Archives: August, 2008


August 1st, 2008 (Friday)

Boat People

Earlier today we received an e-mail from Deborah Kelly, an artist from Australia. One of the projects she works on (along with several others - an “art gang” if you will) really jumped out at me. Here’s an image from that project:

“In 1788 down Sydney Cove, The first boat people land, Said “sorry boys, our gain’s your loss, We’re gonna steal your land.” (from the Boat People website)

Just change the details and suddenly it easily applies to the United States, don’t you think?

The above image is an e-postcard - you can download it and send it around with all your e-mail. Go here to read about and see more pictures from this project!

Take care,
pinky

[top]

August 6th, 2008 (Wednesday)

Ant 288b Report: Misc. Outer Space Trivia

As you know we (ants) are interested in cosmology in general and outer space in particular. On August 3rd myself and 1,006 others from Pinky’s various AntFarms™ visited a science museum & planetarium to learn more about space. We now return with some facts that may interest you, the reader of this blog.

• Galileo first sighted Jupiter’s moons on January 7, 1610. At first he thought he was looking at some stars, but after observing their movements for a little while he figured out they were actually moons in orbit around Jupiter. Galileo used a telescope he made himself. We are in the process of making a telescope for ourselves.

• Have you ever wondered how large the moon is, relative to the size of the Earth? Imagine this: if the Earth were the size of an inflatable beach ball, the moon would be roughly the size of a grapefruit. Also, the spherical shape of a grapefruit makes it impossible for us to lift and/or transport.

• The Earth has two moons. Everyone knows the big one, but there is also a much smaller one named Cruithne. It is about 3 miles across and makes a weirdly-shaped orbit around the Earth that takes about 770 years to complete.

• As of this writing there are 240 known moons in our solar system. Maybe more by the time you read this.

• Even though light travels very fast, the universe is so big that the light you see from many of the stars in the sky have taken billions of years to reach your eyeball. So looking up into the night sky is also looking back into the farthest reaches of time - what we are seeing now is how these stars looked billions of years ago.

We hope you enjoy thinking about the above information.

Signing off,
Ant 288b

Photo added Aug. 13 (click for larger):

[top]

August 7th, 2008 (Thursday)

U.S. Warships Headed for Iran

I just received an e-mail with the following information, originally from Lord Stirling’s Europe blog.

<- USS Roosevelt

“The lead American ship in [the just-concluded Operation Brimstone] war games, the USS Theodore Roosevelt (CVN71) and its Carrier Strike Group Two (CCSG-2) are now headed towards Iran along with the USS Ronald Reagan (CVN76) and its Carrier Strike Group Seven (CCSG-7) coming from Japan… They are joining two existing USN battle groups in the Gulf area: the USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN72) with its Carrier Strike Group Nine (CCSG-9); and the USS Peleliu (LHA-5) with its expeditionary strike group…

The build up of naval forces in the Gulf will be one of the largest multi-national naval armadas since the First and Second Gulf Wars. The intent is to create a US/EU naval blockade (which is an Act of War under international law) around Iran (with supporting air and land elements) to prevent the shipment of benzene and certain other refined oil products headed to Iranian ports. Iran has limited domestic oil refining capacity and imports 40% of its benzene. Cutting off benzene and other key products would cripple the Iranian economy…

The US Naval forces being assembled include the following:

Carrier Strike Group Nine
USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN72) nuclear powered supercarrier
with its Carrier Air Wing Two
Destroyer Squadron Nine:
USS Mobile Bay (CG53) guided missile cruiser
USS Russell (DDG59) guided missile destroyer
USS Momsen (DDG92) guided missile destroyer
USS Shoup (DDG86) guided missile destroyer
USS Ford (FFG54) guided missile frigate
USS Ingraham (FFG61) guided missile frigate
USS Rodney M. Davis (FFG60) guided missile frigate
USS Curts (FFG38) guided missile frigate
Plus one or more nuclear hunter-killer submarines

Peleliu Expeditionary Strike Group
USS Peleliu (LHA-5) a Tarawa-class amphibious assault carrier
USS Pearl Harbor (LSD52) assult ship
USS Dubuque (LPD8) assult ship/landing dock
USS Cape St. George (CG71) guided missile cruiser
USS Halsey (DDG97) guided missile destroyer
USS Benfold (DDG65) guided missile destroyer

