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Apr. 23rd, 2007

jackalope rider

[info]willshetterly

add your participation in IPST Day here!

Either leave a comment on this post, or on yesterday's post about IPST Day.

So far as I can tell, people love this holiday, and I'd hate for the SFWA LJ to get swamped with individual posts.

Share, Technopeasants, share!

P.S. to the folks who already created new posts. Leave 'em up, or delete 'em, or repeat the info on this post or the other. It's all good.
transformation, butterfly

[info]mattador

Happy Holidays!

To celebrate Pixel-stained Technopeasant Wretch Day, here's some of my published fiction. Well, okay: here's all of my published fiction. Comments and criticism appreciated.

Snapshots

&

Gravity.

[info]cmintz

Dancing on the Screens...

International Pixel-Stained Technopeasant Day should properly be celebrated by posting, linking, reading, listening to music composed by the performers, not to mention looking at art. Get to it. "They're dancing on the screens, I've got to warn ya..."

[info]michaelcapo

International Pixel-Stained Technopeasant Day = World Book and Copyright Day

Today is the UN's World Book and Copyright Day. Thanks to maryrobinette for pointing this out. In light of that fact, I deleted the original "Authors' Rights Day" from the subject and substituted the UN's version.

I hope that we all can acknowledge that International Pixel-Stained Technopeasant Day/World Book and Copyright Day should represent more than just authors' right to put their work up on the web for free. The day should also celebrate the right of authors to publish their work in any fashion they see fit, and the right to limit access to electronic versions of their work. Ideally, it should be a day that we recognize that many publishers are not willing to negotiate when it comes to electronic rights, and that we, as writers, show solidarity in decrying their position. Finally, we should use the day to recognize that, if works are posted on the Internet, traded via P2P protocols, or copied via Usenet without the author's permission, that author has the right to stop the unauthorized copying of their work. I understand that there are disagreements about how long copyright should last, and exactly what constitutes fair use, but these disagreements should not affect the consensus that it is the author who has the final say on how their work will be copied, licensed, or liberated during the period of its copyright.

edited April 23, 2007, 2:24 PM EDT

Apr. 22nd, 2007

jackalope rider

[info]willshetterly

International Pixel-Stained Technopeasant Day is coming!

An International Pixel-Stained Technopeasant LJ community has begun at [info]ipstp  . If you're planning to participate, you can leave a message there or on this message or anywhere, since [info]papersky , whose inspiration this was, said,

I'll make a post here on the day and people can post links in comments to whatever they're putting up on. If you are a member of SFWA, or SFWA qualified but not a member (like me) you get extra pixel-spattered points for doing this. If other people want to collect the links too, that would be really cool. Please disseminate this information widely.
Being a member of this LJ community is the only requirement for adding a link to this post. Heck, ignore that requirement: If you want to post a link for something you found, feel free. Doesn't even have to be fantasy or science fiction. On the internet, we're all pixel-stained technopeasant wretches.

later: [info]papersky's post for links is here.

Apr. 16th, 2007

Ocean

[info]derrylm

Never Mind What This Says About Us, What Does it Say About Others?

I've been quiet lately, due to a family trip and a nagging back/neck injury, which hasn't been helped by the fact that it's playoff season for my indoor soccer team. But I have read Howard's note, John's response, and a whole bunch of commentary on what's been said, and even dropped in for a couple of comments earlier today. But I feel like I should say a bit more, in a place and format where it might stand a better chance of being seen.

First, though, I should introduce myself for anyone who doesn't know me. I'm coming to the end of my three year term as Canadian Regional Director for SFWA, and I'm a write-in candidate, for VP. I served as CRD once before, but had to give that up when I inexplicably moved to the US for 14 months. I've published a couple dozen short stories, one collection, and have hopes for my novel. I was also once a professional photographer, including some time shooting for a stock agency, a field which wasn't done as many favors by the web. But that's neither here nor there.

I'm going to reiterate what's been said elsewhere: Howard wasn't speaking for SFWA, and I see that John has pointed to where Howard attempts to clarify things at Galleycat.

Now that that has been said, let me step up to the plate for Howard as a person. I disagree with what he said, I cringed at his choice of words, but I know him to be a good guy and a hard worker for SFWAns and for writers in general. It's unfortunate that this is how he chose to go out, but considering how this (volunteer) job beats you down, I'm not surprised whenever any Board member pops off.

