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Story and Photography by Lehan Winifred Ramsay
I disagree with Occupy Wall Street. It’s irrelevant to talk about the greed of big bankers and corporations. They’re not the only ones who have tipped our world into it’s looming environmental disaster. They are just part of a system of making and selling and buying and throwing away.
I want to propose that we occupy Apple. Especially, those of us who have apple ipods and imacs and iphones. Those of us who have bought into a name and a convenience. I want to suggest that we now turn to Apple and ask it to change. Even whilst feeling the pain of losing Steve Jobs, I want us to ask it to change.
I want us to Occupy Apple. Not by actually going to the Apple Shop and putting up a tent there. But by figuring out a way that we can get the attention of Apple, to ask it to turn its attention, even if for a moment, to our dilemma.
Our dilemma is this. We love our lifestyle. We want it to just keep on getting better and better. We don’t want to give up our conveniences or our tools of work and leisure. But many many more people in the world are wanting a life just like ours. We know that the biggest problem of our life is that it is not sustainable, and that such an increase in people living like us would be catastrophic. But we love it too deeply to change it.
We love Steve Jobs. Because he looks so loveable and he gave us these lovely things, he changed our lives, he made things for us! Not the kind of luxury devices for the wealthy; like sports cars and one-off designer handbags. He made extraordinary devices that we could afford to have. And that changed our lives. Not just by connecting us up in a way that made our world feel like it was the only world, but by bringing well-designed objects into our lives and getting us accustomed to paying more to look better. We love him because he is our style guru, and only a few of his words – think different – when clicked on, bring up a whole manual of style. Life style.
So I want to suggest that we Occupy Apple. That we do it in a loving and sweet way. That we do it in the most endearingly cute and innovative way, in such a way that the person whose idea it is is swept up by the Apple Company. That we who have apple products, and we who simply learned to live with more style but kept our computer know-how and made our own computing products all find a way to make a little nest in Apple and all perch in there together. And once we’re in, we say “Apple, we need your help”.
And the help we need is a bit different from stopping all those Wall Street dudes from getting their big bonuses. The help we need is for us. We need help. We need help to understand that this problem is ours, and understand that no big deals and no big technological breakthroughs and no big laws are going to solve the problem of entire populations living the good life, and other entire populations just wanting to do the same.
I don’t really see that it’s depressing. I think it’s only depressing if you try not to think about it. Once you do think about it, it’s more of an interesting dilemma. I can’t really see how we can resolve it, and my feeling is that we are not going to. That we are more likely to just keep finding ways to do big things in order to avoid looking at the fact that we, that each of us, is the problem.
But I am not overly concerned about this. I think we just need to go to Apple, get inside it somehow, and communicate with it. Apple, we need help. Apple, we have a problem. It might be that Apple is planning a way that we no longer need our computers and our hand held devices. That could be the future. Anyway, if we ask it, perhaps Apple will make that the future and simply work toward it. We really have no idea what Apple wants, what Apple plans for the future. All we know is that when we hold something Apple in our hands, and it is working okay, the battery is full, the operating system, the software, the data, all there, then we feel happy.
I want us to ask Apple for help. I want us to find a way to Occupy Apple, and then find a way to get its attention, and from there, for us to ask Apple for help. Most of us don’t have accounts with those corporations on Wall Street. We don’t have shares, we don’t have funds. We are not Stakeholders. But in Apple we do have a stake. We not only buy from Apple. We like Apple. We trust Apple. And we admire Apple. And so it seems to me the most reasonable action to take, to go to Apple, to Occupy Apple, and to ask Apple for help.
I cannot see how we can solve the problem of our consumption of resources, and how our consumption is depleting the earth. I can, though, see with my own eyes how the depletion of the earth is creating problems. Problems of pollution, and problems of growing piles of garbage, and problems of the seas getting dirty and animals and fish dying. I can see that more people get skin cancers. I can see that in my lifetime winters have gotten warmer and summers are very hot. I have seen countries twice and noticed that the second time they had more shops and cars. I could see that their buildings got sewerage systems, and then nobody noticed the sewerage any more. And I think that might be a problem.
