[-] nothingspecial@kbin.social 63 points 1 year ago

I'm all for it and hopeful. For the first time I'm beginning to feel that there's a real chance that even the US could move towards a General Strike before too long in response to how drastically conditions are collapsing across the board.

[-] nothingspecial@kbin.social 4 points 1 year ago

That's hot. Also I hadn't realized Dylan Dog was still going. 367, wow. I feel like rewatching Cemetary Man.

[-] nothingspecial@kbin.social 40 points 1 year ago

As long as the Democratic Party is run by the same neoliberal establishment there will be a place for grotesque sociopaths like her and Terry McAuliffe. Thank you for remembering that she played a key part in stealing the 2016 primary from Sanders as laid out in "the emails!!!" that everyone likes to pretend didn't contain anything horrible.

3

All 6000-ish of it lol. I'd been registered user for close on five years and I only made use of it for a couple more before that. But boy did Reddit help me out in a variety of ways small and big. And helped me waste time. Some would say too much time. Some would be right.

I deleted my content two and a half weeks ago in one big, automated purge and I've been waiting and watching and stamping out the occasional zombie content reappearing from the dead. I haven't seen any in a couple of days and today is a good day to die. This was much sadder than axing Twitter or Facebook (Freedom! Horrible, horrible freedom!)

I don't know how my experience with kbin will shake out, but I'm honestly looking forward to trying to contribute more and be more thoughtful, careful, interesting, in whatever ways that I can. That's the intention I'm starting with.

Alas, poor Reddit, I knew ye well-ish? It was a tough choice.

[-] nothingspecial@kbin.social 2 points 1 year ago

Agreed. I love Discovery, despite/because/whatever the occasional cheese and the overflow of Michael's tears. I really enjoyed the fact that they went what some people want to belittle under the term woke. To me, they went empathetic, emotionally healthy. Not using emotional immaturity to create artificial, clumsy plot suspense through the characters acting foolishly/immaturely. It's the Federation... they 100% are woke. Empathy and understanding and patience are qualities they'd prioritize to succeed both as a civilization and at smaller scale a crew, and it's nice to see the characters act accordingly. I get enough toxic stupidity in my daily contemporary life. It's nice to dream about humans improving in wisdom. Thanks, Discovery.

[-] nothingspecial@kbin.social 2 points 1 year ago

I loved Cloud Cuckoo, I really didn't care for Seveneves (and I actively disliked Termination Shock... it's been a progression but I do believe my taste and Neal Stephenson have finally cleanly diverged), and Ioved The Overstory, though yeah, I agree that I think it ultimately was drawn out. I read it while on a big plant, tree, fungus and mycorrhizal kick, reading lots of books on the possibility of plant sensation/communication/cognition.

[-] nothingspecial@kbin.social 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I ended up loving Ministry. The way it was written felt like it was putting together moments to evoke more of a history of events rather than developing a rich narrative around a few characters. The individual human characters were less important than the development of official and non-official policy that grew through the book, seeing how it all might happen. It really worked for me in this case.

I read it a few months after having read Stephenson's Termination Shock, which I really didn't care for. I feel like his dialogue and sensibilities about characters and society haven't really moved since the early 90s, except to get progressively more weirdly monarcho-libertarian. I think I'm finally done picking up his new books out of habit.

[-] nothingspecial@kbin.social 2 points 1 year ago

Tchaikovsky's output is kind of stunning, especially given just how good I find so much of his stuff, how memorable. "We're going on an adventure!"

[-] nothingspecial@kbin.social 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I started with The Player of Games and that was a great way for me. I think that was when it actually came out, so it's been a while since I read that series but I absolutely loved it.

I wasn't crazy about The Expanse with the first book but it just kept growing on me and ended up one of my very favorites. And the same thing happened with the tv adaption. Truly amazing.

8

Moving over from Reddit, I don't want to just lurk here, so I thought I'd introduce myself by mentioning the last science fiction novels I read along with how I enjoyed them. I just reread what I wrote and I believe they are spoiler-free, though I may be corrected on that point.