And so, when I hear people getting so pissy with his rant (My goodness! Someone on the web is ranting? Heaven forfend!) that they declare they're happy they don't belong to SFWA/intend to never join SFWA/can't understand why any idiot would ever want to join SFWA and, worse, that if SFWA is led by such an idiot then how could such an organization ever be valid for a writer to consider, my eyes turn red and my pants turn purple and my skin turns green and you probably know the rest.

Let me tell you something. Howard (and by extension, the rest of the Board) has of late been involved in decisions regarding the lawsuit against Writer Beware and SFWA, SFWA's audit of a rather suspect publisher, that we provide extra funding to Griefcom, and that the limit of loans from the Legal Fund should be raised. There were other decisions, some niggling stuff and some less so, but none of them related to people posting their work online. Interestingly enough, many (if not all) of these decisions I relate here affect not only members of SFWA, but writers pretty much everywhere.

If for one second that people, either inside or outside of the organization, think that the late-in-the-day thoughts of one person represent where SFWA stands, then they have their own serious deficiencies in reality grasping. We're a bunch of authors, for crying out loud. We work alone, we don't necessarily play well with others, we're loud, opinionated, love a good argument, and relish the chance to show all the arcana embedded in our brains. Those members who voted for Howard did so based on his prior service and on a platform that, at least in 2005, said nothing about copyright or online publication. I would imagine that, for all but the least sensible mind, this says absolutely nothing about SFWA that he would have been voted in as VP.

I'm sorry if I sound grouchy here. Maybe it's the fact I'm weaning myself from muscle relaxants right now, to say nothing of being thrust into single dad-hood for the rest of the week. But the fact that I'm willing to once again shove my face into the grinder should tell some people something, that perhaps for some people SFWA has value. Me, I haven't directly benefited since way back in the day when I was an Affiliate with a contract problem. Between Ray Feist, as head of the Contracts Committee, and Rob Sawyer (yes), then the CRD, the problem was settled in record time, and I learned a whole lot. Certainly I've seen other benefits, but nothing so direct and job-related. Since then I've made an effort to be there for other authors, and I've seen time and time again that SFWA has a lot to offer to authors of all stripes.

But obviously, there are those who think we should not only be a monolithic entity that agrees on everything, but that we should be a monolithic entity that agrees only on everything they agree on. Sadly, I guess I should advise those people to save their money and not join SFWA. Because, what the hell, they'll get many of the benefits anyhow, and they won't actually need to put out any effort to help their comrades-in-business.

Apr. 15th, 2007

default

[info]scalzi

Dr. Hendrix Comments on Galleycat

Galleycat, the literary business blog, pinged outgoing SFWA VP Howard V. Hendrix about his "Webscab" screed, and received a lengthy response from Dr. Hendrix, which it posted in full here. It also covered the various responses to the rant in this entry, and put up a poll asking folks about ebooks.
jackalope rider

[info]willshetterly

International Pixel-Stained Technopeasant Day

Jo Walton says,
In honour of Dr Hendrix, I am declaring Monday 23rd April International Pixel-Stained Technopeasant Day. On this day, everyone who wants to should give away professional quality work online. It doesn't matter if it's a novel, a story or a poem, it doesn't matter if it's already been published or if it hasn't, the point is it should be disseminated online to celebrate our technopeasanthood.

Whatever you're posting should go on your own site. I'll make a post here on the day and people can post links in comments to whatever they're putting up on. If you are a member of SFWA, or SFWA qualified but not a member (like me) you get extra pixel-spattered points for doing this. If other people want to collect the links too, that would be really cool. Please disseminate this information widely.
If you would like to announce your participation here, please add your links to this post. Let us know now that you plan to participate, or on the 23rd that you have something available. If you can't come up with something new for the 23rd but already have work that's free on the web, offer the link. Everyone's welcome in the IPST!

And if you don't participate, you're welcome to explain why you don't want people to know what you do.

