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24 March 2006 by nathaniel

General Zod For President, 2008

Things are hilarious over at Zod2008.com. A sampling:

General Zod for PresidentEliminate the Iraq War. The Iraq War has shifted $187 billion to the defense industry. How is this "defense industry" to kneel before me? Are my praises to be sung as footnotes in their paperwork? You will stop giving these corporations your wealth. I suggest you put the money into your own schools and health care, so that I may have intelligent, healthy servants. I will indulge your wishes if you all want a Westernized, unpopular regime in Iraq, and I too shall gloat in its troubles, but it will not be done at my expense.
Universal health care. Even a criminal like myself is shocked that millions are not able to get health insurance and cannot pay for basic surgery. Who are these power brokers that allow the pigpen to become wormy and filthy? I demand your very lives, but I am not such an imbecile as to institutionalize suffering and poverty. You have my assurance that this shall change swiftly.
Corporate reform. You people have become disgusting minions to these things you call "corporations". These things take your money and your land, put you into debt, send your jobs overseas, provide you with unsafe foods, and sue you when you say anything bad about them. Yet you people fatten them up at the ballot box. You give them free land, name your stadiums after them, allow them to telemarket you, and even sacrifice your own bankruptcy protections. Quite frankly it astonishes me. I will break this sickly codependency. It is I who shall be your ruler. I shall empower you with wealth to give me as tribute. A corporation cannot bow to me or give me tribute that comes from the heart.
You will buy U.S. made items. Why do you buy Chinese-made items when you know that it sells out the jobs of your family and friends? How will you buy those cheap things when you have no job? You are sending my wealth and tribute to foreign lands. I will not tolerate this.

…Kneel before Zod!!!…

Posted in news and politics, pop culture, re-blog tidbits, uncategorical ·

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23 March 2006 by nathaniel

The New American Myth

One of the greatest Myths propagated by the contemporary American neo-conservative powers that be is the idea that Democracy and Capitalism are one and the same, that the former cannot exist without the latter, and, most dangerously, that big company-led Capitalism Uber Alles actually leads to, promotes and protects what the Founding Fathers intended for our Democracy.

Yes, most developed and Democratic countries are regarded as capitalist, but the vast majority of them have some “combination of mixed economies, government-owned means of production, economic interventionism” (paraphrased from Wikipedia) and/or various socialist-inspired policies that insure the well being of their citizens and the world.

The Conservative movement, at least the version I grew up with, used to be based on a core value of small government – a kind of overarching mistrust of big powerhouses that controlled everything. In a government of, by and for the people, it seemed in line with the Revolutionary “no taxation without representation,” except that Conservatives wanted, both, little taxation, and small government: control of your own money, choices, rules – an almost libertarian approach to decision-making, with the occasional foray into public safety (such as Nixon’s commitment to the environment).

But two groups have mostly taken over the Conservative agenda since the 80s: the Christian Right and Corporate America. The former was needed as a base simply to win votes, and is mostly kept happy with ideological rhetoric and a faux born again Christian in the White House (“I guess I’m more of a practical fellow,” in response to the Biblical / Rapture questions around the War on Terror this week). The latter is far more dangerous.

Ironically, the Christian Right goes against my aforementioned base Conservative values. It wants government to restrict a woman’s right to choose, and take rights away from same sex couples, for example. These have become part of core Neo-Conservatism over the years.

But Big Business actually takes hypocrisy to whole new levels. Of course, they are fully behind exporting Democracy (Capitalism). The Iraq war turned, and continues to turn, huge profits for the likes of Halliburton et al, and was also meant to insure oil in our futures, McDonald’s and Coca-Cola in Iraq’s.

On the one hand, we have a 9 trillion dollar deficit, warrant-less wire-tapping, unprovoked war, an obliteration of checks and balances, not to mention the ridiculous subsidies Big Farmers get in our “Free Trade” – basically, the biggest government (and debt) in the history of our nation.

On the other, we have these same “Conservatives” screaming for tax cuts, no regulation on things like pollution, the only developed nation without universal health care – all in the guise of small government.

In between, we have a media mostly maintained by the same corporate sponsors who lobby in Washington by making “donations” to our governmental “representatives” – leaving very little room for accountability.

This is not conspiracy theory; this is Capitalism in the guise of Democratic policy, and it’s no longer controlled by The People if The People are misinformed. In a country where Democracy = Capitalism, Power and Freedom are inextricably linked to Capital: dollars and cents. The main links holding the Neo-Con agenda together are, simply, Corporate America profits. Corporate America has become the powerhouse Conservatism always warned against; but since they are one and the same, they are not complaining.