I remember I lived in a coastal town, and in the summer my friends used to go to the cliffs and jump off. They laughed at the locals for not swimming in the sea. The locals laughed at them for not knowing that that’s where their sewerage went. I know that Apple is not in the sewerage business. Anyway, perhaps people have to solve their own sewerage problems. I know that this country has sewerage problems.
Occupying Wall Street is a nice idea. Especially with summer coming, it’s a brilliant opportunity to enjoy a bit of camping in a prime location. But I think it isn’t making us look at the painful truths. Like: our love of what is killing us. So it is my suggestion that some smart young person find a way for us to Occupy Apple.

Not something punitive. Apple hasn’t done anything wrong in being successful. But not an award – I feel the nobel peace prize was a little discredited by its award to Obama.
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Afraid I can’t see this working.
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I found this article interesting, Lehan, but feel I have to disagree that ‘occupying’ Apple is all we have to do… IMHO Apple are merely symptoms; the causes lie elsewhere; and it is with the causes we must deal if we are really to have any chance at all of surviving… and the ‘Occupy Wall Street’ movement is at least attempting to address some of the major causes, albeit inarticulately.
🙂
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Well, what I was thinking was that APPLE should address the problems of Wall Street.
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But how, Lehan?
How do you tell Dracula to start drinking milk, or water, or ouzo, instead of blood? How do you make Dracula force the closing of the Blood Sucker’s Bank?
Apple and all the other mega corps operate in the same way: by being leeches on the body of humanity; as well as on the body of the planet.
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Yes. A little piece of software. One that embeds something into every apple device, refuses to budge. That kind of occupation. Something that does something to remind us.
Sure we love a good punch-up, especially when we get to cheer from the sidelines. But surely there must be something more effective.
Imagine, for example, if at all times in one small corner of the screen, you could see the assembly line of a factory. And in another, the living room of the owner of the factory.
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That’s a good idea Lehan. Similar to the Made in Australia campaign. Use the same symbol for everything. For Made in China clothing there could be a patch positioned in a comparable location to the LaCoste logo. Sofas could have it woven into the armrest. Pharmaceuticals might need a simpler version that could be engraved into one side of each tablet. For Made in China food the symbol could be enhanced with a skull and crossbones.
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No need, Voice. We know that EVERY BLOODY THING is now or will be made in China, anyway!
We sell them (give them, more like it) the raw material and they sell us the finished product and keep our currency. Some times we give them those materials via the US or UK, or Europe, but they do get them.
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You got there before me, ato, I was going say the same.
I wanted to send some little Chrissie presents to the youngest relatives in Finland. I could not find anything ‘made in Australia’, everything was imported from China.
Out of desperation I started cutting off the labels whenever possible; maybe the kids would not have noticed or cared.
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Good point, ato. I thought that Lehan’s suggestion was not just to mark them as having been Made in China though, but with a mark that reminds us that the Chinese factories have particularly poor conditions for workers.
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I have never owned any Apple product however I have used them. Initially I was sceptical coming from an IBM background. Their GUI interface, ability to detect and install hardware and software and the 64 bit bus and OS were big advantages. But you can’t tinker with them much. At the time IBM’s were tinkerable. I enjoyed tinkering. Now days I’m glad for GUI interfaces as my knowledge of computing has diminished.
The big thing that makes me laugh is that Microsoft has been trying to match the Apple GUI interface for almost 40 years and still can’t do it. What does that tell you.
I’m not addicted to my hand held device. I do have one, don’t how to work it, use it if I have to and couldn’t tell you what brand it is, don’t know the number. Oh, I picked it up, it’s LG what ever that means.
As technology moves forward computing will become even more fantastic no matter who is at the helm. However saying that I do believe that DOS held Microsoft from making great advances instead of just money but that’s how the world goes.
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I reckon that means Low on Gas.
