Friday, 5 March 2010

The Rebellion

We should form our own opinions from facts and take responsibility for our own actions. Action without thought makes our world so dangerous. Our leaders, marketers, managers and politicians, are uncultivated minds, all acting without thought.

Tuesday, 2 March 2010

Aldous Huxley stated that the world suffers from 3 evils :

ORGANISED LYING.

NON-STOP DISTRACTION.

NATIONALISTIC IDOLATRY (which has taken the place of religion).

The greatest of these evils is Non-Stop Distraction.
These three evils can be summed up in one word: PROPAGANDA

These evils are the ingredients of a free pill which we swallow daily: NINSDOL

(http://www.activeresistance.co.uk/Ninsdol.html)
ORGANIZED LYING

Everyone accepts organized lying.  In general, we don't think; we have little concept of a world outside our perception of uniform opinion and perverse blinkered vision.  We all follow others; our little experts.

(http://www.activeresistance.co.uk/Ninsdol.html)
NON-STOP DISTRACTION

We are constantly bombarded with information, this diverts us from thinking, so our brain will absorb anything that we are exposed to.  We are consumers, passively absorbing information.

The opposite of this is delight in being alone and the discipline of following a deep interest.  It takes you away from consumerism and grants control.

(http://www.activeresistance.co.uk/Ninsdol.html)
NATIONALISTIC IDOLATRY (Nationalism)

A nation doesn’t differentiate between boundaries, language or race. The UN defines a nation as “a society possessing the means of making war.” Conflict is natural; however war pushes this past the line. We have a natural attachment to our place of origin and familiar people. Nationalism uses propaganda to create a loyalty to areas with which the individual is unacquainted. Nationalism is basically a war mentality, it has taken the place of religion.

(http://www.activeresistance.co.uk/Ninsdol.html)

Sunday, 28 February 2010

PROPAGANDA

A form of communication aimed at influencing the attitude of a community toward some cause or position. As opposed to impartially proving information, propaganda in its most basic sense, presents information primarily to influence an audience.

(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/propaganda)

Wednesday, 24 February 2010

Tuesday, 23 February 2010

The most important thing about the manifesto is that it is a practice. If you follow it your life will change. In the pursuit of culture you will start to think. If you change your life, you change the world.


Vivienne Westwood

(http://www.activeresistance.co.uk/Manifesto.html)

Sunday, 21 February 2010

MANIFESTO

I make the great claim for my manifesto, that it penetrates to the root of the human predicament and offers the underlying solution. We have a choice: to become more cultivated, and therefore more human - or by not choosing, to be the destructive and self-destroying animal, the victim of our own cleverness (to be or not to be).

We shall begin with a search for art, show that art gives culture and that culture is the antidote to propaganda.

Dear Friends, we all love art and some of you claim to be artists. Without judges there is no art. She only exists when we know her. Does she exist? The answer to this question is of vital importance because if Art is alive the world will change. No art, no progress.

We must find out; go in search of her - But wait. Who is this with fire-cracking smouldering pigtails, gold teeth and a brace of flintlocks in his belt? He is a pirate. And what does his T-shirt say? I love crap. (Pirate hands Vivienne Westwood an Hawaiian garland of plastic flowers.)

     Pirate: "Leave everything to me. I plunder for you. Stick with me and you might get a share of the bounty. My name is Progress."

     Active Resitance: But you have stolen imagination. There is hardly anyone left now who believes in a better world. What is the future of unlimited profit in a finite world?

     Pirate Progress: "I like you artistic lot. But, trust me or not - I'll take you with me if I go down. We'll all burn together." (Film clip, close up: the pigtails burst into flames and with a "Ha-haagh!" the pirate disappears in a pall of smoke followed by black night.)

(Still dark) He is not Progress. He must have stolen the name. (The defiant face of Pirate Progress appears and disappears like the Cheshire Cat. Light returns). True progress, as the Greeks thought of it is without limit. How can things get better and better if there is a limit?

     Beautiful Slavegirl: "Everything must have an end. And to progress or advance in any way you must know where you are going. An end cannot be something you choose for the sake of something else. For example, money is not an end but a means to an end. And for this reason, I shall be set free.

     Alice: "She was your mirror. Her love showed you Yourself. She believed in you."

     Active Resistance: A work of art may show us our self - who we are and our place in the world. It is a mirror which imitates life.

