I'd argue that if the campaign's been around since 2007 and we've never heard of it, it's not as effective as they'd hoped. Striking, yes, but effective is as effective does. For example, I wasn't able to find these images on the org's current website.
Did you know that China's 10 percent growth in GDP is almost entirely due to US imports and cheap resources from Iraq and Afghanistan bought with the blood and lives of our soldiers and US tax dollars?
Charles,
Wow, those are some arresting images. Reminds me of those Bennetton ads of the late 80s & early 90s (ie. a white baby nursing on a black woman's breast comes to mind). Not sure how effective they are but they get one's attention especially with race and class.
Fela Kuti wasn't making any kind of comment on materialism with "Expensive Shit." It refers to his incarceration while the police waited for him to poop marijuana he ingested.
As someone in Gulu, Uganda advocating for the rights of poor persons with disabilities these ads really strike a cord with me. (http://advocacynet.org/wordpress-mu/ccar…) They incite one to consider the economic complexities at work within poor african economies. For instance it only costs 8 Euro for water if your water has been privatized. If no one had taken over your water supply your water would have been free. Its privatized so a few rich people at the top can afford expensive sunglasses and cologne. If those at the top spread the wealth, fostered upward mobility and established adequate social services this would not be an issue.
However if these ad are trying to promote sending money to poor Africans for water instead of buying expensive sunglasses or cologne then they fail to understand the harm that the continual stream of aid to Africa is doing to the economy. http://www.dambisamoyo.com/ I did not follow this line of thinking until I came here. It’s an ironic tragedy.
Wow, those are some arresting images. Reminds me of those Bennetton ads of the late 80s & early 90s (ie. a white baby nursing on a black woman's breast comes to mind). Not sure how effective they are but they get one's attention especially with race and class.
And stick your Niobium up your nose where the sun don't shine.
However if these ad are trying to promote sending money to poor Africans for water instead of buying expensive sunglasses or cologne then they fail to understand the harm that the continual stream of aid to Africa is doing to the economy. http://www.dambisamoyo.com/ I did not follow this line of thinking until I came here. It’s an ironic tragedy.