Category Archives: capitalism

Reader re-articulation against crap ads

Thanks to Chloe at feministing, I discovered #notcool the website which helps angry viewers to alter wretched ads.  Simply by adding “NOT COOL” in  spray paint style (MS Paint anyone?) the ads become a parry/response kind of read.

Although I like #notcool, I think there is a further discussion to be had about the symbolic energy sponge of angry web-based re-articulation.  I think this site might satisfy the desire to actually graffiti terrible advertisements.  I cheer on those who alter public space with graffiti and billboard modification, so I guess I just wish the response meme could somehow swamp or poison the brand.

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Filed under capitalism, communication, media, protest, resistance

Gambling against Obama

thanks to technorati.com for the image

Yesterday I bet my uncle $10 that Obama would lose the 2012 presidential election.  Here is why he thinks Obama will win:

So this is the deal that I think was offered to Obama back in 2005 or 2006: We will give you two terms, and guarantee the safety of you and your immediate family. But you will have to preside over the transfer of all of America’s remaining wealth from the middle class to the ultra-rich. You must do nothing whatsoever for poor people or immigrants or prisoners or people of color. You will not be allowed to do anything ”environmental.” Do nothing about climate change, or genetic engineering, or the health “care” and “insurance” scams, or about Big Pharma or agribusiness. Don’t do anything that interferes with business at all! In addition, you must escalate both wars until they hit deep quagmire. Nothing sells more weapons than quagmire!

via There Could Be A Revolution In America « Talkin’ Blues About The News.

Not a bad argument.   I’ll have a reply in a day or two.  If you have a perspective on the question feel free to express yourself in the comment section.

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Filed under capitalism, media, propaganda

Trademarking a Toucan?

Sociological images for the pics

Kellogg’s is suing the Maya Archaeology Institute (MAI), a non-profit Guatemalan organization aimed at protecting the local history, culture, and natural environment. Why? It uses a toucan in its logo.

For those of you who did not spend your youth eating highly sugared empty carbohydrates for breakfast, the toucan (specifically, Toucan Sam) is the mascot of Kellogg’s Froot Loops. The toucan is also a large-billed colorful bird indigenous to Central and South America, the Caribbean, and southern Florida.

via Capitalism, Animals, and the Ownership of Icons » Sociological Images.

That is so grimy.  The fight to own/control images, food, genetics, songs, language, and other shit people shouldn’t own is the showdown of this century.  Of course large corporations already have a leg up, by having purchased things like the rights to images of freaking toucans!

Thanks Margo DeMello for bringing this to my attention and sociological images for juxtaposing these two logos.

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Filed under capitalism, communication, propaganda

Nationalism and killing pigs

Interesting article in the LA Times about rising pork prices in China.  Good opportunity for analysis from the article on nationalism and meat eating.

China, by far the world’s biggest producer of pork, is home to about half the world’s porcine population with 460 million pigs. That’s about seven times more than the United States, the second-largest producer.

But it hasn’t been enough to keep a lid on prices, which have risen steeply since the middle of last year. That’s when Chinese farmers reduced production in response to high feed costs and shrinking profit margins. A spate of hog diseases also cut into the supply.

China’s government is so sensitive to the country’s appetite that it maintains a strategic reserve of 200,000 tons of frozen pork. It has tapped that secret stash in recent weeks to increase supply. But analysts said it will make little difference in a nation that consumes 100,000 tons of pork daily.

via China’s pork shortage hitting close to home, affecting economy – latimes.com.

My first thought is that this indicates the importance of pork consumption to the idea of the nation.  In the USA we keep some strategic oil reserves to ensure that there is a backup, but also to reassure Americans that their government is thinking about their oil future oil consumption.  It reassures and encourages healthy consumption.  Similarly, China’s frozen pig reserve indicates a selling of the idea of regular animal protein consumption to the citizenry.

After wondering if other meats will replace the value of pig in Chinese food, David Pearson, the article’s author, includes this reply:

Fat chance, said Shi Zhijun, owner of a Beijing restaurant that sells pork-filled steamed buns.

“Eating pork is good for people,” said the rotund 45-year-old, who uses pork for half the items on his menu. “Everybody should eat at least a half-jin [500 grams] every day. It’s very nutritious…. It helps people grow. If you don’t eat pork you will be very thin and weak.”

via China’s pork shortage hitting close to home, affecting economy – latimes.com.

This seems like another interesting western media strategy — the quirky ignorant quote from a foreigner.  I’m not going to scrap with this idea on the factual basis — pork as health food is in fact silly.  Instead, the quote’s inclusion seems like a key element of American media’s colonialist lens.  The notion of exotic other people who don’t know better, is the foundation of judgement and intervention.