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Pardon? あなたは何を意味する [What do you mean]
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LG. It’s the international code for Low on Gas. Apple appliances say it too. LG. Then you plug it in. And it works again.
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Didn’t kernow that 🙂
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Slogan wise, LG stands for “Life’s Good,” you two!
From their website: A platform of Marketing success in Australia has been the slogan ‘LG, Lifes Good’. (sic. you’d think they’d get the spelling right in their own bloody website!)
But I reckon it means something quite sinister. What about “Lethal Garbage?”
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I thought it was “Cooking with LG”
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It could mean Lucky Guy?
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Lady Gaga, of course, has branded everything that Apple didn’t get to first.
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To tell the truth, these days I get most enjoyment of watching my Cabbages grow, sitting in my leafy backyard with a friend and a glass of Southern Highlands aged Sauvignon Blanc, and/or reading the collection Howard Jacobson’s opinion pieces.
The only apples I’m interested are the edible ones…and of course the painted ones….
PS. … and spending time with my lovely grandsons.
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Just sipping on a cold late picked Rhine Riesling myself. Sunny afternoon but no cricket.
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Now I’m envious, Rhine Riesling is so much better than Granny Smith apples…
The Bradman oval is getting busy, must be a season of something…cricket?
Many buses parked there, one day full of aged Aussies, but mostly Pakistani and/or Indian tourists.
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Those grandsons, they’d be the “Apples of your eye” no doubt, H.
As for you Hung; cricket, like the empire that spawned it, is a game on which the sun never sets. They’re always playing cricket somewhere. You’ll just have to search it out, but I’d get in a little more sweet Reisling, it’s always a long game.
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Yes, it’s low alcohol and slightly sweet which is unusual for me but a nice wine indeed. Probably not quite a sticky but would be a reasonable dessert wine. I got in in a mixed dozen deal and thought why not.
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Oh and cricket, Father O’Way proved beyond doubt that cricket is the universal game. I submitted a paper to a reputable website in The Pigs Arms and those papers were reviewed by my peers without correction or conjecture. This is science, this is proof, this is cricket.
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“…cricket, like the empire that spawned it, is a game on which the sun never sets. ”
Would appear to be a matter of opinion, Warrigal, as is evident from the following folk-song:
Navigator:
The canals and the bridges, the embankments and cuts
They blasted and dug with their sweat and their guts;
They never drank water but whiskey by pints
And the shanty towns rang with their songs and their fights!
Chorus:
Navigator, navigator, rise up and be strong!
For the morning is here and there’s work to be done.
Take your pick and your shovel and the bold dynamite
For to shift a few tons of this earthly delight!
Yes to shift a few tons of this earthly delight!
They died in their hundreds, no sign to mark where,
Save the gold in the pockets of the entrepreneur!
By landslip and rockblast they got buried so deep
That in death, if not life, they’ll have peace while they sleep!
Chorus: Navigator, navigator… etc…
Their mark on this landside is still seen and still laid,
The way for a commerce where vast fortunes were made;
The supply of an empire where the sun never set,
Which is now deep in darkness, but the railway’s there yet!
Chorus: Navigator, navigator… etc…
Sadly, these days, even the continued existence of the railways is in doubt!
🙂
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Nothing to do with cricket, perhaps, Hung… but everything to do with ‘an empire on which the sun never sets’!
🙂
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H, I’ve just happened to have some cabbage seeds, planted them in a box, in my hot house and, lo and behold, they shot up! However, I was warned that they can get all sorts of diseases. Do you know which, what, where and wherefore? Never grew them things before.
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Ato, the ‘cabbages I was just a reference to dear Michel de Montaigne…
I’m growing lettuces, toms, English spinach, chili, silver beet, rhubarb, kipflers ,some Dutch carrots, and all possible herbs. NO cabbages…
Did that on the farm, too hard, had to spray them, always full of some creepy creeping things.
I love cabbages, all kinds, but will never ever grow them 🙂 Sorry to be misleading….and
sorry Lehan, for not sticking to your topic.
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Anyway, stay awake for version III.
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Why?
