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Shunpike: The Road Less Travelled

@ejbarnes / ejbarnes.tumblr.com

Cartoonist E. J. Barnes on art, life, the comics and cartooning industries, and green things in general.
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Today, 1--2 PM, is the reception for "Outside the Box" in the Joy Cochran Gallery in the Parker Room at the Footlight Club in Jamaica Plain. I'll be there this afternoon with other BCR artists, and many of us are bringing the comics the art is from!

The Footlight Club, the oldest community theatre in the USA, is at 7A Eliot Street in Jamaica Plain, MA, just off Centre Street. The closest public transportation is the MBTA #39 Bus; the Green Street and Forest Hills stops on the Orange Line are each at least 15 minutes' walk from the theatre, and there are shuttle buses replacing that branch south of Ruggles 20--21 and 27--28 April. There are several parking garages in the area, though closer to the T stations than to the theatre.

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Zoozve, my beloved

"...we don't live in a big clockwork, we live in a dance club..."

This is my favorite line.

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neil-gaiman

I have learned so many things from this.

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petermorwood

@dduane - one for you!

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dduane

It's a fabulous thing, isn't it! :)

As usual, science is busy being not only weirder and more interesting than we imagine, but weirder and more interesting than we can imagine.

ETA for those who missed it: you don't need to sign any petitions to bring about a happy ending. It's been sorted.) :)

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ejbarnes

We're still discovering weird things about the solar system. And giving them wonderful names. Remember when "Googol" (Not "Google") was 10 to the 100th power? Based on a mathematician who asked his kid what to call it?

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This Sunday, 21 April, I will be one of the Boston Comics Roundtable artists with art in Outside the Box who will be present for the "Meet the Artists" reception in the Joy Cochran Gallery. The Gallery is in the Parker Room at the Footlight Club in Jamaica Plain, MA. Outside the Box is an exhibit of kid-friendly pages in coordination with the Footlight Club's production, Tuck Everlasting, which opens this weekend. The reception is 1--2 PM this Sunday, just before that day's matinee of Tuck Everlasting. Light refreshments will be served, and you will have the opportunity not only to look at the comics art on the walls but to buy copies of the comics those pages are from! Several original pages from my Drowned Town Press all-ages mini-comic Laird MacGuffin's Treasury join the work of Dan Mazur, Anthony Lathrop, Brendan Tobin, Lindsey Leigh, Reggie Themistocle, Julie DiSalvio, Robert Christie and Deborah Lang, Crispin Wood, Calvin and Nile Hennick, Mark Borok, Jerel Dye, Jonathan Todd, and Catalina Rufín. The Footlight Club, the oldest community theatre in the USA, is at 7A Eliot Street in Jamaica Plain, MA, just off Centre Street. The closest public transportation is the MBTA #39 Bus; the Green Street and Forest Hills stops on the Orange Line are each at least 15 minutes' walk from the theatre, and there are shuttle buses replacing that branch south of Ruggles 20--21 and 27--28 April. There are several parking garages in the area, though closer to the T stations than to the theatre.

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Something that literally changed my life was working with a friend on a coding thing. He was helping me create an auto rig script and was trying to explain something to me but his words were just turning into static in my brain. I was tired and confused and there was so many new concepts happening.

I could feel myself working toward a crying meltdown and was getting preemptively ashamed of what was about to happen when he said, “Hey, are you someone who benefits from breaks?”

It broke me.

Did I benefit from breaks? I didn’t know. I’d never taken them.

When a problem frustrated or upset me I just gritted my teeth and plowed through the emotional distress because eventually if you batter and flail at something long enough you figure it out. So what if you get bruised on the way.

I viscerally remembered in that moment being forced to sit at the table late into the night with my dad screaming at me, trying to understand math. I remembered taking that with me into adulthood and having breakdowns every week trying to understand coding. I could have taken a break? Would it help? I didn’t know! I’d never taken one!

“Yes,” I told him. We paused our call. I ate lunch. I focused on other stuff for half an hour. I came back in a significantly better state of mind, and the thing he’d been trying to explain had been gently cooking in the back of my head and seemed easier to understand.

Now when I find myself gritting my teeth at problems I can hear his gentle voice asking if I benefit from breaks. Yes, dear god, yes why did I never get taught breaks? Why was the only way I knew to keep suffering until something worked?

