Filtering by Category: 2010

Freedom Riders: Why did it work?

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Posted by Pinky.

Bunny and I are super excited that a new documentary about the Freedom Riders (Freedom Riders, 113 min, Stanley Nelson, 2009) just debuted at the Sundance Film Festival. They've been written about a lot but I hope this film will bring the story to a wider audience. It's important to learn how ordinary people have challenged injustice at different moments in history, to understand what worked and what didn't work and why - otherwise The Wheel has to be reinvented over and over again.

Democracy Now! did a segment on the new film: here:

In our most recent video we used the phrase class treason a lot. Thinking about the Freedom Riders, I think it is important to consider how history might have been different if only black people were Freedom Riders. Or only white people. Why did it have to be black and white people? And also male and female - why was that important? It brings me back to the question of whether or not we can expect change if the oppressed are left to fight for freedom all by themselves.

Take care,
pinky

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Posted by Bunny: I love the 2nd half - the interview with the two old guys. I think most young people in America aren’t often given a chance to learn from their elders. They aren't raised to think about commitment, sacrifice, solidarity, strategy or anything else meaningfully related to politics and power. As far as I can tell young people in the U.S. are schooled to believe that making society better is the responsibility of politicians, corporations, and famous people. ]

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Posted by Bunny: Another must-see: The Most Dangerous Man in America: Daniel Ellsberg and the Pentagon Papers. I'm expecting this one to be good too. ]

Bunny Mailbag: Wikipedia; Hawaii Connection; Unemployability.

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Posted by Bunny.

I haven't done Bunny mailbag for a while. Might as well do it while Pinky tries to fix the floor (we have termites). First one:

Hello Pinky Show, I have been watching for some time the back and forth fighting about The Pinky Show on Wikipedia. Are you even aware that you have an entry at Wikipedia? If so, do you think that the characterization of your show is accurate? Also, why don't you correct the false statements made about your show? I think the characterization misses the mark. And I think it's very damaging to let inaccurate information stand. Because people consider Wikipedia to be a reliable source of information. Anyway, I thought you should know what is happening there. Jean

My reply to Jean:

Hello Jean. Wikipedia is great if you want to know how many legs an ant has or need Creative Commons photos of donkeys. The everybody-chime-in premise behind Wikipedia works okay for stuff like this, but it's not going to produce a fair or accurate representation of counter-hegemonic concepts, histories, or entities. I mean seriously, have you seen how stupid some of these people are?

I've also noticed that entries generally tend to get stupider when the topic under discussion is more overtly 'popular' (i.e., popular as in accessible or understandable to everyone). For example, I'd expect the Wikipedia entry on dictatorship of the proletariat to be somewhat less stupid than The Pinky Show's entry. Why? Because idiots generally don't read Lenin or Marx (why should they?), but everyone feels like they can understand (and then comment on) talking cats.

I've had lots of conversations about democracy and knowledge and power with Pinky; as far as I'm concerned Wikipedia is just another interesting case study. Considering the kind of work we do, it's predictable that we'd have a really stupid Wikipedia entry. And we do. -Bunny

Next e-mail, this one from Matthew.

Hi. I'm curious about the connection to Hawai'i. I've spent a little time there on the Big Island because my aunt and uncle live there. We're haoles and they don't really consider themselves as colonists or participating in that (at least, no more than I do myself living on the mainland) but they aren't blind to the dynamics, either. I drove through the big military base one night on the way home from Mauna Kea and it was freaky. How did your program get involved there? Were there connections that existed before the show? Best, Matthew

My reply to Matthew:

Hi Matthew. Our connection to Hawaii is that Pinky was born there. Also, since we are committed to developing an understanding of imperialism and U.S. hegemony, Hawaii is an important place for us to study (for obvious reasons). Regarding your letter though, I would like to point out that from a political perspective, it is totally irrelevant if you, aunty, uncle, me, Pinky, or anybody else thinks we are not participating in an imperialist project. The fact is that the continued occupation of Hawaii - as well as the ongoing violence perpetrated against Native Hawaiians - absolutely depends on the silence and inaction of everyone who's not getting attacked. As Howard Zinn used to be fond of saying, "You can't be neutral on a moving train." If, like you say, your aunt and uncle really aren't blind to the dynamics, then it's probably fair to ask them something like "What have you done to restore Hawaiian independence lately?" or "What are you doing to help dismantle U.S. imperialism?" If they say 'nothing', well, then U.S. Empire says "Thank you for not participating."

