dear capital: while you were out colonizing institutional space…

hautepop:

by nocaesura:

dear capital:
while you were out colonizing institutional space, unethically accumulating resources on blind cybernetic autopilot and profiting at the expense of humanity, i have been levelling up my mage. i am now an advanced practitioner in the spheres of skepticism, invasion, critical irony and hauntology. i have maxed out my skill level in all four of these spells to ‘sisyphean ad nauseam’… ne plus ultra much, bitch? see u in hell.

p.s. my identity is an emerging micro-niche market which i have chosen to claim ownership to despite previously owning it in an informal-communal sense defined by untranslatable semiotic which i have betrayed by increasing the visibility of and making translatable to the commodity form in order to profit from and secure my personal transmutation into celebrity, please buy my chapbook grimoire e-book for $5 via paypal. thanks.

net/art people seem big on personal branding – in the ruins of its desecration (can you desecrate something that was always ghastly?) by digital marketers and bloggers-on-blogging about 2-3 years ago. not quite sure what this means, now – but it’s interesting.

dear capital: while you were out colonizing institutional space…

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climateadaptation:

Wild dolphin “asks” for help to get untangled from fishing line and a fishing hook stuck in its skin. Openly trusts divers as they cut off the line.

I know, I know. At first, I didn’t believe the title or description either. And even as the video unfolds, I remained skeptical. But then it happened – the dolphin clearly ‘asks’ for help. I’ve never seen anything like it (well, maybe except in domesticated pets). Definitely gives pause to reflect on the meaning of sentience.

From the description:

This video of a dolphin in need is really something on so many levels.

It turns out that the dolphin had fishing line and a hook stuck on one of its fins, so it approached a group of divers who were watching manta rays at night near Kona, Hawaii. Fortunately one of the professional divers was able to help remove some of the fishing line that was restricting the movement of the dolphin, though in the end they were unable to remove the hook.

Via BoingBoing

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“The experience of a relatively easy 500 years of expansion and colonization, the constant taking over of new lands, led to the modern capitalist myth that you can expand forever,” Wright said. “It is an absurd myth. We live on this planet. We can’t leave it and go somewhere else. We have to bring our economies and demands on nature within natural limits, but we have had a 500-year run where Europeans, Euro-Americans and other colonists have overrun the world and taken it over. This 500-year run made it not only seem easy but normal. We believe things will always get bigger and better. We have to understand that this long period of expansion and prosperity was an anomaly. It has rarely happened in history and will never happen again. We have to readjust our entire civilization to live in a finite world. But we are not doing it, because we are carrying far too much baggage, too many mythical versions of deliberately distorted history and a deeply ingrained feeling that what being modern is all about is having more. This is what anthropologists call an ideological pathology, a self-destructive belief that causes societies to crash and burn. These societies go on doing things that are really stupid because they can’t change their way of thinking. And that is where we are.”
And as the collapse becomes palpable, if human history is any guide, we like past societies in distress will retreat into what anthropologists call “crisis cults.” The powerlessness we will feel in the face of ecological and economic chaos will unleash further collective delusions, such as fundamentalist belief in a god or gods who will come back to earth and save us.

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The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, or DARPA, is hoping to implement a global infrastructure for storing mission-critical objects and payloads at the “bottom of the sea”—a kind of stationary, underwater FedEx that will release mission-critical packages for rendezvous with passing U.S. warships and UAVs.

It’s called the Upward Falling Payloads program.

The “concept,” according to DARPA, “centers on developing deployable, unmanned, distributed systems that lie on the deep-ocean floor in special containers for years at a time. These deep-sea nodes would then be woken up remotely when needed and recalled to the surface. In other words, they ‘fall upward.’” This requires innovative new technologies for “extended survival of nodes under extreme ocean pressure, communications to wake-up the nodes after years of sleep, and efficient launch of payloads to the surface.”

As Popular Science describes it, it’s a sleeping archive of “‘upward falling’ robots that can hide on the seafloor for years [and] launch on demand.”

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iamdanw:

Fake Oyster Card 1 (by Darren Cullen) – “It took awhile but I finally got the RFID chip out of an Oyster card and put it inside my own fake cardboard Oyster for use on the London transport system.”

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