Jason’s Discoveries


31
Aug 10

Bob Dylan’s 1st Bad Dream: “Man Gave Names to All the Animals”

Bob Dylan is my favorite singer/songwriter.  Original, I know, and I’ll spare you the diatribe about his greatness as his standing among the 20th century’s greatest performers and personas is well established.  He is immortal as far as the history of music is concerned and bears responsibility for some of the best musical and lyrical offerings ever produced.  That being said, Dylan’s undertakings became more mercurial as his career went on, and in addition to having written some of the most powerful and groundbreaking songs of his generation (or ever), he may also have lashed together some of the worst I’ve ever heard.  This ongoing series entitled Bob Dylan’s Bad Dreams seeks to bring those forgotten anti-classics into full view with naught but love and admiration.  The idea is to keep this list going on a semi-regular basis until I run out of things to say.

Album: Slow Train Coming (1979)
Link:  Lyrics/Audio

I’m not sure if “Man Gave Names to All the Animals” is the worst song Dylan has ever recorded, but it’s certainly close.  Coming of the earlier portion of his descent into Christian-themed music and through twelve verses of banal, unironic descriptions of — for the most part — farm animals, Dylan alludes to the story of Adam bestowing names upon all God’s creatures:

And out of the ground the LORD God formed every beast of the field, and every fowl in the air; and brought them unto Adam to see what he would call them: and whatsoever Adam called every living creature, that was the name thereof.  And Adam gave names to all cattle, and to the fowl of the air, and to every beast of the field; but for Adam there was not found an help meet for him.

Genesis 2:19-20, King James Version

Dylan, however, tends to phrase Adam’s exploits in this regard with considerably less poetry than the indelible King James Version of the Bible.  Take, for instance, my favorite verse of the lot:

He saw an animal up on a hill
Chewing up so much grass until she was filled
He saw milk comin’ out but he didn’t know how
“Ah, think I’ll call it a cow”

He couples his childish lyrics — and really, this song’s only legitimate home is within the disease-ridden confines of a Kindergarten classroom — with a hefty serving of backing Gospel singers as would be his wont for some time.  (There will be other entries that deal with more egregious uses of the Gospel tradition, which I do like, by and large.  It can, however, be abused and mutated to horrendous effect.)

To end off what amounts to a musical version of a See ‘n’ Say, Dylan concludes the song with an ellipsis as if challenging you to name the animal he is describing in the last verse.  Go ahead.  See if you can guess, but you have to actually listen to the roughly 4:20 that precedes this point in the song because I did, and it’s very lonely out here.

This article is cross-posted at They Will Rise Again from the Tundra.

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12
Aug 10

The Terminal Illness of Fashion: A Review of the Blog “Attempted Style” by Neil Gorman

The evolution of style since the dawn of humankind consists of a long, tortuous transition from garb of utility — the skins and furs that girded our ancestors against an unforgiving Ice Age and the often ferocious wildlife that inhabited the era — to dress meant primarily as decoration.  The latter turn along the road of fashion can be traced with great accuracy back to the ancient Egyptians, who in 3000 B.C. and before adorned their bodies with sumptuous jewelry and painted their faces in a vast array of gaudy colors now reserved for stage plays and transvestites, but recent archaeological finds suggest these stylistic underpinnings, notably facial paint and primitive jewelry, may date back to the aforementioned era of utilitarianism perhaps even as far as the Neanderthal.  If this assumption is indeed correct, the introductory sentence of my review may prove worthless, and worse, almost totally inaccurate.  To begin such a piece with a potentially false assertion that narcissism and superfluity were somehow acquired during the ravages of our “advancement” as a species would be perilous when, in fact, all evidence suggests these traits to be not only well-established but innate.

It does one no good to have a beef with evolution, though.  Evolution is sloppy and inconsistent, a hyperactive child with a menagerie of toxic finger paints at his command who manages after billions of years and almost by utter chance to concoct a masterpiece.  If humans truly are programmed to covet oddities like neckties, bowler hats, hoop earrings, cuff links, necklaces, body piercings, styling mousse, or any other ilk of useless adornment, I defy the very foundation upon which this predilection was formed.  Fie on evolution, and fie on Charles Darwin for having explained it so sufficiently (for his time).  How could Nature, in her seemingly infinite wisdom, have made such a grave error in estimation?  How could she have instilled in us such a fatal flaw?  We were doomed all those millions of years ago when we broke from the tree, and we are doomed today as our psychological corruptions, once apparent, have now grown insurmountable.

