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A summary of the most interesting stories in the past 24 hours that challenge the prevailing orthodoxy about the ?climate emergency?, public health ?crises? and the supposed moral defects of Western civilisation.
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Don't Mention the War Didn't Work

category dublin | miscellaneous | feature author Monday June 14, 2004 00:29author by Noise Hacker Report this post to the editors

'Government Kicked Out of Dublin' sez Wag, 'So What Next?'

"We must all appear before the judgment that each may be repaid for his deeds in the body, according to what he has done, whether good or bad" intones Poet.

So the left are in power in Dublin? Any chance of a free train to Limerick on the 25th for your 'Obedient Citizens' ?

Election Posters Bothering You?
Bye Bye Agressive Rats?
CWI statement on Socialist Party Election
Left Wing Election Races - Being the Tallyman
Fingal CoCo Results

'Street Art' Photo-Essay continues at this link

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author by Noise Producerpublication date Fri Jun 11, 2004 16:21author address author phone Report this post to the editors

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author by Noise Machinepublication date Fri Jun 11, 2004 16:24author address author phone Report this post to the editors

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author by conor (wsm personal capacity)publication date Fri Jun 11, 2004 16:26author address author phone Report this post to the editors

these are really excellent -! well done artists and photographer

Conor

Related Link: http://www.struggle.ws
author by Noise Designerpublication date Fri Jun 11, 2004 16:28author address author phone Report this post to the editors

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author by Noise = Unwanted Soundpublication date Fri Jun 11, 2004 16:32author address author phone Report this post to the editors

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author by The Art of Noisepublication date Fri Jun 11, 2004 16:34author address author phone Report this post to the editors

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author by Aris Antainepublication date Sat Jun 12, 2004 22:22author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Gerry Ryan on 2FM identified this behaviour pattern as the “You’re Not the Boss of Me” syndrome (you need to say it in an angst-ridden studenty “Kevin The Teenager” type accent to get the whole deal on intent). Most of us grow out of it. Some clearly don’t.

And so, here we go again. That inviolate godhead of “street art”. Vandalism, masquerading as some the alternative, independent (of who?) voice for the “voiceless”. Yes, that convenient media agent for “popular” political agitation, free of repressive, capitalist ideology (impossible). They tell us it’s the voice of the streets, of the kids, of real people, of the key issues, of the er, “grassroots”. This so-called “art” provides a handy device for the intellectual tyrants (and clearly artistically challenged) to interpret everyone else’s lives and criticize every damn facet of the community except them. Meanwhile, this cloak of socio-political infallibility provides them with the means them to appear aloof from “authority” while maintaining an ideological position even when they are proven wrong.

This scribbling on walls is just more of the same dishonest, narcissistic, hypocritical message. Indicative of a small group of character-resentment ridden windbags, a faction that has become a byword for knee jerk reaction, blinkered thinking, distorted facts, unattributed information, lies, hysteria and opinionated pontificating. A deluded, paranoid world of conjectured association and never established causation...

author by curiouspublication date Sat Jun 12, 2004 22:28author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Were you referring to Gerry Ryan and the Montrose establishment ?

QUOTE " .... windbags ... a byword for knee jerk reaction, blinkered thinking, distorted facts, unattributed information, lies, hysteria and opinionated pontificating. A deluded, paranoid world of conjectured association and never established causation..."

author by Gasogianpublication date Sun Jun 13, 2004 03:17author address author phone Report this post to the editors

People look at this rubbish and say "stupid kids, they haven't a clue".

author by Observerpublication date Sun Jun 13, 2004 06:01author address author phone Report this post to the editors

This is an exact copy of a comment made on an articule in April 04.

¿What is Street Art?
by Tone Ore Thursday, Apr 22 2004, 4:45am
toneore@eircom.net

Follow the link to see it:

http://www.indymedia.ie/newswire.php?story_id=64484

author by Davidpublication date Sun Jun 13, 2004 11:17author address author phone Report this post to the editors

The people who say "stupid kids etc" are the same people who vote FF and PD and pay their bin tax and then complain when the charges go up and the hospitals fall on their arse because of a little flu epidemic...

