squiggelsquirrel:

Asimov invented the three laws of robotics and spent most of his robot books pulling them apart and exploring why they wouldn’t work but why they couldn’t really be improved, either.

Most robot revolution stories assume the danger is when robots stop obeying us and start thinking for themselves.

Asimov’s stories suggest that the real danger is robots doing exactly what we tell them to.

I think that’s both more realistic and actually scarier.

jennytrout:

lexinatrix:

shamelesslyunladylike:

donotlookatthedogpark:

misandry-mermaid:

whereismywizardhat:

unatheblade:

actuallyalivingsaint:

startedwellthatsentence:

jhameia:

kiriamaya:

thetrekkiehasthephonebox:

theoncomingcapaldi:

Things were so much simpler before women started stealing all of my favorite things from me. I don’t care what anyone says. Women aren’t and will never be true fans of Doctor Who, Star Trek or any of that. You jumped in because you wanted attention. You became “fans” because suddenly liking sci-fi shows and fantasy became popular. You only want guys to drool over you because you’re girls who “like” geeky stuff. Kindly go jump in a lake and die.

A woman organized the letter-writing campaign to NBC to save Star Trek when it was on the verge of being cancelled after the first season, and thus enabled the show to continue on for three seasons allowing it to go into syndication and gain the following it did in reruns.

A woman organized the first ever Star Trek convention, and convinced NASA to donate a truckload full of stuff for said convention thus starting the tradition of Star Trek conventions featuring space for modern science.

A woman greenlit Star Trek while acting at the head of a major studio, and consistently fought pressure to cancel the show. This same woman was the person who greenlit Mission Impossible and was the first woman to head a major studio.

A woman wrote many of the most famous TOS episodes, and went on to write on to write episodes of The Animated Series, The Next Generation, and Deep Space Nine.

Learn your history.

You think women stole your favorite things? If it weren’t for women, those things wouldn’t even exist, but you probably don’t even know the names of the women who made that possible.

So much for “infinite diversity in infinite combinations”…

Who is the fake now?

Also, a lot of the current fandom terminology we take for granted originated in the Star Trek fandom, specifically Star Trek fanfic. And who were the major driving force behind Star Trek fanfic? Women.

Earliest spec fic texts in the English-speaking Western world were written by Thomas More (Utopia), Lady Margaret Cavendish (the Blazing World), and Mary Shelley (Frankenstein). Note that there are two women among those names.

I am so sick of these Fake Geek Guys who don’t even understand the history of the fandom they claim to want to protect.

A WOMAN WAS THE FIRST PRODUCER OF DOCTOR WHO.

A WOMAN CREATED THE THEME TUNE FOR DOCTOR WHO.

Are you fucking kidding me? So we can create your favorite things, but it’s impossible for us to be fans of them?

AHAHAHAHAHAHA YES

It would be lovely to see the names of all the women who were so important to the history of Star Trek and Doctor Who. 

I’ll quickly add that Marcia Lucas won an Oscar for editing Star Wars: A New Hope and that The Empire Strikes Back was co-written by legendary science fiction author Leigh Brackett.   

Bjo Trimble organized the letter writing campaign

Joanie Winston,

Eileen Becker, and Elyse Pines were members of the committee that ran that first convention

Lucille Ball (of I Love Lucy fame) greenlit Star Trek after it’s pilot was rejected by NBC

Dorothy Catherine “DC” Fontana was the writer of 

“Tomorrow Is Yesterday”, “Friday’s Child”, “Journey to Babel”, “This Side of Paradise”, and “The Enterprise Incident” in the original series, along with several other episodes under the psuedonym Michael Richards.  She continued writing for the series all the way into 1993.

It takes a special kind of misogyny in a man for him to believe that women are literally incapable of enjoying certain popular entertainment and only fake it for attention from men.

i’m just laughing so hard right now bc it’s hitting me that there are geek guys who think that women would actually pretend to like this stuff to cater to guys. like it never really occurred to me the depths of how absolutely fucking stupid that idea is.  ”we appear to have common interests but you still don’t like me so that must mean we don’t actually have common interests and you are not a real fan”. oh my god i just can’t right now. i want to feel offended by the fact that there is an idiot out there trying to tell me what i can and cannot like but i’m just too busy laughing.

I love when fake geek boys get slammed.

I’m reasonably certain I’ve been a sci-fi fan longer than most of these gibbering blowhard fake geek boys have been alive.

What makes me, a happily married woman in her thirties, so enraged about these little pukes is that I have been into this shit since before they were born. If you transported to my teenage bedroom, you would find that instead of wallpaper, I had hundreds of mint-in-box Star Wars figures lining the walls. I started watching Doctor Who in 1996. Sliders? VR 5? Quantum Leap? Highlander? ALL OF THAT GEEKY SHIT. All of it, before these petulant man-babies were born. EVEN GHOSTBUSTERS, ASSHOLES.

But yeah, I’ve got TIME LADY tattooed across my knuckles to impress some barely legal misogynists at a convention, because I’m the least ambitious cougar of all time.

On the Doctor Who thing I’m a fan at least in part because my parents are and were fans. And have been since the late 70s. My mom knitted Tom Baker’s scarf WAY before it was ‘cool’ (and I think had to design her own pattern). She also sold jellybabies when she owned a coffee and candy store because of Doctor Who and always donated some to the local PBS station for their pledge drives. They had boxes and boxes of classic who on VHS that I think they had to get rid of a move or two ago.

My mom’s also been a Sherlock Holmes fan since she was a kid.

Unlikely Scifi Novels

actualmenacebuckybarnes:

  1. Scientist Decides To Play God And It Turns Out Great
  2. Alien Matriarchy Sustainable Without Men In Positions of Power After All
  3. Alien-Human Relations Not Used As Metaphor For European Colonialization/Imperialism
  4. Alien Babe Has Incompatible Genitalia and Is Also Uninterested In Fucking You
  5. Racially Diverse Crew All Make It Back From Mysterious Supposedly Uninhabited Planet Alive
  6. Utopia Not Actually Dystopia

http://vimeo.com/46927209

moonblossom:

roane72:

saathi1013:

tygermama:

zillah975:

gramina:

triflesandparsnips:

triflesandparsnips:

quakerhobbit:

whimsicalspecks:

veinsoflyrium:

goddessofcheese:

sophiagratia:

tdpossum:

PASSWORD:  STARSHIPS

One of the best fanvids I’ve ever seen.

And when she says ‘one of the best […] EVER’ (emphasis mine), lemme tell ya: it’s really, really true.

hey

hey you there

following me

stop

stop what you’re doing

and watch

oh my god

my life

my entire fucking life

someone understands

W A T C H   T H E   T H I N G

If you haven’t seen this, your life is about to get so much better. If you have, I assume you will watch it again because it is impossible to watch this video too many times. Watch it NOW.

This is, hands down, my favorite fanvid.

I send this thing to people who don’t know fanvids, and they love it.

reblogging myself because every day should be Rewatch Starships Day

This was glorious.

always reblog Starships

^^^^ always reblog Starships

always

I had not seen this before. THANK YOU.

THIS IS AMAZING. Seriously just watch it.