@@@@@ @ @ @@@@@ @ @ @@@@@@@ @ @ @@@@@ @@@@@ @@@ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @@@@@ @@@@ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @@@@@ @ @ @ @ @@@@@ @@@@@ @@@ Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society Club Notice - 11/17/00 -- Vol. 19, No. 20 Chair/Librarian: Mark Leeper, 732-817-5619, mleeper@avaya.com Factotum: Evelyn Leeper, 732-332-6218, eleeper@lucent.com Distinguished Heinlein Apologist: Rob Mitchell, robmitchell@avaya.com HO Chair Emeritus: John Jetzt, jetzt@avaya.com HO Librarian Emeritus: Nick Sauer, njs@lucent.com Back issues at http://www.geocities.com/evelynleeper All material copyright by author unless otherwise noted. The Science Fiction Association of Bergen County meets on the second Saturday of every month in Upper Saddle River; call 201-447-3652 for details. The Denver Area Science Fiction Association meets 7:30 PM on the third Saturday of every month at Southwest State Bank, 1380 S. Federal Blvd. =================================================================== 1. Evelyn Leeper's Chicon 2000 (Worldcon) convention report is available at http://www.geocities.com/evelynleeper/chicon2k.htm. [-ecl] =================================================================== 2. As a mathematician there is a phrase we use in common language that always gives me a bit of a twinge of discomfort. That phrase is "everything else being equal." The problem is that it seems to me to be ridiculous. "Everything else" encompasses so much that the odds are nil that it could be "equal" or even "too close to call." At least I would think that the odds are nil. Or at least up to this election year I would have thought so. What is happening this year seems like the stuff of a bad 1950s science fiction magazine story. We are suffering a plague of ambivalence or of even-handedness. So many election races are so evenly split that more than a week later they are too close to call. There is no way you could force that to happen. I am told that even if each voter were just flipping a coin you would not expect the results to be this close. How can you make two candidates have so even in appeal, even if you wanted to? And it is happening all over. I would not believe this happening in a story, yet it seems to be true for real. I am both incredulous and fascinated. Last week I made something of a mistake by discussing the situation, one that just about everybody in the county has strong opinions about. Well it looks like my discussion of Cincinnati Chili will wait another week and let us take a look at the comments being sent to me about last week's editorial. [Oh, as long as other people are expressing opinions, I will also. I think fairly Gore won, but Bush will probably get the office just because of the imprecision of the vote process.] The irrepressible Lax Madapati says: This country's election system has so many serious flaws. If you look at the voting patterns across the country today regardless of states, it is Gore that has 0.2 million votes more than his nearest rival with a larger percentage of votes going to him overall. It is wrong to keep recounting FL so many times and telecasting by the minute results. Is FL more important that other states to determine the president or does FL have more electoral discrepancies than other states? No wonder most non-Americans are confounded by the recent recounts and controversy over the presidential elections. Besides, incorrect projections by the likes of Wall Street and CNN-Time tend to throw off voting patterns, especially among the undecided voters. Even telecasting the voting results state by state on several network TV channels is wrong. Just finish up the whole process, do a count, verify, certify and declare. That's it. Instead the TV people reduce the electoral process into some kind of a mass entertainment circus show. Even the voting turnout is dismal and pathetic for a country with such a high literacy rate and with so many educated people. This time, it was around 100 million, just half of the eligible voters. Forget about the non-eligible voters like me (who still are to an extent influenced by the outcome of the elections in terms of taxes, work rules, etc.), but what about the rest of the 100 million? Your comments recently about how it not bad for low electoral turnout because it may tend to skew the results if people without the ability to make intelligent choices participate are not well taken. It can be perceived as an elitistic point of view. No one has a right to decide who can and who can't vote. I will point out I was not deciding who could and could not vote, I was saying I would respect people's decision, even if it was to abstain, without trying to change their minds. I think the people who try to coerce them to vote are at least being patronizing and were the ones deciding who must and must not vote. --mrl] I don't know of a single democracy around the world that puts forth a criterion for voting apart from minimum age. It is a right every person in the country has and must exercise even if it is not an intelligent choice. We have to live with leaders who are chosen by the majority of the country regardless of the voters' sex, race, education and intellect levels. I also believe the entire process and sequence of events that lead to winning a presidential nomination somehow prevents visionary leaders from getting there. Just look at the poor percentage of good leaders this country has thrown up in the past two centuries. When I joked about how sorry the choices were this time (Gore vs Bush) for the public, you made comments about how one must look at issues and their positions, etc., and