Carrier Strike Group Two
USS Theodore Roosevelt (DVN71) nuclear powered supercarrier
with its Carrier Air Wing Eight
Destroyer Squadron 22
USS Monterey (CG61) guided missile cruiser
USS Mason (DDG87) guided missile destroyer
USS Nitze (DDG94) guided missile destroyer
USS Sullivans (DDG68) guided missile destroyer

USS Springfield (SSN761) nuclear powered hunter-killer submarine

IWO ESG ~ Iwo Jima Expeditionary Strike Group
USS Iwo Jima (LHD7) amphibious assault carrier
with its Amphibious Squadron Four
and with its 26th Marine Expeditionary Unit
USS San Antonio (LPD17) assault ship
USS Velia Gulf (CG72) guided missile cruiser
USS Ramage (DDG61) guided missile destroyer
USS Carter Hall (LSD50) assault ship
USS Roosevelt (DDG80) guided missile destroyer

USS Hartfore (SSN768) nuclear powered hunter-killer submarine

Carrier Strike Group Seven
USS Ronald Reagan (CVN76) nuclear powered supercarrier
with its Carrier Air Wing 14
Destroyer Squadron 7
USS Chancellorsville (CG62) guided missile cruiser
USS Howard (DDG83) guided missile destroyer
USS Gridley (DDG101) guided missile destroyer
USS Decatur (DDG73) guided missile destroyer
USS Thach (FFG43) guided missile frigate
USNS Rainier (T-AOE-7) fast combat support ship…

…The large and very advanced nature of the US Naval warships is not only directed at Iran. There is a great fear that Russia and China may oppose the naval and air/land blockade of Iran. If Russian and perhaps Chinese naval warships escort commercial tankers to Iran in violation of the blockade it could be the most dangerous at-sea confrontation since the Cuban Missile Crisis…

…A strategic diversion has been created for Russia. The Republic of Georgia, with US backing, is actively preparing for war on South Ossetia. The South Ossetia capital has been shelled and a large Georgian tank force has been heading towards the border. Russia has stated that [they] will not sit by and allow the Georgians to attack South Ossetia. The Russians are great chess players and this game may not turn out so well for the [U.S.]…” (read the whole report here)

Shall we talk about this, or will everyone be too busy watching the Olympics?

Posted by Bunny.

[ Kim: Even if none of these ships actually attack Iran, this is exactly the kind of bullying that nobody should be doing. ]

[ Bunny: If another country tried to make a blockade of the U.S. with warships, I imagine most Americans would have a fit and demand that they all be sunk. But if we're the ones doing it then the experts on CNN will sit around and discuss whether or not the blockade is effective in achieving "our goals". ]

[ Pinky: Everyone here in the U.S. that understands the implications and consequences of a U.S.-led attack on Iran needs to do something now to stop our governmental and military leaders - phone calls, e-mails, demonstrations - anything and everything! ]

[top]

August 8th, 2008 (Friday)

Make Your Own Tienanmen Square Memorial

We just received this neat thing from artists Deborah Kelly & Wei Lai:

<- click to download PDF!

Here is a new work for you, a collaboration with Wei Lai, just in time for the Olympics. Please make it, and/or distribute, just as you see fit. If you print it, use the heaviest paper the printer will allow.

It’s the first of works toward the Tienanmen protests anniversary in June 2009, which we sincerely hope you will take part in, wherever you are. There may be dancing.

with best wishes and solidarity -
Deborah Kelly & Wei Lai

Posted by Bunny.

[top]

August 9th, 2008 (Saturday)

Bunny Mailbag: What About Afghanistan?

Today’s E-mail of the Day:

Hey, I’ve watched your videos about the Iraq War and also the one about Crimes Against Humanity, but I was wondering why you guys haven’t made a video about Afghanistan? Could it be because that war is justified? Seems like you are conveniently avoiding talking about it because you guys always just want to make the military look bad.

My reply:

Dear Joshua, We’ve only made about 30 episodes, which is considerably less videos than there are subjects to discuss in the universe. Regardless, I hope you continue to consult our archive every time a question pops to mind - while we’ve yet to make a video about cheap cigarettes or hemorrhoids, hey, you never know.

However, we do realize that there is a lot of confusion surrounding the war in Afghanistan. Most Americans assume the U.S.-led invasion of Afghanistan was legal, which is understandable considering how hard the mainstream media has worked to lead the general public to this false conclusion.