Which brings me to Neil Gorman and his fashion blog entitled Attempted Style.  The dubbing itself is mincingly affable, dishonest in the way so many hip technoratis and (in a perfect world) unemployable culture connoisseurs are when they wield their powerful and disarming affinity for self-deprecation to mask the magmatic pit of self importance and arrogance that seethes underneath.  This sort of conceit may have played well to blog readers in 1999 when the format was still hobbling through its nascence, but in 2010, only a dementia patient could reasonably fall for what amounts to such an obvious lie.  And that is to say nothing of the content.

I’ve never been a great fan of fashion, preferring instead to invest my quickly waning time on this earth in more useful endeavors such as hypochondria and hermetic solitude, but I am famously unwilling to condemn others for harboring divergent philosophies or interests.  Everyone is entitled to his/her own stupid opinion unless they’re avid proponents of William Faulkner and the horrid dry rot some have the gumption to call writing.

But despite my cultural liberality, a quick leaf through Mr. Gorman’s inane scribblings leaves me scrambling desperately to find my trusty bottle of Metoclopramide, and I’m quite sure, had I taken the time to read all the archival material contained in his blog, the refluxing stomach acid would have burned straight through my esophagus and necessitated a grisly trip to the intensive care unit at the nearest hospital.  It’s not that Mr. Gorman is especially ineloquent nor is it his strange propensity for wearing ladies’ hats that sets my mood toward such profound foulness but the vapidity of his musings.

Take, for instance, a post entitled “Bold Red Tie vs. Subdued Gray Tie” in which he espouses the increased attention he received in his workplace after switching out a drab gray rag of a necktie for a drab red rag of a necktie.  He sets this up as an experiment with one data point, which he at least acknowledges is insufficient, and proceeds to mentally collect the compliments he receives for his red tie.  Two pictures are included in the article, one that shows Mr. Gorman with his hair down, a serious visage, and looking rather dapper in his red tie while the second shows Mr. Gorman in a ponytail with the famished leer of a cannibal and a tie unfit for Crispin Glover’s character in Bartleby.  The obvious lack of controls in his study should be enough to put him out of business; the callous disregard to compensate for observer bias (he was likely in a better mood with the red tie on) and his inability to control for physical differences (hair down vs. the ponytail) effectively nullifies any of Mr. Gorman’s conclusions about his so-called experiment and throws into doubt the reactions of his co-workers.

Further posts regarding particular outfits contain similarly inadequate musings about comfortable styles for summer weddings and an almost fanatical, possibly erotic, devotion to the stylistic sensibilities of Robert Sterling, a character from his favorite television show Mad Men, about which he, frankly, won’t shut up.

Perhaps the most galling aspect of Attempted Style is its author’s implicit anti-corporatism, most blatantly showcased in “Research Shows That Avoiding Logos = Success“, a post that relies exclusively upon two articles originally run in The New York Times from whom we’ve all come to expect unfettered leftist garbage parading around as real analysis.  Apparently, their propagandistic bent extends into the Fashion section as well because what follows from our well-groomed author is a woeful parroting of the Times‘ pro-regulation, anti-capitalist ethos and an article that suggests true glitterati, the real high rollers, prefer subtler expressions of their stylistic superiority as opposed to overt displays of logos and other branded graphics.  I can only assume Mr. Gorman lives in a Calcutta slum and has never encountered an employed person over the age of twelve.  Otherwise, he would have little doubt in the whorish pretenses of today’s yuppie culture, iPhones in hand, expensive TAG Heuer watches glistening obscenely, Armani suits freshly pressed the night before by a beautiful Vietnamese girl who couldn’t rightly be considered a prostitute only because she isn’t paid for services rendered.  Gorman’s shocking willingness to ignore the very real depravity inherent in the young and wealthy by substituting a legless fantasy of the existence of taste and nuance in the modern brain borders on insulting, and his mewling yet clear desire for a societal ascendance into the realm of the meta-human is at once worrisome and sad.

