Tags: victoria
The Myth of Consumer Power & co.
By pascal on Apr 14, 2009 | In Secret Worlds of James Bay
The Myth of Consumer Power
or, How I Learned to Stop Selecting Properly
James Bay Culture Blog #14
(Is fourteen a Blogger's Dozen???)
I confess! I confess a terrible thing -- that I have been unmotivated to post ever since I heard the news that this very website may soon be undergoing a radical graceful change of management. The puts my whole project under the sign of the Dark Question Mark. My article about the implied critique of James Bay that virtually screams off the new metalwork statues in front of Serious Coffee? Nope -- not gonna write it. In its place I present a small essay which could easily be my last...
The Way of Extreme Capitalism has failed!!!
Shop accordingly.
That's right -- we are not just consumers. We are, first and foremost, citizens. So we must always keep this firmly in mind while we are making our shopping decisions.
Recently, my friend Derek said to me "I don't vote, but I vote with my dollars." Do you think he meant it? Do you think the most tiny and necessary form of mass political action is -- in Derek's mind -- adequately replaced by slight shifts in his buying patterns???
If so, I expect to see "Girls Gone Wild - Miami Beach" be elected as Prime Minister.
It is all well and good to be informed, more conscientious. Fine. Obviously. But we must guard against the notion that personal preferences are the primary site of ethical social action. It seems very likely that all inept Owners and Social Administrators would like to relinquish their responsibility the cells at the very end-tips of Society's tentacles.
An ignorant war? An evil product? Mass scale devastation of terrestrial life? Don't blame us -- it was the People who empowered us. THEY should have known better. Don't make the effort to change the system -- the only real change is when THEY magically all start choosing differently.
Easy to see why we would get the blame, but why do we accept this blame? Why agree to the idea that decades of mismanagement of energy technologies must be blamed on OUR wrong pleasures and needs? Well, I guess, when you think about it... there is a certain flattery in this notion.
After all -- we can't be responsible without being imagined as POWERFUL.
Think about the sheer vanity involved in the idea that our little personal decisions about what to encourage or discourage is the central key to controlling reality! Pure Narcissism & Megalomania.
European intellectuals on the leading Left often complain that no one truly believes in an alternative to liberal-capital-democracy, that we have all become content to simply tinker with the existing system rather than entertain any hope of transformation. They claim our social force has vanished, but they don't say where it has gone.
I suspect it is squandered daily in countless grocery aisles and catalogs, viewing choices, purchasing preferences, strategies for customization.
Consider Victoria's water supply.
While the end-level users, the water-receiving citizens, are busy shutting off their taps as quickly as possible & debating whether or not to water their lawns during the expected Water Shortage Period hardly a voice gets raised against the primitive and ridiculous organization of our water system. Our reservoirs and pipelines are basically a giant bucket that we hope will fill with rain each season. We sit next to the unlimited expanse of the Ocean and wring our hands about the Coming Water Crisis! All the while we can't must the time, energy, cash or belief to produce a limitless surplus of fresh water.
The truly scarce commodity is the willingness of people to demand the intelligent upgrade of the socio-technological system in which we are embedded. What do we do instead of demanding change? We are cleaning bottles for recycling, wondering where to dispose of lightbulbs most efffectively, what toys are safe, which sneaker companies support atrocity -- we leak away our social potency when we remember to shut off that leaking tap.
We are like little children playing a game of peekabo -- thinking that the world ceases to exist when we are not inspecting and affirming it.
Laughing at exploding cow (in a film) causes animal cruelty!
Viewing degrading pornography leads to more abuse.
Turning off the lights, or not, determines the Environment's future.
Deciding between the tuna sandwich and the potato soup determines whether or not countless dolphins will be uselessly clubbed to death today.
Yikes!
On all fronts -- your decisions and attention have the power to control reality so you must take every tiny decision so seriously as the primary site at which you play a moral role in the future of society.
Shop wisely, sure. And you don't have to view what you hate. But be careful you don't start thinking that every one of your precious little choices is the critical ethical bond. Efforts toward real and benevolent social change can render countless tiny practices obsolete overnight.

other blogs:
iconasostacles.gaia.com/blog
cultural-aquarium.blogspot.com
planetarycathedral.blogspot.com
Fig.12b - Uh oh! It's all true...
EMILY CARR HATES YOU
By pascal on Feb 15, 2009 | In Secret Worlds of James Bay
James Bay Culture Blog #13
EMILY CARR HATES YOU!

Fig.12 - Check out the Same Old Social Practices at sites around town from Jan 30 to May 24 2009.
Dear James Bay,
Nothing? That's what it reads on the sign outside Carr House on Government Street. This weird interruption in our local side-walking appears to be evidence of some Art Gallery of Greater Victoria mischief which promises a lively soundscape experience if you will only phone 250.704.2737. So, on your behalf, I phoned this number.
THE BIG MINDE OF JAMES BAYE
By pascal on Jan 26, 2009 | In People, Secret Worlds of James Bay
James Bay Culture Blog #12

JAMES BAYE & HIS BIG MINDE
I rolled my eyes at her.
"Just read the card," she told me.
Freedom? Freedom in Self?
THE HORROR AT SHOAL POINT
By pascal on Jan 26, 2009 | In Secret Worlds of James Bay
THE HORROR AT SHOAL POINT
((this is James Bay Culture Blog #11))
Dear James Bay,
It's.... be-ginning to look A LOT
like... Fish Men...
These are lyrics.
The tune is a familiar Christmas carol perverted into a strange, slimy homage on the album "A Very Scary Solistice" by HPLHS. The H.P. Lovecraft Historical Society.
Lovecraft, of course, is the grand-father of the American horror story -- a nervously agitated pulp-fiction author who twisted the form of literature in order to project his personal vexations onto a cosmic stage. Imagine him as a neurotic Edgar Allen Poe trying to describe the plot of a David Lynch film. Or think of him as the Rod Serling of the 1930s -- the authoritative narrator who wants to take you on a short journey into a realm where sanity, reality and language can no longer be trusted. The original Twilight Zone.
But with more Fish Men.
JAMES JOYCE BAY DAY, anyone?
By pascal on Jan 12, 2009 | In Secret Worlds of James Bay, Community Affairs
JUNE 16 2009
THE FIRST ANNUAL JAMES JOYCE BAY DAY!
((this is James Bay Culture Blog #10))
Stately, plump Buck Mulligan came from the stairhead,
bearing a bowl of lather...
These words are the classic opening line from James Joyce's acclaimed universal masterpiece -- the novel "Ulysses." Universal? Wow - that's pretty big. You just can't argue with something THAT big. So I guess we have no choice but to leap onto this bandwagon. Let's get into the Spirit by celebrating James Joyce Bay!
Hip communities around this world have been celebrating June 16th as "Bloomsday" for decades. The events of the novel Ulysses all take place on a single glorious day which is commemorated globally (especially in Joyce's Dublin). Public readings from the book, high spirits, literary excitement and busy pubs typical Bloomsday festivities. Surely we can manage that!