I’m including a short essay by Marjorie Cohn below. She’s a well-known expert on international law, a professor at the Thomas Jefferson School of Law, president of the National Lawyers Guild, and a few other nice things. Even if you think the article appears unbearably long (I’m guessing an average reader may take about 10 minutes to read it), I’m hoping that you’ll at least make your way through the title. The answer to your question is answered there.

[ begin Marjorie Cohn essay ]

Afghanistan: The Other Illegal War
by Marjorie Cohn, AlterNet
August 1st, 2008

So far, President Bush’s plan to maintain a permanent U.S. military presence in Iraq has been stymied by resistance from the Iraqi government. Barack Obama’s timetable for withdrawal of American troops evidently has the backing of Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, Bush has mentioned a “time horizon,” and John McCain has waffled. Yet Obama favors leaving between 35,000 and 80,000 U.S. occupation troops there indefinitely to train Iraqi security forces and carry out “counterinsurgency operations.” That would not end the occupation. We must call for bringing home — not redeploying — all U.S. troops and mercenaries, closing all U.S. military bases and relinquishing all efforts to control Iraqi oil.

In light of stepped-up violence in Afghanistan, and for political reasons — following Obama’s lead — Bush will be moving troops from Iraq to Afghanistan. Although the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan was as illegal as the invasion of Iraq, many Americans see it as a justifiable response to the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, and the casualties in that war have been lower than those in Iraq — so far. Practically no one in the United States is currently questioning the legality or propriety of U.S. military involvement in Afghanistan. The cover of Time magazine calls it “The Right War.”

<- click to enlarge

The U.N. Charter provides that all member states must settle their international disputes by peaceful means, and no nation can use military force except in self-defense or when authorized by the Security Council. After the 9/11 attacks, the council passed two resolutions, neither of which authorized the use of military force in Afghanistan. Resolutions 1368 and 1373 condemned the Sept. 11 attacks and ordered the freezing of assets; the criminalizing of terrorist activity; the prevention of the commission of and support for terrorist attacks; and the taking of necessary steps to prevent the commission of terrorist activity, including the sharing of information. In addition, it urged ratification and enforcement of the international conventions against terrorism.

The invasion of Afghanistan was not legitimate self-defense under article 51 of the charter because the attacks on Sept. 11 were criminal attacks, not “armed attacks” by another country. Afghanistan did not attack the United States. In fact, 15 of the 19 hijackers came from Saudi Arabia. Furthermore, there was not an imminent threat of an armed attack on the United States after Sept. 11, or Bush would not have waited three weeks before initiating his October 2001 bombing campaign. The necessity for self-defense must be “instant, overwhelming, leaving no choice of means, and no moment for deliberation.” This classic principle of self-defense in international law has been affirmed by the Nuremberg Tribunal and the U.N. General Assembly.

Bush’s justification for attacking Afghanistan was that it was harboring Osama bin Laden and training terrorists. Iranians could have made the same argument to attack the United States after they overthrew the vicious Shah Reza Pahlavi in 1979 and he was given safe haven in the United States. The people in Latin American countries whose dictators were trained in torture techniques at the School of the Americas could likewise have attacked the torture training facility in Fort Benning, Ga., under that specious rationale. Those who conspired to hijack airplanes and kill thousands of people on 9/11 are guilty of crimes against humanity. They must be identified and brought to justice in accordance with the law. But retaliation by invading Afghanistan is not the answer and will only lead to the deaths of more of our troops and Afghans.

The hatred that fueled 19 people to blow themselves up and take 3,000 innocents with them has its genesis in a history of the U.S. government’s exploitation of people in oil-rich nations around the world. Bush accused the terrorists of targeting our freedom and democracy. But it was not the Statue of Liberty that was attacked. It was the World Trade Center, the symbol of the U.S.-led global economic system; and the Pentagon, the heart of the U.S. military, that took the hits. Those who committed these heinous crimes were attacking American foreign policy. That policy has resulted in the deaths of 2 million Iraqis — from both Bill Clinton’s punishing sanctions and George W. Bush’s war. It has led to uncritical support of Israel’s brutal occupation of Palestinian lands, and it has stationed more than 700 U.S. military bases in foreign countries.

Conspicuously absent from the national discourse is a political analysis of why the tragedy of 9/11 occurred and a comprehensive strategy to overhaul U.S. foreign policy to inoculate us from the wrath of those who despise American imperialism. The “Global War on Terror” has been uncritically accepted by most in this country. But terrorism is a tactic, not an enemy. You cannot declare war on a tactic. The way to combat terrorism is by identifying and targeting its root causes, including poverty, lack of education and foreign occupation.

