Felix Stalder, Toronto
Kunst im Kontext, zweiter Teil: rTmark vs. WTO
When Charlene Barshefsky, U.S. representative to the WTO, pronounced that
"the single greatest threat to the multilateral trade system is the
absence of public support" she probably didn't expect her statement would become
a rallying slogan for online activists *against* the WTO's "millennium
round" (Seattle, WA, 29.11.-3.12).
But uncovering layers of hidden meaning in corporate and political double
speak is what rTmark is brilliant in. rTmark, a NYC-based artist/activist
collective, uses its limited liability as a corporation to sponsor the
sabotage of mass-produced products, and to discuss corporate abuses of the
political process. Currently they donate their website to support the
rainbow coalition of labour, environment and regional groups that raise
public awareness about and resistance against the WTO.
[http://www.rTmark.com]
rTmark is best known for two campaigns which both are still running. One
is
to expose presidential hopeful George W. Bush as a hypocrite who is though
on crime, except on his own [http://www.gwbush.com]. The other is to
document the fascist tendencies of NYC major Rudolf Guiliani
[http://www.yesrudy.com] who is also a candidate for the US senate. In both
campaigns rTmark is using domain names and sites that look like the
official site and are full of real quotes and events, but of the sort the
candidates would like us to never hear or forget about. rTmark's goal is
to
expose the ugly and dangerous sides of their personality and political
agendas.
The WTO site is done in the same spirit. It uses similar graphic elements
as the official WTO site [http://www.wto.org] but contains a directory to
the growing number of direct action initiatives to resist the unfettered
rule of global capitalism in general and free trade in particular. But the
site is much more than a simple resource page to groups and initiatives
that exists elsewhere. Under the headings of trade topics that WTO is going
to negotiate about--Goods, Services, Environment, and more--rTmark has set
up various investment funds similar to venture capital funds. These funds
hope match creative ideas of how to challenge the neo-liberal juggernaut
with the necessary capital and manpower to turn them into reality.
Some of these funds are managed by well-known net.artists, Heath Bunting
(http://www.irational.org), for example, oversees several high-risk funds
for subversive goods. All in all, there are a few dozens of these funds,
all proposing direct action to expose the cruelty and cynicism of the
advanced global capitalism. Under the heading Dispute Settlement, this
action is looking for capital and manpower: "Insert realistic collector
cards into cereal boxes, each with a photo and description of one of the
many workers that has been killed or maimed at the cereal manufacturer's
factory."
Many of the funds' "business plans" surf hard at the border of
legality.
But their power is often more symbolic as in the fund to rename a factory
of a major chemical weapons manufacturer after former US-president Ronald
Reagan.
It is difficult to assess the effectiveness this type of political parody
and activism. However, after the defeat of the Multilateral Agreement on
Investment (MAI) last year, and the growing resistance against unfettered
free trade in Europe and other parts of the world, the WTO is indeed at
a
critical junction. If the millennium round fails the future of the WTO is
in question. Public opinion is a major factor in determining its fate.
Sustained by a constant rethoric of inevitability--globalization is
progress, the market is natural--resistance often seems futile. The rTmark
site shows that this does not need to be true. They do this through a
powerful mix of the real and the virtual, confusion and clarification,
symbolic and direct action.
Various behind the scenes effort illustrate that this type of innovative
subversive tactics is being noticed, and feared. G.W. Bush sent out his
lawyer trying to stop the critical site, unsuccessfully so far. Various
legislative efforts in the US and internationally (ICANN) are underway to
prohibit using domain names that could "confuse" consumers about
the origin
of the site [[ARMIN MAKE A LINK TO MY OTHER ARTICLE]]. However, it is still
unclear if this type of legislation itself is legal, as it will surely
clash with the right to freedom of speech.
For the time being, there is plenty of opportunity to use the Web
creatively to confuse, upset and challenges the powers that are. And they
indeed feel challenged. This alone is a major success and it shows that
nothing is inevitable.
Other political sites connected to rTmark:
Freiheitliche Partei, Austria
http://www.fpo.at
Liberal candidate Jeff Kennett, Australia
http://www.realjeff.com
Anticopyright site
http://www.grayday.org
More info on rTmark:
http://www.nettime.org/nettime.w3archive/199910/msg00005.html
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Les faits sont faits.
http://www.fis.utoronto.ca/~stalder