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A collection of memes, curated by CJ Trowbridge.

Category: Anti-Oligarch -> This Meme

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First Seen

2023-05-24T22:38:58+00:00

gemma3-27b-vision

Okay, let's break down this Twitter thread using the requested theoretical lenses. **Visual Description** The image is a screenshot of a Twitter thread. It features two tweets. The first tweet is from the account "@besf0rt" with a profile picture of a person with dark hair and facial hair. The tweet text states: "by the time you read this, Jeff Bezos made $50,000 and one child died of hunger." Below that is a reply from the account "@J_Guilbeaux." The reply asks: "Do y’all really hate capitalism or do you hate seeing people doing better than you in a capitalist system?" The timestamp indicates the initial tweet was posted on December 18, 2020, at 6:43 AM. The screenshot was captured on an iPhone. --- **Marxist Conflict Theory** This thread is *directly* engaged with the core principles of Marxist Conflict Theory. * **Class Struggle:** The juxtaposition of Jeff Bezos’ earnings and a child dying of hunger starkly illustrates the inherent inequality within a capitalist system. It exemplifies the division between the *bourgeoisie* (the owning class, like Bezos) and the *proletariat* (the working class, represented by the hungry child). The massive wealth accumulation of one is directly linked to the deprivation of another. * **Exploitation:** The thread implicitly points to the exploitation of labor that allows for such wealth accumulation. While not explicitly stated, the underlying implication is that the wealth Bezos accumulates is built upon the labor of countless individuals who are not adequately compensated, leaving others in conditions of severe need. * **Alienation:** The vast disparity between Bezos’ wealth and the child's death can be seen as a manifestation of alienation. The individual’s (the child's) labor/life is disconnected from the value it produces, and the products of that labor are appropriated by others. * **Response to Exploitation:** J.G.'s question taps into the psychological aspects of conflict, suggesting resentment and envy might be mistaken for opposition to the system itself, potentially obscuring the fundamental injustice. --- **Critical Theory** This thread lends itself well to a Critical Theory analysis. * **Power Structures:** The tweet fundamentally challenges existing power structures. It’s not merely about individual wealth but the *system* that enables such a concentration of resources while simultaneously causing widespread suffering. It implicates the prevailing socio-economic system as a source of injustice. * **Ideology:** The questioning reply from J.G. touches on the ideology inherent in capitalist systems. The question implies that a desire for equality is often framed as "envy" or "resentment" within the dominant ideology, thereby dismissing legitimate grievances. This frames dissent as a personal failing instead of a critique of systemic inequality. * **Emancipation:** The thread can be read as a call for emancipation from oppressive systems. By exposing the stark contrast between wealth and poverty, it implicitly calls for a re-evaluation of societal values and a move toward a more equitable distribution of resources. --- **Foucauldian Genealogical Discourse Analysis** While not as overtly apparent, a Foucauldian reading can be applied. * **Power/Knowledge:** The tweet demonstrates how power operates through the production of knowledge (or, in this case, the *suppression* of certain knowledge). The fact that the disparity between Bezos' wealth and the child’s death isn’t commonly discussed as a *direct* consequence of systemic failures is a result of power dynamics. The dominant discourse tends to normalize or obscure such inequalities. * **Genealogy of Inequality:** The thread implicitly asks about the historical genealogy of inequality. How have societal norms, economic policies, and power structures evolved to create a situation where such disparities are commonplace? It encourages tracing the historical development of capitalism and its consequences. * **Discourse of "Deservingness":** J.G.'s question points to a dominant discourse that often justifies inequality by framing success as the result of merit and failure as the result of personal shortcomings. This discourse constructs a hierarchy of "deservingness," legitimizing the accumulation of wealth by some while blaming the impoverished for their situation. --- **Postmodernism** While a direct postmodernist reading is less prominent, the response from J.G. hints at aspects of it. * **Deconstruction of Motives:** The question (“Do y’all really hate capitalism…?”) deconstructs the simple assumption that opposition to capitalism is purely based on principled objection. It suggests that motives are complex and potentially driven by personal desires or resentments. This challenges the idea of a “pure” ideological stance. * **Relativization of Truth:** The question introduces a degree of relativism. It implies that what appears to be opposition to a system might actually be something else – a reaction to perceived personal disadvantage. This challenges the notion of a single, objective truth about motivations. * **Meta-narrative Critique:** Implied is a critique of the grand narrative of capitalism. Is opposition to capitalism truly about a rejection of the system itself, or simply an objection to outcomes? --- **Queer Feminist Intersectional Analysis** While not explicitly stated, the issue of starvation and economic disparity inherently intersects with multiple forms of oppression. * **Interlocking Systems of Oppression:** This issue is rooted in a combination of economic exploitation, global inequalities, and potentially systemic discrimination (based on race, gender, location, etc.) that contribute to vulnerability and lack of access to resources. * **Material Conditions & Vulnerability:** The child’s death from hunger is a material manifestation of the intersectional forces that create precarity and vulnerability, making certain groups disproportionately affected by poverty. * **Challenging Dominant Narratives:** The thread challenges the dominant narratives that prioritize profit over human life and ignore the systemic factors that contribute to hunger and poverty. This aligns with queer feminist critiques of power structures and oppressive ideologies. **Important Note:** Theoretical frameworks are tools for analysis. Applying them can be subjective, and different interpretations are possible. This breakdown represents one possible reading of the Twitter thread.

tesseract-ocr

‘ Bes @besfOrt by the time you read this tweet, jeff bezos made $50'000 and one child died of hunger @ J.G. S @J_Guilbeaux- 1d Do y'all really hate capitalism or do you hate seeing people doing better than you ina capitalist system? Show this thread 6:43 AM - 12/18/20 - Twitter for iPhone

llama3.2-vision

This meme is a humorous response to a tweet about Jeff Bezos' wealth. The original tweet states that Bezos made $50,000,000,000 in one day, but the response is a sarcastic comment that reads "by the time you read this tweet, Jeff Bezos made $50,000,000,000 and a child died of hunger". The response is a darkly humorous commentary on the wealth disparity between Bezos and those in need.

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