At a distance, I’m beginning to mourn for my birth-country. We are fighting for principles we do not uphold; we are giving up Freedoms in the name of Freedom; we are enabling commercials to sell us lies, and user-tested rhetoric and taglines to define our government. This is not Democracy; it’s 1984.

If you are not angry, you are not paying attention.

Posted in news and politics, pop culture, theory, uncategorical ·

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20 March 2006 by nathaniel

Andre SC’s take on Compressionism

Andre SC: Search our Family PhotosThere’s been a cross-blogging comment buzz between myself and Andre SC (fellow Jo’burger Andre Clemens – that link is to his prints in discussion) as of late, since he picked up on my Compressionist movement.  Trained in information theory and design, Andre has been crossing over into the fine art realm as of late – beginning with his PornAgain and NetPorn series (some featured at GordArt), and now working with ‘Search Engine Compressionism‘. Beautiful and interesting stuff, created using experimental, generative, iterative and sometimes performative algorithms (mixed with aesthetic decision-making here and there).

We’re talking about a live-ish generative net.art collaboration, potentially. Watch this space….

Left: Andre SC: Search our Family Photos

Posted in art, art and tech, Compressionism, me, pop culture, re-blog tidbits, reviews, south african art, stimulus, technology, theory, uncategorical ·

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15 March 2006 by nathaniel

Censure

Not a huge moveon fan myself – they just send too many annoying emails – but at this point, I’d do everything and anything in my power to support Feingold’s resolution.

Subject: Censure President Bush

Hi,

Yesterday, Senator Russ Feingold introduced a resolution to censure President Bush for breaking the law by illegally wiretapping American citizens.

When the president misleads the public and the Congress and willfully and repeatedly breaks the law, there need to be some consequences –that’s how the law works for everybody else.

Censuring the president is a reasonable first step in condemning the president’s actions. Now it’s up to us to show broad public support for Senator Feingold’s resolution. Can you sign this petition asking Congress to join the call for censure?

http://political.moveon.org/censure/

Thanks!

Posted in news and politics, pop culture, re-blog tidbits, uncategorical ·

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13 March 2006 by sean slemon

Snap Judgments at the I.C.P. and Rachel Whiteread

Theo Eshetu, Trip to Mount Ziqualla, Ethiopia, 2005 © Theo Eshetu, Image from the International Center for Photography
Theo Eshetu, Trip to Mount Ziqualla, Ethiopia, 2005 © Theo Eshetu, Image from the International Center for Photography

The new exhibition curated by Okwui Enwezor at the International Centre for Photography in New York has just recently opened.
This was a fantastic exhibition of photography, clearly indicative of the high level of contemporary African work, which is far more energetic, lively and real than any current American or European photography. I don’t claim to be any sort of expert on photography but the show really does prove it. Current western work just looks bland and boring next to this vibrant and important work. As the curatorial brief states, the artists have taken up a problematic or focused attention on social subjects. They deal with the reality of everyday living.
South African artists were well represented on the show- Moshekwa Langa, Zwelethu Mthethwa,  Jo Ractliffe, Tracy Rose,  Mikhael Subotzky, Guy Tillum and Nontsikilelo Veleko. Some were present at the opening – a packed gallery on 43rd street across the road from the ICP University.
The show is definitely worth a look if you can get over there, otherwise check out their website.

Another show that I saw, expecting something exciting, was Bibliography by Rachel Whiteread at the Luhring Augustine Gallery. I was particularly disappointed to find cast after cast of the inside of cardboard boxes.. A token cast was transferred to bronze to allude to that solid heavy expensive monumental feeling. Most of them were placed on shelves and under chairs- a reference to Bruce Nauman’s cast of the underneath space of a chair. I found her previous work exciting-House and her work for the Trafalgar square Plinth. Its had a solidity and austere atmosphere about it, but this show clearly demonstrates that she just hasn’t had a new idea in years. There were some collages as well which looked as if they had been put together on the flight over to New York. Shoddy and uncaring in their execution.
She seems to be just cashing in on her name now and this kind of thing upsets me. I cannot take it seriously at all when people who have previously done such grand work, are able to degenerate into work that is opportunistic and does ones reputation no good at all- www.luhringaugustine.com. A review by Ken Johnson can also be seen here on the New York Times site.
My new motto: Tell it like it is. Few people do in the artworld.

Posted in art, pop culture, reviews, sean slemon ·

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09 March 2006 by nathaniel

O…M…G

Now, I don’t feel as if I have a choice. I need more bandwidth. It’s time. Did you hear that both The Daily Show and The Colbert Report are now both available from iTunes?

Posted in news and politics, pop culture, re-blog tidbits, stimulus, technology ·
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