Daily Archives: May 6, 2017

New technology allows veterans to control prosthesis with their minds – Richmond.com

Posted: May 6, 2017 at 3:31 am

For the first time since the explosion, William Gadsby thought about bending his knee, and it happened.

His keys were banging against his hip so he reached down and dropped them on the floor. But he had lost his knee in 2007 during his second deployment in Iraq, when his leg had to be amputated following an explosion.

He was using a brain computer interface, or BCI, that through circular surface electrodes stuck to his head responded to his reflexive thought to bend his knee and unlocked the simple mechanism on the prosthesis he was wearing.

Its hard to explain how great something is that we all take for granted, he said of his experience. BCI is one of those things that give you a reason to wake up the next day.

Researchers with Hunter Holmes McGuire VA Medical Center in Richmond are working with the BCI technology to allow veterans who depend on prostheses to move naturally.

But thats only the beginning, they predict. Eventually, anyone depending on technology to move might be able to control it seamlessly.

Veterans like Luke Sprotte, who has a spinal cord injury, walk because of a system called ReWalk, a robotic exoskeleton, thanks to a VA study. ReWalk provides him a great deal of freedom, but using it isnt always intuitive and takes a lot of practice.

Maybe eventually, Sprotte will be able to use BCI to control the exoskeleton, the researchers hope he could think about walking forward, and the technology would take him there.

The whole trick is to isolate one thought out of thousands and thousands and thousands of thoughts ... and then build a reliable system that can be used every single time, said Dr. Douglas Murphy, a VA physician working on the BCI study.

Building the BCI system was the first phase of the study, and now the second phase involves a 5-year grant of nearly $1 million awarded by the National Science Foundation to make the technology user friendly.

The goal at the end of the five years is to create something that could actually be used by those who need it, from the more than 2 million people in the U.S. who have lost limbs to the 27,000 veterans with spinal cord injuries.

Murphy and a team of researchers and prosthetists including John Fox, chief of McGuires orthotic and prosthetic lab, William Lovegreen with the Department of Veterans Affairs and Dr. Ou Bai with Florida International University are working to make the technology easier to use.

When they sit down and talk , Fox, Murphy and Lovegreen quickly begin referring to the game-changing ways the BCI technology could alter experiences for anyone who has lost a limb or depends on technology to move.

Its going to be phenomenal, Lovegreen said. You can ask any amputee, theyre always conscious of their prosthesis, theyre always conscious of where theyre putting their foot ... People with able bodies, we take that for granted.

The patient wears surface electrodes on his or her head that pick up brain waves, which are then processed by a device about the size of a pager before being transmitted to the prosthesis.

The electrodes sit over the motor cortex and pick up the thoughts that would move an amputated leg, Murphy explained.

The hardware is constantly changing, he added. It started out more cumbersome with the patient wearing a backpack that held the technology to process the brain waves, but has since gotten progressively smaller.

The researchers began their work with a simple prosthesis with a locking knee, but they see the technology becoming increasingly advanced.

Just like every year theres a new smartphone, technology and prosthesis are moving that way, Lovegreen said.

Eventually, Fox said, the electrodes will be down to a pair of glasses they can wear.

After a training accident in January 2009 left him with a spinal cord injury, Sprotte could stand with the help of a few devices, like a standing chair he has in his North Carolina home, but he couldnt walk.

During a recent visit at McGuire, Sprotte was working on mastering the ReWalk system to walk up and down ramps. It wasnt easy because when the system feels the ramp, it senses a barrier and stops and Sprotte must adjust his balance so it starts moving again.

The first time walking, it was pretty unique, kind of like youre floating on something that you cant feel thats carrying you around, Sprotte said. I had to learn to just trust that this was going to do what it was supposed to do.

Allowing veterans like Sprotte to walk carries a host of health benefits, the head of the ReWalk study, Dr. Ashraf Gorgey, said.

It builds up muscles that otherwise arent used, helps improve the digestive system and, Gorgey added, the VA is hoping to show that being able to stand and walk regularly also improves quality of life.

How is a device like this going to make someone be able to be independent in society? said Gorgey, who is also on the BCI grant research team.

It can reflect back on (the patient) in a positive way and helps them gain the benefits by feeling that they are independent: I can do this, Im not any different.

Whether Sprotte will be able to take a device home once he finishes his training is uncertain. Depending on how well he masters the ReWalk, Gorgey said his team may recommend to Sprottes doctor that the VA buy him a device, which costs about $67,000.

That price may go down, though, as more and more companies are making exoskeletons that are getting approved for use by the U.S. Food & Drug Administration.

Using technology like an exoskeleton or a prosthetic can be physically and mentally exhausting, requiring people to expend energy in ways theyve never had to before.

Amputees constantly have to be aware of their situations, they have to look and no matter how technologically advanced their prosthesis is they physically have to move that prosthesis, Lovegreen said.

BCI could change that, not just for amputees but for those with spinal cord injuries, too. Rather than having to manipulate his center of gravity so the exoskeleton moves him around, Sprotte could simply use the same thoughts and energy he used before his injury.

Once this is out there, it will be a big save on energy because its just a thought, Fox said.

If some type of BCI technology were readily available, it would impact huge numbers of amputees, both veterans and civilians.

Gadsbys experience with the BCI was natural, he said. Previously, even with the most advanced technology, his prosthetic would react to what he was doing. If he was squatting, it would lock his knee to keep him from falling.

But theres always a slight hesitation to it, he said, because it has to catch up with his real leg. With the BCI it just happened.

Youre not as tired mentally and physically, having to wait for the leg to catch up, Gadsby said. It was natural. I didnt have to master it. It didnt master me.

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Prey Review In Progress – GameSpot

Posted: at 3:30 am

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Due to Bethesda's pre-release review policy, we're unable to provide a full Prey review in time for its launch. We recently acquired the game and, since it is quite lengthy, it may be some time until we can deliver our final verdict. However, having played it for close to 10 hours, we are able to offer some early impressions in the meantime.

And those impressions, at this stage, are mixed. If you've played the Opening Hour demo available on Xbox One and PlayStation 4, you'll know that Prey starts strong. It leans on a big narrative twist that pulls the rug from underneath you, and it's very effective in sparking curiosity. We won't spoil the nature of this revelation, but suffice it to say that it plants a seed of doubt, forcing you to question everything and everyone around you.

Thus far that aspect of the narrative hasn't developed into anything of note, however. The lingering supposition of dishonesty has been the main driving force behind a story that has otherwise been quite uneventful. That's not to say it won't develop into something more interesting, and shades of nuance are indeed slowly revealing themselves over time.

In its early hours, Prey wants you to immerse yourself in Talos I, the space station where the game is set, and soak in the story its environments have to tell. Talos I is a wreck, with upturned furniture strewn around its rooms, corrupted companion robots marauding about its hallways, and raging fires enveloping its corridors. The station has been overrun by a sentient alien life form called the Typhon, and while it's clear they're the cause of all this, the exact circumstances of the outbreak are still shrouded in some mystery. Furthermore, there's also the question of who's to blame for it.