I was relating to this same friend recently my roadtrip to the redwoods with my wife. “We stopped every hour or so to get out and stretch our legs and switch drivers. It was really nice. When I was a kid we’d just drive twelve hours straight and not stop for anything, just gas. We’d eat in the car and power through.”

He gave a wry smile, immediately connecting the mindset of my parents on a road trip to what they’d instilled in me about brute forcing through discomfort. “Do you benefit from breaks?” he echoed, drawing my attention to it, making me smile with the same sad acknowledgement.

Take breaks. You’re allowed. You don’t have to slam into problems over and over and over, let yourself rest. It will get easier. Take. Breaks.

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ejbarnes

About 30 years ago, I was a programmer on a team project that had just installed at the first client. The "beta site" was nonetheless considered critical, and so a bug that emerged became the subject of panic and multiple successive days -- memory blurs, it felt like a week, maybe it was less, but it was at least 4 days -- of forced overtime. I'm fairly certain it overlapped a weekend. All members of our team would arrive before 9 AM and not leave until nearly 10 PM. And we were no closer to finding the bug. Making this worse was that one of my cats was lost, and I had no time to put up posters about him. I was fried. The last morning of this horror show, my boss (one of the few female bosses I've had, and one of the worst, as she routinely would turn a one-hour weekly status meeting last all afternoon) cheerfully asked, as I arrived, "How are YOU?" and I blurted out, "Dying of nervous exhaustion." We still didn't find the bug that day. I'd had it. I went home at my normal time (actually 6 PM), had dinner at home with my roommates for the first time all week, went to bed at a reasonable hour, and arrived the next morning at my usual time (10 AM). I found the bug that morning. But I never found my cat.

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wilwheaton
“Barely 24 hours after Roe-destroying Donald Trump took the craven and elastic position that he would leave abortion policy to the individual states, Arizona’s Supreme Court showed us exactly what that will look like. In reviving a draconian, mid-19th century abortion ban passed when Arizona was still a territory, the high court upended the state’s closely watched Senate race, made it an even swingier swing state in the presidential election, put a potential November abortion-rights referendum front and center, and exposed the fundamental fraud of Trump’s position.”
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ejbarnes

Between this and the drive to ban interstate commerce in mifepristone relying on the Comstock Act of 1873, I hate to contemplate what other zombie laws -- unenforced for a half-century or more -- are awaiting revival by those who want to turn the clock back on American freedom.

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anneemay

Matt is harassing Avery on twitter now

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boccher

I wanna emphasise prev tags and ramble cuz it hits the nail on the head exactly. Exactly!!

What mr CEO is doing is fucking heinous: Revealing private information on a sex worker, placing her at risk of danger; Trying to use sexual language as a gotcha, knowing trans women are more likely to be profiled as sexual predators; Using his platform & disproportionate institutional power to amass extra attention & dogpiling on her; chasing her down, telling her that there's no safe place that she can run to without being pursued; threatening police on her. The entitlement to do all this just to win an argument and defend himself as an "lgbt ally". It's disgusting. And yet, it's so fucking common.

It's such commonly accepted behaviour among self-proclaimed "trans allies", among other queer people, even among other trans people. That's what trans women have been telling everyone for the past few months, for the past few years, for as long as we've existed. A significant proportion of TME people think this is totally justified behaviour when disagreeing with a trans woman, when they would rightfully condemn this behaviour if it were targeted towards a man, a cis person, a white person; y'know, people who are considered by default "more innocent" than those trans women who get 500 callout posts a day.

Self-declared trans ally Matt is perfectly replicating the everyday behaviour of all the transmisogynists and terfs running rampant on his website. This is his response to all of the ignored reports of harassment campaigns and witchhunting against trans women: He's joining in. He's replicating their behaviour to a T.

To place him in the broader situation, he's just one of many transmisogynists, all exhibiting the same kind of vile bigoted behaviour as him. He's the norm in a transmisogynistic society. But as a rich and powerful CEO with authoritative powers, he's also spearheading the current wave of transmisogyny, riling up and encouraging transphobes en masse to harass every trans women they see (many of my mutuals!) . This guy's actions are legitimately dangerous.

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ejbarnes

More detail on a situation I am only getting a vague view of, but it is clearly horrible.

