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Hugos Refuse To Award Anyone Rather Than Submit To Fans' Votes

An anonymous reader writes: You may remember way back in April there was a bit of a kerfuffle over the nominees for the Hugo Awards being "too conservative" based on a voting campaign organized by a group of science fiction fans who wanted to promote hard science fiction over more recent nominees. This was spun as conservatives "ruining" a "progressive" award. The question was left: would the final voters of the Hugo awards accept these nominees, or just take their ball home and refuse to give out anyway awards at all? The votes are in and we know the answer now: they'd rather just not give out any awards. (Wired has a slightly different slant on the process as well as the outcome of this year's awards.)

1,044 comments

  1. Lovely summary. by Rei · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's like Slashdot doesn't even try any more.

    --
    "99 dead duelists of Dios on the wall. 99 dead duelists of Dios! Take one's ring, pass it around..."
    1. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      And sourcing from Breitbart of all places. :| Disgusting.

    2. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Informative
    3. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's by timothy. Of course nobody's trying.

    4. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      And not just Breitbart - Milo-freakin'-Yiannopolous. That dipshit is as dishonest as the day is long, even Andrew Breitbart die-hards despise the guy.

    5. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      You realize being a logical fallacy doesn't automatically make it untrue, right? Or were you just looking for an intellectually lazy means for shutting down an opponent?

    6. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Answering laziness with laziness? Being a fallacy means he didn't make a compelling argument. It may well be that the source is wrong, untrue, or misleading, but he didn't bother to point that out, let alone substantiate it in any way.

    7. Re: Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please explain how a fallacy could be true.
      It's literally defined as being a false belief or a failure in reasoning.

    8. Re:Lovely summary. by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1, Informative

      Summary trolls have been around since the early days of Slashdot. The editors got better at removing them and replacing the summary with a more balanced one, but I agree that in this case they could have done better.

      Long story short, some MRAs got butthurt because the Hugo awards were too diverse in their eyes, so abused to the nomination system to fill as many categories with crap as possible. And we really are talking pulp crap here. The members rebelled and voted for "no award" in all categories where there was no non-MRA choice. The only Sad Puppy nominated work that got anything was Guardians of the Galaxy, that likely would have done well anyway.

      All in all a complete debacle. Hopefully they will fix the nomination procedure for next year to avoid a repeat.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    9. Re:Lovely summary. by KillAllNazis · · Score: 1

      Can you give an example?

    10. Re: Lovely summary. by Qzukk · · Score: 1

      My cat is bright purple, therefore 2+2=4. Ex falso, even the truth can be proven.

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    11. Re: Lovely summary. by ScentCone · · Score: 0

      or a failure in reasoning

      You just typed the word "or" in your own sentence, and don't actually know what that words means, do you?

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    12. Re:Lovely summary. by LaurenCates · · Score: 2, Insightful

      There you go again, blaming the MRA strawman because you need people to hate MRAs.

      Look, mate, you are the ONLY person who EVER brings up MRAs into discussions like this one. Seems to me you've got a massive hate-on for them. And that's fine. You get to have an opinion.

      But your opinion loses credibility when you keep on hauling out the strawman everytime a group needs a hatin' on.

      --
      Some people don't believe in fairies. I don't believe in The Patriarchy.
    13. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Milo is pretty great actually and far more reasonable than most of the writers on Breitbart. Outside of extremist SJWs I haven't heard that many people complain about him.

    14. Re:Lovely summary. by Nutria · · Score: 2, Insightful

      some MRAs got butthurt because the Hugo awards were too diverse in their eyes

      You don't deserve a Hugo just because you're tri-racial, transgendered and write about the feelings of Amazon warriors. Life doesn't work that way.

      IOW, diversity in and of itself does not == The Greatest Good.

      Quoting George RR Martin: "Can't the trophy go to the guy who sells 5,000 copies but is doing something innovative?"

      WTF does innovation have to do with *quality*? Answer: nothing.

      The best quote in the article is, " Just because you have an MFA and write a story, you may win a Hugo, but don't kid yourself: Everybody's had a dream, but they didn't write it because they knew it wouldn't sell. Some of this stuff is unreadable."

      --
      "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
    15. Re:Lovely summary. by Rei · · Score: 0, Troll

      What's the straw man? Seems to match the definition.

      --
      "99 dead duelists of Dios on the wall. 99 dead duelists of Dios! Take one's ring, pass it around..."
    16. Re:Lovely summary. by Dunbal · · Score: 3, Funny

      Anyone "deserves" a Hugo award who is picked as a winner by the Hugo award committee. Now this does not mean that the Hugo award itself is in any way deserving of my time or attention.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    17. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You forgot to make wild accusations of being a SJW, and a Communist, and a supporter of the Stuart pretendership.

    18. Re:Lovely summary. by ctid · · Score: 1

      "Award committee". By which you mean the sci-fi fans who were interested enough to register to vote. Remember, anyone can register to vote - you don't have to go to Worldcon to vote.

      --
      Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
    19. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      You don't deserve a Hugo just because you're tri-racial, transgendered and write about the feelings of Amazon warriors. Life doesn't work that way.

      You don't deserve a Hugo just because you're racially superior, gender-structured and write about the feelings of the Self-Actualized Man. Life doesn't work that way.

      IOW, diversity in and of itself does not == The Greatest Good.

      IOW, not pandering to your particular fetish does not == The Great Evil.

      Quoting George RR Martin: "Can't the trophy go to the guy who sells 5,000 copies but is doing something innovative?"

      WTF does innovation have to do with *quality*? Answer: nothing.

      And yet you miss the point of what George RR Martin said, which was that sales volume may have nothing to do with quality.

      Why?

      The best quote in the article is, " Just because you have an MFA and write a story, you may win a Hugo, but don't kid yourself: Everybody's had a dream, but they didn't write it because they knew it wouldn't sell. Some of this stuff is unreadable."

      It's not a new concept, I personally liked the one from Rocko's Modern Life with Wacky Deli.

    20. Re:Lovely summary. by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 0

      You do realise wikipedia has banned feminist editors from articles to with gamergate, right? It can hardly be considered a reliable source when it comes to gender politics either.

    21. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      There is absolutely nothing wrong with using someone's reputation to determine whether or not they are worth listening to.

    22. Re:Lovely summary. by _KiTA_ · · Score: 2

      And not just Breitbart - Milo-freakin'-Yiannopolous. That dipshit is as dishonest as the day is long, even Andrew Breitbart die-hards despise the guy.

      https://yourlogicalfallacyis.c...

    23. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

      https://yourlogicalfallacyis.c...

      Here you go, fuckboi. People who argue by doing nothing but naming logical fallacies are fucking idiots. Go jump off a bridge.

    24. Re:Lovely summary. by mjm1231 · · Score: 1

      WTF does innovation have to do with *quality*? Answer: nothing.

      If this is true, what possible reason is there to ever publish anything new? Readers can just reread the book they just finished.If you still want to give out awards, then just give the same awards out to the same titles every year.

      --
      Ideology: A tool used primarily to avoid the bother of thinking.
    25. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's the straw man?

      Nobody around here ever even heard of an "MRA" until posters like Amimojo started using it as a synonym for "people I do not like".

      Geek sites need anti-culture war rules.

    26. Re: Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      The Rabid and Sad puppies are mostly allies; the Sad Puppies are less viciously reactionary than the Rabid Puppies, but still more "anti-SJW" than not.

    27. Re: Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I think you're misunderstanding the basic premise there. Correlation does not equal causation.

      Something is not great solely *because* it is innovative and vice versa.

    28. Re:Lovely summary. by KillAllNazis · · Score: 5, Informative

      This doesn't corroborate with what I'm reading. It seems the Sad Puppies were formed as an opposition to the CHORFs (Cliquish, Holier-than-thou, Obnoxious, Reactionary, Fanatics) which apparently embody the SJW mindset of disregarding works from authors with differing political views. Everywhere I'm seeing the Sad Puppies and Rabid Puppies described as being very much the same, though the founders of both these blocs seem to disagree that they are the same https://bradrtorgersen.wordpress.com/2015/04/16/we-are-not-rabid/. And what Yiannopoulis is saying in the article seems to be that the SJWs bloc voted no award as opposition to the Sad and Rabid Puppies. FTA: "Puppies supporters say that slew of âoeno awardâ wins this year can at least partially be attributed to the fact that SJW votes were concentrated on that choice, while Puppies votes were distributed between as many as four deserving authors. The âoeno awardâ results in the novella and short story categories are a particular slap in the face to ordinary fans, who remember the genreâ(TM)s roots in short-form pulp magazine writing."

    29. Re:Lovely summary. by Nutria · · Score: 1

      If this is true, what possible reason is there to ever publish anything new?

      That's a logical fallacy, because innovative stories can be quality writing, and they can be turgid dreck. Just as "white male heroes save the universe and get the hot green babe" stories can be quality writing, and they can be boring dreck.

      IOW, innovativeness is orthogonal to quality.

      --
      "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
    30. Re:Lovely summary. by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      Summary trolls have been around since the early days of Slashdot. The editors got better at removing them and replacing the summary with a more balanced one, but I agree that in this case they could have done better.

      It's a beautiful sunny Sunday in August, and anyone who has something better to do is doing it. Nobody is minding the store and the 8chan sewer is backing up. What you'd expect.

      Oops, I see that the White Sox game is about to start. Ciao.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    31. Re:Lovely summary. by PopeRatzo · · Score: 0, Troll

      Look, mate, you are the ONLY person who EVER brings up MRAs into discussions like this one.

      Wait, I thought I was the only person to bring MRAs into discussions like this one. I'm offended. And since I've copyrighted "whiny pissbaby MRAs", I demand that this discussion be taken down.

      Also, Vox Day is one absolutely shitty writer. Imagine if Ayn Rand's African Grey Parrot wrote pedantic sci-fi fan fic and didn't have an editor. If you think I'm joking, go find one of his books (you won't be able to find any at torrent sites, because there is zero demand).

      People signed up, people voted and the Sad Puppy/Rabid Puppy slate was soundly defeated by the equivalent of Deez Nuts. Whenever there are elections, the losers always cry, so it's not unexpected to see Breitbart and company crap on the floor in fury.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    32. Re: Lovely summary. by narcc · · Score: 2

      So, so sad...

      Here we go:

      All Presidents wore black pants
      Bill Clinton wore black pants :. Bill Clinton was President

      Both premises are true and the conclusion is true. The argument itself, however, is not valid.

      This is basic logic, folks. It's not complicated.

    33. Re:Lovely summary. by LaurenCates · · Score: 1

      If I failed to recognize your contributions, then I apologize that I am lapse in my duties of you trying to make "fetch" happen.

      --
      Some people don't believe in fairies. I don't believe in The Patriarchy.
    34. Re:Lovely summary. by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The reason several categories ended up with no award is because the nominations made by the Puppies were shit. They forced the good ones out because they wanted to make sure that a white male won by excluding all other options.

      You have it backwards. The people doing interesting, innovative stuff were not white, so the Puppies made sure they didn't get nominated, and what was selected wasn't worthy of an award.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    35. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nobody around here ever even heard of an "SJW" until gators and other MRAs started using it as a synonym for "people I do not like".

    36. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sad Puppies, Gators, MRAs, and other groups of (mostly) angry young men always claim to be speaking for the majority.

      When reality shows most people actually think they're full of shit, or couldn't care less about them, they can't handle it.

    37. Re:Lovely summary. by farrellj · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The AC who submitted this is of obviously from the "Sick Puppies" camp. Anyone who has a clue to how the Hugo system works could have predicted, and many did, that this would be a sweep for "no award" in the categories that were influenced by the actions of the "Sick Puppies".

      And really, it was all about numbers. The Puppies are a small minority and were thus clobbered by the greater SF Community. To them, it's a well known "fact" that a Hugo win can boost the sales of books and collections, and that is what the Puppies were looking for. Unfortunately, they have confused cause and effect. Books don't suddenly become popular when they win the Hugo....it is because a book is already popular that it goes on to win the Hugo. So no matter how hard you campaign, or rile at the community, to try to win a Hugo, if the work isn't already popular, you only get a pyrrhic victory by getting it nominated.

      And if the "Sick Puppies" really had a clue about how the Hugos work and it's history, they would have known they were going to fail, because a certain organization whose name begins with "S", which is fabulously rich and was founded by a science fiction writer once tried a campaign get a book "written" by him to win the Hugo, and *they* failed.

      So the Puppies had no chance what so ever.

      --
      CAN-CON 2019 - Ottawa's only book oriented Science Fiction Convention! October 18-20, Sheraton Hotel, Ottawa, Canada h
    38. Re: Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The 'therefore' makes it false. Try again.

    39. Re: Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I will bite.

      What is an MRA in this context? New term to me.

    40. Re: Lovely summary. by cfalcon · · Score: 3, Funny

      WTB purple cat PST

    41. Re:Lovely summary. by epyT-R · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No, but it makes your argument untrue. Whatever's being argued for (or against) may in fact be true, but not for the reasoning you presented.

      Regularly, we see story submissions from rags like huffingtonpost, so why not breitbart? The issues can then be debated here openly..well at least as openly as the moderation system permits. From this perspective, it almost doesn't matter what sources the submitter used, though it would be nice if multiple sources were cited.

      The only conclusion I can draw from all of this is that, like so many other 'prestigious' awards, the Hugo is now essentially worthless: Just a prop to push circular legitimacy for certain political viewpoints. That's unfortunate, but good to know.

    42. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      You should never read that site. You might be exposed to yucky new ideas and perspectives outside your normal comfortable cocoon.

      What if you even started understanding something about some of your neighbors? You'd have to start thinking about their lives. What do they want? What motivates them?

      Just call them all racists and retreat back into your box.

    43. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How is he dishonest?

    44. Re: Lovely summary. by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Appeal from authority is a fallacy. As is argument from ignorance. There is little that can be said that can't be argued to be a fallacy of some kind. Just because it triggers some arcane rhetorical rule against it doesn't mean it isn't true. Arguments aren't logical proofs, nor should they be held to those standards.

    45. Re:Lovely summary. by Raenex · · Score: 1, Informative

      The reason several categories ended up with no award is because the nominations made by the Puppies were shit. They forced the good ones out because they wanted to make sure that a white male won by excluding all other options.

      Some of the people they nominated declined to be part of an identity politics culture war, so they withdrew. One of those who withdrew was even given an award by RR Martin at his "losers" party -- Annie Bellet, who is a woman. Damn those MRAs, nominating women writers! And this is all from the Wired article, which is heavily biased against "Puppies" -- or the "MRA" boogeymen you like to invoke who think only white males should write science fiction... or maybe they just think garbage isn't award worthy just because it features an identity politics trope.

    46. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't try to use fancy stuff on people like this. Just call them what they are;closed minded dick heads. if they don't read it on MSNBC, preferably by someone like Jon Stewart, they just don't believe it.

    47. Re: Lovely summary. by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      leave out :. and it's 100% true. When dealing with humans, that's sufficient. It's not the black pants that made Clinton president. It was the unstated premise that the set of Presidents included Clinton (and others). Isn't that begging the question? Stating a premise as the answer? Clinton was a president who wore black pants is the question begged in this case. A fallacy, but still 100% true.

      Arguing about how you get to a proof doesn't change reality.

      That's what the logic form Nazis never seem to understand. They are stating that pizza isn't pizza if there is an uneven distribution of pepperoni on it. The rest of the planet sees their point and thinks them idiots, but they are happy being wrong idiots, so long as they can prove they are right using rules nobody else uses or cares about.

    48. Re:Lovely summary. by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      No, but it makes your argument untrue.

      Nope. An invalid argument may be true, or not true. The lack of validity in the argument has no bearing on whether the conclusion is true. You should use "in/valid" to talk about arguments, and "un/true" to talk about reality.

    49. Re:Lovely summary. by Crashmarik · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Why not Breitbart ?

      Well I would venture that the people complaining are opposed to what they perceive as Breitbart's political leaning but are perfectly willing to accept bad reporting from sources that advance their agenda

      Ex

      https://twitter.com/KatyTurNBC...

      For or against Trump he drew 20,000 + people to that rally. You have to ask is NBC reporting the news here or trying to control it ?

    50. Re:Lovely summary. by AK+Marc · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That's why the Academy Awards go so well going the other way. The closed Academy creates nominations, presumably only containing works they would be happy to win. Then the popular vote is taken on those to select the winner. The academy didn't want Hoop Dreams to win, so it was not nominated. They eliminated any possible controversy about it by excluding it from the running.

      It may also not be fair, but it's lasted longer than the Hugos with fewer complete meltdowns of this nature.

    51. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      > You don't deserve a Hugo just because you're racially superior, gender-structured and write about the feelings of the Self-Actualized Man. Life doesn't work that way.

      Funnily enough, sad puppies and rabid puppies both agree with you. They want the Hugos to be about the quality of the work, not the racial/gender makeup of the authors or the political propaganda of the work.

    52. Re:Lovely summary. by Crashmarik · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The SJW clique was very willing to destroy the award rather than see it go to people they didn't want it to. Not to Godwin but the implication is there.

    53. Re:Lovely summary. by Crashmarik · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Wow all that comes across as Feminists are too batshit agenda driven even for wikipedia

    54. Re:Lovely summary. by JWW · · Score: 0

      Yeah, its all MRAs. That why they didn't nominate any women, oh wait they did.

      You are a lying sack of shit.

    55. Re:Lovely summary. by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      Correction anyone who is willing to spend $40 to vote.

    56. Re:Lovely summary. by epyT-R · · Score: 1

      That is what I said. However, vocabulary noted for future reference.

    57. Re:Lovely summary. by St.Creed · · Score: 1

      I always wonder why they leave out the Trotskyites. After all, if we're gonna be paranoid, why not go whole hog?

      --
      Therefore, by the (faulty) logic you're using, you're just a cow with a keyboard - osu-neko (2604)
    58. Re:Lovely summary. by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 4, Interesting

      MRAs literally had absolutely nothing to do with this, it was a reaction to the hugos becoming a cliquish groupthink approved voting slate that rewarded toxic bigots like Requires Hate while ostracizing people like Toni Weisskopf for their crimethink... or even purely because crimethinkers liked them.

      Congratulations AniMojo, once again you've proven unequivocably that you don't give a flying fuck about women or equality and only use that line as a cover for siding with toxic bigots who disproportionately target women and minorities.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    59. Re:Lovely summary. by St.Creed · · Score: 1

      So I had to google his books, but i found this nice quote right after googling his name and I didn't want to withhold it :)

      "Theodore Beale, known by his pseudonym Vox Day,[2] is a science fiction author, game designer,[3] musician,[4] pseudo-libertarian, anti-vaxxer,[5] racist,[6] Christian apologist, pickup artist, stalker[7], and all-round fucking idiot."

      I think the last assertion needs more citations. And what is a Christian apologist? And while people are explaining, what is an MRA? The whole discussion is filled with incomprehensible slang.

      --
      Therefore, by the (faulty) logic you're using, you're just a cow with a keyboard - osu-neko (2604)
    60. Re: Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can go on apologizing for everyone then.
      You can start for being wealthy enough to own some type of computer and internet connection while women starve in 3rd world countries you rappist basement nerd virgin mysoginist!!!

    61. Re:Lovely summary. by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Yeah because Toni Weisskopf is totally a white male, much better to side with people like Benjanun who go out of their way to attack and abuse women and minorities for their own self-aggrandizement.

      Do you honestly think anyone other than poperatzo and a few other SJWs here on /. still buy your "it's about equality!" whitewashing when you prove, time and again, that you will side with the most vile and toxic of abusers purely because they're SJWs who claim the banner of Feminism?

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    62. Re: Lovely summary. by Culture20 · · Score: 1

      GP's point is that the conclusion is true even though the reasoning is wrong. (Reasoning can't be true or false, but right or wrong)

    63. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fuck off, conservtard. People with your low IQ shouldn't post on Slashdot.

    64. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > the greater SF Community

      All 6000 of them.

    65. Re:Lovely summary. by Crashmarik · · Score: 2

      Summary trolls have been around since the early days of Slashdot.

      Well seeing as your a major summary troll, you should know.

    66. Re:Lovely summary. by epyT-R · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's too bad today's news pushes such obvious political agendas. They should be focused on telling the truth as objectively as possible.

    67. Re: Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Goodbye Slashdot. This really is the end for me wasting time here. I have been reading the site daily for more than 15 years (and no, I have never registered an account). But this thread is a perfect example of what had gone wrong on this site. Rather than a debate of the reasons and merits for the decision to not award the Hugos, there is pages of personal attack on the nature of argument fallacy. Why?

      Undoubtedly, many reading this will attack me, or write off the comment with a "good riddance". Some may even start a war over a misplaced comma. I don't care - I won't be here to read your responses.

      I will miss the witty and informative comments that were the hallmark of this site for so many years. Sadly, they are gone. And so am I.

    68. Re:Lovely summary. by kqs · · Score: 4, Insightful

      They want "no awards" they can have no awards. Forever.

      Yeah, when my step-son was 6 years old he felt the same way. "If I can't win the game, then nobody can win!" just before he turned the board over and stormed out of the room.

      Fortunately, he's matured.

      FYI, "no award" meant that a majority of fans thought that none of the works rose to the level of an award. This only happened in categories which only had puppy works. Since the puppies picked their works based on political views of the authors rather than quality, this seems like a valid result.

    69. Re:Lovely summary. by Boronx · · Score: 1

      What's the fallacy for calling someone else on a fallacy when they weren't even attempting a logical conclusion?

    70. Re:Lovely summary. by Boronx · · Score: 1

      "Yes means yes" is asinine.

      Therefore women shouldn't win Hugos? I don't get it. You sound overwrought and should maybe focus anger on those parts of the PC movement which deserver it.

    71. Re:Lovely summary. by kqs · · Score: 2

      opposed to what they perceive as Breitbart's political leaning

      I don't think Breitbart (either the person or the group he formed) ever made any secret of their political leanings. What you perceive is what you get. Breitbart's reporting has always been in service of that agenda, and I'm not sure how you can pretend otherwise. Sure, others also do that, but that doesn't change the fact that Breitbart does it.

    72. Re:Lovely summary. by tybalt44 · · Score: 2

      Sourcing an "unreliable source" comment from... Newsmax.com. Sweet self-undermine.

    73. Re:Lovely summary. by PopeRatzo · · Score: 2

      And what is a Christian apologist?

      Apologetics is a type of writing in defense of something. Early Christian apologists are Paul of Tarsus and later, St Augustine.

      There are libraries full of apologetics, and one who practices apologetics is called an apologist.

      In regard to the last assertion needing more citations, I think you could find more than you need by reading subject's own public statements. Try for yourself. Start by going back to last year's Hugo Awards for copious self-incrimination.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    74. Re:Lovely summary. by Boronx · · Score: 5, Informative

      Christian apologist is just someone who explains Christianity and why it's right and good. The term has a long history and is not usually considered derogatory. C. S. Lewis was a Christian apologist.

      MRA means Men's Rights Activist. There is a wide range of MRA folks. Some fight for equality in child custody cases or domestic violence cases (there are a lot of men who get beat up by women). Some are just misguided weirdos who think women should hold the door open for men or something, and there's a bunch of horrible misogynists.

    75. Re: Lovely summary. by hackwrench · · Score: 1

      The entire statement is false, but the conclusion by itself is true.

    76. Re: Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Men's Right Activists".

      Basically, a bunch of mouth-breathers who think that men have it super-hard, harder than any minority, and women asking for equal rights means taking away rights from men.

    77. Re:Lovely summary. by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      Sure, others also do that, but that doesn't change the fact that Breitbart does it.

      Do you have examples ? Otherwise you are just saying you don't like where they are coming from so they must be liars.

    78. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, when my step-son was 6 years old he felt the same way. "If I can't win the game, then nobody can win!" just before he turned the board over and stormed out of the room.

      I couldn't have said it better myself. That the GP got a +5 insightful for advocating a tantrums is a sad testament to how badly the slashdot crowd is stuck this persecution fantasy bubble. For too many people age doesn't bring wisdom, it brings bitterness that the world is passing them by.

    79. Re:Lovely summary. by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      You understood it wasn't right, but not the terminology to define it. An invalid argument can be true, even if it can never be valid. Makes it clearer when discussing the minutiae.

    80. Re:Lovely summary. by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 1

      It's not as though it's hard to follow the links in the story to their original source now is it. Although thanks for pointing that out as the original source is considerably more damning and I shall save it for future reference. http://www.campusreform.org/?I...

      Last fall, 15 colleges and universities offered college credit to students who “write feminist thinking” into Wikipedia articles about technology.

      Lovely.

    81. Re: Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Men's Rights Activists. Basically, the idea is that white men are so under-represented in equality debates that they end up being marginalized even worse than any minority.

      In practice, it ends up being more like if you're not a white male you don't deserve to get to the same position that white males currently enjoy without overcoming all of the obstacles that white males never had to overcome. Also, MRAs tend to use a lot of anecdotal evidence of marginalization, but completely ignore statistical evidence that they, as a group, are not actually being marginalized.

    82. Re:Lovely summary. by khallow · · Score: 0

      Yeah, when my step-son was 6 years old he felt the same way. "If I can't win the game, then nobody can win!" just before he turned the board over and stormed out of the room.

      Maturity also means recognizing when you have a rigged game and learning not to play under those circumstances when possible.

      Since the puppies picked their works based on political views of the authors rather than quality, this seems like a valid result.

      This is an example. We have a bald assertion that the Hugo picks by "the puppies" were chosen on the basis of politics. I notice you have asserted this elsewhere with the same lack of proof. The Sad Puppies and the Rabid Puppies both claim otherwise. They can't win here because you have already decided what they are doing.

      I also find it interesting how you characterize their rebellion in the first place.

      Note that nobody came from outside. And the people who tried to "change" fandom were the puppies, not the rest of fandom. Turns out that a majority of fans are happy with diversity; if you're not, well, that's fine, but please stop blaming "ideologues from the outside".

      Where's this majority? At best, you can say that there were a few thousand such fans since that is who actually voted.

    83. Re:Lovely summary. by im_thatoneguy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Arguably though the Academy Awards also suffer from what the Puppies accuse the Hugos of being: rewarding unenjoyable pandering (just of a different variety). I'm a huge film nerd who will enjoy watching abstract art films and I can barely stand sitting through a lot of the Academy Award nominations. There's no good solution. If you hand over awards to critics you often end up with dry "important" works of art. If you hand it over to the consumers you get McDonalds works of art. If you hand it over to the creators you get a lot of self indulgent crap. And without fail the winners are pretty arbitrary especially since it's on an annual basis. If you happen to have a lot of crap in one year, above average crap will win. If you have a year of amazing groundbreaking work then every nomination could be better than the last decade of winners.

      It's tough to find any one process which nominates work that is: Important, Innovative and Entertaining.

    84. Re: Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, they might say that, but funnily enough, I don't quite believe their integrity when I notice that they complain about books they don't like and authors whose nontraditional backgrounds they don't want celebrated.

      I can't see why the political message of a work shouldn't be considered part of its quality though. That just seems inane. Historically, many, many works are possessed of a message or two. Some we may not recognize today, as connecting to ancient politics is hard, but there is enough that we can spot.

      Why get all bothered over it? Somehow I doubt it is some impartial nobility.

    85. Re:Lovely summary. by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      Your timing is wrong. But I suspect you know that and that's one of the reasons you are posting anonymously

    86. Re:Lovely summary. by Xtifr · · Score: 2

      Except that there was a winner for Best Novel, which is all that 97% of the world cares about when the term "Hugo"is bandied about.

      Also, lets not forget that when the Whiny/Syphilitic Puppies nominated something that was actually good (Guardians of the Galaxy), the voters went ahead and gave it a Hugo. Makes it pretty hard to avoid the conclusion that the voters decided the Puppy's crap was...crap.

      And yeah, I hate politically correct bullshit too. I hate it whichever side it comes from. "Oh no, the Hugo voters picked something that offends me--they must be controlled by an evil liberal cabal! We must destroy them!" That's politically correct bullshit, and I despise it.

    87. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since the puppies picked their works based on political views of the authors rather than quality, this seems like a valid result.

      This is an example. We have a bald assertion that the Hugo picks by "the puppies" were chosen on the basis of politics. I notice you have asserted this elsewhere with the same lack of proof. The Sad Puppies and the Rabid Puppies both claim otherwise. They can't win here because you have already decided what they are doing.

      Annie Bellet was a Sad Puppy nominee, she's a socialist and a feminist

    88. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is absolutely nothing wrong with using someone's reputation to determine whether or not they are worth listening to.

      Said the anonymous coward, what idiot upmoderated this?

    89. Re: Lovely summary. by Mashiki · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Sad Puppies believes that the Hugo's can be reformed. Rabid Puppies believes the entire thing should be burned and started oer from scratch. In the end, they were proven right that the Hugo's are being vote blocked and that it needs to be fixed.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    90. Re:Lovely summary. by Mashiki · · Score: 0

      Look at the number data and compare it to the SF voting block. I'll wait, and when you suddenly see that the SF voting block is exactly the same as the 'no award' I'm sure you can explain it. The numbers themselves tell the story that CHORF's got really upset that someone was trying to show that there was a massive voting block, and happily proved it for them.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    91. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's like Slashdot doesn't even try any more.

      They are trying, they're trying to see how far they can push their conservative agenda.

      Hell it looks like they're even trying to out-do fox news when it comes to yellow journalism.

      They're trying to drive off everyone whose even slightly to the right of center and become a Objectivist paradise.

    92. Re:Lovely summary. by dbIII · · Score: 3, Informative

      This is an example. We have a bald assertion that the Hugo picks by "the puppies" were chosen on the basis of politics.

      If you had been following this you would have noticed that the assertion was made by "the puppies" themselves on the initial website instead of being some shameful secret. It's grubby student political shit that has escaped the playpen and for some reason they are proud of it.

    93. Re:Lovely summary. by epyT-R · · Score: 1

      I suppose, if the goal is to reenforce any confirmation bias you might already have. It's good to regularly challenge your assumptions.

    94. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      'FYI, "no award" meant that a majority of fans thought that none of the works rose to the level of an award. This only happened in categories which only had puppy works. Since the puppies picked their works based on political views of the authors rather than quality, this seems like a valid result."

      The "puppies" choices were actually more diverse in viewpoint and politics than the CHORFs, but you go on spreading the bullshit you worthless fucking liar.

    95. Re:Lovely summary. by dbIII · · Score: 1

      There you go again, blaming the MRA strawman

      Most of the time you'd be right but take a look at the sick puppy web site and you'll see it really does fit the stereotype to to point of being barely distinguishable from parody.
      It really is weird anti-feminist shit going so far that Grandpa would give them a paddlin' for having a heathen attitude to women.

    96. Re:Lovely summary. by Runaway1956 · · Score: 1

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

      Publishers have played an important part in American history from the very beginning. I can't really se that things have changed a whole lot.

      --
      "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
    97. Re: Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well this is what happens when irrational ideologies take over communities (for jesus, for the children, or for great social justice, etc). Proponents present themselves as rational, but fly off the handle when challenged. Then we have to backtrack over the discussion to show the errors. It's ponderous but necessary. At least slashdot still allows the discussion to happen. A lot of sites now bitch how 'terrible' online commentary is so they can justify silencing criticism, at least within the limits of their pages. It's their right of course, but it doesn't give me confidence in their reasoning.

      I admit the grammar nazism is annoying, but some grammar is truly so ambiguous that it needs clarification.

    98. Re:Lovely summary. by dbIII · · Score: 0

      what is an MRA

      Men's Rights Activist - it's about taking the most distorted view of the most extreme feminists on the planet to the point of parody and then saying that men should be able to whine like that as well. Some feel a family court system has done them wrong but many who apply that title to themselves just seem to be angry virgins who feel that the world owes them a supermodel.
      So if someone calls themselves that they are likely to have extreme views, up to and including domestic (and other) violence. If someone calls another an MRA it's hard to take that seriously since it can be seen as just a very nasty insult, just shy of calling them a member of the Taliban.

      So to sum up it's a ridiculous label which means nothing in itself until you know what inspired it. Look for rants about losing the kids just because of a bit of violence to identify the hardcore ones that inspired it's use as an insult.

    99. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They want "no awards" they can have no awards. Forever.

      Yeah, when my step-son was 6 years old he felt the same way. "If I can't win the game, then nobody can win!" just before he turned the board over and stormed out of the room.

      Your analogy seems horribly broken with respect to the point you're trying to make. AFAICT, the puppies (both sad and rabbid) voted for real candidates, while the group you're defending voted "No Award", which also had the largest number of new members joining to perform said vote. They'd be the 6 year old, saying, "if I can't win, then nobody can win!" with their vote for "No Award".

      Honest question.... Is voting "No Award" normal in the Hugos? Has "No Award" won many categories in the past? If not, it seems like that was a stupid thing to do, regardless of how noble their motivation was - they had majority, so why not just vote in who they wanted?

    100. Re:Lovely summary. by Aighearach · · Score: 1

      Not only not news, and not for nerds... they are openly hostile to the whole concept of honest discourse.

    101. Re: Lovely summary. by Aighearach · · Score: 1

      My cat is bright purple

      Synesthesia is not a fallacy, you insensitive brute!

    102. Re:Lovely summary. by Aighearach · · Score: 1

      lol his fans on here seem to be wandering around trying to claim his website is a source of news. It isn't, of course, it is a hyper-conservative opinion magazine.

      I don't really get the purpose in trying to convince people it is news. If they actually click a link and go to the site, they'll understand it isn't a news site after reading... any article there.

      All they would do if they tricked somebody into believing it temporarily would be to teach that person that they were lied to. What is the advantage in arguing for a blog/editorial being a news source? What is the goal? It seems like they would have a better chance of recruiting a like-minded soul by being honest about what the site is, and using some positive words that appeal to the type of person who would go on to like the content on the site. Nobody who already has a negative view of the guy is going to change their mind and decide he's a respected journalist because somebody on the internet told them they were wrong.

    103. Re:Lovely summary. by Aighearach · · Score: 1

      No, the claim is that they're biased and opinionated and not news, and their website is full of controversial opinions, many times stated as if they were facts.

      That his fans lie to people about what his content is does really imply a few things about it, though.

    104. Re: Lovely summary. by Aighearach · · Score: 1

      Because the whole "controversy" is a fake controversy, like all the other fake controversies the same known non-news-sources stir up.

      There is no reason to discuss the Hugo Awards, because the linked story is not about the Hugo Awards. It is about how hippies suck and won't let conservatives be a part of culture.

    105. Re:Lovely summary. by Aighearach · · Score: 1

      Stop talking to yourself, Coward, you were right the first time. Stop trying to spoil your own insights.

    106. Re: Lovely summary. by Bronster · · Score: 1

      Oh cool - can I have user ID 666 then, since you won't need it any more?

    107. Re:Lovely summary. by farrellj · · Score: 1

      It's amazing how Brad R. Torgersen came up with an acronym to perfectly describe the various Sick Puppies, and that acronym is CHORF. I couldn't think of a better way to describe them, as it stands for "Cliquish, Holier-than-thou, Obnoxious, Reactionary, Fanatics". That perfectly describes a bunch older white males who pine for the Golden Age when they thought they ruled the world, when women stayed at home and had babies rather than winning Hugos - bunch of white male elitists had a bad case of homophobia.

      As for the numbers, well they really do have something to say about how a bunch of whiny old 5th tier male writers tried to influence an popularity contest by insulting and trying to bully the very people they needed to vote for them. And, not so amazingly, they created an EPIC FAIL.

      --
      CAN-CON 2019 - Ottawa's only book oriented Science Fiction Convention! October 18-20, Sheraton Hotel, Ottawa, Canada h
    108. Re:Lovely summary. by khallow · · Score: 1

      If you had been following this you would have noticed that the assertion was made by "the puppies"

      Quote this statement then or stop wasting my time.

    109. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      this seems like a valid result.

      Its a stupid result because nothing worthwhile got nominated in those categories.

    110. Re: Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow. You don't even realize how far of base you are. It's hilarious really. So let's see if i can 'splain.

      it was the people who voted "no award" that are like your 6 year old. They are the ones that got all pissy and childish and "took their ball and went home".

      Furthermore the idea that the Sad Puppies slate was based on politics is the exact opposite of how they were nominated. But you'll just keep believing whatever your told regardless of reality. What color is the sky in your world anyway.

    111. Re:Lovely summary. by ageoffri · · Score: 0

      About as far from the truth as you can get. This was about diversity, but it is about equal opportunities and not equal outcomes. The Hugo's have in recent memory picked based on the author's sex, sexual preface, and other attributes that are not related to the quality of the work. The Sad Puppies have pointed this out in a manner that only the most ideologues fail to understand. You are right that this is a debacle, and it is showing how little the Hugo's matter. When Toni Weisskopf gets more votes than any other editor in Hugo history, but is denied because a group of Social Justice Bullies bought supporting memberships and urged people to vote No Award, this shows how bad the clique at WorldCon is.

      --
      -- Slashdot, making the Left look conservative since 1997.
    112. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      MRAs are reactionaries. The people opposing "SJWs" are reactionaries. It's all the same.

      As Chairman Mao (or was it some left-leaning journalist explaining a hashtag they didn't like?) said:

      > Historically, all reactionary forces on the verge of extinction invariably conduct a last desperate struggle against the revolutionary forces, and some revolutionaries are apt to be deluded for a time by this phenomenon of outward strength but inner weakness failing to grasp the essential fact that the enemy is nearing extinction while they themselves are approaching victory.

      Since they're all reactionary forces on the wrong side of history, why not group them together?

    113. Re:Lovely summary. by Grishnakh · · Score: 3, Informative

      And yeah, I hate politically correct bullshit too. I hate it whichever side it comes from. "Oh no, the Hugo voters picked something that offends me--they must be controlled by an evil liberal cabal! We must destroy them!" That's politically correct bullshit, and I despise it.

      Actually, that's a slightly different form, called "conservative correctness".

    114. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      > MRA means Men's Rights Activist. There is a wide range of MRA folks. Some fight for equality in child custody cases or domestic violence cases (there are a lot of men who get beat up by women). Some are just misguided weirdos who think women should hold the door open for men or something, and there's a bunch of horrible misogynists.

      So, let's all just lump them together without consideration for the concentration. For illustrative purposes, consider that the population of school teachers is made up of normal people and child molesters. Now, I'm not saying they're all child molesters, but I'll totally bring that up every time I mention them, just because.

      See how silly that gets?

    115. Re:Lovely summary. by Crashmarik · · Score: 2

      No, the claim is that they're biased and opinionated and not news, and their website is full of controversial opinions, ma

      Do you have trouble with the word examples ? I can give you examples of the NY Times distorting the news and publishing completely false stories in pursuit of an agenda. (google New york times, jayson blair, or Ellen Pao Resignation for 2 recent examples) in this thread I presented an example of NBC deliberately distorting the news to influence it.

      So where the hell are your examples ? All I am hearing is "Nobody should hear what they have to say, it might encourage thoughtcrime"

    116. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And when he was done saying that, Mao went about his business of purging the intellectuals. SJWs sure love to think of themselves as intellectuals, so I look forward to the Maoist revolution. Wipe those fuckers out I say.

    117. Re:Lovely summary. by Zan+Lynx · · Score: 1

      "Make sure a white male won" You appear to be spewing back whatever blog you last read that claimed the Puppies were racist and sexist.

      Right there in the Wired article is a woman who was on the Sad Puppies recommended list. She excused herself when the politics showed up.

      That Correia and Togerson are racists is also laughable. If you believe it, show some evidence.

      The Sad Puppies opposition worked hard to push the narrative that Puppies are racist and sexist.

      Their racist/sexist accusation comes down to "If Puppies are not FOR promoting Hugos for authors because of non-white race and non-male gender, then Puppies must be racist/sexist." Now there is a fallacious argument. The old "if you're not for us you're against us" nonsense.

    118. Re: Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Trump will make a terrible president because he wears a bad toupee."

      Ad Hominem. But doesn't make me wrong. Trump would be a horrible PotUS, just not because of the hair piece.

    119. Re:Lovely summary. by hairyfeet · · Score: 1, Troll

      Social Justice Warriors, deciding who counts based on progressive stack, Social Justice Warriors, if you don't think like us we are on the attack!

      We are narcissists and Captain Planeteers, with our heads firmly up our rears, we think the world is black and white, and if you have a vag then you're always right!

      SJWs are to activism what Heaven's Gate cult is to your local foodbank, want a perfect example of how SJWs work? Look at the "feminist" who pulled the fire alarm on a MRM meeting and stood outside with a bullhorn screaming "rapists!" at the top of her lungs. They aren't activists, they are thugs who silence all opposing viewpoints by any means necessary, and if that means destroying the Hugo awards if they can't give it to a "Sci-Fi" story about a trans person overcoming oppression or the like? Well they will look at what they have destroyed, call it a victory, and look for something else to wreck.

      Welcome to the millennials folks, this is what you get when you take middle class white kids and raise them on a steady diet of self hatred and political correctness, lovely huh?

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    120. Re:Lovely summary. by Boronx · · Score: 1

      It is silly, but that's what it is. I'm not sure why there's a conflation, whether the misogynists labelled themselves as MRA or whether their opponents did.

      The shifting of the meaning of labels is natural, and also a common and effective political tactic.

      You can see this coming from the other side, too. Some posters up thread conflate the celebration of diversity at the Hugo awards with the "Yes means Yes" crowd.

    121. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Funnily enough, sad puppies and rabid puppies both agree with you. They want the Hugos to be about the quality of the work

      And thus they nominated Kevin J Anderson (who pissed away Frank Herbert's legacy) at the expense of Andy Weir (The Martian); Jim Butcher over Cixin Liu (who actually won after getting on the ballet because one of the other Puppies' nominees declined to stand); Vox Day's editorial contributions over Ellen Datlow, Liz Gorinsky, and Anne Perry... yeah, that's some commitment to quality of work there.

    122. Re:Lovely summary. by rtb61 · · Score: 1

      Just to be fair, alternate sources http://www.vulture.com/2015/08... and http://www.theguardian.com/boo.... Wired also did it but after the Manning incident, no just NO.

      I have to say, somewhere in the eighties I pretty much started ignoring all the awards as marketing bullshit because they seemed to have lost all value in predicting a good read and came off as being something paid for in a back room some where as public relations exercise to sell more copies of which ever book paid the highest commission for doing so.

      It seems more like people as a result of the internet and directly comparing real opinions have decide huge chunks of the system have been gamed and are just turning around and gaming that gamed system right back. Whether their efforts stick or it fail, they win by shutting down the corporate public relations game, so another exercise in modern marketing bites the dust, the awards game.

      Perhaps someone should come up with a computer game that reflects the reality of public relations exercise in awards scams, be it books, or music or movies or plays or pretty much any kind of awards scam those public relations douche bags can take over.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    123. Re: Lovely summary. by serviscope_minor · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Not really. The puppies (sad and angry) are both pissy that their favourite stuff isn't getting awards. They claim that their stuff is getting pushed out in place of crap that they hate. Of course there's a kernel of truth: some utter drek has been given awards (the utter shit by RH, for example and bad stories that have a gay person in it, such as the appalingly bad http://www.tor.com/2013/02/20/...).

      The trouble is it's only a kernel of truth. The stuff being awarded may have been bad but theirs is, by any reasonable standard just as bad, if not worse.

      This is not an attempt to reform or destroy stuff, it's just a massive attempt at shameless self promotion and getting their stuff awarded. Any claims to the contrary are simlpy them making stuff up to rewrite history in otder to make themselves look better, something Vox Dei does a lot.

      Anyway as a result, the Hugos are part way to adopting a new voting system which penalises identical voters in order to make it harder to utterly stack the votes.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    124. Re:Lovely summary. by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      No, it was because the stories submitted were utter shite. Go and read them. They're all online for free.

      I've been following this for a while now and I've read some of these puppies stories. Oh my god they are bad. Frankly, the non-puppy one that won the short story award was also bad and it nearly (but sadly didn't) lose out to no award.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    125. Re: Lovely summary. by N1AK · · Score: 1

      leave out :. and it's 100% true.

      The fact something becomes true if you change it doesn't make the initial statement any less incorrect; and no that wasn't begging the question (though the statement about all presidents wearing black trousers probably is).

    126. Re:Lovely summary. by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      That perfectly describes a bunch older white males who pine for the Golden Age when they thought they ruled the world, when women stayed at home and had babies rather than winning Hugos - bunch of white male elitists had a bad case of homophobia.

      As for the numbers, well they really do have something to say about how a bunch of whiny old 5th tier male writers tried to influence an popularity contest by insulting and trying to bully the very people they needed to vote for them. And, not so amazingly, they created an EPIC FAIL.

      Strange. I guess all those female nominees who were no longer the 'right kind of person' that said CHORFs decided to vote against with no award were white male elitists. Then again, when did it become bad to be male, white or elitist?

      The numbers sure do, that the SF clique couldn't stand anyone else other than those they wanted to win the awards. And voted 'no award.' If authors like Steven King and GRR.M could figure it out, I'm sure you shouldn't have a problem.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    127. Re: Lovely summary. by Mashiki · · Score: 4, Insightful

      This is not an attempt to reform or destroy stuff, it's just a massive attempt at shameless self promotion and getting their stuff awarded. Any claims to the contrary are simlpy them making stuff up to rewrite history in otder to make themselves look better, something Vox Dei does a lot.

      If that was true, then the SF clique wouldn't have voted no award in only specific categories. That rather disproves your point, Hoyt figured it out. Steven King figured it out, GRR Martin figured it out.

      Anyway as a result, the Hugos are part way to adopting a new voting system which penalises identical voters in order to make it harder to utterly stack the votes.

      And thus both sad and rabid puppies proved their point that a clique was there, and forming voting blocks for the stuff they wanted to win awards. Which detracts from the actual point of having awards for good writing.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    128. Re:Lovely summary. by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      "MRA" is a term like "SJW". It just means asshats who like to call racism and sexism to get their own way, when they think that there isn't quite enough white privilege for example. In this case, the puppies decided that they wanted to fill the ballots with crap written by people who shared their political views and exclude interesting material that was written/edited by minorities, because there was too much diversity.

      Like SJW, the original meaning is long gone... Well, in the case of MRAs they were never what they claimed to be exactly, but still.

      Now answer me this. Why do you always end up making ad-hominem attacks? Looking at your post history you do it an awful lot. What relevance to your argument does it have here?

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    129. Re:Lovely summary. by serviscope_minor · · Score: 2

      Maturity also means recognizing when you have a rigged game and learning not to play under those circumstances when possible.

      Except until this year the game was never rigged. In the previous years, voting has been utterly dominated only by those who care enough about new literature enough to vote. And that's actually a pretty small group of people. There's also a *LOT* of stuff to vote on, so votes tend t be spread very thin. Apparently in some previous years, the only people who could be bothered liked some awful stuff, but not the kind of awful stuff the puppies appear to like.

      If you're too lazy to vote, that doensn't mean the game is rigged against you, it means you're too lazy to vote. The rigging happened this year with the nomination slate becasue it meant the normally spread out votes were not spread out and so had a disproportionate effect.

      This is an example. We have a bald assertion that the Hugo picks by "the puppies" were chosen on the basis of politics.

      A slate is a perfect example of voting by politics. The chance that everyone independently chose exactly the same 5 in the same order is miniscule.

      I notice you have asserted this elsewhere with the same lack of proof. The Sad Puppies and the Rabid Puppies both claim otherwise.

      And you actually beliee anything Vox Day says? How cute!

      Anyway, as always, far fewer people were bothered to nominate compared to those who vote on the final award. Rigging the noms was relatively easy except in the film, book and TV categories where lots of people did vote already. However since far, far more people voted in the awards, that was more or less impossible for them to rig.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    130. Re:Lovely summary. by Crashmarik · · Score: 0

      LOL as usual you're full of crap

      Jim Butcher: The Skin Game, yep Harry Dresden is crap, best selling crap,

      John C Wright's One bright star to guide them. Oh yeah this awful

      Michael Flynn: The Journeyman: In the Stone House, Oh man he has been writing crap for awhile now, Matter of fact he writes such crap he won the prometheus award, the Theodore Sturgeon Award and the Robert A. Heinlein Medal. Not to mention being a 7 time Hugo Nominee.

      Hell even Geofrey Landis admitted Toni Weiskopf should have won for best editor, but was nuked to make a political statement

    131. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Academy awards are also pure shit? I like hugo awards, not a single time have I been disappointed with a book that had won. I can go buy Hugo winner and be pretty sure it's a good book. Academy awards mean nothing, they are pure bs hype advertising for selected works.

    132. Re:Lovely summary. by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      MRAs literally had absolutely nothing to do with this,

      If yo've been following any of this, it's quite clear Vox Day and his ilk espouse much the same in the way of toxic views as the MRA/RedPill/MGTOW/etc crowd. MRA is as convenient a label as any since they all behave in more or less identical ways.

      As with many things, the puppy campaign had a kernel of truth: but then this is not surprising as half truths are always the most virulent.

      Apart from being a thoroughly awful person, from what I've read, Benjanun Sriduangkaew's writing is utterly terrible and goes into ludicrous amounts of floweryness which it seems some people confuse for literary. I also hated the 2014 short story winner who's only distinguishing characteristic was that it had a gay protagonist (who was also very wet) and was otherwise stunningly mediocre.

      For some reason, some people liked that stuff. I don't really know why, but there you go.

      And the puppies had perhaps a kernel of a point which is that that awful stuff was pushing out other, good stuff. Trouble is of course it turned out that the puppy stuff wasn't being not voted in because it was politically inexpedient, it was not being nommed because it was TERRIBLE. Seriously go and read the nominations. They are not very good, and certainly not award quality.

      The thing is just because some other unworthy crap got awarded, doesn't mean YOUR crap is worthy of an award. The thing is this was the one big chance for the puppies to show the rest of the sci-fi world what they're missing. Apparently what we're missing is ham-fisted christian allegories with deep sexist overtones (John C. Wright) at worst and at best a soup of mawkish pathos which verges into the syrupy (literally). (Totaled, Kary English).

      But a big part of it is the rabid puppies are in fact a bunch of raving mysoginists who hate anyone who is't a straight, whte, Chriatian male. Their fearless leader (Vox Day) holds those views loudly and proudly. He's never tried to deny it and frequently makes such comments. See here for his own views in his own words on homosexuality for example:

      http://voxday.blogspot.co.uk/2...

      Make no mistake: Benjanun "Requires Hate" is a thoroughly awful person, but shoehorning the thing into a ridiculous bi partisan issue and siding with the other side is idiotic. And if you really think this is still the case, then explain why the blogger who outed RH and documented her awfulness got a Hugo for her efforts.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    133. Re:Lovely summary. by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      You do not deal with terrorists.

    134. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd never heard of the site before, but gave up as soon as I saw the acronym 'SJW'.

      I really don't understand anything that comes out of the mouth of anyone using that term....

      It all just sounds like 'Whaaa... Why won't people just do what I want them to, and not what they want to do?'. But dressed up in a bunch of pseudo-psychological bullshit.

      Clue: If you had the moral high ground - you wouldn't need such tortuous arguments to try and explain your views...

    135. Re:Lovely summary. by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      I think the last assertion needs more citations.

      Here you go:

      http://rationalwiki.org/wiki/T...

    136. Re:Lovely summary. by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      cliquish groupthink

      Excuse me, but what do you think the Puppies are?

    137. Re:Lovely summary. by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      The term seems to have lost all meaning. I might stop using it, it's too poorly defined. From what people say the puppies could be described as SJWs - trying to force their racist, sexist agenda by selecting inferior works and excluding ones from non-preferred groups.

      This seems to be a standard tactic for organized trolls. It's like Newspeak in 1984, corrupting the language and changing the meaning of words to make it harder to argue against their position and even make it look like a lot of past complaints about there were actually support.

      I bet that blows a few minds.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    138. Re:Lovely summary. by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      Oh my.

      Puppy: Hey I'm going to vote for these books and stories I really like and bring my friends maybe get even more of fandom involved.

      SJW: Terrorist destroy the award

      If these people ever realize that illegal immigrants don't share their values or views they would demand the nuclear arsenal be used on the nation

    139. Re:Lovely summary. by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      BTW if you didn't understand this, the Rabid Puppies were pretty certain the SJWs would cut of their heads to stop a nosebleed.

    140. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Puppies didn't fail. The Hugo halfwits sprinted right into an obvious trap and proved all their critics right.

      The Hugos were taken over by a clique years ago.

      All the Sad Puppies did was use the same tactics that the clique has been using for years... and their only response was a tantrum that makes the Hugos look like some ghastly student union political shouting house.

      The awards were a pathetic display and the publishing world was watching. Watching them celebrating some great victory over the Sad Puppies is hilarious.

      Fav quote from one of the suckers: "Political views ARE a measure of quality!"

      NOTE: I'm neither a voter in the Hugos nor a right-winger. Think on that.

    141. Re:Lovely summary. by Aighearach · · Score: 1

      And that would prove, what? You're waving your hands and pointing at the NY Times.

      You don't know that the New York Times is a respected mainstream news source? You're going to try to tar them by association, because they had a bad employee who wrote fake stories... and was caught by them and fired?

      You think NBC is not a normal, respected news source? You didn't know the they are middle-of-the-road?

      I'll give you a hint... "progressives" think the New York Times leans right. And it does.

      And Brietbart is not a reporter, or a journalist. It isn't his line of work. He is a political activist. Wake up.

      It is just cable infotainment pap to claim that the NYT is some kind of biased hippy liberal newspaper, therefore Breitbart must be a journalist.

      Does your planet have water?

      You think that wanting news to be from news sources instead of editorial sources is... an accusation of thought crime? No. No. No thought is accused of having happened here. Absolutely no possibility for thought crime.

    142. Re:Lovely summary. by Crashmarik · · Score: 2

      And that would prove, what?

      That would mean anyone who accused the Times of bias would have facts to back it up while you have none.

    143. Re:Lovely summary. by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      Well, we have proof that quite a lot of the supporters at his announcement were, in fact, paid actors.
      I wouldn't be surprized if the same is true at his Rallys. What ? You think Trump would NOT spent a hundred grand on an ego stroking excercise ? That's enough to hire a 20-thousand people at 50 dollars a pop.

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    144. Re: Lovely summary. by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      I think it would actually have been simpler to just copy-and-paste the definition of the fallacy fallacy.

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    145. Re:Lovely summary. by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      Well, we have proof that quite a lot of the supporters at his announcement were, in fact, paid actors.

      We do ? Lets see it.

      I'd think it be big news if he was hiring 20k people.

    146. Re: Lovely summary. by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      He did not have 20k people at the announcement. He had less than 100. And some of those were paid actors.
      I never claimed he did augment rally audiences the same way. I merely speculated that this is possible.

      Your reading comprehension failures do not constitute a claim on my part.

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    147. Re: Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem was, Bill Clinton didn't wear black pants all the time. In fact, if Bill Clinton wore black pants all the time he wouldn't have disgraced the office of the President of the United States. (at least to the point where that fat pig became a multi year world news story).
      See? Premise true. Conclusion true. Room 12A please.
      This is why Donald trump will win. Don't marry ugly, lying sociopaths, and don't buy cable TV.

    148. Re:Lovely summary. by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      The former two subgroups are, unfortunately, in such a tiny minority as to be effectively non-existent and have about as much actual influence over the MRA movement as Albert Speer had over the holocaust (in other words, they go along with the party-line until they get called on it and then suddenly speak out against the insane parts) and yes I know I just Godwinned myself but he was just too perfect an analogy not to.

      As one of prominent feminist put it: There are quite a number of MRA concerns that are legitimate issues of gender equality which deserves to have somebody doing something about them - unfortunately, that is not what the MRA movement is doing.

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    149. Re: Lovely summary. by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      If that was true, then the SF clique wouldn't have voted no award in only specific categories.

      Ah I see it's true because there were "no award" votes in puppy categories and it's also true because one of the puppy nominations won its category. Or, perhaps the puppy noms were terrible on the whole and people voted for quality, so when a puppy nom was good, it also got voted for,

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    150. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      FYI, "no award" meant that a majority of fans thought that none of the works rose to the level of an award. This only happened in categories which only had puppy works. Since the puppies picked their works based on political views of the authors rather than quality, this seems like a valid result.

      Or the SJW didn't like the political views of the nominated works, and decided to call the game and take their ball home. I think a third POV is needed for a proper triangulation.

    151. Re:Lovely summary. by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1, Informative

      Jim Butcher: The Skin Game, yep Harry Dresden is crap, best selling crap,

      Ah yes best selling is always an indication of quality. That must be why Star Wars Episode I grossed a cool billion. Jim Butcher is decent enough, but even Butcher fans admit the novel up for the award isn't his strongest work.

      Besides, popularity is already its own reward (heaps of cash), so awards needn't simply go to the bestselling works, regardlss of quality.

      John C Wright's One bright star to guide them. Oh yeah this awful

      Every. Single. Thing by this guy I've tried to read is terrible. I love the whole "pew pew in space genre", I'm a complete sucker for it and I find his stuff utterly unreadable. Yet he got 3 noms in one category. Totally massively political.

      Michael Flynn: The Journeyman: In the Stone House,

      Ah yes, an entry into the novel-by-stealth cattegory. It's part two in a series and frankly does not stand well on its own. It's more of a story chunk from the middle, so yeah I'd have voted for no award on that basis. If you want to see what a good, **complete** novelette looks like, read "The Merchant and the Alchemists Gate", which deservedly won a while back.

      Hell even Geofrey Landis admitted Toni Weiskopf should have won for best editor, but was nuked to make a political statement

      Ah yes, Toni. I guess the fact she refused to provide a list of works she'd edited and instead said that any and all Baen books are representative of her work had nothing to do with it. Must be political because that's a totally reasonable thing to do...

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    152. Re:Lovely summary. by GrumpySteen · · Score: 1

      Jim Butcher: The Skin Game, yep Harry Dresden is crap, best selling crap,

      A few months ago, Kim Kardashian's book of selfies was on a best seller list.

      Selling well doesn't mean it's good.

    153. Re:Lovely summary. by Dagmar+d'Surreal · · Score: 1

      You have this entirely backwards.

      It was the SJWs who were picking authors based on their political viewpoints and their willingness to deal with people who are obsessed with what everyone is doing with their genitalia.

      The Puppies groups were campaigning for works to be judged on their quality alone.

    154. Re:Lovely summary. by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      Last year's puppy slate was utter shit as well. None of them lost out to "No Award".

      So are you suggesting that this years are several times worse?

    155. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The butthurt is strong in this one.

    156. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you see something he wrote that is untrue or misleading, spit it out. Otherwise, piss off.

      His writing about planned parenthood. For example. (http://m.snopes.com/tag/planned-parenthood/ disproves a lot of things he continues to talk about).

      He also quoted non reputable pedagogy groups (A splinter group of researches, who basically are anti gay and right wing. Not sure if their work is peer reviewed), to 'prove' gays are bad parents.

      He still looks fabulous of course ;).

    157. Re:Lovely summary. by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      Every. Single. Thing by this guy I've tried to read is terrible. I love the whole "pew pew in space genre", I'm a complete sucker for it and I find his stuff utterly unreadable. Yet he got 3 noms in one category. Totally massively political.

      http://www.amazon.com/One-Brig...

      pew pew in space eh ?

      Well if you are going to lie, at least try to do a better job.

      I'll just note your reversing yourself on

      No, it was because the stories submitted were utter shite

      And if you would like to argue with Landis about the politics of Weiskopf he posted in the thread.