Similarly, Prey's gameplay feels like it is yet to develop into something unique, mostly because the more interesting abilities are deeper into the various skill trees than I've been able to reach. Up front, Prey is surprisingly generous with the Neuromod items that unlock skills, but so far I have only been able to develop a rudimentary playstyle. I've spent the majority of my points improving my health pool, allowing myself to repair broken turrets, and expanding my inventory space.

This, in turn, translates to a vanilla combat experience. I'm using the GLOO Cannon to immobilize enemies, and then bludgeoning them with a wrench or emptying shotgun shells into them. In other situations--usually when I'm low on health or ammo--I have opted to sneak around enemies to avoid combat, using lures to manipulate enemy movements or methodically crouch-walking in between furnishings.

Developer Arkane Austin has promised players they will be able to take on challenges in a variety of ways, and while that seems to be true so far, the options I've been given have felt uninteresting. I've made note of numerous blocked pathways that will no doubt become available as my skillset improves, but as of yet, my path through the game has been fairly directed. Dishonored 2--developed by Arkane's Lyon, France-based sister studio--encouraged players to achieve their objectives through creative use of powers. My hope is that when more powers are available to me, alternative opportunities will open up and combat will allow me to be experimental.

A major sticking point for me so far is the behaviour of the Mimic enemies. As their name suggests, they have the ability to shapeshift into any object that is in their immediate surroundings. This means that you can walk into an ordinary, empty room and not know that you're actually seconds away from having a Mimic pounce on you. The idea behind this is sound--it creates a constant sense of tension--but in practice it has very quickly become annoying. Not just because a Mimic can attack when your back is turned and you're focused on something else, but also because the appearance of a Mimic is signalled by a sharp, shrill sound effect that--thanks to its overuse--soon grates. It is designed to create a jump scare moment, but since I was frequently looking in another direction and away from the Mimic, it often felt mistimed.

There are other reservations I have with enemy behaviour and combat right now, but I'm hoping that, given some time, they'll click into place.

At around 10 hours, I've been acquainted with the fundamentals of the Prey experience. It all feels quite familiar at the moment, but I'm aware that these are also building blocks. I have just unlocked the ability to use alien powers, which introduces an interesting dynamic when you consider Talos I is littered with sentry turrets that attack lifeforms with alien DNA in them. I'm also moving into a brand-new area of Talos I and accruing side-quests as the world opens up, and with any luck it will start to coalesce into something worthwhile.

Stay tuned for our full review in the near future.

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More Progress For Firefighter/Paramedic Shot Monday – CBS DFW

Posted: at 3:30 am

May 5, 2017 3:35 PM

William An (credit: Dallas Fire-Rescue)

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DALLAS (CBSDFW.COM) Dallas Fire-Rescue firefighter/paramedic, William An, who was shot while trying to assist a shooting victim Monday, remains in critical condition, but DFR says heis consistently improving.

Over the past few days, family, friends and co-workers have witnessed Officer An go from incomprehensible indications of discomfort and fatigue, to normal verbal exchanges, sitting upright and even the occasional laugh, a DFR news release stated.

The statement went on to say:

Officer An, still has a long road ahead as he continues to undergo procedures, and follow-up with medical personnel, related to the injuries he sustained from the shooting.

His wife, and entire family, is in relatively good spirits considering Ans status at the beginning of the week. They are thankful for all the prayers and well-wishes from first responders, the Dallas Community and people across the country who have shown their support; but understand that his recovery is far from over.

If you would like to help the family, the Dallas Firefighters Associations Local 58 Relief Fund is accepting donations for Officer An.

It is a 501c3 non-profit charity from which DFR says 100 percent of the money donated goes to the intended cause.

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Wallaceton man seriously injured after jump from Lawrence Twp. bridge – Clearfield Progress

Posted: at 3:30 am

A 55-year-old Wallaceton man was flown by medical helicopter to a trauma center after he jumped off a bridge in Lawrence Township yesterday morning.

According to Lawrence Township Police Acting Chief Sgt. James Glass, at 8:39 a.m. witnesses reported seeing a male jump off the bridge on U.S. Route 322 over Clearfield Creek in the Golden Rod area near the Beauty Lane intersection. According to Glass, the male fell in approximately three inches of water in the creek below.

Glass estimated the bridge to be about 40-60 feet high.

Police were assisted on scene by Clearfield Borough Police, Lawrence Township Vol. Fire Co. No. 1 Rescue, Clearfield EMS and Clearfield EMA.

Police identified the victim but did not release his name to the media.

Glass said the victim suffered serious injuries and was semi-conscious when they found him, but Glass said the victim was going into shock.

Because of the difficulty accessing the site, emergency responders used Clearfield County EMAs side-by-side ATV to drive down close to the victim. But he said they still had to carry the victim about 100 yards to the ATV because it couldnt get the ATV all the way down to where the victim had fallen.

The male was then placed into an ambulance and then transported to a medical helicopter that had landed on the bridge. He was flown to a trauma center. Glass said he didnt know which trauma center the victim was flown to.

Glass said he would give additional updates when available.

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East Chicago Residents ‘Worried About Everything’ Despite Progress – WFYI

Posted: at 3:30 am

Keesha Daniels advocates for Calumet residents with state and national NAACP leaders the day EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt visted East Chicago. Pruitt was invited to the NAACP meeting, but declined to attend.

Keesha Daniels just moved from one lead contaminated neighborhood to another.

Both her new house and her old West Calumet Housing Complex apartment sit within East Chicagos USS Lead Superfund site. The city is tearing down her old home because of extremely high levels of lead in the soil. So she had to move.

Daniels is still unpacking. Most rooms have a pile of boxes stacked tidily in a corner. Two heavy dressers sit in one otherwise empty room her sons are coming later to move them. As Daniels takes me on a tour of her new house, she offers me some water.

Its bottled water, she says with a laugh. A water filter hangs pointedly from her kitchen faucet.

Despite progress at the state and federal levels, many East Chicago residents, such as Daniels, are frustrated with the public officials in charge of cleaning up the lead contaminated neighborhood.

The Environmental Protection Agency told Daniels and her sons that her new front yard is lead free. The government offered to move the family off the superfund site, to Chicago, but Daniels didnt like that option.

Im still worried about everything; were still doing the bottled water a lot, Daniels says. I just feel safer in East Chicago. I was born and raised here, so Ive been here 40 plus years, so Im kind of nervous about going some place else.

Like Daniels, most West Calumet residents have moved now. Thats Zone 1 of the Superfund, it tested for the highest lead levels. But she also says residents in the other two zones have a lot left to fight for, even though they arent being relocated.

So now, the struggle still continues, because I still have family in [Zone] 2 and I live in [Zone] 3, says Daniels. Its not going to stop just because I moved out of Zone 1.

Daniels really hasnt stopped. In the past month shes had her bones tested for lead (she doesnt know results yet), she traveled to Washington, D.C. to advocate for lead-free housing, and she met with state leaders and EPA Chief Scott Pruitt.

Hours before that meeting, Tyra Taylor stands on her porch, watching a group of activists march for clean air and water in East Chicago.