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jv
Anonymous asked:

What is this about the tumblr staff wanting to sell art data to midjourney?

An ex-colleague of mine mentioned yesterday that there may be contacts between Automattic and midjourney in that direction, but nothing is public yet and I don't have any more info. They probably won't have anything specific to share either, since they left the company weeks ago too. That being said:

  • I have no reason to doubt my ex-coworker word, they are a trustworthy person.
  • Tumblr's CEO has been absurdly enthusiastic (comically, even) about AI, and is a big fan of LLMs and 'AI' companies.
  • A deal with midjourney could solve tumblr financial issues (not the same company, but openAi is paying up to 5 million/year to news companies to use their content as training data... tumblr generates several orders of magnitude more content than any newspaper or any media company and it only would need a 20 to 30 million per year deal to be profitable)

So I don't have any extra info yet, but I'm keeping my ears open.

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And I just got confirmation from a second ex-colleague that a deal with midjourney has been brewing since months ago. Not any extra details, just that's a real thing.

Shit, I don't see any way for this to happen that doesn't make it an apocalyptic event the size of the porn ban. Fuck.

Shit. This may be pure chance and coincidence, and it's not he is in a position to be able to talk about anything, but seeing prominent staff members announcing they are moving their original photography out of tumblr just two weeks ago seems a pretty significant cue of shit to be about to hit the fan.

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ejbarnes

I have posted my art here -- and NOT on Facebook -- for years specifically because of the difference between Tumblr's and Facebook's policies about ownership and control of posted content. Will the advantages of Tumblr go away? If so, where can a [virtual] body [of work] go?

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Thoughts that are mutual between cats and their people:

  1. Yeah you're cute when you sleep but you didn't let me sleep either so I'm going to annoy you now because I'm bored. Hahah get poked, sleepy idiot.
  2. How do you not comprehend this when I am literally staring at you. Like I understand that your brain can't understand things this nuanced but come on, how do you not get this.
  3. I don't know if you know that what I am currently doing is an expression of affection, but that won't stop me. Knowing that I showed you that I love you is enough.
  4. I heard a crinkly material and the sound of you chewing so I have to know what's in your mouth RIGHT FUCKING NOW.
  5. I can't communicate with you and you can't communicate with me, so I'm just copying the tone of the sound you're making in hopes that you understand that I try.
  6. You are doing activities beyond my comprehension, and I find this fascinating. I will never understand what the fuck you are trying to achieve here, but I am intrigued nonetheless.
  7. Hey are you ok, you haven't done your weird thing in a while. Yeah I don't get why you do that but I know you do that when you're ok.
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ejbarnes

Have a cat, can attest.

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foone

Photomatt has become a specter haunting the web. You can find the most obscure niche forum to comment on Tumblr's transmisogyny problem, and within seconds he'll be there to tell you that it wasn't because of his fear of hammers, but predestinationne had to be banned because it was reblogging posts by people with names like giraffecumsock and aardvarkbutthole and...

He'll just continue naming trans tumblrs until he runs out of post length

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ejbarnes

This is horrifying. I've got a number of trans followers and folks I'm following here, and I think you should know about this.

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Boskone starts tomorrow! The 61st annual Boskone Science Fiction/Fantasy Convention runs Friday through Sunday, 9--11 February, at the Westin Boston Seaport District Hotel.

I am, once again, showing my art in the Boskone Art Show. The Art Show is in the Galleria on the lower level of the east wing of  the hotel; Art Show sales of original art are by silent auction, with a  separate section for prints. (I'll have items in both sections.)  Art Show hours are Friday 6 PM–Midnight (with a reception at 8 PM),  Saturday 10 AM – 9 PM, Sunday 10 AM – Noon. Quick Sale (purchase of  original art for its designated Quick Sale price, usually higher than  the minimum bid in the silent auction) is Saturday Noon–9 PM, Sunday 10  AM – Noon. Art pickup will be Sunday 1–3 PM.

I won't be on the program, but barring calamity, I will be attending all three days of the convention. Maybe we'll run into each other!

The Westin Boston Seaport District Hotel is at 425 Summer Street, Boston, MA, next to the Boston Convention and Exhibition Center. It's a short (but often windy) walk from the World Trade Center stop on the MBTA Silver Line SL1, SL2, SL3, and SLW. MBTA Buses #4 and #7 stop near the BCEC, although the #4 does not run on weekends and the #7  does not run on Sundays. Please be aware of this weekend's MBTA Subway and Bus Service Alerts.