P.S. On the web, all artists are pixel-stained. If you're an artist celebrating IPST Day, whether your art is music or comics or sculpture or something that does not yet have  a name, do add your link in the comments here or on Jo's site.

later: Corrected bad dates in this post.

even later: On second thought, no need to mention your link or your thoughts about IPST Day on this post. I wrote that request when I was thinking IPST Day was tomorrow. I'll try to remember to provide a post here next Sunday evening where people can list IPST Day celebrations.

Apr. 14th, 2007

mad!, mad

[info]autopope

So ...

... I've lost track of whoever's creating the "Pixel-Stained Technopeasant Wretch" t-shirts (on Cafepress, presumably -- but where?) but I clearly need one, and I need it b-a-a-a-a-d.

Is anyone heading in the vicinity of Penguicon next weekend who'd be willing to grab me one? Will pay cash or swap for stupid Scottish souvenirs or something.
planes on a snake

[info]aburt

"Scabs" and Gresham's Law

I talked to Howard because I was flabbergasted myself that he thought writer #1 giving away free ebooks was harming writers #2 and #3 and #4 and...

So don't shoot the messenger here -- because I'm not agreeing with Howard, just explaining what he said in response.  (In fact, while I want to see the discussion, I'll say up front that I personally <i>don't</i> agree with his theory, but that'll have to wait for another post as I don't have time right now.)  (Also noting this is with his permission.)

His concept stems from what's called Gresham's Law, which is about "bad" money driving out "good" money.  I.e., he's hypothesizing that the more people give away freebies, the harder it becomes for others to get paid (e.g. because publishers or readers might exploit the freebie propensity in order to pay authors less).  To the extent that he believe's that's true, he sees authors having an obligation to stand together to prevent it. 

(And -- aha! -- I'm connecting the dots here:  If he believes authors should stand together to prevent this problem, those who give away freebies would be crossing the "picket" line, I guess, for their own benefit at the expense of the rest, and thus be "scabs."  So now at least I understand why he felt the word was applicable.  I don't think he made his fundamental point anywhere near clear enough.  [Now that I understand it, I still think the logic is flawed.])

Also noting he agrees it's his own position, not SFWA's.  I think he went for the incindiary approach in order to get folks talking.  He said he's seen bad trends in the music industry regarding freebies and such, and wants authors spared that pain.

But, let's chew on this Gresham's Law concept.  Google on it for more info; wikipedia has a decent intro.

As I said, I don't personally believe his theory; in fact, I think it's flawed.  (Not Gresham's Law, which I think is valid, but it's application to this situation.  My feeling is it applies in reverse.)  But it's a valid topic for civil discussion.
goblin

[info]oneminutemonkey

A Small Idea...

So I see where there is now merchandise bearing the "Pixel-Stained Technopeasant Wretch" Brilliant!
I have a proposal.
If anyone actually makes any money off of that phrase, or off of Dr Hendrix's other fine turn of words, "Wikicliki...etc", how about donating some of that money to something appropriate, such as the SFWA EMF, or the Legal Fund, or whatever exists to help our fellow writers? It doesn't have to be a lot, mind you, but here's the kicker: do it in Dr Hendrix' name.

Even more ironicly biting would be to make that donation, in his name, to an online magazine like Helix.

I'm just saying it would be appropriate, after all, what kind of scabs would we be if we took advantage of something he had put up on the web for free. :>
default

[info]scalzi

Scabs and Peasants

You know, I was going to take the high road and leave this alone, but the more I look at this post from current VP Howard Hendrix, the more it just really pisses me off:

I'm also opposed to the increasing presence in our organization of webscabs, who post their creations on the net for free.  A scab is someone who works for less than union wages or on non-union terms; more broadly, a scab is someone who feathers his own nest and advances his own career by undercutting the efforts of his fellow workers to gain better pay and working conditions for all. Webscabs claim they're just posting their books for free in an attempt to market and publicize them, but to my mind they're undercutting those of us who aren't giving it away for free and are trying to get publishers to pay a better wage for our hard work.

There are lots of other people who have noted the flaws in this particular argument, starting with Dr. Hendrix's rather free adaptation of what what a "scab" is in union terminology, and moving on to his "zero-sum" approach to the publishing world, in which the success of one person equates to lack of success for everyone else. I'm not going to argue these points; go read the other thread for them. What I want to focus on are two things:

1. This formulation is gut-punchingly ignorant of both what the dynamics of online promotion are and what the benefits have been to those who have used it successfully, and to the genre at large;

2. It's appalling that a standing Vice President of SFWA is calling a rather large chunk of his constituency backstabbing scum.