Hours before that meeting, Tyra Taylor stands on her porch, watching a group of activists march for clean air and water in East Chicago.

Taylors yard, running down the side of her house, laid in disarray that day. Bushes and mounds of dirt surround the excavator, which digs out contaminated soil and replaces it with clean soil.

So todays my day to get dug up, Taylor says. See they even brought a whole machine in here, I didnt even notice that.

A letter sent to her by the EPA explains that sampling results from her yard showed lead or arsenic concentrations above the limit the federal government considers safe.

Taylor says shes grateful her yard is being remediated, but shes far from satisfied. She says more crews are needed to do the work faster.

While residents who met with Pruitt that day say officials didnt relay specific plans for the future, it does sound like Taylors wish might come true.

Speaking with reporters after Pruitts press conference Pruitt only gave a brief statement; no questions Regional EPA Administrator Robert Kaplan said they would be doing more work, faster.

So the most important aspect is getting out into the field earlier, and thats what we did, and committing to more residents being done, and thats what we did as well, says Kaplan.

Officials are continuing to make progress:

On the other hand, an investigationby the Northwest Indiana Times found evidence that theres lead paint dust surrounding homes reserved for people moving out of lead contaminated Zone 1.

Both Keesha Daniels and Tyra Taylor say the Calumet neighborhood used to be a tight-knit community. But they feel isolated now, like their lives have been turned upside down. Daniels says $1,000 and a Section 8 voucher arent enough to replace family.

And Taylor says she continues to be frustrated because residents have to deal with lead contamination every hour of every day, and theyve been doing it for decades.

You know, theyre having meetings and people coming in from out of town, senators, you know, whatever thats fine, Taylor says. But then you go on, you have to go back to the rest of whats on your desk. You know, we are just in a pile. We are a pile of paperwork.

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Progress Software: Digital agencies are key to partner ecosystem – TechTarget

Posted: at 3:30 am

Traditional partners typically view digital agencies as competitors, but Progress Software sees it differently.

Progress' partner ecosystem includes ISVs, distributors, systems integrators and services partners. More recently, the company has added new types of partners such as digital agencies and services partners that have specialties in vertical markets. In total, Progress has about 2,500 active partners today.

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"We see a tremendous amount of opportunity from lots of different angles," said Kimberly King, vice president of global partners and channels at Progress . "When we look at our partner ecosystem, the uniqueness of those partners allows us to work very collaboratively with them."

She said digital agencies have unique capabilities for helping customers solve business problems as well as a branding, messaging and marketing background.

"They were basically born out of a vacuum that was created between systems integrators and business consultants," she said, noting that business consultants will look at customer business processes and reengineer them while systems integrators will just look at technology products.

"In the middle, we found these amazing digital agencies that can bridge the gap between both," she said.

Progress began approaching digital agencies and other more traditional partners as complementary rather than competitive, King said, with the company looking for opportunities for pairing them as collaborators. For example, Progress will pair digital agencies with implementation partners that don't do any of the marketing strategy, product selection or go-to-market work.

"They generally sync up well," she said. "We rarely see clashing."

She added that Progress will bring in digital agencies to train other partners on social media, websites, branding and more.

In April, Progress acquired DataRPM, a maker of cognitive predictive maintenance technology, and is currently focusing on incorporating cognitive technology into its strategy.

One Identity, an identity and access management (IAM) company that operates under Quest Software, debuted a standalone partner program, One Identity Partner Circle.Targeting systems integrators, consultants and resellers, the program offers support for selling One Identity's IAM products. Support and benefits include deal registration and incentives for resellers, influencers and delivery partners; technical tools, training and delivery enablement; and a new partner portal.

One Identity was established as an independent business under Quest Software after equity firm Francisco Partners and hedge fund manager Elliot Management acquired the Dell Software Group last year.

Market Share is a news roundup published every Friday.

Read about cybersecurity companies that have launched channel programs

Find out about the combined Verizon/XO channel program

Learn about Seceon's MSSP program

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IAEA chief ‘concerned’ about North Korean nuclear progress – Deutsche Welle

Posted: at 3:30 am

In an interview withGerman daily"Sddeutsche Zeitung" on Friday, International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Director General Yukiya Amano expressed real worry aboutNorth Korea's nuclear advances.

"We have indicators that the nuclear program is progressing as announced," Amano said.

"All the evidence tells us that North Korea is taking steps forward. And that makes us concerned," he said, adding that the security concerns extend beyond the immediate pacific region.

Read more: UN Security Council hears tough talk on North Korea's nuclear program

The IAEA promotes the peaceful use and development of nuclear energy for non-military purposes. Though its inspectors have been banned from entering North Korea since 2009, Amano said satellite images enabled agency experts to draw their conclusions.

Satellite imagery showing an apparent resumption of activity at a nuclear test facility in North Korea

Growing concern in an intensifying conflict

The IAEA's vocal concern adds to the intensifying conflict surrounding North Korea's nuclear weapons program.

Since 2006, the internationally-isolated nation has undertaken five atomic tests, two of which occurred in the past year, according to the country's own statements. In addition, North Korea has been repeatedly test-firing ballistic missiles, all in violation of UN resolutions.

The last such missile, test-fired at the end of April, broke apart shortly after launch.

Read more: North Korean test-fires ballistic missile, breaks apart after launch

Tension has ratcheted up in 2017, and in the past weeks, North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un threatened Japan, South Korea and the west coast of the United States with a possible attack.

In response, US President Donald Trump has sought to exert greater pressure on Pyongyang since taking office. He recently warned a "major, major conflict"with the rogue nation was possible and has not ruled out military action.

However, earlier this week, the US president unexpectedly said he would be prepared to meet with Kim under certain conditions, calling the potential meeting an honor.

Even though Trump has increased pressure on North Korea, he would be open to meeting with North Korea dictator Kim Jong Un.

Shifting alliances?

Trump has been courting American allies in the Pacific, including through recent phone calls with Thailand and Singapore, in an effort to strengthen the alliance against North Korea. And on Thursday, the US House of Representatives voted to impose new sanctionson Pyongyang as Secretary of State Rex Tillerson urged Southeast Asian governments to continue isolating North Korea.

North Korea's latest aggressive action and rhetoric may alienate the country's last ally: China. In a statement made Wednesday to the North Korean state news agency KCNA, Pyongyang warned Bejing not to test "the limits of our patience further."

China has increasingly called on its neighbor to end provocative missile and atomic weapons tests. The country's leader Xi Jinping and Trump have also discussed managing North Korea's nuclear program in an April face-to-face meeting and telephone conversations.

North Korea's nuclear ambitions may draw Trump and Jinping closer together

cmb/rt (dpa, AFP)

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Tornado strikes Dinwiddie – Progress Index

Posted: at 3:30 am

Storm leaves significant property damage in its wake

McKENNEY A tornado that ripped through southern Dinwiddie County early Friday morning left hundreds of trees downed and cut a swath of property damage ranging from shattered windows to collapsed barns throughout the area.