There are already 60,000 foreign troops, including 36,000 Americans, in Afghanistan. Large increases in U.S. troops during the past year have failed to stabilize the situation there. Most American forces operate in the eastern part of the country; yet by July 2008, attacks there were up by 40 percent. Zbigniew Brzezinski, national security adviser for Jimmy Carter, is skeptical that the answer for Afghanistan is more troops. He warns that the United States will, like the Soviet Union, be seen as the invader, especially as we conduct military operations “with little regard for civilian casualties.” Brzezinski advocates Europeans bribing Afghan farmers not to cultivate poppies for heroin, as well as the bribery of tribal warlords to isolate al-Qaeda from a Taliban that is “not a united force, not a world-oriented terrorist movement, but a real Afghan phenomenon.”

We might heed Canada’s warning that a broader mission, under the auspices of the United Nations instead of NATO, would be more effective. Our policy in Afghanistan and Pakistan should emphasize economic assistance for reconstruction, development and education, not for more weapons. The United States must refrain from further Predator missile strikes in Pakistan and pursue diplomacy, not occupation.

Nor should we be threatening war against Iran, which would also be illegal and result in an unmitigated disaster. The U.N. Charter forbids any country to use, or threaten to use, military force against another country except in self-defense or when the Security Council has given its blessing. In spite of the U.N. International Atomic Energy Agency’s conclusion that there is no evidence Iran is developing nuclear weapons, the White House, Congress and Israel have continued to rattle the sabers in Iran’s direction. Nevertheless, the anti-war movement has so far fended off passage of HR362 in the House of Representatives, a bill that is tantamount to a call for a naval blockade against Iran — considered an act of war under international law. Credit goes to United for Peace and Justice, Code Pink, Peace Action and dozens of other organizations that pressured Congress to think twice before taking that dangerous step.

We should pursue diplomacy, not war, with Iran; end the U.S. occupation of Iraq; and withdraw our troops from Afghanistan.

[ end of Marjorie Cohn essay ]

Posted by Bunny.

[top]

August 12th, 2008 (Tuesday)

Buttons from Henry

Today we received an unexpected padded envelope from Henry in Bellrose Manor, New York. Inside we found two large, square buttons and two large, square magnets. Thanks Henry! They look like this:

Cool huh? Henry sent us four so that all of us could have one but 2 minutes after opening the envelope Bunny and Kim were fighting over the second magnet. I had taken the other magnet to stick on the filing cabinet but had to give it to Kim so that we could have some peace around here. I’m surrounded by babies. :P

~ pinky

[top]

August 12th, 2008 (Tuesday)

Report: How Terrorist Groups End

One of the sources of information we like to read are the reports and documents that military strategists and governmental policy makers read in order to form their opinions about stuff. By studying (some of) what they’re studying, I think it’s easier to understand why the United States does what it does, what it might be doing next, and so on.

Recently the RAND Corporation released a report, partially funded by Department of Defense monies, titled How Terrorist Groups End: Lessons for Countering al Qaida. It’s part historical narrative, part political and military analysis, and 100% fascinating. Here’s a few excerpts from the report summary from the RAND website:

“All terrorist groups eventually end. But how do they end? Answers to this question have enormous implications for counterterrorism efforts. The evidence since 1968 indicates that most groups have ended because (1) they joined the political process or (2) local police and intelligence agencies arrested or killed key members. Military force has rarely been the primary reason for the end of terrorist groups…

Following an examination of 648 terrorist groups that existed between 1968 and 2006, we found that a transition to the political process is the most common way in which terrorist groups ended (43 percent)…

…in 10 percent of the cases, terrorist groups ended because their goals were achieved, and military force led to the end of terrorist groups in 7 percent of the cases… Against most terrorist groups, however, military force is usually too blunt an instrument…

After September 11, 2001, the U.S. strategy against al Qa’ida centered on the use of military force. Indeed, U.S. policymakers and key national-security documents referred to operations against al Qa’ida as the war on terrorism…

Our analysis suggests that there is no battlefield solution to terrorism. Military force usually has the opposite effect from what is intended: It is often over-used, alienates the local population by its heavy-handed nature, and provides a window of opportunity for terrorist-group recruitment…”

