szmtag

Chris Woods’ Consumerism-Artworks

Schöne Gemälde von Chris Woods. Consumerism ist als Motiv zwar seit einer ganzen Weile ziemlich totgeritten, aber ich mag die Sachen trotzdem aus irgendeinem Grund. (via Mashculture)

Capitalism is evil, now proven by Science (and mice!)

In einem Experiment haben Wissenschaftler Belege dafür gefunden, dass wirtschaftliche Entscheidungen am Markt die Wertschätzung anderer Lebewesen beeinträchtigt. Konkret ging es darum, Überschüsse an Labormäusen aufzukaufen, die andernfalls getötet werden würden. Die Probanden haben durchaus bezahlt, die wirtschaftlichen Verhandlungen aber haben die Preise gedrückt. Daraus folgt, dass wirtschaftliches Handeln den moralischen Kompass verändert und das Leben der Mäuse an Wert verliert: Capitalism is evil.

The possibility that market interaction may erode moral values is a long-standing, but controversial, hypothesis in the social sciences, ethics, and philosophy. To date, empirical evidence on decay of moral values through market interaction has been scarce. We present controlled experimental evidence on how market interaction changes how human subjects value harm and damage done to third parties.

In the experiment, subjects decide between either saving the life of a mouse or receiving money. We compare individual decisions to those made in a bilateral and a multilateral market. In both markets, the willingness to kill the mouse is substantially higher than in individual decisions. Furthermore, in the multilateral market, prices for life deteriorate tremendously.

Morals and Markets (via Improbable Research)

Molly Crabapples Shell Game: CC-Release in HighRes

Molly Crabapple hatte am 1. Mai ihre Gemäldeserie Shell Game, über die ich schon ein paar mal gebloggt hatte, unter CC in HighRes veröffentlicht:

Today is May Day. The day of workers, immigrants, beautiful young girls, and rebellion. I’m releasing all the art from SHELL GAME on Creative Commons. Share. Remix. Make art. Wheatpaste the world.

SHELL GAME: CREATIVECOMMONS RELEASE

Cosmarxpolitan: Get the Apparatchik Aesthetic!

Fantastisches Tumblr: Cosmarxpolitan. Hätte eigentlich gestern besser gepasst, aber Kapitalismuskritik geht ja auch so immer. Wird sicher die neue Lieblingszeitschrift der FDP. (via AnimalNY)

10 Ways to please the urban proletariat! Viva La Ereccion! Hot new interrogation tips and tricks straight from the secret police! Fun fearless Freedom from the Oppression of Capitalism!

Flashgame: Tax Evaders

Hübsches Flashgame: Tax Evaders, Steuer hinterziehende Firmen und Konzerne und Offshore-Bankster als Space Invaders inklusive Vorstellung der einzelnen Business-Aliens mit weiterführenden Links und Schnickschnack. Und: Ein kleines Flashgame ist jetzt bereits aufklärerisch allemal besser, als #Offshoreleaks und der „größte Datenleak der Geschichte“, für den sich Holzmedienjournalisten grade feiern lassen und wo genau nichts passiert. Ich übertreibe natürlich, aber bislang war da vor allem viel heiße Luft zu lesen, leider. Jedenfalls: Tax Evaders, nettes Flashgame.

Incredibly, some of the wealthiest, most powerful corporations pay less than you or I do in taxes. While the rest of us pay our fair share, these corporate Tax Evaders are stealing nearly $100 Billion a year out of our national economy – every year. Meanwhile, drastic cuts to our public services are taking place, threatening social security, health care, education, and much more.

It’s time to stop talking about cuts, and start talking about the corporations who have changed the laws in order to avoid paying their fair share. It’s time to make them pay. Join us in shining a light on corporate Tax Evaders.

Tax Evaders (via Free Indiegames)

Facebook pays no taxes 2012

Facebook wird für das Jahr 2012 keine Steuern abführen müssen, obwohl sie einen Gewinn von 1,1 Millarden Dollar angemeldet hatten. Im Gegenteil: Sie werden aufgrund von Steuerbefreiungen 429 Millionen Dollar vom Staat ausgezahlt bekommen. Hooray, Capitalism!

Even though Facebook (FB) reported $1.1 billion in pre-tax profits from U.S. operations in 2012, it will probably pay zero federal and state taxes—and even receive a federal tax refund of about $429 million—according to a Feb. 14 statement from Citizens for Tax Justice. […]

You won’t find any $429 million tax refund in Facebook’s financial statements. Indeed, the company says it had a $559 million federal tax liability in 2012. But that liability isn’t an actual payment. In a footnote, the company also said that it had a $1.03 billion “excess tax benefit” last year related to “stock option exercises and other equity awards.” That benefit is what flips the federal tax liability into a refund.

