I very recently learned that the term “boycott” comes from someone’s actual name: Charles Boycott. Boycott was an English land agent who tried, in 1880, to collect unpayable rents from Irish peasants on behalf of an English aristocrat landlord. When he failed to collect the rents, he tried evicting the tenants. The Irish Land League responded with a campaign to ignore Boycott’s orders and isolate him socially and economically.
They not only ignored his eviction orders and threw manure at his process servers, but refused to deliver his mail or sell him food.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Boycott
It was pretty effective—the British government eventually had to deploy a thousand soldiers (naturally, because the state works for the propertied class and none more than the 19th century British state) at a cost of some £10,000 to harvest £500 worth of crops. Boycott had to be evacuated by the soldiers, who even had to drive him out, as no locals would agree to drive his carriage out of the region.
Imagine being cancelled so hard that your name becomes permanently associated with getting cancelled.
gonna get into writing prestige TV just so GIS classes can show other clips of fictional characters talking about maps
stupid web dev joke
telling me you're going to have a SPA day and that actually means using ten thousand javascript libraries to make a web page instead of snoozing in a sauna and maybe putting some lil cucumbers on your eyes? no thanks
this week in perfect sentences: geolinguists, pebble-smooth, the incident of the owl https://buttondown.email/perfectsentences/archive/perfect-sentences-07/
I'm pretty sure more than half of those stories don't hold up/weren't even that great when they were published, but it's nice that some people still get something out of them!
it's becoming very apparent to me that this class is largely stuff I already know but I'm kind of fine with that insofar as I just want to keep from getting rusty and I have to focus on my thesis this term so I'd really prefer any other coursework to be relatively rote