First it was the roar of the wind and then you heard the sounds of the trees crashing down, said George Marshall, whose home sits squarely in the tornados apparent path along Baskerville Mill Road near its intersection with Route 40 just west of McKenney.

As of 1 p.m. Friday, no injuries had been reported, McKenney Fire Chief Ryan Townsend confirmed.

Marshall and his wife Emily were already awake when the storm swept through the area just before 7 a.m. on May 5.

We knew something was brewing, he said. But by the time the couple received the tornado alert, it was too late: not a minute after, Marshall said, the storm was upon them.

It sounded like the old proverbial freight train without the clacking, he said. Ive never actually heard it before.

Without a basement, the couple took shelter with their two dogs in the only place in their home that didnt have an exterior window: a closet.

If wed had more warning, we would have left here, said Marshall. But, he added, there wasnt enough warning.

Just before 1 p.m. Friday, the National Weather Service confirmed that the damage seen in the area was consistent with an EF-1 tornado, a classification applied to tornadoes whose winds range between 86 and 110 mph. The weather service also reported damage from straight-line winds.

On the ground, a path of destruction and debris could be traced down Baskerville Mill Road and Old White Oak Road near their intersections with Route 40, as well as for several miles along Lew Jones Road. Hundreds of trees were uprooted or snapped off midway up the trunk, and downed power lines were tangled for more than a mile in the fallen branches and damaged fences that edged the road.

Weve got a lot of wire to put back up, said Dave Breeden, an electrical worker with C. W. Wright, a company hired by Dominion Virginia Power to repair the lines in the area. Well be out here after dark.

Numerous buildings also showed the impacts of the storm. A barn at the site of the former Roberts Feed Center collapsed entirely, as did a small shed on the property. Portions of multiple structures' roofs were torn off and scattered throughout fields, with one twisted piece found wrapped around a tree roughly a quarter mile from any buildings. The Marshalls home suffered several broken windows, roof damage where a tree struck the building and other problems such as a wrenched-off railing, while a utility trailer that had been anchored near their garage was flung about 30 feet away.

Its just remarkable that some of these people didnt lose their home, said Dinwiddie Extension Agent Mike Parrish.

Although McKenney suffered the worst damage Friday morning, storms affected the entire Petersburg-Richmond metropolitan area, producing more than 4,000 power outages.

School buses were delayed in some areas, and in Chesterfield, tornado warnings led officials at several secondary schools to invoke shelter in place protocols as a precaution. The heavy rain also led Prince George and Colonial Heights to cancel baseball and softball games scheduled for Friday night.

The timing of the storms also significantly snarled morning commutes. A tractor-trailer crash on the northbound lanes of Interstate 95 in Prince George County backed traffic up around Exit 41 about a mile and a half. Fallen trees blocked Cox Road, Namozine Road and Vaughan Road in Dinwiddie, while flooding impaired roads in Chesterfield, Dinwiddie and Prince George.

In McKenney, cleanup efforts were in full swing by late morning, with dozens of electrical workers, tree-cutting workers and emergency responders on site.

Several of those affected expressed amazement that while the storm wreaked such havoc on property, it left the population unharmed.

Weve had three of these, but this is by far the worst Ive seen, said Nicholas Howerton, the grandson of the collapsed barns owners.

George Marshall voiced similar feelings.

Ive been through hurricanes, Ive been through typhoons in Southeast Asia, but never anything quite like this, he said.

Staff writer Michael Buettner contributed to this report. Sarah Vogelsong may be reached at svogelsong@progress-index.com or 804-722-5154.

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Homesteading and Survivalism Living a simple life

Posted: at 3:28 am

This is what happens when the government controls firearms. There is a lot to learn from Venezuela. Some people may say That could never happen here, sure it can. The government can suspend civil rights under certain situation. The United States Supreme Court upheld Executive Order 9066, which was signed by Franklin Roosevelt and detained thousands of Japanese-Americans during World War II. The law has yet to be repealed.

What I worry about, is groups like antifa causing enough civil unrest that basic civil liberties are suspended.

With the outrage with Trump being elected President, what would happen if he is reelected?

My personal opinion the left is not far from causing widespread civil unrest. Look at the news, look at the unrest over freedom of speech at American Universities.

It appears Venezuela has reached a tipping point, and we are not far behind.

A Warning: Venezuela Just Suspended Civilian Gun Rights for 180 Days

The honest truth is, the liberal left does not respect any opinion expect those that agree with them. Under a liberal controlled government, the only people who have rights are those who agree with the left.

If you disagree with the left, you have no rights.

Rammstein has released another video, this one from their Paris concert. I am not sure when the Paris concert was, all I know is this is an awesome video.

American rock bands are so bland. In all honestly, the majority of good music has been coming out of Europe for some time. Even in the 1970s and 1980s, groups like Black Sabbath, Iron Maiden and Judas Priest were blowing most of the American bands away.

We need more groups like Rammstein and less boy bands.

For some reason my fig trees are not growing like they should. I do not want to put commercial fertilizer around them, so I mixed up some organic fertilizer:

(more)

I finally bought a solar panel. In all honesty, I do not know why I waited so long for. It is a Nekteck 20 watt solar panel and I see this as a starting point for bigger and better things.

Before I bought the solar panel I asked myself, what purpose will the panel serve? I decided to go with a foldable solar panel with USB outlets for recharging flashlights, AA batteries and radios. Something to keep flashlights, lanterns and radios charged in a power outage. For right now, the focus is being able to have light and staying up to date on news when the power goes out.

The plan is to have two foldable solar panels one for charging USB battery packs, and the other panel for charging cell phones, radios and flashlights. Hopefully, the next foldable solar panel will be a 40 watt.

(more)

Couple of days ago I was watching naked and afraid, this guys body pretty much shut down and he had to be medivaced to a hospital. They were only 4 or 5 days into the show? The doctor said the problems were from a lack of vitamins and minerals. The guy said he ate something like 5,000 calories a day. I kind of figured he was going to have problems going from 5,000 calories a day to almost nothing.

The guy on the show came across as a great person. He was friendly and had a wonderful attitude. However, it seemed like his body did not react well to be taken out of a certain setting.

The vast majority of the public are use to eating certain foods. Then that all stops in one day. People are spoiled to getting food right when they want it, and then that all stops. There are all kinds of videos on youtube of people getting in fights because McDonalds was out of a certain food.

(more)

Part of my overall prepping plans is to have enough firearms for friends and family members who bug out to my location. I live in a rural area with privately owned that borders national forest and timber company land.

Hunting firearms is not a problem, the issue is handguns.

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If there is ever a real SHTF / TEOTWAWKI event, a large number of so called preppers are going to starve or die from dysentery.

Proof to back up that statement? Just look at the popular prepping related videos on youtube, or look at what forum sections get the most traffic.

The most popular type of video on youtube is gun and tactical videos. It is not gardening, it is not chickens or other livestock. the most popular types of videos are running and gunning videos.

You can not eat bullets, plate carriers, chest rigs, knives, or anything else that fuels the fantasy of a tacti-cool SHTF event.

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In December of 2016 I posted a thread in the forum about my prepping plans for 2017. I wanted to post an update to that thread and how things were moving along.

