Category Archives: communication

RIP Slim Dunkin

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Primate Freedom 2012

An imprisoned chimp in Louisiana where they do Hepetitis C research. Photo by Tim Meuller in the NYT

Nice to hear that the United States has decided to stopped funding research on Chimpanzees. I’m not feeling the excemptions:

The committee identified two areas where it said the use of chimpanzees could be necessary. One is research on a preventive vaccine for hepatitis C. The committee could not agree on whether this research fit the criteria and so left that decision open.

In the second area, research on immunology involving monoclonal antibodies, the committee concluded that experimenting on chimps was not necessary because of new technology, but because the new technology was not widespread, projects now under way should be allowed to reach completion.

via U.S. Suspends Use of Chimps in New Research – NYTimes.com.

It does seem like a victory for some of the cultural arguments about animal rights.  The statement by the director of the National Institute of Health begins with these explanations:

Chimpanzees are our closest relatives in the animal kingdom, providing exceptional insights into human biology and the need for special consideration and respect. While used very selectively and in limited numbers for medical research, chimpanzees have served an important role in advancing human health in the past. However, new methods and technologies developed by the biomedical community have provided alternatives to the use of chimpanzees in several areas of research.

via Statement by NIH Director Dr. Francis Collins on the Institute of Medicine report addressing the scientific need for the use of chimpanzees in research, December 15, 2011 News Release – National Institutes of Health (NIH).

Lets note that the development of scientific alternatives is a key theme that Collins uses to justify his decision.  This suggests there are tangible rewards for those activists who focus on the alternatives to animals in scientific research.

Collins’ argument about the closeness of Chimps to humans is a non-starter for me — I sympathize with all beings that can suffer regardless of cuteness or similarity to me.  I also think  it is a temporary persuader for most people.

But in this case, twenty years of making arguments into the public sphere about primates has saturated the knowledge frame of a few decision-makers.

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Filed under Animals, communication, learning, protest, representation

Fugazi live recordings

I love Fugazi.  My high school and college years are infused with the tracks from the first two albums.   Turns out the band has been recording all their shows.  They are going to release the audio of all 850 live show recordings to the public.  The advantage is to hear some of the awesome songs, but also to get some of that patented Fugazi-audience interactions on tape.

“There’s a really great show from Munich, in I think the early ’90s, ’93,” MacKaye says. “At that time, it was pretty typical for the audience to say things like, ‘Get on with it!’ and ‘Play the music! Just play!’ I remember we had come back on stage for an encore, and somebody was lost or confused, or I don’t know; something had happened and somebody needed help. So we were trying to say, ‘Hey, there’s a woman back here, she’s lost and she’s looking for her friends.’ And some guy was just yelling, ‘Get on with it! Just play!’ And at that moment, I understood the dynamic, what was going on in this relationship, where he was a consumer and wanted to consume. He wanted sound. So at that moment, we just all turned on our guitars and started feedback, and it was a wall of feedback. And it was like, ‘Okay, here’s sound. You just want sound.’ There was no actual engagement with the music; it was just sound they wanted.

“So it’s maybe five minutes of just feedback. It was a totally surreal moment, and when I hear that, I can smell that moment. It’s so visceral to me, but it’s one of my favorites, because we go right into a song from that. I’m not sure that’s even up yet, but it’ll show up.”

via WHAT THE FUCK HAVE YOU DONE?: NPR discusses FUGAZI’s new live series website with Ian “Steady Diet Of Everything: The Fugazi Live Vault”.

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Groupthink and the border patrol

How do they get all those border officers to think alike?  They fire the dissident ones.

Stationed in Deming, N.M., Mr. Gonzalez was in his green-and-white Border Patrol vehicle just a few feet from the international boundary when he pulled up next to a fellow agent to chat about the frustrations of the job. If marijuana were legalized, Mr. Gonzalez acknowledges saying, the drug-related violence across the border in Mexico would cease. He then brought up an organization called Law Enforcement Against Prohibition that favors ending the war on drugs.