Only on the wide and largely untamed expanses of the web could a fashion writer such as Neil Gorman ply his haughty gibberish.  Only in the early years of the 21st century could he afford to traffic such naiveté and vacuum of thought, and as we barrel forward into what is sure to be a bitter war between telecommunications companies and the FCC over Net Neutrality, I am left to wonder whether the dissolution of a free and open internet would be such a horrible thing if it resulted in our being spared such awful, un-evolved tripe as Attempted Style.

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2
Aug 10

Mars Defaced

Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons

Forgive the bad pun in the headline.  I couldn’t resist.

I don’t know if anyone out there still actually believes in the notorious “Face on Mars” located in the Red Planet’s Cydonia region, but just in case, those of you with any lingering trepidation may put your fears to rest.  PhysOrg.com has just published an article outlining a new photograph of the area at a much higher resolution that confirms (again) the face is nothing more than your common, garden variety Martian mesa and reaffirms those who’ve been shouting the Face was simply a byproduct of optical illusion and pareidolia.  (Go figure that the originating citation from the PhysOrg.com article emanates from FOXNews.com, which has surprised me for the second time in a week with a well-reasoned article.  Murdoch must be losing his sensationalist touch, but take a quick skim through the comment boards, and you’ll see there are still a handful of clingers-on that chalk this newest photo up as further spin from NASA, released to embolden the space agency’s vast conspiracy aimed at keeping us in the dark about alien life on Mars.)

Imagine my surprise — disclosure: glee — that the Wikipedia article about pareidolia to which I linked actually uses the Face as its primary visual example.  Other examples of the phenomenon include, of course, Jesus Christs on burnt toast, figures we see in cloud formations, and this eggplant that looks like Richard Nixon.  Pareidolia also applies to perceived patterns related to senses other than sight.

An eggplant.  What will Tricky Dick think of next?

Other Resources:

“Extreme Close-Up of the Face on Mars” – Universe Today
This article gives the most in-depth analysis of the progression from the original Viking Orbiter photo to the current one.  You’ll see a brief timeline of photos taken, each one clearer than the next, and it should have been abundantly clear even after the 2001 photograph that there wasn’t anything even particularly odd about the mesa, at least insofar as it resembles a face because, of course, it doesn’t.  There are a few anomaly hunters in the comment boards on this article too.  This article is also cited in the PhysOrg.com release.

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29
Jul 10

Thesis Wars

I’m about a week behind commenting on the story that pitted WordPress founder Matt Mullenweg against Thesis theme creator Chris Pearson, but I found myself pondering my allegiances again.  Essentially, the fight boiled down to this: Mullenweg was angry at Pearson for selling a theme that used PHP, WordPress code, and WordPress plugin API, all of which are licensed under the General Public License (GPL), without in turn licensing his own Thesis theme in the same way.  This license requires that projects utilizing other GPL-licensed code must be instilled with the same share-alike privileges for users, which means that Pearson was likely breaking an as of yet formally untested law by attempting to make all elements of his theme proprietary, and thus, limiting the rights of users to utilize what should have been freely available bits of code.

As the Mashable story to which I linked outlines, Mullenweg eventually came out on top and got Pearson to utilize a split license in which the aforementioned elements of Thesis are now GPL-licensed while the CSS and JavaScript present within the theme remains proprietary.

Thesis is a fantastic WordPress theme, and I’ve worked with it on a couple of different blogs.  If there were a WordPress theme for which I’d be willing to pay, Thesis would likely be the only one, and even though I’m generally a fan of free, open-source products, I can’t say I blame Pearson for charging for it even though so many theme developers have chosen to request donations instead of fixing prices.  I certainly side with Mullenweg when it comes to the licensing issue, but the CSS and JavaScript are what make Thesis a robust, highly customizable theme, so despite getting bits of it under the GPL, most of the real power of Thesis is still locked away behind the pay wall.

Ultimately, I think this is unfortunate.  Most of the ramblings I produce I attempt to place under one of the Creative Commons licenses, and I’m ecstatic to see CC provisions being used so frequently online these days.  Maybe I’m more comfortable with these licenses because I’d feel pretty damned guilty for being a prick about someone copping my rubbish for free, though I do usually request attribution.  I can’t say I’d feel the same way if I had put a great deal of time into developing a useful plugin, powerful theme, or program of some sort (not that I could).  I still think I’d simply request donations and continue on my way as I do try to donate when I’ve found a plugin especially useful.