A Glock 19 was added to the inventory. Overall, I find the quality mediocre. I can not understand why Glocks are as popular as they are. Because of this I am looking at a Beretta 92F compact.

I have decided to dump a certain amount of money into bulk ammunition. February was 1,000 rounds of Wolf 9mm FMJ. March will probably be 223 Remington. April might be 45acp or 308 Winchester. The plan is to continue to buy bulk ammo for the rest of 2017.

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The Lucky Gunner youtube channel usually puts out some good videos, but I must say this one probably takes the cake. The guy talking in the video uses various examples with one being from the 1930s where it is suggested that police officers double action only revolvers. Jjust 1/8 inch of trigger pull can cause the single action handgun to discharge.

Arguments made against single action handguns can also be made against striker fired handguns.

Now that the argument against single action and striker fired handguns has been made, what are your thoughts?

We have example spanning back 70 years saying that double action is safer than single action and that should apply to striker-fired as well.

On February 27, 2017 someone on a facebook page posted a picture of a bible being urinated on. The guy said he was tired of seeing bibles in hotel rooms.

I posted a comment that the guy should be banned from the group. A young lady replied to my comment claiming the the Bible was a myth and Jesus never existed. She went on to give various examples of why the Bible was not to be believed.

Whether someone does or does not believe in th Bible, GOD or Jesus, is not the issue.

The question I have, why is there so much anger directed towards a person who only taught love and good works? Jesus taught us to love one another, and people hate him of it.

Why?

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The weather in early 2017 has been unseasonably warm, so I decided to go ahead and start the spring garden a few weeks early. I usually do not plant until after the Ides of March. With everything blooming out early and daytime highs hitting the low 80s, I decided to start planting in late February.

This garden will be special, as it uses decade old seeds. I posted a video on youtube about stockpiling seeds and then shared the video on survivalistboards, twitter and reddit. A couple of guys on reddit said made statements that seeds can not be saved.

One comment was,

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Around February 14th is usually when potatoes are planted, at least here in the south. I missed the 14th but will be planting the week of February 20 24th.

On February 18, 2017 my finance and I went to Circle Three Feed in Jasper Texas. I bought some chicken feed, bean seed, seed potatoes and some mineral blocks to put around the deer feeders.

On Monday a front pushed through bringing a lot of rain to southeast Texas. I also cut the potatoes on that day. In the next few days I will be working up a spot to plant this years garden.

Cutting potatoes before planting

Something that caught my eye the other day on youtube, the topic was the new Sig 320 being adopted. Someone said the military needed to get rid of the outdated Beretta design and go with something more modern.

Then the person said something along the lines of modern like a glock. Or otherwise implied Glock is a modern design.

I started laughing and thought to myself the guy in the video knows nothing of handgun history.

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The Thrunite TC12 is unique in that it has a built in battery charger. Plug in a micro-USB cable to charge the flashlight. While charging the brightness selector button flashes.

Being USB rechargeable makes this is an excellent truck, car or nightstand flashlight design. Keep theThrunite TC12 in the console or glove box of the truck. To charge, simply plug it into a USB charger. Most people have some kind of cell phone charger in their vehicle. Use the included cable to charge the light.

To review the Thrunite TC12 I did my typical battery of test. starting with the freeze test.

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Lets just say that I am very impressed with theAtactical A1 flashlight. I have had this flashlight for around a month. During that time it has stayed in a table next to the front door.

As some of you know I live in a rural area. It is not uncommon for the dogs to start barking at something. When they do, I take the Atactical A1 flashlight and walk around hoping to see what they are barking at.

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Homesteading and Survivalism Living a simple life

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On Ketamine and Added Value – E-Flux

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Artist as Consumer

Artists like to role-play scenarios in order to max-out concepts to their logical ends. Art is the space where practices that cannot function within generic constraints run up against the walls and expose fissures in the structures they are working in. Think of documentary or narrative films that dont quite cut it in a mainstream film context, or technologies that fail as commodities but succeed as concepts. When understood as art, these are allowed to exist in all of their complexity.

As an art student in the late aughts, my professors propagated the fantasy that alterity provided access to an otherwise of multinational capitalism. Armed with identities shaped when an outside or another world was possible, they maintained that the other is always outside, and always subversive to dominant culture. With practices emerging in the 1970s, 80s, and 90s, punk negation, slacker refusal, institutional critique, and art-as-activism were put forth as viable tactics for resistance. But to my cohort, the proposal of simple opposition over immanence did not feel appropriate or effective in resisting the conditions of our moment; it felt romantic. A strategic sense of imbrication seemed to better address the layered complexities of the reality at hand. By 2008, institutional critique was being taught as a historical practice. What had once been radicaleven, with Buren and Haacke, to the point of censorshiphad now been wholly recuperated. As Hal Foster pointed out a decade earlier, the quasi-anthropological artist today may seek to work with sited communities with the best motives of political engagement and institutional transgression, only in part to have this work recoded by its sponsors as social outreach, economic development, public relations or art.1

My sculpture class gathered weekly to collectively cook meals. This exercise, led by an exemplary relational aesthetics artist, quickly devolved into performative class warfare, with students bringing everything from Balthazar bread to discount produce, resulting in mixed feelings of guilt, shame, ambivalence, and inadequacy. This was at Columbia. At neighboring institutions, there was a painter known for his Beuysian performance paintings made with heritage pork fat from the Berkshire pigs he raised upstate. In Frankfurt, there was a German painter who apparently ate glass. This education championed the model of artist as x, or artist as performing a rolewhether it be artist as cook, artist as bad boy, artist as gentleman farmer, or artist as sociopathfrom a position of critical distance. Similar to homo economicus, the primary function of artist as x is to utilize and leverage all possible identities, situations, and social relations for their own benefit. From this accumulative imperative emerged practices where every bender was a durational performance and every broken bottle an artifact of critical engagement. Out of this educational model came Times Bar and New Theater in Berlin, the vitriolic blog Jerry Magoo, and, in my own case, a trend-forecasting group named K-HOLE. Relational aesthetics began to look a lot more like aspirational aesthetics, through the aestheticization of trolling, waste, usage, consumption, and the role played by artist as consumer.

To some, art is also an excuse to do things poorly. If an experiment fails, calling the process and its ruins art becomes a contingency plan. If an experiment in a structure traditionally considered as being outside of the boundaries of art succeeds, as functional business enterprises in entertainment, tech, food, or fashion, or the murkier realms of logistics or import/export operations, it is acceptable for the experiment to exist as the thing itself. In the case of the failed, or dis-functional, commercial venture as art, the failure can be understood as performed criticality; it reveals delineations otherwise invisible and shows how the mechanisms of commerce function behind the curtain. But, regardless of success or failure, it has become expected practice to leverage the context of art for the purposes of cultural legitimacy and capital. Many successful business ventures were born this way, from restaurants and fashion labels to BuzzFeed and Kickstarter.

