108: If there were no future
Today is an exciting day because we are going to talk about Children of Men, one of my favorite movies of all time.
Today is an exciting day because we are going to talk about Children of Men, one of my favorite movies of all time.
Mark Fisher's Capitalist Realism is a grim thesis, but a tough one to argue with right now And we are back. I have missed you all I hope everyone had a decent if not great holiday and got to spend some time with loved ones and look at
A bunch of things I loved in 2021 I've been working on some year-end retrospective things for work lately and maybe it's just the contrast to how darkly dramatic 2020 and especially its conclusion were, but I've been having a hard time sort of
The third annual Crisis Palace feel good guide to year end giving One of the things about living during the Biden administration is that the Republican Party's horrors hit differently than they did under Trump, when they were mostly inescapable, because try as you might, you could not
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In Wendy Brown's Undoing the Demos, neoliberalism brings the tyranny of the market and the death of the democratic project -- Oh boy, another issue being written right as our Diarrhea Country kicks into full gear, in this case the Kyle Rittenhouse verdict, which we honestly all knew
It just keeps going and then after a while we die -- Today we are going to do one of those issues where we get up to speed together on what is happening in big climate news, namely legislation in U.S. Congress and whatever in god's name
Philanthropy's refusal to fight the fossil fuel industry and the GOP is holding back progress on climate change -- Hello everyone today we have something special, you might call it a Crisis Palace classic in that it's all about climate change funding. Specifically it is an
I am also a we—social contagion in modern horror -- Fam I have been feeling a little sick the past couple days don't worry it is not COVID I took a test and PASSED. I am soldiering on though as this week's newsletter is an
'A world in which there is room for many worlds' -- Well I asked and you delivered. I didn't really know what to expect when I decided to do a reader participation issue. The response could have been complete crickets and I would have 100% understood.
I am passing the microphone to you—and giving some of you a little present -- If there are any real number-heads out there, you may have calculated that the next issue of this newsletter will be the 100th. (This one does not count because I say so.) That is
An interview with Sam J. Miller, author of The Blade Between and Blackfish City, on community organizing, how fiction can change the world, and finding joy during apocalypse. -- Sam J. Miller is a writer of science fiction, fantasy, and horror, all told with crackling prose, unforgettable characters, and a
Ministry for the Future tells the greatest story of our time, brilliantly, and with no resolution -- For years, there was this common refrain in the news media but also regarding books, movies, etc., that climate change is just not a topic conducive to broadly accessible stories. Chris Hayes notoriously