    158. Re: Lovely summary. by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      http://www.cnn.com/2015/08/22/...

      CNN says he had 30,000. I am sure he paid them off

    159. Re: Lovely summary. by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      I highly doubt that he paid them all off. Just as i highly doubt he didnt pay some of them off.

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    160. Re:Lovely summary. by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      Ok
      Was the book crap ? Or are you going to point to irrelevancies ?

    161. Re: Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The post explicitly states that the fans votes where ignored. This is not true. In the categories where no award was given it was because "no award" received the most votes.

    162. Re:Lovely summary. by dywolf · · Score: 1
      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    163. Re:Lovely summary. by dywolf · · Score: 1

      someone mod up to undo the MRA troll that apparently has mod points today

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    164. Re:Lovely summary. by dywolf · · Score: 1

      Good primer on the "men's rights movement": http://rationalwiki.org/wiki/M...

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    165. Re:Lovely summary. by dywolf · · Score: 1

      See? This right here is yet another textbook example of just what is wrong with these idiots, starting from the assumption that they only got the awards because of who they are, not what they wrote.

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    166. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      MRAs literally had absolutely nothing to do with this

      except for abusing the nomination process in retaliation for too many women and minorities winning last year

    167. Re:Lovely summary. by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      I was referring to his ones in that genre which I love, like " the golden transcendence", where it's a genre I love, but yet still found his work unbearably terrible. I've not read one bright star, because I've hated everything else I've tried of his, and the reviews were not good and I don't like reading biblical allegories much. IOW even when he writes in a genre where I enjoy reading utter drek, I dislike his stuff.

      But well done for jumping go conclusions and throwing insults. That is about the limit of your debating style.

      The rest of your post is nonsensical, as one might expect.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    168. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That would mean anyone who accused the Times of bias would have facts to back it up while you have none.

      I wouldn't say that, it would demonstrate the first, perhaps, but that would not mean that the second necessarily follows. At most you can say "while you have presented none" which does not prove there is none. I haven't presented proof that the sun is shining where I am right now, but that doesn't mean it isn't, and that there aren't facts to show it. Not doing something at most shows you're choosing not to do it, not that you can't.

      Sorry, but it looks like you're going to need to take the logic class found in the other avenues of this thread.

    169. Re:Lovely summary. by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      Mediamatters ??? Oh that's funny. An organization that exists for no other reason than to pimp the Clintons

      http://downtrend.com/robertgeh...
      http://dailycaller.com/2015/06...
      http://capitalresearch.org/201...

    170. Re:Lovely summary. by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

      How many women did they nominate?

      Best Novel
      The Dark Between the Stars – Kevin J. Anderson – TOR (23 FEB 2015 interview)
      Trial by Fire – Charles E. Gannon – BAEN (2 MAR 2015 interview)
      Skin Game – Jim Butcher – ROC
      Monster Hunter Nemesis – Larry Correia – BAEN
      Lines of Departure – Marko Kloos – 47 North (Amazon)

      Best Novella
      “Flow” – Arlan Andrews Sr. – Analog magazine November 2014
      One Bright Star to Guide Them – John C. Wright – Castalia House
      Big Boys Don’t Cry – Tom Kratman – Castalia House

      Best Novelette
      “The Journeyman: In the Stone House” – Michael F. Flynn – Analog magazine June 2014
      “The Triple Sun: A Golden Age Tale” – Rajnar Vajra – Analog magazine July/Aug 2014
      “Championship B’tok” – Edward M. Lerner – Analog magazine Sept 2014
      “Ashes to Ashes, Dust to Dust, Earth to Alluvium” – Gray Rinehart – Orson Scott Card’s InterGalactic Medicine Show

      Best Short Story
      “Goodnight Stars” – Annie Bellet – The Apocalypse Triptych
      “Tuesdays With Molakesh the Destroyer” – Megan Grey – Fireside Fiction
      “Totaled” – Kary English – Galaxy’s Edge magazine, July 2014
      “On A Spiritual Plain” – Lou Antonelli – Sci Phi Journal #2
      “A Single Samurai” – Steve Diamond – Baen Big Book of Monsters

      Best Related Work
      Letters from Gardner – Lou Antonelli – Merry Blacksmith Press
      Transhuman and Subhuman: Essays on Science Fiction and Awful Truth – John C. Wright – Castalia House
      “THE HOT EQUATIONS: THERMODYNAMICS AND MILITARY SF” – Ken Burnside – Riding the Red Horse
      Wisdom From My Internet – Michael Z. Williamson
      “Why Science is Never Settled” Part 1, Part 2 – Tedd Roberts – BAEN

      Best Graphic Story
      Reduce Reuse Reanimate (Zombie Nation book #2) – Carter Reid – (independent)

      Best Dramatic Presentation (Long Form)
      “The Lego Movie” – Phil Lord, Christopher Miller
      “Guardians of the Galaxy” – James Gunn
      “Interstellar” – Christopher Nolan
      “The Maze Runner” – Wes Ball

      Best Dramatic Presentation (Short Form)
      Grimm – ” Once We Were Gods” – NBC
      The Flash – “The Flash (pilot)” – The CW
      Adventure Time – “The Prince Who Wanted Everything” – Cartoon Network
      Regular Show – “Saving Time” – Cartoon Network

      Best Editor (Long Form)
      Toni Weisskopf – BAEN
      Jim Minz – BAEN
      Anne Sowards – ACE/ROC
      Sheila Gilbert – DAW

      Best Editor (Short Form)
      Mike Resnick – Galaxy’s Edge magazine
      Edmund R. Schubert – Orson Scott Card’s InterGalactic Medicine Show
      Jennifer Brozek (for Shattered Shields)
      Bryan Thomas Schmidt (for Shattered Shields)

      Best Professional Artist
      Carter Reid
      Jon Eno
      Alan Pollack
      Nick Greenwood

      Best Semiprozine
      Orson Scott Card’s InterGalactic Medicine Show
      Abyss & Apex
      Andromeda Spaceways In-Flight Magazine

      Best Fanzine
      Tangent SF On-line – Dave Truesdale
      Elitist Book Reviews – Steve Diamond
      The Revenge of Hump Day – Tim Bolgeo

      Best Fancast
      “The Sci Phi Show” – Jason Rennie
      Dungeon Crawlers Radio
      Adventures in SF Publishing

      Best Fan Writer
      Matthew David Surridge (Black Gate)
      Jeffro Johnson
      Amanda Green
      Cedar Sanderson
      Dave Freer

      The John W. Campbell Award
      Jason Cordova
      Kary English
      Eric S. Raymond

      Jesus Christ -- they nominated "looks like FORTRAN to me" ESR? What for? Worst identification of a programming language?

      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
    171. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You seem to be missing the point. The works they put up sucked. There was nothing worth voting for in a number of those categories.

    172. Re:Lovely summary. by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      The golden transcendence

      http://www.goodreads.com/book/...

      Good reads gives it 4.13 out of 5 stars probably be 4.5+ if it weren't for some outlier ratings from post puppy raters.

      Care to be wrong again ?

    173. Re:Lovely summary. by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      I haven't presented proof that the sun is shining where I am right now, but that doesn't mean it isn't

      ::Golf clap:: That's very well done. You have set the impossible challenge of proving a negative. By your logic I'll just assume you're a rapist and child molester because you can't prove you aren't.

    174. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      unfortunately, that is not what the MRA movement is doing.

      And what are they doing? not what are they _being_, but what are they _doing_? I think the answer is, disagreeing with feminists, and doing it somewhere others can hear them, a.k.a. "derailing."

    175. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah so MRAs are as diverse as feminists then? Fair assessment?

    176. Re: Lovely summary. by babydog · · Score: 1

      Sarah Hoyt has a lot of opinions about lots of things. The larger crowd of voters elected not to reward any of the Puppy nominees. I would have voted the same way. That's not a clique, that's everyone _outside_ the clique. Personally, I would have participated if "City of Stairs" had been on the ballot, but it wasn't. A conspiracy! It's those damn FJWs! or SJWs or whatever.

    177. Re:Lovely summary. by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      I don't really care what good reads gives it. I bought a copy (second hand, thankfully) and it's a special kind of awful.

      Now either I'm a unique, free thinking maverick or, more likely, there are a lot of people out there who are like me and dislike his writing. I found the science somewhere between lacking and outright wrong and a lot of misplaced pseudo-profundity. Kind of like "interstellar" which I also hated.

      It also has some unintentionally hilarious moments like "his cells were more like wood" which just made me laugh and broke my suspension of disbelif totally. It's also poor science on the SF side as it's not freezing that makes wood tough and hard, it's lignin primarily.

      Now are you going to continue arguing vociferously about a book you've never read?

      Oh and by the way just in case you think "goodreads" numbers are a good measure of quality, it also gives "50 shades of really, truly ameturish writing, 'oh my' and hilariously awful continuity errors" a whopping 3.7 out of 5.

      Care to be wrong again ?

      Touche my fine gentleman, touche.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    178. Re:Lovely summary. by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      The kerufuffle through the awards into sharp relief and a lot more people voted this year. They seemed to be somewhat critical: the very much non-puppy short story winnder "the day the world turned upside down" won out to "no award" by a wing and prayer (after 4 rounds of runoff), and in fact was a less popular first choice.

      So you can't really complain about people picking on the puppies as they gave everything the same treatment.

      IMO, the shorts should have also been "no award" because the winner was simply not very good. I can go into details why, but you should read it first and form your own opinion if you want a fruitful debate about it.

      Since it's non-puppy I think we can be pretty neutral about it.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    179. Re:Lovely summary. by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      I don't really care what good reads gives it.

      How did I know you would say that ?

      Anyone who could call books he obviously didn't read SHITE could hardly be expected to react to outside input.

    180. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now either I'm a unique, free thinking maverick or, more likely, there are a lot of people out there who are like me and dislike his writing. I found the science somewhere between lacking and outright wrong and a lot of misplaced pseudo-profundity. Kind of like "interstellar" which I also hated.

      You're probably a unique, free thinking maverick.

      Most people have no problem with lacking or outright wrong science. Especially if it fits their political ideology or agenda.

      That's pretty much how you got SJWs and SIWs. They cherry pick half truths they like, and it spreads like wild fire.

    181. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Since the puppies picked their works based on political views of the authors rather than quality, this seems like a valid result."

      Really? Name one author puppies picked based on their politics. That was exactly what they were fighting against, the choosing of "good politics" over "good story."

    182. Re:Lovely summary. by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

      There is a wide range of MRA folks. Some fight for equality in child custody cases or domestic violence cases (there are a lot of men who get beat up by women). Some are just misguided weirdos who think women should hold the door open for men or something, and there's a bunch of horrible misogynists.

      As with any movement, there are splinter groups. The People's Front of Judea makes it absolutely clear they have nothing in common with the Judean People's Front and all. You generally find that those who properly call themselves "Men's Rights Activists" eschew those who call themselves "Pick-Up Artists," or "Red Pillers" (from reddit's /r/theredpill). MRAs are more likely to be egalitarians. Their concerns are generally political, and they want things like you said, equality in child custody and domestic violence cases and are generally not misogynists. But the PUAs are basically male supremacists who see the war between the sexes as a war, and they intend to win it. They do not like MRAs because they think they are whiny beta-males. Their interests are social, not generally political.

      But the popular thing to do in SJW circles is to lump them all together as "MRAs" because including the horrible things the PUAs say means you can ignore any claims made by MRAs without having to examine their validity. For instance, you see in one of the linked articles the author states that early this year MRAs stirred up a shitstorm about the new Mad Max movie because it was "feminist propaganda." However, the blogger who made that claim was a PUA, who specifically states he is not an MRA. So, factually incorrect. MRAs did not rail against Mad Max. PUAs did. But by pretending that PUAs and MRAs are the same thing, you can safely ignore domestic violence against men as an issue because some asshole whined on the internet about a movie.

      Similarly, AniMoJo falsely claims the Puppies are MRAs. The two have nothing to do with each other. I don't even know what conflating them accomplishes. And he gets their complaint wrong, too. They complain SJWs have made "approved political messages" a prerequisite for winning a Hugo. AniMoJo claims the Puppies want those political messages banned. But what the Puppies actually want is for the Hugos to be apolitical. It's bizarre, but so people cannot wrap their heads around the idea that just because one person is not FOR you or your ideas, that they are AGAINST you or your ideas. It's also possible to genuinely not give a shit.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    183. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      except for abusing the nomination process in retaliation for too many women and minorities winning last year simply as a matter of being women and minorities

      FTFY.

    184. Re:Lovely summary. by lactose99 · · Score: 1

      Considering the number of writers that pulled their own nomination when the Puppies floated it, it was the Puppies that started this political war.

      --
      Fully licensed blockchain psychiatrist
    185. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ::Golf clap:: That's very well done. You have set the impossible challenge of proving a negative.

      Not at all. I have pointed out the speciousness of your reasoning, that what you said does not actually mean quite what you claimed it to mean.

      Do you need to read my post again?

      I wouldn't say that, it would demonstrate the first, perhaps, but that would not mean that the second necessarily follows. At most you can say "while you have presented none" which does not prove there is none. I haven't presented proof that the sun is shining where I am right now, but that doesn't mean it isn't, and that there aren't facts to show it. Not doing something at most shows you're choosing not to do it, not that you can't.

      Sorry, but it looks like you're going to need to take the logic class found in the other avenues of this thread.

      By your logic I'll just assume you're a rapist and child molester because you can't prove you aren't.

      Well, you're the one who said "while you have none." when the reality is...no, you can't assume that, so why wouldn't you assume something else?

      It's your logic, not mine. Take ownership of it, why don't you?

      Read your post again:

      That would mean anyone who accused the Times of bias would have facts to back it up while you have none.

      No, it does not mean that. It means that the person in question has not presented any facts, not that there are none.

      Which is why I said:

      I haven't presented proof that the sun is shining where I am right now, but that doesn't mean it isn't, and that there aren't facts to show it.

      Strange that you didn't even quote the whole sentence though, however, I can't say that your not doing so proves anything, it may not mean anything other than you made a simple mistake in editing while quoting, and failed to notice you truncated the sentence. I might say it suggests you're not interesting in reading what I said clearly, or representing it accurately, but it doesn't prove anything.

      Again, I think it looks like you need to take the logic class found in the other avenues of this thread.

    186. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Doubt it... /. kinda sucks

    187. Re:Lovely summary. by squiggleslash · · Score: 1

      ...which actually isn't bad given you get copies of all the nominated works as part of your voting packet.

      Probably better value though during years when the nominated works reflect what ordinary fans have liked, rather than gamed by people voting for slates of works that don't offend them.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    188. Re:Lovely summary. by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      Are you coming I've not read "the golden transcendence" and other things by Wright?

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    189. Re: Lovely summary. by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      What are they doing ?
      98% whining. 2% raping and killing women

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    190. Re: Lovely summary. by meta-monkey · · Score: 3, Insightful

      And thus both sad and rabid puppies proved their point that a clique was there, and forming voting blocks for the stuff they wanted to win awards. Which detracts from the actual point of having awards for good writing.

      Which is also funny, because that will not work. The diversity in the non-NA votes proves there was no "block." The only block that existed was the NA block, because there's no way to argue that was not political.

      Hoyt gets it exactly. The puppies will win, it is inevitable, because their method requires no coordination, and no foaming at the mouth. Just publish the slate, and let the SJWs work themselves into tizzy opposing it. And there's basically nothing easier than getting SJWs to work themselves into a tizzy.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    191. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Some are just misguided weirdos who think women should hold the door open for men or something"

      They fucking should.

    192. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I fail to see how blame for destroying the awards can fall on the people who refuse to vote on a stacked ticket rather than the ones who stacked it. Even if I agreed with their politics, I would have voted "No Award" rather than be associated with people who are willing to game the system to have their way.

    193. Re: Lovely summary. by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      Hoyt gets it exactly. The puppies will win, it is inevitable, because their method requires no coordination, and no foaming at the mouth. Just publish the slate,

      Just publish the slate... and have a bunch of likeminded people all sign up, fork pout $40 and vote in exactly the same way. How on earth is that not coordination?

      I'm also assuming by your use of the phrase "SJW" that you identify as the opposite: a SIW.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    194. Re:Lovely summary. by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      Considering the number of writers that pulled their own nomination when the Puppies floated it, it was the Puppies that started this political war.

      I don't know. I believe one of the writers said she didn't want her career destroyed by the nomination. The implication being she believed there would be retaliation.

    195. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To them, it's a well known "fact" that a Hugo win can boost the sales of books and collections, and that is what the Puppies were looking for.

      lol yes Ancillary Justice has sold so so well. Most people don't read the Hugo winners since about 1987 or so.

    196. Re:Lovely summary. by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      That would mean anyone who accused the Times of bias would have facts to back it up while you have none

      Call me when he presents some.

    197. Re:Lovely summary. by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      So not for the last 20 years or so ?

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

    198. Re:Lovely summary. by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      Look you've been there for awhile

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

      20 years now.

    199. Re: Lovely summary. by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      > "Trump will make a terrible president because he wears a bad toupee."
      >
      > Ad Hominem. But doesn't make me wrong. Trump would be a horrible PotUS, just not because of the hair piece.

      Your argument is still unproven and thus something that no one should take seriously. The requirement to "prove it" still remains.

      That's the whole problem from the "bad arguments don't matter" camp.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    200. Re:Lovely summary. by khallow · · Score: 1

      If you're too lazy to vote

      And if you're too lazy to reason, I guess this results. A bigger reason why one wouldn't vote is that one doesn't care about science fiction and/or the Hugo prize in the first place. After all, somewhat less than 10,000 people bothered to vote. I doubt most of the remaining 7 billion people choose to abstain because they were lazy.

      A slate is a perfect example of voting by politics.

      Don't confuse method with intent. And "voting by politics" is not equivalent to the resulting plank being chosen on the basis of politics. The latter implies political considerations in the choices made rather than political process to make those choices.

      And you actually beliee anything Vox Day says?

      What makes you any more credible than Vox Day?

      Anyway, as always, far fewer people were bothered to nominate compared to those who vote on the final award. Rigging the noms was relatively easy except in the film, book and TV categories where lots of people did vote already. However since far, far more people voted in the awards, that was more or less impossible for them to rig.

      Or someone else was better at the rigging.

    201. Re: Lovely summary. by anyGould · · Score: 1

      In the end, they were proven right that the Hugo's are being vote blocked and that it needs to be fixed.

      Alternately, it was proven that while you can game the system to force your choices to be nominated, you can't force the voters to like them.

      If that don't work for you, it's a reminder that stacking the nominations means squat unless you also manage to stack the voting.

    202. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the well is surrounded by corpses who look like they died in agony, it is a good idea to assume it is poisoned. This is not a fallacy.

    203. Re:Lovely summary. by Kreplock · · Score: 1

      You realize being a logical fallacy doesn't automatically make it untrue, right? Or were you just looking for an intellectually lazy means for shutting down an opponent?

      If it's a logical fallacy there's nothing to shut down. As for truth, status == NULL.

    204. Re:Lovely summary. by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Vox Day has pretty much openly stated that his slate is a nuclear response to the imaginary "left wing conspiracy" that doesn't award the authors that he likes. As I recall, he pretty specifically said that he intends to burn Hugo down to the ground and make sure that it's meaningless, if it doesn't conform to his wishes. Terrorism is actually an apt analogy: utilizing fear and threats to force your target to commit to some political issue. Obviously, Vox is not terrorist (well, not on that count; based on his other writings, he may well be a closeted one who hasn't decided to take up arms yet). But the logic of "you do not deal with terrorists" is fully applicable here. Do it once, and you'll be doing it for the rest of your life, because the threats will never stop.

    205. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They forced the good ones out because they wanted to make sure that a white male won by excluding all other options.

      You have it backwards. The people doing interesting, innovative stuff were not white, so the Puppies made sure they didn't get nominated, and what was selected wasn't worthy of an award.

      So, in your world the Puppies decided that the best way to make sure that a white male won was to nominate many women and non-whites.

      Right.

      Look, you might be entitled to your own opinion, but you are not entitled to your own facts. And if the only way you can justify your opinions is by lying, then clearly your opinions are worthless.

    206. Re: Lovely summary. by Watts+Martin · · Score: 1

      The nomination data for the Hugos has been released. You can very clearly see the effects of bloc voting with the Puppy nominees, but there's no evidence of such "clustering" for other nominated works. If there was an SJW voting bloc that just turned out to be not as effective as the Puppies' block, we'd see it in the data. We don't. The bloc just isn't there. And, hell, if the Hugo awards were really "corrupt" the way some of the more strident Puppies claimed -- if it was really a small group of people who just "chose" the nominees -- then the Puppy bloc wouldn't have been successful. A truly corrupt cabal would have just said, "Yeah, whatever, here's your stories about gay marrying dinosaurs."

      And, yes, it's absolutely true that "No Award" came in ahead of all Puppy nominees save Guardians of the Galaxy. That's not a sign of a bloc, though, it's a sign of thousands of science fiction fans getting really, really pissed at the Puppies. I'm sorry, but Hoyt's claim boils down to "The fact that Hugo voters didn't give awards to works we gamed the system to get on the ballot proves they were gaming the system all along." No. No, it doesn't. It proves that Hugo voters don't like having the system gamed.

    207. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      AniMojo really is one of the most hate-filled bigots on this site. I cannot understand how one person can be such a monster.

    208. Re:Lovely summary. by Cinnamon+Beige · · Score: 1

      It's too bad today's news pushes such obvious political agendas. They should be focused on telling the truth as objectively as possible.

      There's an unfortunately significant body of research in social psychology that suggests that it might be better, in fact, to encourage them to be open and honest about their political agendas--even if they do try to be objective, as long as we have humans doing the reporting agendas and opinions will inevitably shape things. Ironically, being openly and consciously aware of your biases seems to actually make people better at suppressing them in order to be objective. (I've not seen any proposed mechanism, but offhand I'd say it'd be the obvious one of them being able to self-monitor and correct.)

    209. Re: Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No it doesn't. It's a logical argument. It just has a false premise (and is therefore not sound).

    210. Re:Lovely summary. by St.Creed · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I read that page too, and I consider it a shining example of quoting out of context. I've looked up the originals and in context they weren't as stupid as the quotes on the page makes them out to be.

      I disagree firmly with his writings, and I think the way he writes is a great example of "how to troll the internet" as shown by a dick, but the quotes are pretty selective. And therefore easily dismissed by his fans as slanderous.

      --
      Therefore, by the (faulty) logic you're using, you're just a cow with a keyboard - osu-neko (2604)
    211. Re:Lovely summary. by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Oh? So you're saying that there is a context in which suggesting that throwing acid into women's faces is actually a good idea, is not outrageous and not grounds to immediately label the person saying such a thing as irredeemable asshole?

    212. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "make sure that a white male won "

      By nominating a number of people who were not white males? Interesting you know they were 'shit," but not what they were or who wrote them.

    213. Re:Lovely summary. by St.Creed · · Score: 1

      I am, actually.

      The context in which that vile statement was posted was a reply to a question by another person whether there could ever be a hypothetical situation in which you could argue that these things were a good idea. He proceeded to construct an argument that from an abstract and scientific point of view, you could.

      Of course, he chose the most outrageous position you could take to do it with. That's why I agree with the original poster that he's much more a troll, than anything else.

      --
      Therefore, by the (faulty) logic you're using, you're just a cow with a keyboard - osu-neko (2604)
    214. Re:Lovely summary. by St.Creed · · Score: 1

      To clarify: yes he's likely an asshole, but not because he states that it is a good idea to throw acid in women's faces. Plenty of other reasons though.

      --
      Therefore, by the (faulty) logic you're using, you're just a cow with a keyboard - osu-neko (2604)
    215. Re:Lovely summary. by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      I doubt most of the remaining 7 billion people choose to abstain because they were lazy.

      In fairness to those 7 billion though aren't whining all ove the internet about a SJW conspiracy to suppress awards for some really terrible fiction.

      Don't confuse method with intent.

      Aaah so they went all political methods but that wasn't there intent! How silly of me to not realise that they didn't *intend* to blatantly stuff the nominations.

      What makes you any more credible than Vox Day?

      Well, for one, I'm not a raving nutcase. I mean I won't claim to not be a little nutty, but on the raving stakes I'm only a 3 or 4, maybe a 5 out of 10, where as he goes all the way to 11.

      Or someone else was better at the rigging.

      I don't know if you realise, but after the nominations are finished, many of the works are then sent out to the members to read before voting. I think at this point it's reasonable to blame the rules and organisers of the Hugo's because without that, the voters might not have actually read the puppy fiction and so might not have been quite so firmly sure that it was so bad it didn't deserve an award.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    216. Re: Lovely summary. by rbrander · · Score: 1

      Sorry, just left me at the bakery. The only thing I know about this squabble is what I just read, (and I have no intention of reading megabytes of angry argument-posts from dozens or hundreds of people I don't know) and it seems everybody agrees (1) the 2015 nominees were basically picked by these "puppy" groups; and
      (2) that in a wide-open election, their preferences were rejected.

      The latter doesn't prove a "clique" because it was the wide-open election, and the former doesn't prove a clique, it proves a group banded together under the belief that there was a clique. To prove that point, they would have to show somehow that the nominees for previous awards were not representative or fair, that an attempt to nominate their preferences was gamed into failure.

      Just re-reading your note to be sure this critique is fair. Your "and thus" seems to be saying that a current effort to change voting procedures is what proves the existence of this clique. I can't see what's wrong (or tendentious) about the prevention of small numbers of voters from effectively controlling the nominations - surely it could also be used by another fan-group to nominate only 5-nominee blocks of gay liberals or whatever - and that too should be prevented.

    217. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well if you wanted to say you don't want to continue the conversation without such facts being presented, that's one thing, but that is not what you originally said, which was to assert that a lack of such presentation meant there aren't facts to demonstrate the contention. But even a refusal to present them won't offer much of an explanation as to why they won't do it, let alone demonstrate that there are no such facts.

      Sorry, but the meaning which you claimed to be there, it was not there.

    218. Re:Lovely summary. by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      Many voters, perhaps treated them equally, but "The Day the World Turned Upside Down" did get a lot more votes than any of the puppies. The high number of "no awards" could be put down to lazy protestors.

      The Novellas seem to have scored pretty well on goodreads - broadly as well as the non-puppy entries that didn't make it - yet the Hugo voters clobbered them. Even tripe like "Opera Vita Aeterna" managed to beat "no award" in 2014. I can't believe they were all worse than that this year.

      Of course, goodreads isn't an objective measure of quality but one would expect that it would be broadly similar to that of Worldcon membership.

    219. Re:Lovely summary. by asdfman2000 · · Score: 1

      There you go again, blaming the MRA strawman

      Most of the time you'd be right but take a look at the sick puppy web site and you'll see it really does fit the stereotype to to point of being barely distinguishable from parody. It really is weird anti-feminist shit going so far that Grandpa would give them a paddlin' for having a heathen attitude to women.

      Where can I find said "sick puppy website"? The groups you're referring to are the "Sad Puppies" and the "Rabid Puppies". Considering you can't even get the names right, I assume it's safe to conclude you have no clue what you're talking about.

    220. Re: Lovely summary. by MHolmesIV · · Score: 1

      Wait, what?

      The only cliques were the puppies. the 2500 no-awards were not organized, I voted no award for every category that had only puppy-backed folks on it, except for Toni Weisskopf, who I truly believe deserves a Hugo. I did it without some shadowy cabal of liberal elites telling me to, I did it because the puppies gamed the system, and the best way to discourage that sort of behavior is nuke it from orbit.

      And I'm one of the people the puppies should be courting as an ally. I will read any Baen author sight unseen. I love hard scifi. I own every Heinlein novel published, and kept them, even after I converted to ebook only. They're the only paper books I still have. I love military scifi and space opera. I'm exactly the demographic that would vote for some of the things the puppies want to see on the ballot.

      I still nuked them, and I would do it again if they attempted to stuff the ballot again.

      And the very fact that they could stuff the ballot they way they did disproves the idea of there being a shadowy clique controlling the nominations.

    221. Re:Lovely summary. by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1

      MRAs were never what you claimed them to be in the first place. Then again you claim them to be literally everything under the sun to the point you've outdone the "thanks obama" meme in breadth and variety of things blamed on MRAs.

      As for ad-hominem attacks that's pretty rich coming from someone whose posting history consists almost solely of attacking people as misogynists, MRAs, misogynist MRAs, or some other synonym.

      I suggest you look up the definition of ad-hominem by the way. Pointing out that you're defending people who are actively hostile to the women and minorities you claim to care about isn't ad hominem, it's pointing out that your claims of a moral high ground are bullshit.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    222. Re:Lovely summary. by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1

      If yo've been following any of this, it's quite clear Vox Day and his ilk espouse much the same in the way of toxic views as the MRA/RedPill/MGTOW/etc crowd. MRA is as convenient a label as any since they all behave in more or less identical ways.

      Only if you're a complete liar who needs to delegitimize one of those because they threaten the monopoly your toxic hate movement has on all discourse, funding, and even morality itself. MRAs are diametrically opposed to Redpillers on virtually everything except that they both have a problem with feminists. Redpillers, like feminists, judge men solely based on their success with women. To a feminist a man's worth is judged by how loyal of a kapo he is, to a redpiller it's how much sex he has. Both use being unsuccessful with (or unattractive to) women as their ultimate insult. Feminists use the slur "neckbeard", which draws on racialized caricatures and repurposes them. Redpillers use the insult "beta".

      But a big part of it is the rabid puppies are in fact a bunch of raving mysoginists who hate anyone who is't a straight, whte, Chriatian male. Their fearless leader (Vox Day) holds those views loudly and proudly. He's never tried to deny it and frequently makes such comments. See here for his own views in his own words on homosexuality for example:

      I'm not Vox Day. Vox Day also agreeing the Hugos are rigged by a toxic clique of social justice pretenders is about as relevant to the point as Hitler passing animal cruelty legislation is to my volunteering with a shelter.

      And if you really think this is still the case, then explain why the blogger who outed RH and documented her awfulness got a Hugo for her efforts.

      The real question is why it took that much to finally get SJWs to stop supporting this person in the frist place.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    223. Re:Lovely summary. by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1

      A hell of a lot more diverse than people who will spite even the women they claim to support just because someone else likes their work too.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    224. Re:Lovely summary. by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      "I have 390 sworn and numbered vile faceless minions—the hardcore shock troops—who are sworn to mindless and perfect obedience ... the dark lord speaks, the minion acts"

      A very diverse attitude, that.

    225. Re:Lovely summary. by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1

      Repeat after me: "I am not Vox Day".

      Also you might notice SJWs are the people who backed such wonderful individuals as RequiresHate.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    226. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That would presume that over 50% of Hugos winners are "SJWs", which is absurd.

      Come on, face reality. Two third parties, neither of which cared about the integrity of the Hugos, tried to foist a slate of largely second rate works on the Hugo voters based solely not on merit, but on the idea that it didn't contain liberal concepts that offended them.

      Those two parties lost. The Hugos were always based upon merit, not ideology, something the Puppies never understood. The Puppies were insular arrogant jackwagons who thought they were representative of science fiction readers, when in fact they simply represented a small unrepresentative rump of reactionaries who have no idea what science fiction even is.

    227. Re: Lovely summary. by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      The only cliques were the puppies. the 2500 no-awards were not organized

      Nope, Scalzi had his very own voting slate that the SF clique used. And he was the one running the show. And that SF clique, followed his slate.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    228. Re:Lovely summary. by khallow · · Score: 1

      Well, for one, I'm not a raving nutcase.

      Well, what is that assertion really worth?

      I don't know if you realise, but after the nominations are finished, many of the works are then sent out to the members to read before voting. I think at this point it's reasonable to blame the rules and organisers of the Hugo's because without that, the voters might not have actually read the puppy fiction and so might not have been quite so firmly sure that it was so bad it didn't deserve an award.

      Why would they have voted otherwise? Wouldn't have voting for good puppy fiction have defeated the point of the exercise? While googling around, I noticed this bit of analysis:

      That 3459, 3053, and 3259 number [out of 5950 votes] are pretty close. That seems the max No Award number: people who couldnâ(TM)t stand any Puppy Pick. When there were more valid choices, such as in the Editor awards, No Award was still picking up 2600-2500 votes. In a case where a category was almost swept, the number was close to 2000. So Iâ(TM)m calling the No Awarders at 3450-2500. Thatâ(TM)s a huge number, over 50% of the total pool.

      Iâ(TM)m stunned at the 2500 No Awarders in the Editor categories; there were some mainstream, decent editors on that list. If 2500 people were voting No Award on that, thatâ(TM)s out of principle. So hereâ(TM)s how Iâ(TM)m estimating:

      Initial Estimate of No Awarders Who Voted No Award out of Principle: 2500.

    229. Re:Lovely summary. by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      https://youtu.be/qZOWipBL0gM

      LOL

      Vox Day: I'm going to burn the awards down
      SJW clique: Ahhh we can't let him better do it first.

      In short you're a moron and a tool.

    230. Re:Lovely summary. by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      Sorry unlike you, if someone makes claims I expect them to present facts to back them up.

    231. Re:Lovely summary. by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      This story is a perfect example. Hugo Awards voters overwhelmingly voted "no award" in most of the categories where the puppies gamed the nomination process. Breitbart spun this as a "social justice warrior onslaught" rather than rank-and-file voters objecting to abuse of process.

      See also: Pretty much any Breitbart story about GamerGate.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    232. Re: Lovely summary. by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      Rather than a debate of the reasons and merits for the decision to not award the Hugos, there is pages of personal attack on the nature of argument fallacy. Why?

      Because some moron decided that Breitbart was the best source of information about this issues, and most likely no editor was following the story closely enough to understand the issue and pick a submission with more even-handed sources.

      Oh, wait. That is a good reason to leave Slashdot. Enjoy!

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    233. Re:Lovely summary. by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      See also: Pretty much any Breitbart story about GamerGate.

      Should have known, tell me how much are you donating to John Walker aka Briana Wu's aka Lurch's patreon ?

    234. Re: Lovely summary. by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      The only block that existed was the NA block, because there's no way to argue that was not political.

      Nobody is denying that a vote against nomination stacking isn't political, merely that it's not evidence of a "SJW voting bloc".

      Of course it's political. The puppies set out to ensure that no matter what happened in this year's Hugos, it would be political. Job done.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    235. Re: Lovely summary. by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      their method requires [...] no foaming at the mouth.

      I'll believe that if they every try doing it that way.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    236. Re:Lovely summary. by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      Why would they have voted otherwise? Wouldn't have voting for good puppy fiction have defeated the point of the exercise?

      *WHAT* good puppy fiction? As far as I can tell there wasn't any.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    237. Re:Lovely summary. by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      What Annie Bellet actually said: "I love the Hugo Awards. To be nominated was awesome. But I’m a writer. That’s what I want my public face to be. I don’t want people to think of me as some political figure, or some ball in the political game."

      It's clear that hypothetical retaliation was not in her thinking.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    238. Re:Lovely summary. by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      Many voters, perhaps treated them equally, but "The Day the World Turned Upside Down" did get a lot more votes than any of the puppies.

      It was also judged more harshly than any other short stories I can recall. Has any other short story at Tor ever lost the popular vote to "No Award" before this year?

      The high number of "no awards" could be put down to lazy protestors.

      Except given that they treated a non-puppy work much more harshly than has ever been the case before. It is much more likely that the new influx of people are harsher judges than the usual voters.

      goodreads

      *everything* scores well on good reads. 50 shades of bad writing got a nice big 3.7 out of 5. Good reads is not a good indication of quality.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    239. Re:Lovely summary. by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      None, and no intention of doing so. Why do you ask?

      Oh, wait, I know. Because the grand conspiracy theory is secretly all about money.

      Still, at least Brianna Wu is producing something. I hope you didn't sink any money into The Sarkeesian Effect.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    240. Re:Lovely summary. by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      Except given that they treated a non-puppy work much more harshly than has ever been the case before. It is much more likely that the new influx of people are harsher judges than the usual voters.

      Why was there a sudden influx of particularly harsh judges this year? And was "The Day the World Turned Upside Down" really so much better than the others? The abrupt increase here seems to be more likely caused by political choices than a change in vote attitudes.

      *everything* scores well on good reads. 50 shades of bad writing got a nice big 3.7 out of 5. Good reads is not a good indication of quality.

      Fan awards are not about quality! NHave you read some of the winners?

      If there was a fan award aimed at the demographic that tends to like bad Twilight fanfic, you can be sure 50 Shades would be nominated.

    241. Re:Lovely summary. by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      still, at least Brianna Wu is producing something.

      Otay

    242. Re:Lovely summary. by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      That's nice I was talking about Kary English

      See how easily did that ?

      And the really funny thing is even your example shows that she is so worried about being a target of the anti puppies she withdraws.

    243. Re:Lovely summary. by khallow · · Score: 1

      If you had read my post, you would have noticed the quote which mentioned the category of best editor with a bunch of editors skipped over for no award.

    244. Re:Lovely summary. by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      Why was there a sudden influx of particularly harsh judges this year?

      Good question, but you can't accuse them of mistreating the puppies only if they're equally harsh on the other works.

      And was "The Day the World Turned Upside Down" really so much better than the others?

      Well, it was less popular than "no award". I, personally found it particularly obnoxious, particularly because of the protagonist but there you go. It stuck in my mind. Many of the others were massively unmemorable (remeber this all came out months ago, and I read them then). I remember one of the shorts ("on a spiritual plane") for being particularly silly.

      The abrupt increase here seems to be more likely caused by political choices than a change in vote attitudes.

      There's been a huge amount of news in the writing ans SF community about the Hugos. It's not surprising more people have become involved. I don't see any particular evidence that there was some anti-puppy conspiracy.

      Fan awards are not about quality! NHave you read some of the winners?

      Hey, you brought up the good reads review scores, not I. "good reads" scores are not much of a measure of anything except for how well the book is scored on "good reads". If you read any of my other posts in the thread, you may also have seen me complaining bitterly about last year's short story winner. So yes, I have, and some of 'em are awful.

      Awards are generally done not average readers or even fans, but by people who care about the genre deeply enough to (on the whole) fork out $40 for a membership, and frequently $1500 for travel, not to mention taking time off to attend a convention. Those people are not going to refelct popular opinion for the same reason that the recent disaster movie with Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson did well at the box office but got middling reviews.

      There's still not a whole lot of evidence for an organised anti-puppy conspiracy which is overturning the will of the silent majority.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    245. Re:Lovely summary. by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      Regarding winners: some are awful and some are amazing. If you want a good one, the 2008 (?) novella (?) winner was called something like "The Merchant and the Alchemist's Gate". It is fantastic. One of the best short stories I've ever read.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    246. Re:Lovely summary. by dywolf · · Score: 0

      (sorry my dear MRA who got mod points, you cant bury uncomfortable truths)

      Literally the exact opposite of the facts.
      From the previous story, linked in the summary:

      Last year, the Hugo Awards went to mostly minorities and women. In response, a fan group decided to fight back against what they saw as a liberal attack on their medium.

      Because the Hugos went to mostly minorities and women a bunch of white males felt attacked. Note that is text book bigotry, the combined assumptions that: A) minorities and women could not and would not have won on their own merits, and a B) that minorities and women winning something constitutes an attack
      (not too dissimilar from Christians who think that if they aren't allowed to attack and discriminate then they are themselves the victims of attacks and discrimination)

      So these MRAs, because that's what they were, abused the nomination process to flood it with their non-minority non-female nominees, thus poisoning the well.

      These were not nominees chosen for their quality or their contribution, but as retaliation against women and minorities winning an award, by attempting to prevent them winning any again awards this year.

      So bugger off sewer troll.

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    247. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Literally the exact opposite of the facts. From the previous story, linked in the summary

      Yeah! You tell him! Everybody knows that slashdot summaries are always factual, and have wonderful editors keeping any spin to a minimal! The great people at Dice has done a great job keeping the quality of this place!

    248. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not when that someone is yourself, apparently, as evidenced by your conduct here.

    249. Re:Lovely summary. by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      Only if you're a complete liar

      Rabidly screeching insults when someone disagrees doesn't actually support your argument.

      I was walking across a bridge one day, and I saw a man standing on the edge, about to jump off. So I ran over and said "Stop! don't do it!" "Why shouldn't I?" he said. I said, "Well, there's so much to live for!" He said, "Like what?" I said, "Well...are you religious or atheist?" He said, "Religious." I said, "Me too! Are you christian or buddhist?" He said, "Christian." I said, "Me too! Are you catholic or protestant?" He said, "Protestant." I said, "Me too! Are you episcopalian or baptist?" He said, "Baptist!" I said,"Wow! Me too! Are you baptist church of god or baptist church of the lord?" He said, "Baptist church of god!" I said, "Me too! Are you original baptist church of god, or are you reformed baptist church of god?" He said,"Reformed Baptist church of god!" I said, "Me too! Are you reformed baptist church of god, reformation of 1879, or reformed baptist church of god, reformation of 1915?" He said, "Reformed baptist church of god, reformation of 1915!" I said, "Die, heretic scum", and pushed him off. -- Emo Phillips

      If you replace the two reformed baptist churches with, say MRA and RedPill respectively, that is pretty much how it looks to anyone outside the "movement". IOW they are peddling the exact same type of toxic crap, but for some inexplicable[*] reason they've separated into factions which *loathe* each other based on some almost insignificant ideological difference.

      So you can call me a liar if you wish, but to me and many others they are so similar as to be not worth distinguishing between.

      The 99.9% of things in common they believe is what distinguishes them. Franky the 0.1% vehement disagreements between the various groups are so small as to be irrelevant to anyone not actually in those groups.

      Feminists use the slur "neckbeard", which draws on racialized caricatures and repurposes them.

      Well, Feminists stole that from us then. Nerds have been calling nerds neckbeards for as long as I've been flaming away on usenet and IRC. Come to think of it I don't think I've ever personally encountered a non-nerd saying it. As a nerd who's hung around with man nerds, all recognise of the slovenly, smug, superior fellow who is so ungromed he has unkempt hair sprouting from his neck. That's a nerd term from nerd culture. Trying to pass it off as some feminist thing is blatant rewriting of history and frankly dishonest.

      This is a humerous take on what neckbeardery is all about

      http://www.buzzfeed.com/skelli...

      And the heading picture? The slovenly, ponytailed unkempt and superior comic book guy from the Simpsons. Feminism doesn't rear it's head anywhere on that entire page.

      [*]I say inexplicable, but of course humans do this all the time. There's no hate quite like the hate between two incredibly similar groups who split on some minute issue.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    250. Re:Lovely summary. by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      Repeat after me: "I am not Vox Day".

      Aah I see you're playing the game where you claim to identify with a movement but claim that every thing in that movement you don't like doesn't apply.

      Also you might notice SJWs are the people who backed such wonderful individuals as RequiresHate.

      I though the SJWs rigged the Hugos? Make up your mind, because if the SJWs backed RH, they also hate RH. After all, the SJW Hugo voters also voted to award the person who outed RH as total scum.

      If you're going to use SJW you should try to use the term with a modicum of consistency. Not that anyone else does.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    251. Re:Lovely summary. by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      Well, first you claimed there was good puppy fiction. I see you've dropped the claim and not tried to rebut it. Hace you conceded the point?

      The editor one I've already addressed that twice on this thread, and here's one:

      http://entertainment.slashdot....

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    252. Re:Lovely summary. by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      Kary English's sentiment was pretty much identical:

      The Hugos should represent all voices, so if Sad Puppies is about drawing attention to works that might otherwise be overlooked, I can support that and I’m happy to stand for it. But if it’s about shutting out other voices and other work, if it’s about politics or pissing off certain segments of fandom, that’s not something I can get behind.

      The whole point of fandom is that our love for the genre unites us. It’s about having a place where genre is paramount, where literature comes first. So if that’s who you are, and that’s what you want, then I’m with you. That’s why I invited everyone to talk about books here on my blog.

      But if you’re in this with some other agenda, take it elsewhere. I don’t want to be part of it.

      No fear of being a target, just no desire to be a pawn in someone's political game.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    253. Re:Lovely summary. by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      Otay Breitbart is de debil
      News you don't like is de debils work

    254. Re:Lovely summary. by khallow · · Score: 1

      Well, first you claimed there was good puppy fiction. I see you've dropped the claim and not tried to rebut it. Hace you conceded the point?

      No. You expressed a personal opinion. I'm not here to tell you what you prefer.

    255. Re:Lovely summary. by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      Sure she wasn't worried about retaliation.

      I mean it's not like officers of large publishers didn't have a vitriolic reaction to Beale taking away their toy.

      Oh wait they did

      http://www.dailydot.com/geek/t...

      https://www.google.com/url?sa=...

    256. Re:Lovely summary. by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      No. You expressed a personal opinion. I'm not here to tell you what you prefer.

      Well it apears to be your personal opinion that there is good fiction, and so there is a conspiracy against. It is my personal opinion that there isn't so no conspiracy is necessary. Our individual opinions are just that, but the existence of a conspiracy is an objective fact.

      I like how you dropped it about the editors. Duly noted.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    257. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      BTW, if you didn't understand this, the Puppies were seen as a cancer that warranted treatment with even a debilitating process like chemotherapy in order to stop them from destroying the rest of the body.

      Figurative language, it's so very flexible, you can use it to make many different points.

    258. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Breitbart isn't under discussion by me, my concern is you, because it seems what you expect from others, is not applicable to yourself.

      Did you review the logic classes offered in other avenues of this thread or not? It looks like you really could learn some lessons there. It might help your level of self-awareness.

    259. Re:Lovely summary. by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      Good job at that. They made the "cancer" metastasize.

    260. Re:Lovely summary. by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      Breitbart isn't under discussion by me, my concern is you, because it seems what you expect from others, is not applicable to yourself.

      I'm touched, an impartial observer might think you were an ass posting AC to troll. It's heartwarming to know you aren't.

    261. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      An observer, impartial or otherwise, might think many things. If you want to test that, you should do something like presenting this discussion to a sampling of people in order to get what they thought.

      Then you would have the ability to present some facts to support your supposition.

      Assuming you haven't already, I don't know that you haven't, merely that from my observations, you haven't stated that you have.

    262. Re: Lovely summary. by MHolmesIV · · Score: 1

      I read that blog post all the way through. For the first time, mind you, and nowhere does it state that he has a slate, and he's voting for it and that everyone else must do the same. In fact, he was a lot more creditable than I was. If everyone had done as he suggested, there would have been a lot fewer no-awards, which basically disproves your assertion that he was the one running the show.

    263. Re:Lovely summary. by Burstaholic · · Score: 1

      "MRAs literally had absolutely nothing to do with this" - except for being largely led by a prominent MRA.

      It's probably a coincidence.

    264. Re:Lovely summary. by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      TL:DR

    265. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Still replied. So whether actually didn't, or that you wouldn't or that you couldn't is undetermined.

    266. Re:Lovely summary. by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      I mean it's not like officers of large publishers didn't have a vitriolic reaction to Beale taking away their toy.

      I note that Gallo's employer had to react due to fear of retaliation by the puppies. I'm not sure what this link was trying to prove.

      Point taken on Patrick Neilsen Hayden; I hadn't seen that story before. It's fair to say that he did not "create" Vox Day; that's the sort of conclusion that someone who didn't pay attention to GamerGate could come to.

      Ultimately, everything that Beale touches turns to shit, and that's the way he likes it. His MO is the same as petty tyrants everywhere: convince the disaffected that the enemy is just over there, then divide and conquer. No truer words were spoken than Les Murray in his famous haiku: "Brutal policy, / like inferior art, knows / whose fault it all is."

      Not content with declaring war on gamers, he's decided to declare war on SFF now. Vitriolic reactions are not okay, not only because it's unbecoming, but because that's precisely what Beale is trying to engineer.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    267. Re:Lovely summary. by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      Personally I am pretty happy with Gamer Gate. Do you really think game developers need Zampolits ?

      As far as I can see Beale just targets things that are already problematic and exploits the problems for his own gain.

      I have been reading SF and considered myself a fan since the 60s, it really hasn't been hard to notice the problems developing in publishing houses and the awards. The Hugos used to be a pretty solid recommendations for about the last 10 years they have been anti recommendations. The only publishing imprint that puts out consistent quality is Baen. This isn't surprising when you have people like this infiltrating the field

      http://www.newstatesman.com/cu...

      I also remember a post on John Ringo's blog about the organizers of Trinoccon destroying the convention with their zeal to alienate authors on the basis of their politics.

      The rot is there. Beale just delivered the news in a really painful way.
      I am a

    268. Re:Lovely summary. by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1

      Only if you're like AniMojo and use "MRA" as a generic hate-word for every single thing you don't like no matter what it is.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    269. Re:Lovely summary. by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1

      Aah I see you're playing the game where you claim to identify with a movement but claim that every thing in that movement you don't like doesn't apply.

      I'm not a Sad or a Rabid puppy, both of which are seperate groups with somewhat overlapping goals. What's really interesting is how you just described exactly what you, animojo, and other feminists do whenever someone points out the outright violent and criminal conduct of large groups of feminists towards people criticising (let alone opposing) feminism.

      I though the SJWs rigged the Hugos? Make up your mind, because if the SJWs backed RH, they also hate RH. After all, the SJW Hugo voters also voted to award the person who outed RH as total scum.

      If you're going to use SJW you should try to use the term with a modicum of consistency. Not that anyone else does.

      it's astounding how you can take disingenuity to such extraordinary levels with a straight face. One of the key points made when outing RH was how SJWs backed her as a golden child until they were finally forced to stop backing her because she didn't have the star power of more important toxic personalities like Lindy West or Jessica Valenti, or the usefulness of people like Mary Koss.

      It's not inconsistent at all to point out that they backed RH (until called on it and forced to stop) and are rigging the Hugos for ideological purity.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    270. Re:Lovely summary. by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1

      Rabidly screeching insults when someone disagrees doesn't actually support your argument.

      Pointing out something is a patent and provable lie is not "rabidly screeching insults". Screaming "MRA neckbeard fuckboy pissbaby shitlord", most of which your movement made up purely because regular profanities simply weren't hateful enough for them, at anyone who ever criticizes your criminal hate movement is rabidly screeching insults.

      If you replace the two reformed baptist churches with, say MRA and RedPill respectively, that is pretty much how it looks to anyone outside the "movement". IOW they are peddling the exact same type of toxic crap, but for some inexplicable[*] reason they've separated into factions which *loathe* each other based on some almost insignificant ideological difference.

      Again, that's complete bullshit. What you're saying is as facially absurd as claiming that Judaism and Shintoism are indistinguishable and have only "insignifcant ideological differences". They're diametrically opposes groups that are utterly different in virtually every possible way save they both oppose feminism, which is ironic because it's feminism that has far more in common with redpillers than MRAs.

      The reason "anyone outside" can't tell the difference is because feminists like you constantly lie through their teeth, going so far as to publish article after article linking to redpill websites and CLAIMING they're the MRM while doing everything possible to avoid ever actually linking to R/mensrights. It's a deliberate lie and I'm not going to pretend that it's not.

      You want a church metaphor? Here's a better one:

      During the Middle Ages in Western Europe, Christianity was 100% synonymous with the Catholic Church. Although a variety of doctrinal variations emerged over the centuries, the Catholic Church asserted an absolute monopoly over how Christians established a relationship with God. The Roman Pope even eventually claimed authority over the Orthodox churches of the East. Among the secular population, it was taken for granted that the only way to be a good, pious Christian was to be a good Catholic, and follow unquestioningly the dictates of the clergy. To even hint that a person could be a good Christian without following the Church was at some times a crime punishable by death.

      One of the results of this doctrinal monopoly was a slow descent into corruption, including the sale of Church offices and opportunities to ‘buy’ your way into Heaven. An associated trend was a decline in intellectual rigor, scholarship and reasoning.

      Finally, somebody got fed up. A theologian named Martin Luther, basing his reasoning on good scholarship and careful reasoning, rejected the notion that a person could establish their relationship with God only through the Catholic Church. Luther and Protestant theologians advanced the novel idea that people could establish a closer relationship with God and the teachings of Jesus through direct examination of both the New Testament and their own conscience.

      Although taken for granted by most contemporary people, it was appallingly heretical by the Catholic hierarchy when it first emerged. They had no way of fitting it into their worldview. It challenged the Church’s monopoly over Christian thought. The idea that a person could find their own relationship with the Almighty without the intervention of clergy was anathema. In response they branded Protestants as heretics, Satan-worshippers, etc. – as it was the only way they could fit Protestantism within their limited worldview. They were psychologically incapable of of seeing the good points of this argument or understanding that a person could be both a good Christian and a non-Catholic....

      This seems to be extremely threatening on an intellectual level to some (not al

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    271. Re:Lovely summary. by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      What's really interesting is how you just described exactly what you, animojo, and other feminists do whenever someone points out the outright violent and criminal conduct of large groups of feminists towards people criticising (let alone opposing) feminism.

      Aaaah you have now moved into the "blatantly making stuff up fantasy land" part of your argument. This is something you reliably resort to when you're out of arguments with a shred of sense.

      This is the first time this thread you've mentioned "outright violent" behaviour of a group of feminists. Why bring it up now? It has no relevance to my argument that to almost everyone, MRAs/RedPillers/MGTOWs/PUSa are basically the same.

      blah blah SJW blah blah

      So you mean the some people backed Benjanun Sriduangkaew because they (in my mind inexplicably) liked her writing, but when they found out she was the alter ego of the awful person RH, they stopped? Isn't that exactly what's supposed to happen?

      rigging the Hugos

      The only people who tried to rig the Hugos were the puppies. Their attempts brought in more fans to vote. They mostly failed because the fans didn't like most of what the puppies sad or rapid were pushing, and in fact were harsher critics overall.

      The puppies probably did actually swing one of the votes in their favour (after a bout of hilarious failure where they almost managed to force it off the noms completely), and you know what? No one has complained because it's a perfectly good piece of work. Yet more evidence that the only rigging was against bad writing.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    272. Re:Lovely summary. by serviscope_minor · · Score: 0

      Pointing out something is a patent and provable lie is not "rabidly screeching insults".

      No but rabidly screeching insults is.

      MRA neckbeard fuckboy pissbaby shitlord

      lolwut? MRA was a term invented MRAs to describ themselves. Neckbeard was always made by nerds for nerds. The other three insults Iv'e only ever heard from you as examples of what other people say. At this point, I'm not sure if you're genuinely delusional or trolling very ineffectively.

      Again, that's complete bullshit.

      No it isn't.

      They're diametrically opposes groups that are utterly different in virtually every possible way save they both oppose feminism,

      No, they've reached some different conclusions, but they all stem from the same ideology. Most of what all the groups preach/bang on about is essentially mysoginistic women hating about how men are really the oppressed majority and the world owes them something (i.e. sex) and how basically it's all the fault of women or men who are like women which makes them worse than scum. They all seem to loooove absurdly simplistic evopsych "explanations" as to why this is so.

      That's what I care about. The fact that the redpillers hate the PUAs because the PUAs want to leverage it to get more sex and the PUAs despise the MGTOWs because they thing they're idiots for not using their new-found knowledge to get more sex is of no iterest to me.

      The reason "anyone outside" can't tell the difference is because feminists like you constantly lie through their teeth

      You can believe that if it makes you happy. Meanwhile one bunch of MRA neckbeard fuckboy pissbsby shitlords [sic] ranting about how bad women are are pretty much indistinguishable from the next bunch as far as anyone outside cares. Basically they all get lumped into the "women hating losers with massive entitlement complexes" category. Why would I or anyone else bother sorting them more finely than that? Not worth my time.

      Your analogy is all fine and good except you're ignoring that the MRAs are not in fact advocating for men's rights (like e.g. Fathers 4 Justice which seems fine to me). Out of interest have you ever looked through "a voice for men". If that's the voice, then as a man, I sure as hell don't want it!

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    273. Re:Lovely summary. by Aighearach · · Score: 1

      That would mean anyone who accused the Times of bias would have facts to back it up while you have none

      Call me when he presents some.

      You haven't presented any engaging dialogue that would cause me to run off and google links for you, when actually it is public information that you could seek out if you wanted to know about the extant public debate on the issue.

      Rather than an interest in that existing debate in society, you want to jump up and down and make accusations of lack of "proof," and not actually provide any thoughtful responses to what was said. You shouldn't need proof just to know that the Times is a respected middle-of-the-road or "mainstream" media source; that it isn't a "liberal" newspaper; and that to actual liberals it is just another right-leaning mainstream media source. These are basic things that are obvious, and don't call out for proof.

      If you want to debate the obvious, you'll need to make your attempt more interesting to others.

    274. Re:Lovely summary. by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      The New York times itself disagrees with you

      http://www.nytimes.com/2004/07...

    275. Re:Lovely summary. by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      Do you really think game developers need Zampolits ?

      Here in the real world (as opposed to the GG fantasy world), that is not going to happen. The reason why I know that it's not going to happen is that it hasn't happened in any other artform. Michael Bay and E.L. James are rich, and you and I are not.

      The price to pay for being recognised as "art" or "culture" is that you are no longer exempt from cultural criticism. People complain about Fifty Shades of Grey, but nobody has shut it down and nobody can shut it down. It doesn't matter how shitty your taste is,

      GG is basically the same as those US religious right fundamentalists with the persecution complex. You know, how public health or same-sex marriage is "persecution", or an "assault"? It doesn't matter how much Franklin Graham blusters about that, the fact is that nobody in power has shut down the Westboro Baptist Church, and they are much more extreme than he is.

      To complete the analogy, in the USA, if you are a self-identified Christian, the person who is most likely to persecute you is another American who also identifies themselves as a "Christian". The big threat to gamers and games is not some hypothetical SJW conspiracy, it is GamerGate and the cynical opportunists like Beale who are using it for their own personal power trips. They are the only ones who have the proven ability and willingness to turn fandom against itself.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    276. Re:Lovely summary. by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1

      No but rabidly screeching insults is.

      Saying it doesn't make it so. Pointing out something is provably a lie is not "rabidly screeching insults", it's not even an insult. If you want to see what "rabidly screeching insults" looks like again all you need to do is look at feminists continually inventing more and more slurs because ordinary profanity just isn't hateful enough for them. Hell just look at Animojo comically calling everything in the world "MRA", it's like how the smurfs use the word "smurf" for everything.

      lolwut? MRA was a term invented MRAs to describ themselves. Neckbeard was always made by nerds for nerds. The other three insults Iv'e only ever heard from you as examples of what other people say. At this point, I'm not sure if you're genuinely delusional or trolling very ineffectively.

      And used by feminists and SJWs like Animojo for example as a slur against everything in the world they dislike. Also neckbeard is not "made by nerds for nerds", it is or rather was the feminist slur for non-conforming men until they came up with pissbaby and later fuckboy... because again the previous slurs just weren't hateful enough so new ones had to be created.

      THAT is "rabidly screeching insults".

      No, they've reached some different conclusions, but they all stem from the same ideology. Most of what all the groups preach/bang on about is essentially mysoginistic women hating about how men are really the oppressed majority and the world owes them something (i.e. sex) and how basically it's all the fault of women or men who are like women which makes them worse than scum. They all seem to loooove absurdly simplistic evopsych "explanations" as to why this is so.

      That's what I care about. The fact that the redpillers hate the PUAs because the PUAs want to leverage it to get more sex and the PUAs despise the MGTOWs because they thing they're idiots for not using their new-found knowledge to get more sex is of no iterest to me.

      See what you don't realise is that this right here basically proves my point for me. You're projecting your own sexism, prejudice, and hatred onto another group. You utterly dehumanize and objectify MRAs as walking penises with no thought or emotion beyond a mindless insatiable hunger for sex because that's how you see them, and men in general.

