Read Ebook {PDF EPUB} John Scalzi is Not a Rapist A Respected Grand Master of Science Fiction Refutes Certain Allegations 9 people named Richard Scalzi living in the US. We found 9 people in 7 states named Richard Scalzi living in the US. The state with the most residents by this name is Michigan , followed by Florida and Massachusetts . Public records for Richard Scalzi range in age from 47 years old to 72 years old. Possible relatives for Richard Scalzi include Richard Spano , Barbara Denning , Sheryl Garner and several others. An associated email addresses for Richard Scalzi are [email protected] and [email protected] . A phone number associated with this person is (781) 784-1623 , and we have 13 other possible phone numbers in the same local area codes 781 and 401 . Resides in Clarkston, MI. Known as Richard Scalzi, Richard I. Lived in Center Line , MI Warren, MI Madison Heights, MI . Resides in Sharon, MA. Known as Richard J Scalzi, Dick Scalzi . Lived in 233 Palfrey St , Watertown , MA 02472 (617) 924-8494 421 Pearl St , Stoughton , MA 02072 (781) 341-0458 Watertown, MA Canton, MA South Easton, MA . Resides in Bay Shore, NY. Lived in 9 Brentwood , Bay Shore , NY 11706 (631) 666-3566 9 Brentwood Rd , Bay Shore , NY 11706 (631) 666-3566 Rosedale, NY. Resides in Clarkston, MI. Known as Richard A Scalzi, Richard Scalza, Rich Scalzi . Lived in 1827 Lafayette Ave , Royal Oak , MI 48073 (248) 588-5729 Palm Coast, FL Madison Heights, MI . Resides in Center Line, MI. Known as Richard Spano. Related to Richard Spano , 46 Sheryl Garner , Lived in 6823 Engleman , Center Line , MI 48015 (586) 759-6746 Clarkston, MI Rochester, MI Ray Twp, MI. John Scalzi is Not a Rapist. John B.R.M. Scalzi, science fiction legend, up to 147-time Hugo nominee, several time SFWA president, world-adventuring gender-neutral alpha male, charming raconteur, and prominent not-rapist has long been dogged by baseless accusations of being a man who likes to force himself on women. Claims alleging that in fact, he, John Scalzi is a rapist. First put forward by some unknown fool who took hold of John’s own keyboard, and relentlessly perpetuated for several years by infamous purged SFWA member , these completely false, yet enticing claims have recently been lengthened and hardened, to throbbing proportions, and in tantalizing detail, by misguided fan Alexa Eren. Accusations, allegations, and unindicted co-rumors of rapism have insistently pounded upon Mr. Scalzi’s life long enough. Now at last, the great grand master of SFF breaks his long self-imposed silence, and speaks in his own defense. This very intimate first edition includes a foreword by the SFF luminaries of the Special Bear Club. Об авторе. This is a pseudonym for the purpose of parody. Похожие авторы. Связанные категории. Предварительный просмотр книги. John Scalzi is Not a Rapist - Richard Milhous Scalzi. Preface: I am Not a Rapist, or a Crook. John B.R.M. Scalzi, science fiction legend, up to 147-time Hugo nominee, several time SFWA president, world-adventuring gender-neutral alpha male, charming raconteur, and prominent not-rapist has long been dogged by baseless accusations of being a man who likes to force himself on women. Claims alleging that in fact, he, John Scalzi is a rapist. First put forward by some unknown fool who took hold of John’s own keyboard, and relentlessly perpetuated for several years by infamous purged SFWA member Vox Day, these completely false, yet enticing claims have recently been lengthened and hardened, to throbbing proportions, and in tantalizing detail, by misguided fan Alexa Eren. Accusations, allegations, and unindicted co-rumors of rapism have insistently pounded upon Mr. Scalzi’s life long enough. Now at last, the great grand master of SFF breaks his long self-imposed silence, and speaks in his own defense. This very intimate first edition includes a foreword by the SFF luminaries of the Special Bear Club. John Scalzi is Not a Rapist. A Respected Grand Master of Science Fiction Refutes Certain Allegations Made by a Devoted but Mistaken Fan. By Richard Milhous Scalzi. Edited by Pratprick Nielsen Haten. Published by TOAD Books. Cover design and interior artwork by Atlantean Arts, Inc. Artwork incorporates images in the public domain. Copyright © 2015 Anthony Gillis. All Rights Reserved. First Edition, September 2015. Smashwords Edition, License Notes. This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to Smashwords.