2B - Thursday, September 12, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 2B - Thursday, September12, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Artists as activists W ashington D.C.has had a significant impact on our lan- guage over the pastfew years, from the reinvention of old words (such as "Citizens United" and the concept of a "person") to the creation of new ones like "enemy combatants." JOHN Its latest BOHN linguistic H endeavor will be to reinvent the notion of a "trade agreement" this fall. Currently in D.C., the final drafts of what will become the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) are being written. The TPP is a massive new "free trade" agree- ment being negotiated by the Unit- ed States and 11 other countries around the Pacific Rim, totalingat 40 percent of the global economy. President Barack Obama has given 600 corporations official "trade advisor" status, while Congress and the public have been left in the dark. What we, the public, do know comes from leaks. Congress fares not much better. Remember those protocols by which a mem- ber of Congress could learn about PRISM? Same deal. They have a few hours to look at select docu- ments without any means of note- taking and then are not allowed to tell others what they have learned. More aboutcorporate rights than about trade, the TPP, referred to as the son of SOPA, will reach into Internet policy and extend the criminalization of certain activities. It will affect food labeling, turning those such as "locally grown," "renewable/ recyclable" or "sweat-free" into acts of discrimination and barriers to "free trade." It will extend drug patents for the major pharma- ceutical companies, which would delay the production of cheap, generic medications. It will also raise transnational corporations to the status of sovereign nations in international tribunals, allow- ing them to sue governments whose policies (environmental, work-place safety) have affected their projected profits, an act already begun under past free- trade agreements. See: "Met- alclad Corps. v. United Mexican States." Already, countries and their taxpayers have paid $365 million to corporations in this way. The list goes on. I am writing today to the art- ists of Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti because I believe this to be ter- rible poetry. And I think you might agree. I am writing today because we are on the eve of this bill's passing, and while there is still time to act, we need to act fast. President Obama will look to Congress to grant him Fast Track sometime this fall, which would allow him sole authorship of the bill. To deny him this opportunity would allow our Congress mem- bers a say in that process. Let us, as good artists, teach our struggling writers over at the Washington School of Poetry about the healthy benefits of workshopping your writing. If you are starting an art studio, music composition class or creative writing workshop, I challenge you to use that time and space to explore and expose the implications of the TPP. Due to its scale, the TPP's effects will stretch across a multitude of nar- ratives. Where are the stories about threatened small farms? Where is the dance about genetically modified food? Where is the satirical play about the corpo- rate lawyers who settle disputes between nations and corpora- tions? Where are the paintings of the broken faces and broken homes of the dispossessed? Where are photos of abandoned factories? Where is the poetry that reclaims our exploited language? Where are the songs commemoratingthe success of past struggles? Let this art cul- minate in a rotating gallery and performance space where voices are heard. Let our art fill online galleries and the mailrooms of our elected representatives. Let's builda coalition of artists and activists. Do not let Washington monop- olize the telling of this story. The voices of those most affected will not be lost, but neither will they be replaced. Our art, as best as it can, will serve as a humble proxy. The Ann Arbor/Ypsilanti area can only do so much in this endeavor, but let us start a wave of protest art that spreads across the country. The scale of Wash- ington's literature is immense. Ours must be equally immense. We are not alone in doing so. We take our inspiration from groups like the Beehive Collec- tive and affirm our solidarity with an international struggle well underway by farmers in Japan, human-rights groups in Malaysia, protesters in Australia and here in the United States. For those looking to further inform their art, campaigns such as "Expose the TPP" and "Topple the TPP" run by United Students for Fair Trade (USFT) have begun the process of inform- ing the public and can be found online. Sept.23 will begin