      You're like a white supremacist raving about how jews and blacks are sub-human and evil. You're not proving how evil and bad MRAs are, you're proving how hateful and prejudiced YOU are.

      MRAs want feminists to stop erasing 50% of rape and abuse victims for their own profit and self-aggrandizement. They want feminists to stop bankrupting and stonewalling men's shelters and research into men's problems. They want feminists to stop committing felonies to shut down (or try to shut down) every attempt at dealing with or talking about men's problems. They want feminists to stop acting like men have no emotions, no thoughts, no feelings, no humanity beyond a mindless insatiable sex drive... particularly since feminists have recently escalated that rhetoric to the point of playing off of centuries old racialized prejudices against black men.

      And yeah they want feminists to stop conflating them with PUAs/Redpillers as a deliberate lie to plaster over all of that and perpetuate witchhunts.

      You can believe that if it makes you happy. Meanwhile one bunch of MRA neckbeard fuckboy pissbsby shitlords [sic] ranting about how bad women are are pretty much indistinguishable from the next bunch as far as anyone outside cares. Basically they all get lumped into the "women hating losers with massive entitlement complexes" category. Why would I or anyone else bother sorting them more finely than that? Not worth my time.

      Your analogy is all fine and good except you're ignoring that the MRAs are not in fact advocating for men's rights (like e.g. Fathers 4 Justice which seems fine to me). Out of interest have you ever looke

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    277. Re:Lovely summary. by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1

      Aaaah you have now moved into the "blatantly making stuff up fantasy land" part of your argument. This is something you reliably resort to when you're out of arguments with a shred of sense.

      This is the first time this thread you've mentioned "outright violent" behaviour of a group of feminists. Why bring it up now? It has no relevance to my argument that to almost everyone, MRAs/RedPillers/MGTOWs/PUSa are basically the same.

      If by "making stuff up fantasy land" you mean "referring to things recorded live on video" then sure.

      And I brought it up because you literally just accused me of exactly what you, animojo, and virtually every feminist out there does when people point out feminism's nowadays routinely outright violent and criminal attacks on anyone dissenting from the feminist party line.

      You said it right here: "ah I see you're playing the game where you claim to identify with a movement but claim that every thing in that movement you don't like doesn't apply."

      That's EXACTLY what you, animojo, and other feminists do. It's Schrodinger's Feminism... someone is a feminist until they're criticized, then suddenly they're "no true feminist", and then when it's your turn to respond suddenly they ARE a feminist again and that person is a misogynist woman hater for opposing them.

      So you mean the some people backed Benjanun Sriduangkaew because they (in my mind inexplicably) liked her writing, but when they found out she was the alter ego of the awful person RH, they stopped? Isn't that exactly what's supposed to happen?

      People backed the awful person because that's how the oppression olympics worked. The only reason they stopped backing her was because she doesn't have enough star power or usefulness to be worth fighting for. People who have enough star power or usefulness are still supported by SJWs even when they're literally rapists, just look at Amy Schumer. Or for other awful people still backed by SJWs look at Sulkowicz, Lindy West, Jessica Valenti, Mary Koss... the list goes on.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    278. Re:Lovely summary. by Crashmarik · · Score: 0

      You're in for a rude awakening.

      Every line in your post is wrong and if you are posting honestly when you get out of highschool or college reality is going to hit you like a truck.

      My sympathies.

    279. Re:Lovely summary. by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      You're in for a rude awakening.

      That's what conspiracy theorists have been telling me for decades. Not a single one of them have been right so far. I don't see why I should start believing things that are contrary to evidence just because they've started crapping in my areas of interest.

      Every line in your post is wrong and if you are posting honestly when you get out of highschool or college reality is going to hit you like a truck.

      You probably didn't notice that I have a five-digit uid.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    280. Re:Lovely summary. by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      . I should start believing things that are contrary to evidence

      I'ts pretty hard to see the damage unless you know how things were before.

      .You probably didn't notice that I have a five-digit uid.

      You're right I didn't. So were you ignoring the subject of this thread when you wrote this

      The reason why I know that it's not going to happen is that it hasn't happened in any other artform

      Or do you just not understand what has been happening, oh seeing as you brought movies into this

      http://www.hollywoodreporter.c...

    281. Re:Lovely summary. by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      I'ts pretty hard to see the damage unless you know how things were before.

      I remember gaming before Gamergate. It was so much better.

      Or maybe I just pick my friends carefully, and it was a rude shock to discover that there are nutjob gamers too.

      oh seeing as you brought movies into this

      Oh, FFS. Let's get this straight:

      1. Clint Eastwood has won five academy awards.
      2. The movie was nominated even though nobody gamed the nomination process to try to prove a lame point. No evidence of Academy snub.
      3. Neither Selma nor The Imitation Game won, so no evidence of SJW conspiracy. The artsiest move won, which is what sometimes happens. (On a related note, do remember that The Hurt Locker beat Avatar, and nobody was stupid enough to call that a "snub".)
      4. The movie made a bucketload of cash, and Eastwood will get to make more movies.

      But, you know, clickbait hyperbole is journalism these days. Manufactured drama words like "snub" are the order of the day.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    282. Re:Lovely summary. by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      I remember gaming before Gamergate. It was so much better.

      Self parody ?

      The movie made a bucketload of cash, and Eastwood will get to make more movies.

      It's not the Clint Eastwoods of the world that suffer from this.

      It's the people who wanted to make Atlas Shrugged but couldn't get studio funding.
      It's when Starship Troopers gets turned into pissing on Heinlein's memory.

    283. Re:Lovely summary. by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      Saying it doesn't make it so. Pointing out something is provably a lie is not "rabidly screeching insults",

      It is if the thing in question is not provably a lie and is clearly not a lie at all. That makes what you were doing rabidly screeching insults.

      Also neckbeard is not "made by nerds for nerds",

      Well, now you're just rewriting history. It was an insult used exclusively between nerds for years and years on the internet, especially IRC. It's been used by nerds on nerds for decades before "SJW" was an insult.

      Anyway, since you're clearly prepared to simply make stuff up about history so it fits your narritive, I don't see why I should bother reading the rest of what you wrote. You've already convinced me that it's likely to be full of at best half-truths and at worst stuff blatantly made up. Which means there's nothing of value in there.

      It's boring to carefully go through someone's post and point out every counterfactual statement.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    284. Re:Lovely summary. by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      It's the people who wanted to make Atlas Shrugged but couldn't get studio funding.

      Atlas Shrugged had studio funding when Angelina Jolie was attached. When that fell through, the deal fell through. That's the free market for you.

      (Actually, it could have been made 40 years ago, but Ayn Rand was a control freak.)

      It's when Starship Troopers gets turned into pissing on Heinlein's memory.

      Not denying that, but on the other hand, Alan Moore has had similar luck. Also, we're yet to see a half-decent superheroine movie ever. Hollywood is an equal opportunity desecrator.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    285. Re:Lovely summary. by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      Atlas shrugged never had studio funding. You have reversed cause and effect.
      Heinlein's ideas were portrayed as fascist (Veerhoven's own words)
      I presume you mean League for Moore, I can't speak to that

      As for Superheroines consider the concept that making them feminist metaphors ruins them. The Lynda Carter Wonder Woman couldn't be made today but the Reverse abomination Politically Correct Electra Woman and Dyna Girl is due out.

    286. Re:Lovely summary. by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      Atlas shrugged never had studio funding.

      Yes it did.

      As for Superheroines consider the concept that making them feminist metaphors ruins them.

      Not saying you're wrong, but I'm struggling to think of an example. That isn't what ruined Red Sonja, or Supergirl, or Catwoman, or Aeon Flux.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    287. Re:Lovely summary. by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      No it didn't
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

      Well I ennjoyed both Red Sonja and Aeon Flux but both were before excessive PC. Catwoman was what 2002 ?

      A more recent example of the damage narrow minded groups do to movies would be Ender's Game

    288. Re: Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are a terrible liar.

      Scalzi didn't have a slate, was not running the show, and even advocates (in the post you link to) voting for Puppy choices if they're worthy, pointing out that many on the slates were put there without their consent.

    289. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A more recent example of the damage narrow minded groups do to movies would be Ender's Game

      What does profit-seeking Studio executives who want a movie filled with explosions and excitement rather than any kind of cerebral piece have to do with anything?

      Stanley Kubrick's dead.

    290. Re:Lovely summary. by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1

      Why lie about it. You don't want to read my post because you don't care about the truth, only about being loyal to current prevailing feminist orthodoxy.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    291. Re:Lovely summary. by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      And more screeching insults.

      Your post was blatantly counterfactual in the first few lines. Why should I read further?

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    292. Re:Lovely summary. by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1

      Is it still a straw man if you're so divorced from reality as to be simply making things up from whole cloth?

      My post contradicted your party line. It offended your religion in the same way evolution offends righty wingnuts. You're dismissing it because it allows you to lie more with less words and to avoid how I trapped you with your own logic and feminism's real world actions.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    293. Re:Lovely summary. by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      Is it still a straw man if you're so divorced from reality as to be simply making things up from whole cloth?

      Er, well yes you can hurl the names of random logical fallacies at the thread if you wish.

      My post contradicted your party line.

      Your post, as far as I read it, was blatantly rewriting history. Why would I waste my time reading further if you are too lazy to make the beginning of the post factually correct?

      feminism's real world actions.

      Ah yes, how feminists went back in time and stole the "neckbeard" insult from the nerds who coined it. What evil feminists and their dastardly time machines.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    294. Re:Lovely summary. by Burstaholic · · Score: 1

      If you weren't aware of Vox Day's personal outspoken advocacy for Men's Rights, you haven't been paying attention. Which I could hardly fault you for, as he's mainly a clownish sideshow.

    295. Re:Lovely summary. by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1

      Hitler loved dogs, should I stop volunteerng with a shelter?

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    296. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know I'm coming to this long after the fact, but.

      Fuck you.

      Fuck you and your glib, ignorant assumption that this thing was about righteous little guys gaming the system back from corporations.

      The Hugo awards are awarded by the Worldcon. The Worldcon is an association of SF fans. It is one of the most fiercely independent fan-run things ever. It's not large. It's not fancy -- it's a yearly literary SF convention, and written SF simply doesn't draw enough numbers to make for large conventions. When you want to vote for a Hugo, you pay for a membership in that year's Worldcon -- and, preferably, pay a bit more for an attending membership, so you can join the party in person. Because that's really what it is, a yearly party (held in varying places around the world) for SF fans, by SF fans. Lots of people pay for memberships with absolutely no intention of voting on the Hugos at all, because Worldcon fans generally view it as a duty to be extremely well-read in the genre if they're going to take on the responsibility of voting on the award, and it's been difficult to keep up with the whole field for some time now.

      I've never been. I've never even paid for a voting membership, but I know about this because I am not as abysmally and offensively ignorant about what is going on as you.

      There was an infamous incident in the 1980s where Scientology attempted to game the Hugos in order to give L. Ron Hubbard an award. The Hugo Award voters were not fooled.

      Nor were they fooled the past few years. What has been happening is that a small clique of right-wing authors has decided to drag the "culture war" / wingnut welfare system into science fiction fandom. And so, despite the fact that it's ostensibly about improving the quality of the awards, the "Puppies" nomination manipulation campaigns have generally tried to pack the award nomination with works by the authors running the "Puppies", and their cronies. Particularly notable this year, what with the personal vanity publisher run by one of the "Puppy" leaders getting a ridiculously high proportion of the nomination slots -- largely for works that were actually originally published many years ago, and thus ought to have been ineligible this year, but were quickly and sloppily revised and republished in order to take advantage of a rules loophole. (Oh, and did I mention that these stories were complete horseshit? Horrifically bad writing, and most were thinly disguised far right wing propaganda. The latter is notable because the campaign claimed to be all about erasing politics from SF...)

      So fuck you. Giving this junk the "No Award" it deserved was about the rightful owners of the Hugo awards -- THE FANS -- rejecting a crass attempt at subverting the awards for personal and political gain.

    297. Re:Lovely summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nope, you're wrong. The Puppies, for the most part, aren't MRAs. The authors they nominated were pretty diverse. While you think their selections were crap, a lot of people thought the selections in previous years were crap. Furthermore, refusing to vote for someone to receive a writing award because of their political beliefs is bad, and voting for someone because they included gays or other marginalized groups - regardless of story quality - is also bad.

  2. Headline is Bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The headline there is stupid. The result IS the fan's votes. In six categories "No Award" won the vote.

    1. Re:Headline is Bad by tylikcat · · Score: 4, Interesting

      ...and most of the folks I know did indeed sit down and slog through most every story, and only voted "No Award" if they really felt nothing was up to Hugo quality. (Personally, I'm perfectly happy to stop reading about the point that stabbing pencils into my eyes sounds like more fun than continuing reading, but then I'm not a purist.)

      The saddest story is the alternate universe where there wasn't an attempt to organize a voting bloc: http://www.tobiasbuckell.com/2...

      (As an aside, I think there's at lot to be said to building bridges with sad puppies, though it has to be a mutual effort. Rabid puppies? Not so much.)

    2. Re:Headline is Bad by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1, Insightful

      If there was no voting bloc then women like Toni Weisskopf would have won a hugo award rather than get No Awarded purely because they were tainted by crimethink.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    3. Re:Headline is Bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, uhh, actually, both of the girls I know who bought a membership just to vote is in the SJW camp, not the sci-fi readers camp.

    4. Re:Headline is Bad by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      [evidence needed]

      It seems you're siding with the puppies just because. I dunno, maybe you beliee that being contrary somehow makes you smarter? Either way, you have little evidence for your accusations of "crimethink".

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    5. Re:Headline is Bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Name one person OTHER than Toni Weisskopf who should have won an award over No Award, but didn't. One other.

    6. Re:Headline is Bad by MHolmesIV · · Score: 1

      There was no voting bloc. Toni was tainted by unethical ballot stuffing. If she had done the right thing, like Annie Bellet and Black Gate did, there would have been a groundswell of support for her, and she may have gotten a 2016 or 2017 Hugo free of Vox Day taint. There was no way she was winning a Hugo this year, nor should she want to, considering how she got onto the ballot. (And I'm saying that as someone who actually voted for her)

      Toni is an amazing editor, but Baen doesn't really push the boundaries of scifi in it's works. They're like Scifi Mac'n'cheez. Comforting, easily digestible, exactly what you wanted, guilty indulgence.

    7. Re:Headline is Bad by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1

      You mean things like the fact the burn-it-all outcome was predicted in advance and the SJWs' preselected winners were even given alternate awards?

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    8. Re:Headline is Bad by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1

      There was a voting bloc, and they even had special "awards" ready for the people they had preselected to win before the puppies disrupted their rigging attempts.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    9. Re:Headline is Bad by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      And what does "burnitall" have to do with crimethink?

      And you know the "burn it all" thing only happened long after the slate was settled and it became clear that "no awards" were likely across the board. At that point, the puppies had to either admit the obvious defeat which was coming or claim that they were after the defeat all along and that was their grand plan. Because most of us have working memories, the only people who actually believe the puppies total rewrite of history are them and apparently you.

      And what? You're somehow claiming that GRRM dishing out his own awards is somehow wrong?

      u mad bro?

      Oh you're Shadow of Eternity, which means the answer is clearly "yes".

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    10. Re:Headline is Bad by MHolmesIV · · Score: 1

      Wow, where did you get that from???

      The "special awards" you are referring to are George RR Martin's "Hugo Loser" awards, that he's been handing out for more than 30 years. And it wasn't given to people who had been preselected to win, it was given to people who would have been on the ballot if not for Vox Day's ballot manipulations.

      There was no rigging except for the rabid puppies, this magical cabal of people the puppies believe control access to Hugo awards are the actual fans who vote.

    11. Re:Headline is Bad by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1

      Very clever, how you tried to pin all this on Vox and the Rabid puppies who actually think the Hugo should just be tossed as opposed to the Sad puppies who actually proved that it was the awarding being manipulated.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    12. Re:Headline is Bad by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1

      And now we've reached the point where you literally resort to the age old "hysterical emotionally distraught wimminz" argument retooled to be used against men.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    13. Re:Headline is Bad by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      And now we've reached the point where you literally resort to the age old "hysterical emotionally distraught wimminz" argument retooled to be used against men.

      literally?

      I think Inigo Montoya would like a word with you.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    14. Re:Headline is Bad by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1

      Yes, literally. You're literally stooping to the level of attempting to make an ad hominem out of straw manning my emotional state. That's exactly the same thing as the age old "hysterical emotionally distraught wimminz" argument, just retooled to be used against men according to modern day stereotypes and prejudices. It's so old and overused it's been color coded and filed with the others.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    15. Re:Headline is Bad by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      OK, you've completely lost me now.

      Would you mind letting me know what you're actually accusing me of, and a link to the post where you believe I committed this heinous crime would be nice. I think you may have replied to the wrong sub-thread because this has very rapidly lost all connection to what was actually under discussion.

      So I looked at the chart, and after the very first cell was silly, I stopped reading further. Example:

      "you need to get over your anger at women"

      Response: anger is a legitimate emotion in the face of injustice.

      That's stunning! So, some women are oppressing you, and it's OK to be angry at all women. Why no corresponding anger to all men? Some men support those female oppressors. It is mind-bottlingly stupid to be angry at all women because some are doing things you don't like especially as you are not angry at all men even though some are doing things you don't like. Talk about double standards.

      Also: code red? There's no "charge of pretentiousness" on the chart, but I'm levelling it firmly at the entire thing right now (let's call it "code chartreuse").

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    16. Re:Headline is Bad by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1

      That's stunning! So, some women are oppressing you, and it's OK to be angry at all women. Why no corresponding anger to all men? Some men support those female oppressors. It is mind-bottlingly stupid to be angry at all women because some are doing things you don't like especially as you are not angry at all men even though some are doing things you don't like. Talk about double standards.

      See here's where you do that projecting thing again, where you think you're making a point about me but all you're really doing is revealing your own inner prejudice.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    17. Re:Headline is Bad by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      You, as in the general you (you know it's third person as well, right?). I was referring to the chart as was clear by the way I was referring to the awfully silly chart you posted. You need to learn to read, bro.

      But tell me, my man, why post the chart if you don't agree with it? What point are you making by posting something you don't identify with?

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    18. Re:Headline is Bad by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1

      You're misrepresenting things as usual. The point of the Charge of Irascibility is that someone's legitimate arguments are responded to with "you're angry at women", and the response is to both address that as a disingenuous argument and point out that anger in general can be legitimate.

      The problem here is that as usual you're mirror imaging. You're projecting your own internal processes and beliefs onto others. You think because you hate men that means people must hate women in return.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    19. Re:Headline is Bad by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      You're misrepresenting things as usual.

      More lies from Mr Eternity.

      The point of the Charge of Irascibility is that someone's legitimate arguments are responded to with "you're angry at women",

      Nope, the person doesn't deny being angry at women. He's more or less admitting to being angry. But apparently an ovservation that the guy does not dispute is a "charge".

      the response is to both address that as a disingenuous argument and point out that anger in general can be legitimate.

      Sure, anger in general can be legitimate, but in this case it isn't. Being angry at 50% of the population is just plain dumbassery. If he's angry at women in general, then he also ought to be angry at men in general. There is no legitimate reason to be angry at women in general and not men unless he believes that women in general owe him something.

      You think because you hate men that means people must hate women in return.

      Ah so now you're back to making shit up. I don't hate men. As I've pointed out being angry at half of the population is pretty stupid.

      Yo might want to consider why you believe I hate men. I certainly don't, but it is very revealing about you that you believe I do.

      And what does "being angry at women"---something he doesn't deny--even mean? Angry at the old biddy who tottered slowly past him in th street? Angry at the barrista who served him coffee? Angry at the 50 yr old store clerk who was restocking as he passed? Angry at the random women he passes in the office building but has never spoken to?

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    20. Re:Headline is Bad by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1

      It's incredible how you've managed to take a mere handful of sentences and somehow STILL twist and dissemble to such a degree that you can continue doing the thing I explicitly called out.

      The point of the Charge of Irascibility is that someone's legitimate arguments are responded to with "you're angry at women"

      It's like some kind of kafkaesque performance art. The whole point is that claiming someone is angry at or bitter over women is in and of itself the fallacious attack. It's like the bastard child of straw man and ad hominem. You're avoiding dealing with someone's points by trying to turn public opinion against someone using people's natural prejudices towards women and against men... which ironically wouldn't work in the first place if society was actually as anti-woman as your ideology claims it to be.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    21. Re:Headline is Bad by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      I like how you first accused me of hating men, then silently dropped the point. +1 for rhetorical gymnastice!

      The point of the Charge of Irascibility is that someone's legitimate arguments are responded to with "you're angry at women"

      It's astonishing that you showed me a picture of a chart you have either failed to read or are incapable of understanding.

      His argument is that anger is a legitimate response to injustice.

      My argument is that there is nothing that women as a choesive group have done to him, and therefore anger at all women is as ujustified as anger towards all men.

      The whole point is that claiming someone is angry at or bitter over women is in and of itself the fallacious attack.

      No it's not, that is literally not what it says. It says accusations of unjustified anger are bad and the anger is justified. I claim that it is not.

      You're avoiding dealing with someone's points

      What point is that? the one he wrote or the invisible one floating round inside your head?

      public opinion

      I doubt anyone but us two are reading this sub thread.

      society was actually as anti-woman as your ideology claims it to be

      I don't think you have even the faintest clue what my ideology is, but do enlighten me!

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
  3. Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    This sums it up pretty well: http://io9.com/how-the-hugo-aw...

    "This actually sounds like a compelling argument at first â" but the saboteurs themselves have already disproved it. Their own success shows that their conspiracy theory is absolutely false. If there had been a left-wing conspiracy to stuff the ballot, it would have largely counteracted the efforts of Beale and his friends. The Beale strategem only succeeds if all the other nominations are scattered and disorganized. And that kind of disorganization is exactly what we saw in most nominations. It appears that everybody except Bealeâ(TM)s crew simply nominated whatever stories they happened to enjoy in 2014. Had there been a secret left-wing bloc nominating its own stories in lockstep, then Bealeâ(TM)s strategy would have failed."

    1. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by khallow · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That's a terrible argument. It's a have cake and eat it argument. If the Beale strategy works, it shows there is no conspiracy. If the Beale strategy doesn't work, then it shows that there is no conspiracy. The only thing that doesn't support the argument is having no one protest against the conspiracy - which shows that there is no conspiracy.

    2. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Except it's completely the opposite. The puppies scattered their votes between who they thought most deserved an award. The SJWs concentrated their votes on "No Award" to landslide out anyone, especially women or non-whites, who was tainted by crimethink.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    3. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by HiThere · · Score: 1

      And if you your opinion none of the finalists deserved an award, who are you supposed to vote for?

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    4. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      io9 huh? Well Gawker's sites do believe that no ethics is good ethics, so let's get on with it. Article written by Charlie Anders, who has a direct interest in the hugo awards and directly written for tor.com, no conflicts of interest there right?

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    5. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by dbIII · · Score: 1, Troll

      The sad thing is the people labelled "SJWs" in this case is everyone apart from a bunch that has an attitude hard to distinguish from the Taliban.
      So it appears that if you think a woman should be allowed to write for a living you are an "SJW"? It's ridiculous. This Vox puppy shit is going way back before 1900.

    6. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by Boronx · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I don't understand the mindset that can't accept the fact that science fiction encompasses more people, more ideas and a wider audience than first presumed. It's antithetical to the precepts of the genre.

      As an old white guy who grew up on Heinlein and Silverberg and Asimov and Niven and Pohl, it's been proved for decades that non-Anglo and female and gay authors offer something valuable and aren't just a side show. I don't know why anyone who calls themselves a science fiction fan would not want to celebrate that.

    7. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by drinkypoo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You're not getting it. The argument by people in favor of the puppy stuffing is that the nominations were already being stuffed by SJWs. But if SJWs were stuffing the nominations, then someone else trying to stuff the nominations would fail. They wouldn't be able to get basically all the nominations they were looking for, because someone else's stuffing would make sure that some other nominations succeeded. Since they did succeed, we know that there was no SJW-led stuffing worth mentioning, and that the entire puppy argument is a lot of dogshit.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    8. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      Last year, the puppies had quite a few nominations from their slate. I think none of them ranked below "no award".

      This year the puppies had several nomination in each category. Most of them were ranked below "no award".

      The number of voters increased dramatically.

      Did the quality suddenly take a dive this year? Or did a lot of people vote entirely to make a point?

    9. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      OP is talking about the nomination votes, not the award votes.

      The award votes were a backlash from the fandom after the nomination votes got stacked so badly. It is groupthink, in a sense that any ostracism is a kind of "groupthink". It doesn't mean that it isn't warranted or legitimate.

    10. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      GP didn't say that if the strategy didn't work, there was no conspiracy. So your "and eat it too" part kinda falls flat.

    11. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah. Unfortunately that article is one of the most comprehensible news articles out there that gives you the best 30 second read on the situation. Some want to bring attention to certain issues and some have publically stated that their goals since the beginning was to 'burn it all down'. There are logical fallicies and blatent errors everywhere in lots of the media's coverage of this.

      In my opinion puppies disagreed and do what most newborn biologicals do. Crap all over everything.

      Mix in seriously conflicting social/political/anywhatsoever views among the 'original sad puppies', what the 'sad puppies' became, and the 'rabid puppies' had and imho it apparently became a "cause".

      Everyone made a crapload of noise. What noise isn't important to the purpose of the event aside from attention. What was important to the organized 'causes' was that it draws attention to their pet socia/political/anywhatsoever view.

      Sad really. I used to use the Hugo's just to find thought provoking authors 10 years or so ago, but that's rapidly gone away since then. I don't care who/what/species/color/age/sex/sexual identity you are or form of biochemistry you use. I just wanted good sci-fi and to backtrack the authors that I hadn't heard of to read more of their stuff and/or to find more of their stuff in the future...

      Since around then I've also switched (largely) from published works to reading free or mostly free stuff off the internet unless I get recommendations.

      There is a huge amount of crap online, but there is also a small amount of some great stuff out there. I've even cornered a few pseudonyms and found some established and money making authors out there publishing stuff online. Can't hide quality and some can't help themselves apparently. It's allegedly for fun or to just scratch that writing itch that they couldn't dare do under a somewhat traceable name because of the usual sex/politics/religion/censorship reasons. That or the equivalent of pseudo anonymous author exibitionism. "Nobody will ever know it was me! Let's see how this does! lol

    12. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

      The NA votes were the SJW ballot stuffing.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    13. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, they don't think women should be allowed to write for a living. You busted them! Such _facts_ you bandy about!

      No. I think if you walk into the "science fiction and fantasy" section you'll probably immediately see the issue, at least my issue. Used to be good shit, now it's all fucking vampire|witch romance novels. Fuck that.

    14. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by CauseBy · · Score: 1

      Would you say they were barking up the wrong tree? or perhaps that they slept with the dogs, so they should expect to wake with fleas?

      Maybe they should eat their own dogfood.

    15. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by squiggleslash · · Score: 1

      Nope, because that's not how Hugo voting works. Hugo votes are a first choice/second choice/third choice thing. Only when one option has more than 50% of the vote is a winner declared.

      So the StrawJWs can concentrate their votes as much as they want, and heroic fighters against communistic filth in our libraries Puppys can spread their votes as much as they want, it's not going to affect the outcome of the vote.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    16. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're not getting it. The argument by people in favor of the puppy stuffing is that the nominations were already being stuffed by SJWs. But if SJWs were stuffing the nominations, then someone else trying to stuff the nominations would fail. They wouldn't be able to get basically all the nominations they were looking for, because someone else's stuffing would make sure that some other nominations succeeded. Since they did succeed, we know that there was no SJW-led stuffing worth mentioning, and that the entire puppy argument is a lot of dogshit.

      That's not true at all. SJW-led stuffing could have still existed but have been pretty small. In the past some works got nominated with less votes than the amount of people who will read this comment.

    17. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by Steve+B · · Score: 1

      Nope, the NA votes were the fans dumping the punch bowl after they caught the puppies pissing in it.

      --
      /. If the government wants us to respect the law, it should set a better example.
    18. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by meta-monkey · · Score: 2

      Yes, politically motivated spite. Dresden Files are not my cup of tea, but you honestly believe Skin Game deserves to lose to NA?

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    19. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And if you your opinion none of the finalists deserved an award, who are you supposed to vote for?

      You would vote no award. And that's the trick.

      It's the same trick that dictators use to get into power. The saying is that you only need 1/3 of the population to win, as there's 1/3 of the population who are indifferent and won't oppose you.

      That over 50% vote for no award is a combination of both people who really felt no one deserved an award, and people who voted such for political reasons. If either group was alone, they probably would not have won.

    20. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by khallow · · Score: 1
      It'd help if you didn't just repeat the broken argument I was complaining about without any sign of awareness of the flaws in the argument. Just because some group stuffs ballots, doesn't mean that they will be better at it than another group that decides to do that.

      Since they did succeed, we know that there was no SJW-led stuffing worth mentioning, and that the entire puppy argument is a lot of dogshit.

      They demonstrate that the ballot can be stuffed. And just because there was no SJW-led stuffing of note this year (at least one large enough to counter the Puppies thing at the nomination level), doesn't mean that there was in previous years when there wasn't Puppies ballot stuffing.

    21. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      And just because there was no SJW-led stuffing of note this year (at least one large enough to counter the Puppies thing at the nomination level), doesn't mean that there was in previous years when there wasn't Puppies ballot stuffing.

      And yet, there's no evidence that there has been. So, where's the evidence? Who gives a crap about anything else? Point to the evidence, or stop making shit up.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    22. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by Xtifr · · Score: 1

      Spite? Sure. (Though anger might be a more appropriate term.) Politically motivated? I'm sure some were, but a whole lot of people were simply pissed off by the abuse of the nominating process. If I'd been voting, I would have been just as tempted to vote down a far-left slate out of spite (if there'd been one) as I would have been to vote down the far-right slate. As far as I'm concerned, the bad behavior here was creating a slate and persuading people to vote for those specific items sight-unseen rather than voting for what they honestly liked. The politics of the people who did it is irrelevant. And bad behavior deserves to be punished, no matter who does it.

      As far as I'm concerned, a bunch of political fanatics of some flavor or other tried to shit on an award I admire and respect and have occasionally voted in many times over the last several decades. I like science fiction, I don't give a crap about political fanatics of any type, I think those assholes got what they deserved, and I'd say exactly the same if they were SJWs instead of SIWs.

    23. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by guises · · Score: 1

      The evidence from the puppies is the awards given to their non-preferred works. They come along and say: "Look at how the Hugos are being awarded to preachy books, obviously being voted on by preachy people." QED

      Result: "Let's organize some non-preachy people (i.e.: people who agree with us) to get the Hugos awarded to the books we like instead." It doesn't have to be some malevolent conspiracy, all awards are like that.

    24. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 2

      And the reason for an unprecedented number of "No Awards" to be given out was....? Say it with me: Because of a clique dominating the Hugos voting out anyone they dislike.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    25. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1

      Meanwhile in the real world it's women like Toni Weisskopf getting No Awarded because she was "contaminated" by thought criminals liking her work. You do realise it's facially absurd for you to say things like this when SJW's worst victims usually ARE women and minorities, right?

      SJWs are toxic, demand everyone join their crusade or be put to the sword, and in the real world often resort to threats of violence and even actual crimes to silence dissent. If anyone is like the Taliban it's the sex-negative woman-hating racists who resort to bomb and death threats against people that disagree with them... you know, SJWs.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    26. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's almost as if that's not the issue at all, and female/LGBT/non-white authors are in fact regularly celebrated and embraced... when they're not being terrorized by SJW trolls. It's almost as if all that talk of "equality" and "diversity" from SJWs is provably just a smokescreen for toxic bigotry and a violent hatred of dissent.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    27. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by Boronx · · Score: 1

      Please explain why the existence of a lesbian Thai troll necessitates a movement to win the Hugo back from progressive sci-fi culture.

    28. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1

      The nomination votes weren't "stacked", the award votes were. The accusations of the puppies rigging anything are patent nonsense. Meanwhile on the other hand the SJWs even had alternate awards premade for their predetermined "winners".

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    29. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1

      Scalzi explained exactly how to rig voting, which is exactly what happened, and then the SJWs even handed out alternate "awards" to the authors they had originally wanted to rig the Hugos for.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    30. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      All I see is a bunch of whining by the very people who organized the stacking. That the stacking happened is so obvious to anyone who followed the events that I won't even bother addressing that: you're either horribly misinformed, or else deliberately lying to maximize the damage. Given the nature of the Vox minion crowd, probably the latter.

    31. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1

      Let's see... a toxic troll who disproportionately victimized women and minorities and was for a time the golden child of SJWs until they were forced to drop her due to the sheer weight of evidence against them and the lack of enough critical mass to insulate her like Lindy West or others have...

      Yeah totally irrelevant. Except for the fact it's directly representative of exactly the kind of people that have taken over the hugos.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    32. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1

      "Vox Minion". Gotta love that doublethink... SJWs are never reflected on by the people they explicitly support, people SJWs hate are always minions of whoever you hate most regardless of what's really going on. Repeat after me: "I am not Vox Day"

      The only stacking after the puppies got on the ballet was the SJWs stacking on No Award then handing out special "awards" to everyone they had originally preselected to win before their plans were disrupted.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    33. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Yes, you're not Vox Day. You're his minion. He speaks with your voice, and you do his bidding with your hands.

      Even if you claim that is not the case - like Correia, Torgersen etc did - your actions, and, most importantly, their results, have shown otherwise.

      Past a certain point, there is no sense in distinguishing between the Sads and the Rabids. It's like trying to separate CCC from KKK - sure, there is a difference, but what matters in the end is that both are racist and act as such. Same thing here.

    34. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except that's not how it works.

      An award or no award requires an absolute majority. If 75% of the votes are scattered, the 25% concentrated DOES NOT WIN. The lowest rank finalist is eliminated and then the people who voted for it support their second choice. In this case all the puppy votes put together totaled from 30% to 48% per category. IN all cases the winner, be it a nominated work or no award had a majority.

      I'd like to point out that before the puppies, this was tried by the Church of Scientology, pushing a work onto the ballot and it was rewarded by being placed last under no award. The Worldcon membership do not like seeing the nomination process screwed with by ANYONE. Right-wing people have and do get nominations and wins, people who screw with the process get shown the door, that's all that happened this time.

    35. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by Boronx · · Score: 1

      So you're saying that once it became clear she is a horrible person, the SJW crowd dropped her.

    36. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      So they didn't like what was nominated and won, so they had a shit fit, and deliberately gamed the nominations. At the very best they are jealous, stupid hypocrites. The very best.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    37. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

      I think I'll vote next year. Not on any kind of slate. I am not a puppy. I am not a right-winger, and I am definitely not a SJW. And I will read every book.

      But I do see the puppies' point. Write a creative, innovative, well-written book? Get an award, unless your political tone or personal politics are right-wing. Write a good yarn with spaceships and ray guns and wizards and shit? No award. Write complete dreck but make the main character a genderqueer half-Mexican half-African American differently-abled merperson? Award!

      It is kind of ridiculous that in the award that styles itself as "best science fiction and fantasy," Alastair Reynolds has only been nominated once and has never won. The Hugos are not currently representing the best of sci-fi.

      I will not join the puppies, but I concede their point. As a sci-fi lover, I will start paying better attention.

      (Or, man, if I had time, write shlock about a genderqueer half-Mexican half-African American differently-abled merpson, who also occasionally sexually identifies as an attack helicopter and collect my Hugo.)

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    38. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by guises · · Score: 1

      Jealous and stupid are subjective, but I don't see where you're getting hypocrites from. They didn't like the direction in which the awards were going, so they worked to change it.

      Usually when someone works to get people to vote a certain way we call that "campaigning," but "gaming the nominations" is, I suppose, another way to put it.

    39. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      They didn't like the direction in which the awards were going, so they worked to change it. [...] Usually when someone works to get people to vote a certain way we call that "campaigning," but "gaming the nominations" is, I suppose, another way to put it.

      If I could really believe that all the people who voted actually read all the material, I might conceivably describe it in some other way. And see the rest of the thread for the rest of the assorted rebuttals to these points, but this is the one at the core of it for me.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    40. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by Burstaholic · · Score: 1

      Except you're talking about the vote results to refute a point about the nomination results. Gotta keep 'em straight.

    41. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by guises · · Score: 1

      The majority of the people who voted checked the box for "no award." I can see that by reading posts from the rest of the thread, as you instruct me to do. You're suggesting that these people who voted not to grant any award to anyone didn't actually read the material that they were voting on? That they were denying this award to everyone solely because someone told them to vote that way? That this whole argument is all a bunch of rhetoric from people who don't care about the thing they're ruining in the process, but are just using it to push their agenda?

      Gee.

    42. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1

      Mary Koss, Lindy West, Jessica Valenti, and even Amy Schumer and Lena Dunham are all horrible people but they've got enough star power and usefulness that SJWs don't have to drop them. SJWs didn't give a fuck that she was a horrible person, Amy Schumer's a fucking rapist and they gave her an award, they only dumped her because they were forced to.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    43. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1

      By that logic all feminists are the minions of rapists like Amy Schumer, attempted murderers like Valerie Solanas, and people who advocate mass murdering men until they're only 10% of the human population like professor Mary Daly.

      The difference is Amy Schumer won an award, Valerie Solanas still has her work taught and spread as an important work of feminist literature, and Mary Daly was a widely respected feminist professor who quit in anger at being forced to teach male as well as female students.

      Vox Day is just another writer who wants to the same things and started his own group that have some overlapping goals with another group, neither of which I'm even a member of.

      Even if you claim that is not the case - like Correia, Torgersen etc did - your actions, and, most importantly, their results, have shown otherwise.

      Funny I could say the same thing about feminism. Especially given that literally every attempt at even disagreeing with, let alone criticising feminism has been either significantly disrupted by or outright shutdown by threats and at times actual criminal attacks and violence.

      I could easily point out that despite all the insistence that "feminism is about equality" and "feminism helps men too" the actions of feminists in doing things like sending knives, syringes, and dead animals to people who criticize them, continuing to support people that deny men can even BE raped by women like Mary koss, and doing everything in their power to erase and silence male (and female) victims of female rapists and abusers virtually universally prove otherwise.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    44. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by Boronx · · Score: 1

      Do these people control the Hugos? What am I missing here?

    45. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by Xtifr · · Score: 1

      But I do see the puppies' point. Write a creative, innovative, well-written book? Get an award, unless your political tone or personal politics are right-wing.

      And yet Brandon Sanderson, current leader of the Sad Puppies, actually won a Hugo just two years ago!

      Write a good yarn with spaceships and ray guns and wizards and shit? No award.

      Funny, seems to me like the last several winners (at least for Best Novel) have all been good yarns with spaceships and ray guns and wizards and shit. (Where "and shit" is defined as other classic SF elements like time travel.)

      * 2014's Ancillary Justice was a classic space opera full of spaceships and rayguns. I actually approached this one with caution, because I'd heard people say it was all about gender politics, and I don't like being lectured to, even by people I agree with. I'm not a fan of preachy SF, even when it's preaching for my side. To my surprise, the only thing even resembling "gender politics" was an artificial creature pretending to be human who had a hard time figuring out when to use "he"vs. "she", because artificial creatures don't have sexes. It reminded me more of my own troubles trying to remember whether a table is male or female in Spanish than anything to do with politics.I was very pleasantly surprised by this one!

      * 2013's Redshirts was a lighthearted comedy parodying Star Trek. Yes, John Scalzi is the Puppies nominee for Most Evil Writer Evar!!1!, but this was a fun, easy read, without a whiff of politics. (And it won the same year that Sanderson won, so I think it's pretty hard to say that the voters were choosing authors based on their personal politics.)

      * 2012's Among Others was a pastoral fantasy set in 1970s Britain. It did have a message, but not exactly a political one. The protagonist was a young girl who discovers she has some magic powers and can see elves and stuff. And she's a huge nerd who reads science fiction every spare minute, and goes on and on and on about her favorite authors, like Heinlein and Asimov and other greats of the era (some of whom are not well remembered today). So, the message was:old SF is good! I actually found it a little too preachy on the topic, and I suspect that the message did help it win the award. Still...not exactly what the Puppies seem to be talking about though. In fact, I suspect they'd thoroughly agree with the message, if they were willing to read something written by a gu-u-ur-ul. :)

      * 2011's Blackout/All Clear was a story about time-travelers studying WWII London, who get stuck. Connie Willis is a great writer, and, while this was a bit dark, it was still a page turner. The only message I saw was "Nazis are bad"; something I think few people would disagree with. (If you do disagree, please don't tell me. I want to retain some faint faith in humanity.)

      I have to go all the way back to 2010 to find something that even had a strong political element. There were two winners that year. The Windup Girl was a post-disaster technothriller, full of fancy biotech, and insofar as it had a message, it seemed to be pro-science / anti-politics. The right probably hated that the disaster was climate change, but the left probably hated its positive portrayals of GMOs. (And the Slashdot crowd should love its anti-patent message.) As for The City &The City, well, yes, China Mieville is an extreme uberleftie, but the main message I saw in this book was:life under a Soviet-style dictatorship sucks. Which is not exactly something I'd expect the Puppies to disagree with. :)

      Write complete dreck but make the main character a genderqueer half-Mexican half-African American differently-abled merperson? Award!

      Huh. I must have missed that one. Was it one of the short stories? I'm willing

    46. Re:Actually, the truth is somewhat different. by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1

      I answered your question plainly and directly, now you're trolling.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
  4. SJW prove the SP's point by _Sharp'r_ · · Score: 1, Insightful

    From the wired story linked above:

    But in recent years, as sci-fi has expanded to include storytellers who are women, gays and lesbians, and people of color, the Hugos have changed, too. At the presentation each August, the Gods with the rockets in their hands have been joined by Goddesses and those of other ethnicities and genders and sexual orientations, many of whom want to tell stories about more than just spaceships.

    While on the other hand, most SF fans like stories about spaceships as part of their science fiction, hence the rocket shape of the award.

    But no, mustn't have anyone who isn't on-board with the latest politically correct dinosaur win!

    I'm sure the fans can't wait until next year, when a concentrated campaign will emerge to vote one particular non-SJW in each category as the winner, turning their own tactics (block voting on one option and refusing to even consider the quality of others and vote for the "best") on their head.

    --
    The party of stupid and the party of evil get together and do something both stupid and evil, then call it bipartisan.
    1. Re:SJW prove the SP's point by Rei · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Re. the "popular books should always win" concept, I think Martin said it best:

      “The reward for popularity is popularity! It’s truckloads of money! Do you need the trophy, too?”

      --
      "99 dead duelists of Dios on the wall. 99 dead duelists of Dios! Take one's ring, pass it around..."
    2. Re:SJW prove the SP's point by NicBenjamin · · Score: 0

      Fantasy's won at the Hugos more often then Rocket-Ship SciFi in some categories. Hell, most rocket-ship SciFi isn't technically SciFi, it's Space Opera.

      Don't act surprised that the Social Justice vision of the future dominates fan views of what should get rewarded. This has always been the case. SciFi is about the future, so a SciFi world that doesn't look like the world early 20-somethings are planning to build as soon as Grandma dies is simply stupid. What they're planing on building today is a world where gender-identity is a matter of choice; homosexuality is not necessarily the norm, but is normal; etc. And this shit moves fast. In the olden days of Bill Clinton's administration, a man named David Weber created a vision of the future which included ridiculous amounts of racial diversity (the Prussian-themed Empire, for example, is ethnic Chinese; while the British-queen Queen is a black woman with an Afro), numerous shout-outs to fans of military history (the Prussians are there basically so he can drop numerous Frederick the Great References), very well thought-through Physics (altho they are designed so that combat works much like it did in the Age of Sail), etc.

      And the new generation of 20-somethings years later is going "WTF? Why isn't anybody gay?" And pointing out that, back in the early days of the Clinton Administration, the most homophobic demographic were probably feminists, who had yet to notice lesbians existed so assumed that homosexuality was the cruelest form of discrimination against women possible; does not make them want to pay money for his books.

    3. Re:SJW prove the SP's point by ctid · · Score: 2

      Don't act surprised that the Social Justice vision of the future dominates fan views of what should get rewarded.

      This makes NO sense whatever. It's a free vote. And anybody is free to sign up for it (try searching google to confirm this). You don't have to go to WorldCon to vote. If the majority of people voted against the Puppies' nominations, that's because the majority of people who took the trouble to register voted against them. I have no idea why this is so hard to understand or why so many people feel the need to invoke "SJWs" to explain the outcome. If somebody wanted a different outcome, they should have registered and voted.

      --
      Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
    4. Re:SJW prove the SP's point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Informative? Really?

    5. Re:SJW prove the SP's point by NicBenjamin · · Score: 0

      I'm not sure you actually disagree with anything I just said.

      You don't seem to like the vocabulary chosen, but one thing one realizes when one graduates from the Academy, is that there is absolutely no point in using Academic language to talk to people who don't already use it. Either they will have no clue what you're talking about (and you might as well speak Latin) or they have been told the definition Academics use and have decided that Academics are wrong. In this case Academic language is actually worse then Latin because they understand it precisely enough to get mad at you. And making people mad at you is not a useful communications strategy.

      Which in turn means my options when faced with an OP referring to "SJWs" are to either torpedo all chance of communication by correcting him, or live with it.

      There's a reason Obama started calling it "ObamaCare."

    6. Re:SJW prove the SP's point by ctid · · Score: 2

      1. I understood what you were saying;
      2. I don't understand what "the Academy" has to do with it;
      3. I don't understand the point you are making about feminists and homophobia;
      4. I don't understand what Obamacare has to do with it;
      5. I agree with you on the point about the use of "SJW". See also "PC".

      --
      Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
    7. Re:SJW prove the SP's point by NicBenjamin · · Score: 1

      1. One of us is really not understanding here. Your case seems to be that the fans voted because they disagreed with the puppies. My case is the fans voted because they agree with SJWs. That's not a very big disagreement.
      2. A very large proportion of the people who actually bothers to engage with the puppies will bring in Academic language like "unexamined privilege," which pisses them puppies off and gets nothing accomplished. From your reaction to SJW I assumed you were one, if I was mistaken I apologize. Which feeds into four somewhat out of order:
      4. The way you actually deal with these people is talk like them. Sometimes you change it up, but unless you have some deep-ass point about that precise to make at this precise moment you don't bother. You borrow their language, you put the concept in their terms.
      3. The point is that society changes, and the Sad Puppies have to live with it. As an example Feminists used to be incredibly homophobic. That has changed. At this point it's very difficult to find anyone who isn't on the vanguard of the gay rights movement who doesn't consider him/herself a strong feminist and vice versa.

    8. Re:SJW prove the SP's point by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 2

      I have no idea why this is so hard to understand or why so many people feel the need to invoke "SJWs" to explain the outcome.

      Maybe because what Scalzi was trying to get organised turned out to be exactly what happened?

    9. Re:SJW prove the SP's point by ctid · · Score: 3, Interesting

      You've linked to that article but you clearly haven't read it! Scalzi simply explains the rules and how he interprets them. His article was in response to a lot of hand-wringing about the puppies' attempt to vote for a slate. Lots and lots of people were forseeing doom and gloom for the Hugos, Scalzi's article was simply to explain that while it's possible to get nominations on the ballot paper by colluding, it's a very different thing to getting Hugos awarded. You should read the article - it's pretty interesting.

      --
      Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
    10. Re:SJW prove the SP's point by ctid · · Score: 1, Insightful

      1. I believe that by using the term, "SJW", you blind yourself to any realistic analysis of the event;
      2. I'm not trying to use any sort of jargon. I am trying to explain what I mean;
      4. [sic] I don't understand what you mean here.
      3.

      --
      Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
    11. Re:SJW prove the SP's point by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 2

      His instructions were pretty clear, and I quote:

      "HUGO FOR BEST USE OF YOGURT

      1. Deserving nominee #1
      2. Deserving nominee #2
      3. NO AWARD"

      And that's exactly what happened. Coincidence? You decide.

    12. Re:SJW prove the SP's point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's not a very big disagreement.

      Actually, that's HUGE.

      It's like rejecting some ideas of a conspiracy theorist does not mean I support the world wide conspiracy, now does it?

      Maybe I just don't want to legitimize them.

    13. Re:SJW prove the SP's point by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 0

      It makes perfect sense. The puppies spread their votes among authors they liked while SJWs, enraged at women like Toni Weisskopf being nominated after they were tainted by crimethink, concentrated their votes on "No Award". Had someone like Benjanun "Requires Hate" been on the ballot they would have voted for her by a landslide instead.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    14. Re:SJW prove the SP's point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually it was conservatives who first called it Obamacare. You're wrong about a lot of other things too. You should probably post as AC until you get some things figured out.

    15. Re:SJW prove the SP's point by _Sharp'r_ · · Score: 1

      How about "The best Science Fiction story should always win" concept, as opposed to "The most politically correct story or author someone can pass off as as slightly related to science fiction wins".

      --
      The party of stupid and the party of evil get together and do something both stupid and evil, then call it bipartisan.
    16. Re:SJW prove the SP's point by _Sharp'r_ · · Score: 2

      And yet... David Weber has been publishing for 25 years and never even been nominated for a Hugo in all that time, but he's just one of those Baen authors, right?

      The Sad Puppies point isn't that it's not ok to nominate left-wing authors, or women, or minorities, etc... they nominated some themselves, but that your publishing house or your SJW credentials shouldn't be the most important thing for the results of the vote, the story you wrote should be.

      --
      The party of stupid and the party of evil get together and do something both stupid and evil, then call it bipartisan.
    17. Re:SJW prove the SP's point by HiThere · · Score: 2

      It's always been tricky to define just what "Science Fiction" is. I can't really think of even one story that didn't play fast and loose with the laws of physics as known that I would consider science fiction, but if you are too fast and loose you don't qualify.

      FWIW, Isasc Asimov had an anthology called "Earth is Room Enough" which was entirely composed of stories he'd written that has just happened to take place entirely on Earth. No rocket ships needed. There's a series called "Dance of the Gods" (don't remember the author offhand) that starts off as apparent swords and sorcery fantasy and slowly, over the course of four volumes, morphs into rather hard science fiction. (I don't really believe that physics allows what is proposed, but I'm not certain.)

      And nearly anything can be done if you just invoke virtual reality nested sufficiently.

      So "best Science Fiction story" is a totally ill-defined concept. You can't even exclude "Jude the Obscure" by Thomas Hardy. (I hated that in English Lit., but it attempted to be slice of life in the 1800's, or maybe 1700's.) You might, however, argue against "Finnegan's Wake" because it doesn't appear (on the surface) to have much plot.

      Now when I was in my 20's I really liked "Cosmic Engineers", which is fantasy in the Science Fiction metaphor, but I also liked "Mission of Gravity" which attempted to be scientifically accurate (except for faster than light space ships). And I also liked "Sentinels from Space", which was another fantasy wrapped up to look like science fiction. The thing is, all of those were always described as just science fiction. I also liked the lensman series and the skylark series, which were politics wrapped in a science fiction metaphor. And were always described as science fiction. isn't something new.

      Actually, the genesis probably goes back to the British "New Wave" science fiction of the 1960's or 70's. That was when science fiction authors started paying attention to characterization, etc. (Never mind that some authors had always done so, they'd been exceptions during the 1940's and 50's.)

      If you organize slate voting, don't be surprised if some opposition arises. It will, if only as a fission within your existing slate. I rather hope that the rules amendment that has passed it's first vote passes the second vote and solves the problem. At least I hope it makes stuffing the nominations 5 times as difficult, as is its intention.

      For more details about this from an author's point of view see:
      Bad puppies, no awards under http://www.antipope.org/charli...

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    18. Re:SJW prove the SP's point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't act surprised that the Social Justice vision of the future dominates fan views of what should get rewarded.

      This makes NO sense whatever. It's a free vote. And anybody is free to sign up for it (try searching google to confirm this). You don't have to go to WorldCon to vote. If the majority of people voted against the Puppies' nominations, that's because the majority of people who took the trouble to register voted against them. I have no idea why this is so hard to understand or why so many people feel the need to invoke "SJWs" to explain the outcome. If somebody wanted a different outcome, they should have registered and voted.

      Noah Ward won by 0.4% you just argued that to beat that the opposition should have roped in a few more people then block voted for a counter candidate instead of splitting their votes

      Did you mean to argue that?

    19. Re:SJW prove the SP's point by tbannist · · Score: 1

      So, you're claiming that nominees that over 50% of the voters decided were undeserving didn't win any award and it's all Scalzi's fault for explaining the rules to everyone? I think most of us can live with that.

      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    20. Re:SJW prove the SP's point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's a reason Obama started calling it "ObamaCare."

      Actually it was conservatives who first called it Obamacare. You're wrong about a lot of other things too. You should probably post as AC until you get some things figured out.

      These two statements do not contradict each other

    21. Re:SJW prove the SP's point by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 1

      Good thing most of us can read better than you, then. Although congratulations on your appointment as spokesperson for most of us, I wasn't even aware there was an election.

      The emperor has no clothes and the imaginary saviours of humanity are being forced to take a long hard look in the mirror - and it's not a pretty sight - it's a fine start to the week. :D

    22. Re:SJW prove the SP's point by NicBenjamin · · Score: 1

      Actually it was conservatives who first called it Obamacare.

      I believe if you try to exercise some reading comprehension you'll discover that was my point.

      Conservatives were calling it ObamaCare, which was sticking with a sufficiently large slice of the general public that Obama had to do the same.

    23. Re:SJW prove the SP's point by NicBenjamin · · Score: 1

      1. So you're not an academic, but you're trying to "analyze the event" while simultaneously convincing people you strongly disagree with to change their minds?

      That's a PhD-level combination of sounding smart while being totally ineffective right there.

      2. If it's a term the person you're talking with does not use, in their everyday lives, it is jargon to them.

      4. It's pretty simple. The official name of the act ("Affordable Care Act") has never stuck. That makes it jargon in most of the country, which means that a pol talking about the Affordable Care Act dilutes his message with a strong dose of "thinks he's smarter then me." If he's Obama, and the popular name is "ObamaCare," it gets worse because it sounds like he's trying to avoid taking credit for his signature domestic accomplishment.

      You talk with your audience at their level, not above their heads.

    24. Re:SJW prove the SP's point by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      How about "The best Science Fiction story should always win" concept, as opposed to "The most politically correct story or author someone can pass off as as slightly related to science fiction wins".

      But what these nomination-stuffers wanted was "the most politically incorrect story or author someone can pass off as quality in spite of being shit wins", and that's not an improvement.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    25. Re:SJW prove the SP's point by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      It's a fan vote though. The popular books do win!

    26. Re:SJW prove the SP's point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's one of those things that's easy for George to say as he's one of the few fantasy authors that is literally making truckloads of money. When you rule out the superstars like the GRR Martins, and the JK Rowlings even the most popular authors aren't making much money.

    27. Re:SJW prove the SP's point by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      The Sad Puppies point isn't that it's not ok to nominate left-wing authors, or women, or minorities, etc... they nominated some themselves, but that your publishing house or your SJW credentials shouldn't be the most important thing for the results of the vote, the story you wrote should be.

      In that case, they should have nominated something good, so that their argument would have weight. Since they only nominated a bunch of crap (or at best, stuff that wasn't groundbreaking or amazing or otherwise deserving of a Hugo) that argument is shit.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    28. Re:SJW prove the SP's point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't understand why everyone keeps saying that it's a free vote when you literally have to pay for the privilege and that's the only requirement...

    29. Re:SJW prove the SP's point by NicBenjamin · · Score: 1

      I doubt Weber's ever campaigned. He doesn't go to WorldCon. Most Baen authors don't bother. Eric Flint went, but he did it specifically to oppose the Sad Puppies slate.

      He was there because the Sad Puppy story did not add up. If the Sad Puppies'd wanted the best story to win, why did they nominate a full slate? That prevents anyone who isn't on the Sad Puppy side from having any influence. That, combined with the presence of Vox Day (who, BTW, declared victory with the No Awards on the basis that his point the entire time was to ruin the Hugos), is a major reason why No Award beat their entire slate. The logical thing for them to do next year is nominate one or two in each category, and stay far the fuck away from a guy who openly wants to destroy the awards.

      And, again, as I mentioned this is SciFi. It is about the future. A story about the future that does not include gays is not a good story, because we all know perfectly well that gays are not going away.

    30. Re:SJW prove the SP's point by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

      Whether the "puppies" spread their votes or not is irrelevant -- every No Award won by a simple majority.

      Turns out there aren't that many puppies.

      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
    31. Re:SJW prove the SP's point by squiggleslash · · Score: 1

      What is your point here? Should he put nominees he feels should not win the Hugo higher up than No award?

      Out of interest, how do you think people should vote?

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    32. Re:SJW prove the SP's point by squiggleslash · · Score: 1
      It's a preference vote, there's no penalty for spreading your votes amongst authors you like vs concentrating your votes.

      The reason the vote for No Award was so high (more than 50% for the first vote, meaning it was going to win anyway), was because ordinary voters either didn't like the works available to them, or because they were angry about the gaming of the nominations.

      And the fact you think that someone should have been supported by the Puppy's detractors should automatically have voted for one of the options purely because she's a woman shows you're a little too wedded to identity politics in a way that the voters themselves clearly weren't.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    33. Re:SJW prove the SP's point by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 1

      Certain individuals seem to be trying to make out there wasn't a concerted effort by the SJW brigade to spoil the votes, while numbers voting increased ~3000 from last year and about ~2500 votes acted exactly as Scalzi directed. That would be my point.

      And of course in doing so they proved everything the puppies were trying to say. I would have paid to watch the joyous grins of glee on Stross' and Scalzi's faces wither away when they realised this. Hot denials and damage control all round.

    34. Re:SJW prove the SP's point by tbannist · · Score: 1

      Good thing most of us can read better than you, then.

      If it were true, it would be a good thing, indeed.

      Although congratulations on your appointment as spokesperson for most of us, I wasn't even aware there was an election.

      For instance, you need to brush up on the meaning of "I think".

      The emperor has no clothes and the imaginary saviours of humanity are being forced to take a long hard look in the mirror - and it's not a pretty sight - it's a fine start to the week. :D

      You should probably also stay off the LSD, friend, it's apparently impeding your ability to read, understand and think.

      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    35. Re:SJW prove the SP's point by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1

      Which tends to be what happens when a clique of people concentrate their votes to rig a bunch of "No Awards" instead of spreading them out.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    36. Re:SJW prove the SP's point by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1

      There was gaming, but it wasn't the nominations. It was the award itself. Which explains why the SJWs even had special alternate trophies ready and waiting for the people originally preselected to win.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    37. Re:SJW prove the SP's point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You do know Eric Flint is a self avowed trotskyst?

  5. WIRED has it right by Robotech_Master · · Score: 1, Insightful

    This whole movement came out of the same place as GamerGate. A reactionary minority group, upset that their media fandom was getting too diverse, tried to spark a backlash. It didn't work for GamerGate, and it didn't work for the Puppies either.

    The fans rejected the Puppies' attempt to stuff the ballot with their own (largely subpar) works, and now the Puppies are claiming victory with a refrain that sounds an awful lot like "Those grapes were probably sour anyway."

    --
    Editor Emeritus and Senior Writer, TeleRead.org
    1. Re:WIRED has it right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The only thing this has in common with GamerGate is the butthurt SJWs.
      A while back the Hugos stopped being about the best science fiction and started being about social justice.
      The Sad Puppies tried to influence it back in the direction of awarding the best science fiction without regard for the trendy -isms.
      The fallout of the whole thing is a net loss for science fiction fans. And it's not over yet.

