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A collection of memes, curated by CJ Trowbridge.

Category: Anti-Cops -> This Meme

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First Seen

2023-05-10T21:03:33+00:00

gemma3-27b-vision

Okay, here's an analysis of the image and text, broken down by the requested theoretical frameworks. Note that some frameworks won't be strongly applicable or will be a stretch – I'll point those out. ## Visual Description The image depicts an owl perched on the dashboard of what appears to be a police vehicle. The interior is dark, with the owl illuminated by the dashboard lights. The owl is looking forward, seemingly towards the windshield, giving the impression it is "driving" or in control. The setting suggests a nighttime incident. The officer (presumably) is not visible, but the presence of the police vehicle interior indicates they were present at the time of the incident. The image is framed as a news story (reported by KTLA). Below is a tweet from an account run by the Owl claiming it's ready to repeat the incident. ## Foucauldian Genealogical Discourse Analysis This scenario lends itself well to a Foucauldian lens. We can examine the *discourse* surrounding owls, police authority, and “accidents.” * **Power/Knowledge:** The police represent a significant power structure. The "accident" (the owl causing the crash) disrupts this power dynamic. The *knowledge* surrounding policing assumes control and order, but the owl challenges that assumption. The reporting of the incident itself *constructs* the event as anomalous, a disruption to the norm. * **Genealogy:** Tracing the "genealogy" of the concept of "accidents" shows how it's historically been used to explain events outside of direct human control. The owl *becomes* the "cause" of the accident, obscuring other potential factors (like speed, road conditions, or the officer's attention). It's a convenient way to externalize blame. * **Discipline & Normalization:** The police force is a disciplining force in society. This event presents an interesting disruption – a form of "counter-discipline" where the natural world (the owl) actively interferes with police operations. The owl’s refusal to apologize (“And I’ll do it again”) rejects the norms of societal apology/control, and therefore rejects the normalizing power of institutions. ## Critical Theory This situation, viewed through a Critical Theory framework, reveals the inherent contradictions and tensions within societal structures. * **Critique of Authority:** The incident is, at its core, a disruption of authority. The police are *expected* to be in control, but a small animal subverts that control. This exposes the fragility of that power. * **Alienation:** One could argue that the police officer is alienated from nature, from the unpredictable elements of the world. The owl’s attack represents a return of the repressed – a reminder that humans are not entirely in control of their environment. * **Ideology:** The news reporting of this incident reinforces a certain ideology – that accidents are external events, that animals are unpredictable "threats", and that the police are always upholding order. By highlighting the "oddity" of the situation, the media reinforces these ideologies. ## Marxist Conflict Theory This is a stretch, but we can *attempt* a Marxist reading. * **Class Struggle (loosely):** We could frame this as a symbolic struggle between the "ruling class" (represented by the police) and the "natural world" (represented by the owl). The owl "attacks" the symbol of power, challenging the established order. * **Alienation:** As mentioned in Critical Theory, the police officer is alienated from nature. This alienation is a product of a capitalist system that prioritizes control and exploitation of the natural world. * **The Subaltern:** The owl, in this context, could be seen as a representation of the "subaltern" – the marginalized, unheard voices challenging the dominant power structure. ## Postmodernism This situation strongly lends itself to a postmodern interpretation. * **Deconstruction:** The event deconstructs the binary opposition between "human" and "animal," "order" and "chaos," "control" and "unpredictability." The owl’s actions blur these boundaries. * **Simulacra & Simulation:** The image *becomes* a simulacrum – a representation of reality that is more real than reality itself. The image is disseminated through social media, becoming divorced from the original event and existing as a hyperreal representation. * **Fragmentation & Loss of Grand Narratives:** The event doesn't fit neatly into any “grand narrative” of order or control. It’s a fragmented, absurd incident that resists easy explanation. The owl's defiant tweet (“And I’ll do it again”) further rejects any attempt at a cohesive narrative. ## Queer Feminist Intersectional Analysis This is perhaps the most challenging framework to apply, but we can attempt it. * **Disruption of Norms:** The event completely disrupts societal norms around authority, control, and predictability. This disruption can be read as a form of queer resistance – challenging the rigid structures of power. * **Rejecting Categorization:** The owl refuses to be categorized or controlled. This refusal can be seen as a feminist rejection of patriarchal systems of categorization and control. * **Intersectional Considerations:** The intersection of animal agency and a human power structure brings up questions about the power dynamics between species, and the ways in which "wildness" is often framed as a threat to societal order. Let me know if you'd like any of these analyses elaborated on or if you'd like me to focus on a specific framework in more detail!

tesseract-ocr

=p KTLAG (5 @KTLA Louisiana police officer crashes after owl flies into patrol car, starts pecking at him on.ktla.com/ORBXH Pe nt Ree wf &® Owl From Louisiana & @OwlLouisiana And I'll do it again

llama3.2-vision

The meme is a joke about a police officer who is distracted by a bird in their car, but it's actually a joke about a police officer who is distracted by an owl in their car. The text "I've got a bird in the car" is a play on the common police phrase "I've got a bad guy in the car," but in this case, the "bad guy" is a bird, specifically an owl.

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