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  <id>tag:dreamwidth.org,2022-03-30:3975610</id>
  <title>pnictogen_wing</title>
  <subtitle>pnictogen_wing</subtitle>
  <author>
    <name>pnictogen_wing</name>
  </author>
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  <updated>2024-09-24T21:00:27Z</updated>
  <dw:journal username="pnictogen_wing" type="personal"/>
  <entry>
    <id>tag:dreamwidth.org,2022-03-30:3975610:7608</id>
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    <title>ending the "endless September"</title>
    <published>2024-09-24T21:00:27Z</published>
    <updated>2024-09-24T21:00:27Z</updated>
    <category term="techbros"/>
    <category term="usenet"/>
    <category term="ignatius v. reilly"/>
    <category term="the 1990s"/>
    <category term="endless september"/>
    <category term="a confederacy of dunces (1980)"/>
    <category term="computers"/>
    <category term="john kennedy toole"/>
    <category term="computing"/>
    <category term="chara of pnictogen"/>
    <category term="the internet"/>
    <dw:security>public</dw:security>
    <dw:reply-count>0</dw:reply-count>
    <content type="html">Who here has read John Kennedy Toole's &lt;i&gt;A Confederacy of Dunces?&lt;/i&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;It was one of my favorite books in the 1990s and I'm sure I'll love it&lt;br /&gt;just as much when I re-read it (eventually) because I regarded it as a&lt;br /&gt;moral warning, a milepost of sorts: Don't Be Like Ignatius V. Reilly. C.&lt;br /&gt;S. Lewis talked about his moments of Joy or &lt;i&gt;sehnsucht&lt;/i&gt; in&lt;br /&gt;&lt;i&gt;Surprised by Joy&lt;/i&gt; and I agree with him fully; such moments are&lt;br /&gt;important&amp;mdash;and Jack Lewis should have asked himself why he&lt;br /&gt;&lt;i&gt;stopped&lt;/i&gt; having them, even though he wasn't anywhere near Heaven&lt;br /&gt;yet. But I've come to realize that there's a logical converse to such&lt;br /&gt;moments: the times when you realize you've strayed too close to the Pit&lt;br /&gt;and maybe you should back away. &lt;i&gt;A Confederacy of Dunces&lt;/i&gt; was like&lt;br /&gt;that. Reilly was too familiar for comfort. He was stagnant, soured,&lt;br /&gt;morally and intellectually rotting in place, and as it turns out he also&lt;br /&gt;predicted the future. The Internet is overflowing with Ignatius Reillys&lt;br /&gt;and most of them call themselves "dark intellectuals" or something&lt;br /&gt;similar. At some point in their pasts, as with Reilly, they decided&lt;br /&gt;never to grow up: they chose some moment of dark epiphany to fixate&lt;br /&gt;upon, some moment when they realized they were the only sane person in&lt;br /&gt;an insane world, and they haven't budged a millimeter from that spot&lt;br /&gt;ever since. I remember reading &lt;i&gt;A Confederacy of Dunces&lt;/i&gt; in the&lt;br /&gt;mid-1990s and thinking, oh gawd, let us make more use of college&lt;br /&gt;education than THAT.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The "dark intellectual" people and the antisocial techbros who eat up&lt;br /&gt;their stuff love to talk about their "redpill" moments, when they&lt;br /&gt;supposedly realized that feminists had ruined the world or whatnot. Bret&lt;br /&gt;Weinstein, who's peddled TERF diatribe and Sinophobic "theories" about&lt;br /&gt;COVID-19 and is now claiming to be Saving the Republic&lt;sup&gt;TM&lt;/sup&gt; on a&lt;br /&gt;speaking tour with a bunch of other propagandists, has a particularly&lt;br /&gt;hilarious such moment: when he was fired from a teaching job at&lt;br /&gt;Evergreen State College here in Washington State for being too bigoted,&lt;br /&gt;he declared this was evidence that Evergreen was the secret headquarters&lt;br /&gt;of a vast leftist conspiracy to corrupt all education or something like&lt;br /&gt;that. (He's blithered about this at length and you can learn all about&lt;br /&gt;it on YouTube if you like.) As it happened, Ignatius V. Reilly had a&lt;br /&gt;similar moment: he bused to Baton Rouge to apply for a teaching job at&lt;br /&gt;Louisiana State University, flubbed the interview, and then decided that&lt;br /&gt;this experience was a trip into the Heart of Darkness of modernity.