    2. Re:WIRED has it right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Please give me a year in which you feel like science fiction did NOT address social inequality. What were the good old days for you? I'm genuinely curious.

    3. Re:WIRED has it right by ctid · · Score: 4, Informative

      Nope. This was a free vote of everyone who wanted to register to vote. You don't have to go to WorldCon to vote. Anybody who wants to register gets a vote. So there is no question of "SJWs" getting butthurt. There were a series of votes on the various works that were nominated. In the categories where serious nominations were made, Hugos were awarded. In the categories that only had non-serious nominations, no awards were made. If the puppies had wanted to win the votes, they should have recruited more people to vote for their nominations. They didn't (or couldn't), so their nominations did not win.

      --
      Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
    4. Re:WIRED has it right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      This. Seriously, no matter where you sit on the political spectrum, if you're trying to paint a picture of how society has evolved in the future, you're going to be dealing with social issues. It's the nature of the beast.

    5. Re:WIRED has it right by saebasystems · · Score: 4, Insightful

      GamerGate has nothing to do with this, apart for the same ideologues pushing their wacky postmodern agenda, If you think this is just some right wing push back, your so off it's a joke. I have voted liberal all my life, I am bisexual and I am sick of people using my sexuality as shield for their shitty behaviour. After SPJ airplay your hate mob narrative is nothing but ideological bias, keep drinking that Kool aid.

    6. Re:WIRED has it right by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 1, Troll

      From that same article: "Consider: A woman named Adria Richards Twitter-shames two white dudes for cracking off-color jokes at PyCon, a tech developer conference (and then is fired and fields murder threats)." To say that it's a bit slanted is quite the understatement.

      Also you should read the comments for a more balanced view.

    7. Re:WIRED has it right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The original Sad Puppy campaign was to show that a small group of campaigners could control the nominations, and that the people that did the campaigning were such hard Leftists that any conservative write would never win an award.

      Guess what? In just three years, the Sad Puppies have been proven 100% correct.
      A mere 300 or so people were able to utterly dominate the nomination process, including sweeping several categories.
      On top of that, when it came time to actually vote, the 300 member 'No Award' slate (frantically pushed for by people who proudly stated they had never read the nominated writings) was voted in for FIVE categories! That's as many as it has ever had before in the previous 70-something years. No Award was 2nd place in an additional 6 categories, behind only the ONE nominee that the 'puppy-killer' campaign slate pushed for.

      Skin Game by Jim Butcher and The Dark Between the Stars by Kevin J. Anderson both ranked below 'No Award' in the Best Novel category. You think either of those books was so bad it would have been better not to have an award? Bullshit. The anti-puppy haters voted for No Award for purely political and ideological reasons - to punish those who dared to disagree.

    8. Re:WIRED has it right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Was Star Wars about "social inequality"? Would adding "social inequality" improve it?

    9. Re:WIRED has it right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're a fucking idiot.

    10. Re:WIRED has it right by ctid · · Score: 3, Informative

      Wrong! The condition for nominating are EXACTLY the same as the condition for winning the Hugo. Anyone who registers can nominate any work they like (it has to have been published in the relevant year of course).

      So the Sad Puppies didn't prove anything, except that they could get works nominated but could not get those works to win Hugos. The reason for this is the different voting system used in both cases. None of this has changed in any significant way.

      To put it another way, the changing nature of the types of work that win Hugos reflects the changing nature of the types of people who read sci-fi (or to be more specific, the changing nature of the types of people who register to vote in the Hugos).

      --
      Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
    11. Re:WIRED has it right by Karganeth · · Score: 0

      You clearly have no idea what gamergate is. Visit www.reddit.com/r/kotakuinaction if you want a clue of what gamergate is. No one is upset about diversity in games or game developers, that's a lie the media has spun and SJWs continue to propagate. Sorry to hear you bought that lie.

    12. Re:WIRED has it right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A reactionary minority group, upset that their media fandom was getting too diverse

      Both groups are simply the ordinary fanbase, tired of watching their hobby become politcised and corroded by a minority of media backed facists like yourself. Every time you try to smear people like this you just expose your tactics and underlying motives all the more.

      I want Hipstazis out of my hobbies.

    13. Re:WIRED has it right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Take 1967, where "The Moon is a Harsh Mistress" by Robert Heinlein won the Best Novel award.
      His novel features cripples, blacks, Hispanics, whites, old men, children all cooperating in their revolution, as part of a society that features group marriage, homosexuality, and extreme women's rights.
      Yet none of those are the POINT of the book - Heinlein wrote a good story about a revolution on the Moon, and how it might happen. His society that features all those things just happens to be where the story takes place.

    14. Re:WIRED has it right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The ironic thing is that GamerGate is more diverse than the anti-gamer side. Pretty much every anti-gamer is a white male in their late 20s and 30s. There are a couple of exceptions, but by and large, it's white males trying to deal with their Millennial-dictated guilt at being both white and male.

    15. Re:WIRED has it right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Kevin J. Anderson

      Isn't he one of the guys who butchered the Dune sequels?

    16. Re:WIRED has it right by ctid · · Score: 2

      The voters for the Hugos are sci-fi fans. There is no "SJW" group that votes. EVERYONE who registers can vote. There are no restrictions on who can register (another poster says that it costs $40). You don't have to attend Worldcon to register. Presumably, those people who register are the ones who are most interested in scifi. But there's no group of "SJWs" (or anybody else for that matter) who can affect the outcome. Everyone who registers can vote.

      --
      Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
    17. Re:WIRED has it right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some are, in the context of 'culture critics' calling someone Literally Hitler because their game based on Polish myth doesn't have PoC. And hell, some are just dicks who don't want to see diverse people in games, creating games, or just diverse games in general. Though in general, at least on reddit (because twitter is literally worse than literally hitler) I've seen a strong support for creators' rights. I remember a thread talking about a game studio choosing to make non-PoC historical figures PoC; the response was a tepid '...so? Are they being forced somehow?' and a mass of downvotes.

    18. Re:WIRED has it right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      None of this is true at all but if it helps you keep hating women and minorities, good on ya.

    19. Re:WIRED has it right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Was Star Wars about "social inequality"?

      Yes. Did you not see the Empire, a regimented authoritarian and oppressive force being taken down by the Rebel Alliance?

    20. Re:WIRED has it right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      GamerGate claimed to be a backlash against game journalists cooperating with and secretly manipulating the news.

      All the major gaming publications implemented new transparency and conflict of interest requirements on their writers.

      Seems like GamerGate won, doesn't it?

    21. Re: WIRED has it right by dev-in-seattle · · Score: 1

      You are wrong thinking this was a sjw conspiracy or something. Most people like diversity, and new, challenging ideas. Trying to railroad the process and being unhappy that a large majority doesn't like it is childish.

    22. Re:WIRED has it right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not understanding your argument; it reads like a non-sequitor. Everyone who can register can vote; okay, obviously agreeable. How does this support that there are no SJWs voting? If SJWs (or anyone else for that matter) can't affect the outcome, is voting just meaningless?
      I'm not GP, though. I don't believe this is as simple as 'every No Award vote was an SJW;' I've heard much talk about people not voting for SP nominations simply out of principle of not voting for slates. On the other hand, I've seen more than a fair share of attack articles, so I find it hard to believe the claim that SJWs had absolutely zero influence.

    23. Re:WIRED has it right by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 3, Informative

      As I posted above, only 5950 people voted. For contrast 8363 people voted on the last slashdot poll, so we aren't talking about a whole lot of fans, making it an easy balance to swing either way with relatively small numbers of voters. Meanwhile here's Scalzi telling his fellow travellers how to vote, and more details on the exact votes here.

    24. Re:WIRED has it right by orospakr · · Score: 1

      Gamergate isn't at all upset about "diversity". Quite the contrary - there are prominent gamergaters who hail from visible minority groups.

      What they're really upset about is two different things: a) a lack of integrity in the gaming press (insufficient disclosure of conflicts of interest, collusion, etc.) b) a hard-line form of liberal-left politics that has become thoroughly entrenched in the press business that isn't necessarily in alignment with the readers, a situation to the press declaring video games (and the people who play them) are a deleterious force on culture. All sorts of nuanced argumentation can be made here, but to say the least the press used inflammatory language (sexist, racist, harassers, reactionary, and so on) that quickly shaped outside public opinion of the people making the arguments, leaving them unanswered. Sure, like always happens in controversies like this the thoughtless assholes emerged from the woodwork to send nasty, threatening messages to people, but it's happened to *everyone* involved, on both sides.

      Moral of the story: Friends don't let friends read Gawker. They were the epicenter of a lot of this mess.

    25. Re:WIRED has it right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Was Star Wars "trying to paint a picture of how society has evolved in the future"? Was it even set in our future?

      You're probably too pig-ignorant to know and too stupid to find out.

    26. Re: WIRED has it right by LaurenCates · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Okay, but I think you're missing the component here that espousing that point of view fails to account for: that diversity for its own sake is not necessarily beneficial.

      Not that I agree with the Sad or Rabid Puppies here, or that I have any problem with what you're saying on the surface, but that's the problem with ideology. There's been a lot of "taking a good idea to absurd levels" going on in geek arenas, and that's where the charges of "racism" and "misogyny" come from.

      Minorities and women are sure welcome, but ideologues from the outside marched in and started telling everyone on the outside that they don't seem to be welcome enough, by some vague standard of "enough" that can't be satisfied because there are no existing qualifications to satisfy it. So, of course the media jumped on a juicy story that can get people worked up.

      What, really, does "diverse enough" mean, that make fields like science fiction really guilty of not being diverse enough by some standards, and where such guilt is quantified by things other than stereotypes and strawmen?

      --
      Some people don't believe in fairies. I don't believe in The Patriarchy.
    27. Re:WIRED has it right by LaurenCates · · Score: 1

      Where did this "Literally Hitler" thing happen?

      Citations, please.

      --
      Some people don't believe in fairies. I don't believe in The Patriarchy.
    28. Re:WIRED has it right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ohh that is so off its funny. There is an active SJW mob working to change the outcome. Just like if anyone posts something they do not like on twitter they will follow them to their place of work, their opensource software projects or wherever and mob them. Its mob behavior and it should not be acceptable to any adult. I support LGBT marriage and equality and happiness -- I do not support in any way this very harmful mob behavior.

    29. Re:WIRED has it right by saebasystems · · Score: 0

      No used slash. for years. lost login. the domain for my old email is down. so no recovery. made new one with Google. laziness. My old username is vosester. If I came all this way just to troll why wouldn't I just go Anonymous Coward.

    30. Re:WIRED has it right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which group was socially unequal to which other group? And how did their inequality matter for the plot?

    31. Re:WIRED has it right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem is that SJWs can't tolerate people enjoying themselves. If you aren't specifically for their agenda, then you're problematic and need to be ousted.

      Indeed, we can't tolerate the SJWs and must oust them, their agenda must be opposed! They are the problem!

      Did you write a story with rape in it? Then that's problematic. It doesn't matter how well you wrote it, it is always problematic.

      Yes, it pretty much is, rape being a difficult subject to handle well. Would you expect otherwise? It'd be unauthentic if it wasn't.

      Why doesn't your medieval European fantasy story include black people? Because you're racist.

      Why does your medieval European fantasy story reflect nothing in the way of the actual ethnic tensions that occurred during that time period? Why does your medieval European fantasy story caricature black people in a way that fits a minstrel show? Or Jews? Or Poles? Or Vikings? Or Pagans?

      No, it's just bland knights, singing peasants, and nobody thinks twice over it?

      Ok, you're at least writing for elementary schoolers, right?

      Wait, no, you're trying to make some larger point?

      Where are your strong women warriors despite that historically there aren't that many of them? You're a misogynist.

      Why are all the competent and desirable women in your story complacent types who want only to be housewives and mothers, and mockingly spurn the trouble-making liberal women who aren't very attractive and who clearly don't know their place?

      Why do all the women in your story just sit around and swoon after the men?

      And so on and so on.

      And so on and so on...

    32. Re:WIRED has it right by techno-vampire · · Score: 1

      Presumably, those people who register are the ones who are most interested in scifi.

      One would hope so, and most of the time you'd be right. Not always, though. Back in '84 I knew some of the people who put on LACon II, and heard stories about an attempt by scientologists to buy L. Ron Hubbard a Hugo for Battlefield Earth by paying members to get supporting memberships and cast ballots that only listed that one work. It was rather obvious what was being done (Too many of the checks were from the same account, in numeric order.) so all of them were rejected and returned to sender. True? I can't say for sure, but I have no reason to think that the convention's treasurer would have lied about it.

      --
      Good, inexpensive web hosting
    33. Re:WIRED has it right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      GamerGate is a fnord. (If you actually read SF you know what I mean.)
      I've long since realised that anyone who brings up GamerGate is trying to make me too outraged to think about the rest of what they're writing.

    34. Re:WIRED has it right by ctid · · Score: 1

      But anyone could register to vote, including the Puppies and all of their supporters and friends. It doesn't matter if 5000 or 50000 people voted. Anyone could have registered and voted if they had been motivated to do so.

      --
      Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
    35. Re:WIRED has it right by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 1

      Movie adaptation forthcoming: http://www.slashfilm.com/the-m...

    36. Re: WIRED has it right by ctid · · Score: 1

      But surely nobody can force anybody to do anything? Anyone can register. Anyone can vote for anything.

      ideologues from the outside marched in and started telling everyone...

      1. Citation needed;
      2. How does this change anything. Anyone could stump up $40 and register and then vote any way they wanted. How would someone telling them what to do change the result?

      --
      Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
    37. Re: WIRED has it right by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 1

      "Is it Strawman season again?"

      Yes it is. They burn one every Labor Day weekend.

    38. Re:WIRED has it right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which group was socially unequal to which other group?

      Well, obviously the poor Empire was oppressed. It's like you've never seen the movie.

      And how did their inequality matter for the plot?

      Pretty critically, otherwise the movie wouldn't exist unless for some reason George Lucas managed to do panorama scenes.

      That might have worked with the sand people, but American audiences are more sophisticated.

    39. Re:WIRED has it right by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 4, Informative

      I don't think you get what I'm saying - it's a lot easier to rig a small vote than a large one, purely because you don't need to get as many people on board. Look here's a noted and very vocal SJW Charles Stross crowing about the "victory", although himself and Scalzi fail to realise they're just making the point for the Sad Puppies. When he speaks of "fans" here he's talking about his own clique who did exactly as instructed, as demonstrated above.

    40. Re:WIRED has it right by hey! · · Score: 1

      I actually disagree, because "the whole movement" is way too broad.

      There's no question that the instigators of the Rabids were GamerGaters; Vox Day makes not bones about it. But the Sads were a different group that has maybe some intersection in views with the Rabids but are by no means close. They thought they could use the Rabids to their advantage, but really the using was going the other way. Vox Day, whom everyone knew was a chaos-mongering crackpot, used Correia and Torgerson to gain legitimacy. It's a case of lying down with a dog and getting up with fleas.

      I actually feel sorry for the Sads, who strike me as more naive than Machiavellian. In fact unless I'm mistaken it was the Rabid slate that was successful, not the Sad slate.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    41. Re:WIRED has it right by Raenex · · Score: 1

      Pretty much every anti-gamer is a white male in their late 20s and 30s.

      And a significant number of those are trannies. Identity politics, ho!

    42. Re: WIRED has it right by LaurenCates · · Score: 0

      I don't have a citation about ideologues. But, and I want to stress this as much as I can: that is precisely the point.

      We hear in certain circles (think GamerGate and Atheism+, and even the current presidential campaign with Hillary Clinton*) that there's not "enough" diversity, and diversity must be fought for. But when someone says there isn't, they don't provide any information on what that means, how that metric is met, and what will happen when that metric is finally met (i.e., do we roll back the initiatives that are in place to help that diversity quota be met?).

      And yet, we hear that every attack on any woman anywhere is an attack on all women. Because to see one woman attacked is to have all women attacked**.

      Well, who's launching those attacks? People who've "made it" as part of the community? People who have been there for 20 years and have well-earned and well-deserved reputations? Or are they relatively new to the community? Have they produced anything of value that is well-sourced, well-researched or well-developed?

      Seems to me, it's the latter group: people without established reputations running and crying to the press when things don't go their way. Because if those people weren't ideologues, they'd understand that maybe they had to do a little more work before crying "foul" on their failures.

      *though, strangely, we don't hear cries of misogyny when we discuss Carly Fiorina. Funny, that.

      **I can cite my fucking comment history to show how pervasive that attitude is. I was once told by an AC "tits of gtfo" and at least two posters replied how Slashdot isn't a "safe space" for women before I had the chance to stand up for myself. Which, bullshit. I grew up in the ghetto. If the Internet isn't a "safe space" it's because you don't know what real danger is.

      --
      Some people don't believe in fairies. I don't believe in The Patriarchy.
    43. Re: WIRED has it right by LaurenCates · · Score: 1

      And on your second point: If anyone with $40 to burn was completely neutral, it wouldn't change anything.

      However, if you're someone with a chip on your shoulder and friends with deep pockets that are willing to shell out money for a Kickstarter campaign or donate money to a cause they believe in, then it's perfectly reasonable to assess that you can convince someone to spend $40 for the right to vote on a cause they believed in.

      --
      Some people don't believe in fairies. I don't believe in The Patriarchy.
    44. Re:WIRED has it right by St.Creed · · Score: 1

      I think the stormtroopers were pretty heavily discriminated against and socially unequal to other members of society. That led to them becoming a bunch of stupid goons, I think. This led to the famous scene where Han Solo, Chewy, and Luke "rescue" Princess Leia, in a particularly inept manner - and survive it.

      Tadaah!

      I can, upon request, also make arguments for the slave girls (Leia ended up as one, in THe Empire Strikes Back), anyone who is not a Jedi Knight with "midichlorians", or ewoks. Particularly ewoks. Jar-Jar Binks... no. I think I'll pass on that one.

      --
      Therefore, by the (faulty) logic you're using, you're just a cow with a keyboard - osu-neko (2604)
    45. Re:WIRED has it right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's so funny seeing libs dismissing everything they don't like with a simple "it's gamergate", or "it's racist".
      Keep telling yourself that.
      Meanwhile lots of people all over the world are getting sick and tired of illegal immigrants taking over shit, and SJW telling us there's no such thing as illegal immigrants and that they are "refugees" and stop being so racist.
      There's nothing racist about having proper border control and not letting everyone in without any kind of checks.

    46. Re:WIRED has it right by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 0

      First off the word "reactionary" doesn't mean anything the way you're using it, it's purely a scare-word. Everything is a "reaction" to something.

      Second if you want to talk about diversity you're supporting the wrong people. You don't get to side with (mostly rich, white, often male) people who call women "nouse ni**ers", mail people knives, syringes, and dead animals, make credible bomb threats that force multiple evacuations, and overwhelmingly target women and minorities for outright criminal abuse and claim to be supporting "diveristy".

      And when it comes to scifi you're on even worse ground considering the actions of people like RequiresHate.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    47. Re: WIRED has it right by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1

      What's particularly interesting is how often those ideologues are some combination of rich, white, and often even male and how often their victims are none of the three.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    48. Re:WIRED has it right by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 0

      Except that's exactly what did happen, and was predicted months in advance. SJWs dogpiled "no award" rather than allow anyone, especially women and minorities, tainted by "crimethink" to win a hugo.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    49. Re:WIRED has it right by jcr · · Score: 1

      A while back the Hugos stopped being about the best science fiction and started being about social justice.

      Which means that the Hugos are now meaningless, because "social justice" doesn't exist.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    50. Re:WIRED has it right by Gryle · · Score: 2

      This whole movement came out of the same place as GamerGate.

      Untrue. The Sad Puppies movement was started in 2013 by writer Larry Correia who, as far as I know, does not have any direct ties with GamerGate. You can make an transitive link between the two through Theodore Beale, aka Vox Day, however Vox Day didn't become associated with Sad Puppies until 2014. This year Vox Day splintered and started the Rabid Puppies movement, which is centered on getting right-leaning fiction onto the Hugo Ballot.

      --
      Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not entirely sure about the universe - Einstein
    51. Re:WIRED has it right by Gryle · · Score: 1

      The Rabid slate was something of a phyrric victory. They managed to get John C Wright on the ballot (one of their intersections with Sad Puppies), but the Short Story category for which Wright was nominated was one of the "No Award" categories this year. e have seen a few commentators/bloggers/whatevers wondering if burning the whole thing down was perhaps the endgame of Vox Day and the Rabid Faction.*

      An excellent name for a rock band

      --
      Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not entirely sure about the universe - Einstein
    52. Re:WIRED has it right by Robotech_Master · · Score: 1

      That and all the tweets that have both the #gamergate and Hugo-related hashtags together, on the same tweet. Lots and lots of them, on any given day

      --
      Editor Emeritus and Senior Writer, TeleRead.org
    53. Re:WIRED has it right by Robotech_Master · · Score: 1

      The "No Award" option has been present for years, and has been used multiple times before when the majority of the voters felt that nothing in a given category merited an award this year. That's not a "slate," that's a valid voting choice people can make if they think all the nominations either suck or simply should not have been nominated. There's nothing new about it being used again now, save that so many of them happened at once. Fans sent a strong message that they will not tolerate some minority diddling with the nominations.

      Even if it was a "slate," if you're going to say that the original "slate" was a valid means of nominating, the idea of an opposing "slate" being used to cancel it out should be equally valid.

      --
      Editor Emeritus and Senior Writer, TeleRead.org
    54. Re:WIRED has it right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > A reactionary minority group, upset that their media fandom was getting too diverse

      Oh here we go again. The usual cries of racism and misogyny. Do you guys EVER have any other arguments than these tired old ad hominems?

      You pretend like it was a totally legit "fan vote" yet the comments here reek of brigading, everyone chanting the same nonsense and the same old name-calling that's been defining the radical left lately.

    55. Re:WIRED has it right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > So there is no question of "SJWs" getting butthurt.

      Funny. Reading the initial comments here it's pretty obvious there's tons of angry SJWs flooding the comments. No normal person runs around rambling about MRAs, GamerGate, attacking obscure but notorious anti-SJWs and so on. It's like an SJW buzzword bonanza in here.

    56. Re:WIRED has it right by kqs · · Score: 2

      A while back the Hugos stopped being about the best science fiction and started being about social justice.

      1970: Best Novel: The Left Hand of Darkness by Ursula K. Le Guin

      The Hugos have always been about the best science fiction. Much of the best science fiction, like the 1970 best novel, is also about "social justice". But it sounds like you never read the old Hugo winners, so how would you know that?

    57. Re: WIRED has it right by kqs · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Minorities and women are sure welcome, but ideologues from the outside marched in and started telling everyone on the outside that they don't seem to be welcome enough

      Citation needed.

      Fans are part of society. They have always been rather more welcoming of minorities and women than society (if tri-gendered species can be competent, then stating that women cannot be competent is odd), but as society has become more accepting of others so has fandom.

      Now some puppies (who are part of fandom, but not the whole) have started saying that fandom is TOO accepting. Which confused many people. And the puppies nominated works based on the political views of the authors rather than on the qualities of the work. So when you don't select works based on quality, those works don't tend to win awards given to the best-quality works. Seems reasonable.

      Note that nobody came from outside. And the people who tried to "change" fandom were the puppies, not the rest of fandom. Turns out that a majority of fans are happy with diversity; if you're not, well, that's fine, but please stop blaming "ideologues from the outside".

    58. Re: WIRED has it right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Star Wars is a space opera (and a cliched one at that), not science fiction.

      Also, if you don't see the imbalance of power the movie depends on... I'd imagine you're really into brown.

    59. Re: WIRED has it right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OK, so 1977 is the year you've picked? Let's take a look at what won Hugos in 1977.

      Where Late The Sweet Birds Sang, by Kate Wilhelm: Themes include global climate change, cloning, the nature of individuality within society, sustainability and sexuality.

      Bicentennial Man, by Issac Asimov: Themes include civil rights and the nature of humanity.

      By Any Other Name, by Spider Robinson: Themes include pollution, overpopulation and global sustainability.

    60. Re:WIRED has it right by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

      And I remember reading Time Enough For Love as a kid, an epic series of stories of Lazarus Long. Towards the beginning, two people are guarding his room, both clad in almost space suit-like battle armor, the short guard asks the tall guard if they want to have sex. The tall guard replies, "Are you male or female?" The small one replies, "Does it matter?"

      "No."

      Turns out the short one was male and the tall female.

      He was very libertarian and ahead of his time.

      --
      (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
    61. Re:WIRED has it right by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

      Kinda sad he fought the SJW's grandparents with the release of Starship Troopers, a young adult book.

      "But it glorifies the military!"

      "You're damned right it does!"

      --
      (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
    62. Re:WIRED has it right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A while back the Hugos stopped being about the best science fiction and started being about social justice.

      1970: Best Novel: The Left Hand of Darkness by Ursula K. Le Guin

      The Hugos have always been about the best science fiction. Much of the best science fiction, like the 1970 best novel, is also about "social justice". But it sounds like you never read the old Hugo winners, so how would you know that?

      The important difference here being that Ursula K. Le Guin can actually write and The Left Hand of Darkness was actually science fiction

      http://www.apex-magazine.com/if-you-were-a-dinosaur-my-love/

      This won a Nebula award and was a Hugo nominee, can anyone honestly justify that with a straight face?

      I'm not saying it's bad, but if that's science fiction I'm a helicopter gunship

      Why it won a Nebula, and got nominated for a Hugo explains a lot about why all this has happened

    63. Re:WIRED has it right by Mashiki · · Score: 0

      Wired doesn't have it right. In fact, it has a bias so deep and disgusting that anyone who reads it should hang their head in shame. After all, what type of legitimate publication writes a sentence like this:

      GamerGate makes a political movement out of threatening with rape any woman who has the temerity to offer an opinion about a videogame.

      You know what that's called? Yellow journalism. And you fell for it hook, line and sinker.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    64. Re:WIRED has it right by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      Tauriq Moosa in his screed on polygon did for one. There were quite a few of the "witcher 3 is racist because no PoC" bullshit.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    65. Re: WIRED has it right by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Note that nobody came from outside.

      They were outside the usual bunch of Hugo voters and joined as a Bloc to indulge in petty student political branch stacking bullshit. It's pathetic, annoying, and their childish attention getting rants are deliberately disturbing. Hence the fuss.

    66. Re:WIRED has it right by dbIII · · Score: 1

      All of the above factional bullshit just shows it's pointless student politics that escaped into the real world. All the possibilities in SF and fantasy and they waste time on a ridiculous sideshow.
      A Vox on all those losers.

    67. Re:WIRED has it right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, just another random blog that supports your opinion. Good for you.

    68. Re:WIRED has it right by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      The corruption is not from who can vote but who nominates and how organised they are.

      Only people who read a lot will nominate. You need to have read a lot of works to have a good indication. The argument is that there's an informal clique that nominates the same work. This gets strawmanned as some sort of conspiracy.

      I have no idea if such a clique exists. What I can say is that the Dramatic presentation (short form) seems to get a lot of nominations for Doctor Who. It's unlikely that these are coming from different people. More likely that the same set of fans are picking the same episodes. Do you think there may be a Doctor Who clique?

      Sad puppies was a conspiracy. Intentionally so. Part of the aim was to demonstrate how broken the nominations system is. I'd say it did that job well.

      As for the voting - 2015 statistics compared with 2014 stats. Take for example best Novella. Voting numbers up by 2638. All entries except "no award" seem to have comparable number of votes to the previous year. No award gets more than half the votes. Were the entries *really* that bad?

      There's nothing wrong with campaigning, but the suggestion that there wasn't a concerted campaign to prevent people who have the wrong politics from winning an award stretches credibility.

    69. Re:WIRED has it right by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      What they're really upset about is two different things: a) a lack of integrity in the gaming press (insufficient disclosure of conflicts of interest,

      Ah yes that's why there were all over Quinn like a pig over shit dispite the fact she wasn't the journalist with the supposed conflict of interest and the conflict of interest was completely made up by her ex. Yep aaaaaaaallllll about ethics yessir.

      And were all over Sarkeesian because...? Actually I've no idea. I've yet to see an explanation for that one what holds up to even the slightest bit of scrutiny.

      But you're right, it's much more likely that it's all about ethics and there is in fact a global press conspiracy to paint it in a bad.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    70. Re:WIRED has it right by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      So the Sad Puppies didn't prove anything, except that they could get works nominated but could not get those works to win Hugos.

      You mean teh Rabid Puppies. The sad's are a much more legitimate group who in some cases have actually read the stories and vote based on merit as they judge it. The Rabid Puppies (led by Vox Day) almost completely pushed the sads out of the nominations entirely.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    71. Re:WIRED has it right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "reactionary minority" - no, it's not "reactionary". Most of its supporters are social liberals. And no it's not a minority. Most gamers support it.

    72. Re:WIRED has it right by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      The "not your shield" campaign was exposed as being mostly sock puppet accounts. Your account is quite young and has only three posts to its name, the first of which was this one. I can't get the link to your G+ account to work, but searching there I can see two sock puppet accounts with that name and stolen profile photos (Tineye reverse image search).

      So who are you really?

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    73. Re:WIRED has it right by ctid · · Score: 1

      No, you do not get what I am saying. The vote was not "rigged". How could it be "rigged", as it's a distributed ballot? Your argument seems to be, "the number of voters was so small that the vote could have easily been rigged, therefore the vote was rigged". That's not an argument.

      --
      Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
    74. Re:WIRED has it right by ctid · · Score: 1

      So when someone votes for something you don't like, they have "dogpiled" the vote? Is that what you are saying?

      --
      Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
    75. Re: WIRED has it right by ctid · · Score: 1

      What is this drivel? What has Kickstarter got to do with this?

      --
      Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
    76. Re:WIRED has it right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      SCI-FI may adress social inequality - and it may not. A sci-fi story can contain all sorts of politics - but it doesn't have to.

      Sci-fi has to have some good science fiction though. Otherwise, it has no business in the Hugo awards. Not even if it contains lots of blacks or whatever. That might make it great litterature for some other award - but the Hugos are about sci-fi and nothing else.

    77. Re:WIRED has it right by Dagmar+d'Surreal · · Score: 0

      This is a lie and nothing but a lie.

      If you do even the least bit of research, you will find pages like this one...

      The Puppy Free Hugo Award Voter's Guide

      This is where one of the "your genitalia is more important than your writing skills" people was instructing their camp to vote No Award because otherwise the Puppies people might cause an author they voted for based on the quality of the work to win an award.

    78. Re:WIRED has it right by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 1

      Of course, any group willing and able to rig such as vote certainly has little winged monkeys floating around here as well, so I'm not deluding myself that I'm arguing with you. You're just an education for the rest of the class.

    79. Re:WIRED has it right by Dagmar+d'Surreal · · Score: 0

      Please read http://deirdre.net/the-puppy-f... and then say that again.

      Short version: The SJW camp was campaigning for people to vote "no award" just to thwart the people who refused to vote for authors simply because they were bisexual or whatever. The Puppies' camps were talking the entire time about voting for works based on the quality of the work, alone. They did not feel someone should win an award for fiction writing simply because they were of a non-traditional gender or the other reasons the SJWs were nominating stories that were not quality related.

    80. Re:WIRED has it right by DarenN · · Score: 1

      I would tend to disagree with you there about Heinlein. If you look at his Hugo wins (I'm leaving out Double Star because I haven't read it) he won for Starship Troopers, the Moon is a Harsh Mistress and Stranger in a Strange Land. All of these were social commentaries

      The Moon is a Harsh Mistress had a society that had evolved under various pressures and then examined it from the inside (from the protagonist's perspective) and from the outside (the reaction of the Earth to the tour - like when he got arrested for bigamy).
      In Starship Troopers, the Federation wasn't at war until after Rico joined up and the evolution of the start of the conflict was there to highlight the way the society worked.
      And if I have to explain why Stranger in a Strange Land is about society...

      Heinlein's brilliance was his ability to imagine the social pressures of somewhere like living on the moon in a prison complex, and extrapolate a believable society out of it. He challenged the norms of the time (and, frankly, the current norms). But all that said, he was a brilliant storyteller on top of all of that which is why he was nominated and won so many times.

      --
      Rational thought is the only true freedom
    81. Re:WIRED has it right by DarenN · · Score: 1

      I'm feeling really sorry for Jim Butcher right now - the Dresden Files series is excellent and he deserved a nomination.

      The "No Award" vote for some of those categories cannot be viewed as anything EXCEPT political, which is a shame. The fact that the Sad Puppies campaign nominated authors who felt that they had to withdraw because they were on the slate is a tragedy. That, more than anything else, indicates that the Sad Puppies nominated stories by authors that clearly didn't agree with them - to me this indicates that they were doing it on the strength of the story telling.

      That these authors felt that had to decline a nomination, followed by the "No Award" votes shows how poisonous and factionalized the debate got (and that's no thanks to Vox Day, who deserves to have someone steal his internet connection if you ask me). It made a farce out of this years Hugos. My view is that Scalzi, in particular, was stupid - he should have let things go their natural course without trying to organize a "counter campaign". The counter campaign legitimized the campaign and further factionalized any conversation, which played into the hands of Vox Day.

      --
      Rational thought is the only true freedom
    82. Re:WIRED has it right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That doesn't make sense. If you play Xanatos gambit, you don't really get to criticise the option other side chooses because it's bad either way.

    83. Re:WIRED has it right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're confusing SJW with people who just wanted the Hugos to have integrity. The idea that nobody, other than a tiny rump of left wingers, were offended by the gaming of the nomination process by the * Puppies grounds is absurd. It may be the myth both groups want to perpetuate, but it's bullshit.

    84. Re:WIRED has it right by squiggleslash · · Score: 1

      Well, at least the first sentence of your comment describes the rest of it.

      Stop framing this as "SJWs" vs Puppies. It's not. It's Fans vs Puppies. How, exactly, can you believe for a second that the majority of fans wouldn't be upset by two politicized groups (both leaning the same way, to different extremes, indeed) mostly successfully gaming the nomination process so that only works they approve of would be available to vote upon?

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    85. Re:WIRED has it right by CauseBy · · Score: 1

      ^^ look! there's one now!

    86. Re:WIRED has it right by CauseBy · · Score: 1

      You didn't make a very strong retort: "here's a book that deals with all those things, but I enjoyed it, so those things don't count".

    87. Re:WIRED has it right by CauseBy · · Score: 1

      It "doesn't exist" like corporations and shadows don't exist.

      But it does exist in the way that corporations and shadows exist.

    88. Re: WIRED has it right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... rich, white, and often even male ...

      You say that like it's a bogeyman. How scary! A man!

    89. Re:WIRED has it right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He asked for an example of someone calling a lack of representation of PoC "literally Hitler". The image you post doesn't mention Hitler, Nazism, or even Fascism. There are more Puppygaters in this thread comparing the Hugo results to fascism than there are people claiming video games that lack diversity are literally, figuratively, or vaguely Hitler related in the entire known universe.

      You are a bad person and you should feel bad.

    90. Re:WIRED has it right by ameoba · · Score: 1

      This was a free vote of everyone who wanted to register to vote. You don't have to go to WorldCon to vote. Anybody who wants to register gets a vote.

      This is a pants on head ridiculous idea in the age of the internet. Ignoring botnets & scripts stuffing the ballot, you can quickly rally up large numbers of people that don't even read science fiction to vote as a bloc in order to push some agenda. It's not even a popularity contest at this point but a measure of how much social media organization a group has.

      --
      my sig's at the bottom of the page.
    91. Re:WIRED has it right by werepants · · Score: 1

      The only 'clique' that exists is people who enjoy Stross' work - fans.

      This was basically a big whine session from Baen authors and fans who complain that they never get Hugo awards, and rather than accepting the truth (Baen publishes primarily mediocre, escapist, wish-fulfillment sci-fi that is undeserving of any kind of literary award) they invented a conspiracy out of wholecloth to make themselves feel better and try to force their way into recognition.

      The 'club' that Stross refers to is nothing more than the existing sci-fi community - you know the one, it actually recognizes talent and innovation.

    92. Re:WIRED has it right by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 1

      Oh wow are you seriously trying to hold up Stross as a competent writer? I read a short story online apparently written by him, "A Colder War", it was and remains one of my favourite mythos works. On the strength of that I went out and bought a few of his books. They were terrible, barely even "struggling writer" territory. He tried to write a geeky Bond but it really didn't come off very well at all. I've no idea how those books could have come from the same pen as that short story. I felt bad for him after reading them.

      Anyway back on topic, you're fooling noboby. Numbers voting increased, doubled in fact ~3000 from last year and about ~2500 votes acted exactly as Scalzi directed. Maybe you can believe in coincidences that large but for me it strains credulity rather beyond the pale.

    93. Re:WIRED has it right by saebasystems · · Score: 1

      If you bothered to read on you will see why my account is new, my old username is vosester search all you like. You people can not help yourself, an option and facts you don't like, must be a sock puppet, even when I post with my real name and not a pseudonym. Fucking pathetic, the length you SJW will go, to warp reality. Your the creationists of the left.

    94. Re:WIRED has it right by asdfman2000 · · Score: 1

      The "not your shield" campaign was exposed as being mostly sock puppet accounts.

      Source?

      Good job erasing the opinions of women and minorities just because they don't agree with your politics. That's downright bigoted of you.

    95. Re:WIRED has it right by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1

      What a lovely straw man you've created. The SJW vote was clearly along a slate and clearly ideologically based. It was predicted well in advance and hostile to anyone, especially women and minorities, that dared commit crimethink.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    96. Re:WIRED has it right by MHolmesIV · · Score: 1

      In this case the relatively small number was 2500-3500. Due to the australian rules, the small number had to be _a majority of the voters_

    97. Re:WIRED has it right by sithkhan · · Score: 1

      Yeah - Just take a look at the three past suggested slates. ALL. WHITE. CIS-SCUM. HETERONORMATIVE. MALES. Oh wait, what's that? Multiple female authors on the suggestions? Multi-racial authors? Diverse political thoughts amongst the candidates? Yeah - I can totes see them being anti-diversity. I was in the Sad Puppies camp. Now I can't wait to see what new Byzantine rules and regulations the Old Guard comes up with to protect The Precious. I almost feel bad for the 2016 Hugos. Almost.

      --

      is it that bad seein a hot chick again? if i see a hot chick walkin down the hall i dont say "repost"
    98. Re:WIRED has it right by werepants · · Score: 1

      First of all, Stross' story Palimpsest, for instance, is one of the most innovative and well-executed sci-fi stories in recent years. A Hugo award winner, incidentally. Some of his stuff is better than others, but no question he is an excellent author. Second, sounds like you're talking about the Laundry Files, which I'll admit isn't usually award-winning material but is a hell of a good time if you can keep up with the inside nerd jokes. Which maybe you can't.

      Second of all, trying to read some big conspiracy into all of this is just foolish. What's easier to believe, that a handful of second-rate authors just don't tend to write award-grade material, or that there's a secret group that is coordinating behind the scenes to keep out nonbelievers? Occam's Razor, etc.

    99. Re:WIRED has it right by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 1

      A Hugo award winner, incidentally.

      Hahahaha! Ahhh, jeez.

    100. Re:WIRED has it right by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Oh wow are you seriously trying to hold up Stross as a competent writer?

      I could say the same thing about Tom Clancy, and the answer is the same, they make a living selling their writing in volume so they are clearly getting the job done and competent even if we don't think so.
      Personally I like his stuff, and if you don't like his deliberately very derivative laundry series the far more original short stories like "Palimpsest" have the same qualities as "A Colder War".

    101. Re:WIRED has it right by Burstaholic · · Score: 1

      A significant part of the justification here was that many of the conservative authors involved have larger (even much larger) sales numbers than many Hugo stars (Scalzi being the most cited), and therefore they felt there was a conspiracy against them, such that the awards did not truly reflect the "best" authors (judged in part by sales), but rather the most ideologically progressive authors.

      Part of this was an attempt to use their larger fan base to change that equation, which clearly failed. You may say, "Scalzi's minions followed his lead and defeated us!" but that only makes sense if Scalzi has more loyal fans than the other authors combined. By sales, he doesn't. It's not even close.

      This means that many works by popular authors were passed over by their own fans in favor of 'No Award.' The only rationale I see for this is resentment over the gaming of the nomination process. I don't think the Puppies anticipated the size of the backlash from that perception of poor sportsmanship, and it cost them a lot.

      At the very least, the cry of "It's time we conservatives got some recognition!" was nowhere near as compelling as "Don't let these guys break the system for everyone!"

    102. Re:WIRED has it right by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 1

      Scalzi hasn't sold two and a half thousand books? Two and a half thousand, this is a very interesting number to me. I mean, it's the same number of people who signed the Sarkeesian letter. This bears further investigation.

    103. Re:WIRED has it right by Burstaholic · · Score: 1

      Since Correia and Torgensen between them have sold many more, that isn't a useful question. Almost none of their much larger number of fans heeded their call to arms, and I think that's very interesting.

      Personally, I love the 'Monster Hunter' series, but I thought the Puppy nomination block was a dick move, and would have voted against them if I'd been one of the voters. I think a lot of people had a similar opinion, and the votes show that.

      Sidenote: if the nomination system weren't so easily gamed, the story would be entirely different. It's completely reasonable to lead a campaign for recognition of a group you feel is underappreciated - it's the poor sportsmanship aspect here that bothers me.

  6. Story summary ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Makes no sense what's so ever.

    1. Re:Story summary ... by fyngyrz · · Score: 2

      Summary aside, if there really is an objection to the range of science fiction stories that the Hugos are currently addressing these days, then I can see two reasonable solutions, either or both of which may already exist:

      1) hugos specific to the category being awarded: e.g. "hard science fiction"

      2) another award entirely -- which means publicity, fan gathering, etc. Lots of work.

      It seems like a tempest in a teakettle to me.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    2. Re:Story summary ... by Affenkopf · · Score: 1

      You know that a science fiction book won best novel this year? I don't think hard science fiction needs a separate award.

    3. Re:Story summary ... by DarenN · · Score: 1

      Or, you know, vote to nominate the story you like, which is how all this started.

      --
      Rational thought is the only true freedom
    4. Re:Story summary ... by fyngyrz · · Score: 1

      Well, some of us prefer hard science fiction to the squishy stuff.

      I honestly rue the day the all-inclusive crowd decided to re-designate SF as "speculative fiction." All fiction is speculative as it is all an exercise in what-if. The difference between hard science fiction and the rest, as I see it, is that based upon the objective reality currently understood at the time of authorship, the hard stuff is actually within the realm of known possibilities, because, you know, science. I find that to be a significant enough distinction to distinguish these works from those containing gods, elves, magicians, macro teleportation, ESP and so on.

      That is in no way to imply that the squishy stuff cannot be fine work -- it most certainly can, and often is. But the bottom line for me is that it is different on a fundamental level, providing a different kind of experience from, say, "The Martian" or the technically flawed, but scientifically sound, "Red Mars."

      Doesn't matter to me personally who, or what, gets a Hugo, or why. I'm sitting about ten feet from three of them, and the shine has worn off after decades of observing the process. All I'm saying is that if hard science fiction is of such consequence to these people that they feel awards should be proffered in that specific category, there are doors that are open, or could be opened. Assuming the story is at all accurate, which, from the other comments here... it very well may not be.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    5. Re:Story summary ... by fyngyrz · · Score: 1

      I think you may have missed my point. Perhaps another read, with special attention paid to my closing assessment of "tempest in a teakettle." :)

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    6. Re:Story summary ... by DarenN · · Score: 1

      Oh I completely agree :)

      --
      Rational thought is the only true freedom
  7. How on earth did this summary get published? by ctid · · Score: 4, Informative

    This is the most ignorant story summary I can ever remember reading on Slashdot.

    I don't believe that it is worth engaging with it, but readers should understand that there has always been a "No award" option. Furthermore, anyone can join up and vote in the Hugos. There is no "cabal" of "SJWs" who are taking over anything. Anybody can sign up to vote in the Hugos. If the majority voted "No award" in some categories, that reflects a democratic view of those people who bothered to register to vote.

    --
    Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
    1. Re:How on earth did this summary get published? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is the most ignorant story summary I can ever remember reading on Slashdot.

      "posted by timothy" .. 'nuff said.
      Just count yourself lucky it wasn't Bennet.

    2. Re:How on earth did this summary get published? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > There is no "cabal" of "SJWs" who are taking over anything.

      It's a "persecution fantasy." It is just too emotionally painful for them to accept that they are a minority. The cognitive dissonance is overwhelming, so rather than confront the cold hard truth they fantasize about being the target of persecution.

      In the process they call attention to themselves and to their psychological infirmity which makes many people, who would never have noticed them otherwise, react with disgust and shunning... at which point it becomes a self-fulfilling persecution fantasy.

    3. Re:How on earth did this summary get published? by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1

      More No Awards were handed out in a single hugo, as predicted months in advance, than in almost the entire history of the award. And every category that was No Awarded was a direct shot at an author tainted by "crimethink" even if they were a woman.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    4. Re:How on earth did this summary get published? by tverbeek · · Score: 1, Interesting

      That "summary" is just a whiny fantrum. Pathetic.

      --
      http://alternatives.rzero.com/
    5. Re:How on earth did this summary get published? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the majority voted "No award" in some categories, that reflects a democratic view of those people who bothered to register to vote.

      And what kind of people most bothered to register to vote? The traditional sci-fi community / people especially interested in the subject? Or activist SJWs and organized groups paying the fees on their behalf for other people to register and cast the desired vote?

    6. Re:How on earth did this summary get published? by ctid · · Score: 1

      Voters voted for the works that had merit. In some categories, voters did not think any works had any merit, so the voters voted, "No award". You cannot presume to know why people voted the way that they did.

      --
      Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
    7. Re:How on earth did this summary get published? by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      "even is they were a woman"

      And what is that supposed to mean? You know, women in very many ways are extremely similar to men. They are just as capable of holding bizarre, irrational and damaging views as any man. They are also just as capable at churning out poor literature as men.

      It's surprising that you think there may be differences in this regard.

      Also, your claims of "crimethink" are reqlly quite silly. As punishment/pennance, you ought to read any of the nominations by John C Wright. After your brain dissolves and dribbles out of your ears, you will achieve enlightenment and understand why he was voted below "No Award".

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    8. Re:How on earth did this summary get published? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Idiots who complain about made up SJWs are more annoying than SJWs.

    9. Re:How on earth did this summary get published? by lactose99 · · Score: 1

      Or the Puppies' nominees simply weren't worthy of the award. The fans speak

      --
      Fully licensed blockchain psychiatrist
    10. Re:How on earth did this summary get published? by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1

      Except the entire thing was predicted well in advance, everyone on the SJW slate was given an "alternate" award, and the SJWs were quite willing to discuss just how much they personally hated the puppies and everyone connected to them or even liked by them.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    11. Re:How on earth did this summary get published? by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1

      Riiiight, and that's why Jim Butcher and Kevin J. Anderson were No Awarded as well.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    12. Re:How on earth did this summary get published? by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1

      Suuuure they weren't. It totally has nothing to do with the absolutely rabid politicization of the awards, or the fact that they were so rigged that the SJWs even had special trophies to give to the people they had originally selected to win.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    13. Re:How on earth did this summary get published? by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      Riiiight, and that's why Jim Butcher and Kevin J. Anderson were No Awarded as well.

      It's reasonably clear from the short stories that the new influx of voters are much harsher judges overall. After all the non-puppy short story which ultimately won lost the popular vote to "no award". I don't recall that ever happening before, and it's certainly a rarity if it does.

      Ergo, they were judging ALL works much more harshly.

      As for the Jim Butcher book. Let's pick a few select reviews. The following guy is clearly a fan as hi commentry on the series so far is: "For those of you who have read and enjoyed the previous books (if you havenâ(TM)tâ¦seriously what are you doing?)". His conclusion is that it's essentially fun-more-of-the-same for those already versed in the series but a bad stating point for someone new to the series.

      http://www.eoghann.com/book-re...

      Or this Butcher fan who also concurs that as a standalone work it is weak:

      http://file770.com/?p=24502&cp...

      I'm personally of the opinion that min-series books which aren't standalone are not award worthy for the novel award. I mean if you can't pick up and read an award winner, then what's the point? Furthermore people who seem to like Butcher don't think it's his strongest work.

      So given (a) it wasn't really award-worthy work and (b) the new voters are judging everything more harshly there is no conspiracy here.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
  8. Flamebait on the front page? by Dr.+Jest · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I have to wonder why Slashdot ran that submission from an anonymous coward (sorry, reader). The Wired article Timothy mentioned in passing looks like it has a stronger grasp on reality but that submission is what people will actually read. Do we need to start moderating the editors or as the GG/Puppies contingent gotten so strong here that it's a lost cause?

    1. Re:Flamebait on the front page? by tylikcat · · Score: 1

      Maybe I'm over influenced by a lack of sleep, but I've been getting pretty tempted to hang up my hat.

    2. Re:Flamebait on the front page? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've been coming to Slashdot for 15+ years.

      The angry, conservative neckbeard crowd here is LOUD, and they've been in existence much longer than the individual GG or Puppies movements that sprung from them. So it's all par for the course, and a bad choice by Timothy, really.

    3. Re:Flamebait on the front page? by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1

      Sorry were you offended it wasn't a Feminist Friday article sourced from Jezebel about how another $70,000 needs to be spent to tell men they're sitting wrong on the subway?

      If it's flamebait you want you're looking at the wrong side of this.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    4. Re:Flamebait on the front page? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't like the story or its political stance? No problem. Dr Jest suggests censorship to prevent anything as horrific as this ever happening again. What a fucking surprise.

    5. Re:Flamebait on the front page? by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      Not that slashdot has a stellar history of quality summaries, I think things may improve when Dice gets round to selling the "property". Nonetheless the thread would have degenerated into the etertaining shitfest that it currently is whatever the summary, so it's unlikely to have made a significant difference in this case.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    6. Re:Flamebait on the front page? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Do we need to start moderating the editors(...)?

      Censorship through the back door is practically a SJW tradition these days.

    7. Re:Flamebait on the front page? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The story on Wired is a bunch of crap, too.

  9. Re:Wired Article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who are you quoting?

  10. Worst. Summary. Ever. And a lie to boot. by squiggleslash · · Score: 3, Informative

    The Hugos are a fan vote, not a judge vote. The fans voted: they rejected an attempt by two groups, one a band of right wing extremists, the other a kinda "We feel in our gut that previous winners are left wing but can't come up with a coherent reason why", to hijack the awards by gaming the nomination process.

    The two groups, Vox Day's "Rabid Puppies" (the right wing extremists), and the "Sad Puppies", attempted (mostly successfully) to force fans to choose between only works they believed were ideologically sound by focusing nomination votes on two slates. With fans only able to vote for the highest supported works, there was a strong chance each ballot would only have Puppy-supported works on it. This happened in a number of ballots.

    The fans said no. The choices we're stuck with suck. We'd rather not vote for anyone.

    The headline is an outright unmitigated lie. The fans voted. They rejected the slates they were offered. The Hugos accepted the fan's choices here.

    (And how ironic that supporters use the SJW canard when both Puppy campaigns were blatant attempts to prevent anyone voting for anything that might be ideologically unsound to the grounds involved.)

    --
    You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    1. Re:Worst. Summary. Ever. And a lie to boot. by tylikcat · · Score: 1

      I've been hearing a lot about "People don't like stories about self reliance any more! And everyone is preachy! We just want good stories!" ...as if these statements are entirely in harmony with each other.

    2. Re:Worst. Summary. Ever. And a lie to boot. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      +99 Informative.

      Thanks for the details, I didn't know exactly how Hugo voting worked (though it was pretty clear from the first few comments that "No Award" was something the masses voted for), and my faith in humanity has been somewhat restored by the fact that two rabid extremist groups failed, not even by canceling each other out in a shower of sparks and tears, but simply by being outnumbered by normals that were fed up with both of them and their bullshit.

    3. Re:Worst. Summary. Ever. And a lie to boot. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      You should probably read the Wired reporting on the story rather than perpetuating ignorance. They interviewed Annie Bellet. She was not pressured by anyone. She personally rejected Sad Puppies' using her as a politically pawn. She personally thinks their approach is antithetical to inherent inclusiveness of nerd culture. But yeah, keep regurgitating the WML-fabricated narrative. I'm sure it goes over well on blogs like Breitbart.

    4. Re:Worst. Summary. Ever. And a lie to boot. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you had read the Wired article, you would have known that \Bellet freely withdrew her story.

    5. Re:Worst. Summary. Ever. And a lie to boot. by argStyopa · · Score: 2

      I'm genuinely curious: how many awards this year went to white men (or if we throw out this year, let's take the last 5 instead)? Was it approximately proportional to their demographic representation in the field? Too high? Too low?

      Both sides are so busy screaming at each other, I've never seen actual data. To determine whether I feel that the 'puppies' groups were reactionary wreckers (the popular narrative) or whether they identified a actual "politically correct" slant toward a nomination process that was preferentially putting forth female and "ethnic" candidates.

      --
      -Styopa
    6. Re:Worst. Summary. Ever. And a lie to boot. by retchdog · · Score: 0

      Why would one expect a vote (ostensibly about writing merit, whatever that may be), to track on race in the first place? It's such a bizarre hypothesis to put forward, that I have to wonder. The Nobel prizes regularly go to winners with IQs significantly above the voters', and the medals in the Special Olympics are just the opposite. Why would one expect demographics of readers of science fiction to proportionally represent the demographics of the writers of science fiction, whether there are more whites than blacks or more blacks than whites or more filipinos or gays or transgendered people, or whatever else?

      --
      "They were pure niggers." – Noam Chomsky
    7. Re:Worst. Summary. Ever. And a lie to boot. by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1

      Toni Weisskopf was No Awarded for being contaminated by crimethink. Meanwhile SJWs had no problem for years with supporting RequiresHate, a vicious troll who overwhelmingly targeted women and non-whites for her self-aggrandizing hate campaigns.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    8. Re:Worst. Summary. Ever. And a lie to boot. by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 0

      It's not a lie in the slightest. SJWs stacked their vote to "No Award" anyone, especially women (like Toni Weisskopf) and minorities, tainted by crimethink and in the process handed out more No Awards in one year than in almost the entire history of the Hugos. These are the same people who had no issue supporting vicious trolls like RequiresHate for a long time.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    9. Re:Worst. Summary. Ever. And a lie to boot. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      If I recall correctly, two of 16 categories last year went to white straight men. Several of the 14 winners were focused on sexual identity or preference, lacked a significant amount of sci-fi in them, and were popularly considered twilight levels of terrible. Consider one of this year's winners: a story about coming out of the closet in a world where water is magically dumped on anyone's head after they lie.

      Apparently this was going on for years and a groundswell movement happened during the last year culminating in the current farce.

      So, if a group receives 12.5% of the support you expect them to have compared to the overall population, is that sexist and racist or is it justice?

    10. Re:Worst. Summary. Ever. And a lie to boot. by squiggleslash · · Score: 0

      Yes, it's a lie, and your attempt to claim otherwise neither matches reality or matches the summary's headline, and barely addresses the major lies in the summary.

      The headline claims that fans votes were ignored. That's a lie. The fans rejected the Puppy's works. The entities running the Hugos did not override the vote, ignore them, or in any other way replace a legitimate vote with a "No award".

      The summary claims that the controversy over the selection had to do with "a group of (fans)" wanting to promote "hard science fiction". That's a lie. It had to do with two groups, one of which wanted to promote right wing works, the other of which wanted to prevent works it perceived as left wing from being voted upon, both of which using slates of "ideologically sound" works to squeeze out other works from the final ballots.

      Even when the summary tells the truth, its worded in such a way to imply conspiracy where there is none: The summary the bizarre statement "The question was left: would the final voters of the Hugo awards accept these nominees, or just take their ball home and refuse to give out anyway awards at all?" as if to imply that there was something wrong with voters on the Hugos, which is open to everyone who pays the small membership fee involved, being offended by a blatant attempt to rig the Hugos.

      I don't recall, in the history of Slashdot, seeing such a blatant attempt by political ideologues to lie about an event they were a part of.

      And to the Puppies here claiming that somehow they "won": no, you didn't. You didn't "prove anything" beyond the fact that those who care about the Hugos hate it - absolutely hate it - when you try to rig their awards. If the so-called "SJWs" tried to pull the same stunt, the same thing would have happened. You know it.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    11. Re:Worst. Summary. Ever. And a lie to boot. by Xtifr · · Score: 2

      If one of the works you think was "focused on sexual identity or preference" was last year's winner, Ancillary Justice, that's a ridiculous claim (though I've heard plenty of people claim it), and I can only assume you didn't read the work. It was a classic space opera, with a protagonist who was a biological war machine, suddenly stuffed into a human body, who frequently got confused about all sorts of human things, including gender. That's it. That's pretty much all the "sexual identity" issues it raised. An artificial creature trying to pretend to be human, which sometimes gets confused about when to use "he" vs "she" when speaking to humans. It was close to 0% of the plot.

      And yes, this was enough for the hair-trigger politically correct idiots of the right to start tearing out their hair and claiming that it was trying to destroy science fiction and make us all girly-men.

    12. Re:Worst. Summary. Ever. And a lie to boot. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You should probably read the Wired reporting on the story rather than perpetuating ignorance. They interviewed Annie Bellet. She was not pressured by anyone. She personally rejected Sad Puppies' using her as a politically pawn. She personally thinks their approach is antithetical to inherent inclusiveness of nerd culture. But yeah, keep regurgitating the WML-fabricated narrative. I'm sure it goes over well on blogs like Breitbart.

      Exactly, also all confessions of guilt from Kulaks are valid and not to be questioned

       

    13. Re:Worst. Summary. Ever. And a lie to boot. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You should probably read the Wired reporting on the story rather than perpetuating ignorance. They interviewed Annie Bellet. She was not pressured by anyone. She personally rejected Sad Puppies' using her as a politically pawn. She personally thinks their approach is antithetical to inherent inclusiveness of nerd culture. But yeah, keep regurgitating the WML-fabricated narrative. I'm sure it goes over well on blogs like Breitbart.

      It seems kinda weird that a bunch of misogynistic right wing males would have nominated her then. If they were actually trying to push a right wing straight male agenda that is. Which is what the wired piece speculates..

    14. Re:Worst. Summary. Ever. And a lie to boot. by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      It seems kinda weird that a bunch of misogynistic right wing males would have nominated her then.

      These are not people known for being the sharpest pencils in the box.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    15. Re:Worst. Summary. Ever. And a lie to boot. by Fragnet · · Score: 1

      "right wing extremists" - don't be ridiculous. They're people just fed up with the SJW getting awards for political correctness rather than good science fiction. They're fans, not activists.

    16. Re:Worst. Summary. Ever. And a lie to boot. by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      > The fans said no. The choices we're stuck with suck. We'd rather not vote for anyone.

      I don't think you can equate the people who voted in these Hugos with the fan population in general. Maybe they match up, maybe they don't. But you can't just say they're the fans speaking, when it's very clear the 40% uptick in voting at the Hugos this year was due to the controversy. Both camps attracted additional people for political reasons, and more anti-puppies signed up than pro-puppies.

      Just because they voted the way you wanted them to doesn't mean you get to use bad statistics and say they're "the fans" or representative of "the fans".