As many people already know, Mauna Kea is a sacred mountain to Native Hawaiians. The fact that anybody can go driving around on it any time they like, and that the U.S. military gives itself permission to practice war with Strykers and bombs and depleted uranium on its slopes, and that the State of Hawaii allows scientists from around the world to pollute and build giant telescopes on its summit even though it's illegally seized Hawaiian Kingdom crown lands - these are all examples of U.S. dominance over all things Hawaiian. Very similar examples exist throughout the continental U.S. as well, so if any of this seems wrong to you the good news is we have lots of fighting we can do to keep us busy.

By the way again, none of this is meant as a personal attack on you or your aunt or uncle. I'd be saying the same thing even if you were Sandy from SpongeBob SquarePants, who I think pretty much everyone agrees is totally awesome. - Bunny

And finally, an e-mail from Eric & Nibblet:

Hi Pinky!  Your recent video from your bed was very thought provoking.  One thing that wasn't addressed is negative class treason:  i.e. people in exploited classes who act in support of the systems that exploit them, rather than in their own interests. I suppose this is due to the fact that this just represents part of the status-quo. The system relies on the willingness of the designated 'under classes' to pursue paths created for them by the system, rather than working to change the system for the better.

I have tried over the years various times to earn a college degree. For various reasons, I was unable to. Now I find myself in a position where I am virtually unemployable.  (Or so it seems, having tried to find employment for periods of up to several years with no luck.)  Living in the North East, where many of the institutions of 'higher learning' are based, this area is particularly 'degree happy', as I call it.  No degree, no career, for the most part.

I don't know if you can offer any advice as to how someone in my position can seek to improve society, but, after seeing your last video, I just felt the need to let you know that I do feel the need to do something.

Reply:

Hello Eric, hello Nibblet, Pinky is trying to repair the floor right now so I am answering. But she is right over there and I am talking out loud as I type things so maybe she will jump in if I say something totally outrageous. Alright, Pinky is saying “hi” right now. Anyway, yes, what you describe as negative class treason I would just call subjugation. Like you say, it is the status quo and we must find ways to upend unfair systems whenever possible.

Which brings us to the second part of your e-mail. I empathize with your situation. I don't have advice, but I have met hundreds and hundreds of people who are being marginalized and disregarded by the dominant work-system. And I've noticed that this work-system is really good at making un-legitimized people (and there are many different kinds of un-legitimized people!) appear INFERIOR and feel ISOLATED.

The first part - the cultivation of the appearance of inferiority - is designed to simultaneously inflate the value of those who have passed through the legitimation system, while attempting to destroy the dignity of those who have not, for whatever reason, completed their rites of initiation and credentialing. The value of this to the status quo is obvious.

The second part - isolation - is maybe more important because it shields the status quo from competition. If small- or medium-sized clumps of people who are being marginalized by the work-system were to start getting together and forming egalitarian institutions of work, play, and other kinds of cultural production... oh-oh, this would be bad for those who own and control the so-called legitimate work-systems and their corresponding processes of legitimation.

So what can be done? Well, to me, I don't think it's ever too late to embrace upside-down-ness as a positive trait, and a good way to live. There'll always be conventional jobs and schooling out there, but there's also millions of upside-down people out there working their way through life according to upside-down rules, and in many cases improving the planet a good deal as they do it. It can be hard to find them but that's just because there's so much effort put into making people believe they don't exist. Just one example - have you looked into intentional communities? A lot of people might think, "Oh no! Hippies! I don't want to be a hippie!" but actually there are all kinds of intentional communities.

Pinky is over here saying "monster institution". Yup, that's another possibility. If you're not into the already-established institutions, why not band together with some other losers and start your own? (That's what Pinky and I did!) Sure it can take a while to get up and running, but lots of things take a long time to get started, and at least with monster institutions when you're doing it it's yours.

