Category Archives: representation

Based superstructure: apple sweatshop economics

Pretty good example of Apple’s race to the bottom in terms of semi-legal-seemingly-nice-guy-global-gangsta sweatshop economics.

Apple typically asks suppliers to specify how much every part costs, how many workers are needed and the size of their salaries. Executives want to know every financial detail. Afterward, Apple calculates how much it will pay for a part. Most suppliers are allowed only the slimmest of profits.

So suppliers often try to cut corners, replace expensive chemicals with less costly alternatives, or push their employees to work faster and longer, according to people at those companies.

via Apple’s iPad and the Human Costs for Workers in China – NYTimes.com.

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Filed under capitalism, colonialism, human rights, propaganda, representation

Puppets: more real than the judge

Channel 19 in Akron, Ohio was disappointed that it wouldn’t be allowed to take cameras into the corruption trial of Jimmy Dimora, a former county commissioner. But when life gives you SARS, you make sarsaparilla: they bring the courtroom proceeding to their viewers’ TV sets by re-enacting them with puppets.

via Puppets re-enact no-cameras-allowed corruption trial on the nightly news – Boing Boing.

It is an interesting moment when real life is understood through fantasy.  Situationists would call this detournement — to turn the medium around against itself.  To corrode the ideas of those who continue to think about this idea.  I bet a lot of people in Akron who talk about the corruption trial wind up including themselves in the ridiculous puppet world.

Even more powerfully, the puppets get replicated through the Interwebs, spreading the awareness of this trial far and wide.   It is a brilliant response to court censorship.

I also think it’s worth mentioning the racist stereotype of Suzanne, the sex worker whose puppet pigment and willingness to take money make her a true prop in the story.

See.  Even though I’m right, that sounds foolish. That is the power of detournement.

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Filed under art, communication, media, representation

Margaret Cho on accountability and fat jokes

Things I could say should be left unheard and unsaid because I am not willing to be the bigger person. I do not take the high road. I take the low road and blows below the belt are my absolute favorite. The best revenge is not living well. The best revenge is revenge. My mouth and mind and typing fingers are weapons of mass destruction and I pity those ignorant idiots who would leave insults about mine or any women’s bodies in comment boxes because there’s ways of hunting people down. Lots and lots of ways. It’s not as anonymous as they think, as stupid as they are.

via Margaret Cho Rightfully Loses Her Shit.

Thanks Jezebel for the linque!

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Filed under communication, feminism, media, representation

Juxtapostion: gendered LEGO

Artifact one:

Artifact 2:

Image from Sociological Images.

Lisa Wade has the brilliant exposition on this shift over at Sociological Images. 

(And how awesome is that first ad?)

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Filed under communication, feminism, representation

Consciousness and eating animals

I’ve been a vegetarian for almost twenty years.  For me it is easy, fun and a delicious.  I no longer see vegetarianism as a sacrifice in any way.  Eating is celebration and to eat vegetables is delightful.

Mark Bittmann, the New York Times food critic seems to be building a path to live with joyous cruelty-free food:

Many vegan dishes, however, are already beloved: we eat fruit salad, peanut butter and jelly, beans and rice, eggplant in garlic sauce. The problem faced by many of us — brought up as we were with plates whose center was filled with a piece of an animal — is in imagining less-traditional vegan dishes that are creative, filling, interesting and not especially challenging to either put together or enjoy.

My point here is to make semi-veganism work for you. Once a week, let bean burgers stand in for hamburgers, leave the meat out of your pasta sauce, make a risotto the likes of which you’ve probably never had — and you may just find yourself eating “better.”

These recipes serve about four, and in all, the addition of salt and pepper is taken for granted. This is not a gimmick or even a diet. It’s a path, and the smart resolution might be to get on it.

via No Meat, No Dairy, No Problem – NYTimes.com.

Kudos to Bittmann for the column, approach, and recipes.  To have veganism be the suggestion for New Years resolutions is wonderful.  The New York Times, one of the most venerable newspapers in North America offers a marker of the persuasiveness of vegan choice in the current public dialogue.

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Filed under Animals, communication, food, health, representation

Einstein and rhetoric of science

Wow.  Talk about an intro to place Einstein in the modernist frame.

Thanks to What the fuck have you done for the relatively cool connect.

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Filed under academics, communication, documentary, representation

Changing culture about head injuries

The rapid pace of cultural transformation on some health issues has been pretty impressive.  Think about how quick major public conversations about health and safety have been about tobacco, seatbelts, and trans-fats.  In these cases it didn’t take long for laws to be changed based on health concerns.

I  think we are on the verge of a new way of thinking about head injuries and sports.  Probably one that will come with new laws and regulations.  As a marker of these changes let us note that several NFL players are suing the league for it’s antiquated approach to head injuries.

Furthermore, the court documents say the league concealed the dangers from coaches, trainers, players and the public until June 2010, when it publicly acknowledged the health threats and warned players and teams.

“While athletes in other professional sports who had suffered concussions were being effectively ‘shut down’ for long periods of time or full seasons, NFL protocol was to return players who had suffered concussions to the very game in which the injury occurred,” the lawsuit states.

via Ex-NFL Players Jamal Lewis, Dorsey Levens & Two Others Sue League Over Concussions | BALLERSTATUS.com.

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Filed under communication, disability, health, representation

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

All-American Muslim, profit and representation of Islam

Several prominent US businesses have withdrawn advertising from the television show All-American Muslims.  They were pressured by right wing anti-Muslim groups who believe the show humanizes humans.

Well dang.

Here is Edward Said explaining the early days when there were only a few dozen so-called-experts who exploited the moral panic over Islam to earn money.

There’s a whole group of these people, numbering thirty or forty, who are trundled out whenever there’s a crisis, a hostage crisis, a hijacking, a massacre of some sort or another, to demonstrate the necessary connection between Islam, Arab culture and the Arab character, as it’s sometimes referred to, or the Islamic character and random violence.  To my mind, the great misfortune is that these Orientalists whose role is to understand, to interpret the culture of Islam and the Arabs, and it’s a culture from which they earn their living, and in fact have no sympathy with it.  They deal with it from an adversarial and oppositional position.

– Said & Barsamian The Pen and the Sword 1994 p.27-28

Thanks to Feministe we get a list of the cowardly businesses who bowed to pressure.

Anyway, the companies who pulled their ads include Lowe’s, Bank of America, the Campbell Soup Co., Dell, Estee Lauder, General Motors, Goodyear, Green Mountain Coffee, McDonalds, Sears, and Wal-Mart. So many don’t give your money to those companies this holiday season? Or call Lowe’s CEO Robert Niblock at (704) 758-2084 or Executive Support Mr. Andrew Kilby at (866) 900-4650 and let them know what you think about this decision (keep it respectful, please).

via Ads pulled from All-American Muslim — Feministe.

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Filed under academics, colonialism, 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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Filed under communication, music, representation