It’s probably better to view the situation with equal parts ideology and practicality.  Open source and alternative licensing have democratized content production on the internet, but it may be overzealous to think the free model will work as an absolute.

RELATED READING: I’m sure many of you have heard of Lawrence Lessig.  He wrote a fantastic book called Remix that deals with rethinking copyright issues on the web.  You can download the book as a PDF for free.  Many of Lessig’s books are listed under Creative Commons licenses.

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27
Jul 10

The Nature of Competition As Spiritual Hemorrhoid

So the Obama administration is presently hemorrhaging classified information courtesy of WikiLeaks, the Bush administration is doing so posthumously, the earth’s crust is hemorrhaging oil, and Tom Vilsack is simply battling an embarrassing case of hemorrhoids after/during the stress of the Shirley Sherrod debacle.  Those are the big stories at the moment, but in true form for a real live Twenty-First Century Narcissist, I’m not really thinking about all that right now.

Something terrible happened on Sunday at Dave & Buster’s… I lost.

In and of itself, losing is not a rarity in my life though I am, in general, more accustomed to winning.  But on Sunday evening, I lost in a big way.  I lost at everything.  Even now, my ego hasn’t restored itself, nor will the chasm be sated or filled by gobbling up Scrabble wins and cheap, trivial victories.  The merciless drubbings I received left me pithed like a dissected frog against a lab mat, immobile and dumb, twitching violently, wanting for an elusive victory at something, anything.

First, I absorbed two straight losses at what was essentially a free throw competition — something I don’t believe I’d ever lost until two nights ago — and then a demoralizing defeat at the Super Shot basketball game.  I was put away handily on the air hockey table by a score of 7-2, at the trivia board three straight times in a row, and I managed to die before my partner in two co-op campaigns on Terminator: Salvation and House of the Dead 4.  I am still surprised I avoided making a hellish scene and tearing some poor child’s arms off in a rabid, ego-fueled frenzy.  There is nothing that incites a petulant rage quite like the perturbation of the competitive spirit, and in my twenty-six years of competing at various events, I have never taken the prospect lightly, which has cost me more than one enjoyable evening playing Taboo or Risk with friends.  (The two remaining teams in a game of risk cannot enter into an alliance with the intention of ending the game in a truce when other armies have been exhausted.  The game must be played to the death.  The incident that spawned this aside happened nearly two years ago and serves as a cautionary tale to all Risk players that treaty restrictions must be stipulated before the game, and in the interest of competition, alliances should generally be disallowed.)  I did manage to win the Daytona racing game, but there isn’t much satisfaction in placing first when the difficulty is set to Easy, the transmission to Automatic, and the game itself is a subpar racer made by SEGA in 1994.

Whether this rage is the justifiable product of primate evolution or a pathetic shard of the male ego still buried in my amygdala (probably both), I almost never see the point in playing “for fun”.  Playing for fun is playing to win, and the fun comes as a by-product of real competition, not half-assed lollygagging through a novel activity.  I don’t want any mealy-mouthed “the fun is in the journey” platitudes either.  The journey isn’t fun unless you care about the destination, and if you don’t care about the destination, why take the journey?  This isn’t to say that I’m always an unreasonable loser, but most people who know will probably tell you that I’m certainly not a tranquil one.  I’d be loathe to disagree with them publicly and at the risk of self-delusion.

But that’s just one asshole’s opinion, a maligned philosophy that emanates from a severely wounded ego, and if you must know, while I’d been planning to post on the site for a few days now, the only reason I got around to it this afternoon is because Master Gorman needled me this morning and pointed out that he was beating me easily in the post ratio.

Trust me, I’m bordering on illiterate right now as I’ve been staring dumbly at this computer screen for going on six hours with very little to do but ponder the slow waste of the world, the burden of being a vile loser, and the long-term implications of muscle atrophy.  I am in no condition to be blogging, and if you were looking for, you know, information, you’ve caught me on the wrong day.  If you catch me on the right day, you might get to read some better dressed gibberish, more eloquent bullshit.  You might not be subjected to such public conceit. (Neil, there will be actual content next time.  I promise.)

So for now, it’s time to suck down my private devastation and try to see the bigger picture.  Stare into the Hubble Deep Field image I’ve now made my desktop wallpaper and contemplate smallness for awhile.  Make this nightmare seem mercifully silly.

