- Joined
- Oct 15, 2016
After months of saying "tomorrow is the day I finally post my new webcomic" Ang Vondra has finally posted her new webcomic. It's about as schizo as you'd expect from her.
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The French judge advocates for Europe to gain more sovereignty in the digital and banking sectors. Without this sovereignty, the rule of law cannot be guaranteed, he warns. At the same time, he calls on the EU to activate an existing blocking regulation (Regulation (EC) No 2271/96) for the International Criminal Court, which prevents third countries like the USA from enforcing sanctions in the EU. EU companies would then no longer be allowed to comply with US sanctions if they violate EU interests. Companies that violate this would then be liable for damages.


As of right now, Brandon Buckingham is in stable condition. However, his heart only works at 15%-20% and it is still unclear how Brandon will make out in the future. He has uploaded a video, creating a GoFundMe to support his 11 month daughter and wife, 100k in medical bills, and ongoing bills while he is out of work.Brandon Buckingham, a former Maryland elementary art school teacher turned YouTuber, reportedly has tuberculosis and is currently septic in the hospital.
@Null (I apologize, but I do believe this information warrants your attention/a possible front page feature)
A few minutes into an interview on PBS' Firing Line with Margaret Hoover, Nebula's soyfaced CEO Dave Wiskus casually revealed that he is personally good friends with the head of Youtube's algorithm department. (Note: can a more technically inclined Kiwi please archive this interview?)
This revelation has extremely interesting implications for the entirety of Breadtube (since a good chunk of Breadtube creators are also Nebula content creators). Is this "close friendship" influencing the Youtube algorithm to push Breadtube slop/promote Breadtube-aligned creators over others? Are Youtube creators critical of Breadtube facing hidden algorithm retaliation?![]()
Breadtube continues to glow like nuclear waste
Aside from said algorithm bombshell, the interview itself is full of lulzy statements/further evidence Wiskus is an incompetent autist way in over his head (for example, Wiskus repeatedly rails against "Powerful Connected Hollywood Gatekeepers" like he thought no-one could ever piece together that he actually meant the Jews. An especially brilliant statement to make, when multiple redditors have recently discussed canceling their Nebula subscriptions due to mistakenly assuming Nebula got taken over by groyper content creators).





POLL FOR DECEMBER: "Lesser-Read Classics"
- Out of the Silent Planet — C.S. Lewis
Kidnapped by two men seeking power beyond Earth, Dr. Elwin Ransom is taken to the planet Malacandra—Mars as humanity has never imagined it. There he discovers alien species living in harmony under a higher cosmic order. As he flees his captors, Ransom confronts questions of morality, creation, and humanity’s place in the universe. A foundational yet often overlooked work of philosophical sci-fantasy.
- Man Plus — Frederik Pohl
As Earth faces global chaos, a desperate government begins transforming a man into a cybernetic being capable of surviving unprotected on Mars. But as Roger Torraway becomes increasingly machine, what remains of his humanity? Pohl’s chillingly prophetic novel explores identity, politics, and the razor’s edge between survival and dehumanization.
- Shardik — Richard Adams
In a kingdom torn by belief and empire, a massive wounded bear—believed to be an incarnation of a god—is discovered by a humble hunter. Swept into religious fervor and political machination, he becomes the unwilling center of a holy war. Adams delivers a dark, ambitious tale about faith, power, and the peril of divine symbols.
- The Ship of Ishtar — A. Merritt
When archaeologist John Kenton uncovers a mysterious Babylonian relic, he is transported onto a timeless vessel trapped in an endless struggle between two ancient deities. Caught between love, war, and magic, he must choose a side in a cosmic conflict. Merritt’s rich, dreamlike prose creates one of early fantasy’s most influential lost-world epics.
- Tau Zero — Poul Anderson
A starship’s crew attempting to reach another galaxy becomes trapped in continual acceleration, pushing them toward relativistic speed where time stretches and the universe transforms. As their mission spirals into cosmic extremes, the limits of courage and purpose are tested. Anderson delivers one of the most awe-inspiring visions in hard science fiction.
- The Gods Themselves — Isaac Asimov
A breakthrough energy source promises limitless power—until scientists discover it may destabilize the laws of physics and threaten the universe itself. Across dimensions, alien intelligences fight for survival as their own cosmos faces destruction. Asimov weaves hard science, political tension, and alien psychology into his most daring standalone novel.
- The Dragon Waiting — John M. Ford
In a Renaissance Europe shaped by sorcery and shifting empires, a physician, a wizard, a mercenary, and a noblewoman become entangled in a conspiracy that will alter England’s fate. Blending espionage, alternate history, and subtle magic, Ford crafts a haunting masterpiece long revered by writers and rediscovered by readers.
- The Broken Sword — Poul Anderson
Born of both human and elven blood, Skafloc is drawn into a brutal conflict between elves and trolls, armed with a cursed blade that demands tragedy. With saga-like power and mythic brutality, Anderson’s novel predates and influences the darker currents of modern fantasy.
- The Inverted World — Christopher Priest
Helward Mann belongs to a city that must constantly move along rails toward a mysterious “optimum.” As he ventures beyond its borders, he uncovers truths that distort everything he knows about space, time, and reality. Priest’s eerie, mathematically uncanny novel becomes a meditation on perception, progress, and the lies societies tell.
- The Demolished Man — Alfred Bester
In a future where telepaths help police the world, murder has become nearly impossible—until a ruthless industrial titan decides to commit one anyway. Pursued by a brilliant telepathic detective, he attempts to outmaneuver both law and mind. Bester’s innovative classic combines noir tension, psychological warfare, and stylistic experimentation that paved the way for cyberpunk.
- WILDCARD: Battlefield Earth — L. Ron Hubbard
In the year 3000, Earth has fallen under the heel of the Psychlos, a towering alien race that has stripped the planet and reduced humanity to scattered, primitive survivors. When Jonnie Goodboy Tyler escapes his dying village, he discovers a world far stranger and more dangerous than he imagined—and becomes the unlikely spark of a rebellion against an empire that spans galaxies. Blending classic pulp adventure with massive scale, Battlefield Earth delivers a saga of resistance, alien domination, and the relentless fight for human freedom.
Let’s all pick a science fiction or fantasy book to read each month and post our thoughts. The books will be chosen by a popular voot that concludes the last day of the month.
I know we got some real sci-fi/fantasy buffs here, so I look forward to seeing what you all would like to read. Classics, new books, pulp, any and all suggestions welcome.


I haven't seen it yet so I'm not sure if nobody has heard or if it's not surprising to them but (((Benjamin Schiff))) also known as Oxide on YouTube has (to the surprise of no one that actually knows him) been discovered to be a furry sodomite who now probably has aids of the rectum. It couldn't be any more damning. Everything is spoilered so click at your own risk etc.
The /k/ thread with the Twitter
Oxide's Vityaz Bump (his tattoo is visible around 40 seconds in, image attached for simplicity)
"Holeoti's" gay sex Twitter video with visible tattoo (cropped image added below)
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