    17. Re:Worst. Summary. Ever. And a lie to boot. by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      It would have helped a great deal with their agruments if the slate-stuffed nominations actually contained good stories. Apparently the "SJW cabal" in previous years has simply been saving us from some certain types of terrible literature.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    18. Re:Worst. Summary. Ever. And a lie to boot. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm genuinely curious: how many awards this year went to white men

      And I am not curious. Instead, I wonder: How many awards went to good sci-fi, and how many went to stories with really bad sci-fi - possibly because the story contained something else the voters liked?

      Such voting is corrupt. A book can be worthy of the Nobel prize in literature, and still not be worthy of a Hugo - for the simple reason of not being scifi.

      When I read scifi, I have no idea about the author's ethnicity - unless they happen to include a picture. don't even know the gender - it is well known that many authors use pseudonyms. Especially when writing weird genres like scifi.

    19. Re:Worst. Summary. Ever. And a lie to boot. by tylikcat · · Score: 1

      Well, turning to science fiction for pleasant escapism that doesn't question the status quo is... well, I can't say made of fail, because there's an awful lot of that, but, darn, should it surprise anyone that this isn't the stuff that is winning awards?

      I'm kind of fascinated by the argument around class divisions in SF, though when I try to map it to the folks I know I do find myself wondering how sensitive a measure that is. I suspect there's a generational component. I suspect there's a regional component.* But I know so many fans working service industry jobs who were all about the progressive fic, and so many well paid software engineers who weren't. (I am thinking of some hilariously awful conversations with a baby lead not so many years ago.)

      * And this is where I'm probably most likely to be blinded myself - I'm from Seattle.

    20. Re:Worst. Summary. Ever. And a lie to boot. by argStyopa · · Score: 1

      I *entirely* agree with you, except that it has been a standard mantra of the Left for the last 40 years that "fairness" is identified by demographics. Not enough blacks in college? Not enough women CEOs? Not enough women in computer science?

      All of these very common concerns that have driven policy and funding are based on the fundamental premise that any subsegment of society should apparently perfectly represent the demographics of the larger society, or "bias" is at work.

      --
      -Styopa
    21. Re:Worst. Summary. Ever. And a lie to boot. by squiggleslash · · Score: 1

      In categories where "No award" won, more than 50% of fans voted for that as their first choice. We can, reasonably, deduce from that that even if somehow those opposed to the political views of the Puppies made up the entire 40% uptick in voters, a massive plurality of the fan population would also have had "No award" as their first choice too.

      Fans are angry about what's happened here. Even GRRM, who Puppies hold up as an example of a centrist because he advocated against No Award campaigns, has expressed nothing but sadness and sorrow about how the nominations were gamed. To expect, even if the voting block had been arbitrarily switched back to the 2010 list (two years before SP), anything other than what just happened is unrealistic.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    22. Re:Worst. Summary. Ever. And a lie to boot. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >inherent inclusiveness of nerd culture

      Has nerd culture changed since I was young? Because "inclusive" is not a word I would have used to describe it.

    23. Re:Worst. Summary. Ever. And a lie to boot. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IT WAS THOSE DAMNED RIGHT-WINGERS READING TOO MUCH INTO IT!!!

      http://www.slate.com/blogs/lexicon_valley/2014/05/22/ancillary_justice_gender_pronouns_comparing_sci_fi_and_natural_language.html

      Holy shit, try living on EARTH for a while.

    24. Re:Worst. Summary. Ever. And a lie to boot. by Xtifr · · Score: 1

      What about it? Did you even read that article you just linked to? (Thanks for the link, btw. It was interesting.)

      Yes, a linguist was interested in the language play in the book. Which was amusing, and Lecke has admitted that it took a surprising amount of work to pull off. It was still just about gendered language, not some diatribe about how all genitalia are equal. One of the trickiest parts about learning a Romance Language (French, Spanish, Italian) for an English speaker is learning which nouns have which gender. Is a table male or female? How about a computer? A rock? A spaceship? A time machine? Lecke took it one step further, and gave us a creature who wasn't used to assigning gender to anything, and had it struggling with the gender of words in the same way people often do when learning a new language.

      Note the conclusion of the article you linked to:

      For an extraterrestrial intelligence, parsing which gender-related features are important in which society can be tricky, but Breq's overall sense of confusion is not unique. With more than 6,000 languages still spoken by us humans, we're all aliens right here on Earth.

      How is that evidence of some evil attack on maleness? Different amounts of gendering in language is confusing to a non-native speaker! That observation is hardly some some sort of social justice warrioring.

      And it was still a minor part of the story, and exactly 0% of the plot. So, again, whatcher point?

    25. Re:Worst. Summary. Ever. And a lie to boot. by asdfman2000 · · Score: 1

      It seems kinda weird that a bunch of misogynistic right wing males would have nominated her then.

      These are not people known for being the sharpest pencils in the box.

      Clearly that's it. They want women out of SF, but they accidentally nominated a women because they're stupid.

      Most people, when confronted with facts ("they nominated women & minorities") that contract a held hypothesis ("they want women out of SF") revise their hypothesis. But feel free to keep ignoring facts in order to cling to a false narrative.

    26. Re:Worst. Summary. Ever. And a lie to boot. by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1

      Yes, it's a lie, and your attempt to claim otherwise neither matches reality or matches the summary's headline, and barely addresses the major lies in the summary.

      The headline claims that fans votes were ignored. That's a lie. The fans rejected the Puppy's works. The entities running the Hugos did not override the vote, ignore them, or in any other way replace a legitimate vote with a "No award".

      It's not a lie in the slightest. The clique dominating the Hugos refused to allow any awards to be given to anyone tainted by crimethink.

      The summary claims that the controversy over the selection had to do with "a group of (fans)" wanting to promote "hard science fiction". That's a lie. It had to do with two groups, one of which wanted to promote right wing works, the other of which wanted to prevent works it perceived as left wing from being voted upon, both of which using slates of "ideologically sound" works to squeeze out other works from the final ballots.

      You forgot "reactionary", "MRA", and "antifeminist" with your partisan straw man.

      Even when the summary tells the truth, its worded in such a way to imply conspiracy where there is none: The summary the bizarre statement "The question was left: would the final voters of the Hugo awards accept these nominees, or just take their ball home and refuse to give out anyway awards at all?" as if to imply that there was something wrong with voters on the Hugos, which is open to everyone who pays the small membership fee involved, being offended by a blatant attempt to rig the Hugos.

      It's not bizarre at all. The entire point was whether the toxic clique rigging the Hugos would award nominees from outside their clique or if they would take the unprecedented step of handing out more No Awards in a single event than in almost the history of the award.

      The blatant rigging was from the people who've been pushing ideology to the point they'll No Award a female author just because people they dislike happened to like her.

      I don't recall, in the history of Slashdot, seeing such a blatant attempt by political ideologues to lie about an event they were a part of.

      You must not browse slashdot very much then because the editors have made a habit of doing that every week. We call it "feminist friday".

      And to the Puppies here claiming that somehow they "won": no, you didn't. You didn't "prove anything" beyond the fact that those who care about the Hugos hate it - absolutely hate it - when you try to rig their awards. If the so-called "SJWs" tried to pull the same stunt, the same thing would have happened. You know it.

      The puppies didn't rig anything, they proved that the hugos WERE rigged in the first place.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    27. Re:Worst. Summary. Ever. And a lie to boot. by squiggleslash · · Score: 1

      It's not a lie in the slightest. The clique dominating the Hugos refused to allow any awards to be given to anyone tainted by crimethink.

      That is a lie. There is no "clique dominating the Hugos". There's no such thing as "tainted by crimethink", and if your inanely ridiculous wording were to be interpreted as meaning "Tainted by being nominated by the Puppy slates", at least one Hugo winner was, actually, on the Puppy slates.

      You forgot "reactionary", "MRA", and "antifeminist" with your partisan straw man.

      No, if I felt those were appropriate, I would have said them - though that said "reactionary" does seem fair, but it's implied by what was said anyway. What I said was 100% accurate, not a strawman.

      Perhaps the problem here is that you have no idea what's going on, have decided you have a bad case of identity politics, and have decided to buy a particularly weirdly spun version of what actually happened because you identify with those spinning it that way? Because there's no obvious other reason why you'd resort both to pretending I'm implying the various Hugo groups were generic enemies of so-called "SJWs" ("MRAs", "Feminists", etc), using ridiculous jargon like "crimethink", and generally pretending that something other than what happened happened.=

      It's not bizarre at all. The entire point was whether the toxic clique rigging the Hugos would award nominees from outside their clique or if they would take the unprecedented step of handing out more No Awards in a single event than in almost the history of the award.

      THERE. IS. NO. CLIQUE. The fans, not some small, closed, secretive group (which is what a clique is) voted against it. Some 6,000 paid up fans voted in this contest. When they voted No Award, which they only did in a handful of categories, No Award was the first choice of the majority.

      There is simply no way to reconcile that with the notion some "clique" overrode fans' wishes. No way at all. It's mathematically impossible. Indeed, if you were to somehow mind read the fans, and murder any fan who'd vote against any work because they dislike that work's political views, you'd still have ended up with a huge plurality in favor of "No award" in those categories.

      Again, I refer you to the headline. "Hugos Refuse To Award Anyone Rather Than Submit To Fans' Votes". I said this is a lie, because it is one. The fans, not the "Hugos", voted, and the "Hugos", that is, the administrators of the Hugos, accepted that vote. The only people who are refusing to accept that vote, who are refusing to submit to the fan's votes, are you and the puppies.

      The blatant rigging was from the people who've been pushing ideology to the point they'll No Award a female author just because people they dislike happened to like her.

      This actually proves the opposite of what you're saying. You're claiming identity politics, yet you're giving an example of where identity politics is being explicitly rejected.

      You must not browse slashdot very much then because the editors have made a habit of doing that every week. We call it "feminist friday".

      That's... fascinating. I obviously haven't, because, no, I have never seen Slashdot's editors try to rig the Hugos by pushing a slate of works deemed inoffensive to liberals. Never. Perhaps you can link to one such story. What works did they recommend, out of interest?

      The puppies didn't rig anything, they proved that the hugos WERE rigged in the first place.

      They proved they were rigged by... being the ones that rigged them. That's it.

      All they actually prove is that while it's possible to game the Hugos and rig the nomination list, it's not possible to win. It's only possible to win a Hugo if your work is good. Game the nominations as much as you like, you'l

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    28. Re:Worst. Summary. Ever. And a lie to boot. by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      >In categories where "No award" won, more than 50% of fans voted for that as their first choice.

      My point is that you can't equate "the fans" with "people who vote in the Hugos". The populations are not equivalent.

  11. Content vs Platform by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    this has been an interesting development in Science Fiction. In many ways this has been an argument about the genre of science fiction: is the genre of science fiction about impossible but theorhetically plausible science such as the future or starships or aliens or time travel, or is the genre about a platform by which issues can be explored?

    What I find interesting is the Sad Puppies were arguing that science fiction should be about the science fiction and not the platform argument, and yet not a single one has ever won a Hugo Award. Alternatively many past Hugo Award Winners such as Robert Heinlein absolutely used the genre of science fiction to ask questions about issues by using them in the somewhat fantastical but plausible context. Stranger in a Strange Land may have been in the future and involve aliens and be set in the future, but it's purpose was to take a plain, unbiased look at many of the social constructs in our society today and question them. Philip K Dick's work almost has to be set in a science fiction setting to his explore his typical themes of reality and perception.

    So in many ways the Sad Puppies were arguing for a perception of what the Hugo Awards were about, a perception that in many ways was false. These guys may be science fiction writers, but I don't think they actually get science fiction.

    1. Re:Content vs Platform by techno-vampire · · Score: 1

      To answer the question in your first paragraph, it's both. We're all familiar with stories based on extrapolating science into the future, but we somehow forget about those that talk about social issues, such as 1984, Animal Farm, and The Marching Morons. The problem here wasn't that the two Puppy factions wanted to award stories that focused on social issues, it's that they tried to make that the only criterion, ignoring the quality of the stories, which is what the Hugo Awards are supposed to be about.

      --
      Good, inexpensive web hosting
    2. Re:Content vs Platform by DarenN · · Score: 1

      The Sad Puppies claim the exact opposite - that they voted for stories that they liked over stories that were preachy. And their slate was pretty damn good, to be honest.

      The Rabid Puppies.... well, let's just say they're well named.

      --
      Rational thought is the only true freedom
    3. Re:Content vs Platform by DarenN · · Score: 1

      Please note that I am referring to the Sad Puppies' original slate, not the Rabid Puppies' one, which was full of crap (in my opinion).

      --
      Rational thought is the only true freedom
  12. does anti-sjw = deranged violent prick? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    > This was spun as conservatives "ruining" a "progressive" award.

    Umm, according the blithest troll behind the group that's exactly what it is:

    "For his part, Beale—who runs his own small publishing company, Castalia House, which got five of its writers and editors (including Beale himself) on this year’s Hugo ballot—has been outspoken about his goals. “I wanted to leave a big smoking hole where the Hugo Awards were,” he told me before the winners were announced. “All this has ever been is a giant Fuck You—one massive gesture of contempt.” Some nerds just want to watch the world burn."

    [..]

    “I have 390 sworn and numbered vile faceless minions—the hardcore shock troops—who are sworn to mindless and perfect obedience,” he said, acknowledging that his army wasn’t made up solely of sci-fi fans. On the contrary, “the people who are very anti-SJW said, ‘Okay, we want to get in on this.’”
    -- source: http://www.wired.com/2015/08/won-science-fictions-hugo-awards-matters/

    They are the typical scummy trolls, just like any other juvenile middle school troll. It's rather sad to see *adults* behaving that fashion. WTF is wrong with some people, really. And that's who you have writing your summary, great job there Slashdot. Breitbart, *really*?! Pretty low.

    1. Re:does anti-sjw = deranged violent prick? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Violent"? You couldn't just make your point. You had to make it false by saying "violent". Why? What actions do you propose to eliminate these "violent" ideas?

    2. Re:does anti-sjw = deranged violent prick? by _KiTA_ · · Score: 1, Troll

      Incorrect. Beale (aka Vox Day) isn't in charge of Sad Puppies. Brad R Torgersen is. Vox Day is some bogeyman people keep trotting out to scare little kids and pink haired manchildren on Tumblr.

      Here's the thing. The Hugos aren't a "progressive" award -- or rather, they're not supposed to be. They're supposed to be a literary award. That's the entire point of the Sad Puppies and Vox Day's Rabid Puppies -- that a group of people are pushing political litmus tests on this award behind the scenes.

      And for all the frothing rage and smug cuntyness that we'll see over the next few days, here's the sad thing: The Sad Puppies were absolutely right.

    3. Re:does anti-sjw = deranged violent prick? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1. The GP never said Vox Day was in charge of the Sad Puppies. He said, correctly, that he was a leader of the "group" without saying which. He is right if he meant either the Rabid Puppies (which you fully admit he's behind) or the two puppy campaigns as a group. He is not "some bogeyman people keep trotting out", he's a leader of one of the two wings of this right wing movement.

      2. The only people pushing a political litmus test here are the Puppy campaigns. They're the ones that gamed the system to ensure their slates of ideologically sound "literature" (to use the term loosely) were the only options people could vote for.

      Everything the Puppies claim to be opposed to, they're actually for, with the exception of the political stance they want the literature to be. Normal voters are not concerned about the political leanings or messages of the art they're voting on. The Puppies, on the other hand, went overboard to make sure that only choices whose political ideologies they agreed with were available to vote upon.

      And the end result was ballot after ballot of... if not steaming hogwash, that would be unfair (though a hell of a lot of the Rapid slate was), then certainly material nowhere near the standards needed to deserve a Hugo.

      The Hugos valued art above politics. Faced with a ballot of only works considered ideologically sound by a politically motivated minority, nothing worth voting for was available to vote for. And so nothing was voted for. The * Puppies just demonstrated that Hugo voters value art over ideology, contrary to every claim their apologists make. And they wrecked one year's Hugos as a result.

    4. Re:does anti-sjw = deranged violent prick? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your source, Wired, lacks a source.

      Given that not even the Westboro baptist church calls it's followers "sworn and numbered vile faceless minions" any sensible mind would consider such a statement without proof suspect.

    5. Re:does anti-sjw = deranged violent prick? by Xtifr · · Score: 1

      The Rabid Puppies (Day's group) got more items on the ballot than the Sad Puppies, so they're really the more appropriate group to discuss.

      That's the entire point of the Sad Puppies and Vox Day's Rabid Puppies -- that a group of people are pushing political litmus tests on this award behind the scenes.

      And, if that were true, then the voters should have been happy to finally have some non-political choices to vote for, and the puppies should have swept their way to victory. That's not what happened, though, is it?

      In fact, if that were true, the puppies should never have been able to get on the ballot in the first place, as io9 pointed out. All those evil conspiring nominators would have rallied to nominate more of those evil SJWworks that are Destroying America!!!! And if there weren't enough of them to do that (the obvious excuse), then how did they manage to show up for the actual vote? The whole freakin' "liberal conspiracy"thing just doesn't fit any of the available facts. Maybe...just maybe, its time to consider alternative theories, like, maybe a lot of other people simply have different taste than you do! Or honestly don't give a frack about all this political BS.

      Frankly, when Ilook at the last several winners, Icannot figure out where the liberal politics is supposedly hidden in those works.Nor the high-falutin' snobby literary qualities. The authors (other than maybe Jo Walton) are pretty political, but I'm not seeing that in their works. And most of them were page turners.

    6. Re:does anti-sjw = deranged violent prick? by Fragnet · · Score: 1

      It's a real pity you don't have the same attitude towards the many activists on the left who seek to get those not towing the SJW line blackballed. This response is a reaction to that.

    7. Re:does anti-sjw = deranged violent prick? by anyGould · · Score: 1

      And ignoring the GamerGate angle, I wouldn't be surprised if some voters looked at a guy who openly attempted to rig voting so that his publishing house was "guaranteed" a Hugo and decided "yeah, let's not".

  13. Re:Breitbart? Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe Social Strawman Warriors -- SS warriors.

  14. Internet trolls lazy assholes, Timothy a moron by Pinky's+Brain · · Score: 1

    If we could vote on a title I'd think mine would stand more of a chance, unfortunately unlike the Hugo's we can't so we're stick with the disingenuous shit Timothy put up.

  15. Re:Obsessed people by chipschap · · Score: 0

    This should be +5 insightful.

    The whole point of equality is to NOT worry about race, gender, orientation, etc. It should be invisible. It should not matter. It should not even generally enter into the discussion.

  16. Re:made themselves irelevent by ctid · · Score: 2

    WHAT are you talking about? The voters ARE the supporters! There are no judges. The voters are ordinary sci-fi fans. In fact, if you had wanted to vote, you should have just registered to do so. Anybody can and you don't have to go to WorldCon. Of course, if you'd rather just complain and blather on about SJWs, you clearly are not interested enough in sci-fi to take part.

    --
    Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
  17. Re:There's truth on both sides here by tylikcat · · Score: 5, Informative

    Okay, some basic factual errors. First off, the Hugos are a fan award, not a writer award - that's the Nebulas. They're both important, they aren't the same.

    Second, the people who refused to grant awards were *the very people who paid $40 [or much more if they attended] to vote*. This wasn't some arbitrary decision, or a decision by some committee, there has always been an option of voting that it was better to not award an award in that category than to award it to the option on the ballot because they were so universally sub-par. This wasn't done by some committee, this was the voice of the voters.

    Seriously - the summary was godawful and misleading, but the information is widely available.

  18. Thanks! I'll never read WIRED again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why did puppies have to be involved tho?

  19. Fallacy fallacy [Re: Lovely summary.' by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Please explain how a fallacy could be true.
    It's literally defined as being a false belief or a failure in reasoning.

    It's the "fallacy fallacy."

    If you conclude that because a line of reasoning contains a fallacy, the statement reasoned about is false, you just fell into the fallacy fallacy..

    https://yourlogicalfallacyis.c...

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
    1. Re:Fallacy fallacy [Re: Lovely summary.' by Khyber · · Score: 1

      Logical fallacies are in and of themselves fallacies!

      --
      Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
    2. Re:Fallacy fallacy [Re: Lovely summary.' by SuricouRaven · · Score: 2

      Not quite.

      Many arguments cited as fallacies are actually heuristics: They are arguments that are usually valid, but not universally.

      If an event A is always followed by event B, it is a fallacy to say from this that A causes B. But pointing this out as a fallacy does not mean A does not cause B. The 'fallacious' argument is flawed only in claiming to be an absolute proof: It is still very strong evidence, and should be taken as such in the absence of any evidence to the contrary or alternative explanation.

      Or in shorter terms: Just because someone submits an clearly seriously flawed argument in support of a conclusion does not mean that valid arguments supporting the same conclusion could not still be made.

    3. Re: Fallacy fallacy [Re: Lovely summary.' by mattwarden · · Score: 1

      Depends on what your definition of correct is. If I say the earth is round because I have two legs and I can only have two legs if the earth is round, am I correct? Generally in reasoning you are attempting to reason or predict an outcome based on inputs. If you by chance identify the proper outcome but based on an entirely flawed process, I have a hard time calling that right. It's just chance.

    4. Re:Fallacy fallacy [Re: Lovely summary.' by retchdog · · Score: 1

      The internet fetishism of refuting arguments by referring to a list of fallacies has made this one particularly relevant. There's a degenerate meta-strategy which goes like this:

      A: [says something totally batshit crazy]
      B: You're totally batshit crazy!
      A: That's an ad hominem attack! I win!

      It's all rather amusing, really.

      --
      "They were pure niggers." – Noam Chomsky
    5. Re:Fallacy fallacy [Re: Lovely summary.' by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      And people don't work on proofs. I don't need a mathematical proof the my light switch turns on my light. B follows A. That correlation, strong enough, is a "proof" for all I need to be a functioning person. The "Truth" of the matter is irrelevant. I believe it to be so, based on the available evidence.

      And the great thing about the human minds is that once a decision to believe is made, facts are then irrelevant. The light burns out. I can now "prove" that B does not follow A. But I'll still believe that A causes B, and operate under that assumption, repairing B and seeing the result.

    6. Re:Fallacy fallacy [Re: Lovely summary.' by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      If an argument contains a logical fallacy it means the argument should be discarded as it is wrong.

      It's ironic in this case that your appeal for acceptance of arguments containing logical fallacies makes both statements incapable of being evaluated.

    7. Re:Fallacy fallacy [Re: Lovely summary.' by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      More along the lines of

      A: says something
      B: You're totally batshit crazy!
      A: That's an ad hominem attack! You have no evidence BS

      Seeing as the internet is filled with people who think their feelings should be real insisting on facts and valid reasoning is a very sound attitude.

    8. Re:Fallacy fallacy [Re: Lovely summary.' by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 1

      If an argument contains a logical fallacy it means the argument should be discarded as it is wrong.

      If an argument contains a logical fallacy then the argument should be discarded. The "fallacy fallacy" points out that this does not imply that the conclusion must be discarded. The conclusion may or may not be wrong: you can't draw a conclusion from a wrong argument.

      It's ironic in this case that your appeal for acceptance of arguments containing logical fallacies makes both statements incapable of being evaluated.

      At no point did I appeal for the acceptance of arguments containing logical fallacies.

      --
      http://www.geoffreylandis.com
    9. Re:Fallacy fallacy [Re: Lovely summary.' by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      At no point did I appeal for the acceptance of arguments containing logical fallacies.

      That is exactly what you are doing. You are promoting the acceptance of poorly reasoned argument. If a statement is being supported by a false argument the only correct behavior is to toss out the statement until a correct argument is made.

    10. Re:Fallacy fallacy [Re: Lovely summary.' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There was no argument. It was a statement of fact justifying someone's reason for disregarding the source. The argument is only in your mind.

    11. Re:Fallacy fallacy [Re: Lovely summary.' by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      . It was a statement of fact justifying someone's reason for disregarding the source.

      Yeah, "I don't like these people so nothing they say is factual" is both well reasoned and factual

      / sarcasm

    12. Re:Fallacy fallacy [Re: Lovely summary.' by retchdog · · Score: 1

      I suppose. In the real world, though, I get paid quite a bit to impart my knowledge on people. Occasionally even respected.

      Doesn't seem worthwhile to spend that much time explaining things to something which is, at best, a brick wall.

      --
      "They were pure niggers." – Noam Chomsky
    13. Re:Fallacy fallacy [Re: Lovely summary.' by Runaway1956 · · Score: 2

      But - flipping your light switch DOES NOT cause your light to come on. Flipping the light switch actually makes an electrical contact possible, through which electricity can flow through some wires to the bulb, which may or may not light up when you flip the switch. If the bulb is burnt out, the breaker is tripped, or power lines are down, it WON'T light up, no matter how many times you flip the switch.

      So, you can see that your statement is a logical fallacy, no matter that the statement is mostly true. You can flip the switch a thousand times, and get the results you expect. That thousand and first time, the lights don't come on, and disproves the statement that flipping the switch causes the lights to come on.

      It is more accurate to say that completing an electrical circuit will cause the bulb to emit light. And, THAT is what flipping the switch does - in most cases.

      --
      "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
    14. Re:Fallacy fallacy [Re: Lovely summary.' by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      Interesting, Unless you are a critic or a pundit, I can't think of a profession that would pay highly for you to impart your opinion as fact.

    15. Re:Fallacy fallacy [Re: Lovely summary.' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Logical fallacies are in and of themselves fallacies!

      Not per se, logical fallacies *can* be fallacies if they're used as an argument to "prove" something is false (or true).

    16. Re:Fallacy fallacy [Re: Lovely summary.' by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Interesting, Unless you are a critic or a pundit, I can't think of a profession that would pay highly for you to impart your opinion as fact.

      What are you talking about? Any profession where you make decisions and get paid for it is this, if you're paid well. A well-paid IT manager who makes a decision on which server to buy, for example.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    17. Re:Fallacy fallacy [Re: Lovely summary.' by Crashmarik · · Score: 0

      I'd tell you learn to read

      Doesn't seem worthwhile to spend that much time explaining things to something which is, at best, a brick wall.

      But I think the post I was replying to had this part right.

    18. Re:Fallacy fallacy [Re: Lovely summary.' by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Your response only makes sense if you are informing me that you are an idiot. I already had a strong suspicion...

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    19. Re:Fallacy fallacy [Re: Lovely summary.' by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      Q.E.D.

    20. Re:Fallacy fallacy [Re: Lovely summary.' by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      Of course, what makes it worse, is that they usually don't understand how fallacies work - especially ad hominem.

      It seriously looks as if the vast majority of people thing an ad hominem means "you insulted me". No, it doesn't, an argument could contain an insult on every line and STILL not be an ad hominem fallacy. The ad hominem fallacy is attacking the arguer instead of the argument. It is not a fallacy to attack the arguer AS WELL as the argument. Insulting somebody doesn't make your response invalid, failing to actually address his arguments do.

      It gets worse. I was in a discussion online not long ago where the following happened:
      Me: well reasoned argument.
      Idiot: You are a *list of insults*
      Me: You have nothing to offer but a long ad hominem, that kind of makes you an idiot. Proceeds with a solid, logical argument supported by significant physical and documentary evidence.
      Idiot: You accuse me of ad hominem, then call me an idiot. Irony much ?

      Seriously, this person couldn't figure out that sentence one was ad hominem but my response was not - I didn't play the man instead of the ball. I played the man who had no ball, he hadn't made any argument at all - and then continued playing my ball.

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    21. Re:Fallacy fallacy [Re: Lovely summary.' by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      Cows eat grass.
      Grass is green.
      Therefore the sky is blue.

      That's a fallacious argument. Nevertheless the conclusion is entirely true.

      You can't accept OR reject a conclusion based on a fallacy - or you are committing a fallacy yourself. The correct response is to denounce the argument, and demand the person provide an alternative argument or evidence for their conclusion.
      Note also how every statement in the above is true, it's a deductive reasoning argument, where every premise as well as the conclusion are provably true yet it is nonetheless not a valid argument (it violates one of the laws of logic in that the conclusion does not follow from the premises).

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    22. Re:Fallacy fallacy [Re: Lovely summary.' by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      You can't accept OR reject a conclusion based on a fallacy

      No you can reject the conclusion as unproven.

      Ex
      Cows eat grass
      Grass is green
      Cowshit is green.

      Cowshit is green is not proven. Not accepted until there is proof.

    23. Re: Fallacy fallacy [Re: Lovely summary.' by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      Unproven: not a synonymn for false.

      A fallacy means this specific arguer failed to prove or disprove the conclusion. It doesnt mean the conclusion is wrong.

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    24. Re:Fallacy fallacy [Re: Lovely summary.' by retchdog · · Score: 1

      The upper tiers (no, i don't mean manager, necessarily) of any technical profession basically comprise offering your "opinion", albeit one which is tempered by a lot of experience, logical analysis, and education. Most peoples' delineation of "fact" vs. opinion is, actually, nothing more than a very uninformed opinion.

      Linus Torvalds is probably not the best programmer in the world, but his opinions about practical kernel design are rather valuable. It's not a fallacy to act on that.

      Finally, the truth or factuality of my statements is independent of whether i convince every schmuck on the internet of them. I simply don't owe everyone that much attention.

      --
      "They were pure niggers." – Noam Chomsky
    25. Re: Fallacy fallacy [Re: Lovely summary.' by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      Unproven: not a synonymn for false.

      If your making a point it most certainly is. It brands the person using faulty logic a fool or a manipulator.

    26. Re:Fallacy fallacy [Re: Lovely summary.' by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      See pundit in my reply.

    27. Re: Fallacy fallacy [Re: Lovely summary.' by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      Which is ad hominem. Who makes the argument again has absolutely no bearing on whether or not the conclusions are true. Even fools and manipulators occasionally say true things. Stopped clock and all that.

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    28. Re: Fallacy fallacy [Re: Lovely summary.' by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      No me asking were you dropped on your head as a child is an implied ad hominem.

      Even fools and manipulators occasionally say true things. Stopped clock and all that.

      But only true idiots listen to them. So good day to you sir.

    29. Re: Fallacy fallacy [Re: Lovely summary.' by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      True wisdom tests the veracity of all claims regardless of source. Thus you can learn the truths spoken by fools and avoid the lies told by great authority.

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    30. Re:Fallacy fallacy [Re: Lovely summary.' by Coren22 · · Score: 1

      Because you are a douchbag, no one should believe anything you say.

      That is the fallacy being used above. "I don't like this source, so the information MUST be untrue!" It is a false statement, either the information is true or false, but the source doesn't make it either.

      --
      APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
    31. Re: Fallacy fallacy [Re: Lovely summary.' by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      Time is money. A fool who makes a bad argument robs you of both.

    32. Re: Fallacy fallacy [Re: Lovely summary.' by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      Money and wisdom are mutually exclusive goals . You can spend your time gaining one or the other but you cannot spend the same time seeking both.
      How much time you devote to which is one the most important prioritization decisions a human ever makes.

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    33. Re:Fallacy fallacy [Re: Lovely summary.' by nitehawk214 · · Score: 1

      But this is not to be used as an excuse to make fallacious arguments.

      --
      I'm a good cook. I'm a fantastic eater. - Steven Brust
    34. Re: Fallacy fallacy [Re: Lovely summary.' by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      Yawn

    35. Re:Fallacy fallacy [Re: Lovely summary.' by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      B: You only think that's a win.
      A: No true Scotsman! I win again!

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    36. Re:Fallacy fallacy [Re: Lovely summary.' by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      Anyone who plays the game of "spot the logical fallacy" has almost certainly never studied critical thinking.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    37. Re: Fallacy fallacy [Re: Lovely summary.' by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      Unproven: not a synonymn for false.

      If your making a point it most certainly is. It brands the person using faulty logic a fool or a manipulator.

      You've never studied intuitionistic logic, have you?

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    38. Re:Fallacy fallacy [Re: Lovely summary.' by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      "These people have a track record of saying nothing of value" is factual in the case of Breitbart. No reasoning required, it's just an observation.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    39. Re: Fallacy fallacy [Re: Lovely summary.' by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      Even in intuitionistic logic the statements need to be proved or disproved, and a faulty proof is just as faulty.

      So were you just ignorant of this or just trolling ?

    40. Re:Fallacy fallacy [Re: Lovely summary.' by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      Well lets just see

      http://www.breitbart.com/

      Day 2: China Crashes at the Open
      Gallup: Trump at -51 Favorability with Hispanics, Nearly 2/3 View Negatively
      Cuccinelli, Virginia GOP Want Trump to Vow No Third-Party Run
      DOJ: ‘Corroborating Evidence’ for Menendez Underage Prostitution Allegations
      EXCLUSIVE–Biden’s Son: Ashley Madison Account Created In My Name By America’s Enemies

      Seems you are making an effort at saying nothing of value.

    41. Re: Fallacy fallacy [Re: Lovely summary.' by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      I was merely agreeing that "unproven" and "false" are not synonyms. The same is true of "true" and "proven".

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    42. Re: Fallacy fallacy [Re: Lovely summary.' by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      Ahh and to think my property tax dollars are allegedly going to education.

  20. Re:There's truth on both sides here by Imrik · · Score: 4, Insightful

    People paid 40 dollars a pop to vote for no award, I think that not giving an award is the right thing to do in that case.

  21. Re:made themselves irelevent by Pinky's+Brain · · Score: 1

    No ... Science fiction is also all about radically shifting social mores (sexual deviancy to some) technology replacing the need for biological imperatives (corruption of sacred family structure to some) and very frequently a ton of blasphemy etc etc etc.

    Lets take good old Crypto-Fascist Heinlein. Do you think these conservative wankers would vote for say ... Job?

  22. Fans' Vote Was No Award by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 5, Informative

    Yeah, the headline is false- in fact, it is backwards.

    The fans voted for no award.

    No award wasn't instead of the fans' votes: it was the fans' vote.

    (not in all categories, though.)

    -- this is an artifact of the fact that it only takes a plurality to get on the ballot, but it takes a majority to win (with single transferable vote). So a small groups can get works on the ballot, if the rest of the nominators are split, but if the majority doesn't like those works, a small group can't make those works win.

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
    1. Re:Fans' Vote Was No Award by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're misreading the summary... the summary says the "final voters" decided not to award. The final voters *are* the fans.

    2. Re:Fans' Vote Was No Award by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Meh, digging into the numbers a bit, it seems 5950 people voted. For contrast 8363 people voted on the last slashdot poll, so we aren't talking about a whole lot of fans, making it an easy balance to swing either way with relatively small numbers of voters. There's more detail on the breakdown of the voting here.

    3. Re:Fans' Vote Was No Award by CrankyFool · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Nobody had to pay $40 to vote in the Slashdot poll. They had to pay at least $40 to vote in the Hugos. This is also, apparently, a huge increase over the last number of people who voted in the Hugos (65% more than last time?) suggesting a significant groundwell.

    4. Re:Fans' Vote Was No Award by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This is also, apparently, a huge increase over the last number of people who voted in the Hugos (65% more than last time?) suggesting a significant groundwell.

      ...or a significant mustering of the troops. If you look at the breakdown of the numbers there an interesting picture emerges. I've also linked to Scalzi telling his minions to vote No Award after their preferences elsewhere on this page, it wouldn't be difficult to organise a couple of thousand people at all.

    5. Re:Fans' Vote Was No Award by ctid · · Score: 1, Interesting

      So the people who voted No award are "minions" of John Scalzi. And you're suggesting that he only has to suggest it and hundreds of people with fork out $40 each so that they can do exactly what he says? Are you serious? Novels cost - what - $10? So you think people are going to spend four times the price of one of his novels just so that they can vote according to his instructions. What would they gain from that?

      --
      Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
    6. Re:Fans' Vote Was No Award by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If Sarkeesian can get almost seven thousand people to donate almost $160,000 to help her create a series of videos I'm not even sure she finished, then yes it's definetely within the realms of possibility.

    7. Re:Fans' Vote Was No Award by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The "fans" voted no award because they'd rather have nobody win than awards not going to their diversity darlings.

      It's an ideology-driven shitshow that had nothing to do with writing and all to do with political agendas.

    8. Re:Fans' Vote Was No Award by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The fans voted for no award.

      I don't know if you would truly call them fans or not. The SJW group effectively stuffed the ballot box. Award organizations like the Hugo are no place for influence peddlers, I don't care if you are SJW, SAD, or RABID. The Hugo awards should be presented to authors based on some consistent criteria of quality and popularity, not solely based on the race of the author. The story itself should be what is important, not the author's real-life political viewpoint. If some radical weird political stance is taken by the protagonist in the story and the story is well written, then hell yes them them an award. Otherwise don't compare them to Sir Arthur C Clarke. Wikipedia defines the Hugo as ... a set of awards given annually for the best science fiction or fantasy works and achievements of the previous year. So people should vote for the best of science fiction regardless if by an accident of birth the author just happens to be a while male.

    9. Re:Fans' Vote Was No Award by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You may want to read the Wired article then, because Beale is quoted thusly:

      “I have 390 sworn and numbered vile faceless minions—the hardcore shock troops—who are sworn to mindless and perfect obedience,” he said, acknowledging that his army wasn’t made up solely of sci-fi fans. On the contrary, “the people who are very anti-SJW said, ‘Okay, we want to get in on this.’” When I asked him how he might deploy those people in the future, he continued, “It’s very simple. The dark lord speaks, the minion acts.”

    10. Re:Fans' Vote Was No Award by dbIII · · Score: 1

      making it an easy balance to swing either way with relatively small numbers of voters

      Hence the branch stacking by a bunch of angry virgins who think the world owes them a Supermodel. It's utterly pathetic student political shit that has escaped into an area where politics was previously not a huge deal.
      To feel threatened by such a tiny niche as feminist SF is as pathetic as getting upset at women riding bicycles. If they don't like it they can look the other way.

    11. Re:Fans' Vote Was No Award by Runaway1956 · · Score: 0

      If I were only slightly closer to the drama, I might have paid $40 for the opportunity to vote "no award". I'm quite tired of the SJW's just walking in and taking things over. What would I have gained? Only the satisfaction of having slapped the SJW's in the face. The opportunity to insult the sorry sons of bitches, and to tell them that I reject their asinine nonsense. Yes, that would have been worth $40.

      --
      "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
    12. Re:Fans' Vote Was No Award by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To feel threatened by such a tiny niche as feminist SF is as pathetic as getting upset at women riding bicycles. If they don't like it they can look the other way.

      Sure, they were so upset that they nominated some feminist SF

      Did you read the either of the linked articles?

    13. Re:Fans' Vote Was No Award by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 0

      It's utterly pathetic student political shit that has escaped into an area where politics was previously not a huge deal.

      A superb description of SJWs sir/ma'am/xir, my hat's off to you.

      To feel threatened by such a tiny niche as feminist SF is as pathetic as getting upset at women riding bicycles. If they don't like it they can look the other way.

      Oddly enough I think you're the first person to mention feminist SF in this entire affair. Good strawman though keep whacking it.

    14. Re:Fans' Vote Was No Award by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Did you read the either of the linked articles?

      The Charles Stross blog covers it far better and answers your question.

    15. Re:Fans' Vote Was No Award by larryjoe · · Score: 1

      Wow, I didn't realize that you could buy your own vote. Of course, that also means that you can pick up friends or strangers and buy their votes, too. Of all voting systems, this seems to me to be one of the easiest to manipulate.

      In this case, "groundswell" could very easily be interpreted as vote buying.

    16. Re:Fans' Vote Was No Award by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      Sarkeesian didn't get almost 7,000 people to donate to her. Her campaign wasn't nearly that successful. GamerGate provided her with massive publicity and boosted her numbers by targeting her with harassment. Ironically if she had not been the target of their abuse hardly anyone would have taken any notice of her videos, made in her living room with a cheap camera and averaging 5 minutes long.

      That's exactly what happened here. The puppies trolled the Hugo awards, and people didn't like it so they signed up to vote against them. No conspiracy, people just didn't like what they were doing.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    17. Re:Fans' Vote Was No Award by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or someone's PAC money...

    18. Re:Fans' Vote Was No Award by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gamergate wasn't even fucking around during the Sarkeesian initial Kickstarter.

    19. Re:Fans' Vote Was No Award by silentcoder · · Score: 1, Interesting

      So wait... your way of attacking the "SJWs" would be to vote WITH them and against their homophobic, white supremacist opponents ?
      Whose side are you on here ? That's like if Sauron tried to stop Frodo by destroying the ring himself !

      As an aside, you guys really need to find a better insult for people like me than "social justice warrior", which as Will Wheaton so elloquently put it "is not the insult you think it is".
      Seriously - you are not doing yourselves any favors by giving the people you claim to be fighting a name that sounds like a particularly awesome superhero team !

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    20. Re:Fans' Vote Was No Award by silentcoder · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Politics not a huge deal in SF ? Politics has been the foundation of great SF for more than a century.
      It is politics that lie at the heart of "20-thousand leagues under the sea" - a famous work by perhaps the first true SF writer. Politics gave us Star Trek - and everything Philip K. Dick wrote. Heinlein's works are filled with political messages.

      In fact, you would be hard pressed to find a single good SF novel that isn't political. They are from all sides of the political spectrum and quite frequently the same novels are read as defending entirely opposing political messages. Many libertarians despise Star Trek as "statist and socialist" but Ayn Rand was a huge fan of it and considered Roddenberry a personal hero. Snowcrash by Neil Stephenson is set in a libertarian "paradise" but is he celebrating it as a dream come true or calling it a dystopian nightmare ? Which way you read it depends more on you than on what he intended. Now think about Diamond Age?

      Why is it that those who have the loudest opinions so rarely know what they are talking about ?

      On the contrary, the reason SF is so much more worthy of literary attention than it normally receives is actually BECAUSE of it's power for political messaging. SF is the ultimate exploration of "what if" - it allows authors to explore the outcomes of ideas, and political ideas are as important a part of that as technology. Every good SF author has realized that a world is more than the machines it contains - it's the people using them, and the society in which they live - that shapes them, without comment on that society, you would have no story to tell at all.

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    21. Re:Fans' Vote Was No Award by hairyfeet · · Score: 0

      That just shows Wesley Crusher has never played sjw or stormfront where they place a hate filled screed and YOU get to try to guess whether the vile bile being spewed is by an SJW or a member of Stormfront. If you score better than 50%? You are great at the game as the average SJW post is nearly impossible to tell apart from a neo-nazi (or in the case of Jews they may be one and the same, as SJWs hate Jews for some reason) because they are both spewing hate filled racist shit, the ONLY difference is who the racism is for and who its against.

      If you don't believe SJWs are real and nasty creatures? Go spend a little time talking to them, gamer-ghazi is a good place to start, and see how long you can go before somebody starts calling you an "ist!" and screaming for your death....."SJWs, what happens when millennials treat WPP like slavery and start throwing snack packs like 4 year olds"

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    22. Re:Fans' Vote Was No Award by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 1

      That's a nice rant but has zero to do with what I actually said, while we're on the topic of those with the loudest opinions.

      The puppies aren't complaining about feminist SF, whatever that is, they're complaining that stories which aren't pushing the "correct" social narrative are being deliberately forced out. In fact I can't recall ever reading the term "feminist SF" before, not that it doesn't exist somewhere I'm sure.

      Actually re-reading your rant I think you may have meant to respond to someone else entirely.

    23. Re:Fans' Vote Was No Award by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 1

      As the AC pointed out you lobotomite, GG wasn't even around at the time. Oh and she never in fact delivered those videos after all, two years overdue and still counting. But never let the facts get in the way of the lies you in particular are notorious for propagating.

    24. Re:Fans' Vote Was No Award by nitehawk214 · · Score: 1

      Nobody had to pay $40 to vote in the Slashdot poll. They had to pay at least $40 to vote in the Hugos. This is also, apparently, a huge increase over the last number of people who voted in the Hugos (65% more than last time?) suggesting a significant groundwell.

      Interesting, so it looks like they are making a lot more money on this, while making the awards entirely meaningless. Well played, WorldCons, well played.

      --
      I'm a good cook. I'm a fantastic eater. - Steven Brust
    25. Re:Fans' Vote Was No Award by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "instead of the fans' votes: it was the fans' vote"

      Fans don't vote "no award," they abstain or they vote who they like best. Only babies take the ball and run home.

    26. Re:Fans' Vote Was No Award by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Their "how to vote card" shit is directly due to the actions of "Vox" and his hate of what he considers some sort of tide of minority fiction - I really don't get what has led you to disconnect from what has happened so much. If you don't want to wade through the shit the Stross blog has a bit about how this stupid expansion of juvenile student politics with attention seeking extremism on top has developed.
      Having a list is entirely against the spirit of such a contest no matter who is pushing it.

    27. Re:Fans' Vote Was No Award by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, SF (and much fantasy) has always been political. However, it used to be the stories carried the message. Now the message carries the stories, and worse- the author's politics now carry the stories more and more often. (Don't think anyone can argue that winking nonsense like "Redshirts" has any political message.)

        One smallish clique of self-righteous jerks has been gatekeeping the award; some authors and fans rebelled. Will this end in a fair nomination/vote doctrine of worthy works? Probably not, but at least the game was exposed for what it is.

    28. Re:Fans' Vote Was No Award by Banner · · Score: 1

      How do you think he won HIS Hugo?
      Yes, his fans are very quick to do what he tells them to do. Same for GRRM,

    29. Re:Fans' Vote Was No Award by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

      Someone does not understand irony.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    30. Re:Fans' Vote Was No Award by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 1

      SJWs like Stross thought they had the slate situation well under control. When that turned out not to be the case, they took it to the next level. Although it is an education in the true nature of reactionary activity as exemplified by the SJWs.

    31. Re:Fans' Vote Was No Award by Shirley+Marquez · · Score: 1

      There is an externality that may have increased the Hugo vote count. There was also a hotly contested race this year to choose the site for the 2017 Worldcon. (Helsinki defeated DC, Montreal, and Nippon.) To vote for that, you had to become at least a supporting member of Sasquan and then also pay an additional site selection voting fee, that additional fee also gets you a supporting membership for the winning Worldcon bid. There were probably some people who were mostly interested in voting for the Worldcon site, but having already paid to be a Sasquan member decided to also cast a Hugo ballot.

      In contrast, last year's site selection vote was essentially unopposed. Kansas City had no serious competitor, in part because 2016 is the 40th anniversary of the first Worldcon in Kansas City, a very popular con that had Robert Heinlein as guest of honor. Thus site selection did not have as large a role in getting people to join the 2014 Worldcon, Loncon 3.

    32. Re:Fans' Vote Was No Award by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is a difference between:
        - exploring the social and political implications of technology and the issues therein
        - couching social and political ideologies in science-fiction clothing as simply a "set-piece"

      I'm not part of a voting block, part of an ideology or what have you but I can understand lamenting the loss of the science portion of science fiction. Ask yourself if what you are really trying to award here is exploration of the political / social issue regardless of the relationship to science and technology? Is it really good enough just to set something, "in space", "in the future"?

      The great masterworks have a handle on both and that is what we should be recognizing, otherwise aren't you giving awards to political and social fiction?

    33. Re: Fans' Vote Was No Award by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      You just ruled out Heinlein's stranger in a strange land from good sf. Not to mention Ender's game and such fantastic sf shorts as "Where late the sweet birds sang"

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    34. Re:Fans' Vote Was No Award by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      Irony doesn't work when the obvious meaning makes more sense.

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    35. Re:Fans' Vote Was No Award by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      As the mainstream is slowly beginning to realise, SJWs don't let little things like facts and evidence get in the way of a good 'wimmin in peril' narrative.

    36. Re:Fans' Vote Was No Award by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

      5950 isn't bad for a WorldCon. As someone who has been to quite a few (NoLaCon, AussieCon, and more) it's a respectable vote.

      Face it, fuzzy nipples or whatever GG name you're using this week was trounced. Or slapped down like the rabid beasties they were.

      Now try "writing good fiction".

      That might work.

      I'd vote for good fiction, even if I didn't agree with it's premise.

      --
      -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
    37. Re:Fans' Vote Was No Award by dbIII · · Score: 1

      SJWs like Stross thought they had the slate situation well under control

      Are you deliberately getting things so ass-backwards to try to get a reaction or are you honestly getting things so completely mixed up? Either way, it's generally expected for someone to have some sort of handle on a situation before making declarative statements.

  23. From the hugoaward web site by aepervius · · Score: 0

    "The Hugo Awards, to give them their full title, are awards for excellence in the field of science fiction and fantasy. They were first awarded in 1953, and have been awarded every year since 1955. The awards are run by and voted on by fans."

    It award excellence it says nothing else. If those women/minorities/LGBT novel shine by excellence then the sad puppies are idiot puppies. If on the other hand those novel do NOT shine by excellence then there is a suspicion they are nominated for other reason, being promotion of author for other reason. In such case then the puppies are correct as this should be excellence which should be promoted. Not political stuff.

    I have no idea whichever way the true reality is I can only give my own take : I can only say the 2014 award did not please me , anciliary justice for example, I found it more old school and not really "excellent" (so the critic of not conservative enough is funny from my POV , it was very conservative in its execution IMNSHO). Water on the shoulder was nice. But both I will have forgotten in a few years. In the end I would not care less for politic I want to see good SF and fantasy float up , being written by and about transgender lesbian women non white or white male. After all I liked Friday from Heinlein. The problem is that definitively this year politics took over from both side.

    My final verdict : both side can go to hell.

    --
    C. Sagan : A demon haunted world:
    http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0345409469/
    visit randi.org
    1. Re:From the hugoaward web site by ctid · · Score: 1

      You don't know enough about this to comment. Anybody can sign up to vote. The outcome of the vote reflects the will of the majority of those who registered. You don't have to attend Worldcon to vote. So the awards reflect those people who were interested enough to sign up.

      Last year's winners were chosen by the same process. The majority of those people who signed up voted and Ancillary Justice won one of the awards. How can you say that it should not have won?

      --
      Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
    2. Re:From the hugoaward web site by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you saying there's no fee? I was under the impression that it costs $40 to register, and if that's the case, no, not just anybody can sign up to vote. I emphasize, I'm legitimately asking if I'm mistaken. But if I'm not, please don't reply with a privileged 'if $40 is too much, then sf doesn't matter to you' argument.

    3. Re:From the hugoaward web site by radarskiy · · Score: 1

      "The problem is that definitively this year politics took over from both side."

      There is still no evidence that anyone other that the Puppies were politically motivated.

    4. Re:From the hugoaward web site by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 1

      Less than six thousand people actually voted and this makes for interesting reading: http://whatever.scalzi.com/201...

    5. Re:From the hugoaward web site by ageoffri · · Score: 1

      Seriously have you not read anything on the Tor editor blog called Making Light, or the numerous hit pieces by the media? Every attempt has been made to call Sad Puppies a conservative, misogynistic, and just plain evil group. If that isn't politics at its worst then I'd love to hear your definition of politics.

      --
      -- Slashdot, making the Left look conservative since 1997.
    6. Re:From the hugoaward web site by radarskiy · · Score: 1

      Have you not read anything that the Sad Puppies wrote about themselves? They would have been well served to let the Nielsen Haydens do their PR; at least then people would not be confusing the Sad Puppies with the Rapid Puppies.

    7. Re:From the hugoaward web site by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please know what you speak of. Do you just hope that all others don't?

      You don't know enough about this to comment.

      Oh I hope you never say something so obviously dumb again. For your own sake. It's trivially looked up. http://www.thehugoawards.org/hugo-faq/#How are the Awards Determined?

      It's not 'anybody' that can sign up to vote. It's 'anybody' that cares enough and ponies up $40 per vote. This little issue has been known for decades. It's strictly pay to play. Plus now it has the Internet! Yea!

      So both sides (plus fans) put up less than $250k combined. $125k in a race to match everyone's votes or $12.5k for what is essentially a win. Gamemanship among numbers like that is trivial to spot for insiders.

      So please don't tell me that someone with a social agenda and/or a larger than usual pocketbook for an "individual" couldn't SEVERELY compromise things. It's not on the FAQ site but it's commonly known that since this new fangled thing that is the internet was invented you could even send in your votes over it. Used to be snail mail before that existed.

      Doesn't give any cause for integrety issues does it. Or oversight tbh - but the Hugo's aren't even a tenth of what they used to be reputation wise 10 years ago.

      How this ever became any kind of sci-fi/geek/national news is beyond me. The only ones interested in keeping it in the national news are those who profit by doing so.

  24. Re:There's truth on both sides here by LaurenCates · · Score: 1

    This is probably where I fall in the scope of these things.

    Indeed, I haven't read all the works in question, so I can't tell you that the strawmen built on either side ("SJW's", "right-wing nutjobs") are in any way reflective of what really is going on.

    But I can say with certainty that most people (I said "most", okay? Fucking re-read before you jump down my throat about what follows in this post) who are planting a flag on one side of the other haven't either.

    As near as I can figure, the majority of the talking-head opinion pieces on either side aren't making any clear citations about the either side's preferences (i.e., citations to the works in question with clear descriptions and references to the works), about what constitutes "progressive" in science fiction and what work would fall under whoever's banner.

    And that as far as this particular controversy goes (as reading the works in question would take time I don't have), it's a lot of sound and fury. Awards are popularity contests. That's the way it's always been. Why anyone bothers to get upset about who wins, or why anyone bothers to trot out being an award winner as if personal preference can be swayed that way is beyond me.

    --
    Some people don't believe in fairies. I don't believe in The Patriarchy.
  25. Timothy, you share my namesake, I am shamed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I hope you get trapped in a mine with Joe and the other guy, never to be found again.

    to obscure?

  26. Don't trust [Re:Lovely summary.] by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 3, Informative

    I trust him more than [xx]

    Your fallacy is false dichotomy. Just because [xx] is a bad or unreliable commentator, doesn't mean that Breitbart is a good or reliable commentator

    In fact, Breitbard is not a reliable source.

    rather than actually pointing out anything untrue or misleading about what he wrote. If you see something he wrote that is untrue or misleading, spit it out. Otherwise, piss off.

    Many people did so. His headline is backwards from the truth. The fans vote was for "no award."

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
    1. Re:Don't trust [Re:Lovely summary.] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You keep saying people have done so. Perhaps you could link these posts so we could, you know, talk about them instead of having a pissing match? Because I was responding to one of the very first posts in the thread and at that point, there had been *no* refutations posted.

    2. Re:Don't trust [Re:Lovely summary.] by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 1

      That was then. This is now.

      --
      http://www.geoffreylandis.com
    3. Re:Don't trust [Re:Lovely summary.] by Crashmarik · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The no awards didn't receive a majority, but rather a narrow plurality.

      So if you're going to complain about slanted news it behooves you not to engage in the practice.

    4. Re:Don't trust [Re:Lovely summary.] by JWW · · Score: 1, Troll

      Yeah because only the people who voted 'no award' are true fans right, RIGHT.

      I am sick to death with the progressive war on free speech and association. They don't get to choose who the right or wrong fans are. Fans get to choose if they're fans of the genre.

      This 'no award' shit was them having a hissy fit about doubleplusungood fans nominating who they wanted to.

      The SJW's who threw a fit with this years hugs are a bunch of fascist twits ready to destroy people for thoughtcrime.

    5. Re:Don't trust [Re:Lovely summary.] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, obviously, they're not a democracy, they're a republic.

    6. Re:Don't trust [Re:Lovely summary.] by Aighearach · · Score: 1

      You should probably find out what "Free Speech" means before you accuse me (a progressive) of waging war on it.

      How is voting in a way you dislike an attack, and how does it oppose Free Speech? It seems like you're the one complaining about people's right to their own opinions.

      Maybe they just disagree with you, and voted their conscience, and there is no war on Free Speech. Maybe the Hugo Award isn't even an opportunity to fight over Free Speech. It seems that anybody who can publish a work is allowed to. Who is attacking Free Speech? I'd fight to defend it, but you can't have me attacking it just by saying words. The attempt is you trying to start a war, and failing because nobody is attacking Free Speech. You trying to wage war is not the same as me actually waging war. Get a grip. Did you learn about "progressive" values from Fox News or something? BTW, it is "infotainment," not actual news. By their own description of what they offer.

    7. Re:Don't trust [Re:Lovely summary.] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In what respect isn't it a reliable source? Like every single news organisation, you have to raise an eyebrow at some articles and accept others as probably correct. Milo is one of the better journalists there, actually researching his subject. There are plenty of journalists and bloggers out there who don't that you'd probably assume were telling you the truth just the same.

    8. Re:Don't trust [Re:Lovely summary.] by squiggleslash · · Score: 1, Informative

      I am sick to death with the progressive war on free speech and association. They don't get to choose who the right or wrong fans are. Fans get to choose if they're fans of the genre.

      In case you missed it: What happened here is that two right wing organizations gamed the system to ensure that only works they considered ideologically sound were allowed to be voted upon. Not progressives. Right wingers. One hard right (Vox Day) and one group that just felt that too many Hugos had gone to stories with progressive themes recently.

      So progressives weren't at war with free speech and association here. Right wingers are.

      Those same groups are claiming, here, that the Hugos somehow did not reflect the "Fans" votes. That's in the very headline of this article. In fact, the Hugos do reflect the vote, and those some right wingers are simply claiming that votes from people who did not like the limited choices provided to them, or who objected on principle to the ballot paper being rigged, should not count.

      So progressives aren't trying to "choose" who the right or wrong fans are. Right wingers are.

      The fact you would try to defend the Puppies on "free speech" grounds when both Puppy groups are opposed to allowing stories with themes they find offensive from being considered for awards is astonishing.

      Progressives have never tried to game the ballot. Never. Never in the history of the Hugos has that happened. Nor have we ever claimed that supporters of books with themes that are anti-progressive (and there are plenty of examples) are somehow not true science fiction fans. That's exclusively a right-wing phenomenon.

      You need to rethink your world view.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    9. Re:Don't trust [Re:Lovely summary.] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Nonsense, SadPuppies was a counter to years of socjus dominance of the Hugos, and factions within blackballing authors from nominations who weren't "politically acceptable" i.e Larry Correria was removed from nominations due to owning a gun shop and being for gun ownership.

    10. Re:Don't trust [Re:Lovely summary.] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      one group that just felt that too many Hugos had gone to stories with progressive themes recently.

      quoted by Wired, announced from the stage after the voting results, “I stand with people from marginalized groups who seek simply to be seen as fully human. Black lives matter.”

      so either you want to give a Hugo to the writer this person likes, or you support killing Black people for no reason. "there’s no middle ground between ‘We belong here’ and ‘No you don’t.’ "

      there you have it in naked glory. "No Award," because "Black lives matter."

    11. Re:Don't trust [Re:Lovely summary.] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And what started this was because progressives were suspected of doing whisper campaigns to vote against people of specific ideologies. This was an attempt to show two things, how the system is broken and also how progressives will vote over political bullshit instead of merit. Now progressives are working to ensure that there cant be another situation like this while also some people involved in the voting are looking to ban right wingers in this new system.

      So yeah, doesnt sound like the progressives are at fault at all...

    12. Re:Don't trust [Re:Lovely summary.] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They're not keeping them out for "offensive themes." They're keeping out shit stories that get votes simply as a matter of having those themes.

    13. Re:Don't trust [Re:Lovely summary.] by jcsalomon · · Score: 1

      In case you missed it: What happened here is that two right wing organizations gamed the system to ensure that only works they considered ideologically sound were allowed to be voted upon. Not progressives. Right wingers. One hard right (Vox Day) and one group that just felt that too many Hugos had gone to stories with progressive themes recently.

      Y'know, this would be a lot more believable if the Sad Puppies list (and Vox Day's Rabid Puppies list, which largely copies SP) weren't easily available, and if the authors on it weren't an ideologically-diverse bunch. But you report as malware sites all the SP-related blogs, maybe then people won't be able to check the truth of your claim.