[ download the entire report here (3.1 MB) ]

Although the report is written from an imperialist/militarist perspective, it does provide several useful explanations as to why the U.S.-led “War on Terror” hasn’t resulted in the dissolution of al-Qaeda so far, and based on an analysis of recent terrorism history, also predicts that continuing our so-called ‘war’ will not produce this result - ever. The report makes a bunch of recommendations as to how the U.S. could ‘fix the problem’ and eventually bring al-Qaeda under control, but reading the report the main question that kept popping into my head was whether or not it’s really in the best interests of the U.S. leadership to dismantle al-Qaeda in the first place. Because if al-Qaeda were to disappear from the public imagination, I’m sure creating a new justification for our own brand of state violence and terrorism would require a tremendous amount of hard work. And since the ruling elite profit so immensely from warring, without significant opposition from the American people I’m willing to guess that all other alternatives are fairly unlikely at this point.

Anyway, please read the report, or at least the summary. It’s useful to see how at least one sector of the U.S. warring apparatus is thinking and talking about these issues.

Take care,
pinky

[top]

August 13th, 2008 (Wednesday)

Who is Ruben Salazar?

Yesterday I got a letter in the mail with a Ruben Salazar stamp on it. For those of you who haven’t seen it yet, here’s a picture:

I don’t know anything about journalism (or journalists) so I had to go look him up, and what I’ve been learning so far this afternoon has really been eye-opening.

Mini-summary: Ruben Salazar was a Los Angeles Times reporter and news director at KMEX (radio station). He was covering the historic Chicano Moratorium protests against the Vietnam War on August 29, 1970 when he was murdered - or assassinated, depends who you ask - by the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department (they shot him in the head at short range with a tear gas canister). Even though his death was a ruled a homocide, no one was ever held responsible for his death. Here’s a photo taken a few seconds before Salazar was killed.

Getting back to the stamp, I think it’s more than a bit awkward how it reads: “during Chicano protest rally in East Los Angeles”. What’s that supposed to mean? Wouldn’t “Murdered by LA Sheriff’s Dept.” be more to the point?

I’m always fascinated by how hegemony works. Like how government agencies will, from time to time, memorialize an individual who are instrumental in directing critical attention towards the government itself. Martin Luther King, Jr. had a stamp. Hell, even Malcolm X had a stamp. I’m sure one day Noam Chomsky will have one too. I can only conclude that stamps with naughty people on them is a nice (i.e., harmless) way to show that we live in an open society that welcomes dissent. While our government continues to develop mechanisms to monitor and suppress dissent, publicly it’s celebrated. The message is clear: ideas like dissent and resistance are wonderful - but if you start making it a habit you might get shot in the head.

Anyway, I’ll go to the library this weekend to try to see if I can find Hunter S. Thompson’s article on the historical context surrounding the Salazar killing, Strange Rumblings in Aztlan.

There will be a remembrance and procession held on the anniversary of the Chicano Moratorium March on Friday, August 29 at Ruben F. Salazar Memorial County Park (3864 Whittier Blvd., East L.A.), at 2 p.m. Bring flowers and candles if you go. Contact David Sanchez if you need more info: (323) 263-3352.

- Bunny

[top]

August 14th, 2008 (Thursday)

Wikipedia Vandalism

Here’s an e-mail we received today from Ricsen:

Hi Pinky, your wikipedia page was spoiled by a stupid person. It make me sad to see that.

(click for a larger image)

Don’t stop your good work!
Best regards. Ricsen

First of all, thank you to Ricsen for pointing this out to us. And yes, I think it’s pretty cool that the Pinky Show has an entry in the Wikipedia.

Second, this kind of thing doesn’t bother me. I think I might feel a little excited (in a good way) if the vandalism was very clever or funny, because then that would suggest that we have real critics out there, instead of people like this. I think Kim is the only one who gets upset when we receive threats or hate mail - the rest of us just roll our eyes and go on with our business. Maybe someone will clean this up, but if not, that’s okay too.

~ pinky

* * * * * Bunny’s comments below * * * * *

One of more interesting things about this vandalism is how much it reveals about the vandal:

• White, male, heterosexual, late-20’s to mid-30’s. Probably a college graduate.

• Not too smart. He’s trying hard but can’t quite pull it off.

• He’s totally unaware as to how easy it is for others to see his intellectual shortcomings.

• Preoccupied with sex and women but unable to have a healthy relationship with either.

