|
Reader's Favorites
Media Casualties Mount Administration Split On Europe Invasion Administration In Crisis Over Burgeoning Quagmire Congress Concerned About Diversion From War On Japan Pot, Kettle On Line Two... Allies Seize Paris The Natural Gore Book Sales Tank, Supporters Claim Unfair Tactics Satan Files Lack Of Defamation Suit Why This Blog Bores People With Space Stuff A New Beginning My Hit Parade
Instapundit (Glenn Reynolds) Tim Blair James Lileks Bleats Virginia Postrel Kausfiles Winds Of Change (Joe Katzman) Little Green Footballs (Charles Johnson) Samizdata Eject Eject Eject (Bill Whittle) Space Alan Boyle (MSNBC) Space Politics (Jeff Foust) Space Transport News (Clark Lindsey) NASA Watch NASA Space Flight Hobby Space A Voyage To Arcturus (Jay Manifold) Dispatches From The Final Frontier (Michael Belfiore) Personal Spaceflight (Jeff Foust) Mars Blog The Flame Trench (Florida Today) Space Cynic Rocket Forge (Michael Mealing) COTS Watch (Michael Mealing) Curmudgeon's Corner (Mark Whittington) Selenian Boondocks Tales of the Heliosphere Out Of The Cradle Space For Commerce (Brian Dunbar) True Anomaly Kevin Parkin The Speculist (Phil Bowermaster) Spacecraft (Chris Hall) Space Pragmatism (Dan Schrimpsher) Eternal Golden Braid (Fred Kiesche) Carried Away (Dan Schmelzer) Laughing Wolf (C. Blake Powers) Chair Force Engineer (Air Force Procurement) Spacearium Saturn Follies JesusPhreaks (Scott Bell) Science
Nanobot (Howard Lovy) Lagniappe (Derek Lowe) Geek Press (Paul Hsieh) Gene Expression Carl Zimmer Redwood Dragon (Dave Trowbridge) Charles Murtaugh Turned Up To Eleven (Paul Orwin) Cowlix (Wes Cowley) Quark Soup (Dave Appell) Economics/Finance
Assymetrical Information (Jane Galt and Mindles H. Dreck) Marginal Revolution (Tyler Cowen et al) Man Without Qualities (Robert Musil) Knowledge Problem (Lynne Kiesling) Journoblogs The Ombudsgod Cut On The Bias (Susanna Cornett) Joanne Jacobs The Funny Pages
Cox & Forkum Day By Day Iowahawk Happy Fun Pundit Jim Treacher IMAO The Onion Amish Tech Support (Lawrence Simon) Scrapple Face (Scott Ott) Regular Reading
Quasipundit (Adragna & Vehrs) England's Sword (Iain Murray) Daily Pundit (Bill Quick) Pejman Pundit Daimnation! (Damian Penny) Aspara Girl Flit Z+ Blog (Andrew Zolli) Matt Welch Ken Layne The Kolkata Libertarian Midwest Conservative Journal Protein Wisdom (Jeff Goldstein et al) Dean's World (Dean Esmay) Yippee-Ki-Yay (Kevin McGehee) Vodka Pundit Richard Bennett Spleenville (Andrea Harris) Random Jottings (John Weidner) Natalie Solent On the Third Hand (Kathy Kinsley, Bellicose Woman) Patrick Ruffini Inappropriate Response (Moira Breen) Jerry Pournelle Other Worthy Weblogs
Ain't No Bad Dude (Brian Linse) Airstrip One A libertarian reads the papers Andrew Olmsted Anna Franco Review Ben Kepple's Daily Rant Bjorn Staerk Bitter Girl Catallaxy Files Dawson.com Dodgeblog Dropscan (Shiloh Bucher) End the War on Freedom Fevered Rants Fredrik Norman Heretical Ideas Ideas etc Insolvent Republic of Blogistan James Reuben Haney Libertarian Rant Matthew Edgar Mind over what matters Muslimpundit Page Fault Interrupt Photodude Privacy Digest Quare Rantburg Recovering Liberal Sand In The Gears(Anthony Woodlief) Sgt. Stryker The Blogs of War The Fly Bottle The Illuminated Donkey Unqualified Offerings What she really thinks Where HipHop & Libertarianism Meet Zem : blog Space Policy Links
Space Future The Space Review The Space Show Space Frontier Foundation Space Policy Digest BBS AWOL
USS Clueless (Steven Den Beste) Media Minder Unremitting Verse (Will Warren) World View (Brink Lindsay) The Last Page More Than Zero (Andrew Hofer) Pathetic Earthlings (Andrew Lloyd) Spaceship Summer (Derek Lyons) The New Space Age (Rob Wilson) Rocketman (Mark Oakley) Mazoo Site designed by Powered by Movable Type |
Terminal Pessimism On one of the greatest days for human freedom in recent memory, as Iraqis, delirious with joy and disbelief that they can finally sincerely cheer in the streets as a tyrant's statues fall, Spider Robinson is compelled to write an essay describing just how much the twenty-first century sucks. Pieces like this really make me miss Poul Anderson and Bob Heinlein. Posted by Rand Simberg at April 09, 2003 09:49 AMTrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.transterrestrial.com/mt-diagnostics.cgi/1063 Listed below are links to weblogs that reference this post from Transterrestrial Musings.
