[personal profile] tcampbell1000 posting in [community profile] scans_daily


The cover’s a spoiler of sorts: by the end of the issue, this will be the official membership of the Justice League International--America and Europe.

But the most important character in this issue isn’t on the cover. All three of its stories are a showcase for the JLI-est of JLI characters...G’Nort? )

'Twas ever thus....

Dec. 1st, 2025 03:53 pm
oursin: Painting of Clio Muse of History by Artemisia Gentileschi (Clio)
[personal profile] oursin

There was hoohahing going on last week on bluesky anent people pirating books on account authors do not need the money and should be creating for Love of Art.

And I will concede that when it comes to Evil Exploitative Academic Publishing Empires, I cannot get my knickers in a twist over people downloading papers for which they have not paid the extortionate fee, none of which goes to author of the paper or the reviewers who reviewed it for the journal in question (wot, me, bitter?) - in fact I will be over here cheering or offering to use such library access as I have to get access and offer a copy.

But honestly the Average Author of fictional works is not making molto moolah but is probably supporting themselves by doing something else or being supported by someone else (hey, Ursula K Le Guin? e.g. mentions somewhere she was a housewife when she first started out) and writing is not their sole occupation or source of remuneration.

And even writers who we look back on as Important and Successful had their money problems: Hardship grant applications to the Royal Literary Fund... show authors at their most vulnerable:

Nobody goes into writing for the money: today, professional authors in the UK earn a median income of £7,000, according to the Authors’ Licensing and Collecting Society. Looking at the starry names awarded grants through the RLF’s history makes clear that the challenges are not new. However, Kemp thinks the problem has become more acute in some regards. “The kinds of deal you get with a publisher as a mid-list fiction writer has gone down, down, down, down, down.” Twenty or 30 years ago, such writers could survive; it is now much tougher, he says. Big publishers are “paying large amounts of money to a small number of writers”. A “tiny percentage actually survive on what they’re making from writing.”

But looking back over the history of the fund:
“On the one hand there are people like Joyce and DH Lawrence, who are early in their careers, and indeed Doris Lessing, who are struggling to get going, who have made a mark but are finding it hard to make ends meet. And at the other end there are people like Coleridge, and more recently Edna O’Brien, who have had stellar careers, and you’d have hoped actually were doing OK, but the vicissitudes of a writer’s life mean that sometimes it goes to pot.”

I wonder how far the All More Complicated Stories behind the need are in the documentation, though:
Many documents show writers at the most vulnerable times of their lives, often in precarious positions early in their careers; everything from feeble book sales to illness to messy marriages to grief is chronicled here.... Nesbit, author of The Railway Children, wrote in an August 1914 letter that the shock of her husband’s death “overcame me completely and now my brain will not do the poetry romance and fairy tales by which I have earned most of my livelihood”.

She was, as I recall, the principle breadwinner of their polyamorous menage and support of its offspring. (Personally we should have danced on Hubert Bland's grave.)

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Posted by Andrew Sparrow

Office for Budget Responsibility says Rachel Reeves ‘had every right to expect that the [report] would not be publicly available until she sat down at the end of her budget speech’

Q: Yesterday you said Rachel Reeves was lying. Today you are saying she gave out false information. Are you still accusing her of being a liar?

Badenoch replies: “Yes.”

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Posted by Rebecca Ratcliffe in Bangkok, and Oliver Holmes

Millions of people affected by torrential rainfall in Sri Lanka and large parts of Indonesia’s Sumatra, southern Thailand and northern Malaysia

Sri Lanka and Indonesia have deployed military personnel as they race to help victims of devastating flooding that has killed more than 1,100 people across four countries in Asia.

Millions of people have been affected by a combination of tropical cyclones and heavy monsoon rains in Sri Lanka, parts of Indonesia’s Sumatra, Thailand and Malaysia in recent days.

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Posted by Jakub Krupa

Ukrainian president says focus remains on security guarantees, maintaining sovereignty and territory

UK prime minister Keir Starmer is delivering a major economy speech this morning.

You can follow all the key lines on our UK live blog with my colleague Andrew Sparrow, but there’s a particular line of argument that will no doubt reasonate in Europe, too.