     Alice: "Those round convex mirrors are very good - you see a lot, but concentrated down - you see big and small at the same time - you need to fit all the things into a microcosm but it has to reflect as well," and turning to the Art Lovers, "I was just explaining this to Pinocchio".

     Pinocchio: "Now that I have become a boy, I want to be a freedom-fighter."

     Active Resistance: Action! Nothing is possible without art. Come with us. To find if Art is alive, we must first know who she is. To the Lyceum!

     Alice - to Pinocchio: "We are going to see Aristotle. His analysis of Greek tragedy is such an objective breakdown that it serves to define art in general and in all its forms - what it is and what it isn't," then finding themselves alone, "We must go back and find the others".

     Pinocchio: "There's a bloke here who lives in a barrel."

     Diogenes: "I shit and wank in front of people in the street like a dog: I am the Cynic. The Great Alexander made a point of coming to see me and asked if he could do me a favour. Nobody's better than me. I told him to step out of my light. I am famous because I've got the balls to do what I want. And I don't want much."

     Pinocchio: "Cool, I've found art! I could be Diogenes II. I'll call myself a piss artist and make lots of money."

     Active Resistance: Come back children. Alice we're waiting for you to introduce us to Aristotle. And Pinocchio, you're just being silly. Though Diogenes is obsessed by himself, he doesn't believe in anything, let alone himself. That's why he's a cynic. This self-promotion, and doing what you want is a sham philosophy of life. No, no, it's not self-indulgence but self-discipline that makes the individual. And you, especially, need self-discipline if you're going to be a freedom-fighter.

     Pinocchio: "You are right. Diogenes seemed kind of happy, but he's a poser. Too boring, I couldn't keep it up. Ha, ha, keep it up! I could sell canned sperm. Great marketing opportunities."

     Alice (sarcastic): "Oh how lewd!"

Aristotle, a Greek gentleman, impeccably dressed, - in contrast to Diogenes - stands centre stage. Alice moves to his side.

     Alice: "Aristotle refers to the writer of tragedy as 'the poet'. Greek tragedy was expressed in verse but this is not the important thing. What defines the poet is that he is an imitator - just like a painter or any other maker of images. If a historian were to write up his whole history in verse this would not make him a poet; for he tells of things that have happened in real life and this is not imitation. Imitation is the work of the imagination. The poet's role is to tell of things that might happen, things that are possible. Aristotle adds that the poet may imitate life not as it is, but as it ought to be.

     Alice: "Dear Aristotle thank you for stating the links between character, action and fortune. I remember you once said that character is a person's habit of moral choice. But please now tell us what you mean when you describe a work of imitation - in this case tragedy - as 'the Whole'."

     Aristotle: "The events which are the parts of the plot must be so organised that if any of them is displaced or taken away, the whole will be shaken and put out of joint; for if the presence or absence of a thing makes no discernible difference, that thing is not part of the whole." (Aristotle retires)

     Active Resistance: One can begin to grasp something of the obsession people have had with the idea of the circle as a perfect form. A work of art then, is an imitation reduced to its essentials, thereby forming a whole - as in a microcosm.

Thus art gives objectivity - a perspective, an overview. We define objectivity as seeing things as they are.

Real life is not objective - we can never get the complete picture. It is chaotic and continuous - a jumble of particulars in which events are engulfed in the flux of circumstance. How can the artist be objective when he, himself is part of the change? He needs a fixed fact to stand on - a standard, a measure, a model.

     Alice: "Tell me all about it! If there is nothing fixed in the world then you find yourself in Wonderland where everything changes - including yourself. - And you try to play a game of croquet with a flamingo for a mallet and the ball is a hedgehog who runs away.'

     Active Resistance: "We do have a fixed standard - timeless, universal, recognizable. We refer to it as Representative Human Nature (RHN). It is the key to this manifesto:

You or I - as individuals - we change. But there is something typical about us which does not change. When we say, 'Man is the measure of all things', we mean the unchanging part: Man, both in his general nature and according to his various types: this is RHN."

Aristotle takes this for granted when he says: "In accordance with their character men are of such and such a quality ... it is for the sake of their actions that the actors take on the characters they have." He also says that the best characters in a play are people with whom we can empathise - 'someone like ourselves'.

We are not saying that art has to be confined to the direct portrayal of human beings: We do say that art must be representational - for it is in imitation that objectivity lies. In practice, through his medium of RHN the artist gains direct imaginative insight into the general nature of things; his view extends from the model.