We'll continue to write more about monster institutions and upside-down-ness in general. The need to "do something" will always be connected to analyses of hegemony and testing different ways to dismantle unjust social orders. So we'll keep on going, I hope you will too. Please take care. Bunny.

End of Bunny mailbag.​

Pinky Show at MoCA-Belgrade

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Posted by Bunny.

Radmila Joksimovic, curator at the Museum of Contemporary Art-Belgrade, just sent us a couple of photos of our work as it appears in their exhibition Lecture Performance. It's neat to see our videos translated into other languages.

Pinky Show : Entounters on Radical Education : Cats in Slovenia!, installation view at the Lecture Performance exhibition, Belgrade Heritage House, January 2010. (Photo: Saša Reljić)

Pinky Show : Entounters on Radical Education : Cats in Slovenia!, installation view at the Lecture Performance exhibition, Belgrade Heritage House, January 2010. (Photo: Saša Reljić)

I can't read this, but for our friends who can read Serbian...

[ lecture-performance-predavanje-performans-muzej-savremene-umetnosti-beograd ]

Unfortunately we weren't able to participate in any of the dialogues or programming associated with the exhibition (there wasn't any funding available to send us to Serbia), but hopefully we will go to Serbia 'one day'. In the meantime, it is just very nice to be included in exhibitions, as it's another way for our work to make contact with new audiences.

~Bunny.

Bunny Report: Pinky Show in Toronto & Sherbrooke

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Posted by Bunny.

Canada Part 2 trip was very successful. Our talks with Toronto and Sherbrooke-area cats were extremely productive. Though there is still much work to do we are definitely making good progress with forming new working relationships with our allies in Canada. Likewise, our human representatives gave good talks to the Canadian humans. We installed the exhibition at Toronto Free Gallery on time and with no major injuries with lots of help from nice people. Here are some photos.​

Aaron Cain does the wiring for the data projector while Siya Chen does her thing in the corner.

Aaron Cain does the wiring for the data projector while Siya Chen does her thing in the corner.

Curator Milena Placentile preparing the paintings for hanging.

Curator Milena Placentile preparing the paintings for hanging.

Toronto Free Gallery is located at 1277 Bloor Street West near the Landsdowne subway station.

Toronto Free Gallery is located at 1277 Bloor Street West near the Landsdowne subway station.

Done!

Done!

The rear mini-classroom area. Thank you to Laura Paolini for letting us borrow your school-desks.

The rear mini-classroom area. Thank you to Laura Paolini for letting us borrow your school-desks.

The crowd, hardly able to contain their excitement, due to mesmerizing 
presentation by Pinky Show HR03. (Photo: Milena Placentile) Note guy in 
front, head ready to explode.

The crowd, hardly able to contain their excitement, due to mesmerizing presentation by Pinky Show HR03. (Photo: Milena Placentile) Note guy in front, head ready to explode.

Flowers got a little tired the morning after the opening. Thank you Heather.

Flowers got a little tired the morning after the opening. Thank you Heather.

This is Bishop's University in Sherbrooke (Québec), where we gave a 
talk. Besides work stuff, we also got to walk around in the snow and 
watch midnight ice skating (we didn't have skates but that's okay). 
Also, I ate poutine (no photos, sorry).

This is Bishop's University in Sherbrooke (Québec), where we gave a talk. Besides work stuff, we also got to walk around in the snow and watch midnight ice skating (we didn't have skates but that's okay). Also, I ate poutine (no photos, sorry).

Big wall signage at the Foreman Art Gallery, Bishop's University.

Big wall signage at the Foreman Art Gallery, Bishop's University.

Pinky speaks French! Flier for the Pinky Show screenings at the Foreman Art Gallery.

Pinky speaks French! Flier for the Pinky Show screenings at the Foreman Art Gallery.

Of course it would have been impossible for us to do our work in Canada without the help of many people:

Heather Haynes, one-woman tornado that is the heart and soul and muscle of Toronto Free Gallery, and Izida Zorde, editor at the extraordinary Fuse Magazine. It was an honor to work with you both.

