Northeastern Pennsylvania
Whirl-Mart

For national & world-wide information please visit breathingplanet.net


Matt Bought Nothing
on 'Buy Nothing Day'



Join us for a NEPA-WHIRL!

Got a scoop for the NEPA WHIRL?

Contact Michael via e-mail.

What is a Whirl-Mart?
     The action is comprised of a group of anti-shoppers ranging in size from 1 to 50 members. The ritual consists of activists/actors arriving at a Wal-Mart, Toys-R-Us or another chain superstore at 12-noon on the first Saturday or Sunday of the month and proceeding to push empty shopping carts slowly and silently through the aisles. Eventually, all of the participants locate one another and form a single-file chain of anti-shoppers which weaves, wanders, and whirls throughout the store for about an hour. It is a collective reclamation of space that is otherwise only used for buying and selling. It is a symbolic display of the will to resist the capitalist ideology.
     'Whirl-Mart' is an experiment that can be approached from several different angles. As a work of art, it examines and blurs the boundaries that have been established between performance art, protest, living sculpture, and direct action. As an action of resistance, it utilizes the power of silence in occupying private consumer-dominated space with a symbolic spectacle. As a ceremony, it is a counter-ritual to shopping that transforms the super-store and its wall-to-wall array of products into a surreal and colorful cathedral. And what the heck-- it's just darned fun!

Search the NEPA Whirl-Mart Site
   
This Site Web      siteLevel search


Get your Networking on

Regional (NEPA)

Rally of One
Peace can begin with YOU
NEPA BLOG
Blog by & about Northeastern Pennsylvania: issues, events, discussion, photos
WatermelonPunch.com
NEPA Whirl-Mart's web host
xradiograph
what Michael does when he's not
"fightin' the man"

SurfScranton.com
1,000+ regional links

National & Worldwide

Whirl-Mart Ritual Resistance
International Whirl-Mart HQ
World Changing
Models, Tools, and Ideas for Building a Bright Green Future
Critical Mass
Critical Mass is not an organization, it's an unorganized coincidence. It's a movement ... of bicycles, in the streets.
Rev Billy's Church of Stop Shopping
Lots of great scripts from/for performance interventions with a heavy focus on Starbucks.
Commerce Jamming
Commerce Jamming source page.
AdBusters
A global network of those who want to advance the new social activist movement of the information age.
Commercial Alert
wants to keep commercial culture within its proper sphere, and to prevent it from exploiting children and subverting the higher values of family, community, environmental integrity and democracy.
No Media Kings
Jim Munroe's guide to doin' it for yourself
Booksense.com
Internet book search that sends your order to your nearest independent bookstore.
Starbucks Delocator
Search that helps you locate locally owned alternatives to Starbucks

Media

The Independent Media Center is a network of collectively run media outlets for the creation of radical, accurate, and passionate tellings of the truth

Project of the Independent Media Institute, a nonprofit organization dedicated to strengthening and supporting independent and alternative journalism.
The Electronic Frontier Foundation is the first to identify threats to our basic rights online and to advocate on behalf of free expression in the digital age.
Declan McCullagh's Politech
Politech is the moderated mailing list of politics and technology. Topics include privacy, free speech, the role of government and corporations, antitrust, and more.
MediaChannel.org
The global network for democratic media. PLUS the News Dissector's Weblog.
CorpWatch.org
counters corporate-led globalization through education, network-building and activism.


FREE THE MOUSE

NEPA Whirl-Mart Blog
Front Page | Blog Archives



« previous  |  Front  |  next »
Tuesday 17 May 2005

washingtonpost.com - Wal-Mart To Apologize For Ad in Newspaper
Wal-Mart Stores Inc. said yesterday that it made a "terrible" mistake in approving a recent newspaper advertisement that equated a proposed Arizona zoning ordinance with Nazi book-burning.

The full-page advertisement included a 1933 photo of people throwing books on a pyre at Berlin's Opernplatz. It was run as part of a campaign against a Flagstaff ballot proposal that would restrict Wal-Mart from expanding a local store to include a grocery.

The accompanying text read "Should we let government tell us what we can read? Of course not . . . So why should we allow local government to limit where we shop?" The bottom of the advertisement announced that the ad was "Paid for by Protect Flagstaff's Future-Major Funding by Wal-Mart (Bentonville, AR)."

The ad, which ran May 8 in the Arizona Daily Sun, was "reviewed and approved by Wal-Mart, but we did not know what the photo was from. We obviously should have asked more questions," said Daphne Moore, Wal-Mart's director of community affairs. She said the company will also issue a letter of apology to the Arizona Anti-Defamation League.

The ADL, members of Congress and the United Food and Commercial Workers International Union criticized the company for the advertisement.

"It's not the imagery itself. It trivializes the Nazis and what they did. And to try to attach that imagery to a municipal election goes beyond distasteful," said Bill Straus, Arizona regional director for the ADL.
I'd like to know what kind of advertising people came up with that one. It's almost like some weird twisted ironic joke, considering Wal-Mart is a company that endorses censorship.

(link via Mark Maynard - "you're a nazi if you oppose us")

posted by Chloe | Tuesday 17 May 2005 4:50 PM
Comments


Add a Comment
Trackbacks

TrackBack URL for this entry:

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference this entry.



Add your comments











Put a URL in the URL field and your e-mail address will not be displayed.
Comment Avatar icons by
Gravatar.
E-mail this entry to a friend

Email this entry to:

Your email address:

Message (optional):