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I'll be at Boskone (in the Art Show)

This weekend is Boskone, the older of Boston's two science-fiction/fantasy conventions (this year is the 61st, hence "Boskone 61"). I am, once again, showing my art in the Boskone Art Show,  and I've decided for certain to attend the con all three days despite  not being on the program. The con runs this Friday through Sunday, 9--11  February 2024. The Boskone Art Show is in the Galleria on the lower level of the east  wing of the hotel; Art Show sales of original art are by silent auction,  with a separate section for prints. (I'll have items in both sections.)   Art Show hours are Friday 6 PM–Midnight (with a  reception at 8 PM), Saturday 10 AM – 9 PM, Sunday 10 AM – Noon. Quick  Sale (purchase of original art for its designated Quick Sale price,  usually higher than the minimum bid in the silent auction) is Saturday  Noon–9 PM, Sunday 10 AM – Noon. Art pickup will be Sunday 1–3 PM. Boskone returns to the Westin Boston Seaport District Hotel at 425 Summer Street, Boston, MA, which is next to the Boston Convention and Exhibition Center. It's a short (but often windy) walk from the World Trade Center stop on the MBTA Silver Line SL1, SL2, SL3, and SLW. MBTA Buses #4 and #7 stop near the BCEC, although the #4 does not run on weekends and  the #7 does not run on Sundays. Please be aware of this weekend's MBTA Subway and Bus Service Alerts.

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TOMORROW -- Friday, 12 January -- is the first day of Arisia 2024,  which runs through Martin Luther King Jr. Day weekend -- and I'll be  there the whole weekend! The four-day science-fiction and fantasy  convention is Friday through Monday, 12--15 January at the Westin Boston Seaport District Hotel, 425 Summer Street, Boston, MA.

As usual, I'm on the program -- including a workshop on drawing Fold-Ins such as those created by the late, legendary MAD Magazine artist Al Jaffee! (Space is limited for that one!) My schedule can be seen here. I also have art in the Arisia Art Show,  with new original art, and more prints than ever before. Arisia's Art Show is in Harbor Ballrooms II/III on the third floor of the east wing  of the hotel. Art can be viewed Friday 6--9 PM, Saturday 10 AM--6 PM and  8--10 PM (with 7--8 PM reserved for mobility aid users and their  companions), and Sunday 10 AM--6 PM. All art for sale is priced as  marked; there is no auction. Art purchased may be picked up Sunday 5--8 PM or Monday 10 AM--1 PM.

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>First, we’ve discovered that about a quarter of all the internet connection in or out of the house were ad related. In a few hours, that’s about 10,000 out of 40,000 processed.

>We also discovered that every link on Twitter was blocked. This was solved by whitelisting the https://t.co domain.

>Once out browsing the Web, everything is loading pretty much instantly. It turns out most of that Page Loading malarkey we’ve been accustomed to is related to sites running auctions to sell Ad space to show you before the page loads. All gone now.

>We then found that the Samsung TV (which I really like) is very fond of yapping all about itself to Samsung HQ. All stopped now. No sign of any breakages in its function, so I’m happy enough with that.

>The primary source of distress came from the habitual Lemmings player in the house, who found they could no longer watch ads to build up their in-app gold. A workaround is being considered for this.

>The next ambition is to advance the Ad blocking so that it seamlessly removed YouTube Ads. This is the subject of ongoing research, and tinkering continues. All in all, a very successful experiment.

>Certainly this exceeds my equivalent childhood project of disassembling and assembling our rotary dial telephone. A project whose only utility was finding out how to make the phone ring when nobody was calling.

>Update: All4 on the telly appears not to have any ads any more. Goodbye Arnold Clarke!

>Lemmings problem now solved.

>Can confirm, after small tests, that RTÉ Player ads are now gone and the player on the phone is now just delivering swift, ad free streams at first click.

>Some queries along the lines of “Are you not stealing the internet?” Firstly, this is my network, so I may set it up as I please (or, you know, my son can do it and I can give him a stupid thumbs up in response). But there is a wider question, based on the ads=internet model.