• He feels like he doesn’t get enough attention and desperately wants some.

• People like this are often unable to recognize their own privileged status in relation to others. In fact they often imagine that they are part of an unfortunate class that constantly comes under attack, supposedly by the very people whose subjugation they actively participate in. Because they don’t understand the concept of resistance, they see any opposition to the oppression they dish out as whining, illegitimate, violent, or nonsensical. These people are by nature self-centered and can only drink beer with ‘friends’ who are equally insecure about their place in the world. Unfortunately no amount of beer can erase the creeping suspicion that they are assholes.

- Bunny

[ pinky: Gee, thanks for the analysis Dr. Bunny! And by the way, is 'asshole' the clinical term? ]

[ Bunny: I'm just saying. What, do you disagree with anything I wrote? ]

[ pinky: Hmm, not really... lol ]

[top]

August 15th, 2008 (Friday)

Picturing Politics 2008 Exhibition Opens!

Today is finally September 15 - opening day of the exhibition Picturing Politics 2008: Artists Speak to Power at the Arlington Arts Center in Arlington, Virginia! As we mentioned in some previous posts, we are very excited to have some of our art, videos, and ephemera in this exhibition. I hope someone who lives in the Washington, D.C.-area will be able to attend and let us know how our stuff looks in the show. If anybody sends us photographs we’ll post them here!

Later this year (November) we will be participating in another art/radical education exhibition, this one at the Musuem of Modern Art in Ljubljana, Slovenia. Of course we are excited about that one too - they will be showing some of our videos and we are also making a special episode specifically for that exhibition. When we have more details we will be posting them on this website. Looks like the last quarter of 2008 will be pretty crazy! ^_^

Take care,
pinky

[top]

August 20th, 2008 (Wednesday)

Mercenaries, Cooks, & Truck Drivers: Crazy Expensive

If you’ve been following the news, I’m sure you’ve been hearing a lot about “private contractors” like Blackwater, DynCorp, and Kellogg Brown and Root (KBR) for a few years now. It’s no secret that wars (illegal wars included) are insanely profitable, but do you know much these guys are actually getting paid to do their thing?

According to a newly released report from the Congressional Budget Office, the government will have paid these privately held “security firms” a hundred billion dollars by the end of 2008 for their work in Iraq. Now that might not mean much to ordinary people - you know, people who get excited every time they find a quarter lying on the sidewalk - but seriously, that’s a lot of money! As expected, the size of the payout is only matched by the level of corruption that follows. Currently there are about 200,000 of these so-called “private contractors” in Iraq and Afghanistan, doing everything from shooting people to driving trucks to cooking eggs. It’s kind of like the world’s largest and most violent catered event.

Please read the rull report. (you already paid for it)

Take care,
pinky

[top]

August 26th, 2008 (Tuesday)

Beautiful Death From the Sky

The other night I was searching the internet for information on nuclear warheads when I came across this pretty photograph:

The first thing I thought was “Wow, that’s beautiful… what is it?” Turns out it’s a long-exposure photograph showing the descent of multiple warheads from a nuclear missile. I’d never seen a photograph that actually shows the warheads falling to Earth before. This particular photo is of a test of a MX intercontinental ballistic missile (a.k.a. LGM-118A Peacekeeper missile - yes, that’s what they actually named it) over the Marshall Islands. Each one of these missiles can carry up to 10 warheads, with each warhead carrying the destructive power of 25 Hiroshima bombs.

I’m sure it’s not easy to design a machine as complicated as an intercontinental ballistic missile. I mean, think about it: a large, multi-stage rocket that’s somehow able to shoot far up into the sky, so high that it skims the very edge of space, then maneuvers itself into position so that it can then rain 10 warheads down on 10 different cities, thousands of miles away, each nuclear explosion killing millions. In seconds. It’s amazing. And it’s not only a marvel of science, it’s also a marvel of logistical planning. Someone had to coordinate the work of literally thousands of scientists and technicians, just to get the decades-long, enormously complicated project to move forward!

And actually I think that’s the part that keeps me up at night. It’s one thing to lay awake in bed, thinking of all the people and animals and plants that will be destroyed by the awesome destructive power of these weapons. But what really haunts me is the question of how so many smart people would be willing to completely give themselves - their minds, their hard work, their enormous creative potential - over to a process of developing weapons of mass destruction.