Let's begin with the fact that I rather comfortably fit in Dr. Hendrix's definition of "Webscab" -- I have all manner of stuff up on my site for people to access for free, including a novel, short stories, an audiobook and an entire magazine that I've edited, in .pdf form. How have these free materials undercut my "union" wages or undercut my fellow "workers"? Well, let's see.

a) The novel, Agent to the Stars, was originally offered as shareware; people could pay if they wanted. I made about $4k off of that. Then it was bought and published by Subterranean Press, which offered me a decent enough small press advance (low four figures) and then, when the limited edition sold out, promptly (i.e., far quicker than most publishers) paid me additional royalties in the mid-four figures. The book was subsequently sold to Tor Books for a trade paperback edition that will come out in 2008; that was a five-figure deal. Which is to say that at every step of the way I got paid, at "wages" which were well in line with what our "union" usually provides. The fact that the book was bought by two separate publishers, for competitive sums, despite the fact the text is fully available online suggests that the publishers find some value in having the work available to read online.

b) The short stories were both published in venues that pay SFWA-qualifying rates (or better), because I have this funny thing about wanting to actually be paid for my work. Having these stories accessible online does not undercut the rates others receive for their work -- indeed, the links on my site go to the stories on the sites of their publishers, and since my personal site gets more daily traffic than either of those sites, I'm helping to promote those sites by driving my audience to those sites. This benefits other writers by bringing more eyeballs to their work and by bringing more readers to sites which pay their authors SFWA-qualifying rates (or better).

c) The audiobook in question was performed by a number of women SF/F writers (Elizabeth Bear, Cherie Priest, Ellen Kushner, Karen Meisner, Mary Robinette Kowal), all of whom were paid for their participation, and some of whom who manifestly benefited from performing the work -- Mary Robinette Kowal, for example, found additional audiobook work directly from having worked on this audiobook. She's a new member of SFWA, incidentally. The audiobook helped drive sales of the limited edition hardcover print version of the same story, driving a hardcover novelette into the Amazon's Top Ten SF list and helping the book get something like a 90% sellthrough in less than a month.

It is true that I took no upfront money for the novelette whose audiobook I offer for free on my site; this is because I wrote it in exchange for a $5,000 contribution from Subterranean publisher Bill Schafer to the John M. Ford Book Endowment for the Minneapolis Public Library. However, Subterranean started paying me royalties on the book once it earned out that $5k pledge; I stand to make a five-figure amount from the book when all is said and done, which is not bad for a 12,500-word novelette. If you do the math, even with the vague variables I just noted, you'll see that there's no realistic way I can be said to be accepting "less than union wages" for the work.

d) For the magazine that is available for download on my site, every writer in it was paid no less than 7 cents a word by the editor (which in this case was me), which is well above the current SFWA minimum rate. I had posted that the rate was 5 - 7 cents a word, but as editor I chose to give everyone the maximum rate I could (even though the end result is that I was paid less for the editing gig, because my editing fee was, more or less, what was left over after I paid the writers). The print edition of the magazine had a run of a few thousand copies; the pdf version of the magazine, on the other hand, has been downloaded more than 25,000 times, giving the writers a much larger amount of exposure. At least a few of the stories in the magazine have been reprinted or are slated to be reprinted. Some of the authors (and SFWA members) presented in the magazine have gone on to write short stories or books for Subterranean Press based in part on their appearance in the magazine; Subterranean Press, while a small press, generally pays above the standard "union wage".

I invite all and sundry to look at this list and tell me where, precisely, I have undercut myself as a writer by promoting this work online; I invite all and sundry to show where, by posting this material online, I have done anything but promote other writers and worked to give them fair compensation and open doors to more work. The fact is, I got paid -- well -- for all the writing on that list above. The fact is that other people got paid as well. There is nothing on that list of freely-readable work that was not paid for at a SFWA-level scale or better. Nothing. End of story. None of Dr. Hendrix's definitions for what a "webscab" are apply.

