Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q4346011> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 46 of
46
with 100 triples per page.
- Q4346011 subject Q6325515.
- Q4346011 subject Q8409814.
- Q4346011 subject Q8879862.
- Q4346011 abstract "Unabomber for President was a political campaign with the overt aim of electing "The Unabomber" as a write-in candidate in the 1996 presidential election. The campaign's slogan was the shermanesque "if elected, he will not serve." The campaign was launched in Boston in September 1995 by Lydia Eccles – a Boston artist who had long harbored concerns about "totalitarian tendencies in technology" – and antinatalist Chris Korda. It took the overt form of a political action committee, Unabomber Political Action Committee (UNAPACK). Influenced initially by ideas of the Situationist International, the group included anarchists, hardcore punks, 1960s counter-culturalists, eco-socialists, pacifists, militants and primitivists. Its supporters included decentralized anarchist collective CrimethInc. and the Church of Euthanasia.The campaign received national publicity, and attempts by news organizations to portray it as frivolous were resisted by UNAPACK, who insisted that the issues raised by Kaczynski were portentous, concerning "the fate of mankind". In the words of the Phoenix New Times, the campaign was "an effort designed to cast votes in protest of the existing hierarchy and its potential replacement." The Maoist Internationalist Movement criticized the campaign as typifying "life-style politics anarchism" and as encouraging protest votes instead of seizing political power from the upper class.As Bill Brown, director of the campaign's New York office, said at the time "most of the media are unable to deal with the campaign…[t]here is no way for people to understand why you would say 'Unabomber for President' and that gives us a tactical opportunity to explain ourselves." The intended symbolism of the campaign was not that it was a joke, but that the political system was a joke.The campaign won Reason magazine's best bumper sticker for their effort "FED UP WITH 'PROGRESS'? Write-in UNABOMBER For PRESIDENT '96."".
- Q4346011 thumbnail Unabomberforpresident.jpg?width=300.
- Q4346011 wikiPageExternalLink unapack.
- Q4346011 wikiPageExternalLink voteuna.html.
- Q4346011 wikiPageExternalLink press.html.
- Q4346011 wikiPageExternalLink nomination_for_unabomber_for_president.
- Q4346011 wikiPageExternalLink unapacknyc.html.
- Q4346011 wikiPageWikiLink Q100.
- Q4346011 wikiPageWikiLink Q1077426.
- Q4346011 wikiPageWikiLink Q1089791.
- Q4346011 wikiPageWikiLink Q10922.
- Q4346011 wikiPageWikiLink Q11016.
- Q4346011 wikiPageWikiLink Q1140033.
- Q4346011 wikiPageWikiLink Q1155605.
- Q4346011 wikiPageWikiLink Q1185824.
- Q4346011 wikiPageWikiLink Q1384.
- Q4346011 wikiPageWikiLink Q1454090.
- Q4346011 wikiPageWikiLink Q17010072.
- Q4346011 wikiPageWikiLink Q1765342.
- Q4346011 wikiPageWikiLink Q188619.
- Q4346011 wikiPageWikiLink Q2101438.
- Q4346011 wikiPageWikiLink Q222134.
- Q4346011 wikiPageWikiLink Q2296351.
- Q4346011 wikiPageWikiLink Q2479497.
- Q4346011 wikiPageWikiLink Q275595.
- Q4346011 wikiPageWikiLink Q2995893.
- Q4346011 wikiPageWikiLink Q3562627.
- Q4346011 wikiPageWikiLink Q578728.
- Q4346011 wikiPageWikiLink Q58848.
- Q4346011 wikiPageWikiLink Q6199.
- Q4346011 wikiPageWikiLink Q6325515.
- Q4346011 wikiPageWikiLink Q6545497.
- Q4346011 wikiPageWikiLink Q659166.
- Q4346011 wikiPageWikiLink Q667672.
- Q4346011 wikiPageWikiLink Q6812827.
- Q4346011 wikiPageWikiLink Q7186938.
- Q4346011 wikiPageWikiLink Q8409814.
- Q4346011 wikiPageWikiLink Q847301.
- Q4346011 wikiPageWikiLink Q850181.
- Q4346011 wikiPageWikiLink Q8879862.
- Q4346011 comment "Unabomber for President was a political campaign with the overt aim of electing "The Unabomber" as a write-in candidate in the 1996 presidential election. The campaign's slogan was the shermanesque "if elected, he will not serve." The campaign was launched in Boston in September 1995 by Lydia Eccles – a Boston artist who had long harbored concerns about "totalitarian tendencies in technology" – and antinatalist Chris Korda.".
- Q4346011 label "Unabomber for President".
- Q4346011 depiction Unabomberforpresident.jpg.