    14. Re:Don't trust [Re:Lovely summary.] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not even close to accurate. You are lying across the board. Get your news from reliable sources and not partisan hack outlets. SJWs are a plague upon humanity and pushing back even mildly on them results in what just happened.

    15. Re:Don't trust [Re:Lovely summary.] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I trust him more than [xx]

      Your fallacy is false dichotomy. Just because [xx] is a bad or unreliable commentator, doesn't mean that Breitbart is a good or reliable commentator

      In fact, Breitbard is not a reliable source.

      rather than actually pointing out anything untrue or misleading about what he wrote. If you see something he wrote that is untrue or misleading, spit it out. Otherwise, piss off.

      Many people did so. His headline is backwards from the truth. The fans vote was for "no award."

      What's the matter little libby boy. Didn't get you latter today at the right time. Or it wasn't the fair trade variety that makes it taste soo good. Fucken lefty dickhead. I guess in your book only black crippled lesbians can write science fiction. Especially if they voted for the Dark Doofus. Anything else is a conspiracy.

    16. Re:Don't trust [Re:Lovely summary.] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      These morons (the Puppies) think that all of SF is Heinlein's *Starship Troopers* and any derivatives thereof (except probably *The Forever War*, which is gay-tolerant more or less).

      Let's look at some of the winners of the Hugos for best novel in the 1970s and 1980s:

      1970: Ursula K. Le Guin, *The Left Hand of Darkness*, a novel about a planet where gender is fluid.
      1971: Larry Niven, *Ringworld*
      1972: Philip José Farmer, *To Your Scattered Bodies Go*
      1973: Isaac Asimov, *The Gods Themselves*
      1974: Arthur C. Clarke, *Rendevous with Rama* (it was an open secret that Clarke was gay, and many of his novels, like *Against the Fall of Night*, have homoerotic aspects)
      1975: Ursula K. Le Guin, *The Dispossessed*, a novel about an anarcho-syndicalist movement founded by a woman
      1976: Joe Haldeman, *The Forever War*, a first novel critical of the Vietnam war which in some ways was a response to 1960 winner *Starship Troopers*
      1977: Kate Wilhelm, *Where Late the Sweet Birds Sang*, by a woman writer and features an environmental disaster as part of the setting
      1978: Frederick Pohl, *Gateway*, which features a character who has homoerotic fantasies
      1979: Vonda N. McIntyre, *Dreamsnake*
      1980: Arthur C. Clarke, *The Fountains of Paradise*
      1981: Joan D. Vinge, *The Snow Queen*
      1982: C. J. Cherryh, *Downbelow Station*
      1983: Isaac Asimov, *Foundation's Edge*
      1984: David Brin, *Startide Rising*
      1985: William Gibson, *Neuromancer*
      1986: Orson Scott Card, *Ender's Game*
      1987: Orson Scott Card, *Speaker for the Dead*
      1988: David Brin, *The Uplift War*
      1989: C. J. Cherryh, *Cyteen*

      Of 20 awards, 7 (35%) went to women and 2 (10%) to a gay man.

      And the SJWs are ruining SF?

    17. Re:Don't trust [Re:Lovely summary.] by Salgak1 · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Stepping in AS a Sad Puppy Supporter, for three years.

      Actually, the Hugos STARTED going downhill, as a general measure, from the late 1990s, and the trend has accellerated to the point that it was pretty obvious 4-5 years ago.

      I've voted in Hugos for 20-odd years, and while there HAVE been lovely works (Lois McMaster Bujold comes immediately to mind), the ideological slant has trended left since the I've been voting them.

      I'll also note the emergence of the "Social Justice Warrior" has been a relatively recent thing, I never even HEARD the phrase until late 2012-early 2013 or so, so putting the bounds of your list 25 years before that is moving the goalposts.

      The REAL issue of the Puppies, is that we believe that the STORY is the most important aspect of a work: is it engrossing, well-written, solid plot and characters. Any Social or Political message, if included, should be part of the story, not the story as a convenient vehicle to preach a particular message.

      Instead, we saw more and more messages, wrapped in a story, and generally dystopic in nature. We thought that we'd like to see some nominees with good STORIES. And so Larry Correia kicked off Sad Puppies 1. And the opposition went berserk. No nominations. So Larry came back in 2014: we got no nominations. Got told that if we wanted Hugos, we had to up our game.

      At this point, Larry stepped down, and Brad Torgersen stepped up. We had a list of recommendations for most of the categories. And then Vox Day/Ted Beale popped up with his alternate "Rabid Puppies" list, even bootstrapping our logo with a variant, and a full slate for ALL the categories. And we did get a larger number of people to register and nominate. So, from the numbers, did Vox and his Rabids.

      The result was unexpected. A Puppy sweep of the nominations, duplicating almost precisely the Rabid Puppy Slate. And the progressive wing of fandom collectively lost their minds. In the following days, we saw widespread media stories condemning us for "stuffing the ballot box". All of which quoted progressive sources, often identically, and yet NEVER contacted anyone on our side. We were accused of standing for white male supremacy and worse, despite a broad range of nominees across ethnic, gender, and political spectrums. Our female nominees were often amused at seeing in print that they were white Mormon males.

      We were repeatedly accused of being racist, sexist, homophobic, even neo-Nazis. And every time we proved otherwise, the cry of "VOX DAY!" went up. People seem to think that, somehow, if several groups of people are working towards similar ends, we MUST be coordinating action.

      To which I reply: have you ever tried coordinating people who trend conservative-to-libertarian ? It makes herding CATS look easy. I don't speak for Vox. I've occasionally interacted with him over the years, and I've read his nominated works. But Vox and his "dread ilk" are independent players, and they can speak for themselves. I know Larry, Brad, and next year's trio, Kate, Sarah, and Amanda. They're good people, interested in good stories.

      And none of us care bit one about the politics, ethnicity, sex, or who and how they prefer to sleep with. That's irrelevant, all we care about is a good story.

      Anyway, that's my significantly-more-than-2-cents on the subject. . . .

    18. Re:Don't trust [Re:Lovely summary.] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've been voting a lot longer than you. Some years, the nominees are better, some worse.

      The Puppies' nominees ranged the gamut, from really *not* vaguely Hugo quality to *crap*. Several fen I know, for example, couldn't even figure out the "plot" of "The Plural of Helen of Troy". I wasn't even interested in Kevin J. Anderson, not after plodding through the 5th book of his Hidden Suns... never mind his writing quality had gone from "not bad" to pulp, and seemed to be going down from there, never mind about his adding layers and layers of plot, never mind about the human raped, and then forgiving and siding with the whatsit who set the whole camp up, and had done her personally, let's just go to the end of the book and finding out that the Baddies we thought were beat were back in force, and the last chapter, where the race that created them, and have been extinct for 10,000 years are not, and are back... as in, "wow, I got a contract for another five books, I can cheat my readers like a shaggy dog story".

      Claiming you don't care about the politics, ethnicity or sex is a lie. As a single item of proof, I note that one of your nominees was published by Patriarchy Press!

      You're losers, and with more votes for the Hugos than have ever been cast, we rolled up our ballots and whacked you on the nose, hard. Go back under the rocks you crawled out of.

                        mark "you'd start a war with the first real aliens we met, to prove your 'manhood'"

    19. Re:Don't trust [Re:Lovely summary.] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sorry, but you're wrong. Two right wing organizations helped get authors onto a ballot, this is true. However, fans - mostly progressives - refused to vote for works solely on the basis of the author's politics. The Puppies did what they did this year because of the progressives ballot-gaming over the past few years.

      To be clear, I didn't vote for anything, and I don't really care that much. However, you should really do some fact-checking, and realize that the "progressive side" has some pretty shitty people too.

  27. Re:There's truth on both sides here by Pinky's+Brain · · Score: 1

    So you form your opinion on a guess ... I guess if you have an opinion and don't want to upset it by facts that's the best road to take. On the other hand I know you're wrong.

    "Total the YES and NO votes. If YES wins, the PW is confirmed. If NO wins, then No Award wins."

  28. Eh? by ctid · · Score: 1

    What has that to do with the Hugos?

    --
    Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
    1. Re:Eh? by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 1

      Exactly, it's a lengthy rambling screed intended to paint a particualr political picture.

    2. Re:Eh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But it is also exactly the same method and behavior they bring to the Hugos -- they are acting as a mob our to hang anyone that does not wish to surround themselves with their ideology.

    3. Re:Eh? by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      I'm genuinely confused as to who "they" are in this instance. Your comment could apply to the "SJW"s or the puppies.

      And in both cases I'd agree that you have a point.

  29. And the winner is... Vox Day by russotto · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Yes, the social justice clique burned the awards to the ground to stop any Puppy-nominated candidate from winning. But all Vox Day (the Rabid Puppy leader) wanted was to take the award away from that clique, and he was openly willing to burn it down. They did it for him. Bravo.

    The Sad Puppies this year were run by Brad R. Torgersen. He's the most moderate of the puppy group. He explicitly wanted the Sad Puppy slate to be apolitical, the best works around. So on the slate were works by people in the Social Justice clique, and works by those who were neither puppy nor SJ. All the clique had to do to save the award for themselves is vote for those works. But instead they hounded some of their own people into withdrawing their nomination, and refused to vote for those neutrals (e.g. Jim Butcher) who remained. Once again, bravo, SJW/CHORFs; in stomping on as decent a person as Torgersen you gave victory to Vox Day.

    1. Re:And the winner is... Vox Day by ctid · · Score: 1

      Yes, the social justice clique burned the awards to the ground to stop any Puppy-nominated candidate from winning.

      Yet another person who just wants to humiliate himself. There is no "social justice clique". It's an open vote. Anybody can register to vote. You don't even have to go to Worldcon to vote. So please explain to everyone, how this clique "burned the awards to the ground".

      --
      Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
    2. Re:And the winner is... Vox Day by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He explained it pretty well. Read his post again.

    3. Re:And the winner is... Vox Day by ctid · · Score: 2

      No he didn't, because he (and presumably you) seem to think that the voters are a closed group. In fact, anyone may register to vote. You don't have to attend Worldcon to vote. So there is no "clique" to sway the vote. There are just fans of scifi who are committed enough to stump up the $40 (or however much) to register to vote.

      There can't be a clique. Anybody can register to vote. Presumably the people who register are the ones who are interested enough in scifi to be bothered. But anybody at all is allowed to register to vote.

      --
      Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
    4. Re:And the winner is... Vox Day by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      [...] Puppy-nominated [...] Rabid Puppy [...] Sad Puppies [...] puppy group [...]

      Ok, seriously, what the fuck is with all this talk about dogs?

    5. Re:And the winner is... Vox Day by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since the word "clique" makes you unhappy, what word would you use for a subgroup of like-minded individuals? Substitute that word. Then reread. The post is clear. Maybe you simply disagree with it.

    6. Re:And the winner is... Vox Day by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      anyone may register to vote.

      Your constant insistence of "you're wrong because anyone can register to vote" is flat out wrong. It does not matter if anyone can register to vote. What matters, is who did register to vote. And OP's claim was that this time, that "anyone" largely consisted of SJWs.

      If you disagree with that claim, that is fine. OP didn't provide any proof for their claim. But your counter-argument is not a counter-argument at all.

    7. Re: And the winner is... Vox Day by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's no Puppy clique either then...

    8. Re:And the winner is... Vox Day by ctid · · Score: 1

      Don't be stupid. You can't say, "anyone can register" and then say, "the people who registered prove that it was a fix!". Anyone was allowed to register. The people who registered to vote voted and the Hugos are awarded (or not awarded) as a result.

      ANYONE can register to vote. If the majority of people who registered to vote voted in a particular way, ALL that you can conclude from that is that the winners reflect what the registered voters wanted. You can't look at the results and then say, "oh look, the vote was dominated by group X".

      Try not using the term, "SJW" to see how absurd your argument is.

      --
      Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
    9. Re:And the winner is... Vox Day by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The SJW cliques are Sad Puppy and Rabid Puppy who stuffed the nomination process with their own socially motivated nominees. Who said SJWs have to be liberal? Apparently these guys epitomize everything they vilify regarding SJWs. When the voting was opened to the general public their nominations were rejected. The most socially motivated, justice seeking, warrior-ethos toolbags are the ones that scream SJW!!! at the top of their lungs.

    10. Re:And the winner is... Vox Day by ctid · · Score: 2

      The OP's contention is that: Yes, the social justice clique burned the awards to the ground to stop any Puppy-nominated candidate from winning. This presumes to know the reason that none of Vox Day's nominations won an award. The possibility that the OP thinks is most likely is that there is a "clique" (or some other term) of "SJ" people who all voted together. This fails Occam's Razor test - it's not the simplest explanation. A far simpler explanation is that the works that were nominated by Vox Day were not actually good enough to be awarded Hugos.

      --
      Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
    11. Re:And the winner is... Vox Day by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Toni Weisskopf has been repeatedly nominated for Best Editor, and has come close to winning it several times. She is widely respected as one of the best editors out there, and as a good person to work with.

      She was No Awarded, for the simple reason that she was supported by people the SJWs don't like. Not one has an actual complaint against her... but almost 3000 people voted the anti-puppy No Award slate just to deny her the award.

      Because of that sort of behavior, along with widespread and proud statements like "I've never read one of their books and I never will!", are why it is more reasonable to assume that you are incorrect, and that people were voting based on the fact that a given work was Puppy-nominated, rather than actually judging the work on its own merits.

    12. Re:And the winner is... Vox Day by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 1

      And yet again I ask, if that is the case, why did things turn out exactly as Scalzi had planned?

      Maybe he's just really, really in touch with the average sci-fi reader?

    13. Re:And the winner is... Vox Day by radarskiy · · Score: 1

      "none of Vox Day's nominations won an award. "

      OP doesn't realize that this isn't even true (Guardians of the Galaxy won for long form dramatic presentation). These people can't even fail correctly.

    14. Re:And the winner is... Vox Day by radarskiy · · Score: 1

      "to stop any Puppy-nominated candidate from winning. "

      False. _Guardians of the Galaxy_ won Best Dramatic Presentation, Long Form

    15. Re: And the winner is... Vox Day by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is, but they don't get to label the other 7.299999 billion people on the planet as SJWs because they didn't vote for them. If we get to declare what clique other people are in nonconsensually, then you're in the Dumb Puppy clique.

    16. Re:And the winner is... Vox Day by ctid · · Score: 1

      That article doesn't say what you think it says. The context of that article was a lot of people running around saying that the Hugos were doomed because the various "puppies" groups had managed to nominate some garbage by voting for a slate. Scalzi's article simply explains that while it's possible for a minority to get things nominated, that doesn't mean that it's possible for the minority to get Hugos awarded. In other words, everybody's doom and gloom about the Hugos was misplaced.

      It's worth reading his article, because it is quite interesting and it is how I learned a lot about the process.

      --
      Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
    17. Re:And the winner is... Vox Day by ctid · · Score: 1

      Yes. Guardians of the Galaxy was a reasonable nomination and it won fair and square. It probably is not the film I would have voted for but:
      (a) I didn't stump up $40, so I had no vote!
      (b) It is obviously a serious nomination in any case.

      --
      Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
    18. Re:And the winner is... Vox Day by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      Which actually goes to indicate there wasn't a cabal of cliquey SJWs rigging the vote. The film and novel category were simply too big for the puppies to stuff the nominations. The result that it was a bunch of nominations which reflected what the fans liked, more or less.

      And the fans liked "Guardians of the Galaxy", and didn't vote against it just because Vox Day also likes it.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
  30. Re:made themselves irelevent by Revek · · Score: 2

    Its funny. How do you think you take part. I've always taken part by reading. Lately when I look at a list of top scifi its all low rent soap opera in some vague dimensionless settings. In other words weather our new interlopers who confuse dragons and fairy's for scifi realize it. They have made the hugos irrelevant. Its amazing you think the main part of 'taking part' is worrying about some decrepit award. I've felt ignored for years by the awards. The crap that got voted in has mostly been crap. In truth to me it looks like the SJW has poisoned it to spite another diversity.

  31. Great way to destroy the Hugo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have not been following this other than knowing some controversy existed so have no opinion either way. The only thing it has done for me is break any link in my mind between a hugo award and a good story.

    If the system can and is being gamed the result cannot be trusted. The Hugo is now just another internet poll.

    1. Re:Great way to destroy the Hugo by ctid · · Score: 1

      The Hugos are not being destroyed. You have to pay $40 to register to vote, so it's not like an Internet poll. The system isn't being "gamed". Anybody can register and vote. The same people who vote also get to nominate for next year's Hugos.

      --
      Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
    2. Re:Great way to destroy the Hugo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anybody? Including nonfans that are there only to vote for ideological supporting outcomes instead of books they actually like to read. That is the mob that joined and refused to vote for books like the Dresden files only because they were not LBGT.

    3. Re:Great way to destroy the Hugo by ctid · · Score: 1

      That is the mob that joined and refused to vote for books like the Dresden files only because they were not LBGT.

      This is Slashdot, not Twitter. You can't just make shit up and expect people to believe it. Or, to put it another way,

      --
      Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
  32. Last Post by Bollie · · Score: 1

    Goodbye Slashdot.

    For the last couple of years, I've been mostly ignoring Slashdot, occasionally reading a headline, wishing back for the good old days when the incompetence was charming. This is not charming. This is hateful.

    1. Re:Last Post by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 4, Funny

      Yes, the Slashdot readership will greatly miss the five posts you have made over the last four years.

    2. Re:Last Post by pipingguy · · Score: 1

      I miss him already.

    3. Re:Last Post by epyT-R · · Score: 1

      Hateful of what exactly?

  33. Re: Breitbart? Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    You could call them mysogenists, racists, etc. But if you want to sum them all up with broad strokes the most relevant moniker would likely be WMLs for White Male Libertarians.

  34. I have a better political mission for the genre by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Science fiction authors always had political differences, which fans were in many cases aware of. In the days of the Big Three, we had, let's see...a New Deal Democrat, a military/libertarian Republican, a gay Eurosocialist. The worlds they built reflected their sociopolitical values, and guess what - nobody worried about it! It just caused them to offer different styles of future, which fans debated as alternative scenarios, which is the whole idea. The field as a whole had no net political coloration.

    What Beale and his minions (there might be henchmen in next year's budget, but they'll never be able to afford cronies) are mainly concerned about seems to be identity politics, especially when combined with the current softening of the science being presented in an effort to broaden readership. I think they have a point on the retreat from science into what Beale calls "angsty fantasy," but do fans really care deeply about the gender ratios in their stories? Beale is attacking from a fundie Christian perspective that has zero following in the genre.

    If SF needs a political mission, I would like to see it address a real present danger, which is the general culture's mounting disrespect for science itself. Tis showed up first as a generalized fear of every application of science, but it has mushroomed into deep-seated evil like this:
    http://dgrnewsservice.org/2015...

    If these people gain political traction, everything we value here is in deep trouble. If the genre wants to charge into a political battle, this is the one it needs to join.

  35. So-called Social Justice Warriors by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Social Justice Warriors are a pox on society's arse.

  36. Think much? by hey! · · Score: 1

    Hugos Refuse To Award Anyone Rather Than Submit To Fan's Votes

    There is no such entity as "Hugos" that can refuse or accept anything. The ballot was duly submitted to the fans, who in fact voted. They just didn't vote the way you thought they should vote. Well, tough; it's their vote and they can do whatever the hell they want with it, and if they don't think any of the nominees are worthy, that's why "no award" is on the ballot.

    --
    Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
  37. mob rule does not make right by aepervius · · Score: 1

    "The majority of those people who signed up voted and Ancillary Justice won one of the awards. "

    Majority from a self selected group is far from being an indication of excellence. But if you think so, then If you expand and read around you will see that the popular estimate is far more mixed for ancillary justice. Do not take me wrong, it is a good novel, but it is a novel conservative in its execution, and as such it does not reflect excellence and innovation. If you had told me it was a novel from a white old guy back in the 70ies I would have nodded : that is how conservative it feel in its execution (note : literary execution and plot, I am not using conservative in a political sense). Maybe it was the best they could find that year though I did not look that up. But then again they could simply have voted "no award". Read around i am not the only one to think so, the critics about its execution, I am not the only one thinking that, and web site where you can see collated critic and fan vote certainly show a wide split. A good novel, but not one of excellence.

    --
    C. Sagan : A demon haunted world:
    http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0345409469/
    visit randi.org
    1. Re:mob rule does not make right by ctid · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure if you're deliberately being obtuse, but the "self-selected group" that you talk about is everybody who wants to register. Presumably the ones who register are the ones who are most interested in sci-fi. Ancillary Justice was voted for by the majority of voters in that category and so won the Hugo. It makes no sense at all to say that something that won a democratic vote "didn't deserve" to win. It was a democratic vote and it won.

      In any case, your criticism that Ancillary Justice is "conservative" is, to put it mildly, contentious.

      --
      Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
    2. Re:mob rule does not make right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not going to comment on whether the winners should have actually one, since that is a very subjective decision for each voter. My problem with this year is it appears many of the "No Award" votes were from people who NEVER READ THE STORIES. These voters only joined to take away the award from authors who were nominated. That's exactly the sort of politicized voting that the Sad Puppies have been complaining about. The Hugos should be about the work and not about a political agenda. However, I also think the Sad Puppies need to come back to the real world. How often have popular high-grossing movies been snubbed by the Oscars? It's the stories that push the envelope, that look at the human condition from a new angle, that are nominated and win. There may be more entertaining, better written/acted/directed movies available, but that's just the way these awards work. It's not always fair, but get over it. Spend your time writing good science fiction and the fans will award you by buying your book, and then next one, and the next.

    3. Re:mob rule does not make right by ctid · · Score: 1

      My problem with this year is it appears many of the "No Award" votes were from people who NEVER READ THE STORIES.

      How could you possibly know this?

      --
      Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
    4. Re:mob rule does not make right by Gryle · · Score: 2

      This site, while not a smoking gun, is fairly good evidence.

      --
      Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not entirely sure about the universe - Einstein
    5. Re:mob rule does not make right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Majority from a self selected group is far from being an indication of excellence

      it is a novel conservative in its execution, and as such it does not reflect excellence

      So a self-selected group of 1 can declare something not excellent, and if he does so then a thousand people saying it is excellent are all simply wrong?

      You really have a high opinion of your own opinion, don't you?

    6. Re:mob rule does not make right by squiggleslash · · Score: 1

      Not really, no. It recommends voting for the things you want to win before voting No Award. So even the website that has "no award" in its damned URL isn't actually advocating voting No Award for everything, or every category exclusively controlled by Puppies.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    7. Re:mob rule does not make right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The purpose of the Oscars is to award good movies, not popular ones.

      If the Hugos rewarded popularity, Scalzi, who obviously must be selling a sh*tl*ad of books given that contract, would win every year.

    8. Re:mob rule does not make right by Gryle · · Score: 1

      Fine, this one then? The site says, and I quote, "If you are voting the strict ix-nay uppy-pay slate, here’s the options in each category" and then goes on to list a voting slate.

      --
      Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not entirely sure about the universe - Einstein
  38. Re:There's truth on both sides here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    refusing to award someone that the people that paid 40 dollars a pop to vote in the election... is also wrong. By the bylaws of the organization I'm guessing that is a violation or something of their own rules.

    Unlike the presidency where the closest there is to "none of the above" is to write in a fake name, the Hugos has a "No Award" option, which the masses voted for instead of those nominated by either the Sad Puppies or the Rabid Puppies (which makes it hilariously sad to see the Rabid Puppies leaders so out of touch with reality that insist that their loss is proof that the "SJWs" have taken over... they lost too).

    That is to say, there is no "Hugo" "refusing" to award anyone anything. All of them lost the election to "None of the Above" fair and square.

  39. Bad voting method, abused by Shmucks by gurps_npc · · Score: 4, Insightful
    There were a bunch of people that did not win awards. They falsely believed there was a conspiracy against them. To "prove" this, they initiated their own conspiracy, which they claimed was a 'counter conspiracy'.

    But if you compare the results of this year's vote, to votes of previous years, you can easily see that this year is the only year where there was an organized attempt to get certain people elected. Categories that they did not care about were ignored, there was no disagreement at all among the conspirators, while their was no unified pattern of votes in previous years. In previous years there was real competition - rather than an agreement for all of one category of voters to focus on a single, predetermined winner.

    So the analysis of their attempt to game the system proves that they were in fact WRONG, and previous awards were fair voting, rather than a conspiracy as they paranoidly claimed.

    But it's not entirely fair to blame the conspirators. They simply abused a system that was not designed to handle intentional abuse.

    Frankly, the main problem is that people simply don't care enough about the Hugo's to cheat - until now. So now we have to upgrade the voting system to account for a-holes trying to game the system.

    --
    excitingthingstodo.blogspot.com
    1. Re:Bad voting method, abused by Shmucks by ctid · · Score: 3, Informative

      No upgrade is needed. The voting system to get things nominated is different to the one to make the awards. So it's possible for a small group to create a voting "bloc" to get works nominated, but they are then not able to force those works to win awards.

      --
      Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
    2. Re:Bad voting method, abused by Shmucks by gurps_npc · · Score: 1

      Then how did this conspiracy succeed? Look, I love Larry Correia's Monster Hunter series. If you ignore the conservative political stupidity he puts in, it's a great set of novels. But he has managed to destroy the Hugos.

      --
      excitingthingstodo.blogspot.com
    3. Re:Bad voting method, abused by Shmucks by Calydor · · Score: 1

      But ... it didn't succeed. The end result was 'No winner' rather than one of the writers supported by the 'conspiracy' winning.

      --
      -=This sig has nothing to do with my comment. Move along now=-
    4. Re:Bad voting method, abused by Shmucks by ageoffri · · Score: 1

      First off Larry wasn't an organizer of Sad Puppies 3, second it was people like Mary Robinette Kowal and John Scalzi that urged the destruction of the Hugo's. People learned that the Social Justice Bullies were playing in a tiny sandbox and using the reputation of the Hugo to nominate works based not on the quality, but if it was a "good message", bonus points if the SJB's could tie in a minority author. Mary went so far as to organize mass buys of supporting memberships for people who couldn't afford it, with the "wink wink" that they would vote No Award for anything Sad Puppy related. Mary and her ilk were happy to light a match and drop it at their gasoline soaked feet. All Larry has done is expose the hypocrisies of the "trufans".

      --
      -- Slashdot, making the Left look conservative since 1997.
    5. Re:Bad voting method, abused by Shmucks by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      Upgrade is needed: they managed to stuff the nominations so thoroughly that only their (terrible!) choices were in the running for an award. It's pointless having an award if it always ends in "no award" becuase a bunch of ass-hatted douche nozzles stuff the noms with crap.

      The voting system is being amended to make it harder to stuff the nominations.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    6. Re:Bad voting method, abused by Shmucks by ctid · · Score: 1

      it was people like Mary Robinette Kowal and John Scalzi that urged the destruction of the Hugo's.

      Citation needed. In fact, I can save you the trouble of linking to John Scalzi's view of the Puppies' stuffing of the nominations. That does not urge the destruction of the Hugo's. Actually, it states unequivocally that what the Puppies had done was fine and that there was no need to change the process

      --
      Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
  40. are the nominees any good? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I haven't heard anyone ask this: were the nominated works any good? If you don't like the nominees, is it because of their politics or because the works sucked?

    I just want to read a good yarn. I have never researched the political views of any author, and I'm not about to start now.

    1. Re:are the nominees any good? by 91degrees · · Score: 2

      Not read this year's

      Last year's puppy slate tended towards pulpy action adventure rather than more philosophical works. So better is subjective - some people like action. Personally I didn't care for them too much but then I found the best Novel winner didn't thrill me either.

    2. Re:are the nominees any good? by serviscope_minor · · Score: 2

      I haven't heard anyone ask this: were the nominated works any good?

      No, no they weren't. I think a large fraction except for the various video and full sized novel awards (i.e. the ones too big to stuff anyway) and graphic novel are all freely available online. The most accessible are the short stories and they're certainly online.

      Go and read them if you care. They are not very good. Actually the non-puppy winner of the novella is also not very good either.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
  41. Re:There's truth on both sides here by Karmashock · · Score: 1

    Offer a complete argument if you have an actual criticism.

    --
    I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
  42. Re:There's truth on both sides here by Karmashock · · Score: 1

    apparently I mistook what happened... the people that voted, voted for no award to be issued. So I'm fine with that.

    --
    I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
  43. What Do Dogs Have To Do With This? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I tried reading the Wired article, but all the talk about puppies just confused me.

  44. Both sides are stuffing ballots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is continually being framed as "white guys stuffing the ballot box." It is my understanding that they were doing so in response to GLBT communities stuffing the ballot box with works by/about their community. That part of the story seems to be continually glossed over in favor of political correctness.

    1. Re:Both sides are stuffing ballots by ctid · · Score: 1

      Neither side can "stuff ballots". It's a free vote and anybody can register to vote. This year, the Sad Puppies (and another group I think) created a "slate" to get a number of works nominated. In the main vote, those works did not win.

      But anyone can register, so nobody can "stuff ballots".

      --
      Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
    2. Re:Both sides are stuffing ballots by Gryle · · Score: 1

      The Sad Puppies put together nominations they thought deserved to win and said "Hey, read these, and if you like them, vote for them." Mostly they encouraged folks to go buy a membership to vote. (I had no idea I could vote on the Hugos, frankly. I figured it was like the Oscars or the Academy Awards in that respect.) The Rabid Puppies, lead by Vox Day, said "This is our slate! Minions, march!". While there was some overlap, it was mostly Rabid Puppy-dominated categories (Short Story comes to mind) that got "No Awarded."

      --
      Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not entirely sure about the universe - Einstein
    3. Re:Both sides are stuffing ballots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Again wrong. People can pay for others to vote. If you don't know that much, then maybe you should do more research.

    4. Re:Both sides are stuffing ballots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Doesn't this just mean that anyone can "stuff the ballot"? Since it's an open vote, anyone with the time (and money) can vote as many times as they like. That's the definition of "ballot stuffing".

  45. Please.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anyone who cares about Sci Fi can join the Worldcon for $40 and nominate which ever person or work they care about. When the voting time comes, please read all the works in a category and vote for which ever you think deserves an award.

    Slates have always been there. Politics and vote begging have always been there. Please ignore them. Also ignore the voting based only on political views held by the author. Be an adult and judge work on merit, not ideology. There is too much crap on both sides here.

  46. Re:There's truth on both sides here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But when people paid 40 dollars a pop to nominate the books they liked, it was called 'cheating' and 'ballot stuffing' and 'racist'. How is this different?

    Is it because this campaign involved 3000 people, whereas the other one was only 300 people?

  47. They Brought It On Themselves by chill · · Score: 2

    The WSFS brought this upon themselves by intentionally being vague and nebulous about what they're giving awards for.

    The popular belief is that Hugo awards are for science fiction and possibly fantasy, but the truth is you can nominate any form of fiction.

    Quote the FAQ:

    The charter explicitly makes fantasy as well as SF eligible for our awards. Works of fantasy have often won Hugos, and, in fact, Hugos have been won by works that some people consider horror or even mainstream. There will never be universal agreement about the precise distinctions between genres and sub-genres, so WSFSâ(TM)s position is that eligibility is determined by the voters. To paraphrase the great SF editor and writer Damon Knight, a Hugo winner is what the Hugo voters point to when they award a Hugo.

    The idea of voting for a work based on the gender, race, skin color, sexual identity, etc. of either the author or characters is stupid. How about basing it off the plot, character development and writing quality?

    For example, Citizen Kane was a great movie and that isn't impacted by the fact the main characters are all heterosexual and white. It wouldn't be improved -- nor detracted from -- if the characters were of a different race or sexual orientation. The story stands alone.

    Conversely, Gigli was a steaming pile of fecal matter. Replacing everyone in it with a wide variety of LGBTQ people of a random variety of races, skin colors and genders wouldn't help. It would still be shit all on the merits (or lack there of) of plot, writing and character development.

    --
    Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
    1. Re:They Brought It On Themselves by LetterRip · · Score: 1

      For example, Citizen Kane was a great movie and that isn't impacted by the fact the main characters are all heterosexual and white. It wouldn't be improved -- nor detracted from -- if the characters were of a different race or sexual orientation. The story stands alone.

      Citizen Kane is an awful movie. It was an important to the film industry due to introducing some important innovations that were influential and adopted by later films, but as a movie it was horrendous. Bad acting, bad writing, etc. It is worse than just about anything that has made it to the big screen - indeed Gigli - as awful as it was - is better in terms of being a movie than Citizen Kane.

  48. The Sad Puppies won. by _KiTA_ · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The Sad Puppies won. Yes, they didn't win a single award -- in fact, some really good works lost to No Award, seemingly just to spite them.

    But that was the point.

    Their stated goal was to prove that there was a group of people out there voting for political reasons and fixing the Hugos. To fight this, they did the unforgivable sin of nominating some good works (such as one of the Dresden Files novels) for a Hugo.

    The CHORF / SJWs fell for it en mass, just as George R R Martin begged them not to (archive version) back in April. They proved the Sad Puppies point -- that the Hugos are fixed by a group of gatekeepers.

    The Hugos have been fixed for years, to the point that Steven King outright refused to participate due to how bad it became. The CHORFs proved the Sad Puppies' point more than anything else could. The Hugos have been forever tarnished by this -- not by the Sad Puppies voting in the "wrong way" for the "wrong type of fans", but by the CHORFs decreeing that you have to have the right politics, the right thoughts, the right opinions, to be a "real fan" or a "real hugo winner."

    1. Re:The Sad Puppies won. by phantomfive · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The Hugos have been forever tarnished by this

      Probably not. Eventually ideological people get bored. They're in it for the emotional high, and as soon as things get tough, they leave.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    2. Re:The Sad Puppies won. by Luthair · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure Dresden files really qualifies as good works, entertaining sure but they're just pulp fiction nothing unique or award worthy.

    3. Re:The Sad Puppies won. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      The works nominated by marching-in-lockstep slate votes were almost entirely shit. There's just so much better right-wing fiction out there, and yet we had John C. Wright nominated over and over.

      And no matter how many times the obviously not-just-defeated-but-crushed Puppies repeat it, there's no getting around the fact that the Hugos have always been, as they were this year, an open vote, in which anyone can participate. The Puppy argument was that they *had* to rig the vote, because they were the Nixonian silent majority and that the mustache-twirling leftists, in between eating babies, were busy ensuring the Puppies' take on what sci-fi should be wasn't making it on the ballot through secret cabal-like actions (not that there was any proof offered of course: in time-honoured McCarthyist fashion, the accusation was enough). But even rigging the game, they still lost. Now, with the voting numbers public, and with them completely destroyed in the vote totals -- a clear declaration that they are in the minority -- the argument has shifted to "no really, we never wanted the awards anyways, also, a cabal is *still* preventing us from getting the awards we don't want! Victory through defeat!"

      It's so transparently desperate and dishonest that I'm amazed anyone falls for it. But as Barnum used to say...

    4. Re:The Sad Puppies won. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or maybe people just vote no award because they are tired of the bullshit? I know that's what I would do.

      And it has been fixed for years, so bad that EVEN Steven King refuses to play, but now they done it and _forever_ tarnished the ting. Get real.

    5. Re:The Sad Puppies won. by radarskiy · · Score: 1

      "To fight this, they did the unforgivable sin of nominating some good works (such as one of the Dresden Files novels) for a Hugo."

      The Hugo for Best novel was in fact awarded this year. It just went to another novel.

    6. Re:The Sad Puppies won. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The problem is, after they mob and burn, many times there is damage in their wake. This whole mob attack crap needs to be done -- people need to stand up and say enough; not acceptable. When mobs of LBGT fanatics find a post they don't like on twitter and mob a person at his work, following her/him to their open source projects until there is scorched earth it is unacceptable. Its one thing when scifi fans are voting for books they like -- it is another to vote purely on ideology and inserting your mob voice into a nomination process for books you don't even read.

    7. Re:The Sad Puppies won. by Sibko · · Score: 0

      Have you seen some of the more recent awards?

      Check out this 2013 award: "The Water That Falls on You from Nowhere" by John Chu.

      "Some weeks prior to the beginning of the story, an unexplained phenomenon begins worldwide: whenever a person lies, water falls on that person from nowhere. Consequently, Matt decides that the time is right to not only come out to his traditional Chinese family, but to introduce them to his partner."

      There was a rather uncouth observation I caught while reading about this: https://i.imgur.com/faHz3H1.pn...

      Another 2013 award: "If You Were a Dinosaur, My Love" won the 2013 Nebula Award for Best Short Story, and was nominated for the 2014 Hugo Award for Best Short Story.

      "A narrator explains to their love how things would be different if that person were a Tyrannosaurus rex."

      How many of the Hugo awards have gone to authors writing stories that, to most people, would never be considered science fiction? These two stories in particular don't stand out as science fiction to me, but rather as social justice pandering - which happens to be exactly the complaint sad puppies have leveled against the awards. There are also accusations that the awards have become nothing more than marketing for Tor Books, and that authors are being selected, not for the content of their works, but the color of their skin.

      Frankly, the fact that the community surrounding the Hugo awards voted No Awards as opposed to allowing some of the few sad puppy nominations to potentially win, pretty much stated their case: The awards are being used to push political agendas; only progressive, left-wing stories can be nominated and if you don't match that ideology, then fuck off.

    8. Re:The Sad Puppies won. by LaurenCates · · Score: 1

      No kidding. I like the Dresden Files (well, the last three or so I've found to be dragging out the story so much; the whole series went downhill after "Dead Beat" really, because, how do you top that?), but I can't imagine that a Dresden Files novel is the best sci fi/fantasy novel of the past year.

      --
      Some people don't believe in fairies. I don't believe in The Patriarchy.
    9. Re:The Sad Puppies won. by radarskiy · · Score: 1

      "the fact that the community surrounding the Hugo awards voted No Awards as opposed to allowing some of the few sad puppy nominations to potentially win"

      _Guardians of the Galaxy_ won Best Dramatic Presentation, Long Form.

    10. Re:The Sad Puppies won. by radarskiy · · Score: 1

      "Yes, [the Sad Puppy Slate] didn't win a single award"

      False.

    11. Re:The Sad Puppies won. by aaribaud · · Score: 2

      [The Sad Puppies'] stated goal was to prove that there was a group of people out there voting for political reasons and fixing the Hugos.

      And in retrospect, they succeeded in proving there was one such group indeed: the Sad Puppies.

    12. Re:The Sad Puppies won. by squiggleslash · · Score: 2

      Exactly.

      Does anyone who's not a complete ideological nutball really think that if, for the sake of argument, Lesbians of Color Against Bernie Sanders, had somehow created their own slate and organized, Puppy-style, enough bad faith voting that ALL the ballot options were leftish and there were no right wing books to be had, that the reaction by Hugo voters would have been any different whatsoever?

      Hugo voters voted the way they did for two reasons. They were aware two third parties with broadly similar, albeit to different extremes, had gamed the selection, and were pissed about it. And they had to choose between a second rate selection of works selected not by merit, but by political ideology.

      They were never going to vote any other way. And it doesn't matter whether the next attempt to force a slate is from the right, left, or the Monster Raving Loony Party, they're not going to accept this crap again.

      The * Puppies lost, however much their supporters might spin it otherwise. They proved nothing beyond the fact that Hugo voters care about the integrity of the award.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    13. Re:The Sad Puppies won. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Entertaining" isn't a valid criteria to judge my entertainment on?

    14. Re:The Sad Puppies won. by ageoffri · · Score: 0

      Actually they proved that the Social Justice Bullies are a highly exclusionary group. It wasn't about politics for the Sad Puppies, it was about good books. The slate wasn't picked based on the author's skin color, or politics. It was based on if the organizers of Sad Puppies 3 liked the book. The backlash from the SJB's was to burn the house down around them and award a record number of No Awards, with multiple loud mouths for the SJB's calling and even organizing mass buys of memberships for the sole purpose of No Award.

      --
      -- Slashdot, making the Left look conservative since 1997.
    15. Re:The Sad Puppies won. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This stuff has demonstrated to me that the Hugos are unreliable, and are being used to look for a certain kind of story rather than being most interesting. So I'm going to decrease my reliance on it for finding things to read.

      And I think this will last permanently, though I don't expect to completely discount it - just decrease how much I value it, and less over time.

      So "permanently tarnished" fits very well for me, at least - it's not destroyed it, but it has tarnished it. There will always be some suspicion of "Are they rigging this?" in both directions, whereas I previously counted it as a way to find great SF.

    16. Re:The Sad Puppies won. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      if one of the sad puppies had won they would have told "see, once we get *real* SciFi on the ballot it wins".

      So it was some sort of Xanathos Gambit for the puppies: no matter the outcome they can tell "we won".

    17. Re:The Sad Puppies won. by serviscope_minor · · Score: 2

      Given that 1. anyone can sign up and vote and 2. No Award won by an absolute majority in many of the categories, the so-called clique actually seems to comprise an absolute majority of the members.

      But yes, it's terrible when you have this clique of people who all vote for works based on merit and don't like the same writings that you do. So cliquey.

      The Hugos have been fixed for years, to the point that Steven King outright refused to participate due to how bad it became.

      Did you ever vote?

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    18. Re:The Sad Puppies won. by Jesrad · · Score: 3, Insightful

      But the S.F. readers get bored of it much faster... Only the people who think they have a religious duty to "correct" reality have the patience, energy and engagement to stick around when everything goes eye-rollingly consternating.

      I had not heard of this whole mess before today, and I find it already tedious just searching for basic factual information about WTF happened and who has been an arsehole and who stuffed whose ballots. I was just hoping to learn of exciting new authors, and now it feels like I'm somehow reading a Twitter argument between some random MRA and my transgender SJW sister.

      --
      Maybe we deserve this world ?
    19. Re:The Sad Puppies won. by ctid · · Score: 2

      Don't be ridiculous. Anybody could have signed up to vote in the Hugos. You could have signed up if you wanted to. Of the people who signed up, the majority didn't want the sub-standard SP entries to win Hugos, so they voted "No award". It's not "bullying" if you lose a vote. It's democracy.

      --
      Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
    20. Re:The Sad Puppies won. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Their stated goal was to prove that there was a group of people out there voting for political reasons and fixing the Hugos.

      And they proved that really well, by being that group.

      I really don't understand why anyone sane is actually on their side. They're trying to prove a conspiracy and even though they failed they still think they won. It's like they can't think of any other reasons why people would react negatively to them. These people are so far up their own asses they can still talk through their mouths.

    21. Re:The Sad Puppies won. by ageoffri · · Score: 1

      I did sign up and I did vote. It is bullying if you are outright organizing buying of voting rights for your supporters.

      --
      -- Slashdot, making the Left look conservative since 1997.
    22. Re:The Sad Puppies won. by Theaetetus · · Score: 1

      The Sad Puppies won. Yes, they didn't win a single award -- in fact, some really good works lost to No Award, seemingly just to spite them.

      But that was the point.

      Their stated goal was to prove that there was a group of people out there voting for political reasons and fixing the Hugos... They proved the Sad Puppies point -- that the Hugos are fixed by a group of gatekeepers.

      Did they? Or did they prove that the Hugos could be fixed by a group of gatekeepers?
      Specifically, we can certainly both agree with the latter - the SPs acted as a group of gatekeepers to fix the nomination slate, proving it was possible. But the fact that they did so easily and completely implies that there was no opposing force. If there already was a group of SJW gatekeepers blocking unapproved nominations, then we would have heard about a nomination battle, no? Each side of gatekeepers would rally supporters trying to control the slate, and this would become more and more public as their forces grow. Most likely, the resulting slate would have some extremist SP nominations and some extremist SJW nominations, no?

      Instead, without even a breath of resistance, the SPs controlled the slate. That shows it was possible, but also shows no one was trying to do it before them. The SPs actually proved that there wasn't a group of people fixing the Hugos until they came along.

    23. Re:The Sad Puppies won. by Idarubicin · · Score: 1

      The Sad Puppies won. Yes, they didn't win a single award -- in fact, some really good works lost to No Award, seemingly just to spite them.

      But that was the point.

      Weeeeeerll...it seems to me that they created circumstances where they could pick a narrative claiming "victory" no matter what the outcome was.

      If they hadn't successfully stuffed the nominations with their slate(s), then they would have claimed victory type #1: The SJW cabal is too powerful, and their conspiracy has suppressed our nominations!

      Since they did successfully stuff a number of nomination categories, they claimed victory type #2: The SJW cabal was too powerful in past years. It took a dedicated bloc of True SF Fans to get Real Stories on the ballot!

      If they had successfully won Hugo awards with their stuffed nominations, they would have claimed victory type #2A: Our nominations of previously-suppressed Real Stories were what Real Fans really wanted, representing the sort of works that the SJW cabal has been keeping off the ballot. This outcome is arguably the only one that would have lent meaningful-but-inconclusive support to their original thesis (that SJW cabal members have been skewing the Hugos).

      Since they lost the Hugo awards for all of their stuffed categories (resulting in no award), they have claimed victory type #2B: Despite nominating Real Stories for Real Fans, the SJW cabal's concerted effort to suppress us during voting was effective. We have thereby shown that the award is hollow, and our (super secret) goal of destroying the SJW Hugo is a success!

      It's worth noting that Victory #2B wasn't the victory that the Puppies (Sad or Rabid) announced at the beginning (or in the middle) of their campaign. It's just the sour-grapes face-saving revision they started using recently, when they realized that Hugo voters weren't going to give awards to a bunch of not-very-good stories.

      --
      ~Idarubicin
    24. Re:The Sad Puppies won. by Triklyn · · Score: 1

      ... goddamn, your "uncouth observation" had like 5 short story plots i'd love to read, wow. They'd be in ted chiang territory if the author followed one of those.

      come to think of it, they could just avoid this whole controversy by throwing money at ted chiang to get him to write faster and just giving him the hugo for short story yearly.

    25. Re:The Sad Puppies won. by MHolmesIV · · Score: 1

      I love how everyone mentions Jim Butcher when trying to justify the puppies actions, but fails to talk about the fact that John C Wright had 3 of the 5 associated works nominations. And they were utter drivel.

      If all the puppies had done was get Jim Butcher onto the ballot, we wouldn't be here talking about the Hugos today. No. They instead shut out everyone but their own nominees by taking up all 5 slots in as many categories as they could.

      _Of course_ there was going to be a backlash. There was no "fixing". There was only angry fans seeing someone tromping shit over their lawn and saying "NO".

    26. Re:The Sad Puppies won. by MHolmesIV · · Score: 1

      Ugh, I meant "Best Novella", not "Associated Work"

    27. Re:The Sad Puppies won. by _KiTA_ · · Score: 1

      "Entertaining" isn't a valid criteria to judge my entertainment on?

      According to the demagogues the Sad Puppies and Gamergate are fighting, no. All media, especially entertainment, must have moral and social value beyond just being fun.

    28. Re:The Sad Puppies won. by _KiTA_ · · Score: 0

      Does anyone who's not a complete ideological nutball really think that if, for the sake of argument, Lesbians of Color Against Bernie Sanders, had somehow created their own slate and organized, Puppy-style, enough bad faith voting that ALL the ballot options were leftish and there were no right wing books to be had, that the reaction by Hugo voters would have been any different whatsoever?

      Hugo voters voted the way they did for two reasons. They were aware two third parties with broadly similar, albeit to different extremes, had gamed the selection, and were pissed about it. And they had to choose between a second rate selection of works selected not by merit, but by political ideology.

      \

      You know, that might make sense, except that the Hugos were already being fixed, before this, by a group of hard left exclusionary TERFs headed up by two TOR employees.

      And don't talk to me about "second rate selection" of Scifi when drivel like ""If You Were a Dinosaur, My Love" or "Queers Dig Time Lords" was getting nominated.

      Everyone likes to pretend that the Sad Puppies are a bunch of right wing trolls that just showed up and said "nice award, we're gonna fuck it up to spite you overly progressive scifi fans." In reality it was far closer to "nice award, but why are only people in the far left SJW clique being allowed to even be nominated?"

      That's the takeaway I hope at least some people get here. The Hugos were being fixed by a whisper campaign for years. The Sad Puppies just brought the whisper campaigns into the open and proved they existed.

  49. Re:made themselves irelevent by ctid · · Score: 2

    What you have written here makes no sense at all. Here are some facts for you.
    1. Anyone may register (I think it costs $40);
    2. Anyone who registers can nominate any work they like;
    3. Anyone who registers can vote for any work(s) they like in each of several categories;
    4. If someone thinks that nothing in a particular category deserves an award, there is a "No award" option;
    5. The voting system for nomination is different from the voting system for the awards;

    So how can "SJWs" (or anyone else for that matter) affect the awards of the Hugos? This is a serious question - I really want to know what you think.

    --
    Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
  50. "Fans" can easily be sockpuppets by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Of all people, you the sockpuppeteer master know what squiggleslash. The folks @ Hugo Awards do too obviously. So much for "fans" (especially fake ones by sockpuppet).

  51. Not this year by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And the Tor Books award for outstanding book published by Tor goes to........ wait, we didn't get nominated.....

    Sorry guys, going to have to cancel the "hugos" they have clearly been infiltrated by some sort of anti-tor hate group, they're probably conservatives or libertarians or some shit, yeah that's it, they are misogynist fascist republican shape-shifters who hate tor.

  52. Re:Wired Article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Mr Strawman, from his publication "The Daily Slanderer"

  53. Re:There's truth on both sides here by hey! · · Score: 2

    I remember watching the New England Patriots play the Chicago Bears in SuperBowl XX (1986). This was in the pre-Belichick/Brady era, and the Patriots got clobbered 46-10. Here's the thing: there were points scored on both sides, but that doesn't add up to some kind of moral victory for the Patriots.

    The Sad Puppy case always struck me as weak; if you look back over the entire history of the awards what you see there was never much of a preference for the kind of stories they write. The overall pattern is one of eclecticism; Starship Troopers wins Best Novel one year, Canticle for Leibowitz the next. Occasionally there's run for a couple of years for one kind of story or another.

    I don't think Torgeson, Correia et al are racists, homophobes, or misogynists. Their feelings were hurt by not winning. Writers are sensitive, even writers of manly adventure stories. It's abundantly clear that they're in denial about their hurt feelings, so they're trying to advance the idea that there's some kind of conspiracy against them, but they don't really care that much.

    I don't even think Vox Day is a racist or misogynist. He's a griefer out for attention. That's why he feels he's won no matter what the ballot outcome. It's not a victory that an ordinary person would recognize as such (which would involve the other guy realizing he's lost). The Sad Puppies weren't victims until they decided to play footsie with Day; it's not SJWs or CHORFs doing the victimizing, it's the Rabids.

    --
    Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
  54. Re:There's truth on both sides here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, to be fair, it is pretty easy to miss the truth when you read SJW blogs like Breitbart -- the wired story has a much more accurate account of the situation.

  55. Single transferable vote by jklovanc · · Score: 1

    Here is an issue with a single transferable vote(STV) that is caused by voters not using it properly. Say there are five candidates and they are almost equally popular so each would initially get about 20% of the vote. The problem comes in if the voters do not make a second choice and the default is "none of the above". In this case basically stating their book is the only one qualified. By the third round of eliminations "none of the above" wins. That is why most elections have a runoff rather than using STV.

  56. The Secret Pre-condition to winning a Hugo by radarskiy · · Score: 1

    Write well.

    The Puppies groups got a lot of objectively poor writing nominated. That writing got included in the packet that is made available to all voters to ensure that the voters can read all of the material before casting their vote. Everyone got to see the poor quality of the works they were offering.

    1. Re:The Secret Pre-condition to winning a Hugo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, terrible authors like Jim Butcher. That guy is so bad, and so unpopular - no one likes his stuff. Why would he ever be on the ballot?

    2. Re:The Secret Pre-condition to winning a Hugo by radarskiy · · Score: 1

      Justin Bieber is a very popular singer, but has never won a Grammy. The path between "things people like to consume" and "thing people think are good" is not so straight.

      There are other authors that I happily pay money to read which I would not say are very good. There are authors which I generally think are very good but have produced specific works which I don't think are good.

    3. Re:The Secret Pre-condition to winning a Hugo by seebs · · Score: 1

      For what it's worth, I quite like Jim Butcher and his writing. On the other hand, I also have every confidence that he can might well one day win a Hugo without ballot-box stuffing to get him in the list.

      --
      My blog: http://www.seebs.net/log/ --- My iPhone/iPad app: http://www.seebs.net/seebsfrac/
    4. Re:The Secret Pre-condition to winning a Hugo by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      The Secret Pre-condition to winning a Hugo: Write well.

      Lolno.

      Explain the 2014 short story winner "The water that falls on you from nowhere"

      But of course, just because bad writing sometimes wins, it doesn't mean that an arbitrary piece of bad writing will win.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
  57. What is SF? by Tokolosh · · Score: 1

    The nub of the story is the definition of SF. Since Jules Verne and HG Wells a certain type of fan has build a clubhouse for like-minded people. They have evolved their own idea of the SF genre. Now fringe genres want in, and are being resisted. Whether this is good or bad is a matter of opinion.

    Mine is that just claiming 50 Shades, Noddy, Teletubbies, Dianetics, Marxist Manifesto or The Fountainhead as SF, does not automatically make it so. Because if so, then we would soon see Heinlein fans submitting his works for Feminist awards and wailing when they are inevitably rejected. The SJW are rejected not because of their beliefs, but because they are not SF fans and cannot unilaterally define SF.

    We end up with LGBT cake shops being forced to bake confederate flag cakes - is that really what we want?

    --
    Prove anything by multiplying Huge Number times Tiny Number
    1. Re:What is SF? by chill · · Score: 1

      Exactly. Except the Hugo site doesn't *itself* define SF. It goes out of its way to say their awards are not limited to just SF.

      At least the Nebula Awards specifically call out the genres of Science Fiction and Fantasy. The Hugos are open to all comers.

      --
      Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
  58. Take your Whine and start a new award by damn_registrars · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If the shoe were on the other foot, the rally cry would be for the liberals to go establish their own award and awards process. Why can't the conservatives do the same? Yeah, we know that slashdot has catered to the right for some time (note the breitbart link in the summary as yet another of thousands of front-page examples here) but really the hypocrisy here is rather extreme.

    --
    Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
    1. Re:Take your Whine and start a new award by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      If the shoe were on the other foot, the rally cry would be for the liberals to go establish their own award and awards process. Why can't the conservatives do the same?

      Because they can only cooperate to shit on things. Only their assholes operate in unison.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  59. Re:There's truth on both sides here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    SJWs say that these books shouldn't exist. They should stop being made. It's just like with GamerGate when SJWs say that the "industry has to change". The problem is that some people like the current crop of games. (Heck, if it were up to me, JRPGs would be more dominant.)

    Think of it lick porn. I don't care for BDMS porn, but its existence doesn't hurt me. Yet there are people (like in Britain currently) that want to see it gone.

    Games, books, television, porn, and other media are all fictional. There is no justification for banning or berating people into changing their preferences.

  60. Re:There's truth on both sides here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Correia was nominated, but withdrew because he doesn't want to be in the Hugo race.
    Torgeson asked not to be nominated.

    This is also the third year of Sad Puppies, but the first year of Vox's Rabid Puppies. Yet despite your claims, during years 1 and 2, when Vox was not running any campaign, the Correia was called racist, sexist, Nazi, and almost every other insult the SJWs can think of.
    Why, if was only Vox's fault?

  61. Re:There's truth on both sides here by Karmashock · · Score: 1

    Fair enough. If people voted to have no award given then I've no problem with what happened.

    I will merely point out that there does seem to be an issue with "brigading" going on with these awards and apparently both these sad puppy people as well as some past winners of these awards have used that as a mechanism to secure an award.

    We know how this works on social media... its not constructive. Something possibly needs to happen to control block voting or cliche voting.

    I'm not advocating for either of these fellows. I've read quite a few of Scalzi's books and Stross's books... those are two of the guys the Sad puppy people are attacking apparently. Both are good authors. Though, I will grant that they both let their politics get away from them at times. Scalzi has basically destroyed the Old Man's War series by trying to pull the story in a direction it isn't going to go in. And if you read Stross's Laundry series you can see his politics get the better of him in a few consistent places.

    I'm also not especially aware of these people organizing the sad puppy thing. I've never read them. Though they cite people getting blackballed for politics like Card and that's a valid point. Card is Christian and he doesn't support gay marriage. I mean... hold any opinion you want on that but that has nothing to do with whether someone should or shouldn't get an award for writing.

    As I said, I think there is an argument on both sides and I think what is happening is a consequence of people not working out some sort of acceptable protocol for dealing with what might have been a simple thing without the heavy handed power plays.

    A lot of these dramatic shit shows are the result of censorship or people being dicks to each other or other offenses that ultimately piss people off so badly that whatever started it doesn't matter any more. People are just mad at that point. That really should be avoided. Even if people are full of shit and whatever they want is something they shouldn't have... don't slap them down unless you're prepared to deal with the consequences of pissing them off.

    --
    I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
  62. Re:There's truth on both sides here by preaction · · Score: 1

    There is a stark difference between what consenting adults do in a private place and what consenting adults discuss doing to other, non-consenting adults. Some of those discussions are even illegal (not many in the US though, and I hope it stays that way).

  63. Re:There's truth on both sides here by Karmashock · · Score: 1

    In fairness, they're saying that there is a new pattern of brigading and block voting going on where previously that was not a feature of the awards.

    I think you're right that the Sad puppies probably do have a weak argument. That said... I think they do have one and possibly the way the award system is structured should make the voting system less vulnerable to manipulation by cliches.

    Just do that. No recriminations. No admissions. No punishments. Just change the way the votes work so that cliche voting is harder.

    How to do that? I am not familiar enough with their voting system to really have a clue. I can think of a few ways its done in other voting systems but I don't know which method would be applicable without studying their situation in some detail.

    --
    I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
  64. Re:made themselves irelevent by LaurenCates · · Score: 1

    Tinfoil hat theory?

    The conventional wisdom about SJWs is that they're often middle-class to upper-class white people. That's not always the case, but both sides create strawmen so, I'd continue with my reductio ad absurdum here.

    So, if the SJWs make more money/have greater media connections, they can influence anyone with $40 to burn to vote on their slate because it supports the kind of media they want to see propped up by awards as if to say "see, our side is the right one, and winning the award proves it. Ha ha, we're popular AND prestigious!"

    And if you happen to believe that this particular theory is patently absurd (again, not that I'm saying that's what happened here), I direct you to the last Oscars awards ceremony, in which there was outrage that "Selma" wasn't nominated for "Best Picture" or "Best Director" (a film about Martin Luther King, and directed by a black woman), because the awarding simply wasn't "diverse enough".

    --
    Some people don't believe in fairies. I don't believe in The Patriarchy.
  65. Re:There's truth on both sides here by Karmashock · · Score: 1

    Hmmm... if you strip out the overwrought opinion, did the fellow say anything that was inaccurate? Can you cite something factually incorrect or misleading?

    --
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  66. Re:made themselves irelevent by BadDreamer · · Score: 1

    If you think the Hugos are irrelevant, then what exactly is it you have a problem with here?

  67. Gamergate is entirey (a), not (b). by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But the reason for (a) is often defended by rhetoric such as would appear in (b). Hence the confusion. E.g. game writer sleeps around with lots of game journos who then "happen" to give her game a good review WITHOUT DISCLAIMING partisanship.

    This was "rebutted" by a "You MRAs hate women getting ahead. Just because she's a woman and she writes game for women, you gotta hate" and so on.

    1. Re:Gamergate is entirey (a), not (b). by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, why did the female game developer get all the hate and threats? What guilty game journos were GG going after for this same debacle?