There is an ever-expanding gray zone where groups and projects seek to operate as commercial ventures outside the art world proper while retaining the cultural context from which they came. Cynicism reads this retention purely as cultural capital instrumentalized towards individual ends. Generosity counters that these artists seek to support their community through heightened collective visibility and towards collective ends. Art-world institutions and curators want to stake a claim on the success of these ventures. Including commodity-based, art-adjacent practices in their programs nods to an opening up and democratization of otherwise exclusive, closed institutions. This can be seen in the emerging model of pop-up shop as group exhibition, or the recent inclusion in biennial exhibitions of fashion labels that do not self-identify their brands or businesses as expanded art practices. These groups are faced with split identities: they are seen by the IRS as small-business owners and operate as such, while also being seen as producers of culture through commercially sold commoditiesdifferentiated from art objects. A third identity of artist as fashion designer, technology and food importer, or alcohol producer is not added to the mix, because any critique aimed at the broader violence of capitalism is not being made from within the world of art, but from that of basic consumer-oriented commerce, albeit aspirational lifestyle commerce. By refusing to identify as artists, these groups resist the recuperation of this identity by start-ups, creative agencies, and real-estate developers that value creativity and disruption.

This turn towards commercial, commodity-driven practices arrives as the value of art objects becomes ever more abstracted and contingent on densely imbricated social, institutional, and cultural reticulation. As immaterial artistic practices are both rewarded with seven-figure sales and called out by alt-right conspiracists as satanic practices of the liberal elite, the ancient ritual of making an object of basic utility for the purposes of transparent exchange begins to promise relief. The commodity in itself offers a level of commercial purity that feels, to some, less complicit or exhausting than the highly mannered and baroque tapestry of brand narratives and leveraged networks on which creating and exhibiting even traditional forms of contemporary artlike paintings, sculptures, or photographyhave come to rely. Certainly many of the groups that produce such commercial commodities continue to lean on a community of friends or a city-specific scene for visibility and cultural legitimacy, but at least these are peer networks, contrary to the inter-generational hierarchy that flourishes in the market-resisting art silos nestled in our educational institutions with HR oversight.

A factor in this turn within art is the nostalgia for an era before branding, taste, and cultural context became the primary factors by which artistic production is evaluated. These commodities can claim a materialist and modernist approach, where the value of the object is ostensibly inherent in the object itself. Value derives from craft and quality or an ability to satisfy a specific need rather than from exhaustive references to context and constructed narrative. These commodities in themselves gesture to the democratization of art, through relative affordability and accessibility when released as consumable goods, design objects, and clothing. It is a functionalist approach that values art for its usability and ability to seamlessly incorporate itself into daily life. This approach to art is not meant to create rupture or to jockey speeds and tempos in its consumption. These objects do not strive to open up a chasm, and they do not call into question their own objecthood. They do not produce moments of unease that, when phenomenologically approached, lead the viewer/consumer to question their own inhabitation of a body and occupation of space. Rather, they are meant to replace the other commodities that previously occupied that space in the consumers lives. Why wear a Supreme shirt when you can wear a Some Ware long-sleeve? Why buy Crofters or Smuckers when you can eat Sqirl jam? Why drink Absolute or even Titos when you can drink Material Vodka and Enlightenment Wine? Why use a Brita when you can filter your hormone-laden municipal water through a Walter Filter? In this sense, there is a perceived ethics to consuming these commodities: you are supporting a community of artistsor artists functioning as small businesses. You may not be able to afford a painting, but you can afford a sweatshirt, and chances are, the producer of that sweatshirt doesnt pay their gallery commission. But this provokes the question of whether these profits benefit the artists lifestyle, artistic practice, or the cause nodded to in the sweatshirts logo or brand name (see: Election Reform, or The Future is Female). The artist-as-shirt-producer will likely spend more time sourcing sustainable materials and investing in fair-labor practices than the artist who creates work out of petrochemicals with the help of their unpaid interns. Many of these practices retain their position within the art community by operating under a FUBU ethos (For Us By Us), wherein a brand produces specifically for, and for the benefit of, a community of peers, with the aim of providing financial capital, visibility, and broader legitimacy for the group. But within the context of art, these commodities transform viewers into direct consumers. The shirt, the jam, and the vodka function simultaneously as signifiers of taste and signifiers of belonging. While they might not get you thinking about objecthood and phenomenology, they will get you thinking about community and identity.

The nostalgia inherent in this commodity-driven practice is mirrored on a mass-produced, national scale, in that companies selling these commercial goods cannot sustain themselves solely on the sales of products without inflating their value through branding and context. If a business seeks to sidestep this, they instead rely on the distribution networks and logistical convenience of human powered, but soon to be automated, fulfillment centers. This allows a level of anonymity for the importer or small-business owner who is shuttling goods between mass producer and anonymous consumer via branded distribution networks like Amazon Prime. But at either level, brand value is what accounts for the difference in price between two instances of the same commodity. Often, the cheapest commodity is also the one with the least identity. A lesson learned from pharmaceuticals: generics can be bought at a lower price. The more expensive drug is branded, trademarked and I.P. driven. Branding allows for the mass production of slightly less authorless objects.

Abandoned American malls are postcard images for deindustrialization and the bottoming out of an upwardly mobile middle class. Retailers are transitioning to e-commerce-only models that rely on fulfillment centers serviced by low paid invisible labor and customer service chatbots, virtual agents and AI assistants with names like Nadia, Twyla, Tara, Polly, and Alexa. Brick-and-mortar stores have come to function as pop-up showrooms and concept spaces. Today, profitable commodities are largely those that trade in the invisiblerooted in financial trading, service, intellectual property, and culture. In other words, profitable commodities arent commodities at all, but assets and capitals.

In 2010, shortly after leaving school, four friends and I self-identified as cultural strategists and created a trend-forecasting group named K-HOLE. Cultural strategists seemed broad enough to encompass all of our practices (artist, writer, musician, filmmaker) and whatever else we might eventually mutate into, while internalizing how brands and agencies were likely to perceive our position as twentysomethings in New York City. A K-hole is what happens when you take too much ketamine, a veterinarian tranquilizer and party drug popular before our time in the 90s. Ketamine provides the sensation of having an externalized view of your body and situation. It is like you are your own puppet master, whispering words in your ear and then hearing them spoken by a disembodied version of yourself. It is similar to an out-of-body experience, but with less of a birds-eye view and more of an over-the-shoulder lurk. This sense of having distance from and perspective on your situation is, of course, illusoryyoure just high. The rationale behind using K-HOLE as a name was that we did not claim to have any macro view of the landscape we inhabited as artists, writers, and twentysomethings in postrecession, pre-Occupy New York City.