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14
May 10

The Faces of [Life and] Death

The death mask of Oliver Cromwell from the Lawrence Hutton Collection of Life and Death Masks at Princeton University Library

I’m constantly enchanted by little echoes we get from the past: fossils, old photographs and recordings, handwritten letters, etc.  There is an almost eerie feeling of being transported back in time when one takes the effort to scrutinize things like these, and it isn’t rare for me wwhile watching a movie or reading some other account to wonder just how minutely accurate a portrayal is.  My desire to see what it was actually like in the Middle Ages or during the Revolutionary War is sometimes palpable, my descent into despair expedient.  The past is, in many ways, utterly unreachable.

Maybe that’s why The Lawrence Hutton Collection of Life and Death Masks intrigued me so much when I happened upon it yesterday.  Paintings of famous people are all well and good, but here we have the most accurate physical representations, actual plaster casts of the faces of some titanic historical figures, Benjamin Franklin, Oliver Cromwell, George Washington, and Leo Tolstoy among them along with many others.  I find myself obsessed with the changing human form, and it seems oddly inconceivable to me that a person living hundreds of years ago was physically much like any one of us.  Granted, that’s a cognitive disconnect brought about by unbridgeable distance, but I find it no less interesting to consider.

I wish we had a much larger repository of these to peruse, though I do find this collection pretty astounding.

(Side note:  some of the plasters included in this collection are actually life masks, but most are not.)

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13
May 10

FOLLOW UP: Bad Reporting on Acupuncture

Just a little update on my last post.

As I suspected, Science-Based Medicine and Dr. Novella picked up the slack on the primary study cited by the NewScientist article I recently criticized.  The first part of Dr. Novella’s post deals with the paper that claimed acupuncture provided a neuroprotective effect and aided recovery (in a rat model) from induced spinal injury, and he came to similar conclusions regarding the media reporting:

The bottom line with this study is that it provides weak evidence for a very extraordinary claim. It is of no practical use unless and until it is independently replicated with proper blinding. If you believe what you read in the media, however, you would be led to the conclusion that spinal injured patients could be made to walk again simply by sticking needles into magical locations on their body.

He also discusses another recent study plagued by related issues and echoes the fact that electroacupuncture cannot be considered true acupuncture:

Further, this study mixed acupuncture with “electroacupuncture.” I strongly maintain that there is no such thing as “electroacupunture” – it is, rather, the application of transcutaneous electrical stimulation through an acupuncture needle. This is no more acupuncture than the application of morphine through a hollow acupuncture needle should be considered acupuncture.

I highly recommend reading the full text of Dr. Novella’s post on this.  Naturally, he provides a much deeper insight into the issues at hand than I do.

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29
Apr 10

Bad Reporting on Acupuncture

http://www.flickr.com/photos/migrainechick/ / CC BY 2.0

So this article on the NewScientist website really chapped my ass.

It cites the publication of a new study that outlines successful use of acupuncture to treat spinal injuries induced in rats.  Now, I’m not a doctor, and I’m unable to access the full-text of the study in question.  My suspicions are that some qualified party will cite methodological issues, or more likely, the study will remain a footnote  in light of the overwhelming weight of evidence in favor of the interpretation that acupuncture possesses no therapeutic benefit beyond that of placebo. (Maybe not.  We’ll see, but I doubt it.)

From the article:

Acupuncture’s scientific credentials are growing. Trials show that it improves sensory and motor functions in people with spinal cord injuries.

Well, not really.  For a great review of the current literature regarding acupuncture and an even greater deal of irate bitching about a fishy article written by The YOU Docs, Drs. Mehmet Oz and Mike Roizen, I highly suggest reading an article on the subject written by Dr. Mark Crislip over at Science-Based Medicine.  In it he outlines the results of numerous systematic reviews of the medical literature as well as dubious claims made about the mechanisms by which acupuncture works its supposed magic.  It appears that Drs. Oz and Roizen are attracted to the mysticism surrounding traditional Chinese medicine.

(Harriet Hall has also written a very thorough overview of acupuncture.)