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Well, you can talk about whatever you like, and it’ll make me feel better.
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Just being stupid Lehan. Keep your story going. I do read it and yes I am interested in what you have to say.
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I had an Apple once but I ate it 🙂
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Oh, GOD!
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Hunger knows no bounds. The bus cables were particularly difficult to get down 🙂
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Give a man an apple and he feeds himself for a day, show him how to use it and he feeds us with silly yokes for life!
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Occupy Story Mark II. Presumably inspired by Apple Mark II.
Reading this story I feel as if I am looking at my reflection. Meaning, it is totally opposite to me.
In the first place I love Occupy Wall Street but find Occupy [Take Your Pick] totally tedious.
Then too I never loved Steve Jobs, loved Apple fanboys still less and never was whatever the female equivalent is. Never had an iPod, iPhone etc.
Love my little Apple laptop though. Stylish, light, small, reliable, and I adore the lit up apple logo at the top. On the other hand, if it didn’t run MS Windows I never would have purchased it, because working with that is how I make a living.
As for the rest. The rest of the world wants what we have. Health, safety, more food than we can eat, leisure. You can’t hold them back now. And what makes that possible is cheap power. Perhaps the world was better off in the days when there were a few filthy rich and their cheap power was provided by us in the form of work as slaves or peasants. Certainly it was a very successful way of funding The Arts, Architecture, Fashion, Philosophy etc.
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I wouldn’t mind occupying apple but I don’t have anything apple, no ipod,ipad,iphone. Perhaps in a modest way I am occupying apple already,
I do have a computor and a modest mobile phone. This phone is just that, doesn’t take pictures, send e-mails or gives me the location of the Eifel Tower nor does it walk Milo or the washing- up.
I had never heard of Jobs until his death, surely proof I occupied apple thoroughly.
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I’ve been struggling today to write a third one, and now that I’ve almost finished it I am wondering why. It wasn’t that deep a subject, after all. I wanted to exhaust all possibilities.
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Like little Codling Moths we can eat our way into the heart of Apple and destroy it, (Read: achieve cultural change), from within.
It’s a nice idea but multi-billion dollar brands don’t much like customers ideas. They interrupt the established flows of design engineering, marketing and sales.
The idea that Apple and Jobs are any different really from any other similar brand just doesn’t hold water, but the fact that so many believe they are is proof of the effectiveness of their marketing. They no longer sell computers and related products, they sell you an alternative version of yourself, but essentially compromised so that you need to keep updating your Apple inventory just to feel like you.
For an analog of what might really happen now that Jobs is gone you could look at the progress of SONY since the death of Akio Morita and Masaru Ibuka in the late 90’s. Prior to their passing SONY had an enviable record for producing high end consumer electronics, as well as high specification professional audio and video equipment for which people were happy to pay a premium to get the SONY brand. These days SONY is having real problems and seems to be dying the death of a thousand cuts.
It’s possible that Apple will be similarly cut into many smaller portions.
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So, you’re saying we should spend up big on Apple machines now before they go downhill?
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If I may interject, had I said what Waz had said above, I’d respond with, no we don’t need to spend up big on Apple machines.
Au contraire, we’re now almost at the very same point where the astronaut, David Hall had reached with Hal 9000 of 2001 a space odyssey. We have become emotionless, and the machines have become emotional. Time to fix the inversion.
More or less.
Some deep thinking there, Lehan but the bankers have become unbearable, unsustainable, unendurable, intolerable. Some shackling must be effected.
We can occupy many spaces simultaneously, you know.
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Yes atomou. But for some reason I find the occupy wall street thing to be dumb. I like the warm and fuzzy idea of it, I don’t like it when it gets back in focus. But I like the idea that we can take that idea and follow it along and find it goes somewhere else.
But mostly I am trying to flex my writing muscles and so I bore you with three stories almost the same as each other. Sorry. There could be an interesting way to do it but I think I have not found it here.
