying, quite sincerely, “please thank your mother for her service.”

    It’s a difficult job, which I freely admit I could not do. I respect those who can.

    (Why, yes, I do know female soldiers, airmen, and marines. And some of them have children. I guess KT doesn’t understand that women can be exemplary soldiers. His loss.)

  36. KT: please feel free to ask Alexandra if she is a Person of Color and if she has received help from Con-or-Bust.

    Um, no. You are the one claiming that Alexandra Erin has received con subsidies from Con or Bust. You are the one who has to substantiate it, or else apologize for just making shit up.

  37. But if you do, please feel free to ask Alexandra if she is a Person of Color and if she has received help from Con-or-Bust.

    I dunno, whenever I’m carrying out requests from cagey, aggressive, racist strangers on the internet to go harass other strangers on the internet on their behalf I like to have a bit more to go on…

  38. “Transphobic dig.”

    And here I was just trying to be considerate and cover all the bases, as I don’t know what Mr./Miss/Ms. Erin identifies as. Do you?

  39. JJ, I decline to accept you as the internet police, rhetoric division.

    Nigel, *sigh* please provide evidence of my racism or tender apology

  40. @Cassy B–

    “Your mother wears combat boots” as an insult dates to WWII and earlier, when the idea of women serving in combat was simply not admitted. It suggests that the mother in question is a whore.

  41. KT, I’m sorry you’re a racist.

    (I gave my reasons for thinking so a few comments above.)

    (Now I think you’re a lot of other things, too: a liar, a slanderer, an harasser and abuser, etc, etc. I’m sorry you’re all those things, he whispered, tenderly.)

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