“Let me be crystal clear, there is no credible economic vision for Britain that does not position us as an open, trading economy.

So we must all now confront the reality that the Brexit deal we have significantly hurt our economy and so for economic renewal, we have to keep reducing frictions.

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Posted by Victoria Bekiempisin New York

Alleged gunman faces nine charges including second-degree murder in New York state case

Luigi Mangione is appeared in Manhattan state court on Monday for the first day of a potentially weeklong proceeding to weigh the legality of evidence gathered during his arrest after the killing of a prominent healthcare executive.

Mangione was apprehended last December in the murder of senior United HealthCare figure Brian Thompson last December. In addition to state-level charges, he faces a Manhattan federal court case.

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Posted by Ajit Niranjan

EU’s Copernicus monitoring service hails ‘reassuring sign’ of progress observed this year in hole’s size and duration

The hole in the ozone layer over the Antarctic this year was the smallest and shortest-lived since 2019, according to European space scientists, who described the finding as a “reassuring sign” of the layer’s recovery.

The yearly gap in what scientists have called “planetary sunscreen” reached a maximum area of 21m sq km (8.1m sq miles) over the southern hemisphere in September – well below the maximum of 26m sq km reached in 2023 – and shrank in size until coming to an early close on Monday, data from the Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service (Cams) shows.

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Posted by Clive Paget

Royal Festival Hall, London
The UK premiere of the Turkish composer’s piano concerto Mother Earth was balanced with theatrical Sibelius and a sure-footed reading of Dvorak’s upbeat Eighth Symphony

The Philharmonia closed their 80th-anniversary season in style with a pair of late-Romantic big hitters and the UK premiere of a seven-movement piano concerto by Turkish composer Fazil Say. With nature at its heart, the programme journeyed from the frozen wastes of Finland to the sun-kissed woodlands of Bohemia and beyond.

En Saga, a last-minute substitute for Falla’s Love the Magician, was Sibelius’s first tone poem, poorly received in 1893 but successfully revised nine years later. The composer refused to furnish any specific literary explanations, yet the colourful score is redolent with imagery, from patriotic pageantry to dusky forests and midnight sleigh rides. It proved meat and drink to fellow Finn Santtu-Matias Rouvali. Plunging into its shadowy dramas, the conductor sustained the musical momentum effortlessly across its substantial arc while striking some fantastical podium attitudes of his own to tease out its more theatrical effects.

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Posted by Rob Evans

Undercover unit monitored Stephen Lawrence’s family, as well as thousands of mainly leftwing political activists

Two senior officers who supervised an undercover Scotland Yard unit spying on political campaigns were “horribly and incredibly” racist, a whistleblower has told a public inquiry.

Peter Francis, a former member of the unit, testified that one regularly used the “N-word”, while the other used a repertoire of explicit racist slurs.

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Posted by Jonathan Wilson

In the past, moments like Chelsea’s shorthanded goal might have sent Arsenal reeling. No longer

The gap at the top is five points. Arsenal have now played two of their three toughest away games of the season. They’ve come through a potentially extremely tricky week with reputation enhanced, despite being without one of their starting centre-backs for all three games and both for one of them. If there is any sense of disappointment, it is only that they failed to beat Chelsea, whom they have become accustomed to getting the better of, despite having a man advantage from the 38th minute on Sunday.

But really there shouldn’t be any disappointment. Coming out of the international break, having conceded a late equaliser to Sunderland in their previous game, Arsenal looked potentially vulnerable. Despite having been by far the most impressive side this season, their lead over Manchester City was only four points. They were without Gabriel, who probably ranks alongside Declan Rice as their most important player. They faced Tottenham, Bayern and Chelsea over the course of eight days, and Manchester City appeared to be beginning to gather momentum.

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Posted by Hannah Ellis-Petersen South Asia correspondent

MP for Hampstead and Highgate in London denies allegations and condemns ‘flawed and farcical’ trial

A court in Bangladesh has sentenced the British MP Tulip Siddiq to two years in jail after a judge ruled she was complicit in corrupt land deals with her aunt, the country’s deposed prime minister Sheikh Hasina.