Facebook Gets a Multibillion-Dollar Tax Break (Bild: Sign announcing Facebook IPO via Shutterstock)

Horsemeat Burgers

In Aldis und Lidls in Irland und UK hat man Pferdefleisch in den Burgern gefunden. Die haben 27 Produkte getestet, in mehr als einem Drittel waren Pferde drin. Und „Produkt“ heisst in dem Kontext, dass da nicht mal versehentlich ein Pferd in den Mixer gefallen ist, sondern dass die das systematisch verarbeitet haben. Warum überrascht mich das jetzt nicht im geringsten? Und warum krieg ich jetzt Hunger?

Horse DNA has been found in some beef burgers being sold in UK and Irish supermarkets, the Republic of Ireland’s food safety authority (FSAI) has said. […] In the Republic of Ireland they were on sale in Dunnes Stores, Lidl and Aldi.

The FSAI said the retailers stated that they were removing all implicated batches of the burgers. A total of 27 products were analysed, with 10 of them containing horse DNA and 23 containing pig DNA.

Horsemeat found in beef burgers on sale in UK and Ireland

A Mobile Phone for 60 Rats

Fängste in Südafrika 60 Ratten, kriegste vom Sponsor ein Handy geschenkt. Easy.

As it was in medieval Hamelin, so it is today in the South African township of Alexandra: wherever you go, you are never far from a rat. In an attempt to fight back, city officials have distributed cages and the mobile phone company 8ta has sponsored the volunteer ratcatchers. Resident Joseph Mothapo says he has won two phones and plans to get one for each member of his family. ‘It’s easy,’ he told South Africa’s Mail & Guardian newspaper, wielding a large cage containing rats. ‘You put your leftover food inside and the rats climb in, getting caught as the trap door closes.’

South Africans offered free phone for every 60 rats caught

Inside a big ass Corporate Online-Monitoring Controll Room

 Youtube Direktcorps

Reuters hat sich die „Mission Control“ für Nestlés Online-Monitoring angesehen, die täglich die globale Kommunikation auf Twitter und Facebook und auf Blogs überwachen und bei aufkommenden Shitstorms „eingreift“. Ich wusste ja, dass solche Dinge stattfinden – die tragen vielleicht Anzüge, aber doof sind die nicht! –, aber bei den Bildern aus der Schaltzentrale hab’ ich dann eben doch kurz mit ‘nem offenen Mund vor dem Monitor gesessen. Oder wie es einer der YT-Kommentare ausdrückt: „Welcome my son, welcome to the machine.“

At HQ, Nestle’s team of Digital Accelerators is tasked with “listening, engaging, transforming and inspiring.” Each member spends eight-month stints working in the space with a mini TV studio, rather like a busy newsroom or trading floor. Pete Blackshaw, 47-year old head of digital marketing and global media, is in charge. On a recent weekday, the American and his staff of 30 to 40-year-olds were monitoring the online action on such topics as the latest cute dog photo on the Purina pet food website, or who was drinking Nescafe. […]

“If there is a negative issue emerging, it turns red,” says Blackshaw, indicating a screen powered by software from Salesforce.com Inc., which is also used by such brands as Dell computers and delivery company UPS. It captures millions of posts each day on topics of interest to Nestle.

“When there is a high number of comments,” Blackshaw adds, “it alerts you that you need to engage.” That can mean a real-time online response from a team member – each has a small flag indicating their country of origin above their desk – or the team might pass an issue on.

Insight – At Nestle, interacting with the online enemy, Galerie, Video (via Gizmo)

Und nur scheinbar unrelated: Ai Wei Wei’s Interview With the Chinese Digital Thought Police, in dem er Mitarbeiter des Chinesischen Regimes interviewt, die Internet-Diskussionen steuern sollen. Aus der Kombination der beiden Artikel kann man wahrscheinlich ‘nen sehr schöne Near-Future SciFi-Thriller basteln.

Peeled Bananas packed in Plastic

Die geschälten Bananen in Plastik-Verpackungen gingen letzte Woche durchs (österreichische) Netz und haben bereits (zurecht) einen mittelkleinen Shitstorm ausgelöst, aber ich will das hier für mich festhalten.

A supermarket chain which advertises using a slogan that urges more common sense in shopping has been selling peeled bananas on plastic trays wrapped in foil. […]

One said that selling ready peeled bananas in a plastic package was the ultimate symbol of waste and the throw-away society. A spokesman for Greenpeace in Austria where the peeled bananas had been on sale said: “If there is an easy to open ready packed food it’s the banana – peeling it only to pack it in environmentally unfriendly plastic is just madness.”