Furthermore, the scientific paper to which the NewScientist links in the blockquote (different than the paper the article is discussing) does not deal directly with traditional acupuncture but with electroacupuncture in which an electrical impulse is introduced to the nerve.  This is an actual intervention that will induce some type of physiological response and cannot be considered acupuncture as Dr. Crislip asserts in his piece.  It seems dishonest to equate the two since there is a big difference between simply placing a needle into someone’s skin and running an electrical current into their body.

Of further interest is another post by Dr. Steven Novella regarding the placebo effect, one of the more misunderstood health-related phenomenons due to the complexities of interpreting study results.  The standard perception goes like this:  you walk into the doctor complaining of pain, the doctor gives you a sugar pill that you think is a pain reliever, and because you believe you’ve received treatment, your brain responds in kind and ramps up the production of natural healers, presumably the immune system.  Viola!  You’re better, and you didn’t have to ingest any dangerous drugs.

As you’ll see when reading Dr. Novella’s article and the mostly excellent discussion on the comment board that follows, the placebo effect doesn’t really work that way.  Most of it can be chalked up to study artifacts, bad study design, and reporting biases on the part of both doctors and patients.  Without an objective way of measuring pain or nausea or other types of discomfort, many of these studies are hindered by the need for patients to fill out a pain evaluation, the results of which can vary greatly from study to study.

You’ll notice all of my links are from Science-Based Medicine.  So sue me.  They devote their time and energy to evaluating dubious claims and pseudoscience, and they are an absolutely fantastic resource for anyone interested in the complicated study of medicine.  At the very least, reading many of these posts should help elucidate why all-or-nothing claims made by various pseudoscientific outfits are silly and don’t incorporate a nuanced approach to the business of getting things as right as possible.

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27
Apr 10

Bill Nye Cleans House

Bill Nye - Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons

I used to watch Bill Nye the Science Guy when I was a kid, and his show stands as probably the earliest discernible science-related influence I can remember.

Imagine my disappointment when I happened across Brian Dunning’s post over at Skepticblog that discusses Nye’s recent promotion of a cleaning product called Ionator from the company Activeion.  Essentially, the company has recruited Nye to endorse a line of water ionizers the cheapest of which is priced at $169 and the science behind which is unproven and dubious.

I’m not going to get into the debate over the science of their claims.  You can scroll through the comments on Skepticblog, which do a decent enough job of hashing out the quandaries, and you can read an article by Dr. Stephen Lower, a retired chemist from the Department of Chemistry at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver, that Dunning links to and which discusses the general quackery of ionized water claimants and provides an interesting remedial chemistry lesson about the subject.

My overall impression is that at best, Activeion’s product is a ripoff that does what they say it does despite the fact that its effects could be achieved for a few dollars and without the aid of the ionizer, and at worst, it’s a pseudo-scientific scam.  (If you’re interested in specifics, I highly recommend reading the discussion.)

I don’t agree with Dunning’s reasoning that we should withhold judgment if Nye took up the job because of money woes.  If Bill Nye knowingly promoted snake oil, he has done so at the peril of his credibility within the skeptical community as a science advocate.  If he was duped, at least he wasn’t a witting scammer, but even so, it’s fair enough to say he should have vetted Activeion’s claims and checked with one of his many contacts that would have had access to pertinent knowledge.

Either way, my opinion of Nye is diminished.

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16
Mar 10

The Two Minutes Hate

Nineteen Eighty-Four ruined my life.  It’s one of my favorite books and not for the reasons many people erroneously reference it as the ultimate cautionary tale about surveillance, government intrusion, and herd mentality.  These were all prominent themes for Orwell, no doubt, but the book is more about the limits of the human spirit [vernacular] than anything else, and without spoiling the ending for those who haven’t read it, I will say the culmination of Nineteen Eighty-Four tore open a hole in me that will never be mended.  My life after the book bears the weight of an inherent void, a fallibility at once ugly and natural and unconquerable.

That might all sound depressing, but what I find most unfortunate is that the point of Nineteen Eighty-Four — and by extension George Orwell — has become synonymous with their assertions about Big Brother.  A book this good shouldn’t be used as shorthand for drumming up fear, and however astute Orwell seems in retrospect (and he does), we should appreciate the nuance of his work.

To those who have read the book and are fans, visit Two Minutes Hate and give Emmanuel Goldstein a piece of your mind.  If you’re too lazy to click the link, get your sixteen seconds hate below, but I warn you.  The effect is not the same.

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