It seems so weird to me that if any of these people were acting alone, or maybe in a small group, to make a bomb to blow up a few dozen or even a few thousand people, everybody would say “Oh my goodness these people are terrorists, they need to be caught and executed!” But since these scientists are working for Lockheed Martin or Raytheon and they are trying to figure out how to incinerate millions at a time, this is respectable work. Is it the degree from MIT or Stanford that makes it okay? Or do we need these weapons simply because there are people in this world who deserve to be mass murdered via nuclear explosion and fallout?

I wish Bunny & I had enough time to walk around and ring the doorbell of every scientist that works for the so-called ‘defense industry’. I want to plead with them to please reconsider and maybe try to use their knowledge and talents for something less totally insane.

~ pinky

[top]

August 29th, 2008 (Friday)

First Peek: PS installation at AAC

Exhibition curator Rex Weil sent us a snapshot of the Pinky Show section in the Picturing Politics: Artists Speak to Power exhibition at the Arlington Arts Center going on right now.

The vitrine on the left has Pinky Show zines and stickers in it. It’s a bit weird to see something like zines encased behind plexiglass but if it wasn’t probably the zines would walk away very quickly. The shabby Pinky Show poster (’laminated’ with packing tape) on the left is the poster we usually have in our office - we take that poster with us every time we do a workshop or go somewhere to speak, so it’s pretty beat up.

The only thing that concerns us about the installation is the apparent lack of wall text for the two large pieces. I wrote some text to be placed next to them - from the picture it looks like it wasn’t included. (I wrote to the curator to ask - he wrote back to say that he wasn’t sure it if was included or not; he’s checking) It bugs me when museums don’t include information that help explain the objects on display. If a context is not provided, I think it becomes too easy for the museum visitors to think of the art work only in terms of what it looks like.

~ pinky

[ Bunny: The wall text that was supposed to be placed next to the art work is below. Anyone who wants to see the images more close-up can see them in our Commons Gallery - just click on the On Native Land series icon. ]

I’M ON UR LAND…, Version 2.0
Pinky & Bunny
Giclée on canvas, 24 x 30 inches
2008

Pinky notes: Among other things, maps are a fundamentally important instrument of conquest. In the case of the “New World”, the mapping of native peoples and lands helped settlers conceptualize and orient themselves to their new and unfamiliar surroundings.

This image references John Smith’s well-known map of the area now commonly referred to as Virginia. Comparisons with later maps of the same area clearly illustrate the extent to which settlers have succesfully erased Native people from the land - via displacement, forceful removal, introduction of diseases, and outright killing.

As you can see, there’s not many English language place-names on this map. It’s not unusual for documents to live multiple lives - at one time a useful tool to be utilized in the service of conquest, and now a document that helps to dispel commonly held settler myths - for example: “When we arrived, the land was vacant; there was hardly anybody here. There was no genocide.”

Bunny notes: Looks like the native guy’s quiver is made from the front half of a dog! lol

********************************************

On Native Land triptych (left-side panel)
Pinky & Bunny
Giclée on canvas, 24 x 36 inches.
2008

Pinky notes: This piece is the left-side panel of a triptych (approximately nine feet across) titled On Native Land. Together the three panels name imperial culture, militarism, and occupation as basic structuring elements of the United States of America, currently the planet’s most powerful settler state.

This image, with its huge columns and the D.C. Mall in the background, is a reference to how imperial culture and symbolic form are deployed to shape popular narratives and provide the empire with a strong sense of identity.

The middle image (not included in this exhibition), a nuclear explosion at the Nevada Test Site, refers to militarism and direct use of force (sometimes just the threat of force will do) in the service of building and maintaining an empire. The right-side image, a photograph of Arlington National Cemetery (also not included in this exhibition), is a reference to the seizure and use of native land by settlers for settler interests.

Of course there are other aspects of empire that warrant discussion, but we think talking about how these three mechamisms work together is a useful starting point.

The triptych may be viewed in its entirety at the Pinky Show website (www.pinkyshow.org) in our Commons Gallery.

[ Kim: Wow that sucks that they didn't put your text next to the paintings! Isn't it ironic that the show's title is "Picturing Politics 2008: Artists Speak to Power" and here they are limiting what you can show and what you can say? That's too funny! ]

[ Pinky: Kim, I don't have any information if the wall text has been included or not, if it was intentionally excluded, or what. As of today (8/29) I'm still waiting for a reply. ]

[top]

<end>