Nor would they apply to, say, Charlie Stross. Charlie was paid by two separate English language publishers for Accelerando, which he released on the Web under a CC license. It's likely that being online was not the sole reason that particular book was nominated for a Hugo, but it didn't hurt the book. However, let's ask Peter Watts if releasing his book Blindsight didn't help that book into a Hugo nomination this year; you might also ask him if making it available online didn't help push the book -- which was floundering in sales -- to a second and then a third printing. Peter Watts got paid for the book by Tor before he put it online, and now he stands to get paid even more. Ask Peter Watts if he did not see a concrete financial benefit. Has the availability of Watt's book online hurt any writer? As far as I can see, probably only the guy who came in sixth in the Hugo Best Novel balloting; otherwise no, not really.

I know Dr. Hendrix isn't going to deign to come on to the internet to offer an answer to this question, but let me ask it anyway: Who, exactly, are these "Webscabs" he's talking about, the ones who are infesting SFWA and rotting it out from the inside? They simply don't exist, or more to the point, I'm willing to bet a nice chunk of change that there isn't a single person he would point to that he can prove is undercutting themselves, other writers or the genre directly by using the online medium for promotion. I, on the other hand, can very easily show you an entire group of people and entities who are using freely-available work online to build the genre.

Let me point to Strange Horizons magazine, whose business model, as far as I know, has always been built around paying fairly for their fiction. Let me point to Subterranean magazine online, who pays well, pays fast, and has an expanding reach. Let me point to Charlie. Let me point to Peter. God forbid I should point to Cory Doctorow, because he causes people's heads to explode, but you know what? He's been paid for the work he's put online, too. Let me point to Nick Mamatas, who for his own account got paid four separate times before he put his novel Move Under Ground out online for free (let me also note there's a short story he co-wrote up online for free on my personal site; I paid him seven cents a word for it. Worth every penny, too).

Here's a fact, and it's a not very nice one: The only way you can call any of these people "Webscabs" is if, in fact, you are wholly and utterly ignorant of how people are using the online medium to promote themselves, their work, and the genre. Even a cursory examination of what these folks are actually doing shows that there's not a thing insidious about it. The most Dr. Hendrix has on any of these people, including me, is that we are happy to use the online medium to promote ourselves and our work a way that he doesn't like or apparently much understands.

That's his karma. I wouldn't want him to promote himself any way he doesn't want to; I wouldn't encourage anyone to promote their work in a way they're not comfortable with. The idea that people who promote themselves online by offering up freely-readable work would somehow force other people to do so is, well, crazy nonsense. I am happy to let Dr. Hendrix promote his work in ways he's comfortable promoting it, and I'm happy to have SFWA help explore and explain these offline options to its members, along with the online promotion options.

But the fact that he is not only ignorant of how this online promotion works, but is actively hostile to the people in SFWA who use it to expand their careers and the genre because of this ignorance, is ridiculous. None of the people Dr. Hendrix has publicly crapped on by calling them scabs and peasants who has earned that sort of abuse. These "scabs" and "peasants" are the people who are writing science fiction today, getting onto award ballots and -- Somehow! Mysteriously! -- actually having careers. Good ones. These "scabs" and "peasants" are who SFWA is now, and who it will be in the future. They deserve better than that. SFWA does, too.

Apr. 12th, 2007

jackalope rider

[info]willshetterly

Howard V. Hendrix, SFWA's current V.P.

Howard sent the following and ended it, "Thanks for taking the time to post the rant." I respect a good rant, so I'm glad to post it. He didn't make me change my mind about posting work for free on the web, but he made me consider the issue in a new light.

--Will Shetterly


About Howard V. Hendrix:

About My Work:

I've held jobs ranging from hospital phlebotomist to fish hatchery manager to university professor and administrator.   My degrees range from a BS in Biology (Xavier University, 1980) to an MA (1982) and PhD in English Literature (1987), both from University of California, Riverside. 

My first four published novels appeared from Ace Books (Penguin Putnam): Lightpaths (1997), Standing Wave (1998), Better Angels (1999), and Empty Cities of the Full Moon (2001). My fifth novel, The Labyrinth Key, appeared from Ballantine Del Rey in April 2004. His sixth novel, The Spears of God, was published by Del Rey in December 2006. 