then decide. My question is, how much of the agenda of these two will actually come into effect? If the Congress keeps vetoing everything these people propose, especially with different parties at the Senate and Congress, I say it is not very likely that most of the agenda gets through passing bills. Besides, neither of them had a clear agenda anyway to start with and this time, Bush takes the prize for being the more vague of the two. In the end, the elections in this country are nothing but an excuse to claim democracy. Vested interests fund and engender mediocre or sub par "leaders" who then have to resort to dubious victories over shaky platforms that may or may not translate to actions and benefits for the people who actually take trouble to analyze and cast votes. This is the sad truth my friend. Of course, there can always be the argument, "oh, this is better than being ruled by Milosevich or Pinochet or General Speight" or " at least we have a real democracy where people have a choice" but unfortunately my standards are much higher than what is going on in the most powerful country in the world that most people look up to. After all, we ARE the melting pot of the world. Steve Humphrey says: > The sad and scary thing is that is that not every election > in this country meets our own high standards. I think almost all elections in this country--especially the presidential election--DO meet our own high standards. Are there mistakes, perhaps even local cheating? Almost certainly--I have no proof, but I concede it probably happens. I say this because I accept that high standards do not mean perfection. I believe (but again I must confess to not having solid proof) that a very large fraction of the voting is honest and mistake-free. I would very much like voting districts to continue to pursue perfection, but perfection will never be met. High standards mean we strive to achieve honest & mistake-free elections; high standards also mean there are no government barriers to honesty. We meet these high standards. A very close election magnifies the tiny fraction of mistakes and dishonesty. Fine, use that magnifying glass to fix problems, but DON'T put our elections in the same basket with Russia's or Haiti's or Yugoslavia's (oops, the latter seems to have clean up its act.) > Personally I would hope that what comes out of this > incident is the abolition of the Electoral College. It > was established so that there would be some control by the > ruling class over the will of the people. No, it was established as a compromise between the statists and the populists. As a compromise, it's pretty darned good. > Another reason that the Electoral College is an > embarrassment is that it does just the opposite of what > people are claiming it does. I have heard several people > claim that the election situation demonstrated that every > vote counts in a democracy. That's the bunk. Really what > it shows the world is that with states having > winner-take-all systems with the electoral college, some > people's votes can be worth a lot more than other people's > votes. Yes, by design. The electoral college gives a combination of equal voice to each state plus equal voice to each person. Well, of course by combining these voices they are no longer equal. Rather, the will of the populous is tempered by the will of the separate states & vice versa. Perhaps you wish the United States became the United State . . . fine, then work to change the whole constitution, not just the provision for the electoral college. But as long as this country is designed to preserve States' Rights, I want the Electoral College kept in place. (And, yes, I would like to preserve States' Rights.) > Regardless of who wins, the final National Election of > the 20th Century will have to be one of the most > interesting of the century and may well drag on with > implications that will shadow the next four years. As a > Democrat, I cannot help but wonder. After eight years of > the Republican Machine taking every innuendo about the > Presidency and turning it into a national headline, I > just wonder what that machine would have made of this > incident had the tables been reversed. I mean, Bush was > declared victor in a state where there were so many voting > irregularities almost all of which by an odd coincidence > seemed to help Bush and in which Bush's brother holds the > highest political office. Had the table been reversed we > would have heard about it from the Republicans for years > to come. Sour grapes, Mark? Please, raise yourself above such pettiness. The Republicans certainly conducted themselves as yapping dogs while Clinton was in office. But oral sex while at work? I would have been fired had I obtained a blow job while at the office, no questions asked. Lying about it? Shows lack of character. "A Republican Machine"? Sure. But please don't suggest, by omission, that there is no Democrat Machine. "So many voting irregularities"? Back to my initial statements, I suggest that "so many" == "a small fraction". You are a scientist (close enough), please respect the truth by not stooping to cheap exaggeration. "Had the tables been reversed we would have heard about it ... for years to come"? Look, we're going to hear about this for years to come no matter who wins, and no matter which way the tables are turned. Someone is going to lose an extremely close race; therefore, someone else is going to bitch about it for years, nay decades. Gerald S. Williams says: > Personally I would hope that what comes out of this > incident is the abolition of the Electoral College. It > was established so that there would be some control by the > ruling class over the will of the people. Certainly it is time to eliminate the Electoral College, or at least establish tighter controls over what they can do. People vote for the candidate on the ballot, not for the electoral college. Currently, the only way the electoral college members can exert their influence is by going against the will of the voters they are supposed to be representing. The sad thing is that this has happened in recent history. I believe in 1980 one of the votes for Ronald Reagan was switched to a third-party (Anderson?). The electoral college was not formed solely so that the elite could exert their influence, however. This nation was founded upon the premise of peaceful transitions of power. The electoral college helps to ensure that by guaranteeing that a single election results in the selection of a new president. In the past, elections took much longer and there may have been judgment calls to make. For example, one of the candidates could have died in the period between the voting and the tabulation of the votes. This should be far less likely now, but with the way things are going... > Further if we had a popular vote the vagaries of > Florida's polls would be much less likely to be important. It is one thing to say that the electoral college is outdated. However, it is an entirely different thing to say that the entire system of electoral votes is flawed. When these votes were set up, electoral votes were not in direct proportion to population. They were tilted slightly so that the larger states could not completely overwhelm an election. This is a good thing, I think. As it stands, it is almost possible to win an election by focusing entirely on the big cities. You probably noticed that Bush won the vast majority of the states despite having a slightly lower minority of the overall votes than Gore does. If you look close enough, you'll see that Gore got almost all of his wins from highly urban areas. When the states got together to form this nation, they decided that this should not be sufficient to win an election. Why should it be now? One could even argue that, since states are much larger now, it is time to extend this system down into the individual states. Pennsylvania's electoral votes went to Gore, yet it was only because Philadelphia dominates the population. If the same weighting was applied to the voting districts as is used in the national electoral college, the votes would have gone to Bush. Ultimately, it is up to each state to determine how their electoral votes are distributed. There are two states that split them according to their voting districts, I believe. These states could have split them according to the popular vote instead. If you think that the vote should be distributed along the popular vote, petition the New Jersey legislature to change the way it allots its electoral votes. I may send such a recommendation to my state representatives as well. But the system of electoral votes is part of the checks and balances that went into the formation of this nation. I see no reason to change it at a national level. [-mrl] =================================================================== 3. RED PLANET (a film review by Mark R. Leeper): Capsule: Earth wants to colonize Mars as a refuge when our ecological excesses destroy nature, but our efforts to seed the neighboring planet with oxygen-producing algae are failing. A crew of six astronauts is sent only to have five crash onto the planet and one be stranded in space. The survival exercise that follows seems more like a dramatized role-playing game with problems and dangers not a whole lot like real astronauts would face. There are a few nice concepts floating around, but in general the writing is just not very good. Rating: 6 (0 to 10), +1 (-4 to +4 scale) The discussion of some technical details following the review has some mild spoilers. When I was growing up Mars gave me the same thrill that looking at the Western frontier gave people of the last century. I even got excited about films as unpromising as ANGRY RED PLANET. Mars just has a certain aura. Films about missions going to Mars also have their special excitement. The year 2000 brought us not one but two exploration films, MISSION TO MARS and RED PLANET. Both films were savaged by the critics. For my money the better film was MISSION TO MARS which had very clearly delineated plot segment of when the filmmakers were trying to be realistic and when they were adding fantasy. The astronauts in MISSION TO MARS had landed on Mars as we know it but it had a big surprise inside. Fine. RED PLANET is much more like a throwback to earlier films, grounded in fantasy and inaccurate science but with perhaps one or two interesting science fiction concepts mixed in. The year is 2050 and humanity's bad management of earth's nature and natural resources has come home to roost. With our time on Earth limited, we have decided we have to make Mars livable and to move our population there. (Really?) Earth has been successfully seeding the planet with algae to make it livable, but just recently all the algae seems to be dying off. Our first actual human mission to Mars is to find out why. The near perfect Mars mission sours badly at the last minute leaving their commander Kate Bowman (Carrie-Anne Moss) in orbit but dumping five men on the planet along with a cleverly designed robot--with a few foolish design flaws. On the planet is technician Robby Gallagher (Val Kilmer), Dr. Quinn Burchenal (Tom Sizemore), the philosophical Dr. Bud Chantillas (Terence Stamp) and two others. Following their crash landing on the planet, they have a serious struggle on their