Property is Popart.
Filed Under Fun Stuff/Oddities | Leave a Comment
“Das Privateigentum muss Heil bleiben” by Kurt Jotter.
Title summary: “Private property must remain sacred.”
Policemen involved in patrol, arrest, and coffee break activities, superimposed on bird’’s-eye view of a city.
Read more
Geht ja gar nicht: Privatisierung der DDR und ihres Wappens
Filed Under Fun Stuff/Oddities | Leave a Comment
DB probiert virales Marketing
Filed Under Fun Stuff/Oddities, Mobility | Leave a Comment
Sorry, but this content is not available in English
Wem gehört denn nun die Welt?
Filed Under Fun Stuff/Oddities, Privatization, General | Leave a Comment
Sorry, but this content is not available in English
Wem gehört der Berliner Teufelsberg?
Filed Under Nature Areas, Fun Stuff/Oddities | Leave a Comment
Sorry, but this content is not available in English
Wem gehört der Aufschwung
Filed Under Fun Stuff/Oddities | Leave a Comment
Sorry, but this content is not available in English
Privatization of the police
Filed Under Security, Fun Stuff/Oddities | Leave a Comment
Die Community kanns immer besser als der Profi!
Filed Under Fun Stuff/Oddities, Education/Knowledge | Leave a Comment
Sehr schoen: Die Titanik “Humor Kritik” bringt einen weiteren Beleg dafuer, wie viel ueberlegener ein…
Aneignung des Weltalls:
Filed Under Public Space, Fun Stuff/Oddities | Leave a Comment
So EU-industriekommissar Günter Verheugen (zitiert nach faz.net).
…
(Ohne weitere Worte)
"War on Want" against Privatisation, Power & Poverty
Filed Under Distribution of Wealth, Water, Fun Stuff/Oddities, Practical Struggles | Leave a Comment
“War on Want” is a London-based NGO that claims to “fight poverty in developing countries in partnership and solidarity with people affected by globalisation” and to “campaign for workers’ rights and against the root causes of global poverty, inequality and injustice.” Watch their new Privatisation film:
http://www.waronwant.org/Can+you+swallow+this+14099.twl
Privatisation of basic utilities like water can devastate poor communities. Without access to affordable and clean drinking water, diseases like cholera can spread and infect hundreds of thousands of people.