By necessity, if you believe something, you believe you are right. The problem with most of 'civil society' is that they don't believe anything except that they want to get through life with as little inconvenience as possible.

author by anony moosepublication date Sun Jun 13, 2004 21:28author address author phone Report this post to the editors

What are the authors of above trying to achieve exactly? Is there some sinister sociopathic hitherto-unseen anacho-nazi element out there lying in wait until the time is ripe to overthrow capitalism, democracy and (presumably) their schoolteachers and parents? Oh No! I blame the nasty police state for restricting their access to more traditional, mentally challenging youth pastimes, such as theft from the person or joyriding.

author by anony moosepublication date Sun Jun 13, 2004 21:36author address author phone Report this post to the editors

just to add to the above, that poster of the person in the balaclava has other connotations. It's not a million miles away from the more offensive murals one might find in certain parts of belfast. A great many Irish people may well find such an image deeply disturbing, sinister and offensive. People posting such muck deserve a kick in the arse for their troubles. Rubbish like that is not even worthy of discourse.

author by Gaillimhedpublication date Mon Jun 14, 2004 16:04author address author phone Report this post to the editors

I dont know, i think its just people trying to EXPRESS themselves. You know in a FREE manner.
FREE EXPRESSION.

That phrase sounds sort of familiar.

Thankfully the walls and hoardings of our nations cities stikll provide temporary space for the free expression of ideas, ideals, threats, subversion, intimidation and protest.

The writing is on the wall, and i for one find it hugely informative to keep an eye on the scribblings, (even when its neo-nazis and racists telling their story too).
who knows maybe if FF had been reading and heeding the rabbles scribbles they might have kept a few seats.

author by tompublication date Mon Jun 14, 2004 17:49author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Why do people get so hot and bothered about this sort of creativity while ignoring the fact that every tiny bit of space on walls ,bridges ,hoardings-even on toilet doors nowadays -is appropriated by capitalist advertising ?
It's alright to deface the streets of our cities with the visual garbage of the ad agencies so long as you can afford to pay for the space -is that it? . So , Burger King can have their say but not somebody on the dole who opposes the occupation of Iraq .
I'm going out with my spray can over the next week or two and I advise anybody who has never tried it before to give it a go . It's a great bit of craic and ,as the photos show , can be very artistic indeed .I particularly liked the stencilled portrait of George Bush. Indymedia should run a yearly contest where people can vote for their favourite piece of graffiti .

author by -publication date Mon Jun 14, 2004 20:13author address author phone Report this post to the editors

we are the merrrrrrovinjans!
bam bam bam bimby bam bam bam
bambi bambi bambi bimby bam bambam
120 beats a minute.
we are over the horizon!

link to the Global village - http://paris.indymedia.org/article_propose.php3?id_article=22037
link to the Global village - http://paris.indymedia.org/article_propose.php3?id_article=22037

Related Link: http://www.indymedia.ie/newswire.php?story_id=65482
author by redjadepublication date Tue Jun 15, 2004 05:07author address author phone Report this post to the editors

''Boredom is counterrevolutionary''

http://bopsecrets.org/CF/graffiti.htm

author by redjadepublication date Tue Jun 15, 2004 05:52author address author phone Report this post to the editors

This is the problem: The Bush Administration has aggressively concealed the numbers, names and faces of the dead — pretending that the war has neither victims nor consequences.


The media has been compromised by Republican financial interests and the State department, unwillingly participating in a whitewash. For example, Bush campaign donors recently blocked 65 million Americans from seeing ABC’s broadcast of names and faces of the dead. And for example, Tami Silicio, a Pentagon contractor, took photos of coffins being loaded onto plane in Kuwait. She was fired after her pictures appeared in the Seattle Times.

If truth is the first casualty of war, then this time, truth is war’s atrocity. Whether you support or oppose the war in Iraq, it’s easy to agree that suppressing information is undemocratic, and it belittles the sacrifices that have been made. How can we feel righteous about something we’re trying to hide?