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author. This is a work of parody. Any persons, living or dead, bearing resemblance to characters in this work are public figures, and are quoted, paraphrased, parodied, or referenced from publicly available sources, or under fair use for the purposes of satire. Vox Day. Vox Day (born 21 August 1968) is the popular alias of Theodore Beale, an American publisher, science fiction writer, philosopher, musician and video game designer. He is a former nationally syndicated columnist with Chronicle Features and Universal Press Syndicate. He is known as the Supreme Dark Lord of the Evil Legion of Evil by his supporters, who describe themselves as Vile Faceless Minions and the Dread Ilk. He is producer of the Voxiversity video lectures. Contents. Early life. Theodore Beale was born in Boston, Massachusetts, and grew up in Minnesota. He is the son of entrepreneur and jailed tax protester Robert Beale [1] and the father of Christopher Beale, the youngest-ever published male author. [2] He is of English, Irish, Mexican, and Native American descent. He attended Minnehaha Academy in Minneapolis where he played varsity soccer for the MISSL-champion Indians and ran track-and- field. In 1986, he was the 100-meter and 200-meter dash champion of the Tri-Metro Conference, recording personal bests of 10.82 and 22.40 seconds. He graduated from Bucknell University in 1990, [3] where he studied economics, history, and Japanese, and ran for four East Coast Conference championship-winning track teams. Beale first began to write short stories while he was in college, [4] and began using the name Vox Day as a stage name after founding the band Psykosonik. Careers. Music career. In 1987, Beale played in a cover band called NoBoys . He met Smilehouse lead singer Paul Sebastian at The Underground in Minneapolis and the two men put together a band with Beale on keyboards and Sebastian on guitar and vocals. They found a drummer, Michael Larson, and a production engineer, Daniel Lenz. Psykosonik began recording electronic music at Sebastian's apartment where he had a recording studio and performed in Minneapolis clubs such as First Avenue, 7th Street Entry, and Glam Slam. [5] Their first recorded song was the unreleased "Sex Me Up", [6] which was the first song on the three-song demo that led to the band being signed to Wax Trax! and TVT Records. Between 1992 and 1995 Day was a founding member of the electronic band Psykosonik , which recorded four [7] Billboard Top 40 Club Play hits. Day was responsible for composition and lyrics on three of the four: "Silicon Jesus", "Welcome to My Mind", and "Unlearn". Day left the band before writing or recording "It Has Begun", featured on the Mortal Kombat: More Kombat soundtrack. In 1995, Day and Sebastian founded Power of Seven to make soundtracks for video games. Video game career. Day and Andrew Lunstad founded a video game company in 1993 named Fenris Wolf . They developed the game Rebel Moon in 1995, and its sequel Rebel Moon Rising in 1997. [8] Computer Gaming World described Rebel Moon Rising as technologically innovative and "highly creative", and declared that its escort missions broke new ground in 3D shooter mission design. [9] Fenris Wolf was developing two games, Rebel Moon Revolution and Traveler for the Sega Dreamcast, when it closed in 1999 after a legal dispute with its retail publisher GT Interactive. [10] In 1999, under the name Eternal Warriors , Day and Lunstad released The War in Heaven , a biblical video game published by Valusoft and distributed by GT Interactive. [11] Day was an early supporter of Gamergate and hosted the GGinParis meetup in July 2015 with and . [12] Writing career. Theodore Beale first began writing under the name Vox Day for a weekly video game review column in the St. Paul Pioneer Press, [13] and later continued to use the pen name for a weekly WorldNetDaily opinion column. His columns have been nationally syndicated three times, once by Chronicle Features and twice by Universal Press Syndicate. [14] In 2000, Day published his first solo novel, The War in Heaven , the first in a series of fantasy novels with a religious theme; entitled The Eternal Warriors. The novel investigates themes "about good versus evil among angels, fallen and otherwise". [15] Day served as a member of the Nebula Award Novel Jury in 2004 [16] and in 2007. [17] He was a contributor to the Black Gate blog until December 2012. [18] In 2008 Day published The Irrational Atheist: Dissecting the Unholy Trinity of Dawkins, Harris, and Hitchens , a book devoted to criticizing the arguments presented in various books by atheist authors Richard Dawkins, Sam Harris, Christopher Hitchens, Daniel Dennett, and Michel Onfray. [19] The book was named a 2007 Christmas recommendation by in the online conservative magazine, Online . [20] Day's 2008 book, Summa Elvetica: A Casuistry of the Elvish Controversy , was nominated for an American Christian Fiction Writers award in 2009. [21] Blogs. Day currently produces a pair of blogs called Vox Popoli and Alpha Game . Vox Popoli is his primary outlet for