&lt;br /&gt;Reilly would tell this story of dark awakening to all and sundry, and&lt;br /&gt;write extensively about it into foolscap tablets in his bedroom at his&lt;br /&gt;mom's house. Now, though, you can put that stuff on the Internet, and&lt;br /&gt;get paid for putting it there.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;If there's any ONE event that gets the "dark Enlightenment" people&lt;br /&gt;worked up, though, it's the &lt;i&gt;endless September&lt;/i&gt;, the day when the&lt;br /&gt;Internet was finally too public and commercial a thing to remain the&lt;br /&gt;exclusive domain of universities and .mil accounts and that sort of&lt;br /&gt;thing. There was a long enough interval when the nascent Internet was&lt;br /&gt;the exclusive playground of college students and military contractors&lt;br /&gt;for a pecking order to develop between wise professional greybeards and&lt;br /&gt;clueless college freshmen joining the party late (like I did) and thus&lt;br /&gt;contributing to a September rush of "dumb" and "moronic" newbies on&lt;br /&gt;mailing lists and Usenet. But then when there were enough people getting&lt;br /&gt;Internet accounts through corporate outfits like AOL, round the clock&lt;br /&gt;instead of clustered round the school schedule, that meant an "endless&lt;br /&gt;September" of newbies at all times of year. It's quite clear that&lt;br /&gt;there's a lot of rancid resentful nerds who still think of this as the&lt;br /&gt;End of the World, more or less, the day that the barbarians arrived at&lt;br /&gt;the gates. After all, nobody represents civilization better than a&lt;br /&gt;racist computer nerd still waging Mac v. PC wars.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I'd love to kill this bit of toxic nostalgia stone dead, if I could.&lt;br /&gt;I've experienced a bizarre reversed version of it: I came to hate&lt;br /&gt;computer nerd culture so much that I aggressively took the part of the&lt;br /&gt;unsophisticated user, partly because one of my best friends IRL is a&lt;br /&gt;very old-fashioned gardener born in 1951 who NEVER got used to this&lt;br /&gt;stuff even a bit and still prefers to talk on the telephone. I've helped&lt;br /&gt;him out with computer stuff and shared his anger: why is this stuff so&lt;br /&gt;confoundedly hostile and overcomplicated? It's not fair to make someone&lt;br /&gt;like my friend deal with a labyrinth of bad choices like the modern-day&lt;br /&gt;website or recent Windows versions, much less the fucking smart phone.&lt;br /&gt;(He refuses to get one. Can you blame him?) "Endless September" now&lt;br /&gt;seems merely like the reification of the casual bigotry of toxic&lt;br /&gt;computer geeks, the ease with which they divide everyone up into the&lt;br /&gt;[slurs] vs the high-IQ, more "evolved" human beings, &lt;i&gt;hoi polloi&lt;/i&gt;&lt;br /&gt;vs. &lt;i&gt;hoi aristoi&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;It's not like they even respect that era of computing anyway, not&lt;br /&gt;really. Oh they still spout out sentimental glurge about it but in&lt;br /&gt;reality they're happy to have left it behind. It's safely in the past&lt;br /&gt;for them, like Napoleon or Julius Caesar, and therefore safe to&lt;br /&gt;mythologize.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;~Chara of Pnictogen&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;img src="https://www.dreamwidth.org/tools/commentcount?user=pnictogen_wing&amp;ditemid=7608" width="30" height="12" alt="comment count unavailable" style="vertical-align: middle;"/&gt; comments</content>
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