My most widely available works of shorter science fiction can be found in my short story collection Möbius Highway (Scorpius Digital Books, 2001), the Full Spectrum original anthology series Vols. 1, 4, and 5 (Bantam Books), and in The Outer Limits Volume 1 (Prima). My publications also include some three dozen works of shorter experimental stories, among them the chapbooks Testing, Testing, 1, 2, 3  (EOTU Press) and The Vertical Fruit of the Horizontal Tree  (Talisman Press). My more recent short fiction has appeared in the June 2002 Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine, in the DAW Books anthology Microcosms (January 2004), and Aeon Two (February 2005), Aeon Five (November 2005), and Future Shocks (January 2006).  My story “Palimpsest” will appear in the September 2007 issue of Analog. 

I have also published numerous political essays, book reviews, and works of literary criticism, including a book-length study of apocalyptic elements in English literature from Langland to Milton, The Ecstasy of Catastrophe (1990). My most recent science fiction criticism appears in Projections (2004) and YLEM Journal (2006).

An avid gardener, I co-wrote a book on landscape irrigation, Reliable Rain (co-authored with Stuart Straw), which appeared in March 1998 from Taunton Press. 

For book-length print work, my agent is Chris Lotts at Ralph M. Vicinanza, Ltd in New York. For film, his agent is Vincent M. Gerardis of Created By, in Hollywood, CA.

About my life:

I live with my wife Laurel, just shy of the 5,000 foot elevation in the Sierra Nevada Mountains, near Shaver Lake, CA. We do not need summer cooling. Over ninety five percent of our winter heating is from a woodstove fueled with wood obtained from our own property -- salvaged from second- and third-growth forest long ago timbered-over and natural-fire suppressed. I do all the felling of the trees for firewood, all the cutting in rounds, and the splitting.  Our primary vehicle is a 2003 Honda Civic hybrid, purchased in that model year.

We are firefighters with the Pine Ridge Volunteer Fire Department.  We enjoy backpacking and snowshoeing in the Sierra Nevada, as well as training in Brazilian jiu-jitsu.

About my work in SFWA:

   I wrote the following when I ran for Vice President of the Science fiction and Fantasy Writers of America a few years back:

   "SFWA is full of busy people who, nonetheless, make time to keep our organization going.  The strength of SFWA is clearly its volunteers and the service of those volunteers on SFWA's committees.
   "The purpose of our organization lies not only in educating ourselves and our fellow science fiction and fantasy writers about the blessings and the curses of this business, craft, and art -- important though that is -- but also in being zealous in our defense of the respect, dignity, and financial fair-play we are due as professionals.
   "Such an understanding -- that, at its best, SFWA functions as a trade association looking out for the common interests of our membership -- comes from my experience as SFWA Western Regional Director (2000-2003) and as chair of the Credits and Ethics committee during the late 1990s.  It also comes from twenty years as a professional writer whose publications include several dozen shorter works, a couple of short fiction collections, and five novels.  These works have appeared via large traditional print publishing houses, electronic and digital media, and small presses.
   "On a more personal level,  I am interested in the vice presidency of SFWA because the vice president works primarily with SFWA's committees.  Nearly fifteen years ago, it was a committee of SFWA -- the Grievance Committee -- which came to my aid when I was in a tight spot.  At that time, an unscrupulous agent who had "taken me on" as a client was holding my manuscripts hostage in hopes of extorting money (several thousand dollars) from me -- a trick, I later learned, which she had previously pulled  on other writers.  I contacted the Grievance Committee (chaired at that time by Sheila Finch) and presented to the committee the evidence of my situation.  As a result, SFWA's lawyer hit the aforementioned agent with a "cease and desist" and the situation was successfully resolved in my favor.
   "Despite a busy life and the sometimes crazy fractiousness of our organization, I feel a continuing sense of obligation to SFWA.  If the membership sees fit to elect me to SFWA's vice presidency, I will do my best to faithfully discharge that obligation."

