Notes from the IET

Posted by Ben On October - 3 - 2009

The Institute of Engineering and Technology stands imposingly at the northern nape of Waterloo Bridge, a giant colossus rubbing shoulders with its surrounding big business compatriots, unimaginably large for an edifice sitting so central in London’s landscape.

A doorman working there tonight might be puzzled at the assortment of plain clothes dressed stragglers, understated media types and sharply dressed city people all slowly assembling and mingling at the Kelvin Bar, named after one of the great engineers to unify physics as we know it today, William Thompson. (Kelvin happens to come from his title, being as he was, 1st Baron of Kelvin. I presume the establishment didn’t want to refer to a temperature as “67 Thompson.”)

Tonight, among the busts of professors past and the dusty books of long-assimilated theories on thermodynamics, another unifier, one with no formal “qualifications” sits amongst the motley crew who have assembled to welcome him to the city which sees host to two three hour lectures back to back tomorrow. Welcome to the world, for now, of Jacque Fresco.

Fresco, an absurdly sprightly, lively 94 year old is many things. Futurist, (social) engineer, physicist, cultural explorer and sometime author of many (often co-written) books expounding the untold benefits of a society in which function, consistency and automated, the absence of money and instead a resource-driven efficient peak-performance of technology can do so much to advance all humans from poverty, war and the seemingly ever-present desolation of what we laughingly term “modern life.”

Over a beer or seven, a dozen or so listeners have the pleasure of hearing one of the few remaining men who has a living memory of the Great Depression recall events which now don’t even seem realistic enough to be portrayed in film. Accompanied by his partner and co-founder of The Venus Project Roxanne Meadows, Fresco describes his first important formative brushes with US law. “During the height of the depression, a local shoe store had closed down. And the doors were wide open. So as a young child I went inside one day, and started building houses out of the empty shoe boxes. A policeman came in and grabbed me by the ear, and told me I had criminal tendencies, and I was trespassing on private property.” (Quotation approximated.)

Fresco’s second brush with the law involved him witnessing cops shoot “niggers” for fun. It rapidly becomes quite obvious why his world-view seems so all-inclusive. Despite this one can’t help wondering why other people of his age (to say nothing of those much younger than he) are so often fully-fledged racist products of the very environment that led to Rosa Parks, segregation and ultimnately the Kent State shootings (although the latter was more informed by police brutality in general.)

I asked him how he managed to detangle himself from the cultural zeitgeist of Depression/post-depression America. He puts it firmly down to his leaving school at the age of fourteen, having spent most of the curricular time rejecting pledges of allegiance, downplaying the value of American History, and at all points pointing out the blockheadedness of asserted beliefs based on societal values rather than clear and open thinking or judgements informed by real-world observations.

It’s hard not to agree; one look at any curriculum I have ever come across screams “BS – Bad Science” as Fresco puts it, to laughter all around. When I discovered years after the fact that the Chemistry that I was taught was at best an approximation of what we thought we knew, and at worst an oversimplified set of cliches bordering on untruth,m I wonder just what kind of person I might have ultimately become if I had been taught (and allowed to discover) much more relevant, applicable and enriching areas of study.

Instead we were given algebra, with no application for it.

Amongst the crowd was filmmaker Maja Borg, a disarming, engaging “One-Year Old” (at least according to this amusing biographical page) whose own film Future For Sale has covered Fresco and Meadows’ Venus Project in parallel to Peter Joseph’s widely-publicised Zeitgeist Addendum, both which showcase as their centrepiece Fresco’s simple yet elegant ideas through interviews and visualizations of his work. I snatch a few minutes with her and ask her how she came to discover The Venus Project herself.

“It was actually through an Italian actress who I had worked with. She had been running her own project to live without money for five years, and she introduced me to the work of Jacque.” Given the vast differences in filmmaking stlyes between Borg (personal, Eurocentric, third-person and shot on location) and Joseph (dark, visually arresting and slickly produced graphics coupled with calm yet forceful voiceover), I half-seriously suggest they team up to make a film together. Maja smiles and we both try to imagine what such a film might actually end up really looking like.

One thing is sure in my mind – it, like an evening with Jacque Fresco, would certainly be a very interesting one.

Outside as I walk home, a few of the crowd are congregated, and appear to be talking about “Twenty Twelve”, The New World Order and how aliens once had sex with humans to give birth to what we are today.

And I realize how far we have yet to go.

Zeitgeist – First London Lecture

Posted by Ben On July - 27 - 2009

Whatever your views on the subject presented by either of the two Zeitgeist films, one thing is beyond doubt – they certainly have appealed to the “spirit of the age” that their titles allude to, garnering by far the most views of any feature film released on the internet so far.