    2. Re:Gamergate is entirey (a), not (b). by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, why did the female game developer get all the hate and threats? What guilty game journos were GG going after for this same debacle?

      Because she got herself famous over it, famous people get threats

    3. Re:Gamergate is entirey (a), not (b). by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      So, why did the female game developer get all the hate and threats? What guilty game journos were GG going after for this same debacle?

      Ask her. After all, every time her paetron numbers started dropping she injected herself right back in, just like brianna wu.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
  68. Even the "bad guys" in this hit piece love sci fi by PerlPunk · · Score: 1

    If you are a real sci-fi fan and not another SJW who sees sci-fi as just another medium to broadcast his (ahem, "her") cis-gendered religious beliefs, then how can you not love this one from TFA?

    --- quote ---

    Going forward, he [Beale] said, no matter how the Hugo administrators modify the nominating process to try to prevent manipulation (and there are two proposals being considered), he will still have enough supporters to control future awards. Specifically, “I have 390 sworn and numbered vile faceless minions—the hardcore shock troops—who are sworn to mindless and perfect obedience,” he said, acknowledging that his army wasn’t made up solely of sci-fi fans. On the contrary, “the people who are very anti-SJW said, ‘Okay, we want to get in on this.’” When I asked him how he might deploy those people in the future, he continued, “It’s very simple. The dark lord speaks, the minion acts.”

    --- end quote ---

  69. Rename it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let's rename it "Hugo Award for Political Correctness" and be done with the charade.
    Otherwise innocent SF readers may mistake award-winning works for readable ones. ;)

  70. Re:Even the "bad guys" in this hit piece love sci by PerlPunk · · Score: 1

    The other TFA from Wired, not the main one.

  71. Just returned to Slashdot, and this is what I see? by Cyberpunk+Reality · · Score: 1

    After a several year break, I decided to come and give Slashdot a try again. And on my second time checking the site, I find *this* crap on the front page? Offensively misleading summary on an article by "anonymous coward". It would be hard to find a less worthwhile "news" website.

    --
    Rule 35 of the internet: "If it can be hacked, it will be". - Charles Stross
  72. Headline is bogus but voting "no award" was B.S. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The headline is bogus but that aside it is difficult to spin what's happened here to suit Wired's agenda. A whole bunch of social justice warriors joined up to vote no award at the Hugos in many categories as a political act. That's pretty disgraceful. They weren't content to simply vote for works they liked they've completely politicized this award making it irrelevant.

  73. Re:There's truth on both sides here by hey! · · Score: 1

    Yet despite your claims, during years 1 and 2, when Vox was not running any campaign, the Correia was called racist, sexist, Nazi, and almost every other insult the SJWs can think of.
    Why, if was only Vox's fault?

    I never claimed Correia was racist, sexist or Nazi. Nor did I claim it was only Vox's fault; I claimed the Sads' association with Vox is a result of their own actions and inactions; it's not fair, put it was predictable.

    As for "why", I always say to my kids that there's at least one actual example of any kind of person you can imagine, somewhere in the world. So what some person on the Internet says doesn't prove anything about society as a whole or other people you might associate that person with. If you looked hard enough on the Internet you'd find a Jewish neo-Nazi -- or at least someone who claims to be one.

    --
    Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
  74. Larry Correia nailed it with this quote. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    “I said the Hugos were dominated by cliques that cared more about an author’s identity and politics than the quality of their work,” Sad Puppies founder Larry Correia told Breitbart. “Tonight they proved me right.”

  75. Fans Don't Like Self-Reliance Stories? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You must not be familiar with the wildly successful (and brilliant) novel "The Martian", which is bound to win at next year's Hugo ceremonies. BTW, the Ridley Scott directed movie adaptation is coming out in a few months and I can hardly wait.

  76. Re:Just returned to Slashdot, and this is what I s by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Welcome back!

    This is the new improves /. with the overt right-wing, libertarian, whiny, misogynist agenda!

  77. does SF matter? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I mean still? I have not read an interesting book for ages and I still try from time to time - I look up nebulas and hugos from last few years and try to read some of them but that is an universal crap or I grew uninterested maybe. The books also suffer from less editing - nobody reads the books before printing it seems. Which is just as well - I stopped reading now for good. Looking how god awful the scripts for SF movies are I'd say interwebs and gobalization destroyed many things - good writing was among them.

    1. Re:does SF matter? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're normal. For all the nerd's howls of rage, sci-fi is actually quite unimaginative and narrow-minded. It's mostly puerile, predictable crap.

  78. Re:There's truth on both sides here by hey! · · Score: 1

    Actually you put your finger on what I think the real problem is: the voting system for selecting "the best" in each category.

    No matter how you tweak it, you're going to run afoul of Arrow's Impossibility Theorem, which basically establishes there's no rational, consistent, fair way for a group of voters to select the most preferred anything if there's more than two candidates. Occam's Razor prefers this as an explanation for the occasional inexplicable result to one that posits a widespread secret conspiracy to subvert the vote. If you want me believe somebody orchestrated a campaign like that in the modern age, show me the digital footprint of that campaign and I'll believe you. The Sads and Rabids after all left a substantial one; are the SJWs and CHORFs that much smarter than them?

    The option I like is approval voting, in which each individual voter is allowed to vote for *all* the candidates he thinks are good enough. This works because it doesn't even attempt to select the "best" candidate; it selects the candidate the greatest number of people would be happy with. So you amend the voting system to ask people to select all the candidates that they think should be remembered for all time as a great story.

    Mathematics tells us that "best" is a concept best left to individual critics, not voters.

    --
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  79. Re:There's truth on both sides here by hey! · · Score: 2

    SJWs say that these books shouldn't exist.

    Examples please. And show me how these particular people are managing to steer the course of fandom.

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  80. Re:made themselves irelevent by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 1

    If you look in on Beale's blog, it has an angry screed denouncing "Stranger In A Strange Land."

  81. Re:There's truth on both sides here by Karmashock · · Score: 1

    there's apparently been blatant brigading going on... and brigading is a real thing.

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  82. Re:There's truth on both sides here by hey! · · Score: 1

    there's apparently been blatant brigading going on... and brigading is a real thing.

    I can't evaluate this statement or respond to it without specific examples.

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    Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
  83. Libertarians, go figure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Free Market Libertarians aren't going to let things like voting with dollars, (Hugo voting isn't free ), or even reality get in the way of their agenda or weltbild.

  84. Larry Correia has sand in his vagina by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    “I said the Hugos were dominated by cliques that cared more about an author’s identity and politics than the quality of their work,” Sad Puppies founder Larry Correia told Breitbart. “Tonight they proved me right.”

    Except he's wrong.

    You want to vote, you pay your money. http://www.thehugoawards.org/i-want-to-vote/

    He just has sand in his vagina because his conservative agenda failed, because his followers weren't willing to fork out the €35 / $40 to vote for him.

  85. poor puppies... by unami · · Score: 2

    ...turns out, it isn't as easy as you thought to rig an election. it's not their authors being "conservative" that makes those books lose. incidentially they are all - sometimes entertaining - pulp novels. it's the quality, stupid.

    1. Re:poor puppies... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not quite, though. The rigging was to fuck up the voting, which is exactly what happened. The well was poisoned to ruin the awards, not to give them out to what they wanted. It has been a massive success for those that wanted the Hugo's ruined. This is precisely what GRRM was talking about a number of weeks ago, but you all fell for it regardless. Even today you cannot see what the aim actually was, despite authors fucking telling you!

  86. Hugos and the WSFS by nojayuk · · Score: 1

    The Hugo awards are a part of the Worldcon, nominated and voted on by members of the Worldcon. Anyone can be a member of the current Worldcon by paying a membership fee. Supporting membership usually costs $40. That doesn't get you physical access to the con itself, attending membership is a lot more.

    Joining the Worldcon makes you a member of the World Science Fiction Society (WSFS) for that year. As part of that membership you get nominating and voting rights for the Hugos including the right to nominate the next year but not vote. If you want to vote next year (that con will be in Kansas City in 2016) you need to pay for a supporting or attending membership for that specific convention.

    I was a member of the 2014 Worldcon, nominated and voted that year and nominated this year but I couldn't vote this year since I didn't join Sasquan.

    As I understand it a lot of people joined Sasquan as supporting members after the nominations closed simply to vote for the Hugos, generally opposing the slate nominees. They couldn't change the nomination lists but they could vote against the slate nominees. In the end the opposition was strong enough that most slate nominees ended up below No Award (or as David Gerrold calls it "Noah Ward").

  87. Majority [Re:Don't trust [Re:Lovely summary.]] by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 5, Informative

    The no awards didn't receive a majority, but rather a narrow plurality.

    So if you're going to complain about slanted news it behooves you not to engage in the practice.

    Nope.

    In every single one of the categories in which NO AWARD won, it won on the first ballot with a majority.

    The closest was in editor, long form, where the results were:
      No Award 2496
    Toni Weisskopf 1216
    Sheila Gilbert 754
    Anne Sowards 217
    Vox Day 166
    Jim Minz 58
    Total votes 4907

    But 50.9% is a majority. (The other categories were not nearly as close.)

    I'm rather sorry for Toni, who I rather like, and who might well have won in the absence of the puppy-only ballot. If she had won, I would have said "well deserved."

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
    1. Re:Majority [Re:Don't trust [Re:Lovely summary.]] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm rather sorry for Toni, who I rather like, and who might well have won in the absence of the puppy-only ballot. If she had won, I would have said "well deserved."

      Did you vote for her ? then please spare the crocodile tears

    2. Re:Majority [Re:Don't trust [Re:Lovely summary.]] by Cytotoxic · · Score: 1

      I'll take it that you are an expert on the topic and also somewhat passionate about it, so I'll ask you. How does the single transferrable vote thing work?

      Someone below stated that if you only chose one work, your second choice defaults to "No Award". Therefore an evenly divided electorate that had a majority of voters failing to select a second choice would give results exactly as you have listed.

      Is that how it works? Did we arrive at "No Award" on purpose, or did we arrive at "No Award" because a large percentage of the electorate failed to list a second choice?

    3. Re:Majority [Re:Don't trust [Re:Lovely summary.]] by jcsalomon · · Score: 1

      I'm rather sorry for Toni, who I rather like, and who might well have won in the absence of the puppy-only ballot. If she had won, I would have said "well deserved."

      Of course, before Sad Puppies she’d never gotten a nomination...

    4. Re:Majority [Re:Don't trust [Re:Lovely summary.]] by FutureRobertOverlord · · Score: 2

      I feel similarly with regard to Mike Resnick losing in editor, short form. He took second place after "No Award." He's a good writer, and Kirinyaga (for which he won his first Hugo award) is a spectacular and nuanced novel. I'm somewhat surprised the Puppies like him, but their taste doesn't seem to be all bad, as evidenced by their only victorious nomination: Guardians of the Galaxy.

    5. Re:Majority [Re:Don't trust [Re:Lovely summary.]] by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

      The no awards didn't receive a majority, but rather a narrow plurality.

      So if you're going to complain about slanted news it behooves you not to engage in the practice.

      Nope.

      In every single one of the categories in which NO AWARD won, it won on the first ballot with a majority.

      The closest was in editor, long form, where the results were:

        No Award 2496
      Toni Weisskopf 1216
      Sheila Gilbert 754
      Anne Sowards 217
      Vox Day 166
      Jim Minz 58
      Total votes 4907

      But 50.9% is a majority. (The other categories were not nearly as close.)

      I'm rather sorry for Toni, who I rather like, and who might well have won in the absence of the puppy-only ballot. If she had won, I would have said "well deserved."

      Don't confuse fuzzy nipples morons with facts. It's hurts their tiny heads.

      --
      -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
  88. Uh, no, that is an outright lie. by seebs · · Score: 3, Informative

    The Hugos did not "choose not to award anyone rather than submit to fan's votes". They submitted to the votes of the fans, as always. The fans voted for "No Award".

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  89. Re:There's truth on both sides here by St.Creed · · Score: 2

    If Orson Scott Card got his act together and wrote something on the order of Speaker for the Dead, or Ender's Game, again, I'm pretty sure he'd claim both the Hugo and Nebula. Unfortunately, the main reason he didn't get more awards was because most of what he wrote later was rather crappy. Xenocide, anyone?

    Correia - I enjoy his books a lot, but they aren't in the same league as Stross or Scalzi. Correia takes the old fantasy plot of monster hunters and upgrades it rather well, but still... no. Comparing it to The City and the Stars is awful. Then again, MHI by Correia is miles better than Redshirts. I've never understood that particular award. Actually, *anything* by Scalzi is better than Redshirts. A miss, IMO.

    But once Correia (or John Ringo, or Travis S. Taylor) create something that's really different from "upgraded western or war story" I'd be all for it. It's not that they can't write, it's just that their characters are so.. cardboard. Women are fuckable housewives, the "real" men are muscled jocks, we have the nerds, ... and let's not discuss the bad guys. If they aren't union organizers, or environmentalists, they're Democrats. If you read a lot of Ringo in one go, even the characternames start to become predictable.

    Anyway, I didn't vote. But I'm curious to hear from the voters - anyone here?

    --
    Therefore, by the (faulty) logic you're using, you're just a cow with a keyboard - osu-neko (2604)
  90. Re:There's truth on both sides here by Karmashock · · Score: 1

    What would you accept as an example? There is lots of evidence of a campaign to vote that way on social media. People that are self identified as SJWs saying stuff like "SJWs burned the village down to save it" and

    ""Your VOTE is not wanted.

    Your BOOKS are not wanted.

    YOU are not wanted.

    Period.""

    Say what you like about the SP, but clearly there is an ideological opposition here. You don't get people self identifying as SJWs and then saying things like this unless such people feel invested in the outcome.

    And there is of course evidence of coordination. As the Breitbart article points out, the SP votes were often split between four different authors while the opposition put all their votes into "no one".

    Frankly, the more I look at this... the more it looks like typical social networking brigading in action.

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  91. fuck slahdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    disgusting. really.

  92. This has to be the best quote .. by nickweller · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "The facts of this case are the same as in gaming and in every other industry that social justice warriors touch. They do not care about art forms. They do not care about science fiction. They do not even particularly care about talent. They care about enriching and ennobling themselves and their friends, and pushing a twisted, discredited, divisive brand of authoritarian politics."

    1. Re:This has to be the best quote .. by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      "The facts of this case are the same as in gaming and in every other industry that social justice warriors touch. They do not care about art forms."

      This is ironic given the SIW (social injustice warriors---opposite of SJW) targeting Sarkeesian. What she did was treat games as an artform and subject them to the same type of harsh scrutiny that other artforms (i.e. books and films) are subject to. The SIWs absolutely hated that.

      In other words, it's quite clear that the last thing SIWs want is for games etc to be treated as an artform because when that's done, they object strongly.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    2. Re:This has to be the best quote .. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      "What she did was treat games as an artform and subject them to the same type of harsh scrutiny that other artforms (i.e. books and films) are subject to."

      You failed to mention that she and her team did that absolutely horrendously and dishonestly. They are pushing an agenda and are trying to make the facts fit it, even if they have to twist them or outright lie about them.

      But don't take my words for it, go watch her videos (preferably ones about games you know) and make your own opinion.

      The base idea is good, but when it is done in such a dishonest and agenda driven way, it's just pathetic, and the fact she whined about misoginy to deflect serious criticism, gain publicity and make money is an insult to gamers who actually suffer from misoginy.

    3. Re:This has to be the best quote .. by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      But don't take my words for it, go watch her videos (preferably ones about games you know) and make your own opinion.

      I have, I did and my conclusion is you're full of it.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    4. Re:This has to be the best quote .. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good, I'm just sad you don't realize the amount of bullshit and fallacies that is in their video. Just one example is about hitman, where they say that the game is sexist and reduces the women are object because it encourages to kill women. She failed to mention that you can kill women in one level, and that the games actually punishes people for killing characters who aren't the target.

      Also, just try to switch the genders in one of their argument, and with the exact same logic, you can easily demonstrate that many works are sexists toward men.

  93. Re:There's truth on both sides here by St.Creed · · Score: 1

    I don't even think Vox Day is a racist or misogynist. He's a griefer out for attention.

    Might be true. But quotes like this make it hard to distinguish the one from the other: I've been reading his blog (yuck) and most of what people quote from him is missing bits and parts, that obscure the intention of the original text. I have not yet found a single instance of any racist of mysogynist quote in over 2 hours of reading through his posts. Yes, he does make the case that women should not be able to vote and are only good for bearing children - as hypothetical argument in response to another discussion. The list goes on and on with stuff like that.

    I think he's a far right wing ideologue, but not stupid. Certainly not stupid enough to post something that could be construed as outright racist or mysogynist writings.

    --
    Therefore, by the (faulty) logic you're using, you're just a cow with a keyboard - osu-neko (2604)
  94. Re:There's truth on both sides here by St.Creed · · Score: 1

    But quotes like this make it hard to distinguish the one from the other:

    That was a preface to one of the quotes mentioned, before I discovered the originals and removed the butchered quote. My post reads better if you remove that line :)

    --
    Therefore, by the (faulty) logic you're using, you're just a cow with a keyboard - osu-neko (2604)
  95. Re:made themselves irelevent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I can answer that. Earlier on, there was an idiotic person offering to pay for people to vote in the resulting fracas openly. You asked for a possible method of gaming the system, there you go. That one was rated as a "CHORF" in case you were wondering.

  96. Re:There's truth on both sides here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wrong due to said CHORFs being willing to stuff the ballot by inviting other voters in.

  97. Re:There's truth on both sides here by tylikcat · · Score: 2

    I think it's pretty valid to make a distinction between authors saying "Hey, BTW, my book is eligible to be nominated!" which a ton of people from all kinds of backgrounds do, and for that matter "Hey, this is a bunch of cool stuff I've read that you might want to check out that's also been eligible," to putting together a slate. There's an argument to be made as to where the sad puppies fell. There really isn't one with the rabid puppies.

    (And really, as many people have pointed out, when you have so much stuff being published, and a relatively small body of people nominating things, it's a system where even a very small organized voting bloc can get something on the ballot. This isn't the first time this has come up, even, though it's the first time there's been a slate that I know of. There are a number of reforms to the nomination system being looked at, so things might be changing.)

    Card... So, you do know that opposition to gay marriage is only one of the more recent bits there? And he takes it an awful lot further than a lot of people seem compelled to by their faiths. He was, at one time, one of my favorite authors. I attended one of his Secular Humanist Revivals way back when. He seemed to be a great guy. I mean, this was back when the net was flat, and I was a young thing, but still. ...and I guess I should be glad that the quality of his writing had been falling off by the time I heard about him writing about how there should be laws criminalizing homosexuality, which should then be selectively enforced to keep the unruly ones in their places. *boggle* The volume has increased and decreased at various times over the years, but I do think there's a difference, at least in degree between someone thinking that their own religion is a great reason some other people entirely shouldn't be able to get married, and their own religion is a great reason those people should be thrown in fail unless their keep their heads and voices down. Ew.

    (Of course, as a bi woman it's perhaps not surprising that I'd take this a bit personally.)

  98. Re:Wired Article by nickweller · · Score: 1
  99. How voting doesn't work [Re:Lovely summary.] by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Puppies supporters say that slew of "eno award" wins this year can at least partially be attributed to the fact that SJW votes were concentrated on that choice, while Puppies votes were distributed between as many as four deserving authors.

    First, all of the "no award" wins won by a majority on the first ballot. Even if all of the puppy voters had agreed on a single candidate-- they still wouldn't comprise a majority. That argument is false.

    Second, that argument is by somebody who doesn't understand how the ballot functions. It works for the nominations, but not for the actual votes, which use a "single transferable ballot" (aka, "australian ballot"). When your first choice is eliminated, your vote goes to your second choice. So, if the puppy vote was distributed between four authors-- so what? As each candidate is eliminated, that vote doesn't go away.

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
    1. Re:How voting doesn't work [Re:Lovely summary.] by Cytotoxic · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I don't think I understand your point. Are you saying that the "SJW" faction didn't decide to take their ball and go home by voting for "No Award"? Or are you saying that there were no works worthy of awards this year and that's how the voting went?

      By voting "No Award" it sure seems like there was some organized group bent on preventing the interlopers from getting their way - even if it meant that nobody got an award this year.

    2. Re:How voting doesn't work [Re:Lovely summary.] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First, all of the "no award" wins won by a majority on the first ballot. Even if all of the puppy voters had agreed on a single candidate-- they still wouldn't comprise a majority. That argument is false.

      Technically correct, the best kind of correct

      No award was the majority vote by 0.9%

    3. Re:How voting doesn't work [Re:Lovely summary.] by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      He must be a stupid American who doesn't understand voting systems other than first-past-the-post.

    4. Re:How voting doesn't work [Re:Lovely summary.] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The nominations are the issue.

    5. Re:How voting doesn't work [Re:Lovely summary.] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or it could be that seeing this organized group of interlopers haughtily proclaiming their own moral superiority, loudly declaring their intent to spoil the process out of some perceived outrage, the voters, factionalized or not, didn't want to play, and ended the game the only way they could for this year.

      What else would you expect them to do? Say an opposing team accuses your team of cheating. You know you're not cheating, but they insist they won't play ball unless you go through a process they demand, a process you find degrading and otherwise unacceptable. Why wouldn't you quit? And why would that be an admission of cheating?

    6. Re:How voting doesn't work [Re:Lovely summary.] by squiggleslash · · Score: 4, Insightful

      By voting "No Award" it sure seems like there was some organized group bent on preventing the interlopers from getting their way - even if it meant that nobody got an award this year.

      No. The organized group was at the nomination stage. Two organized groups, the Sad Puppies and Rabid Puppies, organized to prevent anything other than bland or poorly written, ideologically sound, material was up for a Hugo.

      At the vote itself, there was no organized. We know this because the "No award" votes - which were open to all fans who paid the membership fee - attracted more than 50% of the vote on the first round. A small anti-right-wing rump wouldn't have been able to organize that.

      Hanlon's razor applies here. What do you think happened? Somehow "SJWs" were able to mind control 51%+ of Hugos voters to vote a particular way, or that a ballot that consists only of "ideologically sound" options picked by two groups of anti-left activists, might not actually contain anything considered as Hugo-worthy by the majority of fans, and additionally the blatant attempt at ballot gaming might offend those concerned about the integrity of the Hugos?

      If so-called SJWs had the powers their opponents ascribe to them, there wouldn't be any social justice issues for anyone to go to war over.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    7. Re:How voting doesn't work [Re:Lovely summary.] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hanlon's razor applies here. What do you think happened? Somehow "SJWs" were able to mind control 51%+ of Hugos voters to vote a particular way, or that a ballot that consists only of "ideologically sound" options picked by two groups of anti-left activists, might not actually contain anything considered as Hugo-worthy by the majority of fans, and additionally the blatant attempt at ballot gaming might offend those concerned about the integrity of the Hugos?

      The irony is of course you're just used a very common anti-left argument against SJWs

      "What's more likely: that all these for-profit businesses out there are cutting into their own profits by hiring/promoting more men instead of women (who are cheaper! Wage gap! Glass ceiling!), or that women willingly CHOOSE and made different life decisions that led them to lesser paying jobs?"

    8. Re:How voting doesn't work [Re:Lovely summary.] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      By voting "No Award" it sure seems like there was some organized group bent on preventing the interlopers from getting their way - even if it meant that nobody got an award this year.

      No. The organized group was at the nomination stage. Two organized groups, the Sad Puppies and Rabid Puppies, organized to prevent anything other than bland or poorly written, ideologically sound, material was up for a Hugo.

      At the vote itself, there was no organized. We know this because the "No award" votes - which were open to all fans who paid the membership fee - attracted more than 50% of the vote on the first round. A small anti-right-wing rump wouldn't have been able to organize that.

      Hanlon's razor applies here. What do you think happened? Somehow "SJWs" were able to mind control 51%+ of Hugos voters to vote a particular way, or that a ballot that consists only of "ideologically sound" options picked by two groups of anti-left activists, might not actually contain anything considered as Hugo-worthy by the majority of fans, and additionally the blatant attempt at ballot gaming might offend those concerned about the integrity of the Hugos?

      If so-called SJWs had the powers their opponents ascribe to them, there wouldn't be any social justice issues for anyone to go to war over.

      You realize there were numerous instances of authors and others buying votes for people so that they can vote no award, right?

      You also realize many of those started prior to the nominations were even announced. So they didn't even know what got nominated.

      You also should realize your a tool.

    9. Re:How voting doesn't work [Re:Lovely summary.] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think I understand your point. Are you saying that the "SJW" faction didn't decide to take their ball and go home by voting for "No Award"? Or are you saying that there were no works worthy of awards this year and that's how the voting went?

      Geoffrey isn't saying either of those things. He's saying that the ticket was stacked for ideological reasons, and people who disagree with that voted "No Award" rather than giving the award to someone who may not have even been on the ballot, had the nomination process not been violated.

    10. Re:How voting doesn't work [Re:Lovely summary.] by Steve+B · · Score: 1

      Bottom Line: The puppies pissed in the punch bowl, which then had to be dumped.

      --
      /. If the government wants us to respect the law, it should set a better example.
    11. Re:How voting doesn't work [Re:Lovely summary.] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the categories in which "No Award" won, with one exception (editor), yes, there were no works worthy of awards. You noticed that a novel did win best novel, and not No Award?

  100. Re:There's truth on both sides here by hey! · · Score: 1

    I would accept a name of an identifiable person (or well-known pseudonym) that can (a) is actually social justice causes (other than trolling) or has extensive connections with people who do; and (2) has organized/participated in a documentable campaign of intimidation or hate-mongering beyond opportunistic trolling or cyberstalking people they know personally.

    What I won't accept is "some troll somewhere said something mean and unwelcoming." It's not that I don't believe that trolling happened or that the person targeted felt bad, it's that I don't believe most trolls are who they say they are or support what they say they support. If you can't stand up to a random troll there's really no hope for you. People who put serious effort and organization into persecution are a different matter. Show me that widespread prevalence of those people and you've convinced me this is a real problem.

    That's a starting point; I can even give you an example: Benjanun Sriduangkaew (aka "Requries Hate"). The thing is, like I tell my kids there's at least one example of every kind of person you can imagine out there. It's like Jefrrey Dahmer, who proves there are such things as cannibal necrophiliac serial murderers in the world. And it's obviously a big deal if you run across one personally. But cannibal necrophiliac serial murderers are not a major society problem.

    --
    Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
  101. Bad Summary, but ultimately point has been proven. by Derekloffin · · Score: 2

    The terribly slanted summary aside, I think ultimately this has shown that the process is borked to high heaven. Even if I give every point the No Award crowd seems to be pushing, which I certainly would not, they have shown that they will vote as an ideological block themselves to a degree that completely eclipsed the 'problem' group. All you have proven is your system is woefully broke and subject to ideological influence over all else. It is rather sad. It has proven to me that unless the Hugos completely overhaul there methodology, they are worthless, and just a matter of who can rally the biggest crowd of supporters, rather than anything to do with actual worth of the work.

  102. Re:made themselves irelevent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What you have written here makes no sense at all. Here are some facts for you.
    1. Anyone may register (I think it costs $40);
    2. Anyone who registers can nominate any work they like;
    3. Anyone who registers can vote for any work(s) they like in each of several categories;
    4. If someone thinks that nothing in a particular category deserves an award, there is a "No award" option;
    5. The voting system for nomination is different from the voting system for the awards;

    So how can "SJWs" (or anyone else for that matter) affect the awards of the Hugos? This is a serious question - I really want to know what you think.

    I see this argument a lot in the comments and it makes no sense. Let's say there's a vote down at the town fair to decide on the best apple pie recipe. Alice, Bob, and Charlie all got nominated for the award, but Dick didn't. Alice, Bob, and Charlie all go to the town fair to have a cook-off. Anyone can vote for who they want to win, they just have to buy a ticket and write who they want to win on it and place it in the ballot. There's also a No Award vote if you don't like any of the pies.

    Let's say I really wanted Dick to have won, so I have my 100 friends all come in from out of state to vote. They all buy a ticket and vote No Award. There are another 100 people at the state fair voting, and they all vote how they choose. The award goes to no one.

  103. Re:There's truth on both sides here by Austerity+Empowers · · Score: 1

    The irony in all of it is that both Scalzi's Old Man's War and Card's Ender's Game, are really good sci-fi both deserving of awards. The politics is ruining their achievements by turning the award into a faction war. Neither SJW nor * puppies are really helping anyone.

  104. Re:There's truth on both sides here by Xtifr · · Score: 2

    No, it's because the overwhelming evidence was that they didn't vote for books they liked. They voted for books they were told to vote for, blindly following a slate, instead of voting for the their own preferences. I suspect that many of them never even read the works they nominated. They didn't have to—their great leader, whose ass they have their heads firmly wedged up, told them to vote for it, so they did.

  105. So finally ... by Krishnoid · · Score: 2

    What was the best reading/watching this year? The nominees, or some stuff that didn't clear the nomination cut? This whole thing seems kind of confusing.

  106. "Right-wingnut" Heinlein was awarded by mi · · Score: 1

    Because if so, then we would soon see Heinlein fans submitting his works

    Interestingly, Heinlein holds a record of five Hugo awards, including one for the "nazi" Starship Troopers and another — for the "libertardian" The Moon is a Harsh Mistress .

    Clearly, there was a point, when Hugo Award was given for other than "progressive" works. But then, again, there was a point when Nobel Peace Price was given for actual contributions to world peace too...

    --
    In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
  107. Re:Breitbart? Really? by Xtifr · · Score: 1

    SJWis a favorite acronym of the SIWs! ;)

  108. Foal ball by dbIII · · Score: 1

    TRIGGER WARNING: YOU WERE MOLESTED AS A CHILD.

    Poor Trigger - he should have known that Roy rodgers.
    Now he's completely stuffed.

  109. WIRED is dripping with bias, as always by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    First, a pox on BOTH sides in this. The SJW crowd took over the Hugo twisting it into another weapon in their cultural war toolbag, then the puppies came along to push back - BOTH SIDES are guilty of distorting a LITERARY award into a flag on the cultural tug-of-war rope.

    WIRED, sadly being full of SJW idiots, unfortunately could not resist the urge to slander the puppies with every trashy accusation they could make that was short of spurring a lawsuit. Do we really need a run-down on just how native-American one of the players in this drama is??? Has WIRED ever been equally hostile to the actual basis of ethnicity claims by any SJ, like Elizabeth Warren, for example??? This is one reason I can no longer endure the poor writing at WIRED; they seem to have completely lost the art of neutral reporting. Either trash BOTH sides with all available dirt, or leave all the trash out from both sides and report the facts. Trashing one side is not journalism. And, no, I'm NOT one of the "puppies", do not know any of them, have no known political or economic ties to them, etc. I am just tired of biased drivel pretending to be "reporting"

  110. Typical by p51d007 · · Score: 1

    When "progressives" (new age term for socialist, liberal, communist) don't get their way, they just pick up their ball and go home.

    1. Re:Typical by serviscope_minor · · Score: 2

      I know. Isn't it terrible that the commieliberals want good writing to be given a Hugo award. And if they don't get their way in having good writing in the nominations, they'll just take their award and go home.

      Wait what, is there something objectionable there?

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
  111. Brewster Approves by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Vote No Vote

  112. Re:There's truth on both sides here by tbannist · · Score: 1

    The option I like is approval voting, in which each individual voter is allowed to vote for *all* the candidates he thinks are good enough.

    It sounds like you don't know how the voting actually works. It's ranked balloting, you rank your favourites in order and if you're #1 choice doesn't win, your second choice gets your vote and keeps going until you reach the last choice you approve of. In my opinion, it's actually a better system than approval balloting because it produces fewer ties.

    --
    Fanatically anti-fanatical
  113. Re:Bad Summary, but ultimately point has been prov by tbannist · · Score: 1

    On the other hand, maybe it's a simple as people become pissed off when they think other people are trying to cheat?

    --
    Fanatically anti-fanatical
  114. It's fantasy as well these days by dbIII · · Score: 1

    I'm not saying it's bad, but if that's science fiction I'm a helicopter gunship

    It's fantasy as well these days - so much so that a guy that wrote a sequel to a small part of "Gulliver's Travels" accused Greg Egan of having too much science in his fiction for it to be SF! Apparently Greg Egan's aliens are a bit too alien as well, perhaps they should have been like little people who behaved exactly the same as full sized people.

  115. Re:Bad Summary, but ultimately point has been prov by ageoffri · · Score: 1

    Where was the cheating? Even George RR Martin admits that the Sad Puppies did everything within the rules. The issue here is a clique of Social Justice Bullies have taken over the Hugo's and it was exposed over the last 3 Sad Puppy campaigns. Now we see that the SJB's will burn the house down around them to prove that they are a clique and hostile to fans that aren't "trufans".

    --
    -- Slashdot, making the Left look conservative since 1997.
  116. Why shouldn't SF awards be political? by NostalgiaForInfinity · · Score: 1

    Science Fiction is largely a vision about the future, and often it is used to promote particular political views. There are communist and socialist futures, corporatist futures, libertarian futures, militaristic futures; authors explore these futures from a utopian, dystopian, or neutral point of view. Science Fiction also validates or contradicts scientific and economic predictions like climate change. Depending on your own political leanings, you may find a particular science fiction story interesting and insightful, or manipulative and propagandistic.

    Occasionally, there are stories that straddle political lines and are interesting even if you disagree with them. For example, although I think Ursula LeGuin is wrong on many political points, but her stories are still interesting and thought provoking. On the other hand, I find Arthur C. Clarke's politics utterly naive; I think he thought himself above politics and I can see why people who aren't very much interested in politics might like his stories, but I find him an utterly naive technocrat and really don't enjoy his books very much anymore (I used to enjoy him more when I was younger and didn't really understand much of the political dimension).

    I think it's a bit too much to expect a single convention or set of awards to be able to cover all those different political views. We'll have to accept the fact that there is going to be at least a split between progressive, libertarian, and apolitical science fiction fans. There is even some Christian and conservative science fiction (arguably, the ultra-crappy "Left Behind" falls into that category, in addition to the only slightly less crappy C.S. Lewis), though perhaps not enough to support large conventions or awards.

  117. Crickets chirping by RubberDogBone · · Score: 1

    In my youth, I was a voracious reader of Scifi and it is still my area of choice in reading and other forms of entertainment.

    But I've never given two shits about the Hugo awards so hearing there's a dispute among several factions about.... something that isn't entirely clear, just made me realize I still don't give a shit about the Hugo awards and by extension I care even less about the people upset about it. My life up to now has been just fine in blissful ignorance of the entire thing. I suspect a lot of other people have gotten along just fine too.

    And if that is the case, if people can lead meaningful lives without knowing about the Hugo dispute, then do the Hugo awards need to exist at all? Not existing would solve everybody's problems all at once.

    --
    Sig for hire.
    1. Re:Crickets chirping by ctid · · Score: 1

      Not really, but the Sad Puppies would not be sad any more. So your "solution" supports one side at the cost of the other.

      --
      Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
  118. So in 20 years.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If I read the rules for the Hugo awards, an award can be made in 20 years or so for a previous year that had no winner in a category. So, look for the real Hugo's for 2015 in 2035 :-)

    Oh, and it might have been 25 years or so, I don't remember, it was back in Feb that I read it :-)

  119. Lead the horse to the source by dbIII · · Score: 1

    Others have in the comments, quotes about turning the Hugos into a smoking hole, but don't take it from me or them - take a look at "Vox's" website so that you can find out what is going on instead of wasting time guessing about it and wasting time writing down your guesses.

    Yes I know the "stop wasting my time" is just movie inspired shit to try to look tough, but it's pretty funny since you are so busy wasting it instead of spending far less time looking at the source to see what is going on.

    1. Re:Lead the horse to the source by khallow · · Score: 1
      I wasn't asking about these other Slashdot posters who may or may not have said what you claim they said. You asserted something, now back it up.

      Yes I know the "stop wasting my time" is just movie inspired shit to try to look tough, but it's pretty funny since you are so busy wasting it instead of spending far less time looking at the source to see what is going on.

      And you are still wasting my time. You can't even put forward a coherent defense.

    2. Re:Lead the horse to the source by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Why should I defend myself when you clearly know very little about the situation and do not wish to bother to find out - yet you still emit pointless noise.

    3. Re:Lead the horse to the source by khallow · · Score: 1

      Well, why did you bother to say anything in the first place, if you're not going to bother to reason?

    4. Re:Lead the horse to the source by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Because you are deliberately misleading the kiddies and I wanted to hang a bit of a bell on you so that they would know.

    5. Re:Lead the horse to the source by khallow · · Score: 1

      I suppose I shouldn't complain. A willing shill is the oldest trick in the book for creating rhetorical theater.

    6. Re:Lead the horse to the source by dbIII · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't know about that but I suppose you have experience in such dishonesty.

    7. Re:Lead the horse to the source by khallow · · Score: 1

      Anyone who pays attention to human nature would eventually have such experience to such dishonesty.

    8. Re:Lead the horse to the source by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Anyone who pays attention to human nature would eventually have such experience to such dishonesty.

      Usually only as the observer and not as an experienced perpetrator such as yourself, so I take my hat off you to and the extensive work you have done along those lines over the years on this site. Are you in politics, "public relations", "social media worker", advertising or just an unpaid person fond of manipulation? Either way this current "spin" of pretending rather blatant student politics style bullshit is not happening shows a distinct lack of integrity and only makes my wonder at the motives of an apologist for such bullshit. It's not just about being anti-science this time, so what is it about?

    9. Re:Lead the horse to the source by khallow · · Score: 1

      Usually only as the observer and not as an experienced perpetrator such as yourself

      I think no one can disagree that you are inexperienced.

      Are you in politics, "public relations", "social media worker", advertising or just an unpaid person fond of manipulation? Either way this current "spin" of pretending rather blatant student politics style bullshit is not happening shows a distinct lack of integrity and only makes my wonder at the motives of an apologist for such bullshit. It's not just about being anti-science this time, so what is it about?

      I think it shows poor reasoning skills on your part. Even if your accusations were true, you're pointlessly making an idiot out of yourself since you would have nothing to back it up. You probably should learn to come up with support when you make assertions. Just saying shit marks you as an idiot.

      We can use those out of shape reasoning skills here. There isn't a financial or propaganda advantage to spending endless hours on Slashdot, especially without a coherent theme. Sorry, we're just not that important and human labor is rather expensive. In addition, it's an enormous pain to find any posts on Slashdot via the search engines. So there's no point to using Slashdot to poison the well that way either.

      Finally, why should it be such a big deal that someone disagrees with you that you have to spin conspiracy theories about it? I got used to it. You should too.

    10. Re:Lead the horse to the source by dbIII · · Score: 1

      I think no one can disagree that you are inexperienced.

      What an utterly pathetic shotgun attempt at bullying in the hope you hit someone younger. I suspect that if you had studied harder you could have had what was required to enrol so that I could teach you a few things about engineering a couple of years before slashdot started - that's how ridiculously far off the mark you are.

    11. Re:Lead the horse to the source by khallow · · Score: 1

      What an utterly pathetic shotgun attempt at bullying in the hope you hit someone younger.

      Bullying doesn't mean disagreement or even insults. Nor do I care if you are physically older or younger than me. What I care about is your completely inadequate and incompetent efforts at debate.

      I have to say, my original accusation looks now to be statement of fact than the witty rejoinder I originally planned it to be. If I really were as dishonest and fraudulent as you seem to think I am, I couldn't pay someone to do a better job for me than you are doing right now. Maybe you ought to think about those unintended consequences?

    12. Re:Lead the horse to the source by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Your shotgun "inexperienced" thing is a textbook case of attempting to bully the kiddies and hilariously having utterly no idea that you are discussing things with someone older than yourself.
      As for "unintended consequences" - are you so really so narcissistic that you think anybody is going to bother to read down this far apart from you or I? We both know what is going on and nobody else is going to care.
      Also - debate? You really think this is a debate? For a debate both participants are expected to have something worthwhile to say.
      I am not debating you so what's with the "completely inadequate and incompetent efforts at debate"? There is no debate here. Above I was just correcting what appeared to be deliberate misdirection and misinformation on your part and you got very insulting about it.

      If "debating skills" are petty bullying that relies on being older than the other debater then you can keep those skills. This isn't supposed to be a "mass debate", it's not supposed to be a silly game of trying to convince others via bullshit and insults, it's supposed to be a discussion about issues that crop up. You may have some meta-game you are playing via slashdot at my expense but it comes across as a rather pathetic thing detached from reality.

    13. Re:Lead the horse to the source by khallow · · Score: 1

      Your shotgun "inexperienced" thing is a textbook case of attempting to bully the kiddies and hilariously having utterly no idea that you are discussing things with someone older than yourself.

      Except that it's not. You're just saying shit again.

      Above I was just correcting what appeared to be deliberate misdirection and misinformation on your part and you got very insulting about it.

      In your usual thoroughly incompetent way. If I really were delivering deliberate misdirection and misinformation, I couldn't buy better support than what you've given me. You need to learn how not to bake failure into your arguments. For example, a weak ad hominem attack like you started with, because of assertions you made which you can't even bother to back with the minimum of evidence, is a classic way to come out swinging and losing.

      But in turn, I get easy theater and narrative to show to everyone else. Look? See how I'm getting unfairly persecuted by this ignorant guy for being right?

      It doesn't matter now, but some day, you'll be in a situation where you need to persuade someone else to keep something bad from happening or lessen its impact. Maybe a friend or loved one is harming themselves, maybe your company is thinking about doing something really stupid, maybe your society is pushing the self-destruct button. Even if persuasion can't prevent or reverse bad choices, it can still result in a better outcome. But you have to have the skills in the first place for it to work. Slashdot is a place you can learn those skills, should you ever choose to pay attention.

    14. Re:Lead the horse to the source by dbIII · · Score: 1

      You don't get it. This is no "debate". This is just me pointing out a lying bully who is deliberately misleading people. There was nothing to debate since you've fabricated your own bullshit and pretended it was a fact.
      Blunt enough yet or should I descend to your level?

    15. Re:Lead the horse to the source by khallow · · Score: 1

      This is just me pointing out a lying bully who is deliberately misleading people.

      The obvious rebuttal here is that words have meaning.

      Bully: a blustering browbeating person; especially : one habitually cruel to others who are weaker

      Blustering means among other things threatening. Since I have yet to be threatening in this thread, a key component of bullying is missing. Similarly, browbeating is coercion to get someone to do something. That's not happening either.

      Similarly, "lying" means intentional spreading of a falsehood. You never bothered to say specifically what of what I wrote was a falsehood or why. You apparently do disagree with the observation:

      This is an example. We have a bald assertion that the Hugo picks by "the puppies" were chosen on the basis of politics.

      Note that no one in this thread has bothered to provide evidence or reason to dispute my observation. It's all empty assertions and noise. One can get very tired of that.

      This is no "debate".

      True, I won that when you refused to and continue to refuse to back up any statements you made. You've only made my argument stronger emotionally since.

      Nobody cares that you think for some bizarre reason that I'm a lying bully. You give out those insults like candy and with about as much thought as breathing. There's no weight or credibility to it. And as I noted earlier, that accusation just strengthens my rhetorical position. Unfair, aggressive attacks do that for the one attacked.

      You start off arguing to fail. Stop that. You need to up your game.

    16. Re:Lead the horse to the source by dbIII · · Score: 1

      You never bothered to say specifically what of what I wrote was a falsehood or why

      Do you have such a short memory or an inability to scroll up and see the post of yours that I replied to?

      You need to up your game

      I am not playing a game here and I am obviously objecting to you doing so. If I'm not scoring points by your silly little scale in your mass debate game why should I care?

    17. Re:Lead the horse to the source by khallow · · Score: 1

      Do you have such a short memory or an inability to scroll up and see the post of yours that I replied to?

      Of course not. I read through my previous posts and didn't see anything.

      I am not playing a game here

      Even though I don't buy that at all (though I grant you probably think you're not playing a game), I'll point out that at the time I was using an idiom of speech.

    18. Re:Lead the horse to the source by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Then answer this - how is compiling a "how to vote card" and asking people to use that instead of their own judgement not politics?
      You've had nothing other than games, misdirection and insults - but somehow insults are only fair if you use them.

  120. Real man not strawman by dbIII · · Score: 1

    Oddly enough I think you're the first person to mention feminist SF in this entire affair. Good strawman though keep whacking it.

    Strawman? Vox rants about it length so I'm describing a real man pointlessly charging at figurative windmills. While Vox is possibly just an attention seeker trying to stir up trouble that is still the centre of this ridiculous vortex of shit - pointless hate of feminist SF for the sake of it.

    1. Re:Real man not strawman by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 1

      Ah well I don't read Vox Day, he's a spurious little prick that does more harm than good to the puppies by a long stretch in my opinion. Not all PR is good PR.

    2. Re:Real man not strawman by dbIII · · Score: 1

      The puppies make zero sense without the stuff written by Vox that is driving this thing in the first place. He is at the middle of the shitstorm stirring hard.

    3. Re:Real man not strawman by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 1

      I'm fairly sure the sad puppies started all this then Vox showed up and kicked off his own version.

    4. Re:Real man not strawman by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Since you are avoiding reading about it how do you know where the puppies and the "slate" list came from in the first place?
      If you don't want to get Vox slime on you the Stross blog has a cleaned up description as to why Vox and his puppies pissed a lot of people off.

  121. Re:Lovely summary. TL;DR by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Basically a while ago some writers decided that awarding a SciFi trophy to non-SF lit was stupid, so they gamed the (imho totally broken) system to ensure only SciFi got nominated, and therefore awarded. Then the hippies and weirdos who wanted Hugo awards but weren't eligible re-gamed the system to get their non-Sci-Fi awarded again. It's a shitty game of one-upmanship that nobody truly wins, so this result is fair.
     
    tbh its kinda stupid that the "SJW" ppl started dicking with the Hugos in the first place but the award has been abused so much that it's lost all meaning.

  122. Re:Khyber = the human "FAIL", lol... apk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Fuck off, apk. There are few more worthless than you festering on Slashdot. It can't possibly become any worse by you pissing off. So please do so. Thanks.

  123. Re:made themselves irelevent by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

    Let's say I really wanted Dick to have won, so I have my 100 friends all come in from out of state to vote. They all buy a ticket and vote No Award. There are another 100 people at the state fair voting, and they all vote how they choose. The award goes to no one.

    Well, that sounds like a nice synopsis of what actually happened here. So what's the problem? The system is more or less working, and probably this won't happen again next year. People who are against social justice usually get discouraged and go back to complaining about not being able to own slaves or whatever when you foil them.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  124. Re:Khyber = the human "FAIL", lol... apk by Khyber · · Score: 1

    The fact that I can make you respond on command pretty much proves I own your worthless pathetic whiny ass.

    You dance just like a fucking puppet.

    --
    Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
  125. Re:There's truth on both sides here by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

    Hmmm... if you strip out the overwrought opinion, did the fellow say anything that was inaccurate?

    If you strip out the deliberately inflammatory bullshit, a lot of people start to make sense. But if you do that, you're not reading what they wrote.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  126. Proven RIGHT How? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Literally anyone could vote if they signed up. The Puppies lost a POPULAR democratic vote.

    Their original argument was that their preferences were more populist and would win the popular vote, but the nominations process was being secretly block voted by a small shadowy liberal cabal to keep populist authors off the nominees list if favor of more preachy, pro-liberal agenda authors.

    This was the stated reason for their publicly arranged block voting of nominees, to provide the popular vote with a choice they felt was lacking.

    The voting fandom responded massively against them.

    So now, they are arguing that the popular vote is rigged by the shadowy cabal as well, except it's now not a tiny cabal, it's the majority of fans. Which is less a sneaky cabal of so called "SJWs" and more, you know, most people.

    If their actions had supported their "populist" argument, they would provably have carried the day. But putting up people like Kevin J. "suncrusher-I-ruined-star-wars-long-before-jar-jar" Anderson and highly divisive figures like John C Wright and the Rabid Puppies Vox Day up on their slate as the poster boys for their "populist" argument probably didn't help, if they'd put up more genuinely popular, genuinely decent authors like Jim Butcher then their argument may have been a hell of a lot more compelling and effective.

    John C Wright and Vox Day were up their simply to provoke outrage at their views, not because of the quality of their writing. Which, at least in the case of Vox Day, is objectively terrible. Many of the puppies chosen authors (not all) were...not actually all that good. Not innovative, or exciting, or fun, or smart. They did not make me think, or shout with Joy, or smile (with, of course, the exception of the excellent Jim Butcher). Most of the winners did.

    The no awards were mostly, as far as I can tell, a reaction to the politicization of the awards. And whatever the puppies argument that the awards were always political, these campaigns are what made them so in the public consciousness. By making a political argument for the vote, the puppies forced everyone else to consider the awards in a political, rather than creative context. the trouble there was, when people did consider the issue politically, they decided they didn't agree with the puppies, as evidenced by, you know, the POPULAR VOTE!

  127. Re:made themselves irelevent by Affenkopf · · Score: 1

    This is a really bad year to make this complain. A hard science fiction book (The Three-Body Problem) won the award for best novel. Very far away from a low rent soap opera in some vague dimensionless settings.

  128. proven right how by lowkeyknight · · Score: 3, Interesting

    (and re-posted ACTUALLY logged in this time. Sigh.) Literally anyone could vote if they signed up. The Puppies lost a POPULAR democratic vote. Their original argument was that their preferences were more populist and would win the popular vote, but the nominations process was being secretly block voted by a small shadowy liberal cabal to keep populist authors off the nominees list if favor of more preachy, pro-liberal agenda authors. This was the stated reason for their publicly arranged block voting of nominees, to provide the popular vote with a choice they felt was lacking. The voting fandom responded massively against them. So now, they are arguing that the popular vote is rigged by the shadowy cabal as well, except it's now not a tiny cabal, it's the majority of fans. Which is less a sneaky cabal of so called "SJWs" and more, you know, most people. If their actions had supported their "populist" argument, they would provably have carried the day. But putting up people like Kevin J. "suncrusher-I-ruined-star-wars-long-before-jar-jar" Anderson and highly divisive figures like John C Wright and the Rabid Puppies Vox Day up on their slate as the poster boys for their "populist" argument probably didn't help, if they'd put up more genuinely popular, genuinely decent authors like Jim Butcher then their argument may have been a hell of a lot more compelling and effective. John C Wright and Vox Day were up their simply to provoke outrage at their views, not because of the quality of their writing. Which, at least in the case of Vox Day, is objectively terrible. Many of the puppies chosen authors (not all) were...not actually all that good. Not innovative, or exciting, or fun, or smart. They did not make me think, or shout with Joy, or smile (with, of course, the exception of the excellent Jim Butcher). Most of the winners did. The no awards were mostly, as far as I can tell, a reaction to the politicization of the awards. And whatever the puppies argument that the awards were always political, these campaigns are what made them so in the public consciousness. By making a political argument for the vote, the puppies forced everyone else to consider the awards in a political, rather than creative context. the trouble there was, when people did consider the issue politically, they decided they didn't agree with the puppies, as evidenced by, you know, the POPULAR VOTE!

    1. Re:proven right how by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      You mean anyone could vote if they paid $40. And boy oh boy does that post come off like a damage control shill post. 1 comment and this is it, and it only had to be posted 3 times while claiming to log in.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    2. Re:proven right how by lowkeyknight · · Score: 1

      Yes, My (admitted) ineptitude at logging in for the first time is the issue. Absolutely. That is the important point we are discussing. Any actual counter-points to the post? BTW - no skin in this game, did not vote, never have voted in the Hugos. I love plenty of populist Sci-Fi that the puppies champion, think Butcher Absolutely deserves a Hugo and have no time for preaching for preaching's sake. The absolutist arguments on both sides, strawmen and the constant changing of goalposts in this cycle of the hugos has intrigued me however. So, if you disagree with the post, debate the post, not my dipshit failure to post in the logged in tab.

    3. Re:proven right how by lowkeyknight · · Score: 1

      Nothing? That can't be right! Only the dread SJWs attack the author and not the content. Right? Your argument that "anyone could vote if they paid $40" is valid, it was a members vote, and that membership is paid for. So my question is: With three long running active campaigns to generate new members and promote specific slates. With an argument that the works promoted were more populist. Assuming that not all of the existing, non affiliated fanbase were actively involved in a SJW no award conspiracy to keep the populist works down (because, let's face it, if EVERYONE was in on it, it's not a conspiracy it's just the popular opinion) How in the world did the puppies not utterly dominate? It's not like there were a lot of voters. And the puppies were actively promoting signing up without attending. To my knowledge, and do correct me if i'm wrong (with links please, I do genuinely want to know) there was no "SJW" sign up to stop the puppies campaign.

    4. Re:proven right how by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you routinely wait an hour before declaring that the other person lost because they hadn't replied yet?

    5. Re: proven right how by lowkeyknight · · Score: 1

      No. Didn't this time either. I have not declared victory. Attempting to debate and contest arguments does not constitute a declaration of victory (although I'll admit to a touch of sarcasm). But if the majority of your response is an attack on the author, rather than their post, I feel justified in noting it when addressing the remainder of the comment.

    6. Re: proven right how by lowkeyknight · · Score: 1

      I will also point out an absence of substantive material in your comment. Again: anything to say on the issues?

  129. Re:Bad Summary, but ultimately point has been prov by ctid · · Score: 1

    "shown that they will vote as an ideological block"

    So people who vote for things that you don't like are "voting as an ideological block". What do you call people who vote for the things that you do like? "Fine, upstanding fans of sci-fi"?

    --
    Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
  130. Re:Bad Summary, but ultimately point has been prov by ctid · · Score: 1

    You can't have it both ways. The Sad Puppies were within the rules. So was the electorate in rejecting most of their nominations. You can't say that one side was "bullying" and the other was not if both "sides" followed the rules.

    --
    Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
  131. Re:Khyber = the human "FAIL", lol... apk by Khyber · · Score: 0

    See APK fail fucking miserably since his HOSTs advice is OUTDATED AS SHIT -

    http://tech.slashdot.org/story...

    http://www.ghacks.net/2012/08/...

    Very soon Windows Defender will NOT be able to be turned off, and your HOSTs file will become FUCKING USELESS.

    The proper way to run the internet - USE A REAL OPERATING SYSTEM LIKE MENUETOS WHICH AIN'T GETTING COMPROMISED ANY DECADE SOON.

    --
    Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
  132. How can one group control what gets nominated? by Punto · · Score: 1

    Ok so the summary was really confusing, and the articles linked were obviously one-sided, and talking about "sad puppies" right away (wtf are you even talking about?), but some of the comments here clarified the situation. The only question is, how were these groups able to control who got nominated in the first place? Are the nominations picked by one group of people? Are these the people that rule the awards, will they pick the same way next year? How can they win at the nominations and lose at the final vote?

    --

    --
    Stay tuned for some shock and awe coming right up after this messages!

  133. Really? by MitchDev · · Score: 1

    Just as useless and pointless at the Oscars, Emmys and Tonys...

  134. Goskomizdat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The socjus clique in the WSFS were not vetting the works themselves, they were vetting the authors political views, associates and social media output, and those that weren't considered "suitable" weren't nominated.

    This is essentially a modern day Goskomizdat representing the authoritarian left, and even the libertarian left were smeared as bigots and blackballed, let alone any centrists/right leaning types.

  135. Re:There's truth on both sides here by Karmashock · · Score: 1

    If all that you focus on is the opinion then you're clearly not reading the facts.

    I read them both. I take it like this:

    Here are facts
    Here are my opinions of these facts

    If the facts are valid then I can look at the opinion and see if that makes any sense.

    I don't just read something "think oh this has a biased opinion" and discount all information in it.

    If I did that, I'd never read anything. The vast majority of news stories by anyone contain a lot of opinion and attempts to influence. Read/watch/listen to PBS... its FULL of opinion especially where they're telling you it is JUST news.

    Get a couple other sources to verify facts... things line up or not... then you draw your own opinions.

    --
    I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
  136. See Khyber dance everyone... apk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    See subject & Khyber's massive fail -> http://tech.slashdot.org/comme...

    * LOL!

    (Keep on dancin', BOY!)

    APK

    P.S.=> "Dance, BOY - dance" - R O T F L M A O!

    ... apk

    1. Re:See Khyber dance everyone... apk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      good one APK...!
      that guy (Khyber) is just a High School Drop-out, drug addicted, alcoholic Homosexual who is a complete and total looser and I mean with a capitol "L". a two time Felony convict who is so totally lame he can't even support himself. get this: he was fired from his job at Harts (probably a Dog Food tester), fired from his job at a porn shop (mopping the floors in the jack-off booths, and fired from his job at Papa Johns... He can't even hold down a job delivering Pizza! we researched his ass (he's not a "Research Director") and arrived at the only sound and 'logical' conclusion: a Complete, Utter and Total Looser!
      His live is crap- look at what he does in websites like Slashdot searching for some kind of validation of a totally wasted life...

  137. Re:There's truth on both sides here by Karmashock · · Score: 1

    The quotations I cited both came from this guy:
    http://daddywarpig.com/

    He appears to be more than some troll. And he was apparently very active in the whole thing.

    --
    I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
  138. Let me get this strait by lowkeyknight · · Score: 1

    If the Puppies had won, this would mean they were right, and they represented the true breadth of fandom, that populist work was underrepresented in the Hugo awards in favor of stuffed nominations for a socially "progressive" agenda. This would be proof of "SJW" conspiracy at nomination stage. If the Puppies lost to "no vote", this is the "SJW's" cutting off their noses to spite their faces. Proof that the SJW anti-puppy campaign (any evidence of this existing, please, provide links, that I cannot find it does not mean it does not exist) controls the actual voting (better than the three active puppy campaigns influenced their voting slates anyway). If there were no "no awards", but all categories with a non puppy approved author went to that author, this would presumably mean the SJW machine was also in effect, they just corralled their voters into voting tactically in favor of SJW approved writers and threw a bone in the puppy dominated categories to maintain the illusion of a democratic vote. It seems to me, whatever the result, the puppies would just declare "Mission Accomplished" But, I may well be wrong: Please tell me, what would a loss for the puppies look like? What outcome of the vote would be evidence that the puppies are wrong and that there is no evil SJW conspiracy? Is that even an acknowledged possibility? Or is this conspiracy simply accepted fact?

  139. Re:There's truth on both sides here by Karmashock · · Score: 1

    In fairness, Scalzi was doing a bit more than that. He was saying "who else should get nominated in this year's hugos"...

    That seems innocent but the question isn't being asked in a neutral political space.

    As to your problems with Card... I haven't really followed him in years either. I enjoyed ender's game and a few other books but he doesn't seem to have written anything in awhile worth reading.

    As to not liking authors because of their politics... it depends on how you deal with that.

    For example, I don't much like Scalzi's and Stross's politics. Scalzi has ruined his Old Man's War series with his politics. He's written FIVE books in that series and the first one was an action packed romp as a space marine. It was full of these hilarious situations where he was fighting people... fully formed people... but they were 3 inches high... alien obviously. Just an example of the nutty aliens he was being sent in to kill. And sure, the Colonial Union which was the Human force organizing the whole thing was of dubious moral value. But the whole galaxy was full of creepy crawlies that didn't mind killing humans either.

    He's written four books after that. Each one has been pretty boring. Books 2 and 3 had him basically telling the same story from different less interesting perspectives. Very little action... and all of it coached in this " this is what I meant to say" subtext. It was sad. Book four and five are better... but nothing near as good as the first one because he's still trying to walk back what the first book was... which was FUN... and ENTERTAINING.