Those remarks, along with others expressing sympathy for illegal immigrants from Mexico, were passed along to the Border Patrol headquarters in Washington. After an investigation, a termination letter arrived that said Mr. Gonzalez held “personal views that were contrary to core characteristics of Border Patrol Agents, which are patriotism, dedication and esprit de corps.”

via Officers Punished for Supporting Eased Drug Laws – NYTimes.com.

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Double down objectification: turkey bowling

Thanks to national geographic for the photo of a living turkey

An advertisement for Turkey bowling jumped out at me today.  I said the words aloud to see if they made any more sense: “Turkey bowling.  Turkey bowling.”  Hmm, not really.

A local casino is offering a promotion where punters attempt to throw a frozen turkey down a makeshift bowling alley.  Huh?

Easy enough to explain: animals become objects when killed.  To insulate reflection against the ethics of the dead animal erupting, humans are encouraged to treat the newly-deceased animal as a stand-in for some other object.   Reflection about the mass slaughter of turkeys is less likely when the turkey becomes the bowling ball.

 

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Thinkin’ Turkey

I’m a vegetarian.  Don’t eat the thanksgiving bird.  It’s easy.  If a being had a mom and has a face — don’t eat it.

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Filed under Animals, communication, juxtaposition, representation

Visibility of power: controlling the message on #occupy wallstreet

Thanks to Democracy Now! and MSNBC for unveiling the corporate lobbying group that has offered to the American Banking Association to undermine #occupy wallstreet.

According to MSNBC, the lobbying firm Clark Lytle Geduldig & Cranford sent the memo to the American Bankers Association and offered to conduct “opposition research” on Occupy Wall Street in order to construct “negative narratives” for a fee of $850,000. The memo advises the ABA to take the movement seriously, writing: “It may be easy to dismiss OWS as a ragtag group of protesters but they have demonstrated that they should be treated more like an organized competitor who is very nimble and capable of working the media, coordinating third party support and engaging office holders to do their bidding. To counter that, we have to do the same.” The memo goes on to warn the ABA that Democratic victories in 2012 would be detrimental for Wall Street and suggests the financial industry focus its energy on specific races that would lead to Republican elections.

via Washington Lobbying Firm Offers to Undermine Occupy Movement on Behalf of Wall Street.

In times of crisis, arguments about power become more visible.  In this case, we get to see the generation of propaganda at the stage of inception and amplification.

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Filed under capitalism, communication, media, propaganda, resistance

Dumb arguments about breastfeeding

Just to speed  up your life, Feministe has outlined the more idiotic arguments against public breastfeeding.

Here are the tired, stretched-out, armpit-stained arguments that won’t fly:

1. Breastfeeding is comparable to pooping. One is food at the beginning, the other is food at the end. One has everything the body needs, the other is everything the body has decided it doesn’t need. Changing a diaper != breastfeeding. (Also, public sex != breastfeeding.)

2. Breasts are sexytime. For some people, necks and knees and earlobes are just as erogenous as breasts, and yet we’re allowed to walk around in shorts and boatneck tops. And unlike the aforementioned body parts, breasts can be used to feed people.

3. Breastfeeding is a private, intimate moment between mother and baby. And dinner is a private, intimate moment between me and my cheeseburger. Breastfeeding = hungry baby + accommodating, lactating woman. Which is not to say that breastfeeding isn’t intimate–and natural and beautiful, too–but it’s also functional.

4. Breastfeeding should take place in bathrooms. Generally, private, intimate moments in public restrooms are frowned upon (and that’s a mistake you only make once–sorry again, Georgia Dome!), but apparently it is appropriate to feed a helpless infant in a place where people are pooping.

5. Moms can always pump or use formula. Not every woman can pump, not every baby will take a bottle, and even then trying to schedule the pumping and the feeding and the toting of perishable bodily fluids can be a hassle.