commentary and had traffic of 25.8 million pageviews in 2016. [22] He also produces the blog Alpha Game, which focuses on male-female relations and the socio-sexual hierarchy, particularly from a married Christian perspective. Alpha Game had an additional 5.3 million pageviews in 2016. [23] Voxiversity. DarkStream. Technology innovations. Video games. Day was an early champion of 3D CAD hardware in video games. As the Transdimensional Evangelist for ARTIST Graphics, he named the 3GA chip and trademarked the term 3D Blaster, but later gave the trademark to Creative Labs. In 2002, Day created a system to use 3D videogame technology to sell real estate called 3DH. The technology was received well by real estate agents in Minnesota after being the subject of a local news report on KARE 11 by reporter Rick Kupchella, but Day shut down the company after learning that agents were not willing to use it for all their listings, but were only using it to acquire expensive listings they would not have otherwise been able to land. WarMouse. Day holds the design patent [24] for WarMouse, a computer mouse with 18 buttons, a scroll wheel, a thumb-operated joystick, and 512k of memory. [25] InfoGalactic.com. In 2016, Day designed a system intended to reduce bias by eliminating centralized control of the content on online encyclopedias. With the help of 172 of his readers, he created Infogalactic, where he is the Lead Designer and a member of the Star Council. Social Galactic. Unauthorized.TV. Castalia House. In early 2014 Day founded Castalia House, a publishing house based in Kouvola, Finland. He is the Lead Editor and has published the work of writers Jerry Pournelle, John C. Wright, Tom Kratman, Eric S. Raymond, Martin van Creveld, Nick Cole, Peter Grant and William S. Lind. [26] [27] [28] Castalia House has had 22 Hugo Award Finalists as a result of the Sad Puppies (2014) and Rabid Puppies (2015-2016) campaigns. [29] . Castalia House has also published two Dragon Award winners, one of which, Somewhither by John C. Wright, was edited by Day. Castalia House is known for regularly publishing bestsellers in a wide range of Amazon categories, including Philosophy, Literary Satire, Military Strategy, Nationalism, and Politics. Controversies. In 2013 Day ran unsuccessfully against Steven Gould to succeed John Scalzi as president of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America (SFWA). African American writer N. K. Jemisin, during her delivery of the Guest of Honour speech at 2013 Continuum in Australia, complained that 10% of the SFWA membership voted for Beale in his bid for the SFWA presidential position and called him "a self-described misogynist, racist, anti-Semite, and a few other flavors of asshole". Beale responded by denying her accusation and calling her "an educated, but ignorant half- savage, with little more understanding of what it took to build a new literature by 'a bunch of beardy old middle-class middle-American guys' than an illiterate Igbotu tribesman has of how to build a jet engine. " [30] In the resulting interactions, he also called writer and editor Teresa Nielsen Hayden a "fat frog" [31] and "the Toad of Tor". [32] A link to Day's comments about Jemisin was tweeted on the SFWA @SFWAAuthors feed. Day had previously made controversial remarks, but in this case he was investigated by the SFWA Board, who subsequently voted to expel him from the organization over his use of the promotional SFWA Twitter feed in a manner that allegedly violated organization guidelines. [33] Day posted a scan of the letter notifying him of the decision on his website. He later maintained that the vote did not signify his expulsion from the organization due to the fact that the required vote by the entire membership never took place. [34] 2014 Hugo Awards. In 2014 Day's novelette, "Opera Vita Aeterna", was nominated for the Hugo Award for Best Novelette [35] as part of Larry Correia's Sad Puppies campaign. Correia later explained that he had included "Opera" in his campaign because he had enjoyed it, because he wanted to increase participation in the Hugo nomination process, and because he wanted to upset people, stating that he "nominated Vox Day because Satan didn’t have any eligible works that period." [36] The Hugo voters ranked "Opera" sixth out of five nominees, behind "No Award." [37] [38] [39] [40] 2015 Hugo Awards. In 2015 Day created a slate of candidates for the Hugo Awards called "Rabid Puppies", which successfully placed 58 of its 67 recommended nominees on the ballot. Two of the nominations were for Day himself, and eleven were for works published by his Finnish publishing house, Castalia House, [41] where Day acts as lead editor. [42] Of those other nominees, two authors, an editor, and a fanzine subsequently withdrew