    But do I blacklist Scalzi? No. Would I say he shouldn't get Hugo awards? Absolutely not.

    As to Stross... he basically hates Americans. He's so anti American he doesn't know he's Anti American. He thinks its like hating cockroaches or something. Its sort of funny how thick his cognitive dissonance is on the issue.

    In the Laundry Series, he has a British anti demon government service. They protect the British people from horrible nightmares beyond time and space. And to do that, they use Zombies as inexpensive guards, they put mental control spells on people so they must obey orders... total mind control, some of their more powerful agents are soul eating monsters, and his main love interest is a woman that uses a violin made of human bone that is possessed by a demon which she uses to unravel the soul of anyone she turns it on.

    Those are the British and their force is called "the Laundry"... the American force which doesn't do anything even remotely as fucked up is routinely referred to as utterly without moral compunction... always referred to as "well you know how those people are"... and the name of their organization is "The Black Chamber". All of this excluding that the UK and the US when it comes to intelligence and high level government are very friendly with each other. But in Strosses work... the Americans are soulless monsters... even though by all indication the British are up to some very dark shit.

    Now would I black list Stross even though he has a strong bias against my country, culture, and people?

    No. He's a very entertaining writer and if I ignore the stupid digs at America in there, then his books are very well written and very fun to read.

    And that's my attitude. I don't black list people because I don't like their politics. I don't like Michael Moore as a very polarizing example. the reasons are something I'm not going to get into, but I'll still listen to him he gets to the point quickly.

    We have a big country and a big world. If you just exile everyone not of your politics then you're going to very quickly find yourself in a hug box.

    You don't like that Card has issues with homosexuality? Let me tell, a lot of the world has such issues. Go to eastern europe. Go to the middle east. Go to Asia. Go to South America.

    Would you want to black list everyone from those regions of the world? Because I assure you most of them would agree more with Card than you.

    --
    I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
  140. Re:There's truth on both sides here by Karmashock · · Score: 1

    I generally agree about Card, that said... I do question that he would win if he did write something that good. You saw how many people were pissed that they were making an Ender's Game movie.

    As to Larry, I'd never heard of him before now.

    As to the treatment of women in the stories... speaking merely of Ringo, he wrote quite a lot of stories with women that were not fuckable house wives. They were war stories so they had to be able to hang in that environment. They were tough cold fighters.

    As to the men... they're not all muscled jocks either...

    Remember Full Metal Jacket? Remember all those guys that showed up at boot camp. All different sorts of people. But once they went through training and then got dropped in the shit... they HAD to be tough... or they died.

    And that's basically what you find with Ringo's characters. Its not that the characters are card board it is that our personalities are plastic to our environment. You put someone in a situation and they're going to try and adapt to it. And if you're constantly in life and death situations it is going to have a certain effect on your personality.

    For one thing you need to be able to deal with the fear of getting killed. And the best way to deal with that is not think about it. A certain amount of bravado is psychologically useful. Beyond that, you will have other things to deal with... depression... despair... horror. And each of these has to be dealt with in a sustainable manner. We have video of US soldiers talking to each other in Afghanistan while manning positions that are coming under attack from Taliban.

    What do you think all those guys sound like? They're making jokes... they say "fucking eat it" kill a guy, they're telling dirty jokes to get each other to laugh...

    Think they're happy to be there? No... Its miserable, scary, and horrifying. But they have to wake up every morning and hold that position against people that want to kill them. So they do what they do to balance out their mental state.

    Something you have to keep in mind about a lot of these authors is that they either personally went to vietnam, had some kind of military background, or at least studied it to some extent. And the the way they're writing about these people... it sounds the way it sounds if you don't understand what is below it.

    War is scary, horrifying, and depressing. How do you do it every day for years on end?

    See?

    Anyway, most of these authors don't write something I'd consider hugo worthy. though each of them probably has written something that should at least be nominated. They have their moments.

    --
    I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
  141. Separate categories? by fieldstone · · Score: 1

    It seems to me that the essential conflict here, if you ignore all the "racists vs SJWs" rhetoric, is this:

    Some people think science fiction should be primarily about action, inventing amazing new gadgets, and people fighting aliens in space. This is called "hard" SF.

    Some people think science fiction (or fantasy) should be more about telling stories that allow the exploration of real-world issues in a world whose cultures, asumptions, and in some cases even the laws of physics or magic, are constructed to throw them into sharp relief. This is called "soft" SF.

    While there's some overlap - a notable example being the new Battlestar Galactica show - most authors fall primarily into one or the other camp. So having one set of awards for two genres, many of whose fans on both sides consider them opposed, is like trying to support a one-state solution in Israel / Palestine instead of a two-state solution: naïve.

    This is analogous to how some tabletop gamers prefer RPGs that are "crunchy" with a lot of combat and mechanics, and others prefer rules-light systems that tend to gloss over the mechanics a bit. Neither style is "wrong" or "bad", they just may not be be compatible with each other.

    I'm not sure whether separate awards for hard SF are the solution, or just separate categories (or a "hard" and "soft" winner in each existing category, maybe). But that's how I see this playing out in an ideal world.

  142. Nice anti-advert for Breitbart. by easyTree · · Score: 1

    Wtf? TPDR = Too Partisan Didn't Read.

    The text was dripping with digital spittle. Feel free to get a tetanus shot at your earliest opportunity.

  143. Single transferable vote [Re:Majority] by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 1

    I'll take it that you are an expert on the topic and also somewhat passionate about it, so I'll ask you. How does the single transferrable vote thing work?

    It's also known as "Australian ballot." You rank your choices numerically. The number one votes (and only the number one votes-- that's the "single" in the name of the voting system) arecounted. If any candidate has a majority, they win. If there is no candidate ranked number one by a majority, the candidate with the fewest votes is eliminated. Everybody who voted for that candidate has their number two vote moved up to number one, and the votes are tallied again. The process is repeated until a candidate has a majority.

    Someone below stated that if you only chose one work, your second choice defaults to "No Award".

    No.

    In the Hugo balloting, "No award" is an actual choice on the ballot, not a default for abstain.

    Therefore an evenly divided electorate that had a majority of voters failing to select a second choice would give results exactly as you have listed. Is that how it works?

    But that's not how it actually works. You have to positively vote for no award; it's not a default. (In any case, though, "no award" won on the first ballot-- there was no transfer.)

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
  144. Re:Take your Whine and start a new awardw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is a good one. i suggest you read about the history of the Hugos before asking conservatoves to create a new award..

  145. Politics in award reality not written fiction by dbIII · · Score: 1

    Politics not a huge deal in SF

    Maybe I should have dumbed it down to politics not being a huge deal in voting for who gets an award for a work in SF than it is now with a fucking voting guide from manipulative pricks who are politicizing the process instead of readers voting for what they like independently.
    Now do you get what this is about instead of rolling out Diamond Age and some out of touch Russian that saw the capitalist system in a republic as a dystopia?

  146. Re:Khyber = the human "FAIL", lol... apk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Khyber you shouldn't have started this with apk. He's finishing it and you with it http://tech.slashdot.org/comme...

  147. SJW's say 'It Sucked' but admit they didn't read by Banner · · Score: 1

    I find it funny that all these people are saying that the puppy noms didn't win because 'They sucked', when so many of them, and their leaders freely admitted that they did NOT READ any of the puppy noms.

    Because the politics of the author are more important than the story written.

    Three Body Problem only won because the 'Rabid Puppies' voted for it as a block. Does that mean Three Body doesn't deserve it's award? That it sucks? And what about 'Guardians of the Galaxy'? That was a puppy nom, why didn't that get blackballed as well?

    And lets not even mention the months and months of harassment and libel that has been taking place. I find the lying of the establishment to be pretty funny.

  148. Re:There's truth on both sides here by Coren22 · · Score: 1

    http://whatever.scalzi.com/201...

    Yes, there was an organized "vote no award" block.

    --
    APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
  149. Re:Breitbart? Really? by Coren22 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Really? Those being called out as SJWs are the ones I see marginalizing other's viewpoints. The whole thing about GG and anti-GG was the anti-GG people trying to shut down the other group rather than even discussing what they were saying. In this thing, you have the same thing, those who have subverted the voting system in order to shut down another person's viewpoint. These are the SJWs, the ones preferring to vote no award because they don't like the politics of those that were nominated. Hell, many of them didn't even read the entries and were bragging about it. How can you vote in a best of award without even reading the material?

    http://whatever.scalzi.com/201...

    --
    APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
  150. Has the Hugo Award become obsolete? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe we should create a new award for science fiction. It is a shame the nomination process has become political correct.

  151. Re:SJW's say 'It Sucked' but admit they didn't rea by lowkeyknight · · Score: 1

    The stuff the puppies nominated that was genuinely great mostly did well: Pretty sure lots of people voted for GOTG because of all the awesome, puppies or no. The rabids seemed to have about 500 votes total (https://chaoshorizon.wordpress.com/2015/08/23/2015-hugo-stats-initial-analysis/) so, less then 10% of the total vote. Three Body Problem was well received by all and was not part of the puppies original slate. The rabid puppies jumped on, after the nominations, instead of their own nominated Skin Game (a genuinely great book by a class act of an author) just so they could declare a victory and we all know it. Skin Game, by the way, awesome book: Would have finished a lot higher if the rabids had not abandoned it in favor of jumping on a winner for the sake of point scoring. (http://www.thehugoawards.org/content/pdf/2015HugoStatistics.pdf) "Parkour, Bitch". As for not reading the stuff, I read a lot of the books despite not voting, but for one. For one I drew the line. No, not the objectively terrible Vox Day stuff, a few snippets were enough to know that was rubbish. I'm talking about the one author I will never read ever again. Never. Not one more penny from me. In fact not even for free: I'm talking about Kevin J Anderson! Why? Because he's Kevin J. Anderson, ruiner of franchises, creator of the sun crusher and the darksaber and fucker-up of Dune. His latest stuff may be 100% gold plated genius (I'd lay odds it's not) but I'll never, ever know, because he's Kevin J "my-jedi-is-a-bigger-jedi-than-yours-Kyp-Durron-was-fucking-terrible" Anderson! I'm proud not to have read his book. Because fool me once Mr Anderson, shame on you, fool me five damn times because you're attached, lamprey like, to franchises I love and just...no. No more of my money. Not ever. So, I didn't read that book. But not because: Puppies. Not because: Ideology. Because: Oh God I just remembered the end to the meandering pointlessness of Darksaber where the fucking thing just crashes into a rock in total anti-climax. *weeps*.

  152. Surprisingly good news! by BenBoy · · Score: 1

    I can't believe that the voters haven't acknowledged No Award before now; it's not perhaps Zelazny's best work, but it's up there (first published in The Saturday Evening Post, then in Last Defender of Camelot).

  153. Re:There's truth on both sides here by Idarubicin · · Score: 1

    Though they cite people getting blackballed for politics like Card and that's a valid point. Card is Christian and he doesn't support gay marriage. I mean... hold any opinion you want on that but that has nothing to do with whether someone should or shouldn't get an award for writing.

    I dunno...Card has been phoning it in for a while now. I had been reading his new stuff more out of habit (it's easier to read the next book in a series than it is to go and discover new writers). 2008's Ender In Exile lost the 'fire' that the previous post-Bugger-War Bean-series books had; I was willing to suspend my disbelief regarding the implausible political victories achieved by Peter and Bean in the earlier books, but the Ender-versus-Achilles'-son subplot in Exile tied off too easily. All of the main characters just felt over-powered.

    And don't get me started on the Formic Wars books. The first one (2012's Earth Unaware) put me off the series for life. The physics were just so nails-on-blackboard bad. The idea that ships in interplanetary space need to come to a stop (relative to where, exactly?) before a spacewalk...arghhhh! You get the impression that he thought ships docking in space would be like semi-trucks side-by-side on the highway, fraught with danger and the risk of swerving or getting blown off course by the wind. What happened to the Ender's Game author who so thoroughly grasped zero-gee combat and advised us that the enemy's gate is down? Is he getting lazy, or arrogant, or not listening to his beta readers, or what?

    I didn't find out about Card's execrable views until after I had already paid for, and was thoroughly irritated with, the weakness of his later books. I can get my pulp somewhere else; learning about his hateful attitudes (and actions) just cemented a pre-existing feeling that sending him more royalties was a poor investment for me.

    --
    ~Idarubicin
  154. Re:made themselves irelevent by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

    Because the SJWs organized people to vote NA en mass. The Puppies proved their point: the Hugo voters are a clique. They would rather burn the house down by organizing to vote NA than give an award to someone who doesn't share their political ideology. And we know they did that, because they posted about it on their blogs. Charlie Stross (whose work I very much enjoy) was crowing about it on twitter.

    Now the SJWs can claim "nuh uh, the voters just didn't think any of these books were any good!" That seems hard to believe, particularly given the popularity of some of the novels that were passed over. They proved the Hugo voters (and yes, I know anyone can vote. I'm saying the people who choose to vote) are motivated by politics before quality.

    --
    We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
  155. The Hugos, Sucking Since 1971 by ToddInSF · · Score: 1

    When Paul Kantner's Blows Against The Empire was the first rock album to ever be nominated for a Hugo Award, in the category of Best Dramatic Presentation.

    In voting, the album garnered the second most votes for the award, losing to "No Award", which received the most votes.

    Because you can't have dirty hippies winning anything.

    Fuck the Hugos.

  156. Re:There's truth on both sides here by Karmashock · · Score: 1

    Maybe not... but maybe the conflict will make it clear that politics are operating in the awards.

    The opinion of the Puppies remember was that politics was playing a part in who won or not. And the SJW thing rather proved they were right.

    Now was the sad puppy campaign the best way to go about it? I don't know. Vox Day for example appears to be a racist asshole. But there is clearly some politics going on in the Hugos and the Hugos need to understand that they're having their votes manipulated.

    --
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  157. Breitbart, really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Breitbart is considered a reliable news source here? Seriously? What a fail of an article.

  158. It's Just A Flesh Wound! by Steve+B · · Score: 1

    "You yellow bastards! Come back here and take what's coming to you! I'll bite your legs off!"

    --
    /. If the government wants us to respect the law, it should set a better example.
  159. Re:There's truth on both sides here by NicBenjamin · · Score: 1

    Whether Card could win would depend on what WorldCon attendees thought, and quite a few of them don't seem to mind conservative authors. Mike Resnick has gotten five, for example.

    I suspect that if Card did something really, truly great, and didn't include any overt anti-gay stuff, it would be virtually impossible to beat him. He's OSC, and the extremely gray WorldCon audience is probably not very gay. It could easily turn out like the Sad Puppies campaign -- piss off all the voters for bringing politics into their little world and fail miserably.

  160. Re:There's truth on both sides here by Karmashock · · Score: 1

    Not voting for them because their writing is shitty is one thing. In Card's case, I'd agree... he hasn't written anything worth reading in a long time.

    My point is that there is clearly politics operating in the awards and that is something the system has to take into consideration.

    Its not going away. The politics were there before and they'll be there in the future... you just need to appreciate that going forward.

    The whole rivalry between the SJW and sad puppy people makes it clear that this is the new normal.

    So just adapt. That's all. Just adapt.

    As to where we get our pulp... that's fine. I'm the last person to tell anyone where they should get it. I'm just saying... keep an open mind.

    If I were bisexual as you said you were... I'd have to be very tolerant of people that didn't understand or accept that. There are too many of them. Much of the world doesn't understand or accept bisexuality or homosexuality.

    And however you might feel about that, consider that I personally hold a lot of views that I believe are moral imperitives that many other people don't ascribe to. You don't have to be homosexual or of some given race that has had discrimination issues to feel persecuted on occasion.

    We all have to live with each other. I don't blacklist people for not ascribing to my views about everything. If I did that, I'd black list most people because my views are not especially common. I have to be tolerant with people and I don't hold their not sharing my views against them personally or professionally.

    I don't think it is practical for bisexuals or homosexuals to do that either. We have a big wide world with a lot of interesting, clever, and wonderful people in it. We just need to get along.

    The sad puppy thing was bigger than card in any case... I think there was soemthing in Science fiction where people were saying "Science fiction needs to grow up" or break old patterns. And the problem with that attitude is that its often an outside element trying to impose a narrative on a subculture.

    We saw this recently with the whole drama over gaming and sexism. Where an outside group was trying to turn video games into casual narratives about sex issues or lesbianism when the existing market was more interested in space marines, shooting hookers, or quietly building cities by yourself.

    And we've seen this in other subcultures. We've seen in comics where every depiction of women in a skin tight outfit is decried as sexism despite the fact that the male characters are similarly clad.

    We even saw some of this hit the table top gaming world.

    Its a thing. There's this weird culture war going through geekdom and you're seeing push back in certain segments. That's it.

    Now if people want to hold view X or Y that is fine. Believe whatever you want and consume whatever you want. But don't try to take it over and tell everyone that enjoys something else that they're bad people for it.

    Just leave people be. Maybe we should split the hugos?... have it be the SJW hugos versus the puppy hugos... I don't know. If people can't tolerate each other and coexist then we have to separate and that would be sad.

    You see these signs all over the place about coexist... get along... but they seem to only mean that when it comes to the middle east or something. That sort of thing starts at home. It starts HERE. If you can't coexist with some guy because he has views on homosexuality that you don't like... then how can you coexist with anyone that isn't in lock step with you? That's a very common view... right or wrong... its common.

    We have to get along. No?

    And just in case you're curious, I have no problem with homosexuality what so ever. Be as gay as you want. It doesn't matter to me. Get married, divorced, adopt a kid, whatever. I don't care. The only time I have trouble with homosexuality is when people play the gay card to get favoritism. I had a coworker that sexually harassed another coworker. Other guy was married... to a lady. A

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  161. Re:There's truth on both sides here by squiggleslash · · Score: 1

    That link is not to any organized "Vote no award" block. It's a basic description of how voting works, and some commentary on the situation. Scalzi is very clear that when you see a work worthy of a Hugo, it should be listed as a choice higher than No Award.

    Scalzi's instructions should be how all Hugo voters vote, at every election, regardless of whether there's an organized attempt to game the nominations or not.

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  162. Re:There's truth on both sides here by Karmashock · · Score: 1

    Don't boil everything down to whether or not Card personally gets a Hugo... no one gives a shit about that. Its rather an impression that there are cliches in the awards and only people inside the cliques get them.

    What we saw from this rivalry is that there are AT LEAST two powerful cliques operating in the Hugos and that is something the Hugos need to take into consideration in future awards.

    Whatever you think about the sad puppies or the SJWs... it doesn't matter.

    No no... it doesn't matter. Actually. Because either way... this situation PROVES there are cliques.

    So... you need deal with that.

    By all means... set up rules to make it harder for the sad puppy people to fill a docket with people they like. That's reasonable.

    But you're going to have to make it harder for other cliques to operate in the same way as well. You can't just have a rule that says "if sad puppy, then no vote" So your rules have to be blind to which clique is pushing whatever. And simply by doing that you're going to reduce the power of all the cliques.

    This is another of those weird situations where drama happens and then both sides declare victory.

    The reality is that both sides probably lost here.

    The Sad puppies failed to get anyone they wanted on the list of winners.

    And the SJW clique lost because the only way to deal with the situation is to change the rules that will ultimately make it harder for the SJWs to operate in the future as well.

    So it was WW3.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

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  163. Awards don't mean anything anymore. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nowadays they give them out for passing gas.

    It's not about quality, but about how much money they can make off it all.

    They can take their HUGO award and shove it where the sun doesn't shine (Black Hole?) ;-)

  164. Re:Bad Summary, but ultimately point has been prov by Derekloffin · · Score: 1

    No, but having people vote overwhelming for NOTHING because they don't like the candidate IS ideological block voting. I would say the same damn thing if sad puppies won overwhelmingly. Instead of the qualities of the books being what sets the bar, this clearly shows that it was politics that set the show. Sorry, you can't hide behind it's all personal choice when there was such campaigns pushing these outcomes at play here.

  165. Re:Bad Summary, but ultimately point has been prov by tbannist · · Score: 1

    Where was the cheating? Even George RR Martin admits that the Sad Puppies did everything within the rules.

    Are you kidding? Do you really think "technically, they aren't cheating" is going to calm anyone who thought the puppies were stuffing the nomination box? Because if you do, you have a lot to learn about human nature.

    --
    Fanatically anti-fanatical
  166. Mike [Re:Majority [Re:Don't trust]] by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 1

    Mike Resnick is a good editor, a fine writer, a witty conversationalist, a font of wisdom and knowledge in the field, a person who is interested in helping others, and in pretty much every way I can think of, a genuinely nice guy.

    If all of the nominations by the sad and the rabid puppies had been people as well-regarded in the field as Mike (and Toni), there would have been far less controversy.

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
  167. Slashdot deserves it's waning significance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Holy fuck Slashdot, Brietbart?

    Really?

    This entire website can just sit in the trashfire it has become.

  168. Re:There's truth on both sides here by Idarubicin · · Score: 1

    The whole rivalry between the SJW and sad puppy people makes it clear that this is the new normal.

    I think that hits the nail on the head, though probably not quite the way you intended. The Sad/Rabid Puppies have chosen to label themselves, and self-selected their membership to only include individuals who pass their own internal litmus tests of conservatism, manliness, or dear-God-not-feminism--and who actually want to appear under their banner. (We know there were a couple of authors who were - apparently without their consent - nominated as part of a Puppy slate and who withdrew from the Hugo ballot because they didn't want to be associated with the Puppy project.)

    Then the SJWs - the Social Justice Warriors - who just seem to be...everybody else. They didn't need a banner to crowd behind. They're not a shadowy cabal or powerful movement. They're just...a bunch of fans with a whole bunch of independent (and sometimes mutually contradictory) viewpoints about both SF literature and society.

    It doesn't strike me as sensible, or constructive, to reduce it down to Well, it's just A versus B, I guess we should agree to disagree, try to get along, and make sure both "sides" get equal airtime--when we've let one little group draw boundaries and then assign a label to everyone else. It gives disproportionate attention, weight, and power to the loudest argument, rather than the best one. Compromising with extremists doesn't result in an improved consensus, it just tends to encourage the extremists. (Witness all of U.S. politics.)

    If I were bisexual as you said you were... I'd have to be very tolerant of people that didn't understand or accept that. There are too many of them. Much of the world doesn't understand or accept bisexuality or homosexuality.

    Wow. Not sure where you got that. I didn't say word one about my sexuality. You've gotten it wrong, and it's irrelevant to the discussion anyway. I am impressed, however, that you are willing to helpfully explain to non-straight people that bigots exist and are plentiful (because, after all, non-straight people would be totally unaware of that without your advice), and that non-straight people have to be very tolerant of bigots, in order to keep the world running smoothly.

    Incidentally, a word of advice. Adding an "I'm not a bigot" disclaimer at the end of a post never helps, and definitely doesn't work the way you think it does.

    --
    ~Idarubicin
  169. Re:There's truth on both sides here by NicBenjamin · · Score: 1

    The way you're using the phrase "SJWs" makes little sense. It's not like anybody would answer the question "Are you a Social Justice Warrior?" with a yes. Gay rights activist, black lives matter activist, progressive, those would all get somebody to say yes, and all three probably have pretty significant overlap with people you'd call Social Justice Warriors, but in general the whole concept of Social Justice Warrior is something that is entirely made up by their opponents.

    In this case, for example, there's no progressive slate at the Hugo's. Never has been. There's a Fuck Vox Day vote, but the Fuck Vox Day vote includes a lot of people Vox Day supported strongly enough to get Hugo Nominations.

  170. Re:There's truth on both sides here by Karmashock · · Score: 1

    Whatever you find reasonable, the reality is that you won't be able to shut just one group out. You'll have to tighten the rules to make it harder for ANY group of that nature to operate.

    And assuming the sad puppies were honest about their goals... they win if you do that.

    Which means you can either maintain the status quo and deal with them coming at you every year doing the same thing over and over again.

    OR... you tighten the rules making it harder for groups to brigade and they obtain their stated goals.

    Its a no-win scenario for the SJWs. They can't win. That's checkmate.

    As to sexuality, then I got you confused with someone else in this thread that said she was a bisexual woman. Sorry.

    As to my explaination of to non-straight people... its actually a more expansive point about how unproductive it is to blacklist anyone that doesn't check all your boxes.

    I went into some depth to explain that there are more boxes that can be checked besides "your thoughts on homosexuality" etc. And if I blacklisted everyone that didn't ascribe to my own personal beliefs there would be very few people in the world that I found acceptable to conduct business or associate with.

    I have friends, family, business associates, etc that don't share my values. I don't hold it against them.

    I also don't appreciate your attempt to suggest that my opinions or honest and heartfelt attempts to explain myself are unwelcome because of my gender or sexual orrentation. This is a new phenomon which frankly should be labeled as trending towards bigotry.

    There is this notion these days that you can't be racist against white people, you can't be sexist against men, and you can't be sexually intolerant of heterosexual people.

    That's logically impossible for that to be impossible. Discriminating against any group is discrimination on that basis. So I frankly don't appreciate you saying this:

    "I am impressed, however, that you are willing to helpfully explain to non-straight people that bigots exist and are plentiful"

    Either we have a dialog or we do not. You want to tell me your opinions? You get mine in return. Attempts to make it only flow one way will be rejected.

    As to saying "i'm not a bigot" meaning that I am a bigot... only for those that like to speciously label people bigots.

    If your great goal in any discussion is to try and find out how to label the other side in the discussion a bigot and then claim victory on that basis... then sure. However, you are increasingly seeing that rhetorical technique fail. So i would suggest diversifying into rhetorical arguments and strategies that have a longer shelf life. Just a word of advice. ;-)

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  171. while we're weeping over 'right wing extremists' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The 'no award' vote was a blatant block vote and only won because the others split their vote among the other options. So much for 'will of the people'.

  172. Re:There's truth on both sides here by Karmashock · · Score: 1

    1. Yes, people do answer to that. I think I quoted some tweets from one of the organizers of the opposition to the sad puppies self identifying as such. I believe his tweet after the vote was "SJWs burned the village down to save it." What is more, my understanding is that the term was actually what some activists were calling themselves initially. It just got co-opted by their detractors. Wouldn't be the first time. I'm further going to point out that playing word games is a trope of both progressives and SJWs... so... arguing they don't exist with semantics might turn out to be a somewhat self defeating argument.

    2. As to the "they're not a group they're all different groups" argument. Lets not pretend that there aren't clouds of association here.

    3. As to whether there is or isn't a progressive slate... as I said... it doesn't matter anymore. Does it? See... once you've validated that there is a brigading issue... That the sad puppies even got all those names on the list frankly proves the rules need to be changed. And from what I hear, they are changing the rules... tightening it down so brigading is harder. And if you pass rules against it... that undermines a progressive or SJW slate as much as it undermines the sad puppies or whatever else you want to talk about. You can't pass a bill of attainder against the sad puppies. You either change the rules making it harder to brigade or you accept the practice and normalize it. Choose. It doesn't matter what you do or how you justify it or what you argue... checkmate. You either update the rules... which is happening... or you accept the sad puppies as the new normal. And if the rules get updated... and they are... then that undermines any other brigading action by any other group... whether they exist or not. It doesn't matter. Its over.

    4. As to Vox Day, I think I said previously that he appeared to be a racist asshole... so... fuck him. But that doesn't really change anything.

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  173. Re:There's truth on both sides here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You saw how many people were pissed that they were making an Ender's Game movie.

    I saw some people who thought such a bad story would just make a bad movie, I saw others who thought that a bad movie would ruin the story.

    The available evidence supports both positions.

  174. Breitbart by millenium68 · · Score: 1

    Breitbart died on the toilet.

  175. This was a discussion at our Sunday brunch by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

    A lot of my friends are writers, and are quite diverse, but we all were glad that No Award was made in the categories where the "slate" got all five positions.

    You proved a lot. You proved that there wasn't slate voting before, and also that fuzzy nipples or whatever GG name you're going by this week are a bunch of jerks.

    And as someone who's held shiny Hugos and had the hassle of going thru security with them, I'm glad of the result.

    Here endeth the lesson. Cheaters never prosper.

    --
    -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
  176. Re:There's truth on both sides here by Karmashock · · Score: 1

    *bitch slaps fucktard AC Troll with reality*

    ""
    Critical response

    Critics received Ender's Game well. The novel won the Nebula Award for best novel in 1985,[10] and the Hugo Award for best novel in 1986,[11] considered the two most prestigious awards in science fiction.[12][13] Ender's Game was also nominated for a Locus Award in 1986.[6] In 1999, it placed No. 59 on the reader's list of Modern Library 100 Best Novels. It was also honored with a spot on American Library Association's "100 Best Books for Teens." In 2008, the novel, along with Ender's Shadow, won the Margaret A. Edwards Award, which honors an author and specific works by that author for lifetime contribution to young adult literature.[14] Ender's Game was included in Damien Broderick's book Science Fiction: The 101 Best Novels 1985â"2010.[15]New York Times writer Gerald Jonas asserts that the novel's plot summary resembles a "grade Z, made-for-television, science-fiction rip-off movie", but says that Card develops the elements well despite this "unpromising material". Jonas further praises the development of the character Ender Wiggin: "Alternately likable and insufferable, he is a convincing little Napoleon in short pants."[16]

    The novel has received negative criticism for violence and its justification. Elaine Radford's review, "Ender and Hitler: Sympathy for the Superman", posits that Ender Wiggin is an intentional reference by Card to Adolf Hitler and criticizes the violence in the novel, particularly at the hands of the protagonist.[2] Card responded to Radford's criticisms in Fantasy Review, the same publication. Radford's criticisms are echoed in John Kessel's essay "Creating the Innocent Killer: Ender's Game, Intention, and Morality", wherein Kessel states: "Ender gets to strike out at his enemies and still remain morally clean. Nothing is his fault."[3] Noah Berlatsky makes similar claims in his analysis of the relationship between colonization and science fiction, where he describes how Ender's Game is in part a justification of "Western expansion and genocide."[17]

    The U.S. Marine Corps Professional Reading List makes the novel recommended reading at several lower ranks, and again at Officer Candidate/Midshipman.[18] The book was placed on the reading list by Captain John F. Schmitt, author of FMFM-1 (Fleet Marine Fighting Manual, on maneuver doctrine) for "provid[ing] useful allegories to explain why militaries do what they do in a particularly effective shorthand way."[19] In introducing the novel for use in leadership training, Marine Corps University's Lejeune program opines that it offers "lessons in training methodology, leadership, and ethics as well [....] Ender's Game has been a stalwart item on the Marine Corps Reading List since its inception."[19]
    Accolades
    Publication Country Accolade Year Rank
    Amazon.com United States Best of the Century: Best Books of the Millennium Poll[20] 1999
    32
    Locus United States Best 20th Century Science Fiction Novels: Reader's Poll[21] 2012
    2
    Modern Library United States Modern Library 100 Best Novels: Reader's List[22] 1999
    59
    NPR United States Top 100 Science Fiction, Fantasy Books: Readers' Poll[23] 2011
    3
    Publishers Weekly United States Bestselling Science Fiction Novels of 2012[24] 2012
    1
    Science Channel United States Top 10 Sci-fi Books of All Time[25] 2013
    5

    The weeks ending June 9, August 18, September 8, September 15, November 3, November 10, November 17, and November 24, 2013, the novel was No. 1 on the New York Times' Best Sellers List of Paperback Mass-Market Fiction.[26][27][28][29][30][31][32][33]
    ""

    Don't respond. Just sit there with that red mark on the side of your face and your shame.

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  177. Re:There's truth on both sides here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    *bitch slaps fucktard AC Troll with reality*

    ""

    You mean goes off on a rant that only serves to make you look like an arrogant blowhard.

    I dunno, maybe that's how you want to appear, so if so, kudos to you!

    Let's review the comment:

    I saw some people who thought such a bad story would just make a bad movie, I saw others who thought that a bad movie would ruin the story.

    The available evidence supports both positions.

    Nothing you've said does much in the way of addressing it.

    You're just randomly quoting the critical reception of the book, from Wikipedia as if that were anything but what some other people think, though it does show the book has people who like ti and those who don't, so I'm not even sure why you think it'd be refuting anything I said. Besides you'd probably want to talk about the film.

    But hey, since you brought up Wikipedia:

    Ender's Game received mixed reviews from film critics. On Rotten Tomatoes, a Review aggregator, the film has a score of 60% based on 196 reviews, with an average rating of 6 out of 10. The critical consensus states: "If it isn't quite as thought-provoking as the book, Ender's Game still manages to offer a commendable number of well-acted, solidly written sci-fi thrills."[75] On Metacritic, the film has a score of 51 out of 100 based on 39 critics indicating "mixed or average reviews".[76]

    Well, I think that does show support for both positions as being possible, but let's check an actual discussion:

    http://entertainment.slashdot.org/story/13/11/06/1921209/movie-review-enders-game

    I see both positions evident there, but let me know if you need help finding the posts.

    And if you want to go back even further:

    http://news.slashdot.org/story/01/01/15/1432236/more-on-ender-film-from-orson-scott-card
    http://news.slashdot.org/story/99/08/24/1229229/anakin-actor-to-star-in-enders-game

    It's hilarious when you realize what Star Wars actor they DID get.

  178. Re:There's truth on both sides here by Karmashock · · Score: 1

    Apparently you're beneath shame... I thought scum could at least feel shame...
    https://youtu.be/_TxnL5VYgoY?t...

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  179. Re:There's truth on both sides here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I take it you're having problems finding the posts then, so I'll help you:

    http://entertainment.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3726433&cid=43658427

    This is one book that I couldn't see Hollywood doing justice to. The trailer doesn't really leave me feeling any better about it. Lots of nice effects, but I think it's going to come out all bubble-gum.

    http://entertainment.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3726433&cid=43659075

    This is a great book, but I don't think a movie can do it justice. Lots of books make great movies, but this book is great precisely because of its subtlety, emotions, and the mind tweaks. I see how you can get a lot of great action sequences out of the story line but they were never even close to the meat of the book, and I am sure the real meat will be lost in the action sequences of the movie. So it will have some cool scenes but will otherwise be just another sci fi movie.

    http://news.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=9968&cid=506424

    I love SF and I have read all the classics, and as much modern stuff as I have time for. But man, I just could NOT get into Ender's Game. Mod me down, but there it is -- I didn't like the book. Couldn't even finish the sequel. I know this is high treason on /., but I gotta be me.

    I don't think a movie adaptation is a good idea. It's rare enough to find one kid who can act, let alone a whole gaggle of them. It will probably be painful to watch if it's ever made. Imagine a dozen Anakin Skywalkers. Ack.

    http://entertainment.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=4418137&cid=45348415

    This. Plus I never rated the whole Ender trilogy. I trudged through it but found it shallow, unimaginative and dull. (The Great Enemy are called "Buggers" - so they destroy your planet and then they sodomise you?) Where are the movies of books by Banks or Niven, or even the more modern Reynolds and Asher. Action and plot aplenty amongst any of those and (apart from Niven, alas) proper character devlopment too. OSC is grade C at best, then you hear he's got some nasty politics and for me too it's a no f... way am I going to waste my life to put a cent in this man's pocket.

    Considering the movie...

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K4Fvsgv0bYw

    So love or hate Ender's Game the novel, the movie itself? Can't say either side was wrong with their expectations from a Hollywood treatment.

    Personally I'd suggest something else Japanese:

    http://ku-sen.jp/

  180. 820 posts later - none of you make any sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What is this all about?

    No seriously - explain what this is in 5 sentences or less.

    I enjoy sci-fi and fantasy books. There were quite a few good ones in 2014/2015... Somehow nerds are ruining it for other nerds? There is no way "no award" makes any sense. "No Award" might as well be replaced by "Fuck books and the people that write them". It's so bizarre I can't even begin to understand it.

    One more worthless award.

  181. Re:Hard vs. Soft SF by Baron_Yam · · Score: 1

    Your categorization is off. "Hard" SF deals with technology that is at least theoretically possible, "Soft" does away with that limitation.

    Somewhere further along the spectrum after "Soft" it fades from science fiction to fantasy fiction.

    Traditionally, science fiction involves introducing some technology to the reader and then exploring the world that results from its existence.

  182. Re:There's truth on both sides here by Idarubicin · · Score: 1

    Either we have a dialog or we do not. You want to tell me your opinions? You get mine in return. Attempts to make it only flow one way will be rejected.

    Then why is it that you're replying to - and arguing with, and lecturing about - so many things that I didn't write?

    I guess some of us are able to better handle the terrible burden we heft as straight, white males. And I'm sure that if I were a bisexual woman, I would understand and appreciate your honest and heartfelt attempts to advise me on how to handle bigots.

    You can reply, or not. I won't be reading further messages.

    --
    ~Idarubicin
  183. Re:There's truth on both sides here by Karmashock · · Score: 1

    I didn't say it was a burden... I simply reject the notion that I have less a right to an opinion because of such things.

    You're basically trying to use a lot of specious crap to suggest some people don't have a right to an opinion.

    That's fine. You shut up too then. Everyone shuts up as well.

    You all keep your mouths clamped shut and I'll do the same as well. But the first mother fucker that opens his mouth cancels the deal and everyone gets to talk again.

    You either have free speech or you don't. I spit in the face of your absurd presumption to shame me into silence. Who made you an authority on anything? And why would you think that my gender or my race or my sexual orientation would make me more or less valuable as a voice for anything?

    As to you not reading messages, you contacted me, shithead... not the other way around.

    You can't handle people laughing at your comical world view? The future is going to be hard on people like you. This whole pearl clutching political correctness thing is eating itself alive. Its all down hill for this shit going forward. If you can't handle me, then you're going to have to climb pretty damn far up your own ass to escape the rest of society.

    Enjoy the future. I know I will.

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  184. Silver Lining by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This fiasco draws attention to one inescapable fact -- Sci-fi has gotten really fucking shitty in the last decade. We don't have grandmasters. We have a few aging masters and a whole bunch of 2000 ELO (chess term) newbies who write one or two decent debut stories. Many authors have lost the plot! They hide weak characters and clumsy writing behind alien language, violence porn, and emo cliches. Short stories, the true metric of the overall health of sci-fi in the opinion of this humble reader who has read more of it than anyone alive, have gotten so woefully bad that some yearly collections are 80% unreadable! We don't have craftsmen, we have dilettantes - we don't have artists, we have children's coloring books.

  185. Re:Breitbart? Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You seem to be misinformed.

    The people who rigged the nominations, to ensure that ONLY their nominees made the ballot were the Sad and Rabid Puppies. They didn't come to participate. They came to dominate. Torgenson says up front that they did mathematical analysis to determine how many votes it would take to get all the nominees in a given category. And that's what they did. They used the slate to take the entire category for their nominees. Nobody else was allowed to nominate anybody in those categories.

    And the fans didn't like that. That's rude. It's beyond rude. It's appalling behavior.

    So, yes, some fans voted against the slate to send a message "DON'T DO THAT". Don't take our ball and say we can't play any more. We don't mind if you nominate, but you don't get to be the ONLY ones who nominate.

    And some of us read the works. Well, parts of them. Most of them were pretty awful, and painful to read. I couldn't finish quite a few of them.

  186. Re:Khyber = the human "FAIL", lol... apk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yep,
      Khyber is an Idiot!
    the guy actually feels he is "unlawfully detained" in California, calls and threatens the DA in Riverside County Calif. where he lives and gets a 2nd Felony conviction for Criminal Threat. That's one of the most profoundly Stupid things I've ever heard- Threatened the DA !? That's beyond Stupid!.
    He goes on here like some kind of Computer Expert, but in a Writ of Habeas Corpus he filed with the Riverside Superior Court he wrote: I had to educate myself about computers and realized I could not have sent that message (referring to the Threatening email to his landlord (after Eviction proceedings) that got him arrested & Convicted for threatening letter intending to Extortion money.

    He (Khyber) is a F_cking Idiot!

  187. Re:Khyber = the human "FAIL", lol... apk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Khyber ?
    that guy is a a genuine Moron
    Go back to Kirby High School and get your GED, or have you tried and can't pass the test?
    Your not Mad, are ya' bro?

  188. Nebula anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Hugo award has about as much substance as the People's Choice Award. The Nebula Award is picked by the SFWA and thus has a slighter probability of exercising some critical discernment.

  189. Re:Breitbart? Really? by Coren22 · · Score: 1

    Nobody else was allowed to nominate anybody in those categories.

    That is entirely untrue.

    Anyone could nominate, it just happened to be a voting bock of 300 who got a few slates nominated. The answer is not to have no award (despite good entries being nominated) by 3000 people (out of 5000).

    --
    APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
  190. capitalist voting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    First off Larry wasn't an organizer of Sad Puppies 3, second it was people like Mary Robinette Kowal and John Scalzi that urged the destruction of the Hugo's. People learned that the Social Justice Bullies were playing in a tiny sandbox and using the reputation of the Hugo to nominate works based not on the quality, but if it was a "good message", bonus points if the SJB's could tie in a minority author. Mary went so far as to organize mass buys of supporting memberships for people who couldn't afford it, with the "wink wink" that they would vote No Award for anything Sad Puppy related. Mary and her ilk were happy to light a match and drop it at their gasoline soaked feet. All Larry has done is expose the hypocrisies of the "trufans".

    Except you miss the point where they Hugos are pure capitalism--you pay your money, you get to vote.

    The alleged cliques have exactly zero say in who gets to vote, because it boils down to the number of people who are willing to put their money where their mouth is.

    On the other hand, I don't have respect for the Hugos because first grade reading material like Ender's Game wins.

  191. Hugo Voters Refuse . . . by Burstaholic · · Score: 1

    I think just adding the word 'Voters' fixes a lot of the issues with this terrible headline, and shows why it's terrible. The voters refused to submit to the votes!

    Of course the correct statement is, even more clearly, "Hugo Fan Voters Refuse To Award Anyone Rather Than Submit To Fans' Nominations," which points up how ridiculous the whole thing is.

  192. Re:Bad Summary, but ultimately point has been prov by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    SJW's buying Hugo supporting memberships. http://maryrobinettekowal.com/journal/talk-with-me-about-being-a-fan-of-science-fiction-and-fantasy/ They say there wasn't be any collusion.

  193. Re:Breitbart? Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, because name-calling is so conducive to discussion. As soon as you start throwing around SJW you marginalize.

    Did you read that link you point to? Or did you just start spouting off the SJW name-calling like a petulant child as soon as you identified that his position was different from your own? My guess is the latter. Here's a quote from your link:

    5. Also, in case people think I’m being arch or coy on this subject: Yes, in fact, I do intend to read all the fiction nominees this year and consider them seriously for my ballot. I’m not expecting, say, Tom Kratman to surprise me, but maybe he will. Note well, however, that (as with every year), I read the nominations until I decide the work is not worth my time. The works that engage me long enough to read all the way through will be ranked. The ones that don’t won’t make my final ballot. And yes, this means it’s possible that something not on a slate won’t make my final ballot (and that something on a slate might).

  194. Re:There's truth on both sides here by NicBenjamin · · Score: 1

    1. I'd believe that somebody who'd been trolled by Vox Day repeatedly might decide to throw the label back in his face. Day's that kind of guy. But, as someone who was on the board of one of the state-level groups that helped push for ObamaCare, I think I'm pretty well informed on how progressive activists refer to themselves. And I can assure you that nobody uses the word "warrior." Somebody somewhere (particularly in the more "I-have-a-PhD-so-you're-stupid" wing) might use the phrase "social justice," but "equality" and "fairness" are much more common.

    2. "Clouds of association?" If I started putting the gun-rights guys (and in my experience gun rights ladies are rarer then black conservatives), the pro-life activists, and libertarians all under the same label I'd be an asshole. I've done it before, and I'll do it again, because it's a useful activism tool (people get more worked up about opposing Right-Wing Loonies then they do some reasonable term), but that doesn't mean I'll be right in an objective sense of the term. And those groups are as tightly allied as the so-called SJWs. More tightly aligned then gays and blacks -- those three groups really seem to understand how each-other thing, whereas I have never met a non-black gay-rights activists who has any clue how black people think.

    3/4 When Vox Day is involved brigading against him is inevitable. At the actual con more then one attendee was quoted saying they agreed with the puppies, but hated their tactics/Vox Dayish personality so much they'd voted No Award.

    Drawing conclusions about the nature of Hugo voting from this is roughly as sensible as drawing conclusions about French elections from that time La Pen managed to squeak through the first round and got whipped by Chirac.

  195. Re:Breitbart? Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Give it up they don't or won't understand. The only thing proven here is the SJW's were better at getting people to pay 40 bucks then SAD to vote no award. Certainly not all of them but if you actually really read the works nominated for no award to find none of them worthy stretches incredulity.

  196. Re:There's truth on both sides here by Karmashock · · Score: 1

    1. by this same logic people might claim the sad puppies title for the same reason. The logic doesn't work in other applications which is a good sign it is invalid.

    2. Its not a question of right or wrong... its a rejection of the notion that there aren't factional associations outside stated limited associations.

    3/4. This was clearly bigger than Vox Day. Trying to boil everything down to him is inaccurate.

    Look, I'll tell you again...

    IT
    DOES
    NOT
    MATTER

    It doesn't matter. Brigading happened. Both sides. Obvious. The system is being reformed to make that harder. That will prevent ANYONE from brigading again in the future in the same way.

    So... Given that the Sad Puppies said their problem was undue influence on the awards and brigading for various authors on political grounds... if the rules are changed to make it harder to brigade... then the sad puppies just won.

    No?

    Their point was not to get certain names on ONE award. Their point was to reform the system. The system is getting reformed.

    So in what way would this not be a total victory?

    --
    I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
  197. Khyber = moron, proof inside... apk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "NOD32 detects a trojan in APK's HOSTS bullshit." - by Khyber (864651) on Saturday August 22, 2015 @01:02PM (#50370415)

    VirusTotal & NOD32 SHOW IT COMPLETELY CLEAN IN ITS EXES

    https://www.virustotal.com/en/...

    AND

    https://www.virustotal.com/en/...

    There's only 2 exe's & 5 text files in it - The exe's are proven clean as shown above in the 2 links from VirusTotal, the installer's a SFX rar (keeps it 2mb smaller on download) - that's NO virus!

    (Unless YOU know of a way that .txt files are "viruses")

    ---

    "he's tying to get your fucking information." - by Khyber (864651) on Saturday August 22, 2015 @01:02PM (#50370415)

    My program doesn't transmit outward ONLY intake of data from 10 reputable sources in the security community!

    ---

    "APK is apparently too fucking stupid to do this at the ROUTER level where it's most effective" - by Khyber (864651) on Saturday August 22, 2015 @01:02PM (#50370415)

    You believe in "eggshell security" which fails per -> http://www.theregister.co.uk/2...

    A TRULY COMPETENT NETWORK ADMIN WOULD DO FAR MORE THAN MERE PERIMETER LEVEL SECURITY @ ROUTER LEVEL!

    (Right down to the endpoints/network nodes level in PC workstations also using tools you already have in hosts + firewalls (vs. "piling on 'MOAR'" that's inefficient & not nearly as effective in slower usermode browser addons)).

    ---

    "Windows 10 has hardcoded IPs and bypasses HOSTs." - by Khyber (864651) on Saturday August 22, 2015 @01:02PM (#50370415)

    Windows ONLY bypasses hosts files for Windows update (Win8 & below) & for the tracking "telemetry" in Windows 10 (this is going to KILL Windows 10, mark my words - nobody likes tracking -> http://localghost.org/posts/a-... - test it yourself.

    ---

    "Browsers can bypass HOSTs as well." - by Khyber (864651) on Saturday August 22, 2015 @01:02PM (#50370415)

    WTF? They'd be bypassing the IP stack itself, hosts are part of it - since that's impossible? You've proven yourself a moron, again.

    APK

    P.S.=> See subject & "EAT YOUR WORDS"... apk

  198. Re:There's truth on both sides here by NicBenjamin · · Score: 1

    1. White people really are fucking clueless about how they sound to anyone else, probably largely because we don't have to talk to anyone else in a context where they can get away with calling us assholes to our faces. The Sad Puppies call themselves Sad Puppies, except for Vox Days faction who prefer the term "rabid puppies." Their logo is a sad puppy. If I wanted to do what they did, and make up some insulting phrase to dismiss their entire argument, it would actually be pretty easy. They're fighting, and they called me a warrior, so warrior would probably be in it. They explicitly admit that they want SciFi to be like it was in the 60s and 70s, when the only white people in it were Uhura and Sulu. So they really don't want me to make up a bunch of words about them.

    As for the brigading issue, look at the reform proposals. They're not doing anything about brigading in voting, they're doing something about brigading in the nomination system. The Sad Puppies have never said the nomination system was rigged (every year at least one Puppy-approved work has been on the final ballot), they've said the actual voting was rigged. That's why they tried to keep all non-Puppies-approved work off the ballot this year, rather then settling for a couple works in each category like they did last year.

    Which means the Hugos are now changing the rules to protect the bit of the process that (the puppies say) is rigged, from the process the puppies use to de-rig the awards.

  199. Re:There's truth on both sides here by Karmashock · · Score: 1

    1. I'm not white. And even if I were... that wouldn't matter. The people that like to use racism prop up shitty arguments are mostly on the progressive left these days.

    Anyone disagrees with you, you say "RACE" or "SEX" or something else that doesn't actually matter in that situation and try to censor all opposing view points.

    I reject your attempt with extreme prejudice.

    2. As to vox day, i'm not letting you reduce everything to one racist dick. Rejected. What was going on was a lot bigger than him. You can't just fine one racist in a group and dismiss the whole thing.

    3. As to wanting scifi to be like it was in the 1960s... that doesn't mean anything about race particularly. That is your projection.

    4. As to distinctions between voting and nominations.... *laughs* they said there was brigading. That is getting dealt with. If it wasn't then you can expect them to exploit the holes left in it to make the point again until the system is reformed.

    They win. The brigading which was their primary objective to stop is being made more difficult. If it isn't difficult enough, then they'll do it again until the system is fixed.

    What they did was TROLL you... and they did it to force you to change a position. You see this on internet communities all the time. Some stupid rule will get put in... and someone will exploit that rule simply to show how stupid it is... and that will force the reform.

    You don't like that Vox Day is a racist? Great. That gives you extra incentive to actually shut down the brigading. Do it. Shut out the evil Vox Day... and in doing so... you give the movement what it wanted which was reform.

    it's checkmate.

    Game over. The brigading is done.

    --
    I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
  200. Re:There's truth on both sides here by NicBenjamin · · Score: 1

    1. I never said you were. I said white guys like them really don't get why anyone with a modicum of manners doesn't make up a word, apply to everyone who disagrees with them, and then act offended when they act offended.

    Note that what they're doing is the same thing as you imply I'm doing with race: you're saying that whenever I hear something I disagree with I call it racist no matter what the actual argument is. What they're doing is whenever I say something they disagree with, they say "that's social justice bullshit."

    Thank you for proving my point.

    2. Who cares whether you "let me" do it. The fact is their slate got rejected by their own voters due to a combination of their over-aggressive tactics and Vox Day. That is what actually happened. Several were quoted at the awards ceremony saying they agreed with many Sad Puppy arguments but voted No Award anyway. The Sad Puppy point lost partly because it was being argued by a guy everyone hates. This is not uncommon. It is the reason nobody has asked Dubya's endorsement for anything since he left the White House.

    3. The only social justice movements in the 60s were against sexism and racism. In fact they actually called themselves that back then. If you don't want me to believe you don't oppose the Civil Right movement don't a) say you want shit to be like it was back then, and b) deride your opponents as being Social Justice anything.

    Hell if you want to actually have an exchange of ideas at any level don't use that term. You made it up as a slur, which means my response to hearing you say it is not gonna be "he's probably a nice guy, I have a moral duty to give him the benefit of the doubt." It's gonna be "fuck that guy." Particularly if that guy is in any way associated with Vox Day.

    4. And what possible rule change can eliminate brigading at voting? It's trivial to do it in nominations. You could restrict everyone to three nominations and still have five nominees. You could eliminate the fan-nomination process completely and have a committee of winners determine the nominee list, or have the guy who runs the con write the nominee list. Any one of those rules makes the Sad Puppy system technique virtually impossible. But you can't have a rule that says "you can't vote for that guy for short story AND that other guy for novel because we found a website advocating both of them" without banning all fan voting or adding a whole bunch of by-laws to prevent the Sad Puppies from producing a bunch of fake internet slates combining all possible combinations of ballot that they dislike.

    Which puts this in a completely different tradition: that of trolls dominating something for a short time period, getting themselves banned, and then declaring victory anyway because "we made our point, and we didn't want to not be banned anyway."

  201. Re:There's truth on both sides here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm not white.

    I call bullshit. Elsewhere, you've clearly stated that you never reveal anything personal on your slashdot account. You're just trolling here.

  202. Re:There's truth on both sides here by Karmashock · · Score: 1

    And who says one's race is personal information, Bingo?

    In my opinion race is an arbitary phenotype... as relevant as the color of your hair, eyes, your height, or what your arm pits smell like after a work out.

    I wouldn't divide society on that basis and I view anyone that would as some flavor conman or moron.

    Often as not the people pushing this sort of thing are doing an "US vs THEM" divide and conquer political strategy. Have nothing of use to offer anyone? Divide people.. tell people that their neighbors want to stab them in the back or rape their daughters or whatever and then say "I will protect you from your evil neighbor who's dog shits on your lawn!"...

    And boom... winning political strategy.

    I find differences in personal philosophy more relevant really. Religions often are relevant. And there is always competence.

    The one thing few people seem to be able to handle is that there are some people that are competent at certain things and some people that are not. Some people can sing. Some people can do quantum mechanics in their head, and some people can just about manage maintaining their autonomic functions if they don't strain too hard.

    I believe in meritocracy. That people should be able to rise to their level of competence and sink to their level of incompetence.

    Race doesn't enter into that.

    There are competent and incompetent people in all races just as there are incompetent and competent people that are tall or fat or have hairy backs. Dividing societies on that basis might have been how past cultures did things but it is important to note that one of the reasons besides ignorance that was done is that there was a stark cultural difference between people of different races.

    A white person was likely to have a western european culture. An asian person was likely to have an eastern cultural perspective. And so on.

    And discriminating on the basis of culture is still bigotry but it is at least more understandable.

    In fact, the primary differences between the racial groups in the US is that there are lingering cultural differences. You will hear a black person chide another black person by saying "stop talking like a white person"... this makes clear that there is a cultural aspect to the racial dynamics in the US.

    And these cultural differences can be found in the jewish community indifferent to whether they're atheists or not, the various European American groups, the various African american groups, and the various Asian American groups.

    Korean americans are not the same thing as Japanese Americans or Chinese Americans. They have distinct cultural traits.... moral and ethical codes that differ. Something one group would call rude another group would call polite.

    These cultural differences are even found between the sexes. A life time of growing up reading different books, having different heroes, and being asked to live up to different standards conditions young men and young women differently which causes friction when one expects something of the other which makes sense in the context of their culture but not in the context of the other culture.

    This dis-unity is what causes a great deal of the friction. Once you understand that, it becomes clearer how to deal with such problems going forward.

    --
    I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
  203. Re:There's truth on both sides here by Greg+Hullender · · Score: 1

    I voted. I attended. I read all the submissions before I voted. I was really shocked by how bad most of the Puppy-nominated works were. Several of them were so bad I couldn't believe they got published in the first place--never mind nominated for awards. I did vote for two of their nominees above no-award though--the two that I genuinely believed to be award worthy. One other one I debated about--it was well-written and I liked it, but it seemed to have too little content for the category.

    To illustrate some of the problems: 1) several of the works were incomplete. They were part of larger stories, apparently, but simply ended abruptly. 2) A couple of them actually seemed to tell no story--they just preached. WTF?! 3) Some were just really, really dumb. E.g. imagine a planet whose magnetic field is so strong it captures people's souls when they die. 4) One big rule that beginner writers have to learn is not to give "infodumps." About half the puppy nominees never learned this rule.

    If the puppy dogs really want to have an impact in 2016, they really, really need to focus on nominating genuinely good works. It's hard to give NA to a deserving work. It's really, really easy to give it to trash.

  204. Re:There's truth on both sides here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And who says one's race is personal information, Bingo?

    Who is "Bingo?" Perhaps you made a punctuation mistake, and you actually meant, "And who says one's race is personal information? Bingo?"

    Is that what you meant?

    If so, I have no idea whether or not Bingo (whomever he or she is) would say that one's race is personal information. Why do you care what Bingo thinks? Is he/she someone you look to for guidance?

    Anyway, regardless of what Bingo might think, it's pretty common for people to consider their "race" to be personal and private.

  205. Re:There's truth on both sides here by Karmashock · · Score: 1

    On the Bingo issue... we'll just let that one lay where it is for now.

    As to race being personal... its no more personal than the shape of my nose, height, or shoe size.

    Its a basic human phenotype and unlike the length and girth of my penis its something you could tell just by looking at me. As such, I don't see how it could be personal. Penis girth?... a bit personal... race? How is that personal?

    If it were such a personal question than why would the US census department ask me that information every time I talked to them?

    I actually find the issue of race to be incredibly tedious since it serves a smoke screen to cover up bigger problems or give legitimacy for really really stupid cultural tropes under the guise of "well that's my culture/race"... That's no excuse. Its in the culture of some people's to eat each other. Literal skull cracking cannibals. Now do we judge their culture? Yuuup.

    So clearly we have no problem judging cultures. That's as the joke goes, now we're just negotiating price. A reference to the joke where a fellow asks a woman if she's a prostitute, she says no, he says what if I gave you 100 million dollars to have sex with me, she says okay at that price, and then he says okay now we're just negotiating price.

    Here's the thing. Why we latch on to race as being relevant is that it historically correlated with culture and various cultures would create culturally unitary poltical units where they would say "fuck everyone else but help your own out."... and you'll find that people were generally pretty fucking nasty to each other even when there was only one race in the area. I mean, in Asia you could all asians in the area but are you Chinese? Are you Japanese? Are you Korean? And people from each of those countries LOOK different they have different cultures, different politics, and different religions.

    And the subdivisions didn't stop there. The various provinces/states/kingdoms of Japan or China all thought they were superior to all the other provinces for various reasons.

    The point is that people LIKE these US vs THEM narratives because it gives you moral justification to fuck someone else over.

    You dehumanize or rob someone of any moral/ethical/political/economic agency and then you just fuck them.

    Now dividing us on the basis of race WAS functional when given political units really only had one race in them. However, racial divisions are DYSFUNCTIONAL in cosmopolitan societies.

    Thus this whole "oh I'm this race" or that race in the first world is generally detrimental to our socities as a whole.

    Here someone will start quoting statistics at me about low achievement or over representation or under representation in one thing or another... and why that is bad.

    Statistics should not be cited by people that don't know how to read them or don't know what they mean. They're numbers. And often as not the reason we talk about race is because THOSE are the numbers we collect. Do we have employment stats on people over and under a certain Body Mass Index? I bet we could make as much of a fuss about that as any of this race stuff. People's world views are prisoners of the statistics. Because the US census divides everyone based on race largely as a racial throw back everyone judges the success and failure of the country in those terms.

    We don't look at the socioeconomic angles where we judge people by CLASS more than by race or gender. There is an assumption that CLASS is subordinate to race which isn't the case or Oprah wouldn't exist.

    Region is also a really interesting way to break people down. People in state X are going to have different socioeconomic characteristics to people in state Y. THAT is interesting.

    But your race? Not interesting unless there are institutional barriers based on race. And in the 21st century in the First World... there aren't any. We've done away with that. What we have left are self imposed cultural barriers.

    Its like that stupid action movie "the matrix" where people a

    --
    I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.