6. Ew, I don’t want to see that. Yeah? Well, I don’t want to see your FACE.

via Extreme Debate Makeover: Public breastfeeding edition — Feministe.

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How do you know if it’s propaganda: Iran edition

I guess a large explosion has erupted in Tehran.  Iran proclaims that it had nothing to do with the United States or Israel.  No news here right?  Wrong!  Check out the last paragraph in this L.A. Times write up:

Exonerating archenemies Israel and the United States from any foul deed seems to some a peculiar turn of events, likely deserving further inquiry. An uneasy Iranian populace, steeped in intrigue and conspiracy theories, sometimes assumes the opposite of what its leaders say.

via Iran, again: No U.S. or Israeli mischief in explosion – latimes.com.

Huh, that’s interesting.  I wonder if that kind of criticism happens in the United States?

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Filed under capitalism, communication, propaganda, representation

Heteronormativity and penguins

Buddy and Pedro are two male penguins who bond and nest together.  The Toronto zoo is breaking up this male/male relationship to force the penguins to reproduce with female penguins.

Buddy and Pedro are originally from a zoo in Toledo, Ohio, and were bonded before the reached the Metro Zoo. Twenty-one year old Buddy had a female partner for ten years with whom we produced offspring but she is now deceased. Ten year old Pedro has never produced offspring and the zoo feels it’s their job to ensure that the penguins are matched with females and bred.

Buddy and Pedro are not the first same-sex animal pair, nor even the first same-sex penguin couple. In 2004 a pair of same-sex chinstrap penguins named Roy and Silo at New York City’s Central Park zoo incubated, hatched and raised a chick together, a female named Tango. Tango’s birth was the subject of a popular and controversial children’s book called And Tango Makes Three by Peter Parnell and Justin Richardson.

A pair of male penguins at a zoo in Germany also successfully hatched a chick. It is almost rarer to find an animal species wherein there is not same-sex pairing than it is to find a completely heterosexual animal species. Same-sex pairings have been observed in elephants, giraffes, dolphins, apes, lions, sheep, swans, hyenas and vultures. The list of same-sex pairings in insects and marine species is too long to list.

via » Marriage of the Penguins Gender Focus – A Canadian Feminist Blog.

Humans like to use specific animal case studies to help confirm their own stories about how humans have to act.   In essence by finding animals in the world who act in certain manners, humans extrapolate that there is a universal drive or that particular behavior is natural in other species. This is biological essentialism.

Considering this case of same-sex animals, one might ask if the science is being used by leftists to support the naturalness of human homosexuality?

Sure, I guess that is probably true in this case.  Humans are story-loving animals, and we generally want to gather information which supports our prevailing points of view.  But how we get the stories which are the foundations of our own beliefs — in this case nature or nurture — is the real question. Schools, clergy, parents, books, authority figures, and anecdotes we’ve collected invite us to invest in some particular ways of understanding.   Some communications corrode against other communications.   One example is same-sex coupling in animals:

For more than a century, this kind of observation was usually tacked onto scientific papers as a curiosity, if it was reported at all, and not pursued as a legitimate research subject. Biologists tried to explain away what they’d seen, or dismissed it as theoretically meaningless — an isolated glitch in an otherwise elegant Darwinian universe where every facet of an animal’s behavior is geared toward reproducing. One primatologist speculated that the real reason two male orangutans were fellating each other was nutritional.

via Can Animals Be Gay? – NYTimes.com.

Sexuality in nature appears to be quite diverse and hard to map out in any deterministic fashion.  Language, words and the human desire for classification spin stories from observations.  These lived realities then influence how we exist in the world.

Communications give birth to us.  They also mark the ideas of the past, making visible our often embarrassing intellectual histories.  The desire to open up those old ideas with more thoughtful understandings is valuable.  More importantly, it is fruitful to be reflective about how we self-constitute our ideas about sexuality.

 

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Filed under Animals, communication, human rights, learning, nature