>I’m afraid I passed the You Wouldn’t Download A Car point back when I first installed ad-blocking plug-ins on a browser. But consider my chatty TV. Individual consumer choice is not the method of addressing pervasive commercial surveillance.

>Should I feel morally obliged not to mute the TV when the ads come on? No, this is a standing tension- a clash of interests. But I think my interest in my family not being under intrusive or covert surveillance at home is superior to the ad company’s wish to profile them.

>Aside: 24 hours of Pi Hole stats suggests that Samsung TVs are very chatty. 14,170 chats a day.

>YouTube blocking seems difficult, as the ads usually come from the same domain as the videos. Haven’t tried it, but all of the content can also be delivered from a no-cookies version of the YouTube domain, which doesn’t have the ads. I have asked my son to poke at that idea.

fastest reblog in the west

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dduane

Yeppers. :)

reblogging for study later AND to spread the info.

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thebobbu

Seriously, get and run PiHole if you can. It changes your internet experience so much for the better. I get shocked when I visit a website when I'm someone else's network, by just how many ads the internet is flooded with now. Take back control.

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ejbarnes

This is well beyond the "$#!+ Switch" I installed on the TV at my parents' house during Xmas break my Sophomore year in college: A mechanical toggle switch at the end of a cord that broke the circuit to the TV's speaker, for muting the ads (TV remote controls were still a rarity back then). I'd learned the trick from my then-boyfriend's roommate. My parents removed it after I went back to college. I should look into this, though it might take some time to learn what I need to learn to implement it -- especially with parts available in the US. I don't have a handy younger generation in residence to implement it for me.

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Somewhat on the vibe of "your glorious revolution doesn't exist," I want to talk to you all, especially the young folks, about effective anarchism.

Spoiler alert, it's not blowing stuff up or arson.

I am considered the most anarchical person of all among my friends. Granted, most of my experience has been wreaking anarchy against the systems present in my high school and college, but the principles are the same.

Practical anarchy is not the big, flashy, romanticizable thing people online make it out to be. It's more about the long haul - digging in your teeth and just being a menace that no one can really get rid of.

Everyone's "Why vote when you can firebomb a Walmart" posts (that they don't follow through on) are just not pratical because this is a surveillance society. With CCTV and DNA testing and cell phone cameras and GPS tracking, if you do something big like that, you are GOING to be caught; then that is the end of your anarchical career. And, keep in mind that you might get caught while you're setting up this big event - it's a crime to blow up a Walmart and also a crime to conspire to blow up a Walmart, so your career in anarchy might end before it begins, and then you are permanently out of the game. No matter what causes you were working for that inspired you to do something big and violent that you thought would get someone's attention, you now can't help at all ever again in your entire life. What you did will be a passing headline on the news, and then everything will go back to exactly what it was because big, acute actions can't compare in effectiveness to small, constant actions (just being a thorn in the side of the system, poking and poking, but unable to be dislodged).

This is just the practical side of it too: think about the risk of hurting innocents if you really advocate for doing things like that. You think blowing up a Walmart would really make a dent in that big of a corporation? But if you intentionally or unintentionally kill a bunch of Walmart shoppers, that's going to devastate families that had nothing to do with whatever your cause is.

So all that big talk about violence and destruction: not practical, not effective, not ethical.

The only way I've started to change oppressive systems around me is by justing chipping away from within the confines of the rules of these systems, and/or only stepping just outside them (never breaking rules in a big way that could have allowed said system to easily and "justifiably" get rid of me).

So if you're going to be an anarchist, you need to consider:

  1. Having the longest career in anarchism possible (i.e. being careful enough and judicious with your actions so that you don't get expelled from the system you wish to fight).

And then for any given anarchical plan:

2. Potential consequences.

3. Insurance.

I'll give you an example. I had serious beef with the culture of my college's science department. Students were constantly overworked, and if they expressed their misery outloud or reached out to any of their professors about their struggles, they got apathetic responses if not direct insults to their abilities or dedication. I had too many similar disparaging interactions with professors in one week, and I realized a lot of the responses I was getting were just the result of professors not really knowing how they sounded when they said certain things to students (ex: If someone says they're struggling with a course, don't IMMEDIATELY respond with "change your major," - you can give that as an option, but if you make it your first suggestion, the implication to the student is that if they're having any trouble with the course, they're not good enough for the program).

