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bibliotecamemetica.com

A collection of memes, curated by CJ Trowbridge.

Category: Drugs -> This Meme

remove toilets from coke rooms.jpg

First Seen

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

gemma3-27b-vision

Okay, here's an analysis of the image based on the requested frameworks. Due to the inherently provocative and layered nature of the content, multiple frameworks apply. This will be a detailed, academic response. **Please be aware the content references illegal drug use and highly vulgar language.** **Image Description** The image is a screenshot of an online petition. The visual component shows the interior of a public restroom, specifically a row of stainless steel toilets and urinals. The lighting is stark, typical of a public restroom. The petition is titled "Remove Toilets From Coke Rooms." A progress bar indicates 936 signatures, with a goal of 1,000. Below the progress bar, a profile image is displayed alongside the name "Fucking Sober" who initiated the petition targeted to Donald Trump and four others. The text accompanying the petition reads: "Whenever I go into the coke room there's always some sick fuck taking a shit ruining the experience of my nose candy." --- **Foucauldian Genealogical Discourse Analysis** This image is fertile ground for a Foucauldian analysis. Foucault was interested in the relationship between power, knowledge, and discourse. The petition itself is a manifestation of a *discourse* around bodily functions, spaces, and substance use. * **Power/Knowledge:** The petitioner is attempting to exert power by influencing the design or access to a specific space (the "coke room"—a clear euphemism). Their knowledge is inherently tied to the subculture of drug use. The very naming of this "coke room" establishes a power dynamic – who gets to define the space, its purpose, and its rules? * **Discipline and Surveillance:** The focus on the presence of another person *using the toilet* while the petitioner is engaged in drug use implicates a form of "panoptic" control, even without direct surveillance. The petitioner feels observed and violated in their experience. The toilet becomes a site of disruption to their self-imposed disciplinary practices around drug use. * **Genealogy:** A genealogical approach asks how this discourse arose. What historical conditions created a space where this concern is articulated? The petition suggests a history of spaces designated for drug use, coupled with a specific etiquette or expectation of cleanliness/privacy. This isn't a universally held concern, but one specific to this subculture. * **Normalization and Exclusion:** The petition attempts to *normalize* a specific experience (drug use) by demanding a modification of the environment to enhance it. Conversely, the act of defecating is framed as *abnormal* and disruptive within that space, resulting in othering and exclusion. --- **Critical Theory** Applying Critical Theory, particularly as influenced by the Frankfurt School, allows for an analysis of the image as a symptom of a broader social malaise. * **Commodification:** The petition, while appearing absurd, can be read as a manifestation of consumer culture’s demand for curated experiences. The petitioner isn’t simply upset; they are complaining that a *sensory experience* is being ruined. This turns drug use into a commodity, and the restroom into a space that must conform to consumer expectations. * **Alienation:** The focus on the interruption of the drug experience signifies a deep alienation from the body, from others, and from the social environment. The individual seeks refuge in the artificial high, and any disruption of that state is perceived as a profound violation. * **Reason and Instrumentalization:** The demand to remove toilets can be seen as a hyper-rational attempt to optimize an irrational activity. The pursuit of pleasure is stripped of any ethical or emotional context, reduced to a purely instrumental goal. * **The Culture Industry:** The very framing of this grievance as a petition for change within the existing power structure reflects the logic of the culture industry. Rather than challenging the system that drives drug use or social alienation, the petitioner seeks to address the symptom (the toilet) within that system. --- **Marxist Conflict Theory** From a Marxist perspective, this image highlights class-based contradictions and the power dynamics inherent in access to spaces and resources. * **Class and Access to Spaces:** The existence of a dedicated "coke room" suggests a level of privilege and access unavailable to most. It implies a subculture with its own spaces and resources, likely tied to wealth or social status. The petition doesn't address broader issues of social inequality but focuses on maintaining the comfort of this privileged group. * **Commodity Fetishism:** The "nose candy" and the desired environment are commodified objects. The value isn’t found in the substance itself or the social context, but in the experience it provides. * **Ideology and False Consciousness:** The petitioner is operating within a specific ideology that normalizes drug use and prioritizes personal pleasure over social responsibility. This is a form of "false consciousness" – a failure to recognize the systemic issues that contribute to alienation and addiction. * **Conflict and Contradiction:** The conflict arises from the clash of needs and desires within a confined space. The petitioner wants a controlled environment for their drug use, while the presence of another person disrupts that control. This reflects the inherent contradictions of a capitalist system that prioritizes individual gain over collective well-being. --- **Postmodernism** A Postmodern reading emphasizes the fragmented nature of reality, the loss of grand narratives, and the blurring of boundaries. * **Simulacra and Simulation:** The "coke room" itself could be seen as a simulacrum—a copy without an original. It's a constructed space designed to create a particular experience, divorced from any authentic meaning. The petition further reinforces this artificiality. * **Deconstruction of Language:** The crude language and unexpected combination of concepts ("coke room," "nose candy," "taking a shit") deliberately disrupt conventional linguistic norms. This is a playful, ironic deconstruction of meaning. * **Loss of the Real:** The image suggests a world where the boundaries between pleasure and disgust, public and private, are blurred. The act of defecation is presented as a violation of the drug experience, highlighting a loss of connection to the physical body and the natural world. * **Irony and Parody:** The petition is inherently ironic and parodic. It’s a mocking exaggeration of consumer demands and a commentary on the absurdities of contemporary culture. --- **Queer Feminist Intersectional Analysis** This is the most complex framework to apply directly, but potentially insightful. While the image doesn’t explicitly deal with gender or sexuality, intersectional analysis helps to unpack the power dynamics and hidden assumptions. * **Subcultural Codes and Regulation:** Subcultures (in this case, linked to drug use) often have unwritten rules and hierarchies. The petition is a form of attempting to *regulate* this subculture to maintain the petitioner’s comfort. Analyzing *who* is being excluded (anyone who uses the toilet at the “wrong” time) can reveal power dynamics based on assumed social status within the group. * **Bodily Autonomy and Disgust:** The focus on bodily functions evokes societal anxieties around the body, particularly the "abject" body (as theorized by Julia Kristeva). The disgust expressed towards the act of defecation is often linked to gendered and racialized biases. What aspects of bodily function are considered “acceptable” or “unacceptable” are rarely neutral. * **The Construction of "Clean" Space:** The demand for a toilet-free "coke room" is tied to the construction of “clean” and “pure” spaces. These concepts are often linked to ideologies of social control and exclusion. * **Privilege & Access**: The ability to create and advocate for a dedicated “coke room” itself implies a level of privilege and access that is not universally shared. Examining *who* benefits from this space, and *who* is excluded, can reveal the underlying power structures. **Disclaimer:** This analysis is intended for academic purposes only and does not endorse or condone illegal activities or harmful behavior. The content of the image is provocative and potentially offensive. I have attempted to provide a nuanced and critical reading within the frameworks requested.

tesseract-ocr

. =3 | / 7 = ¥ ; — wil “— Ez: = : . io? a - ‘Re “ ; q =. = 7 1 Remove Toilets From Coke Rooms 936 have signed. Let's get to 1,000! y 7 Fucking Sober started this petition to a President Donald J. Trump and 4 others Whenever | go into the cocaine room there’s always some sick fuck taking a shit and ruining the — of 7 nose a

llama3.2-vision

This meme is a screenshot of a Reddit post titled "Remove Toilets From Coke Rooms". The post is a joke about a petition to remove toilets from a hypothetical "Coke Room" (a slang term for a place where people use cocaine). The text reads: "In 2-3 sentences, describe this meme for someone who cannot see it. Include any text that appears in the image."

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