Comments
Well, that was interesting. I've never read a Spider Robinson book, and now I can pretty safely say, I don't think I ever will. I don't need to agree with an author's politics to enjoy their work, however, I'm concerned about the total lack of common sense or critical reasoning evident here. The Berlin Wall "dropped as though it were no more than a pile of bricks and stones" and the Soviet Union "its cards without firing a shot." As if those things just sort of happened on their own one day, suprising everyone. I particularly like the line, "Peace in the Mideast seemed just around the corner, thanks to the patient diplomatic efforts of a well-informed, articulate and creative U.S. president." His implications are clear. The collapse of the Soviet Union and East Germany just happened on their own. Under Clinton, we had pending Mid East peace, dot com wealth, no deficits, a great economy, and hell, under Clinton, terrorists even FAILED at blowing up the WTC. So then we elect a "halfwit" and terrorists succeed at destroying the WTC, the dot com bubble collapses, we go to war and wind up with SARS. It's all George Bush's fault! Unbelievable. It's like reading a DemocraticUnderground posting. Bob Posted by Bob at April 9, 2003 10:30 AMBoy, I can't wait to get home and fisk this one. Bob, I made the mistake of reading "Starmind" when it was serialized in Analog a few years back. I figured, here was a big-name famous SF writer who I'd never gotten around to reading, let's see what he can do. It was a godawful hack job. PC cliches strung together with a supernatural/mysticism (rather than science) theme. How it even got published in Analog is beyond me. The letter here is pretty much consistent with what the story led me to expect re:his politics. Posted by T.L. James at April 9, 2003 10:50 AMHeinlein would kick this guys ass if he was around. How can a guy who writes scifi be so damned down on the future? Overinflated Canadian twit!! He says terrorists were "...bearded buffoons who squabbled and shot ineffectually in all directions in films." Just after he talked about the first attack on the WTC. It looked pretty effective to me. Just because they failed doesn't mean there was no effect. Some people were killed in the first attack, not 3000+, but those families were no less affected. He thinks Tim McVeigh acted alone, did he read Jayna Davis' book about Middle Eastern involvement in that bombing? He wanted legalized marijuana and free health care. Is that his idea of a good future? I support reform of our drug laws but understand the consequences of "free" health care. He says states held the illusion of having power at the end of the 20th century. Well we had it, still have it and how does that equal what powers the provinces have up there, eh? Posted by Steve at April 9, 2003 12:35 PMSpider Robinson has never been too tightly wrapped, but he's a good writer when he sticks to light comedy (i.e. the Callahan stories). When he tries to do something serious, the logic holes are severely distracting. But I didn't realize until now that he was a flat out idiot. We "replaced" Clinton because of his sexual escapades? Jeez, Spider, could you at least understand the law? Posted by Gary Utter at April 9, 2003 12:37 PMIronically, Spider wrote one of the best-ever defenses of Heinlein, "Rah, Rah, R.A.H.!", in 1980. IMHO this essay was obviously written somewhat tongue in cheek. At least he mentioned the FBI in the proper context. ;) Posted by Jay Manifold at April 9, 2003 01:59 PMHaving read the "Callahan's Cross-time Saloon" stories, I think it's fair to say that Robinson's politics are definitely left-of-center. Which is fine, but I wish he'd stop living in 1969. Case in point being (if memory serves me) a story called "The Time Traveller" from the Callahan "universe". An American comes home to the US of 1973 having languished for a decade in some South American prison, only to find the country seeming changed beyond all recognition from what he remembered it being in 1963. His disorientation leads into a life of crime, which ends with his attempt to rob Callahan's Place. Callahan and his crew manage to talk sense into the man, and he repents. Unfortunately, Robinson is like his character in the story-- he "went to sleep" circa 1973, has woken up in 2003, and doesn't like what he sees. I wish the man would get a clue. Posted by Hale Adams at April 9, 2003 04:00 PMNear as I can tell from reading his stuff on and off for the last 25 years or so Spider's politics are libertarian, he and Robert Heinlein knew each other and you won't find a greater fan of Heinlein's work than Spider. You will find many Heinlein tributes in Spider's works and do yourself a favour and read "The Free Lunch". If you liked "Red Planet", "Podkayne of Mars" and "Have Spacesuit, Will Travel" you'll recognise the style. Spider is pro space, pro nuclear power and definitely not a bleeding heart. You don't have to agree with all his political views. Posted by Mike Borgelt at April 9, 2003 08:24 PMNear as I can tell from reading his stuff on and off for the last 25 years or so Spider's politics are libertarian, he and Robert Heinlein knew each other and you won't find a greater fan of Heinlein's work than Spider. You sure wouldn't know it from this editorial. Bob would string him up by the ears after reading it. Posted by Rand Simberg at April 9, 2003 09:54 PMFisking complete: http://www.lamarssociety.org/archives/000454.html Posted by T.L. James at April 9, 2003 11:31 PMPost a comment |