It is this precise notion — they don’t know what they are doing — that lends to the well-intentioned, but devastating difference and quite often some sense of we must help.  The impulse to act to help is at the core of the colonial mission.  Of course, a pork bun seller would never suggest that his product was harmful.

In this case, the geopolitics associated with China make it unlikely that the United States will send a chicken promotional team to China (although stranger things have happened).

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Filed under Animals, capitalism, colonialism, food

Polishing the deck chairs on the titanic: climate change and boobs

We are doomed, for real.

I just watched a video with supermodels stripping while they narrate a bizarre rant about global warming.  Something about fifty parts per million.  This is the best that an active ecological movement can come up with?

1.  Layer this against people dying from global warming enhanced storms and diseases, flooding and wretched humans trying to survive in disaster zones.   The way to deal with this massive global change is not to get naked as the earth gets warmer.  Nor is it to gaze at supermodels hoping that people will be inspired. These ideas are dumb.

2.  The incentive for humans to want to address global warming should be self interest.  Do you want to cradle your dying loved ones in an atmosphere less hospitable to humans?  The advertisement suggests that the true incentive is to see some tits.  It is implied that if humans in the USA can reduce emissions sufficiently, then these models will strip fully naked instead of to their skivvies.  What a bargain.   I wonder if they got this in writing from the supermodels — some kind of hooker deal where they have to have sex with the director if humans can learn to live in a steady-state economy.

3.  Oppression of women and consumer fashion culture are part of global warming.  To layer more sexist and consumerist stuff (disney t-shirt in the strip show) as a placebo remedy is toxic.

No link or reference to the group or ad itself is intentional.  Why give them another platform.

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Filed under capitalism, communication, disaster, feminism, human rights, media, nature

Nature visible: Bodega cats

 

Thanks to Dallas Penn and the Internets Celebrities for this lovely film.  Check the rest of Dallas and Raffi’s vids and posts.  A+

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Filed under Animals, art, capitalism, nature

Capitalism visible: cosmetic surgery in Brazil

Interesting article about one of Brazil’s most famous plastic surgeons, who also a 2-bit philosopher.   I enjoyed the write up and noticed a few interesting moments.

1.  Capitalism is seldom visible.  But the cultivation of desires, and the normalizing of those desires can be noted.

When a good life is defined through the ability to buy goods then rights may be reinterpreted to mean not equality before the law, but equality in the market. One young man who lived in an area notorious for police violence said he longed to buy an imported car. While there is nothing unusual in this wish, what he said next surprised me: “That’s my dream. Rights for all.” This is perhaps a new idea of citizenship: social belonging depends on access to a particular standard of living.

via A ‘Philosophy’ of Plastic Surgery in Brazil – NYTimes.com.

2.  These changes are exceptionally fast.  Victorians believed cleft palette would ‘build character.’  To move from a normal space for a body to inhabit to an illness that needs remedy is pretty amazing.

Victorians saw a cleft palate as a defect that built character. For us it hinders self-realization and merits corrective surgery. This shift reflects a new attitude towards appearance and mental health: the notion that at least some defects cause unfair suffering and social stigma is now widely accepted.

via A ‘Philosophy’ of Plastic Surgery in Brazil – NYTimes.com.

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Filed under capitalism, disability, health

Onions and eggplant: the essence of life

India is ground zero for the intellectual property rights fight over food.  At this point, it’s basically corporations vs. the humans of the world.  Oops, Supreme court decided that corporations are people too.  But keep an eye on your nation’s key foods, cuz in India the fight is about onions and eggplants.

Now the National Biodiversity Authority of India (NBA) has dealt another blow: it has decided to sue the US biotech giant Monsanto and its Indian collaborators who developed the Bt brinjal.

The extraordinary decision by NBA is based on a complaint filed last year by the Bangalore-based Environment Support Group (ESG), alleging that the developers violated India’s Biological Diversity Act of 2002 by using local brinjal varieties in developing Bt Brinjal without prior approval from NBA. Leo F. Saldanha of ESG says his group is hopes NBA will not only launch the legal proceedings soon but also stop processing Monsanto’s recent application to work with two varieties of Indian onions.

via Nature News Blog: India’s biodiversity agency to sue Monsanto.

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Filed under capitalism, food

Economic snapshot: thrift store

I spend a lot of my time inside thrift stores looking for records.  I’ve noticed a massive increase of people shopping at the discount/recycled/donated stores.  I’m not the only one.

In case you needed more evidence of the gut-kick California’s economy has taken, consider this: Sales records have been shattered at thrifts in Oxnard, Long Beach and the Lincoln Heights store, said David Fields, executive director of the Society of St. Vincent de Paul. In April, cash registers at the 95,000-square-foot main store in Lincoln Heights rang up $349,158 in sales. That was 16.5% higher than the same month in 2010.

via Steve Lopez: Hard times are boom times for thrift stores – latimes.com.

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