Since writing that, I have published another novel and served two terms as vice president of SFWA. I still believe what I wrote at that time.  During my two terms as VP under President Robin Wayne Bailey (with whom I've been proud to serve), I have performed the traditional duties of the VP --  participating in all votes of the Board of Directors, serving as ex-officio member of many committees, and serving as chief "wrangler" for SFWA's numerous committees.  I also began working toward a reform of bankruptcy laws and publishers' contract templates regarding those laws, as well as working to establish a permanent "Legacy" database so that contact info for the estates, heirs, and agents of SFWA members who have passed on might be more readily available to agents, publishers, producers, anthologists, publishers, editors and scholars.  Both of these projects are ongoing.

Given my involvement with SFWA over the last ten years, many SFWAns have asked me why I chose not to run for the office of SFWA President.  Some have even accused me of precipitating a "constitutional crisis" by deciding not to run -- uncontested ballot, write-in candidates, all that.

I will not comment on the interesting election this year (2007), although I do think that anyone who seriously contemplates running for higher office in SFWA should have already served in the organization for a least a couple of years.  It shouldn't be "on the job training."

As to why I didn't run, there are several reasons.  No, none of them were "a desire to spend more time with his family" -- the cop-out du jour in these difficult times.  I will admit, however, that in my own case the last two years have been very trying: Laurel and I built a house in the mountains so I had to take on more teaching chores to help pay the mort-gage (French for "death pledge"), my mother-in-law went into terminal cancer, my mother was diagnosed with early stage dementia, and -- oh yes -- I had two editors (Steve Saffel and Jim Minz) shot out from under me at Del Rey.  I'm beginning to feel about my editors the way Custer felt about his horses at the Battle of the Little Big Horn (two steeds were shot out from under Old Yellow-Hair too).

I didn't think I'd serve SFWA well given all these matters still pending.  I though I'd call 2007-08 a "rebuilding" or "retrenchment" year.  I had no idea that one result of that simple decision would be an uncontested ballot.

In another way too, though, I feel that the organization and I are moving apart at the moment.  More and more of SFWA's business is internet mediated.  I've spent several thousands of hours doing SFWA business online during my Western Regional Director and Vice President years.  As a result I've developed an almost allergic aversion toward all things nettish, including what I'm doing right now. 

I think the ongoing and increasing sublimation of the private space of consciousness into public netspace is profoundly pernicious.  For that reason I don't much like to blog, wiki, chat, post, LiveJournal, or lounge in SFF.net.  A problem with the whole wikicliki, sick-o-fancy, jerque-du-cercle of a networking and connection-based order is that, if you "go along to get along" for too long, there's a danger you'll no longer remember how to go it alone when the ethics of the situation demand it.

I'm also opposed to the increasing presence in our organization of webscabs, who post their creations on the net for free.  A scab is someone who works for less than union wages or on non-union terms; more broadly, a scab is someone who feathers his own nest and advances his own career by undercutting the efforts of his fellow workers to gain better pay and working conditions for all. Webscabs claim they're just posting their books for free in an attempt to market and publicize them, but to my mind they're undercutting those of us who aren't giving it away for free and are trying to get publishers to pay a better wage for our hard work. 

Since more and more of SFWA is built around such electronically mediated networking and connection based venues, and more and more of our membership at least tacitly blesses the webscabs (despite the fact that they are rotting our organization from within) -- given my happily retrograde opinions, I felt I was not the president who would provide SFWAns the "net time" they seemed to want at this point in the organization's development, or who would bless the contraction of our industry toward monopoly, or who would give imprimatur to the downward spiral that is converting the noble calling of Writer into the life of Pixel-stained Technopeasant Wretch. 

Will I answer your emails? Sure, if you look up my contact info in the SFWA Directory.  But I won't blog, wiki, chat, post, LiveJournal, lounge or lurk -- and I'll be the happier for it.  Writing this now, I'm well aware of the irony that zealot Ted the Unabomber Kzin-ski got the biggest audience for his antitech manifesto /on the internet/, but I persist in insisting that people have a right to push back against technology they perceive to be destructive to their ways of life and their beliefs.

This is my pushback.  I'd rather be chopping wood for my woodstove, maintaining my own well, and working endlessly on our twelve acres of pines, oaks, and cedars than futzing with these electrons.  And that, if you'll excuse me, is exactly the hands-on work I'll be doing after my term as SFWA vice president ends

Have a nice life.

-- Dr. Howard V. Hendrix

4/24/7: Please read the follow-up post and comment here.

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