acm acm on Tue, 29 May 2001 23:06:04 +0200 (CEST) |
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[Nettime-bold] Food not (DNA)Bombs |
As a entry to the "DNA Bombs for DNA" (by now outdated in net-time) discussion, i have to say that there were some important questions brought up, and so i'll add my 2 cents (now worth only 1.2). Scott brings up some particularly strong points for those not already invested in a particular position, especially for those watching the lampoon that is the ELF on various mainstream media channels saying, "what a bunch of morons." Eco-terrorism is quickly becoming the target du jour for conservative/centrist forces, especially since there are some less media savvy, brazen "groups" like the ELF that have slit their own vocal chords in favor of anonymity and isolated spectacle. While there certainly does need to be some internal criticism within the "lefts", to cite "eco-terrorists" (already criminal by definition) as hypocrites is ridiculous. The ELF has certainly never declared themselves pacifists, in fact major contributors have denounced pacifism as a methodology- a major mistake in this person's mind, as their position in a social-darwinian scenario is fragile at best. And many other groups, Greenpeace and Earthfirst! to name the major influences in the movement, may have engaged in risky physical acts, but remained nonetheless pacifist in theory and practice - risking harm to only themselves. Anyway, while there may be more immediately crucial issues for the environment ("land clearing", etc...), certainly there already exists a recognition of these problems, even by the capitalist machine (Wise Use conservatism, sustainable development, industrial metabolism). Indeed, it would seem that biotech is a proposed way around these terrestrial concerns for capital. The problem, as Faith and Steven make apparent in their responses and collaborative work, is that these technological developments/uses of are driven by specific desires, the political economy of which becomes invisible to history by becoming "science," "health," and "common sense." As they point out, it's necessary to interrogate/subvert these desires so that the process of technological assimilation is as democratic/transparent as possible. And as Rosalyn Deutsche points out, this is a painful and never-ending process, as democracy is an unstable system of difference, and we (in the US) live in an agoraphobic society. Thanks to Scott for bring the _Voice_ article to my attention though. happy trails ===== artofficial construction media A collaborative effort to screw in a lightbulb. visit us on-line at http://www.artofficial-online.com __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Yahoo! Auctions - buy the things you want at great prices http://auctions.yahoo.com/ _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold