May 19, 2012
"This is also the case with the activity of so-called “free time”, which, in the hyper-industrial sphere, extends the mimetic, compulsive behaviour of the consumer to all human activities: everything must become consumable—education, culture and health, just like washing powder and chewing gum. But the illusion that must be maintained to achieve this can only provoke frustrations, discredit and destructive instincts. Alone in front of my television I can always say to myself that I behave individually, but the reality is that I do exactly as the hundreds of thousands of television viewers watching the same program."

Bernard StieglerSuffocated Desire: Or, How the Cultural Industry Destroys the Individual: Contribution to a Theory of Mass Consumption (via adumbrations)

(Source: autochthones)

April 15, 2012
Above:  Karl Marx Street in the former East Berlin shares space with Dunkin Donuts

John Stuart Mill writes about his reservations concerning Communism:
“The question is whether there would be any asylum left for individuality of character; whether public opinion would not be a tyrannical yoke; whether the absolute dependence of each on all, and the surveillance of each by all, would not grind all down into a tame uniformity of thoughts, feelings, and actions…”
But if Mill were alive today, what would he make of the homogenizing juggernaut of corporate culture or the surveillance industry spawned by the “war on terror”?
“No society in which eccentricity is a matter of reproach can be in a wholesome state.”—John Stuart Mill

Above: Karl Marx Street in the former East Berlin shares space with Dunkin Donuts

John Stuart Mill writes about his reservations concerning Communism:

“The question is whether there would be any asylum left for individuality of character; whether public opinion would not be a tyrannical yoke; whether the absolute dependence of each on all, and the surveillance of each by all, would not grind all down into a tame uniformity of thoughts, feelings, and actions…”

But if Mill were alive today, what would he make of the homogenizing juggernaut of corporate culture or the surveillance industry spawned by the “war on terror”?

“No society in which eccentricity is a matter of reproach can be in a wholesome state.”
—John Stuart Mill

March 24, 2012
(via redcloud)

(via redcloud)

(Source: dearratbastards)

January 17, 2012
Is protest an “abuse of power”?

wilwheaton:

SOPA lives—and MPAA calls protests an “abuse of power”

The Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) has looked at tomorrow’s “Internet blackout” in opposition to the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA)—and it sees only a “gimmick,” a “stunt,” “hyperbole,” “a dangerous and troubling development,” an “irresponsible response,” and an “abuse of power.”

“Wikipedia, reddit, and others are going dark to protest the legislation, while sites like Scribd and Google will also protest. In response, MPAA chief Chris Dodd wheeled out the big guns and started firing the rhetoric machine-gun style. 

“Only days after the White House and chief sponsors of the legislation responded to the major concern expressed by opponents and then called for all parties to work cooperatively together, some technology business interests are resorting to stunts that punish their users or turn them into their corporate pawns, rather than coming to the table to find solutions to a problem that all now seem to agree is very real and damaging.”

Can I interrupt for a moment? Thanks. When you complain that opponents didn’t “come to the table to find solutions”, do you mean that we didn’t give NINETY-FOUR MILLION DOLLARS to congress like the MPAA? Or do you mean that we didn’t come to the one hearing that Lamar Smith held, where opponents of SOPA were refused an opportunity to comment? Help me out, here, Chris Dodd, because I’m really trying hard to understand you.

“It is an irresponsible response and a disservice to people who rely on them for information and use their services. It is also an abuse of power given the freedoms these companies enjoy in the marketplace today. It’s a dangerous and troubling development when the platforms that serve as gateways to information intentionally skew the facts to incite their users in order to further their corporate interests.”

Oh ha ha. Ho. Ho. The MPAA talking about “skewing the facts to incite” anyone is just too much. 

“A so-called “blackout” is yet another gimmick, albeit a dangerous one, designed to punish elected and administration officials who are working diligently to protect American jobs from foreign criminals.”

Except for the part where this is completely false, it’s a valid point.