The project grew out of a frustration with an attitude common among Gen X artists, who liked to neg on younger artists for not keeping their distance from the inner workings of capitalismfor selling out. Like our professors, artists who were a generation older than us promoted subcultural tactics such as zine-making and abject performance, which had since been aestheticized and recuperated by mainstream brands from Urban Outfitters to IKEA to MoMA. They acted as if our decision to engage was motivated by anything other than awareness of the immediacy of recuperation, survivalism, and the deep-rooted anxiety brought on by the recession and student debt. We resented the unspoken mandate within the art world that there are only certain acceptable jobs for an artist: assistant, teacher, physical laborer, bartender, retail worker, food service worker. As if these positions allowed artists to retain their identity as artists. You could be a singular artist, without having to confront the complexity of an imbricated identity, as long as you worked for another artist, at a boutique that happened to sell artists books and editions, or at a restaurant frequented by art-world luminaries. Beyond propagating the model of the monolithic artist, who creates their artwork uncompromised by other forms of labor, this model normalizes independent wealth and excludes those who feel poor, disenfranchised, and generally alienated when confronted with class disparity. When compounded with other occupations, the identity of an artist requires qualificationwhich often becomes the qualification artist as ethnographer or anthropologist, thus claiming the position of both observer and performer, and maintaining a critical stance within that role. The disappearance of salaried positions, lack of access to affordable health care as a freelance worker, lack of access to affordable housing, and student debt led me to wonder what kind of critical distance one can have in a survivalist state.

With K-HOLE, we were not interested in taking on the role of ethnographer or performer; we were interested in the total collapse that comes with being the thing itself. So, rather than perform artists as trend forecasters, we produced trend reports like those that are sold via subscription for tens of thousands of dollars to corporate clients and advertising agencies. We created the publications in a form we thought would circulate as freely and fluidly as possiblePDF. Unable, perhaps, to fully shed our training in market confrontation and antagonism, we saw the fact that our report was free as an affront to the traditional trend-forecasting model of groups such as WGSN, Stylus, or the Future Laboratory. What we didnt realize was that the worlds of branding and advertising already had a word for this sort of antagonism: loss leader. A loss leader is a product exchanged at a loss to attract customers for the future. From a certain perspective, this would include some of the most radical twentieth-century market-refusing art practices. Far from being an exception to the standards of established commerce, distributing free information that can be harnessed by an elite or restricted group with cultural legitimacy is the way conglomerates do business. Historically, artists have been regarded as forecasters of everything from style and behavior to speculative international futures. Trend reports are a vehicle for identifying emerging behaviors and the forces that motivate them. We issued our own because we wanted our community of peers to be aware of the strategies that were being used on them as consumers, and that they were parroting back in their own artistic and creative practices. Trend forecasting is a form of armchair sociology that identifies how consumers respond to global sociopolitical and environmental change through pattern recognition. Trends are less about seasonal colors, and more about consumers crisis response. Our thought was that the more people are aware of these strategies, the more they can develop tactics based on those strategies and use them towards their own ends, whether in their studio practice or in their plan for survival on Earth. For me, our practice was about peeking behind the curtain, gaining an understanding of the logic and intentions of corporate behavior, and seeing if there was any potential for us to affect change. We wanted to identify the threshold dividing viable from nonviable in the commercial sphere.

Our first two reports mirrored the traditional format, with the coining of a neologism, the definition of the trend, and the inclusion of supporting case studies. The first report was on FragMOREtation, a strategy by which brands play with fragmentation, dispersion, and visibility in order to conceal expansion and growth. The second was on ProLASTination and addressed the ways that brands seek ambient omnipresence over long periods of time. In 2012, after Hurricane Sandy and leading up to the Obama-Romney presidential election, we released K-HOLE #3, The Brand Anxiety Matrix, where you could plot brands, presidential candidates, countries, celebrities, and your friends, along two axes: from legibility to illegibility, and from chaos to order. We used anxiety as a metric to identify larger behavioral shifts. We crafted a collective voice that made hyperbolic declarative statements such as The job of the advanced consumer is managing anxiety, period, and It used to be possible to be specialto sustain unique differences through time, relative to a certain sense of audience. But the Internet and globalization fucked this up for everyone.

But as with all well-compensated prophecy, trend forecasting isnt about seeing the future, not really; its about identifying collective anxieties about the future operating in the present. We dedicated our fourth report, Youth Mode, to generational branding. We described a crisis in individuality and a response to that crisis, which we saw as a rejection of the individual and an embrace of the collective, privileging communication and communities over individualist expression. We saw ourselves as living in Mass Indie times, with Brooklyn being arguably one of Americas largest cultural exports. The endless list of signifiers pointing to unique individuation leads to isolation, and when no one gets your references, youre left alone and lonely. Instead of community building, the compulsion of individuation leads to some Tower of Babel shit, where youve been working so hard at being precise that the micro-logic of your decisions is only apparent to an ever-narrowing circle of friends.

We termed this approach Normcore, which resonated with people experiencing signifier overload and the pressure to be unique. Where our hypothesis was off was that this trend was less a response to fear of isolation and lack of community, and more about exhaustion. The dominant narrative around Normcore is understood in terms of normalcy and sameness, not communication and community. It was equated to dad jeans, Birkenstocks, and sneakers, and was runner-up for the Oxford English Dictionarys word of the year. Our final report, released in 2015, was a report on doubt, magic, and the psychological trauma of collaboration.

After Youth Mode, we were approached by brands and agencies to speak at corporate conferences, hold workshops, and create custom research reports. Asked about our methodology, our answer was something like we just hang out a lot. In our workshops and brand audits, we told brands what they were doing wrong at a meta-institutional level. We were not brought in to provide tactics, just strategy. Or rather, we were the tactics: we were invited into the room so that strategists, creative directors, and work-for-hire creative agencies could signify to their C-suite executives and clients that the brand was engaging in radical strategery. They brought us in to provide cultural credibility, not to actually implement our work. MTV asked us to write a manifesto to inspire their employees about the brand. We delivered a manifesto that included what we imagined were harmlesss platitudes like Breed unique hybrids, and If were for everyone, were not for anyone. Even so, the most pointed suggestions in the document were edited to make it acceptable for upper management. Our demand for the cancellation of the Real World, for example, became a gentle suggestion that MTV have the courage to put things to pasture.

The World Economic Forum sent a representative in a grey pantsuit to our fifth-floor Chinatown studio to invite only one of us to Dubai for the organizations Global Agenda Council on the Future of Consumer Industries. We were told, in a tone of forced casualness, that entire phalanxes of corporate executives met at such councils to set an agenda for the coming year. A few years prior, the agenda had been entitled Sustainability and Mindfulness. It was unclear what came of these terms, or what the exercise accomplished aside from fostering a sense of corporate responsibility and dedication to the double bottom line. These were bloated, entrenched monopolies gathering in a gilded desert to confirm to themselves that they had not totally lost their taste for truth. Hired to provide such vrit, our role was like that of a royal soothsayer, and gigs became a productive exercise in failure. We quickly learned what kind of work we had to do in order to passthat is, to be seen as the thing itself rather than as art-school imposters. While we offered strategy and insights, any tactics or ideas for execution that we brought to the table stayed there. Corporate clients cant stand to feel like theyre being trolled. To many clients, we were useless beyond our cultural capital or brand equity.