After the 2007 release of “Zeitgeist”, Google Video racked up 50 million views of the film, before resetting its counters. Its director Peter Joseph estimates that by now the film has been played around 80 million times worldwide, not counting the numerous free DVD copies made by fans or given out at events such as last year’s Z Day event on the Ides of March.

The 2008 follow-up “Zeitgeist Addendum” released in October of that year, already sits at almost a million views on several Youtube accounts, whilst Google Video’s numbers on all its content seem to have been moved out of sight. The total view count is estimated by Joseph again to be around the 30 million mark. Not bad for 8 months of exposure unaided by any of the established media outlets, and with absolutely no formal advertising campaigns whatsoever.

In the 2 years since the first movie was released, a movement of some 300,000 people from a variety of countries has been born from the thought processes and views expressed in the movies. Given that Joseph, a deliberate art school drop-out, originally simply made the film as an art project, and “flung it up on the internet” without a second thought to the global chain-reaction it would set off, nevermind the perfect timing of the horrors of an historic downturn whose epicentre was the very New York Joseph calls his home, he must wake up every morning with the phrase “Holy shit, how crazy is THIS?!” His continual reassertion that he is “just some guy” underscore the unprecedented differences between his original intent and the global village his work and research has given birth to.

To the movement – the final goal of which is to reshape and re-order a society from its current embedding in a monetary system (which developed out of existing environmental scarcity, helping to stabilize various civilizations which faced shortages in many if not all resources) to one of a “resource-based economy” where all are truly equal and where humans have the chance to live real, creative lives rather than persist on the hamster wheel lives that rotate around the much-cliched “Nine to Five”.

In such a new economy, technology is to be used to its absolute full potential minimizing waste, human involvement in production, unnecessary redundancy (one need only look at how many different versions of the iPhone there are after only 2 years of its existence) and inbuilt technological obsolescence (see above also.) In this scenario, human society employs inferential logic, vastly advanced AI technology and empirical testing to regulate and improve all facets of society, as it evolves, and as new and better technologies appear. The present system, it is argued, does not evolve, and it limiting every human from living a richer, more progressive, healthier and safer life.

The argument for change put forward by Joseph is based on the studies and lifelong works of industrial designer and social engineer Jacque Fresco, a man who first appeared on Larry King live in 1974 and has been back on the program numerous times, although not recently, and whose work has appeared on Fox News 7. Further afield than his native America, Fresco is known and appreciated across the world for his visionary idea of a future forged by practicality, environmental respect and plain awesome-looking buildings.

Joseph’s lecture at Goldsmiths College in Lewisham, which is available in its entirety via bootlegged audio at the end of this article, focused on expanding the current understandings of a monetary system’s cause and effect cycle, the ill-effect on the health of all people in a society more stratified than one where each individual is “more equal”,(to quote but mis-represent Orwell), and used examples of feral children to demonstrate just how much a human being is, or can be, shaped by their surroundings.

Ultimately, the negative effects of the society work themselves out upon children, and the resulting adult operates on his/her learned societal instincts to re-entrench the same value systems upon future generations through actions that perpetuate or worsen the status quo.

Joseph’s lecture, which itself lasted an hour and twenty minutes, was followed by another hour and fifteen minutes of Q&As from an audience which remained rapt and involved from beginning to end. This is a big deal for an event that is essentially based in cultural theory and economics.

An even bigger deal, however was the demographic of the attendees. Peoples of ages as young as seventeen to  old as the hills, older hippies and younger activists, and even a Norweigan businessman and a gentleman from the Ukraine who had flown to London specifically for the event comprised the 300 audience members. A live webcast on Ustream garnered another 300 viewers. The Eerie Investigations team who broadcast on Sky 220 were also present,  filming the entire event.

Joseph is a naturally able rhetorician, despite claiming he is normally introverted. His natural flow and ability to answer varied and often multi-segmented questions without the need to jot down any notes whilst audience members asked up to three questions at once stood in sometimes strong contrast to his less smooth flow whilst reading the lecture notes. This, however, seemed also to come down to sleep deprivation and a decent bout of nerves which all experience in front of a crowd, especially one overseas.

Overall the event was a real success, with quite a few over-eager audience members staying up to an hour afterwards to question Peter and talk to each other. Whatever the future of the movement is, it is very likely to be larger, louder and very very interesting.

More on the Zeitgeist Movement can be found at www.thezeitgeistmovement.com, and both films can be viewed online for free (part one is here, part two is here.)

Lecture mp3 Bootleg link (Direct Download). Torrent file here.

Q&A mp3 Bootleg link (Direct Download). Torrent file here.

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