And abstract art? An abstract that represents no object! And revels in subjectivity. Academic, it's all in the mind - the painter's mind. Unfortunately we are not all mind readers, and the work gives us no clue. He may think he's discovered the secret of the universe! He will take it to his grave. There is no common ground on which artist and art lover can come together, because there is no objectivity - no control of the imagination.

     Alice: "Oh hello, Mr. White Rabbit! Please stop a moment! The artist has just produced a giant hole in the wall. Perhaps he thought it was a 'Whole'. I'm sure you have an interesting observation on holes."

     White Rabbit: 'Negative,' (rushing off).

     Artist's Agent: 'Superb intellectual irony. Right on!'

     Mad Hatter: "What do you mean, we're not mind readers? We've all got a hole in the head and we can fill it with whatever 'Whole' we want." (changes price-tag on hat from 10/6d to £10m)

     Pinocchio: "I'm going to be a real painter and a freedom fighter. I've been drawing in secret. To see the world as it ought to be - that can't be bad for a freedom-fighter. Hard work though."

     Talking Cricket: "Pinocchio, you know that there are two sides to people, the donkey and the boy - the self who wants to live in Toyland versus the self who wants to grow up. It is the inner struggle between doing what you want and being true to your Best Self, that humanises a puppet."

     Pinocchio: "Dear little Cricket, I still get around - have a laugh! But, yeah this inner voice is always having a go, 'Pinocchio, don't be an arsehole! I am your human genius. Listen to me!'"

     Active Resistance: Pinocchio, the whole future of art is at stake and depends on you and others controlling your imagination and listening to your best self - your human genius.

Imagination is the driving force in human nature. But it is likely to run wild and escape into the chaos of endless desire, unfulfilled longing and alienation.

      Active Resistance: The way we control the imagination is through the imagination itself - or rather, through its 'best self' - the ethical part.

The Ethical Imagination is a power of control, an inner check, which prefers to see things as they are. It questions art: is it probable? –is it true to life? - could it be otherwise?

To the great artist the ethical imagination is absolute, he never ceases to explore and cultivate it. To the art lover, we possess it in differing degrees, all may cultivate it. It is intuitive, you get at the truth through insight and you get better at it with practice, through comparison - between works of art and with real life. You need the stamina of a lifetime.

In general: the true artist is always true to his art; the impostor is self-conscious, demonstrating his idea, projecting his theory, his ego, and e.g. the figures of the painter are not borrowed ideas who demonstrate themselves talking, dying, dreaming - they do it. They are of themselves and they LIVE! - and the flowers are not showing us how pretty they are, or how weird - they are what they are - Etc.! No invention for the sake of invention! Invention must serve the purpose of art.

Art is alive to the extent that we control our imagination; we miss everything if we let it run wild. The aim of art is objectivity - she comes to life when we are objective - when we see her as she is. Without judges there is no art.

Neither is there culture, - for art gives culture - because objectivity in art is a centralising and unifying experience:

1. The artist, taking RHN as his model, presents an imitation of life. We aspire to the image. The image may be beautiful or ugly. We see our human face and we ask - could it be otherwise?

2. Thus RHN is the authority on which culture rests. Culture must rest on something abiding, an authority, a belief. But our authority is not the dogma of outer authority (no need for God to supply social cement or fill the spiritual vacuum) but the authority of a consensus - of shared experience.

3. Through culture we are moving towards a centre which is infinite. It is more human, and alive and open to improvement, because it is dependent on the private judgement of every one of us - which is our third factor, the inner check - the ethical imagination.

We define culture as: The exploration and cultivation of humanity through art.

Culture will overcome Propaganda, the nature of Propaganda.  In the pursuit of art we become impervious to Propaganda.

We discover Progress.

Through art we see the future.  It holds up a mirror of our human potential; - or as victims of our mere cleverness we will remain the destructive animal.

End of the journey.

(for full version,http://www.activeresistance.co.uk/Manifesto.html)

Saturday, 20 February 2010

The Active Resistance campaign aims to eradicate the constant stream of propaganda presented to us everyday.  It encourages free thinking, through the exploration of culture and personal growth.  Vivienne Westwood heads the campaign.  Through following the Active Resistance manifesto, the individual should become resistant to Propaganda.

Friday, 19 February 2010

PROPAGANDA

A systematic form of purposeful persuasion that attempts to influence the emotions, attitudes, opinions and actions of specified target audiences for ideological, political or commercial purposes.

(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/propaganda)

Tuesday, 16 February 2010

Time to start a campaign...