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I’m happy for the revival of Luddism in American culture that finds intractable problems associated with particular technologies, such that the only thinkable solution is to remove them from circulation. Let’s begin by rank ordering those most harmful to lives and freedom and begin with the most egregious of them. I’m sure we’ll eventually get to guns. But let’s be honest about the fact that dismantling dams, shutting down nuclear reactors, eliminating toxic synthetic chemicals, and reducing the numbers of vehicles on the roads and planes in the sky would be no more difficult a task and have a far more significant improvement on the quality and longevity of lives, human and otherwise. To select those technologies only based on their purpose in design (for instance, those designed to kill), while simultaneously disregarding the relative magnitude of their actual effects is to appeal to blind moralism. I’m too much of a materialist to believe we should focus only on intention and not on consequence.

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August 16th, 2012

The photographic symbol of the post-space age

Almost 46 years ago to the date, the Lunar Orbiter 1 spacecraft took the first satellite image of Earth from […]

June 3rd, 2012

Genetic modification of foods is a contemporary form of biopower

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April 30th, 2012

Two tyrannies of vulgar praxis

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April 13th, 2012

Interview with McKenzie Wark

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March 30th, 2012

In memory of Joel Olson

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December 2nd, 2011

On Technology and Human Agency

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November 25th, 2011

Techno-utopians, then and now

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November 14th, 2011

Members of Occupy Albany Radical Caucus Arrested

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November 9th, 2011

Autonomous Technics & Civilization: Mumford and Winner in conversation

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November 3rd, 2011

Stage One: Occupy Public Space. What Next?

Stage One: Occupy Public Space. Occupy Together, an outgrowth of Occupy Wall Street, has seen tens of thousands of people […]