the national week of action, and the University's chapter of USFT, with meetings Mondays at 8 p.m. in B810 East Quad, will have events to look out for. "Poets are the unacknowl- edged legislators of the world," Percy Bysshe Shelley wrote near- ly 200 years ago. I am not here today to agree. I ask that Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti artists demand their acknowledg- ment this fall. Bohn is demanding acknowledgement. To join, e-mail jobohn@umich.edu. baked.buzzed.bored. in this new series, three daily arts writers in varying states of mind visit the same place and write about their experiences. this week's destination: g Under the Lights t COE M I'm going to be completely honest: I have no idea what's happening. 4 Normally, under slightly less high circumstances, I slowly but surely drift in and out of the game. Seeing it, but not really paying attention until the guy beside me with the maize mohawk starts yelling, "GO BLUE!" But now ... Look I don't even really remember who's who. So, the game. Look. We're winning. It's really light, which is disorienting because the sky is DARK. I also feel like now is as good a time as any to talk about how fast all the football players run. I mean, they are FAST. OK, look, we just scored 17 points and now it's HALF TIME and BEYONCE JUST SAID SHE WISHES US LUCK what is this life tho. I mean, what's the point, NOTHING CAN DEFEAT US. I feel slightly disoriented, but the march- ingband is killing it. I can tell because I'm singing along to "Countdown," and they don't miss a BEAT. Way to keep up with the drunk masses, guys! OK, we are back and the game starts off kind of tense. I'm lying because I feel goooood and I don't really feel any tension except some sexual ten- sion between maize mohawk and an innocent bag of popcorn. OH SHIT they just got like 10 points. They beat us in the last quarter but WE WON THE WAR. Victors valiant, holla back. - DAILY ARTS WRITER The last thing I remember was, "Meet in Section 30! Section 30 - don't forget." Too bad it seems like every other friend group has done the same thing - the line doubles around so that it faces away from the stadium. Bleary-eyed, I curse the ticket policy. My heart is still pounding from before. Stepping beyond the ticket checkers, I thought I was safe - somehow convinced myself to sneak in a couple of shooters. But a policeman cordoned me off with an arm and looked at my pockets. "Whatcha got there?" he asked, pointing. I'd had a serious bout of paranoia, but was with it enough to pull out my water bottle and wallet. "They want you to buy water here," he said, snatching it from my hand. "Oh, sorry, I understand, thanks so much!" I answered, moving along. Close shave. "Dude - let's just walk across the horseshoe." Before I know it, my two friends are cutting the gap, and it's get left with the squares or hop on board. Wordlessly, I slip away from my remaining friends to follow. We all sort of clot around a spot near the front. "Oh, hey, is that Kyle over there?" We stand. I feel eyes on my back, but maybe that's the buzz. "Nevermind, that's not Kyle. But now that we're here..." The game is a blur. We're never losing, the touchdowns are raining, but all I can think is: Cottonmouth. Bathroom. Feet tired. Water ... I could gofor some water. Eventually I'm completely, and we're shuffling back up the stairs, euphoric in our delirium. We won. Thank God. -DAILY ARTS WRITER The stadium smelled terrible. Everyone smelled like beer. Everyone smelled like sweat. Random joints were smoked. Which made everyone smell like weed. But that's OK; it was Notre Dame.Nothingelse mattered that day.It didn'tmatter that my legswere about to collapse. All that mattered was 41-30. It didn't matter that Gardner threw an interception touchdown after a split second series of horrible calls. All that mattered was that he returned it with another touchdown. It didn't matter that it was general admissions, and I was stuck in row 90. Or that I could never hear the band because everyone was screamingso loud. It didn't matter that all my friends were slowly becoming miserable, hung- over zombies as the game progressed, and refused to sing anymore of the Victors because their heads hurt. Some were drunk and some were high and some were both. Their crazy dance moves didn't matter. Their embarrassing decrees of how drunk they "really" were didn't matter. They were drunk and there was no looking back. And, in retrospect, it didn't even matter that the person in front of me was basically eight-feet tall. All that mattered was that it was Notre Dame. I was there. It was Under The Lights Part II. And we beat them. - NICK CRUZ 0 WE'RE THE HOTTEST BLOG IN THE INTERWORLD! Visit michigandaily.com/blogs/the+filter to check us out. 6 0 6 0 f