hands to stay alive and to understand some of the strange phenomena they are seeing. The script by Chuck Pfarrer and Jonathan Lemkin is frequently only on the level of some cable films. This is not the kind of film that should need nude shower scenes and the astronauts improvising illicit alcohol distilleries. Luckily that part of the plot is dispensed with early. The script improves somewhat after the five astronauts are down on the surface of Mars, but the sorts of threats they face and the puzzles they have to solve seem more like they are from a fantasy role-playing game than from serious scientific speculation. Visually the film shows a smaller budget than most major releases. I would say that the effects are sufficient but not actually good. Frequently the scenes in space do not focus on where there would be the greatest interest, maybe a rocket exhaust rather than the main body of the craft where more detail work would be necessary. Once the major setting moves to the surface of Mars the effects are just a desert, I think it was Australian, filmed with a red filter. No serious attempt is made to show Mars's lessor gravity. Particularly in the rolling crash landing sequence the model-work seriously betrays its small size. The robot which transforms into a jungle cat or a martial artist is placed in the scenes by CGI and moves a little too smoothly to be made of real matter. The actors were partially sabotaged by very weak plotting and dialog in the early parts of the film. With the exception of solid character actor Tom Sizemore nobody really seems like someone who really might be on a Mars mission. Val Kilmer has a kind of comic charm, but he oozes The Wrong Stuff. Terrence Stamp's pensive religious astronaut just seems wrong for the mission also. In THE CONQUEST OF SPACE an astronaut who gets too strong a dose of God decides the entire Mars mission is blasphemy and commits sabotage. I almost expected a repeat. In spite of having the trappings of a serious look at a possible Mars mission this is really much more just a fanciful story that could be set on any nearly Earth-like planet. It is not bad as a space opera but as we hopefully near the time when we really will be looking at colonizing Mars, RED PLANET is almost an anachronism. It is engaging sci-fi (as opposed to science fiction) with a few new ideas. I rate this film a 6 on the 0 to 10 scale and a +1 on the -4 to +4 scale. Minor Spoiler...Minor Spoiler...Minor Spoiler... I should mention a few technical quibbles. Nobody in the film seems particularly surprised by the storm system or the ice storm. Admittedly they had been tampering with the environment by 2050, but that effort was mostly a failure. Considering just five decades earlier Mars had no clouds and at most too little water to be unambiguously detected by Earth probes, clouds and ice storms seem highly improbable. Without going into detail, the entire ecology we see seems unlikely to have developed in the short time necessary. Also considering that even minor fender-benders could be a serious problem so far from Earth, the crew seems rather cavalier about the possibility of collisions in space. [-mrl] =================================================================== 4. PANDAEMONIUM (a film review in bullet list form by Mark R. Leeper from the Toronto International Film Festival): Capsule: The friendship and conflicts of Samuel Taylor Coleridge and William Wordsworth portrays them like modern revolutionaries and the creation of their greater poems. As with AMADEUS its history is a bit speculative, but it certainly gives new life and interest to the poetry of the great poets. Some beautiful landscapes and visualizations of Coleridge poems. Rating: +2 - Julien Temple does for Samuel Taylor Coleridge and William Wordsworth what AMADEUS does for Mozart and Salieri - Social event, we do not yet know what - Byron as pop star - Coleridge to make speech, Wordsworth says some good things about him, but they do not like each other - Drugs ruining Coleridge life - Coleridge sees past as flashback - Coleridge as young man protests war with France - He and Wordsworth know change is coming, poetry, ideas, and politics in heady stew - "Gas is the great liberator." See gas balloon - Government repression - Coleridge and Wordsworth go to beautiful Lake District to lead bohemian life and write - Play with physical effects of inhaling helium - Wordsworth starts to dominate Coleridge - Coleridge finds laudanum frees writers block, frees mind - Wordsworth does not use drugs, not as creative as Coleridge, creates tension - Wordsworth's sister Dorothy also interested in the married Wordsworth - Creation of major poems, Rime of the Ancient Mariner, Kubla Khan - Rift increases - Coleridge hallucinating under influence of drugs - Carries draft of Kubla Khan with him but never publishes - Romanticized but not necessarily realistic look at how poets create - Frankenstein images more accurate for Shelley and Byron - Fantasy from Coleridge's mind visualized, including pleasure dome - Wordsworth becomes straight-laced - Beautiful valleys and waterfalls - Horrible credit sequence at end ruins feel of the film - Actors do not seem to age - "Tuesday, March 1, 1876", seen on pamphlet, but was Wednesday, easy to look up - Script draws connection poetry and revolution - Triangle for control of Dorothy Wordsworth - Dorothy Wordsworth judgmental but free-spirited - Poets enthusiastic about ideas - Feed each others egos - Sarah Coleridge treated like "third wheel" [-mrl] Mark Leeper HO 1K-644 732-817-5619 mleeper@avaya.com Patriotism is the willingness to kill and be killed for trivial reasons. -- Bertrand Russell