undallesoyeaahh

Sep 26

“UND ALLE SO YEAHH!” …auf DinA4 aufgeblasen – zum Ausdrucken… on Twitpic

“UND ALLE SO YEAHH!” …auf DinA4 aufgeblasen – zum Ausdrucken… on Twitpic

Sep 25

Renè Walter Tagesthemen Remixed on Twitpic

Renè Walter Tagesthemen Remixed on Twitpic

A call for action from Germany to the G20 in Pittsburgh - and an explanation of an innovative non violent form of protest

A Call for Action

First things first: I would like to ask you, who have the chance to take their protest to the streets of Pittsburgh, to try a new form of protest. I think, here in Germany a new tool for protest has developed that could change the course of history of protests. The non-violent, political flashmob.

What happened

Last week, at two different occasions, the Chancellor of Germany, Mrs. Merkel, delivered a speech in the run up for the national general elections at a rally of her conservative party, CDU. At both venues, she was met with a completely innovative approach to protest by a spontaneous flashmob.

A crowd had spontaneously agreed to form a flashmob, first in Wuppertal, then in Hamburg, that spread out well amongst the audience. Their strategy: Whenever Merkel had concluded a sentence they would extati cally cheer “Yeeeeeeah!”. The ritual repeated a few dozen times at each of the venues, and eventually Mrs. Merkel felt obliged to welcome her “friends from the Internet” - which assuered coverage on German national prime time news TV.

The charm of the new approach to protest

Unlike other forms of confrontational protest, this approach can hardly be countered with violent means. It is not a systematic disturbance, it has not the least potential for violent escalation, yet the ironical component of exaggerated approval and cheering clearly shows disapproval in its most essential format: contempt. Even so, every hypothesis by the speaker (Frau Merkel in this case) is answered only with a short staccato of sacrastic disapproval. The discourse can go on, even if not as planned by the speaker.

This kind of negative applause therefore could evolve into one of the most efficient forms of protest ever invented. The official speaker simply has no means to confront the formally approving (yet sarcastic) crowd by aggressive means.

How the story evolved

According to German blog Spreeblick everything started with a photo taken from a CDU billboard in Hamburg on September 11, published on flickr according to the post on Spreeblick, a hand written note on the billboard written by an unknown passer by had created considerable amusement in the German blogosphere. The note read “und alle so: Yeah!” (“all shout out yeah”), and meant to criticized the all but completely blood empty campaign of Mrs. Merkel’s CDU party, showing such important solutions as “we have the pow er” (“WIR haben die Kraft”).

Eventually, in a comment, a blogger by the name of Edgar asked whether there could not be a spontaneous flashmob using this slogan. Spreeblick’s editors took it upon them to create a mixtape with the “Und Alle so: Yeeeah”-song, while appointments were made in Hamburg and Wuppertal to create flashmobs - in many cases supported by the still rudimentary but seemingly functional local chapters of the anti-copywrong political party Die Piraten (the Pirates).

” — A call for action from Germany to the G20 in Pittsburgh - and an explanation of an innovative non violent form of protest - bloggi’s observations

Sep 24

“Thomas Hinrichs so: “Haben sie das gerade gesehen? Yeaahh, Yeaahh, Yeaahh! Ziemlich sinnentleert finde ich! […] Du lieber Himmel! Im Netz steht viel, auch viel Blödsinn und man muß nicht jeden Blogsinn mitmachen”!” — Kommentar in den Tagesthemen vom 23.09. auf Youtube

[video]

[video]

#merkel live in #wuppertal
(via cornstar)

#merkel live in #wuppertal

(via cornstar)

Sep 23

#immf 184: widme ich den “Und alle so: “Yeaahh”“-Flashmobbern… on Twitpic
(via @Frauenfuss)

#immf 184: widme ich den “Und alle so: “Yeaahh”“-Flashmobbern… on Twitpic

(via @Frauenfuss)

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