0 this is You'll abstain from acts of idle or wrongful gratification. You'll abstain from abuse, from profit and exploitation. This is no consumer product. Help us with the war against inequality: Racist, sexist, and economic. Before its too late CONSOLIDATE - Consolidated The question surfaces once again: consume or fight? Or is it, rather, fight consumption? Whatever the answer may be, one thing remains certain. Because Ann Arbor has so affectionately been deemed the love-me-I'm a-liberal bastion of the Midwest, everybody is finally tapping into what Time magazine recently called the free market of the "twentysomething-lost-generation". In other words, all you socially-aware types standing up for morals instead of marketing will finally be completely pacified with something to really sink your money-bags into. Yes, perhaps the ultimate of oxymorons will triumph:A politically-correct artistic products. Never mind . inherent by Donna ladipaolo contradictions that may (or may not) linger in these newly produced "art forms" displayed and promoted around town. After all, some objets d'art are simply there for the buying. Art for art's sake and all that kind of stuff. So here's a consolodated list of the week's artistic exploits and fashion-filled guilt supressors: ROCK AND TOLL WILL NEVER DIE How 'bout that industrial-funky-syntho political band Consolidated? They drummed a message of "compassion" and "accountability" loud and clear Wednesday night. And how 'bout that highlight: MC 900 Foot Jesus with DJ Zero? Their preaching about the sinful nature of our system was never made more glorious. While truth may definitely be out of style, the messages of these two bands - when put to a heavy hip-hop bass-line - have definitely created their own fashionability. How much were the tickets anyway? While I actually love these two bands and believe their music is affecting their listeners, I can't help but apply some scientific laws of relativity upon witnessing species-being. If energy can really neither be created nor destroyed but only transformed, where does it all eventually go? Does it fizzle into all the service charges? Is it swept off the Nectarine Ballroom's floor after all the stomping has ceased? Does it trickle down to the masses? Or do people actually believe their performances are more important than the causes we are supposedly fighting for? Do flashing lights, trendy clothes and spiked hair amount to fighting for a pig-free campus? Surely this band cannot be completely blamed. "If music is inspired to make money how interesting can it be?" says Consolidated before they begin their synthed bebop in one song. So where does "selling-out" as an artist (or consumer) actually begin? This band, like others, stand clear. Art and action must go hand in hand. Maybe somewhere out in Pettybourgeoisland someone's consciousness is awakening. JUST LIKE A FARE Recently, a group of pointy-heads (like myself) have found it relevant to look at the social, political - and dare I say - economic ramifications of Madonna. Specifically, this self-deemed "Boy-Toy's" "Like a Prayer" video along with her once- shown Pepsi commercial were shown in 4051 LSA with a subsequent analysis to decipher any possibly subversive dimensions in her mood and music. (Once Pepsi found out what her M Tv video was about they pulled their ad because of controversial associations. They probably loved the controversy, however. Controversy seems to be selling lately.) Anyway, I was pretty dismayed by the entire event. Of course, you don't have to pay to become involved in any of these wonderful forums on pop stars (unless you consider tuition a kind of expenditure). And I'm not denying that I haven't become absorbed in the whole pseudo-feminist-anti-repressive thing when arguing about "Express - Yourself." In fact, it's Y refreshingly different from studying Chaucer and the like. 0 But how 'bout really gettingf = into the nitty gritty about Madonna as a very shrewd capitalist? After all, she did o recently make the cover of Forbes magazine. Her greed was mentioned during the discussion but was brushed . aside. How much money is she . making off us and where does it go? <.. And what will happen with the academy and pop-ish topics? If the study of television ever ' gains academic respect, we may end up analyzing "Leave it to . Beaver" with the same zeal we once had in dissecting Shakespeare. Will we CRISP for "Cop Rock" 101? FASCINATING FASHION-ISM This was also the week Bloomingdale's of Ann Arbor - Bivouac - decided to change their "politically charged" window display. The manager there told me they changed the display every couple of weeks to promote more merchandise. "Eyes and minds for change" and "End Racism" were just some of the phrases printed on a minimalist- styled shirt to grab the fashion mongers of this city who believe they can make the difference (even if it's only when they get up and Vogue). This kind of promoting is similar to Collected Works' recruiting of shoppers by displaying an "End Racism" bumpersticker in their own window displays. (Never mind that the same racism now used as a marketing tool by the garment industry was used to produce the cotton that launched, and continues to support the textile industry.) So I called up the designers in San Francisco. . it turns out one of the two designers, Matthew Wong, is originally from Ann Arbor (Wow, what a concept!). Wong, from MM Sherman Wong Work Wear described his new line as "politically aware and utilitarian clothing." "Fashion is more than fashionable things. It's the way you feel," said Wong. "People are becoming more socially and politically aware." Aah, I'm glad somebody created such things to satisfy our needs and end product alienation once and for all. Wong's new clothing line has, by the way, received raves in such fashion magazines as Details. But when I started asking Wong about the $70 price tag for these clothes he didn't seem as comfortable discussing any economic ramifications. In fact he asked me, "I don't know, is $70 expensive for a shirt?" Well, not being,one of the exploited, I wouldn't exactly know. But it would take over seven of these stories for my paycheck to allow me to buy such authentic "work wear." BELOW MM Sherman Wong Work Wear had 1 at Bivouac this week. This "utilitarian" shi (originally from Ann Arbor) described it, m seventy dollars. October 12, 1990