their own nominations; three of these four explicitly cited the wish to dissociate themselves from Day as being among their reasons for doing so. [43] [44] [45] Day was nominated in the Best Editor, Long Form and Best Editor, Short Form categories. No award was given in either category. [46] When asked why he included himself in the nomination, and what it meant that the voters preferred that no one win the award rather than give one to him, Day stated, "I wanted to leave a big smoking hole where the Hugo Awards were. All this has ever been is a giant Fuck You—one massive gesture of contempt." [47] 2016 Hugo Awards. In 2016 Day ran a second annual "Rabid Puppies" campaign, which successfully placed 69 of its 80 recommended nominees on the ballot. Five of the nominations in the Best Dramatic Presentiation, Long Form and Best Dramatic Presentation, Short Form categories were disqualified, and two nominees, Best Fanzine finalist Black Gate and Best Short Story finalist Thomas Mays, elected to withdraw their nominations after learning they had been nominated as a result of Rabid Puppies. Feud with John Scalzi. Since 2005 Day has engaged in an exchange of online criticism with science fiction writer John Scalzi. This began with Scalzi's attack on one of Day's syndicated columns blaming the lack of woman hard SF writers on poor science education in universities. [48] [49] In 2015 Day released a book about social justice warriors titled, SJWs Always Lie: Taking Down the Thought Police [50] The book was positively reviewed by the conservative online magazine American Thinker [51] and contained a chapter demonstrating that John Scalzi had repeatedly lied about his popularity and his claimed site traffic of two million pageviews per month. The book was the #1 bestseller in the Political Philosophy category on Amazon for 13 months. Progressive writer Alexandra Erin then wrote a short parody of the book titled, John Scalzi Is Not A Very Popular Author And I Myself Am Quite Popular: How SJWs Always Lie About Our Comparative Popularity Levels. Supporters of Vox Day released their own parody book on Amazon in response, titled, John Scalzi Is A Rapist: Why SJWs Always Lie In Bed Waiting For His Gentle Touch; A Pretty, Pretty Girl Dreams of Her Beloved One While Pondering Gender Identity, Social Justice, and Body Dysmorphia. The parody became the top seller in the “parodies” section of the Kindle store, two places ahead of Erin’s book. [50] At one point, SJWs Always Lie, the parody of the parody, and the parody were the top three sellers in Amazon's Political Philosophy category. After John Scalzi complained to Amazon about the title of John Scalzi Is A Rapist: Why SJWs Always Lie In Bed Waiting For His Gentle Touch; A Pretty, Pretty Girl Dreams of Her Beloved One While Pondering Gender Identity, Social Justice, and Body Dysmorphia , the title was removed from Amazon. The book was subsequently renamed John Scalzi Banned This Book But He Can Never Ban My Burning Love: A Pretty, Pretty Girl Dreams of Her Beloved While Pondering Gender Identity, Social Justice, and Body Dysmorphia . In September 2015, another parody, entitled John Scalzi is Not a Rapist: A Respected Grand Master of Science Fiction Refutes Certain Allegations Made by a Devoted but Mistaken Fan was also published on Amazon. Hugo Award nominations. Day has been nominated six times for a Hugo Award. 2014 finalist for Hugo Award for Best Novelette[52] 2015 finalist for Hugo Award for Best Editor Short Form[53] 2015 finalist for Hugo Award for Best Editor Long Form[53] 2016 finalist for Hugo Award for Best Editor Long Form[54] 2016 finalist for Hugo Award for Best Related Work[54] 2017 finalist for Hugo Award for Best Editor Long Form[55] Personal life. Day is married and was a member of Mensa and a National Merit Semifinalist. He speaks English, Japanese, French, German and Italian. [56] Philosophical views. Vox Day is known for libertarian and traditional views, and has been described as an "alt-right figurehead". [57] According to the site Know Your Meme , Day is a "proponent of the philosophy of racial realism, which states that one’s race directly correlates with their ability to think and create." [58] Day describes himself as a libertarian nationalist and of the Alt-West branch of the Alt-Right. Writing for Publishers Weekly , Kimberly Winston described Day as a "fundamentalist Southern Baptist", [15] but other journalists have made more pointed characterizations, such as Mike VanHelder's assertion in Popular Science that Day's views are "white supremacist." [59] Similarly, an article by Jeet Heer in The New Republic says that Day "has written that women should be deprived of the vote", [60] an interpretation of comments in Day's article "Why women's rights are wrong." [61]