It became clear that what constituted trend forecasting in itself in the case of K-HOLE was the collective work of immaterial, unlocatable, affective, and knowledge labor. That, and the effusive, intangible, shape-shifting, and value-adding fog of branding. We realized that behind the multinational curtain is a decentralized quagmire where no one is held accountable and decisions are driven by fear. Corporations are people, US presidential candidate Mitt Romney said, and people need jobs, and jobs are jeopardized for all sorts of dumb, cyclical reasons without adding reckless departures from precedent. This is why, increasingly, most successful entrepreneurslike most successful artistscome from some kind of money. Genuine risk-taking is usually the mark of desperation, mental illness, or both. We were brought in as crisis control, for brands and agencies to prove both internally and externally that they were self-aware and not ready to die.

We were court jesters, hired to tell creative directors and executives about their follies. They were the masochistic kings paying to hear how their messy and often violent business of accumulation disgusted us. But, like the dominatrix or jester, we were still contract workers. Power likes to hear truth spoken in its presence rather than whispered in the shadows, as a substitute for seeing it acted upon by others. In our final reportK-HOLE #5, A Report on Doubtwe conceded that seeing the future changing it. Networks of power and influence remain the same. To quote Sun Tzu in The Art of War: Strategy without tactics is the slowest route to victory. Tactics without strategy is the noise before defeat. It was worse than I could have imagined.

For the past two years I have worked as a trends and strategy consultant for various creative agencies and media companies, and as a strategist for an advertising agency in Los Angeles. The LA agencys two primary offices are open plan and dog friendly. Like service animals, the office dogs are there to absorb the emotional trauma that their owners experience while they hash out content calendars and campaign strategies. These are positions that deal in pure affect, and I have become intimately familiar with the language through which corporations narrativize and justify their position and actions. It is a corporate logic that speaks in sweeping generalizations, thus erasing difference and constructing statements on human universal truths with ulterior motives. At no point in this work have I felt like Im engaging in dtournement. Any attempts to translate critique into tactics have been exercises in futility. I suggested that a light-beer brand address its role in rape culture and create a campaign supporting the implementation of Title IX on college campuses. I recommended that a bank divest from the Dakota Access Pipeline as a campaign strategy. I developed a strategy for a television show that dealt directly with issues of reproductive rights and used the shows platform to direct attention and resources to groups like Planned Parenthood and the Center for Reproductive Rights. Needless to say, these efforts did not result in bank divestments or brand-sponsored resources for victims of sexual assault. The television show opted for artist collaborations and a fashion capsule collection. Ive witnessed how brands privilege the unquantifiable asset of cultural relevance precisely because of its slipperiness. It does not have to function to work.

My inability as an artist or simply an individual to effect change within corporate structures has not resulted in a radical turn towards art, or an essentialization of my identity as an artist. Rather, I have been producing and exhibiting art and poetry concurrently with these experiences. While the economy of language and image and the specific language Ive encountered permeate my writing, I do not directly make work about branding. The office is not a site of artistic production for me, and in this sense I am not wearing Certeaus wig as a diversionary tactic. The erasure of complexity in both thought and representation that I witness in my hired work has made me more idealistic about art as a space with the potential to embrace complexity, and to counter the on-demand speed mandated by our culture at large. It has allowed me to distinguish the making of art and a community of artists from the art market.

Artists have traditionally included brands, logos, and readymade consumer goods into their work in order to mount critique on consumption, globalization, mass production, and art-as-commodity. Now you have works created with contemporary brands and products, be it Axe, Monster Energy, Doritos, Red Bull, images of which are then posted and shared on social media. On the other end, you have a social media manager with a liberal arts degree scanning hashtags and coming across their brands being worn and consumed by artists and appearing in the artworks themselves.

Of-the-moment consumerism rewards a level of complexity that answers the question why not have it all? You can like both Dimes and Doritos, sincerely and without irony. The mixing of high and low points both to self-awareness and being in the know. Lux T-shirts with licensed DSL logos, fashion presentations taking place in White Castle, Pop Rocks on your dessert at Mission Chinese.2 This sincerity has taken precedence over critique or resistance. Somewhere along the line it became acceptable to be authentic, earnest, honest, and sincere, even if the object of this sincerity is a complete celebration of consumerism. The primacy of affect over rational thought has, in large part, led us to our current state of political affairs far beyond the realm of art. Subjective emotional truths are being taken as objective rationality-driven realities. With alternative facts, truth is malleable, and as we see with crime footage posted to social media, forensic visual evidence has not resulted in structural change.

Instead, in the realm of art and creativity, when posted on social media these brand and consumer good laden images function as user-generated content (UGC), authentic marketing material being promoted by the coveted creative class. Art that incorporates brands and readymade branded products has become earned media. Earned media is free advertising; its what news outlets provided for Trump, which would have otherwise been regulated and campaign financed. Paid media is publicity gained through paid advertising, while owned media refers to branded platforms, websites, social media accounts.

This brand inclusive art is user generated content. It is not even sponsored content, in which the artist would be paid for posting images of the brand to social media, or paid to incorporate the brand into the artwork itself. Any critique is sublimated, and the artist, like Leslie in season 19 of South Park, doesnt even know shes an ad.

Taking on the role of Patron of the Arts, Red Bull Studios provides resources and physical space for artists and musicians to create and exhibit their work. They are facilitating the creation of work that an artist may otherwise lack resources for, but that work must now be understood as sponsored content. While artists and musicians stage exhibitions in Red Bull branded spaces, the brands CEO, Dietrich Mateschitz is launching his own Breitbartian conservative new media platform, Nher an die Wahrheit, or Closer to the Truth. While there are artists exploring the potential of this role as content creator, and artwork as sponsored or user generated content, this is not something I would like to explore to my own practice. There is no critique, no position of power for the artist in this exchange. We must shift our understanding of this form of work and acknowledge the way that it is being instrumentalized by brands on the other side of the feed. Having influential creatives touting the brands products on social media and in the work itself is their goal.

Artists who participate in this might feel that their radicality lies in goes against a culture of liberal critique, that they are being anti by embracing the commercial. But it becomes a question of scale, of knowing ones own insignificance and finding a form of resistance that doesnt start to feel like reactionary consumerism. One form of resistance is to go dark, to stop making artwork that can in any way be represented on the platforms that facilitate these forms of recuperation. But even if you as an artist dont post images of your work on social media, other people might. You could institute a Berghain rule and administer stickers over phones camera lenses upon entering an exhibition, but then, hashtags are indexable forms of language that dont require images and are still a useful metric for brands. You could literally never show your work to anyone. You could embrace chaos and illegibility, creating visual or written work that is non-instrumentalizable, but legible across many parts over a longer period of time. This might mean making work that operates at a different tempo than that of branding and social media, work that occupies multiple sites and forms, work that fights for the complexity of identity (as artist or otherwise) and form, and believes in a creaturely capacity for patience with a maximum dedication to understanding.

All images unless otherwise noted are courtesy of the author.

Dena Yago is an artist who was born in 1988. Dena Yago has had numerous gallery and museum exhibitions, including at The Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw and at the Bodega. Articles about Dena Yago include Flash Art International no. 311 NovemberDecember 2016, written for Flash Art (International Edition) in 2016.

2017 e-flux and the author

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On Ketamine and Added Value - E-Flux

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