Boy, talk about consumption. Great music video featuring the digital art prowess of Chris Jordan.
We offer this as a follow-up to last summer's "What We Waste," a post on Jordan's work that was part of a larger discussion of consumption patterns and energy (cf. E-trash , What We Eat, and this larger conversation on e-trash with Lizzie Grossman).
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World's Fair note: This new author-meets-blogger series of posts was written by guest blogger and new father Jody Roberts, author of previous posts on endocrine disruption and organic farming research.
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Chris Jordan has done it again. And if you're not sure who this fellow is, then let me be the first to introduce you to this digital artist extraordinaire, who creates these magnificent images of consumption in our world.
The latest is a little mindboggling to say…
[To go with this post on images of consumption and that post on what we eat in a week.]
"Each year, between 20 and 50 million tons of electronic waste is generated globally. Most of it winds up in the developing world."
The caption from Foreign Policy was simply, "Throwing Stuff"
Foreign Policy…
As a follow-up to Dave's prior post, I add here reference to a discussion about the same topic in response to an Orion article last Fall. The essay by Janisse Ray, "Altar Call for True Believers: Are we being change, or are we just talking about change?," was followed by over 200 comments. It…
I lost nearly all respect for Beck after I learned he was a Scientologist.
"I lost nearly all respect for Beck..."
Okay. Duly noted. Any thoughts about the visual message in the video?
Sure. Impressive but ultimately worthless. People are overwhelmed by numbers like that - they just turn numb and forget about it. Eddie Izzard has a bit about this and mass murderers - after a certain number, we just can't comprehend it anymore. It's all the same.
So yeah, we produce a ton of waste. But with SO MUCH being produced, how can little ol' me even make a dent? It's just not worth it. That's what people think.
There are only 2 ways to get people to do something, en masse - 1) pay them and/or 2) make it easy. Municipal recycling programs are very successful, usage-wise. But if there isn't any, not so much. The only things that do OK are things you get paid for. But grocery bag recycling? Forget it - you don't get paid, and you have to haul the bags back to the store (at best) to recycle them. Hell I have a huge pile of grocery bags. I feel guilty tossing them - but like I'm gonna pile 1000 bags into my car and go to the store with them? But give me a bin in my backyard, and I'm more than happy to participate.
please assure me you were being facetious cephyn. your solution to a specious morality of unblinkered self-interest and laziness is to cater to the whims of the self-interested and lazy?
Perhaps cephyn is no longer available.
Although sentiments like cephyn's tend to frustrate and depress me, I do see an element of interest to me underlying those comments. Currently our culture does have socially-reinforced belief mechanisms that tend to make harmful behaviors our default. Those socially-reinforced beliefs sometimes create some extra work just to Do The Right Thing. And that does pretty much suck.
I recall that BRC once said something along the lines of, "All scholarship is about making things VISIBLE." I like that. It describes my experience.
I didn't understand this stuff, and I didn't really pay attention, until I had the experience of someone directing my gaze, holding my attention, and saying the equivalent of, "Don't look away. Keep looking until you SEE."
And after I finally noticed the stuff that I had not been paying attention to, I discovered that I could no longer ignore it.
Different people have different ways of noticing things, I guess. I'd like to think that pairing the waste message with popular music (popular with some listeners, at least) might hold someone's attention long enough for them to notice what it means. Or at least to begin to become somewhat more willing to consider paying a little more attention, next time.
Personally, I gained respect for Beck when I found out he was a Scientologist. Who better to adopt that set of beliefs than a guy who sings about chemtrails, gamma rays, nicotine, and gravy? If anything, Scientology was ordained exclusively FOR Beck.
And, it goes to show that he's not just scatting in hipster speak for the masses, but he has something really invested in those lyrics...
That, or he's a scientologist as a joke no one is getting. Either way, win.