In a ruling on Monday, a judge found Siddiq, the Labour MP for Hampstead and Highgate, guilty of misusing her “special influence” as a British politician to coerce Hasina into giving valuable pieces of land to her mother, brother and sister.

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Posted by Gwyn Topham Transport correspondent

Avanti service was to have been axed from mid-December but would have still run because of needs out of Euston

The express Manchester-London 7am Avanti service will take passengers after all, after the rail regulator conceded defeat in the face of public outcry over a ruling that would have left it running as an empty “ghost train” each day.

The 7am train, the only service linking the cities in under two hours, was set to be axed from the passenger table from mid-December – but would, as the Guardian reported on Saturday, have kept running empty from Piccadilly each day so it could run morning trains back out of Euston.

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Posted by Shrai Popat(now) and Frances Mao (earlier)

President’s remarks come amid calls for an immediate investigation into reports Hegseth ordered a second strike on alleged drug-smuggling boat

The president has picked up where he left off before Thanksgiving, when it comes to his anger at the six Democratic lawmakers who took part in a video urging service members to “refuse illegal orders”.

A reminder, that Trump initially went on a Truth Social tirade, accusing the members of Congress (all of whom are veterans or former intelligence officials) of sedition, adding that their actions are “punishable by death”.

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Posted by Hanne Blank Boyd

There aren’t a whole things about this world that I know for absolute certain, but I do know that somewhere out there is an extremely worthwhile ruckus that needs you to make it.

Subscribe now

Clarke Award Finalists 2024

Dec. 1st, 2025 10:59 am
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll
2024: Scutigera coleoptrata become established in the UK, a Trident missile suffers performance anxiety during a test and refuses to leave its sub, and Labour sweeps to victory in the General Election, with surprising little effect on the subsequent frequency of cruel and vindictive legislation.


Poll #33896 Clarke Award Finalists 2024
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 2


Which 2024 Clarke Award Finalists Have You Read?

View Answers

In Ascension by Martin MacInnes
0 (0.0%)

Chain-Gang All-Stars by Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah
0 (0.0%)

Corey Fah Does Social Mobility by Isabel Waidner
1 (50.0%)

Some Desperate Glory by Emily Tesh
2 (100.0%)

The Mountain in the Sea by Ray Nayler
1 (50.0%)

The Ten Percent Thief by Lavanya Lakshminarayan
1 (50.0%)



Bold for have read, italic for intend to read, underline for never heard of it.

Which 2024 Clarke Award Finalists Have You Read?
In Ascension by Martin MacInnes
Chain-Gang All-Stars by Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah
Corey Fah Does Social Mobility by Isabel Waidner
Some Desperate Glory by Emily Tesh
The Mountain in the Sea by Ray Nayler
The Ten Percent Thief by Lavanya Lakshminarayan

"Rabbit rabbit rabbit!"

Dec. 1st, 2025 04:37 pm
mdlbear: Three rabbits dancing (rabbit-rabbit-rabbit)
[personal profile] mdlbear

Welcome to December, 2025!

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Posted by Michael Schuman

Living in China is getting cheaper. Because rents in my neighborhood in central Beijing are dropping, my wife and I pressed our landlord to reduce ours by $140 a month in a new lease that we signed last month. He wasn’t too happy about it, but he’s lucky that we didn’t move out. Given the desperation of local landlords, we probably could’ve saved another $500 a month had we switched to a comparable apartment nearby.

To Americans pinched by rising prices, such declines might seem enviable. The high cost of living in the United States has become a serious political headache for President Donald Trump, who entered office with promises to bring prices down but has seen them only rise. Falling prices in China may then seem like yet more evidence that Beijing is getting things right.

[Read: China is building the future]

But plummeting prices are a problem too. Deflation in China is a result of the most basic of market principles: too much supply and too little demand. China’s government has spent decades promoting investments in housing, factories, and infrastructure—investments that enabled China’s rapid growth but that have also left the economy burdened by apartments and assembly lines that well exceed demand. This mismatch explains why prices for Chinese-made goods have been falling for more than three years.

A proliferation of bargains may be great for shoppers and renters, but it poses an existential threat to the economy. Deflation often stymies growth by discouraging consumption. Why buy a car or dishwasher today when they will become cheaper tomorrow?

Chinese leaders have tried to tackle the problem by meddling with the markets. The Chinese Communist Party’s powerful politburo signaled over the summer that it would crack down on price-cutting. China’s president, Xi Jinping, declared in comments published in September that aggressive price competition must be “effectively managed”—in other words, stopped by the state. Regulators have tightened oversight of how businesses set prices.
Like Trump, Xi seems to believe that he can solve complex economic problems by addressing the symptoms, not the root causes. But Xi can’t simply regulate falling prices and expect them to stabilize.

Chinese leaders have resisted economic reforms to scale back supply and juice demand. Although Xi has suggested that the government should do more to strip out excess factory capacity—calling in September for an “orderly exit” from outdated manufacturing, for instance—local officials often prop up loss-making companies to preserve jobs. The government could also entice households to save less and spend more by building out a more comprehensive social safety net, but Xi has expressed fear that extensive welfare programs promote laziness.

China is now paying for this economic mismanagement. Companies in crowded, competitive markets are slashing prices in a mad scramble for customers. We recently bought a cup of fresh yogurt from a nearby restaurant for 68 cents; in September it was $1.10. A friend recently tried out a new gym where a promotion cut the price of exercise classes to 40 cents a session, a bargain compared with the $10 she usually spends. Vicious competition among desperate automakers has depressed car prices to nearly unsustainable levels. BYD, China’s largest electric-vehicle maker, startled the industry earlier this year with steep discounts on many of its models. The company cut the price of its Seal hybrid sedan by 34 percent, bringing it to about $14,500.

[Michael Schuman: China’s EV market is imploding]

Despite the deals, Chinese people are reluctant to shop. Worried about their jobs in a sagging economy, many have grown even more cautious than usual. Retail-sales growth has been slowing for months.

The government has tried to spur spending by subsidizing purchases of new appliances, smartphones, and other products. My wife and I recently bought a Sealy king-size mattress at half-price thanks to a retailer’s discount and a state handout. But declining prices also create strong incentives for shoppers to wait. A local real-estate agent told me that our landlord could have sold the two-bedroom apartment where we live for $2.25 million three years ago. Now, she estimated, he’d be lucky to get $2 million, assuming he could find a buyer. Because apartment hunters expect property prices to fall further, many are holding off for better deals that might come in a year or two.

That patience will likely pay off. Leah Fahy, an economist at the London-based research firm Capital Economics, expects deflation to persist through at least the end of 2026. She told me that in the absence of structural reforms, “it looks pretty likely that supply will continue to outpace demand.”
The risk is that China tumbles into a long-term deflationary spiral that saps growth, much like the one that contributed to Japan’s “lost decades,” starting in the 1990s. To avoid that fate, policy makers need to reform China’s economy to encourage more consumption than investment and let market forces cull bloated industries. “It is going to be challenging for China to escape deflation unless it is willing to take the measures needed to shift its growth model,” Eswar Prasad, an economist at Cornell University, told me.

But China’s leaders do not seem ready to pursue these changes. Instead, the Communist Party’s latest five-year plan, a draft of which was drawn up at a party conference in October, seems to promise yet more state-led investment in manufacturing and technology, ensuring the supply glut may well persist for years to come.

What’s bad for China, however, isn’t all bad for the rest of the world, because China is exporting its lower prices abroad. There is some irony in the fact that China’s deflation problems could be a boon for Americans seeking cheaper goods—if only Trump hadn’t offset those potential savings with hefty tariffs. The lesson for both Beijing and Washington is pretty clear: Policy makers are often better off letting the market do its job.

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Posted by Andrew Sparrow

Office for Budget Responsibility says Rachel Reeves ‘had every right to expect that the [report] would not be publicly available until she sat down at the end of her budget speech’

Q: Yesterday you said Rachel Reeves was lying. Today you are saying she gave out false information. Are you still accusing her of being a liar?

Badenoch replies: “Yes.”

Continue reading...