I just finished Translation State by Ann Leckie, and overall I'd say that I enjoyed it. Interesting characters and alien species (particularly the Presger) told at an interesting pace that eschewed typical action-centric plotting. My one real complaint was that the last quarter of the book felt like it ran into a wall for me, forcing the characters suddenly into a restricted space that felt like it was all about placing the various characters into different combinations to force the dialogues that the author wanted to happen before the end of the book. That felt clumsy to me and I found myself tempted to skip pages.

A few books before that I had read Titanium Noir by Nick Harkaway. I have a long history with hardboiled/noir fiction and the sci-fi variants, but I have tended to avoid it for a long time just because I grew tired of it through overexposure. But between how much I enjoyed Harkway's Gnomon and the rave reviews for Titanium Noir this was an easy pick-up and I'm glad I did pick it up, because I loved it and was driven to finish it in a few reads. Harkaway does an exceptional job of creating his own hardboiled atmosphere and characters, coming up with his own spin on the trope-y patois made relevant to its particular setting and wrapping it all around an excellent investigation into where our haves vs have-nots society is heading with his concept of Titans. Not a long read, but a particularly enjoyable one. I see how it could easily turn into sequels, but personally I'm really happy for this to be a terrific one-and-done.

A few books before that was Adrian Tchaikovsky's Infinity Gates. I think I'm not alone in saying that his Children of series is among my favorite science fiction of all time. I haven't read anything else by him that I was into until this. It's not conceptually as amazing as the Children of books (for me at least), but I found it a good actiony yarn that has a fresh and very neat spin on the now-tired multiverse concept, something which also allows it to avoid needing to come up with some broken explanation for ftl travel so it could have radically different settings and species.

A handful of books before that one, my next-previous sci fi read was the remarkable A Half-built Garden by Ruthanna Emrys, which is really stellar science fiction by my tastes. Great and big ideas in regards to aliens, gender and climate response, bringing both Butler's Xenogenesis and Robinson's Ministry for the Future strongly to mind though not in any way aping them. In fact I think Emrys one-upped Robinson in respect to her incorporation of how the tech of social networks and communications might evolve (including using AI/algorithms responsibly to support the mechanisms rather than guide them) and be used to form non-state governance, mutualism and corporate resistance centered around dealing with climate change and environmental restoration. I REALLY want there to be watershed networks and given my geography I look forward to being a part of the Chesapeake Watershed.

This is a book that made me think a lot, and beyond that it worked on me with its use of personal pronouns. It's far from the first stuff I've read that makes a point of upending traditional gender pronouns (I think Xenogenesis may be my first significant encounter with that long ago), but the degree and the rapid fluidity of the usage here (all required by the story I should note) definitely challenged my reading flow due to my old man conditioning. At some point during my read, though, that friction receded. I'm not saying I had no issues at all with the writing (some of which I recall was in regards to character motivations I found bit sudden and/or baffling and unsupported to me), but this was Emrys' book, not mine, and for something this inspired and beautifully-executed I'd feel pretty petty for nit-picking over what are ultimately personal choices. This is exceptional science fiction that I highly recommend.

[-] nothingspecial@kbin.social 7 points 1 year ago

That might be true if we lived in a world where companies behaved like that. But given that they now answer to shareholders and the admitted priority above all others is to squeeze every possible cent out for those shareholders in the short term and that ignore long-term health, I don't think the principal really applies any longer. Public companies or companies courting IPOs are literally not permitted to behave in the way you describe.

Also the free market is a complete myth. The market is constantly manipulated and distorted by those controlling the capital via methods such as monopoly, monopsony, trusts and vastly disproportionate "influence" over law makers and potential regulatory power.

[-] nothingspecial@kbin.social 4 points 1 year ago

Adding my emphatic thumbs-up for this feature which I've also been wanting in my interactions with the kbin UI.

[-] nothingspecial@kbin.social 2 points 1 year ago

Lastly, speaking of the links, is there a way to make the link on the main page open the actual link to the external source instead of opening the post and comments? I feel like I am having to do extra clicks just to get to the content posted. I am used to viewing the content first, then going to the comments later if I choose to.

I'd like to add that I also would love to have this feature. I think about it each and every time I click on a post referring to a source.

[-] nothingspecial@kbin.social 3 points 1 year ago

In case adding my voice here helps to prioritize this, I also feel strongly that this would be a significant help to readability.

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nothingspecial

joined 1 year ago