Adbusters Media Foundation
Sometime in the autumn of 2006, an anonymous figure began to splash once sacred images. Revolutionary creativity does not shock or entertain the bourgeoisie, read communiqués posted at the scene, it destroys them. Deriding street artists as “advance scouts for capital,” the Splasher, as he came to be known, was issuing a proclamation.
The Federal Communications Commission is about to give Big Media a big gift. Media activists are trying to take it back.
Armed with potent drugs and new technology, a dangerous breed of soldiers are getting ready to fight America’s future wars.
The Blue Brain Project aims to solve the epic problem of consciousness. But will it let us catch consciousness in the act?
Virtual addiction is beginning to have a corrosive effect on our real-life communities.
Trapped by our cell phones, email and iPods, we need to clear our minds from the clutter and stop being technoslaves.
The US presidential elections may finally spark the American revolution the rest of the world has been waiting for.
Guardian columnist Martin Jacques on how the world's seismic changes are creating both great hope and danger.
A NEW REVOLUTION – The US presidential elections may finally start the revolution the rest of the world has been waiting for.
AUSTRALIA’S TURNAROUND – After a decade of conservative rule, Australia's is redressing its past so the country can move forward.
TINO SEHGAL – By creating "staged situations" Tino Sehgal forces his audiences to confront art.
MEDIA BULLY – Leonard Asper is distorting Canada's national discourse.
SOLDIER OF FORTUNE – Armed with potent drugs and technology, a dangerous breed of soldiers will fight America’s future wars.
Venezuela's Hugo Chavez is lifting the Caracas barrios out of poverty and giving the slums a new kind of meaning.
Adbusters Media Foundation
The problem with activism today is that it is largely funded by grants and gifts from rich foundations and individuals. The long-standing assumption that you can take the money with few strings attached, and then run, needs to be fundamentally re-examined. Michael Shuman and Merrian Fuller point the way to an alternative model in which non-profits say goodbye to funders and start generating their own resources.
If Stalin could see American agriculture today, he’d assume his forced collectivization had caught on. Like its Soviet predecessor, modern American farming is characterized by centralization: an absence of open markets, decision-making by distant officials, and growing techniques that poison and exhaust the land.
In the late 1990s, Hans Moravec, Ray Kurzweil, Neil Gershenfeld and Kevin Warwick all published popular books predicting that artificial intelligence would soon overtake human intelligence in every way, including creativity. If they are right, then we will, in the not-to-distant future, see machines creating works of art, new scientific theories, inventing new devices, even designing their own successors – and doing it all at blinding speed.
Water in five of China’s largest rivers is now so polluted it’s dangerous to touch, acid rain bathes 30 percent of land, half its forests have gone, and two-thirds of major cities fail air quality standards – with officials admitting that in some areas breathing is like smoking two packs of cigarettes a day.
But the picture wasn’t always this bleak.
An acquaintance – Richard – recently asked where my husband is from. I
told him he is Palestinian. “That is an interesting problem,” said
Richard without missing a beat. I nodded my head and smiled and said nothing.
I drive my kids to school Monday to Friday so they can learn
spelling and computers. On weekends, we sip frozen cappuccinos and
watch Saturday matinees. We surf the net and sign off at bedtime. At first glance, life holds no tangible terror. However, in the
quiet moments, we feel short of breath, as if we’re slowly suffocating.
On September 10, 2003, some 150 South Koreans were trying to pull down a security barrier at the WTO negotiations in Cancun. While the barrier heaved and flags burned, one farmer — whose land had been repossessed by the bank – scrambled to the top of the fence.
In a parking lot in suburban Philadelphia,
a mother buckles her child into the car seat. She puts the groceries in
the back of the station wagon, and as she pulls the door down I see, on
a piece of paper taped on the window the question “Is it fascism yet?”
The fall of multi-million dollar energy broker Enron was one of the most dramatic corporate implosions in recent memory.
With 57 years of White House reporting, Helen Thomas is commonly referred to as
“The First Lady of the Press.” She talked to Adbusters associate editor Deborah
Campbell about the state of journalism today.