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Adbusters Takes Credit Where There Ain’t No Credit

by ThePete 2:55 pm 2008-10-17
utterli-image
Truth be told, I didn’t get very far into the article that the above screencap came from. I didn’t need to get very far into it to realize that Adbusters, a group I’ve respected in the past, has stopped being a discerning, critical voice speaking against hegemony and has become part of the problem.

In a blog post from ten days ago (here: http://www.adbusters.org/…trike.html ) they make the claim that they are, in fact, behind the spending slowdown America is experiencing. They claim it all started with their "Buy Nothing Day" and "Turn Off TV Week" and it slowly grew from there.

"Culturejammers" they claim, took things further and began "advocating a General Consumption Strike as the appropriate tool for reshaping the basis of our economies."

Someone even wrote a manifesto that was "printed in the pages of Adbusters, emailed to friends and discussed in cafes."

Wow, cafes, you say? WOW. That’s like SERIOUS distribution!

Then they say:

And now, at the brink of an economic collapse, increasing numbers are joining the Consumption Strike. Already our actions are having profound consequences. The New York Times reports that consumer spending is down sharply, the first quarterly decline in two decades link and that consumer borrowing fell for the first time in a decade. And according to the Wall Street Journal our general decrease in consumption is putting retailers out of business and pushing mall vacancy rates to their highest level in seven years.

Pardon me while I ROFLMAO.

Guys at Adbusters, I hate to break it to you, but people aren’t rejecting capitalism. They’re not following your proud teachings.

People aren’t buying stuff because of one simple reason:

SHIT IS EXPENSIVE.

They’re not turning off their TVs because you guys told them to. They’re doing it because the INTERNET IS COOLER.

I didn’t sell my car in 2003 because I was moved by some campaign organized by a bunch of activist types. I sold it because I got tired of spending hundreds of dollars a year on a vehicle that spewed toxins and wasted space.

I didn’t stop watching TV because of "Turn Off TV Week", I stopped watching TV BECAUSE TV IS STUPID.

Seriously, what you guys have done is become part of the problem.

You guys bitch and moan about how lame the system is–how everything’s shallow and consumption-oriented. You tell the system to stop telling you what to do.

But how do you do it? By telling all of us what to do.

You want to replace someone else’s hegemonic "ism" with your own. Why not let us all decide for ourselves what is best for ourselves?

Claiming credit for influencing people, is just trying to capitalize (!) on the misfortune we’re all experiencing. It’s like at the Wall Street rally I went to a few weeks back where people were handing out communism flyers because clearly the ONLY alternative to capitalism is communism!

Fight isms with isms. Good plan, guys.

Ever worry that maybe your ism isn’t the one, true ism?

Ever worry that one ism doesn’t fit all?

Ever worry that you might be full of shit?

Ever worry that pulling the same old cliched, holier-than-thou crap liberals are famous for might cost you the support of people who actually support your cause?

You should worry…

…because that’s what’s happened with me.

You guys are just as bad as anyone else trying to get their way. Trying to determine what’s right for everyone is simply wrong–even if you insist that it’s for our own good.

And this lying you’re doing to your own followers, that’s just wrong, too. Man, I never even heard of "Turn Off Your TV Week" before reading that article and you want me to believe you’re responsible for people watching less TV?

Screw you guys.

Thanks for getting greedy and missing the point of your own existence.

Mobile post sent by thepete using Utterlireply-count Replies.

Can We All Agree that Any Extreme is Bad?

by ThePete 9:00 am 2008-09-20

This is just a quick post because the thought occurred to me while considering the blatant hypocrisy of the Federal Reserve and the USG bailing out/taking over banks.

See, we need banks in order for our monetary system to function. Without them we’d all be carrying too much cash or we’d make our homes a magnet for home robberies. Banks also allow for a much smoother and faster (believe it or not) transfer of money from one person or corporation to another.

Sure, they also allow for quite a bit of money laundering (read: crime) but there’s essentially no modern tool of society that can’t be repurposed for corruption and greed. The point is, we need the banks.

So, the USG and The Federal Reserve effectively nationalizes a bunch of them. Now the Fed is not really part of the government–the USG pretends to oversee it but really, the Fed chairmen over the years have been so good at obfuscation that I blame no politician for not wanting to exert force over these guys. Of course, I DO blame politicians for not doing it despite not wanting to–but I’m getting off-topic.

OK, so here the USG/Fed are, taking over banks–essentially owning said banks. So, now our tax dollars (and any investments in the Fed) make each of us (and investors in the Fed) partial owners of these banks. You know what this looks like, right?

Communism.

Or even Socialism.

Or both!

So, isn’t this completely hypocritical of a government whose excuse for not nationalizing health care is that government-run health care would be too much like socialism?

Doesn’t this make the government completely full of shit when it gives us any reasons for anything (especially after losing all credibility in stating facts about “enemy” countries)?

Let’s also consider how nationalized health care benefits would help hundreds of thousands of people–possibly millions of people–who don’t have health care insurance (like yours truly).

Yes, banks are important, too.

But which is more important to prop up?

1) America’s financial health
2) Americans’ actual health

I say both. Instead, we worry about “isms” and assume that they’re all bad except for the one the rich folks practice: Capitalism.

The catch is, that we can see that no regulation on banks has gotten themselves into this predicament. Our economy is failing and some people are calling for even LESS regulation. It’s unchecked greed that caused this problem.

Surely, as with complete socialism, you can see that complete capitalism is also dangerous. Leaving everything to the “free market” means greed and power can rule all things.

Only a just set of regulations can keep the power-brokers from abusing their power.

This is especially obvious when you consider that sometimes socialism is OK. The USG/Fed and the rich folks of America are happy to see the banks be bailed out. Meanwhile, I would like to see health care be free for all Americans.

So, once you realize that in some cases socialism is OK, why do so many people insist that we stick to one “ism”? Surely, ANY extreme is bad–so why not regulate socialism AND capitalism and any other “ism” that will help America and the American people be stronger?

Why is Muslim extremism bad and Christian extremism not?

Why was Soviet extremism bad and American extremism not?

Why is Socialism bad, except when it helps the rich?

How can you say your way is better or best and assume that other folks who say the same thing about their own way are wrong?

What if you’re both right and in some ways bits of all ways just might be the best way of all?

TheBlurb: "Happy new year, but keep your fingers crossed." -Bill Moyers
updated on 01/07/09 11:34:14 Change it! Archives