Siya Chen, who took care of us the whole time we were in Toronto. She even cooked dinner for us, unbelievable. We wanted to bring her home with us but she has things to do in Toronto.

Aaron Cain & Amber Landgraff, thank you for helping install all the stuff.

Sayed Mohammad Afzal the taxi driver who gave us the most excellent lecture.

Stéphanie Corriveau and Vicky Chainey Gagnon at Bishop's University in Sherbrooke. Just many thanks for 'everything'. You two are so special and we hope one day we will meet again.

The amazing Kosasa sisters, Karen & Eiko, for their help in sending the human delegation to Toronto and Sherbrooke. We love you.

Lynette Cruz for always taking care of HR02.

And of course, curator Milena Placentile, for inviting us to come to Winnipeg last November, which then turned out to be the start of all these other great experiences for us in Canada. It is so easy and fun to work with you; now you are our friend so come to Death Valley and do stuff with us over here.

The Class Treason Stories exhibition at Toronto Free Gallery closees February 21. End of Canada 2 report.

~Bunny.

Howard Zinn (1922-2010)

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Posted by Pinky.

Bunny and I were looking for old books at a bookstore today when the bookstore lady told us that Howard Zinn had just died. Although I know he was getting kind of old my heart stopped for a moment as I realized what I’d just heard.

A few years ago I was fortunate enough to have dinner with Professor Zinn in Boston. He was funny, gentle, warm, humble. Near the end of the evening I told him I was thinking of making a tv show with cats that would talk about ethics and do structural analyses of imperialism and stuff like that. I’m sure it sounded like a stupid idea but instead of making a weird face he just thought about it for a moment and then gave me some encouragement. Maybe he was just being polite but it didn’t matter to me, Howard Zinn is one of my heroes and there he was encouraging me to go do it! Wow! A little later Bunny and I started making The Pinky Show. It’s certainly not epic like A People’s History of the United States, but it’s what we can do.

I have often wondered how people find their paths. For example, as a young man studying to become a historian, I’m sure Howard Zinn wasn’t the only person with access to a secret stash of radical history books at the NYU library. Actually, I’d be willing to bet that he studied from mostly the same texts that his classmates were also studying. But somehow he managed to cultivate a perspective of history that was fairly downside-up compared to those of his peers. How did that happen? I want to know because I’d like to see maybe a million or ten million Howard Zinns coming up in this next generation.

I’m going to miss Professor Zinn. But I’m also grateful that he made so many extraordinary books for us to read and study.​

ooo x,
pinky

Howard Zinn/ The War on Terrorism and the Uses of History.

Earthquakes Are Not Simple Events

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Posted by Pinky.

Hi. Bunny & I got back from Canada on Thursday night. It was a amazing trip for us. But of course it was also impossible to fully concentrate on our own programmatic stuff because the entire trip coincided with the devastating earthquake in Haiti. We arrived in Toronto on Tuesday, January 12, the same day of the earthquake. When not setting up our exhibition or having meetings or giving talks we were reading the Canadian newspapers about the extent of the damage and also what kind of difficulties are being encountered in trying to retrieve the dead and care for survivors.

Perhaps you have heard that a lot of countries have been criticizing the U.S. for making it more difficult to help the suffering people. And a lot of U.S. Americans have reacted with anger and bewilderment at this charge. If President Obama has pledged 100 million dollars to help Haiti, why is the U.S. now being blamed for something as 'un-political', 'unavoidable', and 'natural' as an earthquake? Well, as usual, the answer is much more complicated than what the U.S. mainstream media has been showing.

Below I put together a few excerpts from various sources that you can read in less than 10 minutes. They are linked to short essays that all together will take less than an hour to read. But they contain essential information and questions that will help people (especially U.S. Americans that probably never heard this stuff before) to rethink our connection to the people of Haiti, a connection that has existed since before the United States even became the United States. Most of this won’t ever appear in the mainstream media. Please read them.

From No hope for Haiti without justice (Mark LeVine, Al Jazeera)

The roots of this collapse are as deep as they are unknown - or unappreciated - by the majority of Americans - although it is widely discussed across the globe.