“It is our hope that the White House and the Congress will call on those who intend to stage this “blackout” to stop the hyperbole and PR stunts and engage in meaningful efforts to combat piracy.”

Riiiiiiight. Protesting to raise awareness of terrible legislation that will destroy the free and open Internet  is an abuse of power, but buying NINETY-FOUR MILLION DOLLARS worth of congressional votes is just fine.

I’m so disappointed in Chris Dodd. He was a pretty good senator, wrote some bills (like Dodd/Frank) that are genuinely helping people, and is going to be on the wrong side of every argument as head of the MPAA. What a wasted legacy.

October 26, 2011
We have lost our way.

We have lost our way.

(via akapearlofagirl)

September 18, 2011
cadavered:

“The Birds (Alfred Hitchcok)” themed Barbie Doll by Mattel.

It’s the end of the world as we know it, and her hair is perfect.

cadavered:

“The Birds (Alfred Hitchcok)” themed Barbie Doll by Mattel.

It’s the end of the world as we know it, and her hair is perfect.

August 20, 2011

(via majidrazvi)

April 30, 2011

Charlotte Perkins Gilman (1860-1935) was a utopian feminist before such a stance was fashionable (or even conceivable). In her career she wrote novels, short stories, and poetry. Her satiric poem Homes is one of my favorites.

Homes is in the form of a sestina. A sestina does not rhyme, but does use a complex “lexical repetition” formula to realize poetic effect. Almost a century later, Gilman’s scathing irony still packs a sting!



Homes
by Charlotte Perkins Gilman

We are the smiling comfortable homes,
With happy families enthroned therein,
Where baby souls are brought to meet the world,
Where women end their duties and desires,
For which men labor as the goal of life,
That people worship now instead of God.

Do we not teach the child to worship God?—
Whose soul’s young range is bounded by the homes
Of those he loves, and where he learns that life
Is all constrained to serve the wants therein,
Domestic needs and personal desires,—
These are the early limits of his world.

And are we not the woman’s perfect world,
Prescribed by nature and ordained of God,
Beyond which she can have no right desires,
No need for service other than in homes?
For doth she not bring up her young therein?
And is not rearing young the end of life?

And man? What other need hath he in life
Than to go forth and labor in the world,
And struggle sore with other men therein?
Not to serve other men, nor yet his God,
But to maintain these comfortable homes,—
The end of all a normal man’s desires.

Shall not the soul’s most measureless desires
Learn that the very flower and fruit of life
Lies all attained in comfortable homes,
With which life’s purpose is to dot the world
And consummate the utmost will of God,
By sitting down to eat and drink therein.

Yea, in the processes that work therein—
Fulfilment of our natural desires—
Surely man finds the proof that mighty God
For to maintain and reproduce his life
Created him and set him in the world;
And this high is best attained in homes.

Are we not homes? And is not all therein?
Wring dry the world to meet our wide desires!
We crown all life! We are the aim of God!

February 12, 2011
"

Corporations are people, and they own the news. Money is speech. We are fighting wars in Eurasia and Eastasia simultaneously. It’s cheaper to die if you get sick, unless you’re a car, in which case you are required to have insurance. Rape isn’t rape anymore, if you ask the right people. Being gay means the Bill of Rights isn’t for you. Having brown skin is original sin. Guns don’t kill people. Keep your damn government hands off my Medicare. Clean water is a socialist plot. The polar caps totally aren’t melting and stuff. Have some seafood from the Gulf of Mexico. Visit the 9th Ward in New Orleans. Your vote counts, especially in Ohio and Florida. American citizens don’t get “disappeared,” except for Jose Padilla…remember him? He doesn’t.

…but but but… Hosni Mubarak was a dictator who stole elections and reigned with an iron fist for 30 years. America isn’t like that. Right?

"

William Rivers Pitt, Truthout (via vruz)

February 12, 2011
“And more—much more than this—I did it my way!”—Paul Anka

“And more—much more than this—I did it my way!”

—Paul Anka