John Hopkins on Mon, 8 Dec 2008 00:04:32 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> Call for support: why? |
Hey folks... > > One might say that the whole issue is about the unexpected reactions of >> the general users, who rejected the project. Well, this was after all >> (or wasn't it?) an art project - so people are free to reject it as they >> please. >This for me -- much more than the amazon's reaction -- is what makes this >project really interesting. This is not only about people being free to >reject an art project. I don't think the relevant point is whether this is >art or not (at least not for the people hating the project). Rather, it I do wonder how many of the 'regular' recognized nettime contributors avoid taxes or refuse to pay taxes to their respective governments (eps. on salaries coming from the public sector)? If given a public choice either to pay taxes or to skip the taxes (at the same time as getting (plenty of) cultural funding for their respective art/educational institutions (where the majority I guess are employed in some capacity)), what would they do? Perhaps when an Amazon user is confronted with the choice to violate (at least a perceived) law in their locality, they may make a personal moral decision not to. What's problematic about that? I am sure that everyone on this list faces decisions like that frequently -- but how many (esp. those who are in positions of publically-recognized employment) choose to break local laws? Of course, the dislike coming from consumers might just be a case of getting in the way of their shopping, which, if you hadn't already observed in the world, is the self-promoted raison d'etre for the global capitalist system. People are trained to shop in order to BE. Anything getting in the way of this is perceived as de-stabilizing everything in their world! (RIP to the guy trampled to death by shoppers at a WalMart on Black Friday)... Would there be a difference in this project if the students manufactured alternate UPC scan codes for books -- which would decrease the cost to zero, for example -- and went in and stuck those codes on the books in a shop? I think it's a good project which reveals the limited extent to which anybody in any community can cope with alterations and change in their world. cheers, John # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mail.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org