Signal Orange is a project to make the invisible visible — which is a premise and prerequisite for democracy. The goal of Signal Orange is to unveil the faces that the Bush Administration wants hidden — and to stop pretending that its actions in Iraq are inconsequential.

prewitt_f.gif

Related Link: http://www.signalorange.net/
author by redjadepublication date Tue Jun 15, 2004 05:57author address author phone Report this post to the editors

.

iSubvertise.
iSubvertise.

Related Link: http://www.angelfire.com/vamp/warposter/
author by redjadepublication date Tue Jun 15, 2004 06:03author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Modern brand advertising depends on repetition.
Since the advent of marketing, advertisers have spent their careers discovering the importance of insinuating their way into the actual lives of consumers, rather than just their wallets. As public attention spans grew shorter and shorter, the advertising world realized that the days of full-page ads extolling the virtues of their product--explaining how it would cure all of their ails, painting a picture of a better life if only you were part of its satisfied consumer base--were over. Repetition--simple, to the point, memorable--was key. Advertising with a sales pitch--with any message at all--began to seem rather desperate when Coca-Cola could just as effectively win the hearts and dollars of a nation with the simple words "Drink Coke." In the end, brand name recognition--without any qualifier--is the end-all, be-all goal of advertising. To be able to conjure a gut reaction to a product simply by hearing its name is the mark of effective saturation of the buying public. When even people who don't use your products can still describe them, sing your advertising jingle, or recognize your pitchman on the street, you know you have a successful ad campaign.

retag.
retag.

Related Link: http://conglomco.org/retag/
author by iosaf - subverts.publication date Tue Jun 15, 2004 17:41author address author phone Report this post to the editors

One of the most successful techniques of counter advertising "subvertising" or "ad busting" is to piggy back the deep resonance product identification of the product.
In the ultimate years this has led to highly succesful subvertising campaigns being led by the very corporations who pay to promote their product. We increasingly see this in car advertising. It is quite apparant that those who work in the agencies to develop new car adverts, also share sympathy with the movement to end mass car use. They may present their project as being tailored to a specific market niche, but "our" message carries to more. It's an example of "doublespeak", if one is not familiar with the language be it jargon, codified, slang, or visual you miss the point completely. Thus I and my subvertising pals were happy to see the last Renault campaign (as just one example) which linked "literal branding of the hand" ( a very apocalyptic image) with dark endtime skies, and matrix style towerblocks", the directors of Renault obviously bought the pitch "your buyers will feel secure in a Renault in insecure times" but we felt the clear majority of the non-Renault buying public got the connection "Car use = Petrol Use = global warming = endtime bablon game time". I think most advertising is now to some extent prejudiced by subvertising sucesses. And in the next ten years that will indeed make for very interesting advertising campaigns. But at the same time slightly more "sussed" and "savy" executives and politicians will get to the boardroom and maybe, we will stop getting free global advertising.

anyway a god stencil, is remembered, and like a good slogan will be snapped up by some poor advertising sod, who will sell it to some Beta Executive. The deltas around you will say "you fool, you gave them a fortune", you should just remember no matter who "owns" the message, it may not so easily be changed if designed well in the first place, it is intended to be "stolen".

Some politicians in Ireland and the UK are learning that to their chagrin this week. It will only take another generation before they have learnt not to employ spin doctors, advertising agencies and go back to writing their own possibly more truthful speeches.

"an end to government by marketing".

author by seedotpublication date Tue Jun 15, 2004 17:53author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Food not bombs, RTS, Indymedia, Social Forum etc. etc. These have many of the features of brands, have proved to have both a global reach and the ability to adapt to the local market in innovative ways.

Subvertising has thought the 'movement' important lessons which it is using to create global, flexible, identifiable structures which unite but do not control our activity. Or maybe graffiti is just fun

author by Firewomanpublication date Thu Jun 17, 2004 14:06author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Grafitti of this nature is a visual reminder that not everyone agrees with the status quo , in that, it is valuable.

author by Noise Hackerpublication date Thu Jun 17, 2004 16:03author address author phone Report this post to the editors

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author by Noise Producerpublication date Thu Jun 17, 2004 16:04author address author phone Report this post to the editors

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