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bibliotecamemetica.com

A collection of memes, curated by CJ Trowbridge.

Category: Drugs -> This Meme

2020-11-14.jpg

First Seen

2023-05-10T21:03:35+00:00

gemma3-27b-vision

Okay, let's break down this meme through the lenses you've requested. It's a dense meme for its simplicity, so we'll cover where these analytical approaches intersect. **Visual Description** The image is a meme utilizing the "Drake Approving/Disapproving" format. The upper panel shows rapper Drake with his hands raised in a gesture of disapproval, seemingly blocking something. The lower panel displays Drake looking positively, hands giving a "thumbs up" gesture. To the right of the Drake panels are two text labels: "Plastic straws" appears alongside the disapproving Drake and "Meth" beside the approving Drake. The meme is top-labeled with "Oregon." The overall aesthetic is simple and intentionally utilizes a popular internet meme format. --- **Foucauldian Genealogical Discourse Analysis** This meme operates powerfully within a Foucauldian framework. Foucault's concept of discourse emphasizes how language and knowledge systems create and regulate power. The meme subtly unpacks a particular discourse around "Oregon" and its perceived priorities. * **Power/Knowledge:** The meme positions "plastic straws" as a focal point for moral outrage and policy intervention (a power/knowledge nexus). However, it juxtaposes this with the prevalence of methamphetamine use ("Meth") within the state, suggesting an incongruity. The implication is that Oregon (or society in general) is more concerned with seemingly superficial environmental issues than with the very real harms associated with drug addiction and its social consequences. * **Genealogy of Concern:** A genealogical approach would investigate *how* the issue of plastic straws became so prominent in the cultural consciousness. What historical shifts, technological developments, and political campaigns led to this prioritization? The meme tacitly questions this “history” by implying that this environmental concern has eclipsed other, more pressing, socio-economic issues. * **Discipline & Normalization:** The focus on plastic straws can be seen as a form of disciplinary power – an attempt to regulate individual behavior in a way that appears benevolent (environmentalism) but is ultimately about social control. The meme suggests this control is misdirected when more harmful phenomena are ignored. --- **Critical Theory** Critical Theory, broadly, examines how power structures maintain and perpetuate inequality. This meme aligns well with this framework. * **Ideology:** The meme exposes a potential ideological critique. It suggests that the intense focus on plastic straws may serve as a distraction from deeper structural problems (like poverty, addiction, systemic inequities) that contribute to social harm. Focusing on a seemingly solvable issue offers a sense of control while masking the difficulty of addressing complex problems. * **The Culture Industry:** One could interpret the widespread concern over plastic straws as part of the "culture industry" (a concept from Adorno & Horkheimer). The meme implies that media and popular culture amplify certain concerns (plastic straws) to create consumerist and superficial responses to real problems. * **Critique of Reason:** The meme can be seen as a subtle critique of "instrumental reason" – the idea that rationality is only applied to achieving efficient means to ends, without questioning the ends themselves. Is banning plastic straws actually addressing the core problems Oregon faces? The meme suggests it isn’t. --- **Marxist Conflict Theory** While subtle, a Marxist reading of the meme is possible. * **Distraction from Class Struggle:** The intense focus on an environmental issue (plastic straws) could be seen as a way to divert attention from the fundamental class conflict that underlies many social problems. The meme suggests that the concerns of the wealthy and privileged are being prioritized over the needs of the working class and those struggling with addiction. * **Commodification of Concern:** The focus on plastic straws may also be seen as a form of commodification – turning environmental concern into a market opportunity (e.g., selling reusable straws). This, in turn, obscures the larger structural issues of consumerism and unsustainable production that drive environmental degradation. --- **Postmodernism** A postmodern reading would focus on the deconstruction of meaning and the questioning of grand narratives. * **Rejection of Universal Truths:** The meme rejects the idea of a singular, “correct” set of priorities. It suggests that what is considered important (plastic straws vs. meth) is subjective and constructed. * **Irony & Parody:** The meme is inherently ironic. It uses a popular meme format to expose what it sees as a societal hypocrisy. * **Fragmentation of Meaning:** The juxtaposition of two seemingly unrelated issues (plastic straws and meth) creates a fragmentation of meaning. It challenges the viewer to question the coherence of current social and political narratives. --- **Queer Feminist Intersectional Analysis** This is the least obvious lens, but not entirely absent. * **Marginalization & Vulnerability:** The meme tacitly acknowledges that those struggling with methamphetamine addiction are often marginalized and vulnerable populations. The meme implies that society is quicker to condemn perceived "moral failings" (like using plastic straws) than to address the systemic factors that contribute to addiction and harm. * **Intersectional Concerns:** Drug use and addiction disproportionately affect marginalized communities. The meme’s subtext could be interpreted as highlighting the intersection of class, race, and addiction, and the fact that these issues are often ignored in favor of more superficial concerns. In conclusion, this meme, though simple in appearance, is quite dense with potential meaning. It functions as a critique of societal priorities, a questioning of power structures, and a deconstruction of dominant narratives. It operates effectively through irony, juxtaposition, and the strategic use of a popular internet meme format.

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UREGON io St cael 2 straws fy. ie Meth A re

llama3.2-vision

This meme is a play on the phrase "drain the swamp" which is a common phrase used in politics to describe cleaning up corruption. The image shows a split-screen of two different versions of the same person, with one version saying "drain the swamp" and the other saying "drain the meth". The text at the top reads "Oregon" and the bottom reads "drain the meth". The meme is poking fun at the idea of cleaning up corruption by using a phrase that is commonly used in politics, but replacing it with a reference to methamphetamine, a common problem in Oregon.

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