Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2001/05/03
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Governments are powerful in all respects except the creation of wealth. They simply choose how to tax and spend the money. You can't have a big war without a government OTOH! I lived and worked in both France and the UK during the Thatcher/ Mitterand years. Both liked to give credit to their politics for their booming economies. In fact the whole world economy was booming at the time - it had NOTHING to do with them. I have always been tickled by this - being lectured on the benefits of right wing politics to the prosperity of everyone whilst in England and ditto the benefits of Socialism in France!!! cheers Frank - ---------- > Alan Hull added > > From: Oddmund Garvik >> It is something like that, yes. But the exercise of power is a subtle >> often invisible affair. The real power in our time is the corporate >> multinational power > > No, I cannot agree with that. The real power is still firmly in the > hands of governments. They excercise that power with laws and taxes. > They have the power of life and death. They have power a multinational > company can only dream of. On a mundane note, I cannot name one > multinational company that can get money out of my pocket unless I buy > their product. The government, though, has its hands in my pocket every > day whether I want their product or not. Taxes, taxes and taxes, those > are the three main issues that should fire the imagination of the > concerned photographer. I live in Sweden so pay attention. > Last year, to brighten up the winter, I gave myself a photo project to > document the nasty effects of a society that suffered overtaxation. > Impossible. I didn't have the talant, or even a single idea about how > to illustrate the theme. I mean every photo I took looked like > ordinary folk going about their business in clean swept streets and law > abiding surroundings. It wasn't fair. They should have looked > downtrodden and miserable and they didn't. > > Two days ago I was invited to a traditional May-day bonfire. Goody > goody I thought recalling English bonfires. A marvelous booze and bash > up with fireworks and things. Took an old Canon SLR in anticipation of > getting legless. Nope. For three hours we stood around a blazing > bonfire listening to the local church choir. Then we trooped off to > the school hall for a cup of coffee. So what, I hear you cry. Well I > realised the reason why my photographs failed. It is not possible to > indicate lack of fun. Everything that is frivolous and fun attracts a > premium tax in Sweden so nobody can afford it. I mean its easy to > photograph a fat slob coming out of a McDonalds cafe and blame the > giant multinational for purveying junk food. Try photographing > something invisible like the lack of fun. > > Alan