Hi Marc

Thank for your remarks

We are amidst the demolishing of the results of 20 years of class  
strugle

I - speaking for myself - feel lost

Lost in possibilities in gaining a life in this society, lost in this  
hellish world where the most brute and intellectual incapable rules

Its like the 30s when artists, intellectuals were prey to the  
machinations of the ruling class

And yes indeed the 'art' world is feeding its egocentric lifestyle at  
the costs of common human capital, a trend started with the rise of  
Andy Warhol and the distgusting 'pop' artists

When during the last 30 years, capital got tightly connected with  
'art', art ceased to exsist, that's the state we're currently in.

Let's face it Richard Florida ideas together with the overvalued works  
of Marshall McLuhan harmed society more than it gained from it

Not surprisingly both exponents of the new american class of neolibs  
wanna bee intellectuals

These ideas are constantly pushed and used in governemental and  
corporate neolib think tanks across the world

Art without esthetics or moral is not art it is just advertizing

Tonite I will play "What did you learned at school today, little boy  
of mine, by Pete Seeger"

Radio Patapoe free radio from Amsterdam The Netherlands

16:30 to 19:30 CEST

http://icecast.freeteam.nl/patapoe.m3u

Andreas Maria Jacobs

w: http://www.nictoglobe.com
w: http://burgerwaanzin.nl

On 11 Dec 2010, at 13:28, marc garrett <marc.garr...@furtherfield.org>  
wrote:

> Hi Andreas,
>
>> Subversion is not a political attitude, it is a way of life...
>
> Being a decent human being is considered either negative or a criminal
> activity in itself.
>
> I have not noticed many art groups in the UK other than ourselves and
> Mute, discussing all these issues as openly.
>
> Across the sea, Rhizome.org in America is 'silent' regarding the
> wikileaks or student cuts around the world - I would of hoped the
> individuals who run the platform would be brave enough to activate  
> some
> kind of dialogue around it. And I suppose, what it tells me is that,
> they do not care enough to push these things into the public for  
> mutual
> dialogue. Yes, I know it may threaten funding, but we have the same
> problems here.
>
> Next week live on Resonance fm, our last broadcast this year - we are
> holding a minute silence 'live' on the radio to mourn the death of
> education.
>
> All this stuff threatens the existence of furtherfield and the space  
> we
> have in London plus many projects we are involved in, most of them
> socially engaged - and that's what the government wants to happen.
>
> And all those peer 'art' groups who do not openly challenge the powers
> that be will be invested in, such as those similar to Rhizome.org
> because they tow the line - and lets not forget that this is not  
> just a
> national issue, it is an international, neoliberlist attack on
> humanities. And I will not 'ever' forgive those who have so  
> conveniently
> kept silent, when as others have at least tried to make real changes  
> in
> culture; deeper than promoting top-down artists and institutional
> drone-art, and product and technologically determined (so called) art,
> conveyor belt products. Techno-bling is boring, boring, boring, and  
> shallow.
>
> We have already been warned to stop discussing the current crisis
> regarding cuts and the neoliberlaist situation with our own community,
> by friends who are well connected to others in power, who are watching
> us - and it really feels strange and distressing to know that by  
> openly
> discussing this with you and others, that I may be risking the  
> future of
> our independent, creative and brilliant individuals and groups who are
> part our networked communities...
>
> wishing you well.
>
> marc
>
>
>>
>> Shame on our justice systems and the prosecution of our idealistic
> motivated youth, which are threatened all over the world by the
> fillistines called judges
>>
>> More examples of injustice in our so called democracies:
>>
>> Hungary:
>>
>> Asisstence given by child birth at home, imprisoned until at least
> January 2011
>>
>> Source : chtodelat
>>
>> Us Chigaco
>>
>> Three young women accused of travelling to Palestine put on trial by
> the FBI
>>
>> Source: hufftington post
>>
>> And so it goes on and on and on
>>
>> What is there to stop falling in a cynical state of mind and a
> profound sadness about the failure of the human project?
>>
>> How to survive in a bitter and cold world without shared ethical and
> moral principles ?
>>
>> I am deeply depressed by the current situation and can hardly believe
> it will be better during my lifetime
>>
>> Liberators turn out to be ursurpators in the very end
>>
>> Andreas Maria Jacobs
>>
>> w: http://www.nictoglobe.com
>> w: http://burgerwaanzin.nl
>>
>> On 11 Dec 2010, at 11:24, marc garrett
> <marc.garr...@furtherfield.org> wrote:
>>
>>> Angles On Anonymous.
>>>
>>> "A number of readers are sending in links related to Anonymous, the
>>> Internet phenomenon — don't call them a group — behind 
>>>  the
> controversial
>>> DDoS attacks on commercial entities that fail to support  
>>> WikiLeaks. The
>>> best insight into Anonymous comes from the Economist's Babbage  
>>> blogger,
>>> who hung out in one of their IRC channels
>>> (http://www.economist.com/blogs/babbage/2010/12/more_wikileaks).  
>>> Reader
>>> nk497 points out that UK users looking to join Anonymous's DDoS army
>>> should be aware they could face a jail term of up to two years
>>>
> (http://www.pcpro.co.uk/news/security/363523/wikileaks-protest-tool-could-carry-two-year-jail-stretch
>  
> );
>>> simply downloading the LOIC software used in the DDoSing could  
>>> suffice
>>> to earn a conviction. One 16-year-old has been arrested
>>>
> (http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2010/12/first-arrest-made-in-wikileaks-revenge-attacks.ars
>  
> )
>>> in The Netherlands and is charged with participating in the DDoS.  
>>> Reader
>>> ancientribe sends in coverage of a claim by one security outfit that
>>> several existing criminal botnets have joined forces
>>>
> (http://www.darkreading.com/database-security/167901020/security/attacks-breaches/228800076/botnet-operators-set-to-join-operation-payback.html
>  
> )
>>> with Anonymous's Operation: Payback. And reader Stoobalou notes a
>>> Thing.co.uk story on a manifesto of sorts
>>>
> (http://www.thinq.co.uk/2010/12/10/who-are-anonymous-and-what-do-they-want/ 
> )
>>> that purports to come from "ANON OPS," even though Anonymous  
>>> disclaims
>>> any central spokesperson or entity - press release here
>>> (http://dump.no/files/467072ba2a42/ANONOPS_The_Press_Release.pdf)  
>>> PDF."
>>> From Slashdot.org
>>>
>>> wishing you well.
>>>
>>> marc
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> NetBehaviour mailing list
>>> NetBehaviour@netbehaviour.org
>>> http://www.netbehaviour.org/mailman/listinfo/netbehaviour
>>>
>>
>>
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