Figuring out whether the couple images I’m using in the dissertation are in the public domain or not, I ran across something that would have probably helped a long time ago: the atomic archive. Next time.
Creating Jobs Today to Ensure an Apocalyptic Tomorrow
I’m sure this would be even funnier to me if I had a bit more knowledge of the current discussions going on about the AFL-CIO, but it’s still pretty biting. The blog is NotAFL-CIO, and the post is “AFL-CIO Executive Council Endorses Comprehensive Doomsday Policy for Working Families”:
Sean McGarvey, President of the AFL-CIO’s Building and Construction Trades Department and Co-Chair of the American Doomsday Institute (ADI), noted that environmental concerns were overblown: “Yes, these technologies will destroy life as we know it, but we see enormous opportunities for working families in the emerging evacuation, resettlement, and cryogenic industries of the future.”
I suppose this satire is relevant no matter the organization.
Pynchon’s Bleeding Edge
So it looks like my first speculation about when this novel was going to be set has turned out to be true: the 1990s and/or 2000s, thereby completing his epic of the 20th c. The New York Times reports that Thomas Pynchon’s novel, Bleeding Edge will be out Sept. 17, and is “set in 2001, [and] takes place in ‘the lull between the collapse of the dot-com boom and the terrible events of September 11.’” Wow. 2001 seems close enough for me to feel like my speculation was accurate. Who would’ve thunk that maybe the best 9.11.01 novel might be Pynchon’s . . . .
The Apocalypse Archive: American Literature and the Nuclear Bomb
I have completed the first draft of my dissertation. Hopefully no more apocalypse for awhile. Not now.
Nukes and Zombies
The title probably says it all. This is a report on Stanford doctoral student, Angela Becerra Vidergar, and her work.
Today in Cyborgicity
The Huffington Post has two stories today on our posthuman present. The first is on “Google Glass” (Vernor Vinge‘s Rainbows End, here we come), glasses that give reality a much more user-friendly overlay (also notice the GPS in the video). The second is Cyberdyne’s (seriously) Hybird Assistive Exoskeleton. It is weird to live in the future.
New Findings in Cosmic Eschatology
Irene Klotz writes about Joseph Lykeen’s report on how the discovery of the Higgs boson has made calculations about the future of the universe quite bleak indeed (even if the time scale is so massive as to be completely inaccessible to our anthropic notions / experiences of time):
“This calculation tells you that many tens of billions of years from now, there’ll be a catastrophe,” Lykken said. “A little bubble of what you might think of as an ‘alternative’ universe will appear somewhere and then it will expand out and destroy us,” Lykken said, adding that the event will unfold at the speed of light.
[. . .]
The calculation requires knowing the mass of the Higgs to within one percent, as well as the precise mass of other related subatomic particles. “You change any of these parameters to the Standard Model (of particle physics) by a tiny bit and you get a different end of the universe,” Lyyken said.
Meteor Strike in Russia
North Korea Nuclear Test
As is being reported all over today, “North Korea has drawn widespread condemnation after conducting a nuclear test in defiance of international bans – a development signaled by an earthquake detected in the country and later confirmed by the regime.” This is N. Korea’s third nuclear test; the others occurred in 2006 and 2009. The Guardian Quotes Dr. Leonid Petrov as saying, “‘The world is now a much more dangerous place.'” Indeed.
And Wired discusses how N. Korea’s weapons are getting bigger based on seismic readings.
The Real Cuban Missile Crisis
Benjamin Schwartz over at The Atlantic writes that “everything you know about the Cuban Missile Crisis is Wrong,” in “The Real Cuban Missile Crisis.”