Haiti, then Saint Dominigue, was among the first islands "discovered" by Columbus, and became France's - and likely Europe's - most profitable colony. Its more than 800,000 slaves produced upwards of half the sugar and coffee consumed in Europe. The discourse of freedom and equality underlying the American and French revolutions had a profound impact on the island's African slave population, who led the first successful slave revolution in the Western hemisphere, creating the first free black republic in the wake of their successful independence struggle against Napoleon's army. Far from embracing the new republic - the second independent country in the Americas - the administration of President Thomas Jefferson, under pressure from southern slave-holding politicians, refused to recognise Haiti.

Just as Communist Cuba was deemed to constitute a grave threat to capitalist America a century and a half later, a revolutionary republic of free Africans set a very bad precedent for its huge neighbour to the Northeast, where slavery was still a major component of the economy. Rather than finding an ally in the still young US, Haiti was shackled with a crushing debt by France as the price of independence.

From democracy to dictatorship

After a century of alternating democratic and dictatorial rule, Haiti was invaded and occupied by US marines from 1915 to 1934, during which time the US overturned laws that restricted foreign ownership, allowing American corporations to gain a permanent foothold in the country's agriculturally dominated economy. The first two decades of post-occupation politics saw as many coups, until stability of a sort was attained with the election of Francois Duvalier, known as "Papa Doc", in 1957. But his rule quickly deteriorated into a brutal dictatorship, equaled in its corruption and violence only by that of his son, Jean-Claude ("Baby Doc"), who ruled from 1971 until 1986. Despite the intense brutality and corruption of the regime, the US supported Duvalier as a counterweight to neighbouring communist Cuba and because of his friendliness to US corporate interests… [edit]

Whitewashing history

Haiti's complex and, from an American point of view, largely unpleasant and unedifying history must be acknowledged if there is to be any hope that the country's internationally financed reconstruction will not merely lay the groundwork for more poverty and disasters. Sadly, Obama, who famously admitted in his 2009 Cairo speech that the US had in fact overthrown the elected government in Iran, has so far said nothing about the even more extensive US history of meddling in Haiti. Instead, writing in Newsweek, the president declared that "at long last, after decades of conflict and instability, Haiti was showing hopeful signs of political and economic progress". Needless to say, if there was any substantive progress, the state would not have utterly disappeared in the rubble of the temblor. Seemingly oblivious to the role of the US and UN in producing Haiti's current woes, Obama declared that: "The United States will be there with the Haitian government and the United Nations every step of the way." If the past is any guide, this does not augur well for the country's future. Indeed, Gerald Zarr, the former USAID Haiti director, was more honest in explaining that "Haiti's going to have to change" - which is code for being even more acquiescent to the kinds of reforms that helped produce the disastrous consequences of the earthquake in the first place… [edit]

From Haiti: An Unwelcome Katrina Redux (Cynthia McKinney, Global Research)

Haitians are not the only ones who know their importance to the struggle against hatred, imperialism, and European domination. This pesky, persistent, stubbornly non-Western, proudly African people of this piece of land that we call Haiti know their history and they know that they militarily defeated the ruling world empire of the day, Napoleon's France, and the global elite at that time who supported him. They know that they defeated the armies of England and Spain.

Haitians know that they used their status as a free state to help liberate Latin Americans from Spain, by funding and fighting alongside Simon Bolivar; their example inspired their still-enslaved African brothers and sisters on the American mainland; and before Haitians were even free, they fought against the British inside the U.S. during its war of independence and won a decisive battle in Savannah, Georgia, where I have visited the statue commemorating that victory.

Haitians know that France imposed reparations on them for being free, and Haiti paid them in full, but that President Aristide called for France to give that money back ($21 billion in 2003 dollars).

Haitians know that their "brother," then-Secretary of State Colin Powell lied to the world upon the kidnapping and second ouster of their President. (Sadly, it wouldn’t be the last time that Secretary of State Colin Powell would lie to the world.) Haitians know, all-too-well, that high-ranking blacks in the United States are capable of helping them and of betraying them.