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Not bored at all, Lehan and we can all do -and must do- with a bit of flexing our writing muscles, only because writing has now become the dominant way of engaging in conversation with others, in other words, affirming that we are alive and part of a society, rather than single atoms in a universe of fluttering butterflies.
Our world -not the world of the poor villagers- is becoming exponentially insular and quite vacuous. The act of connecting with others, of conversing (exchanging words) has been taken out of the mouth and into keyboards. Out of the facial histrionics and body language, of touching, (watch politicians endlessly chuck airy cheek kisses at each other) of arm waving and into silly little gravatars and iconitrons and puzzling vowel-deprived word contractions. Symbols, instead of words.
So, yes, let’s flex all our verbal muscles as much as we can.
Personally, I like to see ideas thrown about. Tossed this way one minute, then that way the next, like feathers in a tempest-gripped ocean. Let us see how they survive the intellectual frictions. Ideas, mind, stuff that has emerged out of an Apollo ruled brain, not arrows or bullets shot by a possessed Bacchant.
And that’s where the artist comes in. The one whose eyes scan life in its minutest forms, catches those forms and presents them to the world, as if thrown at the world by the settled tempest. Ants going up a hill, for example, or ants hanged. Millipedes in Heaven. Chickeinfications.
Without the feather words, without the tempests we are simply atoms, detached from each other, disabled from our own infinite mental powers, dysfunctional societies.
If the Occupy movement is about anything, it is about the need to bring back the feathery words, and the tempest. To let these words scatter and fall where they may, not collected and kept in the chambers of the elite, much like Zeus kept the flame in his chamber, away from the mortals.
Time for a new Prometheus!
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Interesting thoughts ato… However, at the time of the original Prometheus, fire was the source of all power, so it was fire that was stolen from Zeus… Today it is money which is the source of all power… so our Latter-Day Prometheus could look a lot like Robin Hood… or Ronnie Biggs…
😉
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Quite so, asty -with a slight quibble.
In the case of Prometheus, the seed of all good things (all the arts and sciences) was the fire and that is why, out of his love for the mortals, Prometheus stole it from Zeus. Aeschylus’ play lists all the arts that were invented and achieved with the use of fire. (447-506):
” I have harnessed horses to the chariot and made them obey men’s reins as an exhibition of wealth and luxury…
And it was I and no one else who discovered the seafarer’s flax-winged craft that now roam the seas…
Firstly, and most importantly, I showed them how to mix soothing remedies with which they could stay clear of any malady because beforehand if they fell ill they could do nothing about it…”
FIRE was the main tool that helped man rise from the dumb darkness in which Zeus had confined him.
Nowadays it’s money, more particularly, Wall Street money, so modern Prometheus does not need not steal money but to stop those in Wall Street, who enforce usury, upon it.
Here’s a verse or two from Ezra Pound’s brilliant canto called USURA:
Usura rusteth the chisel
It rusteth the craft and the craftsman
It gnaweth the thread in the loom
None learneth to weave gold in her pattern;
Azure hath a canker by usura; cramoisi is unbroidered
Emerald findeth no Memling
Usura slayeth the child in the womb
It stayeth the young man’s courting
It hath brought palsey to bed, lyeth
between the young bride and her bridegroom
CONTRA NATURAM
They have brought whores for Eleusis
Corpses are set to banquet
at behest of usura.
So, yes, our modern Prometheus (the name means Pro-vider, or pro-utterer) must steal the thing that stops the arts, which, in Pound’s view is excessive, usurious, interest.
I think that’s what the Occupiers, and the Indignants in Greece and the rest of Southern Europe and the UK want. They, I dare say in poetical terms, are the new face of Prometheus. Not protesting so much as to steal money from the rich and give to the poor but to steal from them, the Wall Streeters and their minions, the ability to enforce usury upon the common mortal.
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Ah, Sony.
I agree, Waz. Once SONY was THE brand of electronics to have. Pioneered the Walkman – the first portable “my music” machine. Superb TVs. But now same as same as. It takes a rare vision to not only see the future but have the knowledge and capacity to create it. Vale Akio Morita.
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