Peeled bananas offered by common sense supermarket (via Arbroath)

Anonymous, powered by Saturn

So, this was that. (via MalteJK, Da Wood)

Karl Marx Creditcard

Die Sparkasse Chemnitz hat eine MasterCard mit Marx-Statue am Start, die Kunden hatten sich in einer Abstimmung dafür entschieden. Grandiose Ironie oder auch mit einem Zitat aus dem Manifest der Kommunistischen Partei eine klare Ansage an alle Bankster: „Kapitalist sein, heißt nicht nur eine rein persönliche, sondern eine gesellschaftliche Stellung in der Produktion einzunehmen.“ Natürlich kann man auch sagen, dass die ehemalige Karl-Marx-Stadt einfach nur eins seiner Wahrzeichen auf der Karte haben will, aber trotzdem. Marx auf ‘ner Kreditkarte!

The disappearance of communist former East Germany has not deterred them from using credit cards emblazoned with the image of the man who foretold the end of capitalism and the triumph of communism.

More than a third of customers at Sparkasse bank in Chemnitz opted for the picture of a bronze bust of the bearded 19th century German-born philosopher, bank spokesman Roger Wirtz said.

Marx’s stern face is depicted gazing towards the logo of Mastercard.

Karl Marx bank cards prove hit in eastern Germany (via Neatorama)

Fuck the System Online-Shortfilm-Festival

YT Direktsystem

Nepo schreibt mir: “hey, was für ein glück war diese feuchtfröhliche url noch frei: fuckfuckfuck.org. Ein wohl antikapitalistisches Onlinekurzfilmfestival mit Pornotouch, bei dem 1000 CHF gewonnen werden können. Einsendeschluss 1.Juni,
Screening am 15. Juni in Zürich. In der Jury: Philipp Meier, Direktor vom Cabaret Voltaire und Alex Plucer, Chief Media Artist von Voina, der russischen Kunstgruppe, die den bekannten 30m-Penis auf diese Brücke gemalt haben.”

FUCK THE SYSTEM! —WHAT’S THE SYSTEM AND HOW CAN I FUCK IT??

fuckfuckfuck.org is the online shortfilm festival for everyone who dares to ask this question – never mind answering it! Try as hard as you can – and win 1000 Swiss francs! Entry deadline for your short film is the 1st June 2012.

Everything is possible – from trash to cinema dimensions. Quality comes from DOING not from equipment. The offline showing and discussion will take place at Cabaret Voltaire, Zürich.

Subversive’d subversive, anticapitalistic Streetart turned into Supercapitalism

Man kann von Luxusklamottenklitschen halten, was man will (ich zum Beispiel halte davon… wenig), aber die Aktion/Antwort vom New Yorker Designerlabel Marc Jacobs auf die jüngste Vandalism-Aktion von Kidult (der mit Feuerlöschern die Schaufenster von Luxusoutlets mit riesigen Lettern ansprüht) ist ein subversiver Mittelfinger und ein bissiger Kommentar auf Streetart und artifiziellen Antikapitalismus, die haben nämlich ein Bild der Kidult-Fassade auf ein Shirt gedruckt und verkaufen das jetzt für 689$. In your face!

The store’s staff cleaned it up, but not before snapping a photo of it and dubbing it Art by Art Jacobs. And then, in an awesome twist, Marc Jacobs put the photo on a tshirt and offered it for sale: $689 or $9 less if you want it signed by the “artist”. The Observer’s Foster Kamer has the story.

Jacobs, in this situation, has made one hell of a commentary about the absurd commoditization that some street art has yielded, and how easily ostensibly subversive art can actually be subverted, facile as it so often is, and it may be the best take on the matter since Exit Through The Gift Shop.

When life gives you graffiti, make money (Die Website vom Observer ist grade down, daher der Link zu Kottke)

Capitalism Works For Me – Interactive, crowdfunded Sculpture-Tour

Steve Lambert hat sich per Kickstarter eine interaktive Skulptur finanzieren lassen, mit der er jetzt bis zu den Präsidentschaftswahlen durch die USA reist. Updates dazu gibt’s auf der Kickstarter-Seite und auf Lamberts Website. Sehr schönes Projekt! Hier das Video aus der Kickstarter-Kampagne:

I’m excited that this piece takes on what for most Americans is a taboo, or even nonexistent subject: whether global, hegemonic capitalism actually works for most people. But whew, talking about that is boring! And telling people what to think is worse! This sign gets passers by to participate in deceptively simple vote (True/ False) which only pretends to offer resolution. Every aspect of the interaction draws them in to more complex questions and conversations, leading to new thoughts and ideas about a better world!

For 50 years it has been unacceptable, politically, in the United States to ask what is basically a straightforward question. We have a particular economic system, it’s called capitalism. We have every right as a society to ask of that system, is it working? Is it working for us? Do the benefits and the costs balance themselves out in a way that says, do we want to keep this system? Or that says, we want to change this system? Or that says, we ought to look at an alternative system. We’ve been afraid to ask that question. We’ve been afraid to have public debates—that’s the legacy of the cold war. We can’t afford anymore to not do that. We have to raise the question.

CAPITALISM WORKS FOR ME! TRUE/FALSE (via Evil Mad Scientists)