Haitians know, too, that the United States has installed its political proxies and even its own soldiers onto Haitian soil when the U.S. felt it was necessary.  All in an effort to control the indomitable Haitian spirit that directs much-needed light to the rest of the oppressed world… [edit]

So, on this remembrance of the birth of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., I note that it was the U.S. government's own illegal Operation Lantern Spike that snuffed out the promise and light of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.  Every plane of humanitarian assistance that is turned away by the U.S. military (so far from CARICOM, the Caribbean Community, Médecins Sans Frontieres, Brazil, France, Italy, and even the U.S. Red Cross)–as was done in the wake of Hurricane Katrina–and the expected arrival on this very day of up to 10,000 U.S. troops, are lasting reminders of the existential threat that now looms over the valiant, proud people and the Republic of Haiti.

From Seven Questions About Haiti (Toby O’Ryan, Revolution: Voice of the Revolutionary Communist Party, USA):

Question One: If you are so concerned about the catastrophe in Haiti, and feel so sympathetic to the terrible plight of the Haitian people, then why has President Obama promised a mere $100 million in aid, which is barely 1/10 of 1% of what this country spends on its military operations in Afghanistan and Iraq each year? Why has it taken so long for the most powerful country on earth, a mere few hundred miles from Haiti, to deliver the badly needed teams and technology which can remove people from rubble, the fresh water which people so desperately need, the food and medicine and medical personnel so urgently required? And why does the U.S. Coast Guard still insist on turning back any Haitian attempting to seek refuge in the U.S.?

I realize a blog is not the best place to have a serious conversation about the relationship between colonization, neoliberalism, and earthquakes. But the news coverage we've been reading and watching since coming back from Canada has been absolutely mindblowing in its lack of critical perspective or historical consciousness. If this blog entry has been useful in raising a few questions in your own mind about how maybe we can really help the people of Haiti beyond more guns, more containment, and more outside control exerted over of their political and economic futures, please send the links to these articles around to your friends. Thank you.

~pinky

Pinky Show events schedule for Toronto & Sherbrooke

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​Posted by Pinky.

Happy New Year everybody!

Well the new year started out with all kinds of bumps (everybody sick, big fight with Bunny, my computer broke down, our electricity got turned off, no hot water - brrrr!!!) - I can only hope that the rest of the year goes smoother. Not likely though, as this is a Tiger Year (Chinese animals calendar), and as you know, a Tiger is nothing but a huge, temperamental cat with very sharp claws and big teeth. So I'm pretty sure this is going to be a wild year. Anyway, after lots of talking and soul-searching, Bunny and I decided that we need to make this year a time for new directions for us. Last year was very difficult for us and in some ways even kinda depressing, but I'd much rather be excited and hopeful, so that’s what I'm going to be. Anyway, I'll write about some of our decisions and intentions a bit later, right now I want to fill you in on our upcoming schedule for the next few weeks:

SHERBROOKE: Jan 4 - Jan 27: Video screenings of various Pinky Show episodes at Foreman Art Gallery, Bishop's University.

Monday, Jan 11: Bunny & I set off for Toronto.

TORONTO: Thursday, Jan 14 @ 8pm: Opening of our Class Treason Stories exhibition at Toronto Free Gallery. Also the winter issue of Fuse magazine (featuring Pinky Show cover story!) launches at the same event!

TORONTO: Saturday, Jan 16 @ 4pm: Artist talk at Toronto Free Gallery. We're going to bring t-shirts and fine art prints just in case the TFG folks let us do a little fundraising on the side…

Monday, Jan 18: We leave Toronto to go to Montreal, then Sherbrooke.

SHERBROOKE: Tuesday, Jan 19 @ 7pm: Public presentation with the Pinky Show, "Structure / Power / Agency". Boquébière  (50, Wellington Nord Street, Sherbrooke)

Wednesday, Jan 20: Bunny & I leave Sherbrooke > Montreal > Toronto.

Thursday, Jan 21: Bunny & I leave Canada to return home… unless we have to go to Belgrade. We probably won’t know if that's going to happen or not until the last moment…

Okay, it's almost 3am and I have to get up early tomorrow morning so I'm going to bed now. So... goodnight!

ooo (hugs),
pinky