So I wrote up a flier of examples of good and bad ways to respond to students having anxiety with explanations and distributed it to every professor in the department. Everyone who knew about this perceived it as a great personal risk - that I would get in some kind of unspecified trouble or piss off an important professor, so before embarking on this project, I considered...

Potential consequences: I couldn't really think of any specific college or department rules I could be violating. People postered and handed out fliers in the department all the time. What I was doing fell pretty clearly under freedom of speech. I just shoved the fliers under professors' doors, so I didn't trespass in anyone's office. Worst I could think is that individual professors would get mad at me and make my life difficult, or I'd simply be told to stop fliering in the department.

Insurance: Just in case there were any consequences that I didn't think of and to insure me against the ones I had thought of, I didn't put my name on the flier. It was typed in Word, something everyone had access to. I came in to do it after professors had all left for the day but before I needed to use my ID to get into the building (no electronic record of me being there). I took the elevator to the first floor offices because the stairs require ID swipe after 5pm, but the elevators do not. I found out the building had no cameras by asking about it on the grounds that something of mine had been stolen a few weeks prior. I shoved the flier under the doors of dark offices and left it outside offices with lights on (so that no one would come out and spot me). And here's one of the most important pieces of insurance: I put up a few of the fliers on public bulletin boards in the building. This was important so that if I slipped up and said something that conveyed that I had knowledge of the content of the flier, I would have an excuse for that, i.e., I read it on the bulletin board before class this morning.

And then I did the thing. And surprisingly, it was incredibly well-received by professors. A few who knew that the flier must have been mine (because of previous, similar anarchical actions rumored to be associated with me) told me that everyone was RELIEVED that they finally had an instruction manual from the student perspective on what the hell they're supposed to say when one of their students is panicking. It sparked a real change in the vibe of the department and student experience. Had it instead pissed people off, I would have simply said I could not claim authorship of the flier but had read it and thought it contained good ideas then gone on creating more anarchy while angry people grasped at the zero straws I had left them to pin the action on me.

That's an example of a single action I took that was part of a much longer (~3 years) campaign of mine to change the culture of my department. Everytime I did something in that campaign, I made that consequences vs. insurance calculation to make sure they couldn't expell me from the program, the department, or the school before I succeeded.

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ejbarnes

Monkeywrenching in the age of surveillance. Some good advice here.

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This Sunday, Noon--5 PM -- 17 December -- I have a table at Pandemonium Books and Games at their annual GeekFaire. The store is at 4 Pleasant Street, Cambridge, MA -- in Central Square, right near the Post Office that faces Mass. Ave. This event is FREE to the public and is my last scheduled craft fair of the holiday shopping season.

Then -- within hours of getting home -- I'm giving my very last Blaster Al Ackerman Zoom reading of 2023, "The Curate and the Haint". The reading is on Zoom at 8 PM EST and is also free, although you have to sign up in advance on EventBrite. The reading, like all those this year, is going to be recorded, so if you miss it you'll still have a chance to view it on my Vimeo channel. Content warnings galore on this one, so make sure the kiddies are in bed and your gramma has taken her heart meds.

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foone

I went into the woodworking shop at work and I'm wearing my ear protection and there's lasers and routers all going and I think to myself "hey, maybe I should wear a mask too? It can't be good breathing in any wood dust. Like yeah, everything has vacuums to try to catch that, but there's probably some escaping.

Then I remembered I was already wearing an n95 mask, because covid.

I am not smart sometimes

I currently wear a mask most of the time - I work with a lot of people and commute by bus and train, it just seems sensible to not be a vector.

I keep being astonished at how many people at my work not only don't choose to wear one because of covid, but no longer wear masks in the machine shop, labs, or other places where they normally would have worn a mask four years ago.

OK, so you not only aren't worried about the pandemic, fine, but you're also now immune to silicosis and all its friends?

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teal-deer

I'm the only one in the welding class who wears a mask.

The class where we are regularly doing SO much grinding that the floor gets slippery due to all the metal shavings.

The class where my respirator ends up dark brown because of all the rust in the air.

I'm like y'all look at my respirator and go "haha it's fine, my lungs are the exception" or what?

AHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH

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ejbarnes

Even if you're no longer worried about viruses, the other crap never went away and never will.

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