Animal School Photos – Picture Day by Angela Rossi Puts Critters Behind the Camera (GALLERY)
Posted in: UncategorizedYouTube Klubi #6 – The Kony Free Edition
Posted in: UncategorizedThis week’s Klubi takes in a strange mix of topics. From game and music mashups to the fate of three little piggies there is a little something of everything. Well, almost everything. Enjoy.
Now this is how you launch a game. Angry Birds in Space. Real space.
The new Guardian promo shows how the story of the […]
Panasonic HD CCTV: Robber, Thief, Snatcher
Posted in: UncategorizedCampaign Viral Chart: Film plea for warlord’s arrest goes stratospheric
Posted in: UncategorizedThe 30-minute film to raise public awareness of the crimes of Ugandan warlord Joseph Kony and secure his arrest has been shared more than five million times this week.
Tribal Teen Pictorials – The Lost Rebels Editorial by Danny Nguyen is Nomadic (GALLERY)
Posted in: UncategorizedStarbucks to Launch Single-Serve Coffeemaker
Posted in: UncategorizedAfter Dad-Fueled Poop-Storm, Huggies Alters Campaign
Posted in: UncategorizedP&G Learns Digital Lessons — And That Twitter Success Brings Spambots
Posted in: UncategorizedAmerica’s Authoritarian Turn
Posted in: UncategorizedSpeaking truth to power becomes a crime.
From Adbusters Blog
Ever since the rise of Occupy, corporatist authorities have been trying to figure how to squash our emerging social movement. First they tried a media blackout, but when over 700 nonviolent meme warriors were arrested on the Brooklyn Bridge our Gandhian ferocity catalyzed a thousand encampments and the 1% could ignore us no more. Next elites tried the Bloomberg model of midnight paramilitary raids backed up by excessive force and sometimes-lethal munitions. That worked well to evict encampments in New York City, Oakland and nationwide … but it backfired when occupiers became diffuse, appearing at scripted events and interrupting the spectacle of corporate-funded politics with mic checks of truth. Now they are trying the new tactic of “lawfare” – using draconian laws to squash free speech in a last ditch effort to put an end to people power.
A week before the G8 Backdown, the US House of Representatives voted in near unanimous consensus in favor of an authoritarian law, H.R. 347, that makes it a federal crime to disrupt “Government business or official functions” or to enter any building where a “person protected by the Secret Service is or will be temporarily visiting.” In other words, to mic check Obama is now a federal crime punishable by a year in prison. And so too is the banner drop if it takes place in any building that a “protected” person might be visiting in the future, even if jammers don’t know it. And so is the anti-globalization tactic of blocking road access to a meeting of world elites, there is a special clause about that too. Obama signed the bill into law on March 9.
History shows that using authoritarian laws to silence the authentic, legitimate concerns of the people always boomerangs into a fatal loss of legitimacy. Governments derive their authority and right to exist from the people and when the people are ignored and beaten back regimes fall.
Read more about H.R. 347 at the dailyagenda.org and the lawfareblog.com and then brainstorm below on how Occupy can outmaneuver this new tactic of repression.
H20h: Patinaje
Posted in: UncategorizedMais uma argentinice bacana. Simples e com uma boa história para contar.
Daquelas que, como diz o conceito, mostra que todos podemos gostar do mesmo.
Criação da BBDO Argentina com produção da Landia.
Post originalmente publicado no Brainstorm #9
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